KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.29
SenEx supports varied court size
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, October 1, 1976
See story page seven
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
The writer's response
Writer-in-residence William Burroughs talks to a Modern American Art class vaster afternoon. Topics of Burroughs' talk
Boredom prompted writer
ranged from eastern mysticism to Richard Nixon, who Burroughs said in time would be called a folk hero.
By GREG BASHAW
Chairs jammed into room 211 Blake Hall where writer-in-residence William Burroughs to speak yesterday were filled filled and it was still 10 minutes before class time.
"Whattyta think about moving the class inside Al Dewey, who teaches art at Brownburg Literature and Burroughs novel, Naked Lunch, asked Allen Millstein, an instructor of a Modern Art American art school."
"The Man wrigglegs . . . His flesh turns to viscid, transparent jelly that drifts away in green mist, unveiling a monster black cintipede." -Burroughs in Naked Lunch.
"Nah, I don't think so," Mullstein said. "I can't see William Buroburs sitting on
"I don't know about this. I don't know whether I want it sit this close to him," she said.
By 1:30 p.m. the only seats left were in the front of the room. Jane Tankard, Leaneap sophomore, sat slowly into a chair right in front of her. She looked around the crowded room. She looked around the crowded room.
"There is a sense in Naked Lunch of the destruction of soul, which is more intense than any I have encountered in any other modern novel."—Norman Mailer.
"Naked Lunch—a frozen moment when everyone sees what is on the end of every day."
Burroughs arrived late in a gray suit, big black boots and a hat that left a crease mark across his high forehead when he took it off. He spoke in a monotone, slightly slurring his words. He was without the Senior Service cigarettes, a foreign brand, he'd puffed on all week in his stay as writer-in-residence and drummed his stubby
fingers on the table through most of the tal
"Eastern religions have an effect on the whole method of thought that moves you toward nonlinear thinking," he said, speaking of the development of the cut-up mind, which has enabled him treating your mind work as it actually functions instead of forcing it into a linear operation."
"Naked Lunch is of very small significance . . . From the literary point of view, it is the merest trash, not worth a second glance."—New Republic.
Burroughs took off his glasses and then into his suit pocket. He was asked about the cut-up method of writing, in which he would take a skate apart and piece together his phrases.
"What you see when you walk around is a montage of perceived," she said. "My first drafts are like rough sketches, and the cut-outs are literary equivalent of montage painting."
William Burroughs, 61, grew up in St. Louis where his grandfather began the Burroughs Business Machine Co. He studied literature at Harvard and began studying biochemistry with experiences with heroin addiction on paper. After many years of addiction, Burroughs kicked heroin in 187 by using apomorphine, a solution that regulates the body's metabolism. Burroughs has long claimed apomorphine could be an effective cure for most addicts if its use wasn't suppressed by pharmacological and pharmaceutical professions.
"Drugs are a million-dollar industry, and no one wants to see it end by curing adults."
Burroughs "might have been one of the greatest geniuses of the English language if he had never been an addict."—Norman Mailer.
Clean-up project gains approval
By CAROL LUMAN
Staff Writer
A project of the Lawrence Sanitation Department to clean and beautify the alleys in the central business district isn't a white man's problem. The machines apparently think it will suffice.
Alleys off of Massachusetts, Vermont and New Hampshire streets from Stixth to 11th Streets are the center of the beautification project, which began six weeks ago.
Longhurst said he was impressed that the men on the special route took time to pick up litter and sweep around trash bins in the basement, where they empty the bins, as was done in the past.
"The service is wonderful," David Longhurst, president of the House of Usher, 838 Massachusetts St., said yesterday. "It's an enormous improvement."
If comments of two downtown merchants are representative of the general feeling about their stores, they will be included.
Tom Black, manager of the Royal College
Shop. 87 Massachusetts St., said he had
been in charge.
"The alleys are cleaner than they were before the project beamed." he said.
But Black said that part of the problem in
Burroughs' experiences with drugs and his nightmarish visions while using and withdrawing from heroin are an axis around which his creative work revolves.
"The human body is scandalously inefficient. Instead of a mouth and an anus to get out of order why not have an all-purpose kitchen? No, it's a character from Burghershack." Naked Lunch.
"Burroughs novels are the experience of his aesthetic hate." -Harrer's.
While Burroughs fielded a few questions on America, a man near the back of the room wanted to know what he thought about former President Richard Nixon.
"I think Nikon will go down in history as a great folk hero," he said, to gales of the media. "He completely debunked the reverence the country had for the presidency and I think that that unquestioned power the President had was so important."
the past was the fault of merchants, not sapitation workers.
Merchants are sloppy, according to Black
So, a special three-man crew was assigned to the route. They worked downtown first, beginning at 6 a.m. and finishing by midday--before delivery trucks began using the alleys. Then they their assigned residential area near downtown
One of the area's past problems was that merchants and passbyss were careful when they dumped trash, Earl Cheek, a sanitation department supervisor, said.
For Burroughs, the image of a dependence on junk can be applied to all people, and even those without reliance on material form, a forced feeding of image, thought and energy from those in control. The only escape from this addictive form is through the first form of tummy—the body itself.
"I'd been a bartender, an externinator, a terrible private detective and a junky," he told another class Wednesday "After I retired, I worked as a small stock with this writing business."
THE NEW PROJECT will be a success only if every bitches in he, said.
Standard equipment for the crew is a truck, a broom and a shovel.
Weed cutting in the alleys will be another service. Cheek said. The crew will bring in or replace bins needing repairs and spruce them up with a coat of paint.
"The sanitation workers can clean the hell out of the place, and then the merchants throw stuff without making sure it gets in the bin." Black said.
The men sweep around the bins after they've been emplied, and this winter the
See BOREDOM page eight
KU, county settle on bill for wagon train stopover
By JIM COBB
University of Kansas officials faced the Douglas County Bicentennial Commission in a $250.65 charge made by KU for use of University property by Bicentennial Commission.
Staff Writer
Del Shakel, executive vice chancellor,
Max Lucas. University director of facilities
Libraries seek $35,000 extra for student help
The University Senate Libraries Committee has asked the University of Kansas to provide $35,000 to supplement student wages in the library system. The committee said this week that it might request a loan from the university if additional funds were not provided.
Letters sent to Chancellor Archie Dykes, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, and Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the funds available for wages during the 1976-77 school year were about $120.00 less than the amount requested.
The amount requested was $291,695, and available University and work-study funds
SUPPLEMENTAL FUNDS are necessary to keep Watson Library open the 86 hours a week it now operates, the committee's letter to Dykes was. The group said the 86 hours scheduled were substantially longer in library hours at universities similar to KU.
The letter said the wage problem was "only symptomatic of the overall difficulties that the libraries face owing to inadequate funding."
Earl S. Huyser, professor of chemistry and chairman of the libraries committee, said the University was developing a legacy of poor library funding.
"IM IN MY second year on the committee," he said. "During my first year, I became aware of the severe shortage of funds to maintain a library like the one we should have at the University of Kansas. And it isn't only in student wages."
Huyser said the letter indicated only that there was a possibility that the committee would recommend a reduction in hours if the additional funds weren't provided. The final decision on how to cope with fund availability will be made by library officials, he said.
THE LETTER said that the number of hours of student help in the library had declined about 33 per cent during the last five years. During the same period, it said, student enrollment has increased by 25 per cent.
If additional money isn't provided, the only other sources of funds are the library's personnel and acquisitions funds. Reducing other personnel will add to problems such as the need to find new materials in the letter said, and a reduction in new books will create more problems in the future.
planning, and Mary Soderstrum, assistant to Lucas, attended the commission's monthly meeting in Kanwaka Hall west of Lawrence.
Shankel and Lucas fielded questions about services and facilities provided by KU for the wagon train visit and both expressed dismay that the University had been thrust into an adversary relationship with a local civic group.
AFTER MORE than an hour of discussion and questions by commission members, the commission voted to pay $1,126.78 of the bill for overtime wages of University employees. Shankel said KU would waive a charge of $450 on any materials during the wagon train visit.
The approved resolution stated that the county Bicentennial group, the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission and the KU Bicentennial Committee should cooperate to pay the bill within a week. It was passed, 7-1
A resolution presented earlier calling for the cooperation of the Lawrence City Commission and the Douglas County Commission to pay the bill tiled 4-4.
THE ADMINISTRATORS stood a few steps from the head table in the high-ceilinged hall. A miniature wagon train was the table's centerpiece.
Some commission members, particularly those from smaller communities in the county, didn't hide their concern about the bill. Martha Parker, Clinton, opposed the original resolution because she said it wasn't right for the Bicentennial group to Lawrence and Douglas Cooper to give it more money to pay KU's bill.
"To take the money that we worked so hard to get and spend it for something we did not initiate just seems absurd," she said.
CHARLES DURR, Eudora, said that if the commission paid KU's charges, "then we'll feel obligated to Dr. Bradley for what he did."
Durr was referring to accommodations provided to the wagon train by William Bradley, a Lawrence veterinarian. The wagon train, scheduled to stay on the KU campus, met in a park at night. After participating in a local parade on the second day of its visit, wagon train
members expressed dissatisfaction with facilities provided by the University and threatened to leave Lawrence ahead of schedule.
Bradley invited the group to stay on his arm at no charge and sponsored a barbecue.
LUCAS AND SHANKEL, who said they had been criticized for the University's role during the group's visit and for the bill, defended their actions. They said that an area on West Campus that had been planned for use by the wagon train was scrapped just before the visit at the suggestion of the wagomaster.
In addition, they said, workers for Buildings and Grounds and KU police were also required to overtime work not directly related to the University. The commission had been warned in advance of the visit that KU employees' overtime would have to be paid.
A charge of more than $900 had been discussed during preliminary planning for the visit. Lucas said the University Events Office had asked to waive fees for use of KU facilities.
SHANKEL SAID, "Perhaps we should have been more specific about costs, but we were assured that there would be no problem."
Administrators sent a list of overtime pay charges, Shankel said, to Clemence Hills, Bicentennial commission chairman. Those charges were $655.43 for Buildings and Grounds employees, and $470.95 for KU police.
"The next thing we knew was that there was considerable unhappiness," Shankel
Employees who worked during the group's 24-hour stay on campuses haven't been paid for it.
SHANKEL AND Lucas said that after preliminary discussion of the wagon train's visit, Chancellor Archie Dykes approved the plan. After several locations for the wagon train were considered, it was decided that an area on West Campus would be ideal.
Heavy rains before the train arrived April 29, however, prompted a wagon train
See WAGONS page eight
Variety of festivities highlight Parents Day
"Science Can Be Fun," a lecture by Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry, will highlight Saturday morning activities for the University of Kansas Parents Day.
Bricker's lecture, similar to one he has given in the Soviet Union, will be at 10 a.m. in Woodruff Auditorium. Bricker said this week the speech included impromptu demonstrations of chemical experiments and was planned to be both entertaining and
The lecture will follow a reception for
RKING
Special treatment
Two of the three members of a crew on a special route that hits the alleys in the Lawrence central business district move a trash
can to their collection truck. The added service in the downtown area, started six weeks ago by the Lawrence Sanitation Department.
parents at 8 a.m. in the Kansas Union Paul Gray, a KU alum, and his band, the Gaslight Gang Dixieland Band, will play on the sidewalk along Jayhawk Boulevard during the morning's activities. Also, a film on technology will be shown in the Union
Special exhibits and presentations that will be open all day include;
—Buddist art, Chinese snuff bottles and a special photographic selection at the KU Museum.
-Chalk fossils, photographs of the taxidermy process and an exhibit about Kansas fish in the Museum of Neural History.
-Availability of telescopes in the astronomical observatory atop Lindley Hall so that parents may observe sun spots or planets during the morning.
IN ADDITION, individual schools and departments will have special programs for parents. Open houses have been planned in the schools of pharmacy, journalism, and business. Navy ROTC will have an open house and a picnic for parents.
The School of Architecture will display student projects during its open house and will sponsor a picnic for parents at Potter Pavilion. The department of chemical and mechanical engineering reception will include tours of a recently completed addition to Learned Hall.
Receptions are planned for parents of students in the department of political science and the KU Marching Band. Tours of Engel Library will be conducted by the department of Germanic languages and literature.
HOPE balloting finishes today
Today is the last day of balloting for the five HOPE Award finalists. Seniors presenting their KU ID's may vote from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard. Senior class card holders may vote at the Regina Senior Alliance party from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Broken Arrow Park.
Each senior may vote for up to five of 17 semifinalists. The five finalists will be announced Oct. 4, and after additional voting, the winner will be announced Nov. 5 at the halftime of the KU-Iowa State football game.
2
Friday, October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Congress overrides veto
WASHINGTON - Nearing the completion of business this election year, Congress yesterday appointed President Gerald R. Ford to a $5.5 billion appropriation package to finance 10 percent of the budget.
The Senate completed passage of the bill when it voted 67 to 15 to override the veto. The vote was 12 more than the two-thirds majority required.
Earlier, Congress passed a compromise revenue-sharing measure, an action that should clear the way for adjournment for the session today.
Ford issued a statement saying passage of the revenue sharing bill was "a most significant accomplishment", although, he added, it is not all that I and the company have done. The bill had hoped to
Nineteen Senate Republicans supported the appropriation bill, which provides for programs administered by the departments of Labor and of Health, Education and Social Services.
Soviets buu more wheat
WASHINGTON - The Agriculture Department said yesterday 400,000 more metric tons of U.S. wheat had been sold to the Soviet Union.
The sale brings the Soviet Union to within 880,000 tons of the minimum six million tons of U.S. grain it is pledged to buy for shipment in the year beginning today. (U.S. Steel)
The department didn't identify the private grain firm that made the sale or the price. At closing cash-grain prices yesterday, the sale would have been worth $10 million.
No government financing is involved in the sale.
Palestinians suffer loss
ALEY, Lebanon - Palestinian guerrilla suffered a major loss to Syrian forces after a bombing in this mountain resort to decide whether to continue fighting or to negotiate.
Syrian armored units kept up their advance and clashed with guerrillas five miles from the villa where guerrilla chief Yasir Aisaraf met with his senior military officer.
A Palestinian source said they were choosing between "war or talks."
After meeting for six hours, the guerrilla leaders were reported moving their discussions to Beirut. Nothing was revealed of the talks.
Allied receives acauittal
RICHMOND, Va.,—A federal judge yesterday acquitted Allied Chemical Corp. of polluting the James River by dumping the toxic insecticide Kepone into water.
The judge, U.S. District Court Judge Robert R. Merhage Jr., said that there wasn't enough evidence for conviction of the W charges remaining against the defendant.
"I'm simply not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that Allied entered into a criminal partnership with Life Science Products Co.," Merghie said.
Allied was acquitted of nine counts of aiding and abetting Life Science Products, which manufactured Kepone for Allied, in dumping the chemical into a sewer system. Allied was also acquitted of count of conspiring with Life Science Products to perpetuate the pollution.
Farmers' returns decline
WASHINGTON - Continued declines in returns on meat brought the average of prices U.S. farmers receive for their agricultural products down another half per cent between Aug. 15 and Sept. 15, the Agriculture department reported yesterday. The average was seven per cent below the average prices of a year ago.
A month ago, USDA reported the sharpest monthly drop in prices for the basic ingredients of food in more than two years. That four per cent decline followed a year earlier.
The department's crop reporting board said lower prices for hogs, potatoes, cattle, chickens and wheat contributed to the decrease, but higher prices for soybeans were up.
Mars life-search still futile
PASADENA, Calif.—The Viking missions's chances of finding life on Mars appeared slim yesterday when latest data from the Viking 2 robot showed no sign of life.
On this planet, life isn't possible without organics—tiny chains of carbon atoms—and neither of the Viking landers have found organic matter in their probes of
Gentry Lee, director of the mission's science analysis, said the possibility of life on Mars still existed but admitted that it was difficult to "explain no organics."
Murder suspects freed
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. —A district court judge dismissed charges yesterday against three persons accused of plotting to kill Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., and ordered the trio freed because, he said, there was no probable cause for prosecution.
Judge George Bregians first granted a continuance in the case and later threw out the charges against Robert White, 42, David King, 31, and Sandra Rondeau, 37.
Prodded by Jimmy Carter to discuss his past campaign finances and golfing weekends that were paid for by corporations, President Gerald Ford said yesterday that no campaign funds ever went for his personal use.
"I am certain that when the investigation is completed, that I will be free of any allegations such as I have read about," the President told a news conference. "As long as my conscience is clear, I have no real problem."
Ford denies charges on campaign fund use
Bv The Associated Press
Carter told reporters that the President's declaration ended the matter as far as he
when he made the statement. He was met at the Buffalo, N.Y., airport by pickets calling for an account of Americans still missing in Southeast Asia. Carter pledged to try as president to send a delegation to Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia.
Carter was campaigning in the Northeast
Carter said such a delegation would try to determine what happened to the 796 U.S. servicemen the Pentagon still were unaccounted for from the Vietnam war
Carter had challenged the President to answer questions from reporters about an investigation by special Watergate prosecutor Charles Ruff, who is in connection with Ford's.conversation political contributions to his own use when he was in Congress.
Candidates get job hope
WASHINGTON (AP)—An organization that helps find jobs for executives older than 40 has invited President Ford and other members of the team of them will be unemployed after Nov. 2.
The group, called Forty Plus of Washington, said its members fall into two categories, those who are out of work and those "who are presently employed but have a job change and realize that a group effort is better than an individual effort."
"Our only requirements are that the applicant be 40 or older and that he or she have worked in a professional or executive position." The interviewer said, "You appear eminently qualified."
The letter was carried by hand to Ford's
downtown campaign headquarters and mailed to Carter's organization in Alphia.
Ford has a job that pays him $200,000 a year. Carter's reported income was $136,138.92 for 1975. To belong to Forty Plus, he had a job paid at laying at 15,100 annually.
"As a presidential candidate, you have expressed your concern with unemployment, your concern with the need to reduce the federal government's role and your desire to put people to work," the letters said.
"Your party's platform speaks out on the critical need to reduce unemployment in the nation. You can help highlight the efforts of some of the more than 150,000 people across the country, the unemployed professional men and women over 40 years of age."
Free U. offers diversity; classes popular, crowded
Sex, belly dancing, self-hypnosis and massage aren't subjects of traditional college courses, but these and 34 others are offered in this year's Free University.
Kim Dittmer, director of SUA's Free University, said yesterday that more people than she had expected enrolled in the courses.
"I hope we can keep this pace going," she said. "It's too bad when the have limits and can't move."
Bicycle repair, Massage, Self-Hypnosis,
Sex and the Modern Age, Sensitivity
Training Encounters, Trapping Kansas
Furbenbers and the Writings of C. S. Lewis
popular classes.
Enrollment has reached the limits set by
instructors. Ditmer said.
SIZE LIMITS are necessary because of small classrooms. Mike Potter, instructor of a class called Black and White characters because there was limited darkroom space because there was limited darkroom space.
Tom Leigh, who teaches a bicycle repair course, said he suffered from a lack of training.
One class, however, had a different kind of limitation—a spiritual one. Acting as a teacher, she was forced to Hashinger the theater director, Peggy Baldwin. She said the class was closed because new students wouldn't be able to achieve the full potential, so coerce if they had missed the first sessions.
BALDWIN ALSO closed the class because
"The one thing I'd like to see is the program reaching into the community. We have a lot of people in the community who could benefit from the classes," she said.
Although the Free University is stronger this year than last year, Dittmar said, it is also a better option.
"I't hard to relate to more than 12 people at a time on a high quality basis," she said
Fewer than 20 persons who aren't KU students are enrolled in the Free University
Dittmer said she expected the program to cost about $500 this semester. of the catalogs, and catalogues, She said that about 3,000 catalogues had been distributed and that sales were up 17%
THE ILLUSTRATED MAN (1969)
Dir. Jack Smick, with
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Oct., Oct. 4, 7:30, 75c
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SCIENCE FICTION SERIES
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger declared yesterday that southern Africa was on a course toward peace and racial justice but outside powers had "no hope" of war and racial hatred could "doom" opportunities that might never return."
ALICE IN WONDERLAND (1951)
Dr. Clyde Goremin
Carrell Carroll
Walt Disney animated
Fri, Oct 1, 7:00 and 9:30, $1
Sat, Oct 2, 7:00 and 9:30
All Films shown in Woodruff Auditorium
CLASIFIES SERIES
FILMS OF THE MAYSLES BROS
Oct. 6 • 9,59AM
CALEM SAWN (1968)
and
CHRISTO'S VALLEY CURTAIN
Dir. Mayssles Bros.
Charlotte Zwierin.
Wed., Oct. 6, 7; 30, $1
Kissinger criticizes influence in Africa
WITH K.U. ID.
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WELCOME PARENTS!
PAGE 9
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Friday. October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
3
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U. ID.
PRICE
Staff Writer
Thurmond supports Ford because of fiscal policies
By BETH SPRINGGATE
"I tresponsible" spending by Congress is the overriding reason why Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-SC, is supporting President Trump to re-election this fall, Thurmond said yesterday.
"Thank goodness Ford is a veto President with the spending of Congress," he said. "If not for Mr. Ford's veto, it would have cost this country $10 billion."
At a press conference at the Kansas Union, he said that even though he thought Congress had spent too much money during the United States didn't cut defense spending.
"If we're going to avoid an all-out war, we've got to remain strong," he said.
THURMOND CRITICIZED Carter for submitting to pressure from Labor Union bosses, not showing concern about the growth of federal power and for supporting a proposal allowing voter registration by mail.
He said the postal service registration could lead to a great voting scandal.
The scandal could go to an extreme in which people send in the names from tombstones to register as voters, Thurmond said.
Thurmond has avoided scandals during his career, and has been labeled an honest politician by columnist Jack Anderson, who wrote in his "a model of personal integrity."
THURMOND SAID that the general feeling in Washington, D.C. about the
Bob Dole, Republican party chairman at the time of the Watergate break-in and now GOP vice presidential candidate, has been cleared of any involvement in the scandal, Thurmadow said, and Ford made a good choice in Dole.
Watergate scandal was that Nixon didn't scandle the break-in, but became involved when he tried to protect his friends in the cover-up.
"I think Bob Dole has all of the qualities to show," he said. Selle Doha shows good sense.
Thurmond, a senator for 22 years, plans to run for re-election in 1978, despite his statement that there should be a 12-year limit on a congressman's service.
He also said he would like to see a president elected for one six-year term with a majority.
LIMITING THE president to one term, he
made the president more free-
phobic in his office.
Thurmond said, "He could act without fear of favor, without fear of reprisal and not be concerned about everything in terms of re-election."
Thurmord, 73, is as unique in his personal habits as he is in his political philosophy. He is married to Nancy Moore, Miss South Carolina of 1966. They have four children, the oldest of which is five years old.
HE GOES THROUGH a physical fitness routine every day. It includes exercises designed to improve sighting and jumping.
he said my jogging shoes with me "he"
had. "Jogging makes you pant and blow." It
seems that the dog was on its feet.
CANADA
On Campus
**TODAY:** THE GEOLOGY ASSOCIATES meet at 8 a.m. in the Kansas Union's Council Room. The KANSAS BAR ASSOCIATION meets at 9 a.m. in the Union's Forum Room. HOPE AWARD balloting for five finalists continues from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard. SENIOR CLASS MEMBERS meet at 10 a.m. and the KU-YO ISSUES AND IDEAS small group discussion on racism meets at 11 a.m. in 11B Level 3 of the Union. A PHARMACY SEMINAR begins at 1 p.m. in the Union's Woodruff Auditorium. AN OPEN MEETING for students, faculty and staff members to talk with Chancellor Archie Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, starts at 1 p.m. in the Union's Big Eight Room. SENIOR DELTA PI will be from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. in the University. THE SENIOR GALLIA PARTY will be from 7 a.m. in Broken Arrow Park.
Events
SATURDAY: THE OCTOGINTA BREAKFAST BICYCLE RIDES at 7:30 a.m. at South Park. CLARK BRICKER, professor of chemistry will lecture on "Science and Technology" at 10 a.m. in the Union's Woodruff Auditorium. THE KANSAS EDITORS' DAY begins at 10 a.m. in the Union's Big Eight Room. THE UNION MEMORIAL CORPORATION meets at 10:30 in the Union's Walthur穴房. The union is planning a new campus for members, students and their parents starts at noon at the Potter Lake Pavilion. AN ANTHROPOLOGY picnic for faculty, starts and undergraduates starts at 4 p.m. in Centennial Park.
TONIGHT: BOOKFELLOWS meets at 6:30 in the Union's English Room. The GEOLOGICAL SURVEY ADVISORY COUNCIL meets at 6:45 in the Union's Watkins Room. KAPPA ALPHA PSI meets at 7:13 in the Union's Pine Room. THE KU FOLK DANCE CLUB meets at 7:13 at Potter's Lake Pavilion, or in case of bad weather, in 173 Robinson Gymnasium. CAMPUS CRUSADERS meets at 7:30 in the Union's Big Eight Room.
SUNDAY: THE OCTOGINTA BICYCLE RACE begins at 7 a.m. at South Park.
SUA CHEFS CLUB耍 at 2 m.p.m. in the Union Parls B and The KU FENCING CLUB TOURNAMENT要 at 1 p.m. in North Gym of Robinson Gym.
THE KU FENCING CLUB要 at 1 p.m. in International Room, KAPPA ALPSHA 要 at 7 p.m. in the Union's Gold Room. OMEGA PSI PHI Pearls要 at 7 p.m. in the Union's Jayhawk Room.
LAMBDA CHI ALPSHA 要 at 7 p.m. in the Union's Regionalist Room.
HILLGREST Bowl 842-1234
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Sat. midnight till Sun. 5 a.m.
Wed. midnight till Thurs. 4 a.m.
Sat. noon till 5 p.m.
Sun. 1 p.m. till 5 p.m.
PRACTICE TIME: 2 games for $1
Mon. 9-12 a.m.
Sun. 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
RAZZLE DAZZLE: $50 jackpot for series of strikes
Strikes on colored head pin wins
cash Converted splits win prizes
Sat. 6:30 and 9 p.m.-$4/ 3 games
Phone for information and reservations
Mon—9 a.m.-6 p.m. and 9 p.m.-midnight
Tuesday—noun 6 p.m. and 9 p.m.-midnight
Wed—9 a.m.-6 p.m. and 9 p.m.-4 a.m. Thurs
Friday—noun 6 p.m. and 9 p.m.-4 a.m.
Friday—9 a.m. till 5 a.m. Sat.
Sat—noon till 5 a.m. Sun.
Sun—9 a.m. till 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m.-midnight
OPEN BOWLING:
300 newspaper editors expected at Editors' Day
Two professional journalists will be the keynote speakers at the annual Kansas Election Forum.
Roscoe Born, associate editor of the National Observer, and Bill Branen, president of the National newspaper Association, will address about 300 Kansas newspaper editors in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Born, former managing editor of the University Daily Kansan and a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, will speak about daily newspapers. Born is also currently editor-in-residence at the School of Journalism and lectured in several journalism classes yesterday and now teaches at the University Daily Kansan.
Branen, whose topic will be weekly newspapers, is publisher of the Standard Press in Burlington, Wis., and owner of six other Wisconsin newspapers.
The editors also will be guests of the university at the Kansas-Wisconsin football game.
KU student dies
The announcement of the inductee to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame, which is presented each fall to honor a late Kansas editor is part of editors' Dav.
Ron Bonne, Wellesville senior in electrical engineering, died Wednesday at the KU hospital.
A resident of Naimshi Hall, Boone, 21, was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Boone, Wellsville. He had planned to graduate in December 1977.
The funeral will be at 2:30 p.m. at Wilson and Son Chapel in Wellsville. The family suggests memorials to the Leukemia Research Foundation.
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&
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With New Accounts
CLOSE TO CAMPUS
- Campus Bank-
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SMILE
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The cast of the decade.
The western adventure
of a lifetime.
PG 12+
M.G.M presents
THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT.
Part 2
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
The cast of the decade. The western adventure of a lifetime.
M-G-M presents THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT. Part 2
Eve.7:30 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun.Mat.2:30 Varsity
JOHN WAYNE LAUREN BACALL "THE SHOOTIST"
Eve.7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun.2:30 Granada
STANLEY KUBRICK'S BARRY LYNDON
Sat.-Sun.1:15 Eve.7:45 only Hillcrest
WOODY ALLEN in "Sleeper" 7:15 PG
"Bananas" 8:45 PG
"Everything . . . R About Sex..." 10:15 Hillcrest
Enjoy the biggest, grandest, action-filled pirate movie ever!
SWASHBUCKLER
Eve.7:30-9:25 Sat.-Sun.Mat.1:30 Hillcrest
ROBERT SHAW JAMES EARL JONES PETER BOYLE GEMEVIEVE BUJOLD BEAU BRIDGES GEOFFERY HOLDER
LATE SHOW
Friday & Saturday nights At 11:45 only Hillcrest
MAX VON SYDOW DOMINIQUE SANDA in HERMANN HESSE'S Steppenwolf
FOR MADMEN ONLY
(This is not a skin-flick)
Ends Friday
TAXI DRIVER Plus SHAMPOO Show starts at 7:30 Surset
M-G-M presents
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ENTERTAINMENT.
Part 2
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30
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STANLEY KUBRICK'S
BARRY
LYNDON
PG-2
Sat.-Sun.
1:15
Eve. 7:45 only
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7:15 PG
"Bananas"
8:45 PG
"Everything
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10:15
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SWASHBUCKLER PG
Eve. 7:30-9:25 Sat.Sun.Mat. 1:30
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GEORGE FEY HOLDER
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Friday & Saturday nights
At 11:45 only
Hillarent
BARBERS, CINEMAS & MUSEUMS
MAX VON SYDOW
DOMINIQUE SANDA in
HERMANN
HESSE'S
Steppenwolf
(This is not a skin-flick)
Ends Friday
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Show starts at 7:30
Sunset
COLD WINES & BEER One of the finest selections in town
A group of people are sitting at a table, enjoying each other's company. They are holding drinks and smiling. In the background, there are more people engaged in various activities.
JON T.GREEN Retail Liquor Store
841-2277
802 W. 23 ST.
COLD KEG BEER
Senior Regalia
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DO
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D
77
A
AY
Friday, Oct. 1
4-7 p.m.
Broken Arrow Park
27th & Louisiana
Free beer to all class members wearing senior jerseys.
Food will be available
Pick up senior jerseys 10 a.m.-1 p.m. in Pine Room of the Kansas Union
4
Friday, October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Leisure
MARTIN MAYER
Star struck
Jum Ivey, Chicago junior, does a little loosening up for his title role in Wednesday
night's dress rehearsal of "Anatol." The play begins at 8 tonight in the Inger Theatre, Murphy Hall.
'Anatol' production sparkles throughout
If first impressions are true representations of character, then it is safe to say that the forthcoming 1976-77 KU theater season should be nothing short of phenomenal.
By GREGG HEJNA
Reviewer
The new season opened last night with 'Anatol', a cycle of four plays set in Vienna in the late 1800s. The plays center on a do-do man, a town-far a playboy, and the women in his life.
JAMES IVY works well in his role of Anatol. He underplays his role in the small Inge Theatre, choosing to develop his character with voice inflection and facial expressions. When he agonizes over his lower's possible infidelity, it isn't what
The role of Max, Anastol's best friend and confident, is played superbly by Frank Robert Freeman. In his character, Freeman is called upon for a challenge, when he conveys them all well. Max is always there to smooth his friend's mistakes, pull him back when he's gone too far and push when he hasn't gone far enough.
'Shootist' is Wayne's best shot
Each one of the four plays centers on a woman, who is or has been the object of Anatol's love.
By CHUCK SAC
"It's an-American not to like John Wayne."—Harvey Kelley in "Who's That Knocking on My Door?"
The John Wayne movies of recent years have been a real test of patriotism. Often accused of playing the same character in every film, Wayne has plodded through almost every movie he's made in the last 10 years. But the fact that sexuality isn't enough for most of his fans, but since the retirement of Howard Hawks and John Ford, no director has been able to keep the Duke
NOW, IN "The Shootist",
John Wayne gives a portrayal
composite of his legendary
competition, with his rise to
the challenges of the subxued
under control long enough to make a decent film with him.
"True Grit" gave Wayne an Academy Award, yet his performance in that film didn't earn him the honor, even if he did wear an eyepatch. And too many of his films since then have been potbottlers like Charlie Brown, whom seemed preoccupied with the logistics of making the tired old fossil look alive.
Miles Hood Swarthout and Scott Hale script.
Beginning with a review of an imaginary career composed of clips from earlier westerns, the film follows Wayne in the guee of gunslumber J. B. Books. The year is 1901, and Books has just returned to Carson City to get a doctor's diagnosis of his pains.
he says that makes it believable, but how he says it.
Dr. Hoestelier (Jimmy Stewart) has the unpleasant task of confirming his old friend's fears. Books has a cancer Hoestelier gives him a book on how to live. Determined to die quietly and with dignity, Books takes an apartment run by the Widow
THE SUPPORTING cast is composed of many familiar faces. Besides Lauren Bacall and Jimmy Stewart, Richard Brennan, Larry Hobrien O'Brien and John Carridine have guest star roles.
Rogers (Lauren Bacall) to prepare himself for death.
But even though the film's affectionate handling of its star makes it clear that these actors are on hand to pay tribute to the greatest box-office star of all time. "The Shootist" avoids the clichés associated with marred last year's "Roster Cogburn." Then, the pairing of Wayne and Katherine Hepburn in the twilight of their careers
IN THE ROLE OF the doomed vigilante, Wayne is
seemed antichimacic. "The Shootist" doesn't allow time for such reflections.
Under the sure hand of veteran director Don Siegel, Books is slowly surrounded by friends who have revelled in the tales of his past glories in the area resent him. Carson City fills with punk gunmen to establish their territory in the city. Books. Two men try to murder him in his sleep. And the town marshal tells him, "The day they lay you away, what I do grave not pass for flowers."
made to seem even greater because his screen legend evokes the proper sense of awe and admiration commands from the townpeople.
THE FIRST woman to make an appearance is La Dene Morton as Cora, Anatol's current lover, who his suspects is unfaithful to him. The scenario is devoted to Anatol hypnotizing the girl to ask her if she wants to be arguing with Max when he doesn't have the courage to know the truth.
Far from being the broad self-parody he played in "The Cowboys," Wayne here is a real-life country boy who obides by a strict personal code. And in the best Wayne tradition, "The Shootist" is a straight-shooting moral tale. Most important of all, through this film returns to this proper place as a true hero.
So what if it is just a John Wayne flick? By God, it makes you proud to be an American.
Gabrielle, of an Anatou-former lovers, is portrayed by Teresa Peterson. She is a woman who often leaves left by Anatol and sees no reason to hide her bitterness over it. She can be as elegant as a waltz or as cold and bitter as the December evening when she meets him in a difficult role that Peterson performs with apparent ease.
The few lines of dialogue Cora has before she drifts off to sleep are humorous and Morton delivers them well.
HEATHER LAIRD as Annie provides humor in the play when she tells Anatol she is leaving him before he can break things off to go with his new found love. The irony is clear as
Anatol breaks into a towering rage. As the champagne drenched Annie, Leair says her humorous farewell to her lover with a dry wit mixed in innocent charm.
Anatol spends his last night of bachelorhood with Illona, played by Barbara Mounsey. She becomes enraged when she finds that she is to be discarded by Anatol. Illinois delivers a rotten punch up to the adage that hath hell fry like a woman scorned.
AS THE FIREY Illona.
Mounse has the strongest role of the four women and she more than convincing performance.
J. L. McClure, who directed and translated the Arthur Schnitzler plays, did a far better job than one would expect of someone who is only a graduate student. In the forthcoming theater productions directed by Mamie Dorsey, the direction shouldn't falter in comparison with other directors.
McClure did an excellent *pwm* of knowing when to direct with an iron fist and when to allow a finger to touch their characters on their own.
ED KIRKMAN'S sets were simple, often consisting of no more than a prop or two, but nonetheless he conveys the mood of the scene without fail. The absence isn't less, but just enough.
Emil Muffich's faithful recreation of the Victorian age costumes was flawless down to the smallest detail.
Anatol is a play that exhibits rare balance between what is not too little in the theater. The effect prompts interesting evening of theater.
This Week's
Highlights
Concerts
"MOZART, I LOVE YOU
MADLY!" is presented by the
Kansas City Philharmonic
tonight and tomorrow night at
7:45 in the Multimedia Forum
Hotel in Kansas City, Mo.
THE AMERICAN STRING
OIL MEMBERSHIP
formers in this year's Chamber
Series, plays sunday afternoon
at 10 a.m. SWarthwock, Recital
Hall 39 Murray Street
THE KANSA $ CITY
PHILHARMONIC performs works by Mozart, Bach and Haydn. From 3:30 to the Nelson Art Gallery, 451f and Oak, Kansas City, Mo. MARGARET LING, harpist; KAREEL BLAAS, violist, and JOHN BOULEVARD, faculty recital. Monday night at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy.
LAWRENCE MAXEY plays
the marimba in a faculty
recital Tuesday night at 8
Saworth Hall Recital Hail in
ALAN HAWKINS bassoon
DONNY SMITH drums
player gives a live
recital Wednesday night at 8 in
Swarthworth. Recital Hall in
Exhibits
"THE BARK ARTISTS OF
YORKCITY, displayed on the
Union Gallery is its collection of painting on bark by artists.
The exhibit ends August 21."
"PHOTOGRAPHS," a color photo journal with white and black photographic area photographers, is on display beginning Sunday at the 7EZ Museum.
"ST. PETERSBURG-PETROGRAD INLINGRAG"
pictures and book biography of pilots and book displays, displayed at Watson Library.
THE MAX KADE COLLECTION, consisting of 19th-cen
tury German oil paintings and prints by Whistler and Andres Zorn, on display on Thursday at the Union Gallery.
Theater
“ANATOL” Arthur Schmitz’s cycle of one act comedies he performed at the Vienna man about town, is performed at 8 tonight through Oct. 9 in the William Isement Memorial Theatre, Murray Hall.
"THE BUTTERFLY," by THE
BUTTERFLY,
"Young People's Production
series, is performed tomorrow
morning at 10:30 in the
Museum."
The Kansas City City Lyric Opera gives its last performance of "DOE" tonight at 8:15 at the Lyric Theatre, 11th and Central streets, Kansas City, Mo. The concert is titled "CHENIER" Wednesday night at 7:30 at the Theatre and will be performed for "LA TRAVIATE," which will also be performed Thursday night both at 8:15 at the
Nightclubs
RIVER ROCK, a blue grass
and country rock band, plays
tonight from 9 to 12 at the
Nest in the Kansas
Union.
GARY HILDENBROD, folk singer and guitar player, plays his songs from 11 p.m. to 2 a.m. at the 7th SPIRIT. MAXM TANENT, country guitarist and ballad singer, plays his night from 9 to 12 on the 7th SPIRIT.
THE TOM MONTGOMERY
to 12 at a1f Gray's Jazze Place.
CLAUDE WILLIAMS, [aez]
grown up in the garden night
from 1 to a1f Gray's Jazze Place.
TREE FROG plays country-
rock music tonight from 9 to 12
at Off the Wall Hall, and
RHYTHEM FUNCTION, a
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during weekdays. There will be 10 days, Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 5 days, Third-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 4 days, Fourth-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. a year in Douglas County and $1 a semester or $20 a semester. A year in Douglas County and $1 a semester or $20 a semester paid through the student activity fee.
Editor Business Manager
Dana Thompson
SWAHBUCKLER — Robert Washburn and Genevieve lead the way in this pirate adventure. The production is designed to promote realism, so that the light-hearted spirit of the genre is obscured by the gorriness of the story.
BARRY LYNDON-Stanley Kubrick's tenth film flopped at the box office, despite its beauty, despite its undeniable beauty. Heavily ironic, it's too ponderously padded to make the movie effective. Slarring Ryan O'Neal.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Reggine band, will play tomorrow night from 9 to 12. Monday night the rock 'n' sneeze COMES plays at the Hail from 9 to 12. COMES plays at the Hail from 9 to 12. Hall's FREE ACOUSTIC JAM SESSION from 7 to midnight, and Thursday night the hall FOLK CONCERT from 9 to 12.
Films
THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT,
Two-Like its predecessor
from the M.G.M. vaults
demonstrates why the studio
got its reputation for lavish
creature sets. And almost all the worthwhile
material was exhausted in Part II.
These sequences are more often stupid than suspendous, and the auxiliary comedy scenes only succeed.
ALICE IN WONDERLAND
DALYCE the version later called Carroll's original, and it was considered a failure by the public and the press.
GIMME SHELTER and WILD-APPENNING — two more films by Brothers. The former is a record of the Rolling Stones' disastrous Atamunt concert, which critically captured a murder on film. The latter follows the story of their initial American tour.
SALESMAN and CHRISTOS'
VALLEY CURTAIN—Directed by the Mayays Brothers and
clients of Chelsea Plains films contrast tellies in the poverty
and plenty. Salesman deals with
several door-to-door salesmen
who pledge $5 Bibles in slum
neighborhoods. Christo's Valley
Curtain is a documentary about
the lives of art across a Colorado pass.
Check ads for showtimes.
Burger bugged? Try natural foods
By ROB EMBERS
You've been a burger joint junkie for years and now, after a bad trip on a quarter pound, you decided to cook healthy food to help your failing health. Where can you go?
A good place to start would be Massachusetts street, where natural food restaurants and one natural food grocery.
THEY ARE called natural food restaurants because the food they serve is generally unprocessed and unprepared. For example, instead of buying bread, Cornucopia bakes its own, using unprocessed flour.
Glenn Sohl, one of the owners of the Cormopusia Restaurant, 1801 Massachusetts St., called his restaurant a scratch food restaurant because most foods are made using basic ingredients possible. He said the restaurant served high quality, but inexpensive meals.
SOHL, A FORMER KU student, started the restaurant two years ago, and despite not having had previous restaurant experience, he's making a profit.
"I found myself going nowhere in school, so I started something I could get satisfaction from," be said. "I'd be a fifth semester freshman who had stayed in school."
THE CAFE ALSO prepares its meals from scratch, using no sugar, white flour, hydrogenated oils or food containing preservatives or additives. Because it is a
For those who run Sister Kettle Cafe, 1347 Massachusetts is making a profit is a collection is a collectively owned and operated vegetarian restaurant. About 50 people are in the restaurant, and they are paid an hourly wage for working in the cafe.
Sue Bryant, one of the members of the collective, said one of the main reasons for opening the cafe was to educate the public on the need to eat locally and sustainably. She said meat production used large amounts of grain needed for human consumption.
vegetarian cafe, no meat, fish or fowl are served.
ANOTHER REASON for opening the restaurant, she said, was to create jobs for members of the collective.
"I'm very philosophically in favor of creating your own job," she said. "I also like working with a group of people
Vegetarian meals cost more in the winter...because the prices of fruits and vegetables go up then.
with a common idea. It's sort of like a big family."
Sister Kettle Cafe gets some of its food from another collective, The Community Merchantile, 615 Massachusetts St. The 300 members of the Merchantile food their食 in food for two hours of work a month and a $5 membership fee.
PATTY SPENCER, a member of the collective, said that nonmembers were welcome to buy in the store, but that most business came from members.
She said the store carried both organic and inorganic foods, and that hasn't been sprayed by insecticide or grown with insecticide.
The Casabah Cafe, 803 Massachusetts St., the oldest of the Massachusetts Street natural food restaurants, is nestled in the back of a craft shop. Its menu, like most
natural food restaurants, lists meals that may be strange to students who are used to eating meat. Shrimp and vegetable tempura, dipped in egg batter and fried in pure soybean oil, or crab quiche are two of the meals served at the Casahb.
ALAN AIDSF, a cook at the Casbah, said students could probably afford some of the food they would get good food.
"I don't think I was aware until I started working here of the difference between run-of-the-mill fast food places and good food," he said. "I've seen the short cuts they take."
The employees at the Casbah are dedicated, Aidif said, and won't serve anything that appeal to them personally.
Looking at a typical natural food meal, one gets the idea that anything that grows is appealing. Organic broccoli, asparagus, brussel sprouts and celery are some of the weeds by burger freaks are just a few of the foods that natural food eaters like.
AIDIF SAID the meal prices were usually about three times the price of the food they are less because people will pay only so much for certain foods, he said. Vegetarian meals cost more in the winter, he said, because the prices of out-of-season fruit and vegetables go up them.
Bryant said the prices at Sister Kite Cafe were about $15 per person for ingredients. This compares favorably, she said, with most restaurants, which charge the cost of the ingredients.
BOTH THE CASBAH and the Cornucopia have cooks prepare the meals. The meals are frozen and heated in a microwave oven after they have been ordered. Sister Kettle Cafe does not use microwave ovens.
THE CAFE
The essentials Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENEI
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Decor at Sister Kettle Cafe, one of Lawrence's natural food restaurants, including ceiling fans and bar stools. The cafe is a collective where about 30 members are paid hourly wages to operate it.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, O:
IF YOU WANT TO BE A STAR, YOU OUGHT TO DRESS LIKE ONE.
DONNA GILLETT AND RICKY ROWE
res is a es to
Some of us were born to be football stars.
Others of us are stars in the band. And a few of us are stars in the classroom.
But all of us can look like a star. At Garb-Age we cover you with clothes that say "star" in every stitch.
And here are some of the great clothes that can make you a star:
- Blue jeans trimmed in leather
- Twenty different blue jean styles
- Blue denim jackets
- Beautiful corduroy jeans
- Fashion overalls
- Girls sweaters
- Guys sweaters
- Guys suits
- Leather coats
Denim vests
Denim ski coats
- Fashion jumpsuits
- Soft flannel shirts
- The best selection of fashion blue jeans in Lawrence
- And free alterations on everything
So, if you really want to be a star, come to Garb-Age. As you can see we have the material stars are made of.
GARBAGE
840 MASS. ST., LAWRENCE
STANLEY WATSON
GARB LAGE
840 MASS ST. LAWRENCE
GARBAGE
6
Friday, October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
23 3
Staff photo by JAY KOELZFI
Halfbacks Bill Campfield and Laverne Smith celebrate another KU touchdown
KU men's cross country team competes in O-State Jamboree
Sports Writer
By STEVE CLARK
The KU men's cross country squad
treats to the Colorado water, Okla,
for Bg. Okla. (Mike)
The race will be run on a 10,000 meter (6.2 mile) course that winds through the intramural fields on the Stillwater campus. The race will be more than two miles farther than the Jahyhaw's initial effort Sept. 30. The winner of University Gold Classic, it could help.
"We've been putting in 80-100 miles a week," George Mason, Clarksville, Ark. "We have trained our team's distance" will help us, particularly our team (Rocce), Bruce (Coldsmith) and myself."
Roscoe, Terre Haute, Ind., senior; Coldsmith, Alexandria, Va., sophomore; and Mason led KU to a fourth place finish at Wichita.
Rounding out the squad that will make the trip are Joel Camron, Coffeeville junior; Ted Crank, Hutchinson junior; Bill Ensz, Wichita sophomore; and Rick Ensz, Wichita sophomore.
This will be the first meet of the year for Ensz, who is replacing Brent Swanson, Topeka freshman. Swanson has been slowed by a sore muscle above the kneecap and coach Bob Timmons has decided to not play him this weekend.
As usual, the Jamboree boasts an impressive field that includes Arkansas University, Kansas State University, Texas Tech University, Oklahoma University, State and the host Alabama State squad.
Netters face Iowa State
The women's tennis team will try for its second win of the fall season when it plays the Iowa State Cyclones at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow on the Allen Field House courts.
Kansas will start the same six girls it had in last weekend's 9-9 victory over Wichita State, but the order will be slightly changed, coach Tom Kivisto said yesterday.
KU defeated ISU last spring, 8-1. The Cyclones were fourth in the big Eight last season.
In doubles Kivisto will stick with the same teams that won last Friday.
Carrie Fotopoulos, Astrid Daksa and Mary Stauffer will remain in the top three positions. Marlene Cook, who played in the No. 6 position against WSU, has been moved up to the No. 4 slot, Lynda Hill, who was No. 4 last week, will play the No. 5 position and Tracy Spellman will play at the No. 6 position.
Tomorrow's meet originally was scheduled for today and tomorrow with KU, ISU, and Oklahoma State. OSU, however, won't make the trip because of the resignation of coach Betty Edgley earlier this week.
"I'm disappointed we won't be able to play them," Kivisto said.
There are also some outstanding individual performers in the race. And Mason will face a strong challenge from Arkansas' Nielt O'Shaughnessy and Oklahoma's Stan Vernon in his attempt to capture his second consecutive race.
Kansas would have liked to get back at OSU for the 54 loss the 'Hawks suffered to them in the semifinals of Big Eight meet last season.
KC eyes title;
3 games left
needing only a victory or an Oakland loss to win the American League West title, the Kansas City Royals close the regular season with a victory over the Minnesota Twins in Royalts Stadium.
The Royals, who clinched a tie for the division crown with a 4-0 victory over Oakland Wednesday to win pitch Dog Bird 8-7 at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday's games start at 1:30 p.m.
Field hockey at NU
KU's field hockey team will attempt to extend its perfect record to 5-10 when it meets the University of Nebraska at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Lincoln, Neb.
The Jayhawks who beat Emporia Kansas State College, with a score of 6-0 last Wednesday, were scheduled to play Central Michigan on Friday yesterday, but the game was cancelled.
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The Wisconsin Badgers haven't forgotten the pounding they got last year from the University of Kansas, and there's little doubt that they will be out for revenge when they line up against KU at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Memorial Stadium.
By BRENT ANDERSON
Associate Sports Editor
Last week, when one would think the Badgers would have been preparing for their game last Saturday against Washington State, Wisconsin players were talking about their coming game against Kansas.
"Some pretty harsh things were said about us," Wisconsin defensive end Pat Collins said yesterday. "The papers especially came down pretty hard. But the fact was, we just didn't have much practice against the wishbone.
BUSCONSIN coach John Jardine said he was certain the Cougars would be ready for the trip.
"To me this game means something extra. Cromwell is a good athlete, and faster than most quarterbacks. But this year I'll be ready."
"I'm not making any excuses when I say we weren't ready for KU's wishbone last week but we know we need to get ready for it this time. Kansas probably has the best quarterback for running the wishbone in the country. Cromwell is the best option, and he runs the wishbone as well as anyone."
BREWING COMPANY
Brewed in the Mondeau of New Orleans
Made for the Mondeau of New Orleans
DISTRIBUTED BY
THE BREWING COMPANY
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
Grant
IT IS NO coincidence that Cromwell's name was on the lips of Wisconsin coaches and players as they prepared for the game with KU.
"You don't stop the wishbone but you
can stop to slow. You have just got to
keep it away from your face."
COMFORT
In last year's game, Cromwell rushed for 187 yards on 20 carries. in all, KU had 462
Badgers seeking revenge
Last year's game was a turning point for both teams. KU's 4-17 upset victory shot the Jayhawks into the national spotlight. The Jays finished with a disappointing 4-4-1 record.
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The ruggers, meanwhile, travel to Kansas city for games with the River Quay team on Saturday.
Soccer here; ruggers to KC
The KU Soccer Club and the Lawrence Rugby Club continued fall action this weekend with one team at home and the other on the road.
In the Badger's game against Washington State, Wisconsin quarterback Mike Carroll three touchdowns passes and ran for a fourth. So far this season, carrol has passed for 493 yards and completed 38 of 72 passes.
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But Wisconsin court Jardine hesitated to say whether he thought the Badgers would be able to win.
Several newspaper cuffings were put up Wednesday outside KU's locker room about Wisconsin, and Moore's admonition that the Jayhawks be ready for the game was in red magic marker beside them: "If you are not ready, you'd better get ready."
Washington State was both Wisconsin's and KU's second game this season, and both teams handled the Cougars without much problem. The Badgers beat Washington State last weekend; Kansas beat Washington State, *35*-16, Sept. 11 in Lawrence.
"You can bet your life they haven't forgotten last year's game," KU coach Bud Moore said. "They're going to go after us, and we'd better be ready for them."
Kansan Predictions
yards rushing, including 99 from hallback Lavern Smith and 88 from backlash Norris
"We've had some good workouts this
Livonale said," and "we've seen
some good workout."
She should receive ample support from Kim Glasgow, Salina freshman; Sena Frame, Kinsley freshman; Nancy Bissell, Ekhlart, Ind., sophomore; Mosey Jo Kolarik, Prairie Village freshman; Jo McMillion, Freshman; and Connie Lane, Mission junior.
GAME SCHOENFELD ANDERSON VICE ABOUHALKAH
Wisconsin at Kansas Kansas 28-18 Kansas 28-18 Kansas 30-18 Kansas 17-18
Oklahoma at Iowa State Oklahoma Oklahoma 28-14 Oklahoma 21-14 Oklahoma 30-14 Oklahoma 22-16
Kansas State at Florida St. Florida St. KState 15-14 Florida St. 20-8 Florida St. 17-10
North Texas at Oklahoma St. Okla. St. Okla. St. 28-10 Okla. St. 24-10 Okla. St. 21-7 Okla. St. 21-13
Drake at Colorado Colorado Colorado Colorado Colorado 40-10 Colorado 30-10
North Carolina at Missouri Missouri Missouri Missouri 39-17 Missouri 39-17 N. Carolina 34-14
Miami (Flor.) at Nevada Nevada 30-17 Nebraska 38-17 Nebraska 47-7
Alabama at Georgia Georgia Alabama Georgia 17-17 Georgia 17-14 Alabama 17-14
Prediction Record 15-8 17-8 17-8 17-8
KU has fewer injuries than it has had in weeks; only two players will miss the game. Defensive end Harry Murphy still is sidelined with a broken forearm and safety Jud Mitchell is suffering from a dislocated knee cap.
Among the teams participating will be Kansas State, Wichita State, North-Texas State, Northwest Missouri State, Oklahoma, and the host Oklahoma State squad.
Leading the KU squand thus far in the year is Michelle Brown, Oklahoma City freshman, who placed sixth in the Jayhawks' open meet at Wichita.
Wisconsin is scheduled to arrive in Lawrence early this afternoon and plans a light workout in Memorial Stadium later today.
"We're obviously going to try to pass the football," Jardine said, "but that won't be easy. They've got a tough defensive line and backlayers. I think it will be a good game."
Making the Kansas State predictions this fall are Steve Schonefeld, sport editor; Brent Anderson, associate sports editor; Gary Vee, assistant sports editor, and Yale Ahaboukhian, managing editor and Fall Coach.
Badger OB Mike Carroll
Lionville said that Heidi Wallace, longtime junior, will miss tomorrow's game.
The three-mile race starts at 9:30 a.m. on the intramural station at OSU.
Women at OSU
The young Jayhawks—with five freshmen and a sophomore will be exposed to a tough field tomorrow as they travel to Oklahoma State University Jamboree.
The women's cross country team at KU is talent rich and experience poor.
15
"It's a big field and I'm looking forward to it," coach Tom Lommi said yesterday.
In Concert
I
SEDAKA
HOMECOMING Oct.16 Allen Field House Tickets '5,'6,and '7 Available this Friday at the SUA Office Beginning Saturday at Kief's and Caper's Corner
To
Dublief Court and t
Friday. October 1. 1976
e
1
arroll o pass the t won't be we line and be a good
has had in the game.
still is
and safety
dislocated
arrive in and plans aium later
SU at KU is
fresh-posed to a travel to a State
0 a.m. on
forward
tuesday,
talented.
will be
arth-Texas
klahoma,
ad.
outs this we've seen
the year
ty fresh-
yhawks'
from from
Sena
Bissell,
Kolarik,
Million,
Lane
Wallace, borrow's blisters.
KU construction problems minor
Despite more than $13.8 million worth of current construction and remodeling projects at the University of Kansas, no research problems appear to have arisen.
According to Max Lucas, University director of facilities planning, problems always spring up on major construction projects, but so far all problems have been poor.
Casson Construction Co. was asked Monday to repaint 17 cement panels used to form the outer skin of the new School of Law in New York City. The meet state standards and will be replaced.
LUCAS SAID yesterday that under terms of the construction contract, Casson Construction was required to fix or replace the panels.
"So far we've been able to anticipate any problems and meet them," he said.
The three major construction projects now underway on the Lawrence campus are a $4.9 million law building northwest of Allen Field House, a $7.5 million visual arts building south of Marvin Hall and a $4.6 billion art museum west of the Kansas Union.
The new Green Hall law building and the new art museum, the Helen Foresman
Spencer Museum of Art, are expected to be open in the summer of 1978. The visual arts building is expected to be open in the summer or fall of 1978.
LUCAS SAID that along with the major construction projects, modifications were being made in Railley and Flint hills so that elevators could be installed. HEW has given the elevators, to make curb cubs and to modify restrooms for the physically handicapped.
He also said that recent remodeling in the Union would cost slightly more than $50,000. The Union lobby now is open to the public and work continues on the west stairway.
University Daily Kansan
The visual arts building will bring together all departments and areas under its umbrella. It also provides visual arts. That department has been divided into the department of design and the department of art. These departments now have classes in 23 different places on campus.
THE LAW SCHOOL will provide modern facilities for law students, an expanded law library and specialized teaching rooms for law classes. Lucas said.
Lucas said the art museum was designed specifically to exhibit art work in the best
"It will be a high quality building for display of the KU art collection and for"
*
Lucas said he hoped that construction of a new computation center, east of Robinson Park, would be completed.
possible manner." The building will have open galleries and teaching space.
The bids for the computation center have been received, he said, and are well within the budget. The cost of the computation center is estimated at $5 million.
Before the problem of hunger can be dealt with effectively, it must be considered a public policy issue, Arthur Simon, founder and director of Bread for the World, said yesterday afternoon in a talk at the Kansas Union.
"In 1985 developing countries will be short in 88 million tons a year in grain unless some things are done to change the trends," he said.
The bids will be forwarded to the state architect, who will give his decision to the state purchasing office.
Traffic court, ombudsman, search touched upon at SenEx meeting
SenEx had acted earlier this semester to temporarily increase the size of the court to 15 judges to clear the backlog. Court members, who are law students, recommended a change to a variable court size instead.
By JERRY SEIB Staff Writer
Organization wants help in solving world hunger
Public policy issues, such as unemployment and trade imbalance, must be considered because of their effect on the worldwide hinge problem, Simon said.
A backlog of traffic ticket appeals has been building in the traffic court since it was begun in 1972. The code now restricts only nine student judges, who hear grievances.
—Sent a letter to Dykes expressing SenEx's regret that Dykes refused to add two faculty members to the search committee for the new University Director of Institutional Research and Information Systems.
THE SENEX action on traffic-court changes begin the lengthy process of modifying the University Senate Code. The code is the list of rules governing the university's policies, including the University Council and the University Senate, then approval by Dykes.
During a short meeting yesterday, SenEx briefly discussed the Parking and Traffic Court, the proposed University embsudman and the search for a new administrator.
—Sent to the University Council proposals for changes in the structure of the traffic court. The changes would allow the chief judge to impose a fine on the court if it faced a heavy case load.
—Heard letters exchanged by Chancellor Archie Dykes and Steve Shapiro, associate professor of law, concerning the ombudman, who would act as a troubleshooter for students and faculty members with complaints. SenEx sent the letters to the Council's Organizations and Activities department, where he thought Dykes' letter indicated he was more favorable about creating an ombudman's office than he previously had been.
THE PROPOSED ombudsman position was approved unanimously this spring by the University Council. Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, have recommended that KU think an ombudsman was necessary because of KU's elaborate grievance procedures.
Discussion of the search for the new
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University Director of Institutional Research and Information Systems was prompted by a letter from Dykes explaining how the university is recruiting members to the search committee.
SENEX EARLIER had requested the addition of the faculty members. It also had asked Dykes to reopen the search so local candidates would have more time to apply. Dykes agreed to reopen the search, but he said yesterday that a change in the committee would cause too much delay in filling the post.
The Director of Institutional Research and Information Systems will be responsible for gathering data about KU for outside agencies, including the state legislature. Dykes said KU was falling behind other state schools in collecting information about the funding needed for academic programs.
COLLEGE ASSEMBLY ELECTION
for
Graduate and Undergraduate Representatives from Nunemaker Center and the Liberal Arts and Sciences
The College Assembly
—Sets requirements for graduate and undergraduate degrees
- Approves or disapprove changes in courses, or new courses offered for credit
— Establishes procedures related to the maintenance of academic policies
Filing applications available at 206 Strong Hall, Nunemaker Center, Student Senate Office, Graduate Student Office, Kansas Union. Filing deadline:4:30 p.m., Friday, October 1, in 206 Strong Hall.
for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Football
Mums
for
Mom
Election will be conducted October 6 and 7 by the Student Senate.
"Massive food aid is not the answer," he said. "Enabling the rural poor to become self-sufficient."
Simon said that public support on legislation concerning the hungry was
"Silence on public policy can lock people out," he said.
Kansas and other Midwest states will have more influence on legislation for the hungry. Simon said, because half of the agricultural Committee are from the Midwest.
"There needs to be a national commitment to help the hungry," Simon said. "Those who share the vision of a world without hunger need to take some initiative.
"A national citizens' movement, spread across the land, is needed as a voice for those who suffer from hunger. The right to food is implied in the right to life."
Bread for the World is a Christian organization that raises money on the basis of a problem. Bread for the World
The organization works to get citizens' support for legislation that would benefit them.
Owens Flower Shop
9th & Indiana 843-6111
INTERNATIONAL DISCO
Presented by INT'L CLUB
United Ministries for Higher Education 1204 OREAD
Oct. 2 (Saturday)
8-12 p.m.
Songs and Dances from 9 different countries Coffee and refreshments
Friday Night 9:30-12:30
THE ARENA
A Private Club 842-2458
The Arena will feature the sounds of MIKE BEERS
Vocalist, pianist, & guitarist Pizza & Sandwiches Available
NO
COVER
CHARGE
Cornucopia
Restaurant 1801 Mass. Announcing
New hours, new Salad Bar from Lawrence's finest. We are now open 10 till 10 daily. Now ten feet of seasonably fresh fruits and yogurt.
HOME BAKED SEVEN GRAIN BREADS, BAGELS,
POT PIES: chicken, beef, turkey.
SHLHD BHR: all the cheese, soup and salad fixings you can eat, also 1/3 lb. seven grain bread.
CREPEs: chicken, turkey, Canadian bacon, crab,
broccoli, asparagus, mixed vegetables.
DELI SANDWICHES: ham, roast beef, Canadian bacon, turkey, corn beef, pastrami, avacado, BLT, cheese.
FINEST NATURAL FRUIT JUICES
**SMELETS:** 4,194,304 possible combinations. Make up your own using our kitchen kitchens list of 22 different items.
Table service with seating for 104. Taped music, beer, and average meal price, including drink only $2 to $4.
Good Food Naturally!
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842-9637
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sirloin
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Give your folks a treat on Parents' Day. Best Place in Town to Bring Your Parents and Friends.
Our motto is and has always been ... "There is no substitute for quality in good food."
1 and 1/2 MILES NORTH OF KAW RIVER BRIDGE
E
Phone 843-1431 for Information
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
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DINING
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[ ]
8
Friday, October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Food prices stable in Lawrence stores
Food prices listed in this week's Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) survey indicate that bacon, tomatoes and onions were better buys this week.
Judy Kroeger, CAA director, said
relative to that price, were staying
adjacent to the store.
food price discrepancies the survey indicated. Kroeger said that an error in taking last week's survey caused the price differences.
The survey, conducted weekly by the 10
Lawrence supermarkets
"The novel I'm working on now, cities of the Red Night, is a pirate novel of the 18th century that deals with time travel and time shifts." he told the class.
From page one
Boredom . . .
"The logic, physical and emotional, of a world in which we have made our environment out of our own nervous system, Burroughs follows everywhere to the peripheral orgasmes of the cosmos."—Marshall McLuhan.
Back in Blake, the talk had turned to drugs and mysticism.
"I have no interest in hallucinogenesis," Burroughs said. "But out-of-body experience is something that happens all the time to everybody."
After his talk Burroughs招呼
over his shoulder in a photographer
hovered over his shoulder.
Dillard's (6th bbl.)
Dillard's (1st bwl)
Randall's (2nd bwl)
Waymire's
Kierger's
Salvette
Falery's
The week's Average
Last week's Average
Milk - 3 per cent, i.g., f. B.
Eggs - Grade A medium
Eggs - Grade B medium
Cottonseed oil - 2 oz.
Marigrette - 1 lb, tub
Crisco oil - 3 oz.
Lemon juice - 1 lb
Ground beef - regular, 1 lb
Brown sausage - regular, 1 lb
Tubel - 4 oz, S.B.
White rice - imed, 1 lb
Beef broth - 1 lb
Sugar - grounded, 5 lb, S.B.
Coffee - 10 oz, lil' B.
Ratatouille - 10 oz, lil' B.
Ratatouille - dark, 15 oz, lil' B.
Planta bean - 10 oz, S.B.
Olive juice - frozen, 10 oz, S.B.
Peas - frozen, 10 oz, S.B.
Potatoes - 10 oz, lil' B.
Carrots - 10 oz, red, 3rd
Onion, yellow, red, 3rd
Olive, yellow, red, 3rd
Pomegranate - 10 oz, lil' B.
Peach - frozen, 10 oz, S.B.
Potato - 10 oz, lil' B.
Carrots - 10 oz, red, 3rd
Onion, yellow, red, 3rd
Olive, yellow, red, 3rd
Pomegranate - 10 oz, lil' B.
2.64 | 2.46 | 2.36 | 2.32 | 2.32 | 2.32 | 2.32 | 2.37 | 2.37 |
2.64 | 2.46 | 2.36 | 2.32 | 2.32 | 2.32 | 2.32 | 2.37 | 2.37 |
8.5 | 7.7 | 8.7 | 7.9 | 8.9 | 8.9 | 8.3 | 8.4 | 8.5 |
8.5 | 7.7 | 8.7 | 7.9 | 8.9 | 8.9 | 8.3 | 8.4 | 8.5 |
1.05 | 1.05 | 1.05 | 1.05 | 1.05 | 1.05 | 1.05 | 1.05 | 1.05 |
- indicates sale price
X indicates item not available
S.B. indicates store brand
IN DEPTH SURVEY: DOMESTIC CHEESE
Dilution %
Diluent %
Diluent %
Warmers %
Krager's %
Sahwery %
Falky's %
Average %
average price per lb.
Kraft Cheese Barrel - sharp, 10 oz.
1.41 1.41 1.65 1.29 X 1.49 1.27 1.49 1.48 1.24
S.B. cheese cheddar - 1 lb.
1.87 1.00 1.59 X 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.37 1.97 1.97 1.97
Colby lollyder - 1 lb., S.B.
1.70 1.74 1.79 X 1.79 X 1.73 X 1.78 X 1.79 1.76 1.76
Kraft domestic wedge - sliced, 6 oz.
2.22 2.22 2.29 X 1.99 1.25 1.99 2.16 2.16
Domestic wedge - sliced, S.B.
1.74 1.73 1.83 1.79 X 1.98 1.99 1.99 1.64 1.84
Mozzarella - 1 lb.
1.74 1.73 1.83 1.79 X 1.98 1.99 1.99 1.64 1.84
Shredded monterey slider - 4 oz.
83 83 83 79 X 79 X 79 X 79 X 81 84 84
Gouda - 7 oz (baby)
83 83 83 79 X 79 X 79 X 79 X 81 84 84
Gouda - 7 oz (baby)
1.23 1.23 1.25 1.45 X 1.35 1.23 X 1.23 1.22 1.63
Kraft-Craft - sliced, 12 oz. pkg.
1.23 1.03 1.09 X 1.09 X 1.09 X 1.27 1.27 1.27
Velvetta - 1 box
processed cheeses, and sliced or shredded cheese is much more expensive than large pieces. You can save a lot of money by using a cheese slicer and shredder.
Look at the unit price per pound (last
column) to compare prices of cheese.
Natural cheese are more expensive than
Wagons . . .
From page one
director to that a camp be set up on the Occone parking lot, near Allen Field House.
O-zone parking lot near Allen Field House. There, vandals cut loose some of the group's horses, and police prevented wagon rampage near the clubhouse. The asphalt parking lot. Horses were forced to remain on the paved lot rather than to be tethered on a grassy area.
Warren Shaw, Topeka, chairman of the State Bicentennial Commission, reportedly asked the wagon train to come "to show-off KU."
ONE COMMISSION member questioned how KU could make such a charge when Bradley provided better services for the wagon train at no charge. Others questioned why the community had volunteered many hours to work on Bicentennial events for free.
PARKER ASKED why the Bicentennial commission should be responsible for the bill if it hadn't invited the wagon train to attend. "The University had not invited the group."
Parker said if the bill for one's day's stay was so high, "Did it enter anybody's mind what it would be for three days of the wagon train?"
Commission members also wringed over the correct wording of the resolution. Park officials have done nothing.
our bill," and said it should be written to say "paying a bill." She said the bill wasn't for services performed for the county Bicentennial group.
After the commission finally approved
the group to total the app-
reciation requested by the
company.
GRADEX POSITION
The Graduate Student Council has a position open on its executive committee [GRADEX] for this year. Applicants must be graduate students currently. For more information call 864-4914 or 864-3011
TO APPLY—bring a brief resume to the Cork Room (GSC office)
Kansas Union by 5:00 P.M.
Monday, October 4, 1976
This advertisement paid for by STUDENT ACTIVITY FEES.
Parents' Day Special
DINNER SPECIAL This Sunday and every following Sunday, Roast Tom Turkey and Baked Ham with Raisin Sauce
with Raisin Sauce
WESTERN FLASH CITY WORLD
BREAKFAST SPECIAL Sept. 30-Oct.10
CAROL LEE DONUTS AND SANDWICH SHOP
No. 3 Breakfast: eggs, hashbrowns, and toast $ 79^{\circ} $
No. 5 Hotcake Breakfast 59°
Day Special
SCIAL
and every
nday,
key and
COUNTRY
KITCHEN
HOME OF
Country Roy
1730 W.23rd 842-3664
Carol Lee
Try Carol Lee's Homemade Sandwiches for Lunch.
Go Jayhawks, Beat Wisconsin.
WALT DISNEY'S
CARTOON CLASSIC
ALICE
in
WONDERLAND
Fri., Oct. 1 — Sat., Oct. 2
7:00 and 9:30 p.m.
3:30 Matinee Saturday only
$1.00 - Tickets available at SUA office.
Woodruff Auditorium-Kansas Union
Save your ticket stub and be admitted to The Hawk's Nest, after evening shows only, for $ 50^{\circ} $
SUA
Car crash
Larry's Auto Supply
Full line of foreign and domestic parts Student discount 25%-45%
1502 W. 23rd
842-4152
AUDIOTRONICS
1000
Car stereo speakers, 8-track players cassette players, AM/FM radios AM/FM with cassette 8-track units go on SALE
10 a.m. Friday, Oct. 1st
until
YOU MAY NOT
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QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET
CITY OF BROOKLYN
Open every Saturday & Sunday
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
842-6616
University Daily Kansas
Friday, October 1, 1976
.
Athletes' academic life checked
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Staff Writer
If you can get an athlete up for breakfast,
there's a good chance he'll go to class.
Hank Hettwert, athletic recruiting and academic coordinator at the University of Kansas, uses that theory to encourage athletes in the academic side of college.
"WE HEAR OF someone going back to
be on us we have a coach check it out,
on us."
"The training table has a checker so we can determine who was there," Hetter said last week. "It's rare for an athlete to miss breakfast, and since he's dressed, up and reasonably awake by then, he might as well go to class.
He said the athletic department doesn't seek special privileges for athletes and exceptions to usual class requirements made at the discretion of the instructor.
"We ask the student athletics to arrange their schedules around practice times--like the football players can't have classes past 2:30 p.m. Generally a department will try to accommodate the student if he has a scheduling problem." Hettter said.
He said reports that student athletes received early access to enrollment and therefore got the first choice in classes were inaccurate. All athletes enrolled this fall according to their assigned letter and class schedule, Hettwer said.
He added that KU athletes were enrolled in many fields, from prediensty to architecture, with relatively few in physical education.
"WE HAVE NO specific figures or listing of the number of athletes in each school, but physical education is certainly not at the ten." he said.
Student-athletes are no different from
other college students who select their
job, with the job market in mind,
Hettwer said.
"It's part of my job," he said, "to direct it and inform it about what a particular case might be."
Hettet began his duties as academic coordinator Sept. 1 when he replaced Bob Skahan. Skahan received his doctorate in education and resigned his position.
Skahan had said there was a need for increased emphasis on academics among students.
HE SAID many universities, including KU, were losing sight of the academic priority in college athletics and emphasized that "the athletic athlete* was becoming a hypersocial one."
Skahan also said the present system of intercolegiate athletics failed to prepare the student-athlete for life off the football field or the basketball court.
Hettner said he disagreed with Skahn's philosophy and said communication with each athlete about what he must do to remain eligible for competition and to work for a particular degree was the most important function of an athletic counselor.
HE ALSO SAID he thought Skahan's previous statements that universities were too often "professional training grounds" for future super stars was incorrect.
"Many of our athletes realize they may not become professional athletes, so they are definitely concerned about pursuing a specific academy program." "Heltter said.
Tutoring and study sessions are available to the athletes through specific departments within the University and at residence halls, be said.
"We hold study hall five nights a week, which is mandatory for all athletes and
for some designated individuals who need supervision," he said. "Our coaching staff supervises these sessions and they're just like a team meeting—if you're supposed to show us, we make appropriate arrangements to ensure it doesn't happen again."
HETTWY SAID tutors were available to the athletes at the study halls and that he talked with each tutor every two weeks to get acquainted with them. The athletes buying trouble in certain areas.
"English seems to give student-athletes the most trouble," he said. "So the coaches and tutors try to help them by suggesting the basic organization of the theme."
Hetter also took issue with an earlier statement by Skahan that a high percentage of incoming athletes had been spoon fed and ill-prepared in high school.
He acknowledged that study halls were organized primarily for freshmen athletes because the transition from scheduled daytime study periods in high school to the increased free time available in college was often difficult.
HETTWER SAID pressures on student-
leaders relate to the strictly scheduled bus
arrival.
"Of course when there are 75,000 people watching you, you're under tremendous pressure. But I think the main type of pressure we see is self-inflicted because we can do best his rest. That's only normal—we all subject ourselves to pressures like that."
Hettner said his office wasnt 'the only source of academic direction for student
He said he worked closely with Don Kouras, associate professor of history, who also was a senior editor for *The Atlantic*.
athletes and to help them with class scheduling.
"He helped me a lot because I just jumped into this new position and he'd and previous experience working with the studentworkers he told us. All student-athletes work with me, and Koums carried the major portion of the load this fall since I was so new."
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Dad's visit ends in county job
7A AYLESBURY RD.
TIMONIUM, MD. 21093
MUSIC/SOUND DISTRIBUTORS
Besides Kent, five full-time public health nurses, two part-time public health nurses, two part-time physicians and a medical assistant staff the clinics.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, 701 New Hampshire St., offers family planning, venereal disease diagnosis and treatment. Travel immunization, services to Lawrence
Fri., Oct. 1 "amidst the noise 11:00-2:00
& and mind-blown confusion
Sat., Oct. 2 a song is born in the heart to return to the folk"
7th Spirit
Grea Hildenbrand at
"The rationale is that we just don't have the staff to see large numbers of University students."
sportation of the sick and injured to best serve the needs of the public.
That's not the case, however, with Gary Brann, Lawrence junior. His father, Travis, is Douglas County's new Civil Defense director.
The emergency preparedness office will be in the basement of the new city-county law
But Kay Kent, health department director, said recently that KU students should go to Watkins Hospital for most of their medical care. The family planning clinic but can attend the venereal disease clinic and get travel immunizations at the health department. And students who have children younger than 18 can participate in the well-child clinic.
Braun found out about the job this summer when he visited Gary. He said Monday that he wanted to come to northeast Kansas after quitting his position as an ARMY ROTC instructor at Warren High School, Warren, Ark.
He has been studying the county's facies and facilities before making changes.
Many parents visit their children at the university of Kansas, but not many come to college.
enforcement building, scheduled to open Nov. 1.
"We will have, in the new jail building,
the first adequate emergency operating
centre."
County health says services not for students
KU IS INCLUDED in Brann's coordination efforts. He directs the testing of the siren system at noon on the first and third Monday of each month.
In this central location, the heads of city and county government can gather to coordinate actions and make decisions in an emergency situation, he said.
The kinds of decisions officials must make in an emergency include the allocation of firefighters and equipment, law enforcement officials and tran-
Brann was an emergency preparedness volunteer during his career as an Army Air Corps pilot. He served Douglas County Sept. 1, replacing H. H. Belote, the part-time emergency preparer director. The job became a life position because state law requires it.
Greg Hildenbrand at 6 1/2 E. 7th 842-9549
Serve as a
Choose Marine Air or Ground
MARINE OFFICER
No Obligation until Graduation
Financial Assistance No On-Campus Training
Commissioned 2nd Lt. upon Graduation
843-9108
U. S. Marine Corps Officer Selection Team
WILL BE ON CAMPUS OCTOBER 4,5,and 6 from 9:00 A.M.to 3:00 P.M. in the Student Union
Programs for Fr., Soph., Jr., and Srs.
COLLECT at (816) 374-3031 or 374-3616
If you miss us and desire more information call our office
Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
Giant Hamburger Sack Lunch
Value $1.35
Weekend Special
GRIFF'S BURGER BAR
Now Only 99c
Small Drink 25°
Fri., Oct. 1 and Sat., Oct. 2
French Fries 30°
1618 W 23rd
Giant Hamburger 80°
E
WHEN YOU HIKE BIKE
C.I.MB OR SKI
The down vest is an ideal insulating garment particularly if you are physically active for very little cost in weight or dollars. Vests by North Face Sierra
Vests by North Face Sierra
Designs. Camp /
7th and Arkansas
One block east of Stables
843-3228
SPORT
SO JATRAWKS
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
KANSAS RELAITS
1976
KANSAS
JATRAWKS
WELCOME TO PARENTS' DAY '76
with
new! No.9 Jayhawk T-Shirts
Children's sizes - $6.25 Adult sizes - $6.95
KANSAS BERET — $4.20 STUFFED JAYHAWKS — $4.95 and up
JAYHAWK BANK — $5.40
GLASSWARE - $1.00 and up
JAYHAWK FOOTSTOOL — $9.95 T-SHIRTS — $3.25 and up
PITCHER and 4 GLASSES - $3.75
For all your Jayhawk Souvenirs
Come to the kansas union BOOKSTORE
10
Fridav. October 1. 1976
University Daily Kansan
Prof's book explains poisoning precautions
Drugs are responsible for 3,000 accidental poisoning deaths annually in the United States.
Advice in tackling the accidental poisoning problem is available to Kansas pharmacists through a correspondence course, "Accidental Poisoning and Its Treatment," part of the School of Pharmacy's continuing education program.
Robert Wiley, professor of medicinal chemistry, wrote the 13-page booklet. In it, he examines the problem of accidental poisoning, emergency treatment and recent developments in emergency drug treatment of poisoning. Wiley also lists substances often responsible for accidental poisoning as widely used substances that are safe.
"THE LEADING KILLER among adults is alcohol." Wiley said recently. "It reinforces effects of other drugs. For example, if a person should drink and then go home and take a couple of sleeping pills there is a chance he may not wake up."
Alcohol is followed by narcotics, barbiturates, antidepressants and anthistamines as common causes of accidental poisonings.
Hormones, antibiotics and tranquilizers, although widely used, account for relatively small numbers.
In children, aspirin accounts for the majority of accidental poisonings. Wiley said.
"HOWEVER, INCIDENTS of child poisoning are declining because of public awareness and safety containers," he said. "Incidents of poisoning in children are less than half of what they were five years ago because of things like child-proof caps."
In three-fourths of the accidental poisonings five years ago, the poison was kept in a soft drink or food container. Wiley said, People now know that it isn't wise to keep or other toxins in containers that children associate with beverages or food, he said.
Drugs are responsible for about 70 percent of all reported accidental poisonings but relatively few drugs account for a large share of the dea.hs. Wiley said.
... ms booklet Wiley discusses new methods of treating accidental poisoning. The course, which is part of a three-year-old program, is the first of six continuing education courses to be offered by the school. Students attend the school year. The course was made available Aug. 1 and subsequent courses will be released at two-month intervals.
J. A. Matchett, director of the continuing education for the School of Pharmacy, said 503 persons enrolled in the correspondence program. Pharmacists can enroll at any
time during the year, he said, and complete all six courses after they enroll.
A score of 70 per cent or better on a multiple choice exam that accompanies each course will earn participating pharmacy students an approval to credit needed to renew their license.
BEGGAR'S
DAY
20% off
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Fri., Sat., Sun., Mon.
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7619 Metcalf 381-7555
A career in law without law school.
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Three months of intensive training can give you the skills—the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the seven courses offered—choose the city in which you want to work.
Since 1970, the Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 1600 graduates in law firms, legal assistants and attorneys.
If you are a senior of high academic standing and are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, write here.
Contact the University Placement Office (864-4572)
for an interview with our representative.
We will visit your campus on
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14
The Institute for Paralegal Training
235 South 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103
(215) 732-6600
Operated by Para-Legal, Inc.
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
HEADMASTERS
Only Our Name is the Same.
Come See the Changes.
Oct. 2,1976
809 Vermont
843-8808
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
OCTOGINTA
1976
Mount Oread Bicycle Club
a challenging bike tour of northeast Kansas, October 2-3. For entries and information, contact:
Mount Oroad Bicycle Club
SUA office, Kansas Union Lawrence, Kansas 66045
(913)864-3477
OCTOGINTA 1976
Entry Fee $4.00, on Sunday $5.00
AFTER THE GAME
"Avoid the Crowds"
$1.25 Pitchers at the
MAD HATTER
3:30-6:30 p.m.
400 New Hampshire
Memberships Available - Under New Ownership!
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FIGHT BOILOVERS!
Or
Kan
song
Men
out
Uni
on o
Prestone' II you know it protects
GH the mak said song conv
The with bells is instru must great
Friday, October 1, 1976
11
SUA says concerts well-planned
By PAUL JEFFERSON
Staff Writer
Concerts at the University of Kansas are expensive and well-organized, Mike Miller, director of Student Union Activities (SUA), said Friday.
He said that the average cost for a concert in Hoch Auditorium was about $2,000 or $3,000, and that for Allen Field House the cost ranged from $8,000 to $15,000.
"Many considerations go into whether a show will have general or reserved seating, such as the length of time we've had to publicize it and the type of show," he said.
The main organizing for KU concerts is done by the Special Events Committee.
THE COMMITTEE is in charge of all phases of staging a concert, Miller said, such as publicity and hiring security people, stagehands and users during the concert, and special events for Speech Events, sets up all the facilities for us by the visiting artists.
Thornton Mason, Lawrence senior and head of the Special Events Committee, said the committee handled all the entertainment that appeared in Hoch, the field house, the Union Ballroom and the Union's Hawk's Nest.
"We keep track of available dates and facilities here, then let booking agents know to out them so they can be in touch with any groups in this area." Mason said. "Then the group's agent may try to set up a date for them here."
BECKY MULKA, Overland Park sophomore, who is in charge of hiring ushers for concerts, the committee met with staff to organize volunteers and assist duties.
"We have different users at each concert to try to get more students involved," she said.
The ushers' main job is usually taking tickets, stamping admissions and designating seat locations at reserved-seat concerts, Mulka said. The number of ushers varies from 20 to 40, depending upon where the concert is.
"All of the concert workers are volunteers, but they get free admission to the concert," she said. "Sometimes, the staff are in charge. Any trip, any student can volunteer to do this."
SHE SAID the ushers also had to watch to smoking, which is prohibited at concerts.
"All we can do is to ask people not to
Stadium fills to tune of ringing Campanile
GERKEN TRANSCRIBED the score for the fight song from the KU songbook to make it sound good on the carillon bells, he said, and he plays the same version of the song before football games that he played at convocation.
One doesn't have to go to a University of Kansas football game to hear the KU fight song, "I'm a Jayhawk." The bells of the Memorial Campain can be heard ringing the stadium telephones of other University songs before football games and on other special occasions.
Albert Gerken, professor of music theory and University carillonie, plays variations of the fight song on the carillon in the campanile, as well as classical and folk pieces for regular recitals Wednesday nights at 7 and Sunday afternoons at 3.
The carillon is a keyboard instrument with baton keys connected directly to the bells in the campanile. Playing the carillon is different from playing other keyboard keys when worn, because keys must be struck with a closed fist and with great force.
Gerken said he first played the fight song during convolution on the first day of classes this semester. In the second half of his recital that day, Gerken played songs relating to the bicentennial, such as "Yankee Doodle" and "Dixie."
Gerken said transcribing “is mainly an effort to write something that sounds good on bells. It’s not so much a variation treatment as it is a transcription. Transcription is where you transcript a piece for various modes of treatment. For these
GERKEN SAID he plays the fight song twice, and sometimes three times, in performances, making it slightly different each time. The first time, he might play the song using only the pedals of the carillon, the second time he might use the keyboard.
Andy Krum, Leawood junior and a member of the technical and stage committee, said that he had helped to build the stage for the Yes concert last semester and that he had worked the spotlights for the Lynrd Skynird concert last Friday.
University Daily Kansan
"Most groups bring their own stagehands to handle the main areas of lights, sound and equipment," Frum said. "We kind of do all the heavy work."
pieces, I took a score written for piano and transcribed it for carillon."
"I don't do anything really different with each version," Gerken said. "I just play it differently enough each time so I don't get bored with rhythm and rhythm remain basically the same."
smoke; we certainly can't kick them out of the concert or anything. It's not a problem
In addition to playing the fight song and the KU alma mater, Gerken plays classical and folk pieces in his regular recitals, and arranges the scores for about 70 per cent of the pieces because most of them aren't written for the carillon.
Elaine Fanning, Washington, D.C. senior and chairman of the Hospitality Committee, said the Hospitality Committee was responsible for meeting the groups to make sure that all the requests listed in their contracts with SUA were fulfilled.
On the second time through, Gerken sometimes embellishes the tune with different musical configurations under or above the melody elements. he said.
Mark Woodman, Wichita junior and a guard at the LYNKryn Sydney concert, said that as a guard he acted mostly as an aid to the ushers during the concerts.
So far this year, she said, Cowtown Productions of Kansas City, Mo., has taken care of most of the hospitality measures, but SUA will provide complete accommodations for the Neil Sedaka homecoming concert.
SECURITY AT conics is handled by both student and professional guards.
**WE MAKE SURE they have a place to stay, clean dressing rooms and any foods or beverages you need.**
Kansas City. They provide security at a lot of concerts for buildings and equipment."
"We are stationed at all the doors to try to make sure no one sneaks in or crashes the gates," he said. "We also work with the Kincaid Professional security people from
"The groups usually aren't 'demanding or anything'," she said. "They're nice to be around, but mostly they want to be left behind, can get ready for their performances."
THE ONE, THE ONLY
The PECKER CAP
$4.50 at the g but only $4.00 at
This hat is quickly becoming the official K.U. Sports Hat.
THE STABLES
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Live bands—for dance music fans
the nest
RIVERROCK
Friday and Saturday, Oct. 1 & 2
Electric Bluegrass and Country Rock
Often playing to SRO. Riverrock owns the solid reputation as the KC area's most popular band. From an extended four in Colorado, the Nest grabbed Riverrock for two weekend nights.
So, flock you, we'll rock you!
Doors open 8 p.m. $1.00 cover. Pitchers $1.70.
We're gonna change your ideas about weekends!
Level II in the Union.
X
WE WANT UDK READERS TO KNOW WHERE WE ARE:
JERRY'S PHARMACY
6th & Michigan
Call or ask your doctor KU Blue Cross Accepted to call 841-2520. 24 Hour Service Delivery Anytime
ALL SENIORS: HOPE Award
17
This is the semi-final balloting. Help choose the top five finalists.
Sept. 29-30, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. at the Information Booth Oct.1, 4 p.m.-7 p.m. at the Senior Regalia Party
Where to Vote:
Friday, Oct. 1, 4 p.m.-7 p.m. Broken Arrow Park at 27th and Louisiana. Free beer to all class members wearing Senior Jerseys.
Regalia Party
Dance to the Disco "bounce" of DJ Tom Franz.
Pick up Senior Jerseys in Pine Room at Kansas Union.
Sept. 29-30, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Oct. 1, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.
(Sponsored by Senior Class)
Botany'500 The first name to look for in a suit.
THE EXPLORER
A Young Man of Distinction chooses Botany's "Cartier Collection."
Affluence abounds in a style called "Regis." An expression of Botany's new European look, it's right for America's young leaders. From the wide, "Eura-notched" lapels, to the distinguished, pocketed vest, to the elegant, flowing lines... this selection from the "Carter Collection" says it all. Exclusively designed by BOTANY '500. And best of all, you can afford this Suit of Distinction!
From $135.00
Calkoun's
Store hours: 9:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
1744 Massachusetts
12
Fridav. October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sauna provides s-s-steamy box
To many University of Kansas students a relaxing evening means watching television or listening to the stereo, but to some it means spending 10 minutes in a sauna.
There are two suanas in Robinson Gymnasium for students and faculty members. One is in the women's locker room and the other is in the men's.
Paul Moore, physical education department storekeeper in Robinson, said Wednesday that the temperature in the sauna was 75 degrees. He noted that the ideal humidity was 60 per cent.
A sauna is a Finish bath that uses dry heat. Electric coils heat a tray of sauna stones, which produce steam when splashed with water.
THE PROCEDURE for using the sauna involves showering with warm water, slitting in the sauna and then taking another in the sauna and maximum recommended use is 10 minutes.
The first sauna installed in Robinson was in the men's locker room in February 1973. Women were allowed to use it at certain hours of the day. Two years ago another four-by-six-foot sauna was installed, this time in the women's locker room.
MOORE SAID that an average of 30 people used the sauna each day. It has been used steadily throughout the years, he said, and it became a tradition the summer as any other time of the year.
One rule is not letting a person use the sauna alone because a sauna relaxes a person so much that he can easily fall asleep, Moore said.
Rules for using the sauna are posted outside the saunas.
Reading newspapers in the sauna is also prohibited, he said, because carbonic acid from the ink escapes and creates an odor that is difficult to get rid of.
In 1975 saunas were installed in Lewis, GSP-Corbin and Templin halls. Three weeks ago three saunas were installed in McCollum Hall.
Debbie Blaylock, Overland Park
p sophomore, said she used the sauna at
Corbin Hall every other night. She said she thought it was good for relaxation, her muscles and her complexion.
MARY KARECKI, Ole fraisman, said using the sauna made her feel as if she had
Cindy Johnson, Liberal junior, said the heat in the sauna relieved tension.
"After a hard day I'm really tense; it relaxes me, helps my sleep, and a drink after dinner is really refreshing."
The suuuus in Robinson are available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturdays and 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sundays.
CAA advises that buyers be cautious of salesmen
Judy Kroeger, CAA director, said last week that she had received four inquiries regarding salesmen representing Mecca Enterprise, Inc., who have approached Lawrence residents to buy magazine subscriptions.
She said pople should be cautious about signing an agreement with the company.
The University of Kansas Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) has received recently inquiries on door-to-door magazine salesmen, who have been canvassing the Lawrence area.
baking up an agreement with the company.
"I recommend before buying the magazines to ask for a complete price list," she said.
She suggested that residents first check actual newstand prices and magazine subscription rates before signing an agreement.
The salesmen often refuse to identify themselves or the company, they are working for until they are admitted inside the house, she said.
The salesman tells the prospective client that he is selling the magazine for so many dollars that it looks like a bill.
Do you have any news tips?
Call the KANSAN
864-4810
Under Kansas law, the salesmen must have sales tax certification to legally sell the subscriptions, he said.
win a cash prize and a vacation if he accumulates the most points.
Lance Pool, Kansas assistant attorney general, said that the Attorney General's office was aware of the company's operating in Kansas and that his office had been in contact with the firm, which is based in Arlington, Tex.
He said that the company had been in
operation since 1972 and that his office had received numerous complaints since last year.
complaints concerning the company's salesmen.
Pool declined, however, to comment on whether his office was conducting an investigation.
Berkowitz said all complaints about the salesmen should be reported to the Lawrence Police Department.
Douglas County Attorney David Borkwitz said he hadn't heard of any
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
"BE SURE YOUR SIN WILL FIND YOU OUT!" - Numbers 32:13
"IT SHALL NOT BE WELL WITH THE WICKED." - Ecclesiastes 18:13
"AS I HAIL MEN, SO GOD HATH REQUIRED ME." - Judges 17:4
"O THAT WEY Would CONSIDER THE LATTER ENDOUT." - Enderonomy 32:29
"Pharaoh defied the God of Heaven and raised his hand to oppress
the chosen people, and he perished miserably amid the ruins of his own kingdom. Egypt never recovered from the shock of Pharaoh's sword.
History makes some singular developments in respect to the retributive justice of God, Nations, communities, families, individuals, furnish fearful illustrations that "THE WICKED IS SNARED IN THE WORK OF HIS OWN HAND." AND THAT "THEWAY OF THE TRANSGRESSOR IS HARD" Wrong doing, oppression, crime, are by no means reserved only for a future retribution. Draw them after an almost certain retribution in this world — "THE IS NO PEACE TO THE WICKED, SATH MY GOD MUY" He may seem to prosper — iriches some who will accept him as his own son and seem to have all that heart can wish; yet there is a canker-worm somewhere gnawing at the very vitals of happiness — a blight somewhere upon all that he possessed History bears at least an incidental yet decisive testimony on this point!
Adonibesh, who conquered 70 kings and having cut off their thumbs and big toes, made them eat under his table, at is length conquered by the invading Israelites, who in turn cut off their thumbs and big toes from the same body of the act when he said: "As I have done, God has ruled meti"
THE VOICE OF RETRIBUTION: "FOR I THE LORD YOD GAMA JEALOUS GOD, VISITING THE INQUIRY OF THE FATHERS UPON THE CHILDREN UNTO THE THIRD AND FOURTH GENERATION OF THEM WHO DIVINE FOR THEm TO LOVE THEM TO THOUSANDS OF THEM that LOVE ME, AND KEEP MY COMMANDMENTS." Quote from 2nd Commandment Exodus 20.5.6, if you are one of those who belong to a Protestant Christian Church, and yet rail here revealed, may we suggest that you make haste and extend your obedience on its off rots - hoping it may be a "lengthening of your tranquility".
Examples crowd upon us from every quarter; every neighborhood furnishes them! Haman was hung on the gallows he built for Mordeca, doge are the carcass of Queen Jeezeb, and licked up the blood of her husband, King Akab. The Herods furnish fearful examples!
But consider Pontius Pilate: Many of us quote his name every Sunday in publication worship: "SUPFFERED UNDER PONTIUS PILATATE!" Pilate, vaccinating the monitions of conscience and a man with the authority to be borne as a believer Him to be innocent; yet that his own loyalty to Caesar might not be suspected, he did violence to his own conscience and condemned the innocent. He must secure his friendship to Caesar, though it be at the expense of the most appalling crime. But how he behaved is not in question, striking fitness to the punishment of the crime. He hesitated at nothing to please his imperial master at Rome. Yet but two years afterward he was banished by this same emperor into distant province, where, in the meantime, he put and with a burden on his conscience, which was the burning man he put an end to an existence which was too wretched to be born!
Be sure you sinn with you out our
"He that confesses and forsakeh his sin shall find mercy."
"Be sure your sin will find you out!"
Ice Pop Cig. Chips Cold Beer to go
PARTY TIME
Underwood's P.D. O. Shoppe
P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031
1209 W. 6th
Open 'til 11 p.m. Drive-up window
Find it in Kansan classified Sell it, too. Call 864-4358.
JEWISH STUDENTS ACTIVITIES
HEBREW CLUB Every Monday evening (except holy days) at the home of a different member from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., refreshments served, join us for some good clean! (Hey Hebrew conversation, all levels of proficiency welcome, including 2799) or Diana Wolken (643-1859) for the location of this week's meeting.
UNITED JEWISH APPEAL MEETING Tuesday evening at 9:00 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Kansas Student Union, all people interested in planning and/or working on the Student United Jewish Appeal should plan to attend, and the student representative from Urbana, Illinois) will be the featured speaker.
'GREAT IDEAS IN JUDAISM THROUGHOUT THE AGE'S' Rabbi Shulom vinegain, noted scholar and Hasidic jewish, will lead a lively discussion on aspects of Jewish culture and tradition. Wednesday evening, September 18th, at the Nairim Sahih Hall 1800 Naishtmish Drive, ask for the Hilgel group at the main desk.
ISRAELI FOLK DANCING CLUB Every Thursday evening from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive (one block east of 9th and Iowa), all levels of proficiency welcome, for rides call Brian Salvay (841-2789).
SABBATH EVENING SERVICES Every Friday evening at 7:30 p.m. at the Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive, for rides contact Neil Salkind (841-0947).
OPERATION QUIET! Shenanigan's Patrons: We Need Your Help.
Ladies and Gentlemen: Together we have made Shenanigan's one of the finest Entertainment Establishments in the Midwest. We want to continue to provide the quality that you have come to know at Shenanigan's. We can not do this alone. Our neighbors have been patient with us, and we must return their patience with consideration.
In the future we request all of our patrons to follow these steps in the interest of all concerned:
Please Avoid:
1. LOUD CONVERSATION
3. HONKING HORNS
4. SCREECHING TIRES
2. BLOCKING DRIVEWAYS
5. LITTERING
6. TRESPASSING ON PRIVATE PROPERTY
Thank you.
S
F P
SHENANIGAN'S
Friday, October 1, 1976
shadow
13
IES
Intensive language programs pose stiff hurdles for unwary students
By CHRIS COTTRELL
If you're looking for a quick and effective way to learn a foreign language, the University of Kansas' intensive French course will be forewarned—the course is demanding.
It's listed as French in the timetable, but the course isn't an ordinary beginning foreign language class. Worth 16 credit and graduate diploma and advanced class rolled into one.
Intensive French is the braincade of David Dinnen, professor of French and Italian and of linguistics and chairman of the linguistics department.
The program is in its sixth year and was begun on the premise that the best way to learn a foreign language is through constant exposure to it.
"I FELT IT was the best way to teach people French," Dinnen said last week, "and since I've been doing it, I'm convinced that it is."
Students this semester spend from 20 to 25 hours a week in class and receive instruction from about eight teachers. Distance learning teaches five hours each week in the class.
The course is offered only in the fall semester. Another intensive French class, worth 11 credit hours, is offered in the spring. That course is designed for students
who have completed a five-hour introductory French course.
Sixteen and 11-hour German courses are taught in the spring, and an intensive Spanish class formerly was offered, but八年级学生 now attended 16-hour language program this semester.
ALTHOUGH INTENSIVE language classes aren't common in most colleges, Dinneen said, the intensive system isn't new.
“There isn't anything particularly novel about my program,” he said, “I have done it myself.” So we teach the language following fairly traditional methods of teaching. The one different thing is that we see the kids all day and they learn everything else aside and they learn French.
Dinneen said there was still a search for a better method of teaching a language.
"We have not yet found the most effective of teaching a second language," he said. "We've been using a very effective way, but certainly the ideal, most effective way, has not been
ONE OF THE most efficient ways to learn a foreign language is to go to the country in which it is spoken. And Dimeeen said that he learned from a class to France for part of the semester.
'I very much would like to take the
students over between Thanksgiving and
a reasonable amount of time," he said.
He said that he had wanted to take the students to France the past two years, but it was too time-consuming.
"There were a number of difficulties," he said. "For one thing, we didn't have enough students to make it economically feasible. That was the main problem."
HE SAID HE would like to see more students in the program, but he wasn't expecting it.
"I don't think we'll ever get a lot of students. Most people just don't want to take a chance on 16 hours of C or D," he said.
Dimeeen said he wouldn't recommend the course to all students.
"I don't think that an intensive program is the right thing for everybody. I think it's the most effective way for most people, but it doesn't work with who just can't take the pressure," he said.
"There is pressure. It's not just hard
to learn. You know all the time.
Some people shouldn't do it."
HARRIET BLANTON, Morrill junior,
who took the program as a freshman,
and is now a senior.
"A lot of people don't enjoy language that much and 18 of at once would just be hard to learn," she says.
The man sold she employed the coarse. The woman said she felt it, "never seemed like work." She never seemed like fun. The teachers made it that way because they all enjoyed that they were doing.
you really enjoy languages, you wouldn't want to take it."
Blanton said that because of the shortened time period, she didn't think intensive French students learned as large a vocabulary as those who took French for retraining and she added that the retention rate seemed to be higher for intensive French students.
Blanton said she enjoyed the course.
Farm and trucking logos promoted during cap fad
By BILL CALVERT
"THE VOCABULARY I had, I could use," she said.
Staff Writer
John Deere, Chevy Trucks and Excel
Grain Co., to welcome the University of Kirkcald...
These companies aren't actually trying to sell tractors, trucks and grain to students. But their trademarks, over the hills of stuff from all over the world, might moremon sight on campus in the past year or so.
"My dad got this one free when he bought some grain from Excel." Brungdert said. "You can usually get them from places like Target or Groupon, or you can or get one free when you buy a tractor."
What is the meaning of the appearance of these emblems of rural America at KU, "the cultural oasis" of Kansas? Is it a fashion, a craze, or merely crazy?
John Peters, Lawrence senior, said he had been wearing caps lce caps since he was in high school. He started wearing caps regularly when he saw other people, such as
"It makes me unique," said Randy Brungardt, Galesburg senior, who was sporting recently a red Excel Grain Co. cup. "I like it because the only one on campus with an Excel cap."
BRUNGART SAID that the emergence of the trademark caps on campus might be called a fashion but that he hadn't seen many people wearing them this year. He knew they were there at time, said that one of the best things about the caps was that they usually were free.
his grandfather, who owns a farm near Lawrence, wearing them.
The fashion isn't without its practical aspects.
"It keeps the sun out of my eyes and helps keep my hair in place," Peters said. "My hair gets real frizzy when the wind is blowing."
The sense of comradeship among cap wearers on campus is one motivation for staff to be involved.
"WHEN I WALK by someone with a cap, I look at their cap and the look at my cap," she said.
Ever since he became a cap enthusiast of few years ago, Peters has amassed a sizable collection of caps. The logs on those caps are for such places and names as Lake Calif., Vail, Gold, Golden Harvest, Coors, and Ises, an Emporia tavern.
"If I see a hat I like, I'll buy it," Peters said.
Sonia Manuel, Lawrence junior, took the course in the fall 1974 semester. She also said it in the fall 1974 semester to remember the language.
Peters said that he thought the caps became common on campus about a year ago. They also are common in bars, such as the Stables, he said.
"I learned it much faster and retained it much better." Manuel said. "It's just like being in a country where you are forced to speak that language. All of your classes are taught in one other homework or no other interference. Everything you do is geared toward French."
JEFF RICHARDS, Clay Center freshman and a cap distinguishes its wearer in
"If you wear a hat, the people always remember you because you were the one with the hat," Richards said from under the bill of his Chevy Trucks cap.
an original campus fad, but were merely of the things that people brought from home.
"Most of the people who wear them around home wear them around here," he
Like Brungardt, Richards also got his cap free.
Richards said the caps didn't represent
MIKE PHELPS, Wichita senior, got his Peterbilt cap from a friend who drives a Peterbilt truck. Phillips, who has had his first career as an assistant coach of the time, mainly for practical reasons.
"My cousin works at a Chevy place," Richards said. "He ripped this one off an Aeropostale."
"I always wear it when I ride my motorcycle," Phillips said. "I like to wear it because it keeps my hair from blowing and because I don't like to wear a helmet."
ATTENTION
FRESHMEN
University Daily Kansan
WAS SALE
$125 $129.95
$219.95
$180 $84.95
$160 $84.95
$80 $45.95
$130 $84.95
I also A/C
er, Carrying
one year factory
Texas
UNBELIEVABLESAVINGS CALCULATORS,CB RADIOS STEREOS & COMPONENTS
Enclose payment box in hull with order, or enclose 10% with balance, C.O.D.
PLEASE CHECK BOX FOR ITEM ORDERED
CALCULATORS AND CB RADIOS
ADD $2.00 for HANDLING AND SHIPPING
instruments electronic calculators
Above prices include A/C Adapter/ Charger, Carrying Case, and full one year factory warranty.
412-730-8655
SALARY
412-730-8655
SR-52 ...
PC-100 ...
SR-56 ...
SR-51A ...
SR-50A ...
T1-5050M
T1-5040
PIONEER
Fast Delivery Guaranteed
with certified check only
White Horse Coalition
Casual Shop—1st Floor
RADIOS
STEREO RECEIVERS
(Add 3% for Credit Card Orders)
FREE BEER
Vote Oct. 6th or 7th for the
REPEAT OF A SELL-OUT! DASHIKI TOPS
REG SALE
SX-1250 5844
SX-1050 5970
SX-950 6469
SX-950 6600
SX-950 6402
SX-750 5979
SX-750 6279
SX-650 5213
SX-650 5213
SX-650 5200
SX-450 5199
SX-450 5199
CB
Popular, fast-fasting fashion . . . the Dashiik print top, loose fitting, with two pockets and butterfly sleeves. Choose from assorted color combinations. Red, wine, black. S-M-L-XL. Machine washable.
| | REG | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| □ CRAIG 4101 | $184 | $119.5 |
| □ CRAIG 4102 | $240 | $149.95 |
| □ CRAIG 4103 | $200 | $149.95 |
| □ DISTRIBUTION DATA | $180 | $149.95 |
| MIDLAND 862 | $130 | $119.5 |
| MIDLAND 882 | $180 | $119.5 |
| MIDLAND 888 | $205 | $149.95 |
| MIDLAND 888 | $170 | $109.95 |
| SHARP 880 | $170 | $109.95 |
$5.00
TGIF from 4:00-5:30 White Horse Rally at Sigma Nu Place
RECEIVERS Add 4% for Handling and Shipping
HEWLETT PACKARD
814-237-5990
SEND
CATALOGUE
FOR FREE
PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTE
ONLY WITH
CREDIT CARDS
SIZZLER
FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
REG SALE
4000 450 1879
4200 4330 319
2325 580 578
2774 650 578
250B 500 567
235B 580 578
235B 580 578
215B 370 249
215B 250 166
marantz
[9TH STREET]
MASSACHUSETTS
Weavers Inc.
Serving Lawrence ... Since 1857
STEREO WAREHOUSE
MODEL WAS
HP-21 8100 $1.69 $
HP-25 7900 $1.34 $
HP-25 8145 $1.526 $
HP-25C 8120 $1.715 $
HP-47 8120 $1.875 $
HP-47 8450 $1.849 $
HP-47 8450 $1.849 $
HP-97 8450 $1.849 $
HP-97 8450 $1.849 $
We sound better.
307 W. BEAVER AVE., STATE COLLEGE, PA. 16801
Announcing
THE KANSAS CITY STRIP STEAK Only $3.89
at the Sizzler
1516 W. 23rd St.
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
THE
ARENA
AGENDA
-Frl., Oct. 1-
- Live music at the Arena;
featuring the talented Mike Beers
-Sat., Oct. 2-
- College Football UCLA vs. Ohio State 12:45
- Boxing at the Arena:
Chuck Wepner meets
Duane Bobick 4:00
- Movie: Breakout starring Charles Branson
- NFL Football
Chiefs vs. Bills
12:00
-Sun., Oct. 3-
- Movie: Earthquake
- -Mon., Oct. 4-
- Monday Night Football Pittsburgh vs. Minnesota
- Pizza & Sandwiches Available
- All these events can be seen on our 7' diagonal T.V.
- Come early and get your seats.
YOU OUGHT
TO BE
IN PICTURES...
Jayhawker Senior Pictures
October 11-29
9:00-6:00 Kansas Union
Sitting Fee $1.00
fee includes photo in yearbook and
option of buying color enlargements
appointments required starting Oct. 4
Jayhawker Office 864-3728(29)
14
Friday, October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU library gets papers of late Rep.
The Kansas Collection of the Kenneth Spencer Research Library has acquired the papers of the late Congressman Wint Smith of Mankato.
Smith, who died last spring, was a KU alumnus. He served as a U.S. Representative from the old sixth district of Kansas from 1947 to 1961.
The papers, which cover the years 1915 to 1975, include Smith's personal correspondence, diaries, campaign materials, congressional correspondence and office files, speeches and personal memorabilia. In 1916 Smith served in a cavalry unit Gen. John (Blackjack) Pershing and during World War I he served as an infantry officer.
After the war, Smith returned to Kansas and played on the fourth and baseball team.
HE GRADUATED in 1820 with a bachelor's degree in English and then attended Harvard, where he received a law degree in 1922.
Smith practiced law in Kansas City, Kan., until World War II began. He commanded a tank destroyer battalion in Europe and after the war retired as a baird general.
The collection includes Smith's diaries during this period, along with his military duties.
It also contains papers covering the time Smith served as state assistant attorney general and as the first superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol.
Correspondence from constituents,
selection files and subject files on the United
Nations and on civil rights, which were
published in the American journal of
served in Congress, are in the collection.
"ONE OF THE reasons his collection is so extensive is that Smith was a bistory book and kept everything he had," George Lewis of Kansas Collection curated, said yesterday.
Although other schools wanted the papers, Griffin felt the Smith widow, Katherine, of Smith would be happier.
He said Smith knew about the Kansas Collection and wanted his papers to be given to him.
Smith's collection, which must be sorted and filed, will be ready in three months, Griffin said. It will be housed with the college shell on the ground floor of Spencer Research Library.
Anyone may use the collection, Griffin said.
Rent it. Call the Kansan.Call 864-4358.
---
Tonight!
Dance to the sounds of
TREEFROG. $2 cover charge
Saturday Night
Music by RHYTHEM FUNCT901
$2 cover charge
737 New Hampshire
Off the Wall Hall
---
Cash & Carry
William Inge
Memorial Theatre
presents
ANATOL
by: Arthur Schnitzler
Sept. 30—Oct. 9
Tickets: 864-3982
Sweetheart Roses *295/doz.
Owens
FLOWER SHOP
9TH & INDIANA
GO
BIG BLUE
FREE BIG BLUE TAMS
With $15 purchase, or buy one for only $3.50
at
DON SCHICK'S AUTO PARTS
From Part Stop AUTO SUPPLIES
1209 East 23rd Street 841-2200
Go Big Blue, Beat Wisconsin!
HASKELL
HOMECOMING
INDIAN ARTS AND
CRAFTS SHOW
October 2
8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
October 3
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Indian dancing
Indian Fry Broad and Tacos
Hiawatha Hall
Haskell Indian Junior College
Free Admission
Public is Welcome
Pizza inn.
AMERICA'S FAVORITE PIZZA
Friday Night
$1.00 Pitchers
.25 Draws
2 p.m.-12 p.m.
Tuesday
and Sunday Buffet
4-9 p.m.
All you can eat
$2.20
Noon Buffet
11 a.m.-2 p.m.
All you can eat
$1.79
9th and Iowa
Next to Hillcrest Theatres
Share a pizza today...
WELCOME PARENTS
U
THE KANSAS UNION
PROUD JAYHAWKERS BRING THEIR PARENTS TO THE KANSAS UNION ON PARENTS' DAY
University Happenings in the Union Saturday Morning:
PARENTS' DAY RECEPTION 8:30 a.m.—10:30 a.m. Main Lobby
PROF. CLARK BRICKER'S LECTURE "Chemistry Can Be Fun"
10:00 a.m.- 10:45 a.m.
Woodruff Auditorium
Sidewalk Entertainment throughout the Morning Jayhawk Boulevard
PRE-GAME—For Your Dining Plea STOP BY —
FISH & BEEF
Sewing Room
LEVEL 3
The Doll — 8:00 a.m.—5:00 p.m.
Old-Fashioned Sandwiches
Cafetoria — 11:00 a.m.—1:00 p.m.
Complete meal or light snack
River City Salad Bar
11:00 a.m.—1:00 p.m.
Build your own salad as you like it!
THE KANSAS UNION
A
LEVEL 2
Prairie Room — 11:00 a.m.—1:00 p.m.
Relaxing Table Service
Hawk's Nest — 11:00 a.m.—1:15 p.m.
Game Day Fare includes hamburgers,
sandwiches, shakes and snacks.
POST-GAME
HAWK'S NEST
Unwind with your friends. Popcorn, Hot Pretzels, Pitcher of Beer and Good Music provided by the Tom Montgomery Trio
SUA RECEPTION — LEVEL 4 Enjoy a tour of the new Lounge areas, then stop for refreshments.
C
II
E
A
S
M
T
EI
F
X
J
U
I
J
K
L
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
AI TERMINAL BAD DIR
Bi
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 1, 1976
15
Charges for 411 seen as minimal
The new charge for Southwestern Bell directory assistance service, the 411 number, won't affect Lawrence customers much because the service isn't used heavily, Hill Colinson, manager of the Lawrence Southwestern Bell operation said.
The charge that was approved by the kansas Corporation Commission allows the corporation to acquire property in Kansas.
Collinson said that most directory assistance calls were for people on campus and that probably more than half of the course from University of Kansas students.
each directory assistance call after the first five made in each month. Customers can request two numbers each time they call. The system will answer and phone booths will not be charged.
Go Big Blue Beat Wisconsin
HECK &
HARDTARFER
Realty, Inc.
- GENE HARDTARFER EXEC. VICE PRESIDENT
Residence: 843-0215
601 Missouri / Lawrence, Kansas 66044 / Office: 843-5522
Flower Special
KU Mum Corsage for $1.95
Cash 'n' Carry
12 Miniature Roses...3.00
6 Carnations...2.00
泰安市泰山区安福街道北门社区
Nye's Flowers
939 Massachusetts 843.3255
the flower shop in the center of downtown Lawrence
Need a car, a stereo, a job? Look in Kansan classified.
Game Special!
On All KU Home
Football Game Days
THE
7TH
6PIRIT
- With every sandwich purchased at the Sandwich Shoppe FREE set-up at 7th Spirit
- Special drawing after game at 5:30 Win free set-ups for 2 for the whole night. (Must enter before the game)
- Open at 11:00 a.m. Specials 'til 6:00
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered to all students without regard to gender. Students must BE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO I11 FLINT 8472.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
equal
lessor
extraordinary
$2.00 $2.35 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
word
.01 .02 .03 .04
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.
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
The "DK 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 or charge for a period not exceeding three hours. These cards can be placed in person or taken to the DUX business office at 864-4358.
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
Employment Opportunities
Want to buy used 35mm Miroir or Viastar?
Must accept up-to-date lens. Pref. built-in lit.
Uses a DLX lens.
AVON - Good money, valuable experience. We deliver on our promise of providing beautiful products. Call 842-8162. 10-9
Marketing, Sales & Sales Management positions.
Sales Manager, New England Eastman Kaiser, sign up, new for interviews on Facebook (Bristol Strong) 223, Cullen 661, Nilf (Journ.) New England Mutual Life. 1235-301-8
2-3 person apt, all utilities paid, close to campus.
furnished. Day 843-262, night 814-721, 10-1
Jayhawk Towers 3 bedroom apt. All utilities
paid. Certified. $275 per month. Laundry facilities on bus.
car. Fee for up to 4 weeks.
**ATTENTION STUDENT BENCHES--Drop in at**
**WESTERN CAROLINA** (two phone calls) please at WESTERN
CAROLINA BOOKING. Attendance will be charged on the day of
attendance.
2 bedroom apartment for rent. Near Haskell, first of month. Call 824-3790. 10-1
Sublease 2 bedroom bath, all utilities paid. For lease on bus route, call ext. 123-845-7890; on bus route, call ext. 123-845-7890.
Sunflower House (a cooperative living facility)
has rooms for rent. Residents are responsible for
management. Food program, workshoring, co-ed.
classes, meals preferred. Cahall Dum 105
houses at 842-9421.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, you will want the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIERES for the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIERES.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BEL AURA ELECTRIC, 8309-4300, 2000 W, 60 hp.
ELECTRIC, 8309-4300, 2000 W, 60 hp.
Ball Park Baseball
All the excitement of World Series action—
all the hype, the cheers and the availability with the most realistic and exciting baseball game ever. Write now for this
ball park, Park IL. Bounce 302
Laurence, IL.
sPORT
Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerator,
shelving unit, desk, office table, bar table, m.p. 6 p.m.
delivery, i-247, 273-273-2733, www.ibm.com
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
West 26th Street, New York, NY 10028.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make
some out of Western Civilization makes some
come out.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available at now Town Crier Stores. **tf**
MUST BELIEVE! 1.27l Honda 250 XL Excelwetten
35 mg app. Best offer; Best bk-814, 64-184,
64-299
66 "VW - rebuild engine. Dependable car. 841-
6556. Ask for Mary. 10-1
TOYOTA, DATSUN OWNERS! We're closing out
our sales at our dealership. We can lease
very well for t/a 78-13; at t/a 69-13 at $12.50
for t/a 78-14; at t/a 89-13 at $15.00 for
$20.00 each; many other 13" cars cut as low
as $18 plus $1.75 and $2.00 F.E.T. Ray Stone-
Mary. We can rent them from Mass. St.
with discount tire dept. on alley. Come
thru parking for back Woolworths for tire ser-
ice.
DIBT BIKE - 740 condition CI 125. Numerous extra-
tear, --toulouse condition, $450-$850, 20-14
Like new condition: 100 watt Marshall Amp.
Like new condition: V-4 cabinet with SRO speakers
with microphone.
1968 Plymouth Fury III, excellent condition. PS
of good good goods price. Phnom Penh
10-14
Check out these used bike specs:
1972 Honda XL250 $445
1973 Honda ZRX 650 350
1974 Honda MT125 450
1974 Honda MT500 650
1974 Honda CB250 1155
1975 R Honda RK725 1155
1975 R Honda RM175 1895
1975 R Honda MR175 1895
1972 Honda CL75 375
1972 Honda CL75 375
1972 Honda CB100 275
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th, 843-1
3333
GETTING MARRIED, MUST SELL! Component
phone: 1-423-7084 (Topeka) 10-9-1
1-423-7084 (Topeka) occupies
1 pair fiberglass baskets and bindings; 170' xcel;
cable laminates; 85' xcel at 0.15 p.m. per entry.
843-757-723. 10-19.
Empire 398 Mark III turntable with Empire 4000
engine in a cartridge Mint condition $250 Cell
10-11 at bitrue 6410
67 Flat, very clean & nice -must-use $750
or best offer. 843-8449 10.5
1975 Toyota station wagon, dark brown, 1000 cc. AMF-4M, mg wheel cat. after 6. 1980
Yard Sale. 1428 Tennessee. Student type furnishings include: flat screen TV, glassware, lamps, ironing board, iron, diner, glassware, wild antiques. Friday, Oct. 1, 8-5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 6, 9-10 a.m. Chicago big lot. Heading next to 10-11 Chi Park shopping center.
Must sell my 75 Honda 2004. In your chance to
buy today or next day, pay $1,695 in 1943 after a 6 month
straight stay in New York for a foreseeable event.
19 yr. old, 12 cu. ft. refrigerator, works for $3.50
18 yr. old, 12 cu. ft. refrigerator, works for $3.50
644 (leviing) 644-354-354 (works for $2.65)
621 (leviing)
1970 Ocp Rally, Kadet? 72,000 miles, good condition, gets 20 mpg. Call Paul 842-3838. 10-5
VWP Fastback 1989 Slight body damage and re-
covery 841-1823 evening 10-5
1968 Grand Torino. 78,000 miles, good condition.
Must sell, call Brue, 8-10 p.m.
10-5
Fender Dial Showman RWP w/port. JBEs. BJFs.尖爪
琴。Ding Ding Ding Ding Ding Ding Ding
bout offer. Min. 841-9453 before 20.00. 10.00
after 20.00.
have huge rooms overfowling with the best bes-
tasy rooms. We have private baths, wi-
re, memorandums, high class jigs, bargains,
Jewelry and Indian Jewelry. Used books. Open
every Saturday and Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Until October 31st.
1971 Toyota Wagon Deluxe Deluxe 1600. Excel-
tion automatic transmission. Automatic transmission. 54,000 miles. New valve job, die brakes, battery, snow tires. Asking
battery, 84-2520 or 84-2521 for slightly larger
battery. 84-2520 or 84-2521 for slightly larger
Electric typewriter, Olivetti Undeveld brand,
12 mid-century comma, extra size. Needs repair.
Available at Oliver's in Derry.
Corvette 71 engine rebuilt, leather interior, 52,000
macs AC PS 24 bear detr. 841-6027
has me eyeglasses
you want.
806 Massachusetts
phone 814-7421
www.massachusetts.edu
VISIONS
Lafayette LTN-200, 16 watts/power (380) $100 or best offer. Call Lee after 6, 422-2519.
VW Blue VW Buge: one owner, 30,000 miles,
$1150.00
handmade, small scale, 842.128. 10-6
1967 VW Fastback Owner leaving town, must
buy 842-1181 after 5 p.m.
10-6
Dual 1216 turntable and Sonny tuner. Call 841-
4933. 10-5
1971 Dodge Challenger 318 V-8, AT, PS, PB, alr.
Good condition—must sell. 834-2186.
Ampug 1- Guitar amp. Used 6 mm. Excellent
Ampug 2- See at Love Records, 15 W. 9'h. 10'-7
842-3738
PARRIC SALE 10% to 40% off cotton prints and
kettlehouses, shirts, skirts, and velvetens.
Now through Oct. 9. PRAIRIE PATCHWORKS
June 15, 11 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Saturday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Sat, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Famous FRYE brand boots, gold leather, women's 8 inch or men's 9 inch twice, women's 10 inch or men's 12-inch evening.
HELP WANTED
Penguet UO-18 for 20° and almost new.
Fridge rack, gider furnace, gider fender,
box kit. UO-389 or UO-489.
10% Student ID discount on all used cars, trucks,
wagons, and open vans. A-1 Auto Sale
A-2 Auto Sale
Yellow Labrador pups. ACK, Champion blood-
lines, field and stock. Swamp B391-8321-7921
One of the largest selectives of mounted instrumentation is the instrumentation module for harmonic and organ instruments. Kose KG72, a 4-string keyboard with an octave, is used for
have to sell 86 Fontille Le Mans. Automat,
75, take the best offer. B41 847-6781. 10-7
Both full and part time fontain work available.
Apply in person at the Vista Drive-In: 1857
262-430-6222
Part time grill work, all shifts. Apply in person
at the Vista Drive-In, 1257 W. Kitchener, 10-1
Liquor store elk wanted to work 10-12 am.
The store is in Ramada Inn. Good for travel.
842-790-3678
15-1
Part time secretary to take appointments for the
Society and Health Services
Apply at the Joymaker, 117 B Union, 864-7320
FOOD SERVICE-full time superviving job. 8 hours per day, required. Max 42 hours per week. Paid holidays, vacations, must have had previous food service experience. Apply by September 19th. Mail A7191; Masse. Schumf Foods. 3-4 dail
Counter help part time. Must be able to work
applicant in North America and depend-
ly apply in person, Henry's, H. 917-420-6850.
Female model for freestyle photographer - 5x7
natural model for next door "image" client
V12-918-640-337
www.freestylepictures.com
Clinical Pharmacology group at KU Medical Center needs male volunteers age 18-45 for clinical study. Compensation: $30/day for 8-10 days. For more information call 913-388-7702 Monday, Oct. 19.
15-18 in house parents for halfway house for girls
13-18, 1 parent may be part time, starting salary
14-18, 1 parent may be part time, starting salary
resume to Lincoln House, 129 S. Chauqua,
Wichita, KS. 67211 by Oct. 8, include reference
LOST AND FOUND
Custodial work at Shenanigans. Call for information
ask for Joe. 841-6400. 10-7
Lost-Miplaced in a Malign Pole wagon at Green
Hill, they were caught with wallet, keys, shade, plus. Please
come and see.
Lost: at Union 9/13; tan bilfoil containing identification
materials, and two silver barrettes,
stained with blue.
Lost: I lost a set of keys. If you find, please contact
10-41-4251.
Found—Found Jared Waint you found you.
Call: Callen R84,dmmi 10.1
LOST-LIST silver rimmed gloves in black case.
Ten dollar reward. Call 864-5810. 10-11
Lost: SR-50 calculator in Wescow Hall Thursday
lot: Rent: Call 864-1260. 10-1
Found—Pair a pair of keys in O Cell. call and
Hound—Call. John 843-8729 1041
DOS
DELUXE
BOB'S AFFAIRS
LAW PENNEL JOHN
Lost: Hugo, Collee-S. Bernard mix, Sunday evening 27th and 71th. Call 645-6432 after 6:30.
Lost-Lost kitten in the area of Arizona and 6th.
Born at 14 and tan with striped skin. 19-11
842-0023
Found-Ladies Shawnee Mission NW Class ring
Call 841-7295 after 5:30.
10-5
Found: one set of keys by Potter Lake. Claim at 10-4
Room 1027, Learned Hall.
Loist: tan, suede wallet. If found, please call 842-10-1
LORST - Add filler notebook of booklet 184 notes,
on Monday, $5 reward—roll Ritchie at 834-473-
2201.
FOUND—Found in vicinity of 250 and Iowa.
848-271 and for Norman. Call to iden-
848-271 or for Norman.
FOUND-Pound one keys attached to a
key card to key a for P.O. Card CB-150
Documente 846-4622
MISCELLANEOUS
FOUND= Set of keys. Can be claimed at 2083
Werec: Call 861-315-3
10-5
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Usher/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday- Friday. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10:30. Mass.
Design roommate who practices TM. House near
Sina and Sims 8-5 month + monthly | 19-25
852-747-440
NOTICE
CABAH CAPE *Good food from sarcath.* Lunch.
Bahrain *Good food from sarcath.* Lunch.
Bahrain *Good food from sarcath.* Lunch.
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a "Tune-Up"—we will clean up and adjust your bike. Try to put it on the brakes and, on both wheels, adjust your hubs, crank and head and install any parts or accessories needed for your bike. Go at 10 speed $15.0, 5 or 3 speed $15.0, single speed $25.0. Complete professional services for all
Need a proven ability and see the large new opportunities that exist. Job will require:
Software Engineer, Schwinn Cycleway, # Mon - Thurs,
210 North 46th Street, New York, NY 10019.
LEXANDERS FLOWERS BATH BOUQUET
LEXANDERS SHOP. flowers special bath
842-130 10-6
842-131 10-6
Jim's Steak House Delicious food at reasonable prices. 217-568-0239, jim.ssteakhouse.com Tuesday - Thursday 12:30 Wearchall 4:15 Closed Tuesday
Fall Special- 20% OFF, with KU ID, on our Elm Country line—includes prints, calipse, stripes and solids of polyester cotton and silk. Excluate at午夜 from the Mall's Shopping Center. 10-1
SQUEEZER'S PALACE ANNUAL FALL PLANT
ALL. Sewn, and plaes 20% off. 10-6
Use this advertisement at $10 discount coupon on any portable cassette receiver player with AM-PD radio. Three models of MagnaVox to choose from include the AM-DD, down-down-down, open-day ill 5 p.m., Thurs. 8 p.m., per day.
Cakes baked and decorated for special occasions;
birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, etc. For more
information, call (212) 549-3000.
Vista Restaurant, 1527 W. 4th, open daily tl 1 a.m.
8:30, Fri. & Sat. t 11 a.m. 10-4
Dorothy Molyneau will sit your heart out! Gay Serves
Everyman. Invited to the event, Services are
Everyman. Invited to the event, Services are
Everyman. Invited to the event, Services are
Everyman. Invited to the event, Services are
Commission on the Status of Women: Alternatives
in Sexuality October 5, 7:38 P.M. Lewis Hill
www.lewishill.com
$20 REWARD for first person to offer a tape record of the NATIONAL SURREALIST PARTY Gathering at 10am on Friday, April 30th, on KJHK Sat. Sept. 18, Original was lost; Call Rita or Vera at Tk745 or 841-7692. 10-7
CONGRATULATIONS! If you tagged KJHRE’s website, you’re welcome and a very worthwhile prize. Call us at (804) 237-5670 or visit www.kjhre.com.
$33 REWARD for a tape record of the NA-
ture at 12:45. Send to: NA-REWARD, Sep-
18; Call 1840 or Twn or 646-9461, ib-7
(Telephone).
Abblene High School invites all AHS students to the Homecoming game on October 9, 2014. 8-10
Eyelooker Optical
WELCOME BOTTOM
MESSAGE BOTTOM
ANIMALS ALLOWED
WELCOME TOP
MESSAGE TOP
ANIMALS ALLOWED
WELCOME HUMAN
EYES ON
WELCOME HUMAN
EYES OFF
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
782 Minneapolis
Ramon-Red hair and a bathrobe can be a lot
more expensive than a basic walking home from Free State?
10-1
The Community Mercantile is having a series of meetings to collect all the books to be sold to the holder. All households that joined the coop have not attend a reservation or do not sell your books and the coop will cancel. Books that will be collected. Call 843-8844 or call the office.
PERSONAL
Model and male biology grad student winken
below the midline in a low-mow woman. Call Brow
843-7897, any event.
Racquetball Jones-Happy Birthday! I love you always. Love, Cow. 10-11
Tafa, Hope you buoyed with your baby on your birthday. Love, Megan. 10-1
Tutor wanted for Sociology Statistics 321. Call
842-8998 or 841-2277.
10-4
Gauley Counseling Service; call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
K. V. of Sig Eif (ap Aik of K.B.) is the blue-hall arena at the 9th stair still blocked. **10.4**
SELL OR TRADE
Dear Risa, you've finally made the UDK. Happy Birthday, your gift is on the way. Love, John.
RIDES ___ RIDERS
SERVICES OFFERED
J. B.F—We're still having fun, and you're still the one, Love O'SH. [16]
The best format on night custodial crew at BAG Happy Birthday Hirsty Stephen & Larry
High Jax-Kap. 30. To Joe had goddits and dragons.
High Jax-Kap. 30. To Joe had goddits and dragons.
P. 39. You were in the Stables, Love, the Titans,
you were in the Stables, Love, the Titans.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on
accreditation. 1150 S. Idaho Ave., N. 26th, Los
Angeles 90210. 1150 Idaho Ave., N. 26th, Los
Angeles 90210.
N.A.P'A.
Constance Enn: Chomp chomp chow down! Pemmie
chomp: Chomp chomp chow down! Pemmie
sit: Sit sit sit sit sit! Okay, OK!
sit: Sit sit sit sit! Be happy, okay! OK!
sit: Sit sit sit sit! Be happy, okay! OK!
Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 109, 105, 109, 111, 115, 116, 117, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 128, 129 test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
PRESCHOOL OPENINGS. Preschool kindergarten and full day programs at Sunshine Acres Montessori Preschool for children ages 2-5\* in a well-equipped classroom, working in well-equipped classrooms. Currently, 1.5 and 1.9 teacher-student ratio dependents of 8 to 16 children first week of Oct. Also who is in public kindergarten. Non-profit sponsorship program. Four-acre scholarship program. Four-acre playground. Session history visiting hours 8-4-30. Pick up early from Monday through Friday. Majestic Lake Phone: 842-ASCid evening 842-355
Professional Study Skills Service. Male studying
for For Sale. Male studying for
18-17-7-B
Male studying for
18-17-7-B
Happy Birthday, splash! Your're truly, eragy Ace,
1ee.1
Departed simply with a ride to Hays weekend of Oct. 15 and went back home Friday. Need a ride to Hutchinson Friday, October 15 and go home Sunday.
TYPING
Auto Parts
Experienced typist—term paper, tests, mints,
electric phton typewriter. Spelling, spelling
tips.
For the Do-It-Yourself we
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it
JAMES V. OWENS
24TH AVE. LOUGHBOR STORE
Sales, Parts, Service
HORIZONS HONDA
5. Two stores
NAPA
3. we have it or can get it overnight
Wines and Liquors
NEXT TO OWEN'S FLOWERS
COLD BEER
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-28
Typist/editor. IBM Picae/cite. Quality work.
Website. Discussions, dissertations welcome.
Help 842-913-8778
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
Need an experienced typist? ITM Selectic LL
(ribbon). Call Pam at 842-709-7890.
(ribbon). Call Pam at 842-709-7890.
1811 W. 6th
THEISM BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawton. To order $85 Massachusetts or phone 848-3610 Thank you.
WANTED
Experienced manicurist and thesia typler. Call 841-3511 for details. 841-7800 evening weekends
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Alice Cooper, and/or his new old group, appear in the film *Sexuality* (2015), which is an EDB books, (concert), posters, graphic art. Any teen movie star like Lakers, like Alice Cooper, John Wiley or 67. **Phone:** 843-7928. Aaron Rob. Keep trying.
DESPERATE! Opening for a female Roommate
at the Grand Central Station. We'd be ready moved up. Owner Bathroom, Maid Service. We're coming in. You're going to pay everything you could want. Plus I'll pay you. Every payment of $ plus 20 on your first payment. Don't miss the last day of the month.
Really need tickets badly to Okla. game Oct. 16.
Call JL, 8641-2033. Keep听. 10-1
P
Needed: 2 tickets for the Okla.-KU and
Neb. KU games. 841-6351. 10-1
- Feosball
Need 3 tickets to Oklahoma-KU game Oct. 16.
Call Fred. 841-7815 for 5:30 p.m.
The Lounge
Studios, nonmasking male rooms to resume
house. Washer, dryer. CAR $85/mo.
CAB 10-1
1 or 2 FEMAides wanted to share house in country
or share household dues and greed. Call
642-843-7800.
Alarm clock and portable FM radio. Leave me
wet at night. Rich. 864-457-300, through 10-
a.m. day morning.
Need to buy 2 tickets to KU/K-State football
need-Urgent! 843-805, SUSAN. Tres. 10-4
Needed a cool female to share a nice Towers
Apt. price flexible. Call 841-794 or 843-850-10.
1-800-625-7123
"A different kind of bar
faturing seclusion and quiet."
WANTED: Women interested in working with women transition—divorce, separation, batten homes, family counseling, and homeless care; define needs; clarify resources available to meet those needs. Applications for volunteering must be received by Training stars Oct. 13th. Call 844-8548. Women's Transitional Care Services, Inc. this ad fund.
ROOMMATE. Male. Large 2 bedm. on bus route.
Room #14. Extremely quiet. Call RInhd.
Call RInhd. 849-792-3678. IB-6
- Pinball
Please help! Need 6 or less tickets to KU-OKA-
game game G16. 16. Name your price. Call 811-400-2500.
or email info@kua.com.
*Calculus and Analytic Geometry*, Thomas ob-
tainer, MIT Press; *For Kinematics in Computer Science offi-
cials*, University of Chicago Press.
Need OKn-KU tickets, up to 6 by KU grad.
Call 843-1853 before 9 p.m.
Call Ottis Vann!
Open Barry to 4:15 p.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
- Bud on Tap
Grad student needs female rooms to share 28
guest house rooms $100 plus utilities. Pets 10-
3268
Need KU-Nebraa game tickets. Name the Price.
Call 841-7351 at 4:00 p.m.
Depersonely need 3 tickets to the OU game. **84-**
**4142**. **10-6**
Chrome synchroisic infundibulum *looking for*
influenza vaccine *pressure room*
instruction, m-8972 *pressure room*
instruction, m-8972
Ace needs salespeople at the game to sell the
products. Earn a bonus hail a call B4-84-96
or 84-04-91.
WANTED: two or four tickets to NU-KU game.
Call after p. 643, 845-7975
10-4
For new Chevrolet and used cars
- Pool
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
at
Turner Chevrolet
843-7700
The Chalk Hawk
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Pool
- Smooker
- Ping Po
Ping Pong
Pin-Ball
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
Air Hockey
101
Friday, October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
---
Systems prepared for space trips
During the next decade two Mariner spacecrafts are scheduled to explore planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and the outside of our solar system.
On board the crafts will be experiments designed by the University department of physic
The experiments will measure cosmic
the sun's flare particles and record
solar wind data.
Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, said recently that the experiments would analyze a region of space outside the sun's influence.
Some of the data received from the spacecraft will be analysed at KU and will be released.
IN ADDITION TO the radiation experiments, infrared measurements will be taken of various planets. Ultraviolet measurements are used for characterization and a structure of the planet's atmosphere.
"There will also be a celestial navigation experiment which will get precise measurements of planet motion and the motion of their satellites," Armstrong said.
Spacecrafts that go closer to the sun are able to use solar energy for power but the two Mariner spacecrafts will use nuclear power, he said.
"The Mariners will be able to transmit data back to Earth at a higher rate than any other boat."
He said scientists would have much data to process when the ships get to Jupiter in 1979 because in the same year Ploeer XI will arrive at Saturn.
BAD WEATHER could hamper the 77 launchings Armstrong said, because they were partly weather-related.
Armstrong said launching the spaceships in August was very important because it was only then that the planets had the right relationship for the Mariners to swing by.
When a spacecraft swings by a planet, it when the planet's gravity to change its direction.
"But it won't be until 1980 that one of the spacecrafts will get to Saturn." Armstrong said. "It'll be a long way back."
FROM URANUS the satellites will go outside of the solar system to explore deep space.
He said it would take one spacecraft longer to get to Saturn because one will swing by Jupiter much closer than the other craft will. The farther one will travel to Saturn slower, he said, but it will be safer in case an encounter less radiation from Jupiter.
Armstrong said scientists would have to worry about trouble on Earth first.
"Since they both have to be launched off the same pad and it takes 10 days to count down for the second launching, there could be some problems," he said.
"But there is always the next year."
Students cause census problems for Douglas County, state officials
Every year that the University has a voter registration drive, the population figures for Douglas County rise. Every year following the drive, the figures fall because the names of students who failed to vote or are not members of the county are stricken from the list.
THE FIGURES Rogers use are verified by the state Board of Agriculture, according to K. R. Boyer, assistant secretary of agriculture.
It's a big problem for Douglas County
itsassor Darwin Rogers. He said recently
that he doesn't have an accurate count of
himself. It's also clear, doesn't have
an accurate method to use.
University of Kansas students unknowingly cause problems for Douglas County in
Rogers said that he wasn't happy with the way the census was conducted, but that it was about as accurate as a door-to-door survey.
Population figures are derived from voter and vehicle registration lists for the city of Lawrence and by door-to-door surveys outside the city. Rogers said door-to-door surveys weren't done in Lawrence because many people were missed.
The 1976 census, released last week, indicated that the population of Douglas County dropped 3,241, from 63,833 in 1975 to 60,592 this year.
The census figures are used to determine the amount of money the state returns to the cities and townships in the county on a per capita basis. The revenue comes from cigarette taxes, liquor taxes and the local ad valorem tax reduction fund.
DOUGLAS COUNTY probably benefits from the fluctuation of the population figures despite the temporary loss, Rogers said. Because of the distribution of funds on a per capita basis, Douglas County benefits from its large student registration, he said.
Rogers said although the potential existed no problems have resulted from duplicate registration in a student's home county and in Douglas County.
BOYER SAID that there is some cross-checking of the lists for duplicity, but that the problem isn't big enough to merit much time.
The state Board of Agriculture verifies the population counts and sums the sum of the ages given in each county.
KU, Haskell cooperate in program
A program has been developed between the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Junior College that would permit KU graduate students at both the master's and doctoral levels to become involved in classrooms for practical work experience.
The purpose of the program is twofold, Haack said recently. First, it will provide graduate students with a unique instructional experience and, second, it would expand the number and kinds of resources University can share with Haskell, he said.
According to Paul Haack, associate dean of the School of Education and professor of music education, the "Cooperative Field Experience Program" is the first formal link through education between the two schools.
"All of the graduate students selected will be involved in 'practicum.' They will go into
He said that this system was unlike regular student teaching programs that involve only undergraduates and is highly supervised by other faculty members. The classroom experience at Haskell could be of great value to the students and his adviser from KU.
areas such as student counseling, special education, and administration."
"All the students who teach at Haskell are selected by a joint screening committee of
The selections are based on applications submitted by a KU student and his faculty adviser, and includes the kind of practical experience the graduate wants, how long the program will last, and the number of courses that devote to the practicum." Haack said.
Unless otherwise recommended, all graduate student appointments will be reviewed prior to enrollment.
"Although I'm not the spokesman for the University or Haskell, I think it's a really good setup. It helps our graduate students here in education, and the Haskell student can benefit from an added learning situation," Haack said.
Use Kansan Classifieds
COLD BEER & Wine
Banning's
Retail Liquor Store
NOW OPEN
9th & New Hampshire
located in the
downtown area 841-3288
Stitch On needlepoint shop
a unique store
- paterayn yarns-350 different colors
- large selection of painted canvas
- original & custom designs
- project finishing-fabrics available
- gift items
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
Thurs. 10-8
19 W. 9th
1/2 block west of Weavers
842-1101
Come in and browse. I'll look forward to
JAZZ
seeing you.
Barb Heck
JAZZ
JAZZ
only at Paul Gray's Jazz Place
926 Mass.
TONITE The TOM MONTGOMERY TRIO with guitarist Jim Stringer, exciting modern jazz
Opens at 8:00
Music starts at
9:00
SATURDAY
Claude Williams old-time jazz violinist. You asked for him and he's back for I nite only!
Call 843-8975 or 842-9458 for reservations only! We now have food service!!!
LOVE GLOVES LTD.
SPIRIT GLOVES ARE HERE
- Jayhawk Cafe
- Campbell's Men's Wear
- Weavers Dept. Store
- Town Shop
- Britches Corner
- The Jay Shoppe
- Kansas Union Bookstore
- Cassem's Clothing
- Alice's Closet
- Rag Tag
GIVE
THE HAWKS
A HAND
with
Spirit Gloves®
A Division of
LOVE GLOVES
ETD.
SUPER drug stores
eigh
SUPER X
drug stores
1015 W. 23rd St.
Telephone
841-5110
special selection of top 10 hits
QUEEN
A Night At The Opera
EAGLES
Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975
Take It Easy
Peaceful
Easy
Feeling
Take It To
The Limit
Live Eyes
One Of
These Nights
Already Gone
History
America's Greatest Hits
THE BEACH BOYS ENDLESS SUMMER
GARY WRIGHT
The Dream Weaver
Includes Love Is Alive / Feel for Me
Blind Feeling / Much Higher
WINDS
AT THE
SPEED OF
SOUND
FLEETWOOD MAC
Includes
Monday
Morning
Crystal
Say You
Love Me
Landslide
Frampton Comes Alive!
497 Records
697 Tapes
KISS
497 Records
497 Tapes
EACH LP
Reg. $699
$399
EACH TAPE
Reg. $799
$499
A Night At The Opera
EAGLES Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975
Take it Easy Peaceful Easy Feeling Take It To The Limit Lyric Eyes One On Those Nights Already Gone
History America's Greatest Hits
GARY WRIGHT The Dream Weaver Includes Love Is Alive/Foot for Me Blind Feeling/Much Higher
WINGS AT THE SPEED OF SOUND
Frampton Comes Alive
ETWOOD MAC
*****
CXXXC
Y
ns
sked
e's
only!
KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.30
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Children enjoy KU production
Monday, October 4.1976
See story page five
MARILYN MONROE
Citizens seek Linwood injunction
By JERRY SEIB Staff Writer
A hearing is scheduled for Thursday in Johnson County District Court to determine whether a group of citizens can stop the expansion of a parking lot at the University of Kansas Linwood Center in Overland Park.
Staff Writer
Citizens of the area surrounding the center on Wednesday obtained a temporary restraining order stopping work on the parking lot. The citizens object to the ex-
said yesterday that any order issued because of the hearing would be a temporary injunction that could be made permanent.
THE LINWOOD Center is a former public school building that opened last year as a museum of woodworking.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
said the Kansas University Endowment
Association purchased both the school
building and the land surrounding it. He said about three-fourths of the land purchased was open space.
Plans for the parking lot expansion call for the resurfacing of some current parking areas and the construction of a new lot in the southwest corner of the grounds.
Lucas said about 180 parking spaces would be either resurfaced or constructed. The project would also include installation trees, plants and islands in the lot, he said.
Lucas; Davis; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; and Martin Henry. Endowment Association vice president for property, had met last Monday night with
Drive to Topeka to Save
Volfe's era shop, inc.
eighth · Phone 235-1386
Kansas 66603
Come to Wolfe's dynamic new showroom on 7th and Kansas Avenue. It is easy to find and well worth your time to drive over. Follow Interstate 70 downtown. Exit at 8th Street (worry not—some signs say 8th Avenue—it is the same road). Turn left off the ramp and proceed 3 blocks to Kansas Avenue. Turn right one more block to find the most spectacular camera sale of October. Don't miss it.
WOLF RIDE
WOLFE'S
ting to the construction.
Grand Opening And 52nd Anniversary Sale
WOLFE'S 52ND YEAR OF PHOTOGRAPHY
FEATURES . . .
Nikon
Wolfe's offers the widest selection of camera accessories and photo supplies under one roof. Only a few camera stores in major cities rival the selection available in our new dynamic showroom. Huge displays and wide aisles make shopping convenience another great feature at Wolfe's. Two municipal parking lots in addition to parking spaces on Kansas Avenue and 7th street contribute to the easy access to the friendly camera store in the United States (and maybe the world) Fifteen salespeople stand ready to assist you. Wolfe's will answer your photo questions any time.
ADVANTAGES . . .
Since competitive merchandise is available for direct comparison, you may choose your equipment, accessories, and supplies from immediate stock. You don't have to wait to see what you might get; you can get exactly what you see and want. Honest and helpful information is always available from our trained and experienced staff. Now you can get that skillful guidance that makes photography such a rewarding hobby. Because you can park such a short distance away, you won't have to waste time driving around from store to store or parking place to parking place.
One stop shopping to find the camera, help, and expertise to make photography fun, exciting, and easy are just a few of the many benefits you get from Wolfe's. Wolfe's makes volume purchases and shares the price value with our customers. We never claim to have the lowest price, even though they often are. Nevertheless, now you can find the camera that best fits your needs and at the price you can afford. Come in to see the benefits of comfortable, friendly, and professional service. We are excited to help you now just as we were 52 years ago. Wolfe's Camera Shop, 635 Kansas Avenue.
BENEFITS
University Daily Kansar
SPECIAL SALE HOURS FRIDAY 9 a.m. 'til 9 p.m.
SATURDAY 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
(OPEN LATE FRIDAY, OCT. 1 ONLY)
All prices are limited to stock on hand. Come early to avoid missing out on these great values.
20 Friday, October 1, 1976
CAMERA DEMONSTRATIONS
AL DAY FRIARY AND SATURDAY SPECIALISTS FROM THE LEADING MANUFACTURERS WILL SHOW AND EXPLAIN ALL NATURES OF EQUIPMENT. MEET THE MEN FROM CANON, BOLEX, BEILK and HOWELL, BUSNELL, TOPCOP, HASSELBIRD, BRONICA, DURST OLIVERMUNK, NIKON, OMEGA, VIVITAP, LEICA, KONICA, KOWA, MAMIYA. SEE COLOR PICTURES DEVELOPED BEFORE YOUR EYES.
Save $5.00 Cash
--ad in six others with 38, a total
GET EXTRA SAVINGS ON A $100 or more Purchase
Buy any merchandise totaling more than $100 and pay cash. Woolf's puts the last $5 in the cash register for you. Remember this coupon valid only for cash. Bank cards and credit plans do not qualify. Your U.S. currency is woolf's. That is how we did business 2 years ago. So spend real money today and Save (limit One Coupon Per Family expires 10/31/76).
--ad in six others with 38, a total
FREE MAGAZINE
LENS magazine is still available at Welfare's for free. Pick up your copy of this informative publication at no cost. No purchase required. Quantity varies.
master charge
BANK AMERICAN
welcome here
STORE HOURS:
Monday 8:30 to 8:30
Tuesday thru Saturday
8:30 to 5:30
PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED MAIL ORDERS WELCOMED FINANCING AVAILABLE
master charge BANK NAME ENCARD welcome here
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
STORE HOURS:
Monday 8:30 to 8:30
Tuesday thru Saturday
8:30 to 5:30
Municipal Parking
Parking
WOLFE'S CAMERA SHOP
Ten Street
Davis said some construction work had begun before the court-ordered stoppage.
WOLF TRAINING
master charge
BANKAMERICARD
online credit card
Henry said that the parking lot expansion had been planned about six months and that he hadn't seen a list of the citizens' complaints.
"I's my impression that they feel the paved area will be a less attractive area," he said. "It's also my impression that some kids play football on that grass area."
D that about 50 citizens at meeteing, that which KU oifey would go ahead with the citizens then obtained the straining order, which will be t days.
The live finalists for the HOPE Award will be present yesterday by the HOPE Award committee.
The finalists are Allan Cigar, assistant professor of political science; Edwynna Hare, assistant professor of psychology and instruction and of English; J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business; Joan Peter, associate professor of business; Jack Berman, acting associate professor of journalism.
5 in finals for HOPE
Ankerson Ave.
N
Municipal Parking
Parking
WOLFES
CAMERA
SHOP
7th Street
Kendall Ave.
Randy Brown, HOPE Award committee co-chairman, said 489 KU seniors voted Oct. 6 and 7, almost three times the number that voted last year.
KU seniors may vote again for one of the finalists Oct. 27 and 28. The winner will be announced Nov. 6 at the halftime of the KU-Iowa State football game.
Pennsylvania and Ohio, with notes, are key states where he dwindled, and California, has claimed an edge, the Times
en;
ally
ad in six others
iine said its September poll by Skelly &学良 showed FFor 10 per cent of the ers sampled, with 43 per cent cihandate and 14 per cent
The HOPE Award (Honor to an Outstanding Progressive Educator) was established by the Class of 1959. Calder was a journalist, received the award last year.
SAS
t support fore the iding her
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
are Rita Hume, Topeka junior, left, and Debbie Blaylock, Overland Park sophomore. The yell leaders and pompon girls tried to fill in the gaps in game action and create crowd enthusiasm with off-the-ground formations.
b0 47c
Friday, October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
---
Systems prepared for space trips
During the next decade two Marine spacecraft are scheduled to explore planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and the outside of our solar system.
On board the crafts will be experiments designed by the University department of physics.
The experiments will measure cosmic rays and solar flare particles and record their distribution.
Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, said recently that the experiments would analyze a region of space outside the sun's influence.
Some of the data received from the spacecraft will be analyzed at KU and will be used to investigate future missions.
IN ADDITION TO THE radiation experiments, infrared measurements will be taken of various planets. Ultraviolet measurements will be obtained from the atmosphere and structure of the planet's atmosphere.
"There will also be a celestial navigation experiment which will get precise measurements of planet motion and the motion of their satellites," Armstrong said.
Spacecrafts that go closer to the sun are able to use solar energy for power but the two Mariner spacecrafts will use nuclear power, he said.
"The Mariners will be able to transmit data back to Earth at a higher rate than any other aircraft."
He said scientists would have much data to process when the ships get to Jupiter in 1979 because in the same year Pioneer XI will arrive at Saturn.
BAD WEATHER could hamper the launches Armstrong said, because they were flying at a high altitude.
Armstrong said launching the spaceships in August was very important because it was only then that the planets had the right relationship for the Mariners to swing by.
When a spacecraft swings by a planet, it uses the planet's gravity to change its direction.
"But it won't be until 1800 that one of the spacecrafts will get to Saturn," Armstrong said. "We'll send it."
FROM URANUS the satellites will go outside of the solar system to explore deep space.
Armstrong said scientists would have to worry about trouble on Earth first.
He said it would take one spacecraft longer to get to Saturn because one will swing by Jupiter much closer than the other craft will. The farther one will travel to Saturn slower, he said, but it will be safer to encounter less radiation from Jupiter.
"Since they both have to be launched off the same pad and it takes 10 days to count down for the second launching, there could be some problems," he said.
"But there is always the next year."
Stitch On needlepoint shop
a unique store
---
- paterayn yarns-350 different colors
- large selection of painted canvas
Students cause census problems for Douglas County, state officials
- original & custom designs
COLD BEER & Wine Banning's Retail Liquor Store NOW OPEN
- project finishing-fabrics available
University of Kansas students unknowingly transferred to Douglass County in state's biennial chemical trial.
I
Every year that the University has a voter registration drive, the population figures for Douglas County rise. Every year following the drive, the figures fall because the names of students who failed to vote or were not voters of the county are stricken from the list.
- gift items
It's a big problem for Douglas County assessor Darwin Rogers. He said recently that he doesn't have an accurate count of the number of patients who doesn't have an accurate method to use.
THE FIGURES Board are use verified by the state Roger of Agriculture, according to K. R. Boyer, assistant secretary of agriculture.
The 1976 census, released last week, indicated that the population of Douglas County dropped 3,241, from 63,833 in 1975 to 60,529 this year.
Rogers said that he wasn't happy with the way the census was conducted, but that it was about as accurate as a door-to-door survey.
Population figures are derived from voter and vehicle registration lists for the city of Lawrence and by door-to-door surveys outside the city. Rogers said door-to-door surveys weren't done in Lawrence because many people were missed.
The census figures are used to determine the amount of money the state returns to the cities and townships in the county on a per capita basis. The revenue comes from cigarette taxes, liquor taxes and the local ad valorem tax reduction fund.
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
Come in and browse. I'll look forward to
KU, Haskell cooperate
DOUGLAS COUNTY probably benefits
Wo
camera
116 West Eighth
Topeka, Kane
A program has been developed between the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Junior College that would permit KU graduate students at both the master's and doctoral levels to become involved in classrooms for practical work experience.
According to Paul Haack, associate dean of the School of Education and professor of music education, the "Cooperative Field Experience Program" is the first formal link through education between the two schools.
"All of the graduate students selected will be involved in practicum. They will go into
The purpose of the program is twofold, Haack said recently. First, it will provide graduate students with a unique instructional experience and, second, it would expand the number and kinds of resources University can share with Haskell, he said.
areas such as student counseling, special education, and administration."
He said that this system was unlike regular student teaching programs that involve only undergraduates and is highly supervised by other faculty members. The students were taught to fit the expressed needs of the student and his adviser from KU.
*All the students who teach at Haskell are selected by a joint screening committee of*
*teachers and faculty.*
The selections are based on applications submitted by a KU student and his faculty adviser, and includes the kind of practical experience the graduate wants, how long the program will last, and the number of courses required to devote to the practicum. "Back read."
Unless otherwise recommended, all graduate student appointments will be approved.
SPIRIT GLOVES ARE HERE
- Jayhawk Cafe
- Campbell's Men's Wear
- Town Shop
- Weavers Dept. Store
- Britches Corner
- The Jay Shoppe
- Kansas Union Bookstore
- Alice's Closet
- Cassem's Clothing
A Division of
- Rag Tag
GIVE THE HAWKS A HAND with Spirit Gloves
LOVE GLOVES LTD.
Wolfe's Has Moved!
Wow, are we excited about our new location. So excited we have called in extra help just to tell you about our store. Over 20 factory representatives will be on hand to tell you about our new showroom. (Well, we had to promise to let them talk about their products too, but listen to what they have to say about Wolfe's.) Better yet, come on over and tell us yourself. We think you'll like our newly remodeled, increased floor space with wide aisles and fantastic displays. If you like it, tell us and Santa may put something extra in your stocking this Christmas. (Negotiations aren't in from the North Pole yet, but should be complete by January.)
5
Year
Warranty
Canon FL Mount Lens by Bushnell
Bushnell Lens Riot
135mm f 2.8 $121.50 $39⁹⁹
Mig. Wolfe's Closeout
sugg. Price
entrui
300mm 15.5 $162.50 $69⁹⁹
Limited Quantities to fit Pentax, Nikon,
Canon, Konica, and Olympus. Try one of
the rugged lenses for excellent performance.
They come complete with a five year
warranty and soft lens pouch. Come in to
Wolfe's and buy direct from Ed Weiss
55-135 zoom $289.50 $119⁹⁹
Cannon Long and Short Lens Special
Buy our long and short set for EXTRA savings. Now you can get a 300mm and a 21mm Cannon mount Bushel, made to sell over $50.
Both for $9999
Bring in your body and let us put Bathub Leash on it All the douses are available in limited quantities for Penza, Poland.
Look at these low
Look at these low Bushnell Lens Prices $52d Anniversary
Mint Retail $890
2
AUTHORIZED DEALER
CHEVROLET
NEW Hampshire
28mm f 2.8 131.50 $ 84^{99} $
35mm f 2.8 102.50 **59⁹**
200mm f3.5 142.50 $ 89^{99} $
135 mm f 2.8
Super Wide Lens
300mm f 5.5 162.50 $ 79^{99} $
Close Out
21 mm f 3.8 Bushnell made to sell for $200
90-230 Zoom 254.50 $169^{99}$
400mm f 6.3 194.50 $ \mathbf{1 1 9} ^ {9 9} $
only $6999
Very Limited Quantities on All Specials
35-105 Zoom 425.00 299 $^{99}$
Plus you receive your choice of a Polycontact filter set or an Bx10 Color Print Drum
---
100
Bogen
Enlarger Savings
Now you can make quality black
and white color prints in your own
Dark room
Bogen 22 with
50mm lens ONLY
$8999*
BOGEN 69
SPECIAL PACKAGE
Both Bogen Enlargers help you make
beautifully sharp color or black and
white prints
Buy the Bogen 69 enlarger and
select either a 50 or 75 mm lens.
Usually 139.99
ONLY 99.99
Limited stock
Unicolor Savings
See Color Prints made from Slides in front of your eyes by Ralph Neeley of Unicolor.
Unicolor Kit for Prints
Sale 49.99
Price
Get all the things you need to print color pictures except the enlarger.
UniRoller Special
Usually $9.95
SALE
$46.99
unidrum
SALE
$4699
unidrum
WOLFE'S 52ND YEAR OF PHOTOGRAPHY MEET MINOLTA'S LINE OF FINE CAMERAS and their Joe Millanowski
Minolta SRTSC
This is true quality and value at great price. The SRSCS is fast and easy to handle with formose, fabrics, and wipes away from your subject. Enjoy the Patented through the lens light metering system, and the versatile system of lenses and SRT accessory hot shoe and 1,100 of sec. 2
minolta
SR II
SA
Minolta
Mfgs
SRT-SC with Suggested
f 2 lens Retail $300
Minolta SR-T SC
with 1.4
Mfg.
Suggested
Rent $400
Wolfe's
Low
Price
$229⁹⁹
Wolfe's
Low
Price $18999
YOUR HANDS KNOW IT'S A MINOLTA
MINOLTA SR-T 202
minolta
SUMMICRO
50mm F1.4
minolta
This is Mintuata a small smartphone equipped with match neck bracelet. A beautiful example of how you can wear a heart bracelet. The heart-shaped hidden holder allows exposure through the front cover, holds all jewelry, and allows face-to-face interaction with friends. You feel more to be beloved.
Mlgs. suggested retail With ll.4 lens $400
Wolf's
Anniversary
Special
$27999
Minolta XE-5
minolta
ZC210-80
24mm F3.5 Lens
Mfgs. suggested retail with F 2 lens $500
Now you can set apart you creative and conventional styles. The new style is designed to be compatible with 2000hf in a matt finish, an applied exposure capability in hud hall, and as quick sheen that appropriate glossy finish. This new style compares well with all fitted custom doors. All attach with clear acrylic coating.
mphs, suggested retail with 12 mph
Wolfe's Anniversary Special
$319'99
WOFLE'S 52nd ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL
135mm f 2.8 Auto Marexar Lens
and Capro SLR Compartment Case
Total Value almost $140
Wolfe's Special
$6999
---
PUT NEW LIFE INTO YOUR OLD SLIDES
FILM CAMERA
Automatic focus, 500 watt quartz
iodine lamp, built-in timer for automatic
slide changing Minolta Autopak AFT/2.
Suggested retail $200
Walfe's Price $999
MICROVISION
Auto focus Forward/reverse remote control Single slide pop-up editor Minolta Autokap AF/2
Wolfes Price $7999
KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.30
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, October 4, 1976
Children enjoy KU production
See story page five
Citizens seek Linwood injunction
WOLF CITY
By JERRY SEIB
A hearing is scheduled for Thursday in Johnson County District Court to determine whether a group of citizens can stop the expansion of a parking lot at the University of Kansas Linwood Center in Overland Park.
Staff Writer
camera shop, inc.
THE LINWOOD Center is a former public school building that opened as a museum in 1943 to showcase the artifacts for KU.
Wolfe's
Citizens of the area surrounding the center on Wednesday obtained a temporary restraining order stopping work on the parking lot. The citizens object to the ex-
116 West 8th ght · Phone 235-1358
Topeke Kansas 66603
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
said the Kansas University Endowment
Association purchased both the school
building and the land surrounding it. He
said about three-fourths of the land purchased was open space.
Plans for the parking lot expansion call for the resurfacing of some current parking areas and the construction of a new lot in the southwest corner of the grounds.
said yesterday that any order issued because of the hearing would be a temporary injunction that could be made permanent.
Lucas; Davis; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; and Martin Henry, Endowment Association vice president for property, had met last Monday night with
Lucas said about 180 parking spaces would be either resurfaced or constructed. The project would also include installation of plants, plants and islands in the lot, he said.
AUDIO TECHNICIA
Milton
TGIF takes on a whole new meaning at Wolfe's this weekend. Friday, October 1,
we will stay open from 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. (That way, you can finish studying
before you come to shop at Wolfe's.) Saturday, we will be open from 9:00 a.m. to
6:00 p.m. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE. So come over and look at the Brobdingnagian savings (found that one in my "Swift" thesaurus) on cameras and photo items plus the otherwise tremendous displays and photo demonstrations.
Don't miss it.
Special Sale Hours
2999
M39
and convenience
focusing streets,
possure capability
at automatically
Select from a
s. All attach with
unit
-ting to the construction.
1999
remote
or Mini-
999
KODAK MAKES YOUR PICTURES COUNT
Kodak Tele-Instamatic 608
Price
27.99
Price
$27.99
• Skim and trim, fits pocket or purse
• Easy drop-in loading
• Takes normal snapshots or slides, or
a lever to telephoto and the subject appears closer.
Come see the Deloitte 708 Mode to sell for $99.95
Now $69.99
Kodak Sound Movie Cameras and Projectors
PAL VIDEO RECORDERS
CAROUSEL 760 H
RETAIL $299.50
NOW $159.99
REDUCED BELOW OUR COST
List Sale
Ektasound 235 Projector $244.50 $ 999*
Ektasound 245B Projector $329.50 $ 1999*
Ektasound 130 Camera $208.50 $ 999*
Ektasound 150 Camera $363.50 $ 1999*
MOVIE STAR
DUAL 8 MOVIE DECK
Kodak Movie Deck projects so beautiful it could be the size of your moves. Choose from our easy to operate models. All with automatic threading and instant replay. You can show movies on Kodak Movie Deck 435 154.00 119.99
Kodak Movie Deck 441 184.50 130.99
Kodak Movie Deck 445 185.00 130.99
Kodak Movie Deck 455 279.95 169.99
goF GIANT SALE SAVE 40 to 50% FROM SUGGESTED RETAIL
DUAL 8 MOVIE PROJECTOR
REMOTE CONTROL SLIDE PROJECTOR
SHOWS BOTH REGULAR AND SUFFER II
DUAL 8 MOVIE PROJECTOR
SHOWS ROTH
REGULAR
AND SUPER 8
SOUND MOVIE PROJECTOR
The 8822 is located with features, forward, reverse, still, fast forward, slow motion room lamp switch and zoom lens.
REMOTE CONTROL
SLIDE PROJECTOR
The 2100 E is loaded with features, for more that price indicates. Pop up slides editor, rotary tray, remote control focus and forward and reverse.
HI FIDELITY
SOUND
retail 129.00 Sale $5999
SOUND CAMERA
HI Fidelity SOUND
The 200S has a bright, sharp picture, sound reproduction is very good. Heavy duty speaker built in.
Retail 289.95 Sale 16999
MAGIC CAMERA
With extra Strong Lens the GAF 050 Camera has a power zoom, microphone, backlight control and 6 power zoom lens. (almost as strong as binoculars).
21999
The SPORTSMANS Camera
OLYMPUS
OLYMPUS
18 Friday, October 1, 1976
An Olympus 35mm compact Camera is perfect for saving the fun of your favorite outdoor activity. Tucked away in your pocket, it is always handy for those exciting moments. And its fast shutter stops the most exciting action.
Olympus $159.99 $119 99
35 ED
Olympus $159.99 $129 99
35RC
OL
The Cameras that make "happiness" complete
Olympus OM-1 and Olympus OM-2
OLYMPUS
University Daily Kansan
The OM-1 is over's smaller and lighter than compamers. You will have to hold it to believe yourself, but the OM-1 gets you to lightweight, get lightweight, want to work at it. Bounded by the entire OM system of accessories from Macro to motor drive, it is quiet and shock free, and unfields the need for loud bright light that sway's on your eyes.
with 50mm f1.8
with f1.4 retails for $454.95 Wolle's Price 349.99
OLYMPUS
FREE with the purchase pf an Olympus camera dur ing our grand opening sale you will receive a Capro SLR compartment Case. Regular value $39.99. FREE.
3
Here is the same remarkable feature of the OM 1 package on a automatic exoskeleton. And the OM 2 package that measures light directly at the film plane and measures air flow all over the massive air exposure all the way up to 60 seconds. The OM 1 is the basis of the complete OM system available in the Rigel while it captures the world for you automatically.
with 50mm
1.8 lens made to sell 599.99 479.99
with 50mm
with 50mm 11.4 made to sell for $654.95 529.99
EXTRA SPECIAL
ZUIKO LENS
SPECTACULAR
Come in, buy a new OM camera, and take advantage of these online saving prices on authentic Zuko Lenses.
One of a Kind Demonstrator OM 1 Lens
300mm f 4.5 429.95 279 95
40mm 1.6 999.95 59999
D that about 50 citizens are meeting, after which KU ofsey would go ahead with the citizens then obtained the straining order, which will be t days.
600mm f 6.3 1195.00 799^99
ZUKO INTERNETGAMINGLIBS (UNI GROUP) WOOFTE RATE
13.5W I 15.0W E KGA 259.99 £ 259.99
28mm I 51.0W E KGA with hw bead 169.99 £ 169.99
28mm I 51.0W E KGA with hw bead 169.99 £ 169.99
32mm I 51.0W E KGA with hw bead 134.99 £ 134.99
32mm I 51.0W E KGA with hw bead 134.99 £ 134.99
100mm I 82.8W E KGA with hw bead 174.99 £ 174.99
100mm I 82.8W E KGA with hw bead 174.99 £ 174.99
125mm I 2.8W E KGA with hw bead 199.99 £ 199.99
132mm I 5.5E L KGA with hw bead 149.99 £ 149.99
132mm I 5.5E L KGA with hw bead 149.99 £ 149.99
165mm H M F J K GA with hw bead 139.99 £ 139.99
ad in six others with 38, a total
Davis said some construction work had begun before the court-ordered storage.
Henry said that the parking lot expansion had been planned about six months and that he hadn’t seen a list of the citizens’ complaints.
Pennsylvania and Ohio, with
rotes, are key states where
has dwindled, and California,
Texas has lost the state's
claim an edge. The Times
WOLF
"It's my impression that they feel the paved area will be a less attractive area," it is. It's also my impression that some of their kids play football on that grass area."
Wolfe's
zine said its September poll by Skelly & White showed Fiora n a dead beat among 1,300 candidates. (46) Of the candidate and 14 per cent candidate and 14 per cent
camera shop, inc.
5 in finals for HOPE
The finalists are Allan Cigier, assistant professor of political science; Edwyna Curriculum and instruction and of English;mond McNish, adjunct professor of business; Jean Pyer, associate professor of music; Peter Turk, acting associate professor of humanities.
The five finalists for the HOPE Award were announced yesterday by the HOPE Award committee.
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
Randy Brown, HOPE, Award committee co-chairman, said 489 KU seniors voted Oct. 6 and 7, almost three times the number that voted last year.
KU seniors may vote again for one of the five finalists Oct. 27 and 28. The winner will be announced Nov. 6 at the halftime of the KU-Iowa State football game.
The HOPE Award (Honor to an Outstanding Progressive Educator) was established by the Class of 1959. Calder received journalism, received the award last year.
SAS
t support before the hiding her
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
are Rita Hume, Topeka junior, left, and Debble Blaylock, Overland Park sophomore. The yell leaders and pompon girls tried to fill in the gaps in game action and create crowd enthusiasm with off-the-ground formations.
150 cm
Fridav. October 1, 1976
---
University Daily Kansan
Systems prepared for space trips
During the next decade two Marine spacecrafts are scheduled to explore planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and the outside of our solar system.
On board the crafts will be experiments designed by the University department of physics
The experiments will measure cosmic and record solar wind characterization.
Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, said recently that the experiments would analyze a region of space outside the sun's influence.
Some of the data received from the spacecraft will be analyzed at KU and will be stored in the cloud.
IN ADDITION TO the radiation experiments, infrared measurements will be taken of various planets. Ultraviolet measurement is used for the identification and structure of the planet's atmosphere.
"There will also be a celestial navigation experiment which will get precise measurements of planet motion and the motion of their satellites," Armstrong said.
Spacecrafts that go closer to the sun are able to use solar energy for power but the two Mariner spacecrafts will use nuclear power, he said.
"The Mariners will be able to transmit data back to Earth at a higher rate than any other mode of communication."
He said scientists would have much data to process when the ships get to Jupiter in 1979 because in the same year Pioneer XI will arrive at Saturn.
BAD WEATHER could hamper the 1977 launchings Armstrong said, because he was not flying.
Armstrong said launching the spaceships in August was very important because it was only then that the planets had the right relationship for the Mariners to swing by.
When a spacecraft swings by a planet, it uses the planet's gravity to change its direction.
"But it won't be until 1800 that one of the spacecraft will get to Saturn." Armstrong the astronaut. "I'll send them back."
FROM URANUS the satellites will go outside of the solar system to explore deep space.
Armstrong said scientists would have to worry about trouble on Earth first.
He said it would take one spacecraft longer to get to Saturn because one will swing by Jupiter much closer than the other craft will. The farther one will travel to Earth, he said, but it will be safer because it will encounter less radiation from Jupiter.
"Since they both have to be launched off the same pad and it takes 10 days to count down for the second launching, there could be some problems," he said.
"But there is always the next year."
Stitch On needlepoint shop
a unique store
COLD BEER & Wine Banning's Retail Liquor Store NOW OPEN
Students cause census problems for Douglas County, state officials
- paterayn yarns-350 different colors
- large selection of painted canvas
- original & custom designs
University of Kansas students unknow-
ne about Douglas County in De-
bate's biennial campus.
Every year that the University has a voter registration drive, the population figures for Douglas County rise. Every year following the drive, the figures fall because the names of students who failed to vote or did not attend of the county are stricken from the list.
- project finishing-fabrics available
It's a big problem for Douglas County it's assessor Darwin Rogers. He said recently that he doesn't have an accurate count of them, but that's not how it doesn't have an accurate method to use.
THE FIGURES Rogers use are verified by the state Board of Agriculture, according to K. R. Boyer, assistant secretary of agriculture.
- gift items
---
The 1976 census, released last week, indicated that the population of Douglas County dropped 3,241, from 63,833 in 1975 to 60,592 this year.
Rogers said that he wasn't happy with the way the census was conducted, but that it was about as accurate as a door-to-door survey.
Population figures are derived from voter and vehicle registration lists for the city of Lawrence and by door-to-door surveys outside the city. Rogers said door-to-door surveys weren't done in Lawrence because many people were missed.
The census figures are used to determine the amount of money the state returns to the cities and townships in the county on a per capita basis. The revenue comes from ciga-
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
Come in and browse. I'll look forward to
KU, Haskell cooperate
A program has been developed between the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Junior College that would permit KU graduate students at both the master's and levels to become involved in Haskell classrooms for practical work experience.
According to Paul Haack, associate dean of the School of Education and professor of music education, the "Cooperative Field Experience Program" is the first formal link through education between the two schools.
areas such as student counseling, special education, and administration."
"All of the graduate students selected will be involved in 'practise.' They will go into
The purpose of the program is twofold, Haack said recently. First, it will provide graduate students with a unique instructional experience and, second, it would expand the number and kinds of resources University can share with Haskell, he said.
DOUGLAS COUNTY probably benefits
He said that this system was unlike regular student teaching programs that involve only undergraduates and is highly supervised by other faculty members. The students should be tailored to fit the expressed needs of the student and his adviser from KU.
"All the students who teach at Haskell are selected by a joint screening committee of the faculty."
The selections are based on applications submitted by a KU student and his faculty adviser, and includes the kind of practical experience the graduate wants, how long the program will last, and the number of courses that devote to the precticum." Haack said.
Unless otherwise recommended, all graduate student appointments will be made available to the following groups:
rette taxes, liquor taxes and the local ad valorem tax reduction fund.
- Campbell's Men's Wear
SPIRIT GLOVES ARE HERE
- Jayhawk Cafe
- Town Shop
- Weavers Dept. Store
- Alice's Closet
- Britches Corner
- The Jay Shoppe
- Kansas Union Bookstore
Wo
camera
116 West Spencer
Topeka, KS
- Rag Tag
- Cassem's Clothing
GIVE THE HAWKS A HAND with Spirit Gloves
LOVE GLOVES LTD.
A Division of
Fear Not
Should some uncontrollable force (your parents are coming to stay for the weekend), some freak accident (a herd of elephants ran off with your VW bus), or some unfortunate situation occurs (like you couldn't shut off the shower), and you can't make it over this weekend, the sale continues next week. But, all items are subject to prior sale. (Also we are open every Monday nite until 8:30 p.m.)
RADIO TRANSISTOR AM/FM TIME ADJUSTER
AUDIO/VIDEO METER
MODEL 1040-2605-3705
INPUTS: AC 60-260V, DC 5-35V
OUTPUTS: FM/AM 89.7/108MHz,
TV 108MHz, USB 2.0
CONNECTIONS: Stereo, Headphone
POWER: 10W
GOSSEN LUNA PRO
PROFESSIONAL LIGHT METER
Here is the proven world standard for extreme sensitivity, range accuracy and versatility.
Anniversary Special
$94^{99}
Optional attachments available at Wolfe's usual low price
VIVITAR LENS SPECTACULAR
Available for Most Popular SLR Mounts
LIMITED QUANTITIES
Here is the opportunity to get that lens you've been wanting.
Special Clearance
Retail Wolfe's Low Price
35mm f1.9 for Nikon, Minoolta, Konica 149$^{50}$ 59$^{99}$
135mm f2.3 Series 1 for Minoolta, Konica 219$^{95}$ 99$^{99}$
200mm f3 Series 1 for Pentax, Nikon, Minoolta, Konica 249$^{50}$ 119$^{99}$
5999
Wolfe's Low Price
9999
249 $ ^{50} $ 119 $ ^{99} $
Select From This Group for Big Savings
Vivitar Series 1 Lenses
Lens for Minolta or Pentax. Priced below
(ADD 10.00 for lens with Nikon, Canon
Olympus or Konica 6 mount)
1
in stock and available far most popular SLR Cameras
9999
6999
119 $ ^{90} $
Lens Mfg. Suggested Retail Wolf's Price
24mm 11990
f2.8 ... 164.00
28mm 9999
f2.5 ... 134.00
35mm 6999
f2.8 ... 100.00
55mm 12999
f2.8 MACRO 175.00
135mm 7699
f2.8 ... 100.00
200mm 8999
f3.5 ... 119.00
35-105mm 28999
Zoom ... 349.99
75-205 81999
70-210 f3.5
Macro Zoom 469.50 $ \mathbf{3 1 9} ^{9 9}$
WOLF
35-85
f2.8 499,50 $ \mathbf{3 6 9}^{9 9} $
7699
8999
85-205 19999 Macro Zoom 259.00
Wolfe's
,635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
camera shop, inc.
Omega Enlarger Sale
TOMATO
Chromega Color Print
LEARN HOW EASY
IT IS TO PRINT
OWN COLOR PICTURES
SEE the complete low-cost, easy system.
Bring your own color negative or watch the Omega Man print from one of ours.
Omega B66 XL Wolfe's usual price 209.99
Omega B600
With Dishcote Color Head
Wolfe's usual
for $29.99
Now Only 199.99
$50mm Lens and Carriers only $25.00
Omega Simtron Analyzer Wolfe's Special Price 149 $^{99}$
14999
The Omega Man will be demonstrating color Friday and Saturday. Bring an orange or yellow shirt to him print before your eyes.
Sunpa
Sunpa Automatic
The better your camera, the more you will Five beautifully made models, ranging from incredible Auto 611—the World's most energy saving transistor circuitry.
the 90
the 101
the 311
Fine
ELEMTEK
SUPERM
the 90
$16.99
the 101
$20.99
the 311
$54.99
Lithium
DTL Lens
Close Out
Greg Buys for all Mamiya,
Pentax, Yashica, Fujica Cameras
6999
28mm f2.8
4999
35mm f2.8
6999
200mm f3.5
SAVE MORE
Come see the new Professional Syst With Fred Terry
SUPER TRADE IN SPECIAL
Bring in your old instantiate or polaroid camera in working condition and get a $20 trade in on a Mamiya SLR,
FUJIFILM
E30 24mm F3.5 Lens
1988
Mamiya
spot and averaging meter n e m
and screw mount lens.
Mamiya
1000 DSX f1.8
Open aperture metering system
and spot and averaging system
SALE 199.99
- 20.00 Trade-in*
179.99
WITH TRADUE
Mamiya
1000 DSX with f1.4
Open aperture metering system
plus a fast f1.4 lens.
SALE 219.99
- 20.00 Trade-in*
199.99
WITH TRADUE
KONICA MINOX
35mm F1.4 ZOOM LENS
FASHION LENS 35mm
F2.8
AUTO AF FILTER
Mamiya
1000 DSX with f1.4
---
AAAAAAA
---
KU ?
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Children enjoy KU production
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 87 No.30
Monday, October 4,1976
See story page five
A child is drinking from a cup.
Citizens seek Linwood injunction
By JERRY SEIB Staff Writer
A hearing is scheduled for Thursday in Johnson County District Court to determine whether a group of citizens can stop the expansion of a parking lot at the University of Kansas Linwood Center in Overland Park.
Citizens of the area surrounding the center on Wednesday obtained a temporary restraining order stopping work on the site of the apartment because they would if all renters
THE LENWOOD Center is a former public school building that opened last year as a school for students with disabilities.
said_yesterday that any order issued because of the hearing that could be a temporary injunction that could be made permanent.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
said the Kansas University Endowment
Association purchased both the school
building and the land surrounding it. He
said about three-fourths of the land purchased was open space.
The University announced an announcement about
Plans for the parking lot expansion call for the resurfacing of some current parking areas and the construction of a new lot in the southwest corner of the grounds.
Lucas said about 180 parking spaces would be either resurfaced or constructed. The project would also include installation trees, plants and islands in the lot, he said.
Lacas; Davis; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; and Martin Henry. Endowment Association vice president for property, had met last Monday night with
WOLF RIDE
Wolfe's
camera shop, inc.
116 West Bright • Phone 235-1386
Topok, Kansas 66603
Don't Forget . . .
This weekend you can talk with men representing more than 20 photo factories as well as Wolfe's sales people. You can really compare opinions on everything photographic. And, since direct comparison of merchandise and opinions is immediately available, a wise choice in purchasing is imminent.
Sunpack
Automatic Flash
After your camera, the more you will want Sunpack electronic flash,
autifully made models, ranging from pocket size shoe mounts to the
Made Auto 611 — the World's most advanced Computer flash with
saving transistor circuitry.
the 101
$29.99
the 311
$54.99
the 511
$99.99
the 611
$199.00
WOLF CENTER
the 101
the 311
the 511
the 611
$2999 $5499 $9999 $19900
Sunpack Automatic Flash
After your camera, the more you will want Sunpack electronic flash, beautifully made models, ranging from pocket size shoe mounts to the wide Auto 611 — the World's most advanced Computer flash with leaving transistor circuitry.
the 101
the 311
the 511
the 611
$29'99
$54'99
$99'99
$199'00
SEE THE NEWEST KONICA WITH DARIUS CONTRACTOR OF BERKEY
Konica Dream Outfit
$349'99 • 135mm Bushnell • Sunpak Auto Strobe • Deluxe Compartment Case
• KONICA TC with 11.7 lens
• 25% smaller and lighter than other reflexes
• Compact, lightweight
• Low Cost
Automatic and Manual too
Wuille's $249'99 low Price
Konica C35EF with built-in flash
$109'99
Professional Quality Sensor Easy
e see the new Mamiya Professional System Fred Terry
Come in to discuss the advantages of the Mamiya professional system. From 2½" square to the super approaches of ideal format, Mamiya professionals have them all. Larger negatives mean greater sharpness, greater enlargements, and greater fun. See the ideal format cameras with greater flexibility through interchangeable lenses.
Mamiya
000 DSX with f1.4
en operation metering system
is a fast f1.4 lens.
SALE 219.99
-20.00 Trade-in*
199.99
WITH TRADES
RB 67 Pro S
with 90mm lens
599'00
Save over 150.00
Mamiya 645
Composer tool, Camera Body, Magazine, Waist Level finder and 80mm lens.
499'00
PRICE HIGHER AS ILLUSTRATED
Mamiya C 220
Camera with 80mm lens.
Save 100.00
199'99
Sunpack Automatic Flash
After your camera, the more you will want Sunpack electronic flash. Beautifully made models, ranging from pocket size shoe mounts to the delicate Auto 611 — the world's most advanced Computer flash with saving transistor circuitry.
the 101
the 311
the 511
the 611
$29¥99
$54¥99
$99¥99
$199¥00
Konica Dream Outfit
• 135mm Bushnell
• Sunpak Auto Telephoto
• Strrobe
• Deluxe Compartment Case
• Konica TC with f1.7 lens
• 25% smaller and lighter than other lenses
• Compact, Lightweight
• Low Cost
• Automatic and Manual too
Wolfe's $249¥99
Low Price
Konica C35EF with built-in flash
$109¥99
Professional Quality, Superb fine
see the new Mamiya Professional System
Fred Terry
Come in to discuss the advantages of the Mamiya professional system. From 2¼" square to the super approaches of ideal format, Mamiya professionals have them all. Larger negatives mean greater sharpness, greater enlargements, and greater fun. See the ideal format cameras with greater flexibility through interchangeable lenses.
Mamiya DXS with f1.4
en aperture metering system
is a fast f1.4 lens.
SALE 219.99
-20.00 Trade-in*
199.99
RB 67 Pro S
with 90mm lens
599¥00
save over 150.00
Mamiya 645
Complete Unit. Camera Body, Magnetic, Weist Level Finder and 80mm Lens.
499¥00
Mamiya C 220
Camera with 80mm lens.
Save 100.00
199¥99
Nikon GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY SAVINGS!
Discover All the advantages of a Nikon with factory representative Gail Curran.
Buy a Nikonat FT2 SLR and Nikon will send you a $15 Nikon System Certificate! The Nikkormat FT2 is your entry into the Nikon system... a versatile, full-featured Nikon quality cameral
Nikkormat FT2 with 50mm f2
269¥99
Nikkormat EL Body Only
Wolfe's Low Price 319.99
(you get $35 certificate from Nikon)
LOW PRICES ON NIKKOR LENSES
AUTHENTIC NIKKOR LENSES
REGULAR PRICE
WOLFE'S
24mm f2.8
292¥00
225¥00
35mm f2.8
399¥00
249¥00
105mm f2.5
306¥00
229¥00
135mm f2.8
289¥00
189¥99
55 Macro
293¥00
219¥00
Capro Compartment Case
29¥99
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
KONICA
Konica Dream Outfit
* $349.99
• 130-mm Bushnell • Sunpak Auto
• Tailgate Boots • Deluxe Compartment Case
- KONICA ATC with 11.7 Lens
- 25% smaller and lighter than other lenses
- Compact, Lightweight
- Low Cost
- Automatic and Manual tape
Walt's $249.99 low Price
KONICA
AUTOREFLEX
TC
SEE THE NEWEST
KONICA WITH DARIUS
CONTRACTOR OF BERKEY
Konica Dream
Outfit
$34999
• 135mm Bushnell
Telephoto
• Deluxe Compartment Case
• KONICA TC with f1.7 Lens.
• 25% smaller and lighter
than other relics.
• Compact, Lightweight.
Low Cost.
Automatic and Manual too.
Wolfe's $24999
low Price
Konica C35EF
with built-in Flash
$10999
Professional
Quality
Excellent feel
SPECIAL PURCHASE
ON BELL AND HOWELL
ELECTRONIC FLASH
870 made to
sell for 129.95
880 made to
sell for 149.95
4999
5999
SPECIAL PURCHASE
ON BELL AND HOWELL
ELECTRONIC FLASH
870 made to
sell for 129.95
4999
880 made to
sell for 149.95
5999
PROFESSIONAL KIT
Mamiya
000 DSX with f1.
open aperture hood system
a flat f1.4 lens
SALE 219.99
-20.00 Trade-in*
199.99
WITH TRADE
MAMAX 280
RB 67 Pro S
with 90mm lens
599¥00
Save over 150.00
Mamiva 645
Complete Unit Camera Body, Ma-
gazine, Waist Level Finder and
80mm lens.
499¥00
PRICE HIGHER
Mamiya C 220
Camera with 80mm lens.
Save 100.00
199¥99
Nikon GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY SAVINGS!
Nikkormat
Nikon
GOLDEN
OPPORTUNITY
SAVINGS!
Discover All the advantages of a Nikon with factory representative Gail Curran.
Buy a Nikkomat FT2 SLR and Nikon will lend you a $15 Nikon System Certificate! The Nikkormat FT2 is your entry into the Nikon system... a versatile, full-featured Nikon quality camera!
Nikkormat FT2 with 50mm f2 269⁹⁹
Nikkormat EL Body Only
Wolfe's Low Price 319.99
(you get $35 certificate from Nikon)
Nikon F2 Photomic Body only
Wolfe's low price 469⁹⁹
(you get a $50 gift from Nikon)
LOW PRICES ON
NIKKOR LENSES
AUTHENTIC NIKKOR LENSES REGULAR PRICE WOLFE'S
24mm f2.8 292⁰⁰ 225⁰⁰
35mm f2.8 399⁰⁰ 249⁰⁰
105mm f2.5 306⁰⁰ 229⁰⁰
135mm f2.8 289⁰⁰ 189⁹⁹
55 Macro 293⁰⁰ 219⁰⁰
Capro Compartment Case
with the purchase of any Nikon camera 29⁹⁹
Wolfe's
camera shop, inc.
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
Nikkormat
Nikkormat El Body Only
Nikkormat EL Body Only
Woffe's Low Price 319.99
(you get $35 certificate from Nikon)
Nikon F2 Photomic
Body only
Woffe's low price
469.99
(you get a $50 gift from Nikon)
Nikon
SAID that about 50 citizens at a meeting, after which KU of they would go ahead with the citizens then obtained the restraining order, which will be light days.
Capro
Compartment
Case
with the
permission of
any habitat camera
29.99
WOLF
Wolfe's
camera shop, inc.
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
University Daily Kansu
ahead in six others with 38, a total
ven; cally
r, Pennsylvania and Ohio, with al votes, are key states where驾 has downdrawn, and California, will claim an edge, the Times can claim an edge, the Times
gazaine said its September poll by ch, Skelly & White showed Power heat among 1,300 voters sampled in 48 states; each candidate and 14 per cent
Devis said some construction work had begun before the court-ordered storage.
Henry said that the parking lot expansion had been planned about six months and that he hadn't seen a list of the citizens' complaints.
"I's my impression that they feel the paved area will be a less attractive area," he said. "It's also my impression that some kids play football on that grass area."
5 in finals for HOPE
The final five决赛的 the HOPE Award were announced yesterday by the HOPE Award Committee.
The finalists are Allan Cigler, assistant professor of political science; Edywina Gilbert, associate professor of curriculum and instruction and of English; J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business; Jean Pyter, associate professor of physical education; and Peter Turk, acting associate professor of journalism.
Randy Brown, HOPE Award committee co-chairman, said 489 KU seniors voted Oct. 6 and 7, almost three times the number that voted last year.
KU seniors may vote again for one of the five finalists Oct. 27 and 28. The winner will be announced Nov. 6 at the halftime of the KU-Iowa State football game.
The HOPE Award (Honor to an Outstanding Progressive Educator) was awarded the Class of 1959, Calder Pickett, professor of journalism, received the award last year.
SAS
bout support before the Holding her
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
are Rita Hume, Topeka junior, left, and Debbie Blaylock, Overland Park sophomore. The yell leaders and pomp girls tried to fill in the gaps in game action and create crowd enthusiasm with off-the-ground formations.
BENTO
Friday, October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
---
Systems prepared for space trips
During the next decade two Mariner spacecrafts are scheduled to explore planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and the outside of our solar system.
On board the craft will be experiments designed by the University department of physics.
The experiments will measure cosmic rays and solar flare particles and record their properties.
Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, said recently that the experiments would analyze a region of space outside the sun's influence.
Some of the data received from the spacecraft will be analyzed at KU and will be stored in the data repository.
IN ADDITION TO the radiation experiments, infrared measurements will be taken of various planets. Ultraviolet measure and structure of the planet's atmosphere.
"There will also be a celestial navigation experiment which will get precise measurements of planet motion and the motion of their satellites," Armstrong said.
Spacecrafts that go closer to the sun are able to use solar energy for power but the two Mariner spacecrafts will use nuclear power, he said.
"The Mariners will be able to transmit data back to Earth at a higher rate than any other planet."
He said scientists would have much data to process when the ships get to Jupiter in 1979 because in the same year Pioneer XI will arrive at Saturn.
BAD WEATHER could hamper the 1977 launchings Armstrong strong, because he was too young to reach a high orbit.
Armstrong said launching the spaceships in August was very important because it was only then that the planets had the right relationship for the Mariners to swing by.
When a spacecraft swings by a planet, it then makes the planet's gravity to change its direction.
"But it won't be until 1800 that one of the spacecraft will get to Saturn." Armstrong told reporters.
FROM URANUS the satellites will go outside of the solar system to explore deep space.
Armstrong said scientists would have to worry about trouble on Earth first.
He said it would take one spacecraft longer to get to Saturn because one will swing by Jupiter much closer than the other craft will. The farther one will travel to Saturn slower, he said, but it will be safer to use it to encounter less radiation from Jupiter.
"Since they both have to be launched off the same pad and it takes 10 days to count down for the second launching, there could be some problems," he said.
"But there is always the next year."
Stitch On needlepoint shop
a unique store
- paterayn yarns-350 different colors
- large selection of painted canvas
Students cause census problems for Douglas County, state officials
- original & custom designs
COLD BEER & Wine Banning's Retail Liquor Store NOW OPEN
University of Kansas students unknowingly insulted the problems for Douglas County in Alabama's biography.
- project finishing-fabrics available
Every year that the University has a voter registration drive, the population figures for Douglas County rise. Every year following the drive, the figures fall because the names of students who failed to vote or lost out of the county are stricken from the list.
It's a big problem for Douglas County assessor Darwin Rogers. He said recently that he doesn't have an accurate count of the students she doesn't have an accurate method to use.
- gift items
THE FIGURES Rogers use are verified by the state Board of Agriculture, according to K. R. Boyer, assistant secretary of agriculture.
The 1976 census, released last week, indicated that the population of Douglas County dropped 3,241, from 63,833 in 1975 to 60,529 this year.
Rogers said that he wasn't happy with the way the census was conducted, but that it was about as accurate as a door-to-door survey.
Population figures are derived from voter and vehicle registration lists for the city of Lawrence and by door-to-door surveys outside the city. Rogers said door-to-door surveys weren't done in Lawrence because many people were missed.
The census figures are used to determine the amount of money the state returns to the cities and townships in the county on a per capita basis. The revenue comes from cigarette taxes, liquor taxes and the local ad valorem tax reduction fund.
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
Come in and browse. I'll look forward to
DOUGLAS COUNTY probably benefits
from the population file.
KU, Haskell cooperate
A program has been developed between the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Junior College that would permit KU graduate students at that the master's and doctoral levels to become involved in classroom for practical work experience.
According to Paul Haack, associate dean of the School of Education and professor of music education, the "Cooperative Field Experience Program" is the first formal link through education between the two schools.
areas such as student counseling, special education, and administration."
"All of the graduate students selected will be involved in 'practicum.' They will go into
W
came
116 West Ei
Topeka
The purpose of the program is twofold, Haack said recently. First, it will provide graduate students with a unique instructional experience and, second, it would expand the number and kinds of resources University can share with Haskell, he said.
He said that this system was unlike regular student teaching programs that involve only undergraduates and is highly supervised by other faculty members. The classroom experience at Haskell could be more than that of the student and his adviser from KU.
"All the students who teach at Haskell are selected by a joint screening committee of professors and administrators."
The selections are based on applications submitted by a KU student and his faculty adviser, and includes the kind of practical experience the graduate wants, how long the program will last, and the number of courses required devote to the practicum. "Haack said."
Unless otherwise recommended, all graduate student appointments will be made by the Dept. of Education.
SPIRIT GLOVES ARE HERE
- Campbell's Men's Wear
- Jayhawk Cafe
- Town Shop
- Britches Corner
- Weavers Dept. Store
- The Jay Shoppe
- Kansas Union Bookstore
- Alice's Closet
Hey! We're Sorry!
- Casem's Clothing
LOVE GLOVES LTD.
The sales people at Wolfe's anticipate being super busy this weekend. Unfortunately, you won't get all the conversation and information we like to give, so buy something and come back after the sale so we can lavish our usual warm vivific personality on you.
- Rag Tag
A Division of
GIVE THE HAWKS A HAND with Spirit Gloves
Wolfe's GRAND OPENING
Tripod Dolly
move your luggage for applications
Retail lot $19.95.
$ 99
TRIPOD SALE
Special Sale Price
Tripod Dolly
Support your camera with only one of these sturdy tripods from a safari park. You can get that special time exposure shot you have been waiting to get.
$1499
Kalimar CE-3 ... $21.99 $14⁹⁹
Usually
Viola 3 CSL ... '32.99 $24⁹⁹
Viola 3CSLB ... $42.99 $32⁹⁹
CANON
Canon
NEW Canon AE-1 The electronic system camera that's changing the course of photography.
The AE-1 is changing the way camera will be made, and the way photographers like pictures. Its sharply priority automatic exposure and sensitive silicone photo cell free you can never better to apply your subject - yet with all the sensitivity that Cameras more than a decade of use of accessories makes easily possible. To really appreciate the value of an equipment used up and it used it just may change the course of your photography.
- Shutter shortly automatic exposure
• Shutter slightly light compact and easy to use
• Inspection lightweight compact and easy to use
• Inspection sensitive lens protection
• Inspection moisture-resistant Ae Motorized sequential shooting flash
• Inspection sequential shooting flash shutter and aperture
• Inspection sequential shooting flash shutter and aperture
• Allows camera FLIDE lenses for AF
• Introduces AirFilm for AF
• Introduces AirFilm for AF
- Shutter priority automatic exposure
With f.1.8 lens made to sell for $413.00
Wolfe's Price $33999
Film Winder and Flash Priced Separately
Canonet G-III 17 Perfect Pictures, Day or Night Automatically
This handsome compact 35mm camera gives you mastase proof exposure control whether you shoot in brilliant sunlight or in the glomo™ night with addition of the superb Canon Detele electric flash. All you do is add focus, while the Camerab G III 17 automatically adjusts the camera to suit your lighting. Specifically designed was made for great color palette and high contrast film changing and all information visible in the bright viewmaker this an amazing camera set.
Canon
C EF35
Meet Rich Mengler of Canon at Wolfe's SPECIAL CANON SALE
Now at Wolfe's Extra $109.99
Low Price Made to sell
for $109.99
Demonstrator
Canon TX
Canon
Full aperture metering B/1-100 f1.0 of, a third shutter speed accepts all Canon FL & FD Series lens with 50mm f1.8 lens.
Canon F-1 BODY ONLY
Only $359⁹⁹ Demo Units
CANON
the ultimate SUR removable prism, accepts motor drive, up to 1/2000 of a sec. shutter speeds. Body only.
Gra Lab
0 10 20 30 40 50
Darkroom Timer
Model 300 . . . The perfect darkroom timer. Made to sell for $4.30.
Wolfe's Grand $3199
Opening Special ...
口
Values $7.99 to $11.95 $4.99
NOW Only ...
16 X 20
Print Trays
Choice of 1 or 2. Floral design, solids, plains, and stripes.
Protect your neck and your camera.
Usually $4.99 to 5.99 $2.99
Now Only ...
WIDE NECK STRAP
GAF SLIDE TRAY
$1.99
For Pentax Cameras. Also fits Fujica,
Mamiya, Twinch and Vivitar cameras.
Multicultural Lens imported by
Uniphoto. Compare to $200 values.
Wolfie's
Special.
$9999
Stainless Steel Developing Reels
Your choice of 35mm 30 exposure or
120 roll film. Usually $3.99
New 299
SAVE $10-$20
Sale Price
Pentax
$1 099
7" Stainless Steel Developing Tank
Holds four 35mm or two 120 reels.
Usually 16.99
Now only $999
Made to fit SAVE $10. $20 Sale Prices
Close-up Bellows
Nikon, Minolta, Miranda ... $24^{99}$
Pentax ... '19"
Olympus, Canon, Konica $29^{99}$
Now Only $3499
Zoom Slide Duplicator
Attaches to most any SLR with a "T" adapter (not included in the sale price) Usually $44.99.
Fuji Film Buy four and Save
With Fuji Film you get speed (ASA 100) plus fine grain color. Brilliant reds, natural green, vivid pastels, and excellent pictures in daylight daylight.
WITH NO SAVERS
35
4 pack of 36 exposure $6'99
usually 9.99 New
Watson 100 or Alden 74
Loader Usually 14.00 to
20.00
$1199
New Only
Roll your own black and white or color film, and save money. Leader pays for itself Right away. Practically your film cost in half.
Bulk Film Supplies
Get Your first set of cassettes now and save even more. Bag of ten all metal 35mm cassettes.
Usually $5.99 $249
New only...
Bag of ten
DA-LITE
Reputation Maker Screens
Feature 40x40 Corner Glass Readed Screen. Top Quality fabric in Max agon Convex Rear Valve Water 200
New Only $799
50×50 Broadway Mate
50×100 Broadway Mate
50×60 Bennett
Littleton 29.00
75×70 Bentley Wall Screen
75×80 Bentley Wall Screen
NOW **12**¹⁹
NOW **12**²²
NOW **34**³⁴
Soft Lens Pouches
T
Drawing裤. Pash head. Push head
hold lenus, and also photo
heads. 4.99, 5.99, 6.99,
and 7.99
1/2 Price
Photo Reflectors
Set up a Studio in your home. Low cost set for
Portrait Lighting Card, camp card and your choice
of 5", 10" or 12" reflector. Usually 7.99 to
11.99
$499
Now Only
MADRID
Wolfe's
camera shop inc
---
KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.30
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Children enjoy KU production
Monday, October 4.1976
See story page five
A
By JERRY SEIB
Citizens seek Linwood injunction
DUNLOP
A hearing is scheduled for Thursday in Johnson County District Court to determine whether a group of citizens can stop the expansion of a parking lot at the University of Kansas Linwood Center in Overland Park.
Wolfe's
cameroon shop, inc.
116 West Eht. Phone 235-1386
Topeka, Kansas 66603
Staff Writer
Citizens of the area surrounding the center on Wednesday obtained a temporary restraining order stopping work on the property because they pension because they say it will prevent.
THE LINWOOD Center is a former public school building that opened last year as a satellite classroom building for KU classes.
said yesterday that any order issued because of the hearing would be a temporary injunction that could be made permanent.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
said the Kansas University Endowment Association purchased both the school building and the land surrounding it. He said about three-fourths of the land purchased was open space.
The University arranged to lease about
Plans for the parking lot expansion call for the resurfacing of some current parking areas and the construction of a new lot in the southwest corner of the grounds.
Lucas said about 180 parking spaces would be either resurfaced or constructed. The project would also include installation plants, plants and islands in the lot, he said.
Here's a Capital Idea!
Lucas; Davis; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; and Martin Henry, Endowment Association vice president for property development with light on "selecting to the construction."
Drive to Topeka and see why people drive out of their way to buy cameras and photo supplies at Wolfe's. (It's because some people forget to turn left on 8th Street.) Otherwise, people come to Wolfe's for friendly, courteous help. At Wolfe's, we don't sell photography, we share it. So come by today for a little sharing.
ji Film
our and Save
ed (ASA 100) plus fine grain color
ments, vivid pastels, and excellent
BUTTON AND SAVER
$6^{99}$
Im Supplies
and white or color Film
loader pays for itself Right
its your film cost in film
Watson 100 or Alden 74
Loader Usually 14.00 to
20.00
$1199 Now Only
cassettes now and save them all metal 35mm cas-
$2 49
Bag of ten
-LITE
mutation
maker
seems
NO.1294
D480 Corem Glass Gobes
D490 Corem Glass Gobes in New
Design Gobes Real Gold Table
$ 799
New Only
NOW 12"*
NOW 22"*
NOW 34"*
s Pouches
Drawstring Top; Plush lined tape hold lenses and other photo.
Usually 4.99,5.99,6.99,and 7.99
1/2 Price
reflectors
name. Low cost set for
order set and your choice
actor. Usually 7.99 to
Now Only $499
olfe's
a shop inc.
VISIT WITH TOM O'BRIEN ABOUT THE FANTASTIC CONTAX RTS AND THE ALL NEW YASHICA LINE OF FINE CAMERAS.
MICROFILM
135mm F2.8
The Contex RTS is a full featured, fully-autonomic professional-quality camera that accepts a wide range of sensors. From infrared remote control systems, to the data back, to the incredible Real Time Winder, it is a highly professional system utilizing specially designed for the Contex.
Come take a look at what Yashica's doing now.
YASHICA FX-1
Mamiya
645
- New Context Tastifier beyond email with internal linkage
* Text character count both automatic and manual
* Complete wizard display
NUMISMATIC MONETARY UNIT
Wolfe's 36999 Low Price
Yashica FX-2
- Center wireless electronic meters
* Brightly illuminated waverslot
* A house of two lens systems
* Contour touchless mount
NIKON YASHICA
Walfe's 23999 Low Price
Yashica FR
- Electromagnétique multivalue release
* L.E. Légature Release Box
* L.E. Logic Strip
* Eim Winder Coupling system permit the use of the inferior compact model
Wolles 31999 Low Price
Mamiya Sekor
BRONICA PRESENTS THE ETR
A COMPLETE SYSTEM OF PHOTOGRAPHY FOR THE DISCERNING PHOTOGRAPHER DESIGNED TO PROVIDE FAST SHooting CAPABILITY EQUALING SMALLER FORMAT CAMERS.
Meet Mike Wilcox of EPOI for the full Brancia, Sigma and Sedic Science. See the latest in the special line of equipment for discovery Photographers.
Super Low Prices
SIGMA LENSES
BRONICA S2A w/Lens '399°°
BRONICA EC w/Lens '499°°
Very Limited Quantities in mounts listed
LENS RETAIL WOLFES
VALUE SALE
24mm f 2.8 for Pentax E5 or Olympus $179 **79^99**
28mm f.2.8 for Pentax, Nikon
Gommon 95mm Kono Ulmer, $145
6999
Gamon, Mimela, Kanika, Olympus $145 15.2 W at Greensboro $69
135.12 8.8 for Pentax, Canon
Minolta, Olympus
$135 59^99
19-80 Zoom for most SER $270 19999
1997
Make your camera system more versatile with another body. Keep two kinds of film ready to go, or keep different facial length lenses ready to shoot. How can you be prepared for a challenging environment?
Sport F Sedic 33
500mm f 1.8 Mirror Lens $280 199^99
Sedic
CAMERA
The only packed camera system. See the help guide.
See the special close up.
See the alarmed possible device dearmed possible
Instamatics
Wolfe's Sale Price
$899^{00}
2nd Body Sale
HANIMEX Practica Cameras
Lenses and Accessories in Stock at Low Prices
ONLY 22 $^{50}$
ONLY 69 $^{95}$
Hanimex Praktica L
(Body only) Usually $99.90
Hanimex Praktica LTL body
usually 179.99
Wolfe's 52nd Anniv Specie
Hasselblad offers 13 of the world's top quality lenses, interchangeable film magazines and a wide variety of accessories. Come in for a demonstration and see the System with Gary Erickson Hasselblad 500 CM Camera.
(Body only) Usually $99.90 ... $59⁹⁹
Wolf's 52nd Anniversary Special ...
Both the professional who needs the best and the amateur who wants the best choice the System
with 80 mm f2.8 and back
Mfg. Price $1425 ...
HASSELBLAD...
when you need
or want
the best
Wolfe's $2nd Anniv. Special ... $1099 Leather Case Optional $12.00
SAID that about 50 citizens ate meeting, after which KU ofd they would go ahead with the citizens then obtained the restraining order, which will be eight days.
SUPER TTL FLASH
AF-S TTL FLASH
THE COMPLETE
LIGHT MACHINE
IS HERE
VIVITAR'S NEW
283 AUTO THYRISTOR
includes remote
sensor and cord.
Made to sell
for $124.90
ONLY
$8999
FREE
ACCESSORY HOLDER
WITH PURCHASE OF
A VIVITAR 283 AUTO
VISIONER ELECTRONIC FLASH.
A great opportunity to discover the exciting new world of the flash system with flexibility and control. You'll be able to different flash lenses to the angle of illumination with your camera lens illuminated.
Or match six different flash filters to create color and intensity of illumination with your needs. (or whims.)
MORE SAVINGS
on Vivitar Strobes
On Vivitar Strobes
Mig. Retail Wolfe's Price
Vivitar
273 ... 99.95
69⁹⁹
Vivitar
252 ... 49.95
39⁹⁹
Vivitar
202 ... 34.95
27⁹⁹
University Daily Kansan
HORSE
Wolfe's
camera shop, inc.
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
ahead in six others with 38, a total
ven; cally
r, Pennsylvania and Ohio, with
al votes, are key states where
dies has dwindled, and California,
or New York, can claim an edge, the Times
Davis said some construction work had begun before the court-ordered stoppage.
agazine said its September poll by ch, Skelly & White showed Ford Cat heat among 1,300 voters sampled in a nationwide each candidate and 14 per cent
Friday, October 1, 1976
Henry said that the parking lot expansion had been planned about six months and that he hadn't seen a list of the citizens' complaints.
"It's my impression that they feel the paved area will be a less attractive area," he said. "It's also my impression that some kids play football on that grass area."
5 in finals for HOPE
The five finalists for the HOPE Award were awarded yesterday by the HOPE Award committee.
The finalists are Allan Cigler, assistant professor of political science; Edwynna McGill, associate professor of instruction and instruction of English; J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business; Jean Fayer, associate professor of business; Stephen McKeever, acting associate professor of journalism.
Randy Brown, HOPE Award committee co-chairman, said 498 KUseniors voted Oct. 6 and 7, almost three times the number that voted last year.
KU senators may vote again for one of the five finalists Oct. 27 and 28. The winner will be announced Nov. 6 at the halftime of the KU- Iowa State football game.
The HOPE Award (Honor to an Outstanding Progressive Educator) was established by the Class of 1959. Calder received his Journalism, received the award last year.
SAS
about support a before the Holding her
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
are Rita Hame, Topea junior, left, and Debbie Blaylock, Overland Park parkhomore. The yell leaders and pomp girls try to fill in the gaps in game action and create crowd enthusiasm with off-the-ground formations.
---
16
Friday, October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
---
Systems prepared for space trips
During the next decade two Mariner spacecrafts are scheduled to explore planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and the outside of our solar system.
On board the crafts will be experiments designed by the University department of船舶
The experiments will measure cosmic rays and radio flare particles and record their distribution.
Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, said recently that the experiments would analyze a region of space outside the sun's influence.
Some of the data received from the spacecraft will be analyzed at KU and will be delivered to researchers.
IN ADDITION TO the radiation experiments, infrared measurements will be taken of various planets. Ultraviolet measurement is used to observe the structure of the planet's atmosphere.
"There will also be a celestial navigation experiment which will get precise measurements of planet motion and the motion of their satellites," Armstrong said.
Spacecrafts that go closer to the sun are able to use solar energy for power but the two Mariner spacecrafts will use nuclear power, he said.
"The Mariners will be able to transmit back to Earth at a higher rate than any other ship."
He said scientists would have much data to process when the ships get to Jupiter in 1979 because in the same year Pioneer XI will arrive at Saturn.
BAD WATERHEAD could hamper the 1977 launchings Armstrong said, because the U.S. air force is not there.
Armstrong said launching the spaceships in August was very important because it was only then that the planets had the right relationship for the Mariners to swing by.
When a spacecraft swings by a planet, it uses the planet's gravity to change its direction.
"It but it won't be until 1800 that one of the spacecraft will get to Saturn." Armstrong told reporters.
FROM URANUS the satellites will go out of the solar system to explore deep space.
Armstrong said scientists would have to worry about trouble on Earth first.
He said it would take one spacecraft longer to get to Saturn because one will swing by Jupiter much closer than the other craft will. The farther one will travel to Saturn slower, he said, but it will be safer and will encounter less radiation from Jupiter.
"Since they both have to be launched off the same pad and it takes 10 days to count down for the second launching, there could be some problems," he said.
"But there is always the next year."
Stitch On needlepoint shop
rette taxes, liquor taxes and the local ad valorem tax reduction fund.
a unique store
- paterayn yarns-350 different colors
DOUGLAS COUNTY probably benefits from the fluctuation of the population fig-
COLD BEER & Wine
Banning's
Retail Liquor Store
NOW OPEN
Students cause census problems for Douglas County, state officials
- large selection of painted canvas
University of Kansas students unknowingly receive for Douglas County in the state's biennial.
- original & custom designs
Every year that the University has a voter registration drive, the population figures for Douglas County rise. Every year following the drive, the figures fall because the names of students who failed to vote or been indicted in the county are stricken from the list.
- project finishing-fabrics available
It's a big problem for Douglas County assessor Darwin Rogers. He said recently that he doesn't have an accurate count of the cases. "I don't doesn't have an accurate method to use."
The 1976 census, released last week, indicated that the population of Douglas County dropped 3,241, from 63,833 in 1975 to 60,592 this year.
THE FIGURES ROAG use are verified by the state Board of Agriculture, according to K. R. Boyer, assistant secretary of agriculture.
- gift items
Rogers said that he was 'hmp way the census was conducted, was about as accurate as a door-tey.
1O-5 Mon.-Sat.
Thurs. 1O-8
Population figures are derived and vehicle registration lists for Lawrence and by door-to-door side the city. Rogers said door-weren't seen in Lawrens many people were missed.
Come in and browse. I'll look forward to
The census figures are used to the amount of money the state retires and townships in the court capita basis. The revenue comes
אנון משמעותי
This is Wolfe's 52nd Anniversary and Grand Opening Celebration. Come in and see color prints made before your eyes, 20 factory representatives demonstrating their products, and fantastic sale prices on most items in the store. Take a second look at all the wonderful bargains on these 8 pages, then drive on over to Topeka (directions are given elsewhere) and take advantage of our celebration.
camp
116 West B
Topeka
KU, Haskell cooper
A program has been developed between the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Junior College that would permit KU graduate students at both the master's and doctoral levels to become involved in high schools for practical work experience.
According to Paul Haack, associate dean of the School of Education and professor of music education, the "Cooperative Field Experience Program" is the first formal link through education between the two schools.
areas such as student counsel education and administration.'
The purpose of the program is twofold, Haack said recently. First, it will provide graduate students with a unique instructional experience and, second, it would expand the number and kinds of resources University can share with Haskell, he said.
education, and administration". He said that this system of regular student teaching projvide only undergraduate superserved by other faculty members; the latter is talented to fit the expressed n student and his adviser from F "All the students who teach at selected by a joint screening co Haskell and KU faculty," he said. The selections are based on submitted by a KU student and adviser, and includes the kind of program the program will last, and the week a hour he can devote it ticum." Haack said.
"All of the graduate students selected will be involved in 'practicum.' They will go into
Unless otherwise rechne
graduate student appointme
made for a semester, he said.
SPIRIT GLOVES ARE HERE
- Jayhawk Cafe
- Weavers Dept. Store
- Britches Corner
- Campbell's Men's Wear
- Town Shop
- The Jay Shoppe
- Kansas Union Bookstore
- Alice's Closet
- Casem's Clothing
- Rag Tag
GIVE THE HAWKS A HAND with Spirit Gloves
A Division of
LOVE GLOVE LTD.
Bushnell Binoculars CHOOSE FROM MORE THAN 30 DIFFERENT BUSHNELL MODELS AT REDUCED PRICES
10
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7x35 Ensign by Bushnell
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Mfg Walefore $1999 Retail 34.99 Low Price
Telescope
11° Sportview
7x35
wide-angle
with Instafocus
Reg. 59.95 $3999
Banner
7x50
with Instafocus
Reg. 80.00 $4999
Banner
11° WIDEANGLE
7x35
with Instafocus
Reg. 67.50 $4999
Banner
Broadfield
8x40
$5999
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8X35
300
Banner Broadfield
8x40
$59.99
Sankyo XL Low Light Super 8 Movie Cameras.
Here is a super low-light camera at an amazing low price, the XL 125 is a fine example of legendary Sankya quality. Shoot even in the dimmest light with ASA 160 film. Takes superb, automatic settings and push button power zoom.
Look and Listen
Retails for 199.95 $ 13999 Now it is available at Wolfe's lowest price ever.
1
Super B movie cameras are here and they are easier and more fun than ever before. Even if you have never handed it camera before, you can shoot professional quality movies every time you want to capture the action. The quality of Sankyo camera and projector, the quality is second to none. Two year warranty. Come in to Wolfenstein for a better view.
SALE
SANKYO XL 25S Sound Camera '1340 ... 239.99
XL 40 Sound Camera '1430 ... 309.99
XL 60 Sound Camera '1540 ... 399.99
BENEFITS OF CINEMA
WOLF
Sankyo 2000 Projector Now
Made to sell for 220
Dual 8 projector with slow motion.
Vivitar Pocket Camera with Built-in Flash
Vivitar
Never buy a flash cube again. If you need flash just switch on the built-in electronic flash for sharp, bright pictures every time. You never need to focus, and you will never need to buy another flash bar or cube again.
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But hurry. Offer limited.
Model 602
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FREE POLAROID INSTANT PICTURES
SUPER SHOOTER
The Potolar Camera Girl will be in our store to take pictures with the new Potoral Pronto on new SX-70 film.
- Color PicMonitors in 60-second and while in 30 seconds
* Use two different types of batteries
* Use multiple exposure types
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WOLF CENTER
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
835 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1986
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KU
116 West Topeka
KANSAN
Children enjoy KU production
See story page five
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Vol. 87 No.30
Monday. October 4.1976
it's
the real
thing
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Non-vending vendor
Rob Steer, 1749 W. 20th, samples some of his wares before the game Saturday. Steer, 11, said vendors must pay the full price of sodas they drink.
Citizens seek Linwood injunction
By JERRY SEIB Staff Writer
A hearing is scheduled for Thursday in Johnson County District Court to determine whether a group of citizens can stop the expansion of a parking lot at the University of Kansas Linwood Center in Overland Park.
Citizens of the area surrounding the center on Wednesday obtained a temporary parking permit and parked on a parking lot. The citizens object to the expansion because they say it will prevent children from using the area as a playground and will make the area less
In Thursday's hearing, the citizens will be stopped structure. Mike Dykes, University of Texas law professor.
said yesterday that any order issued because of the hearing would be a temporary injunction that could be made permanent.
THE LINWOOD Center is a former public school building that opened last year as a daycare.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
said the Kansas University Endowment Association purchased both the school building and the land surrounding it. He said about three-fourths of the land purchased was open space.
The University arranged to lease about half of the property to the city of Overland Park for $1 a year, Lucas said, and the land is now used as a football practice area.
THE REASON the kids are using the ground for football practice in the first round is that it's too deep.
Plans for the parking lot expansion call for the resurfacing of some current parking areas and the construction of a new lot in the southwest corner of the grounds.
Lacas said about 180 parking spaces would be either resurfaced or constructed. The project would also include installation trees, plants and islands in the lot, he said.
Lucas, Davis; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; and Martin Henry. Endowment Association vice president for students with citizens objecting to the construction.
DAVIS SAID that about 50 citizens attended the meeting, after which KU of ficials said they would go ahead with the project. The citizens then obtained the temporary restraining order, which will be good for eight days.
Polls show Carter, Ford even; Carter's lead falls dramatically
WASHINGTON (AP) - National political polls show Jimmy Carter even with President Ford or his edge narrowing as the fall campaign enters its last month. A third quarter sees eight points ahead, but the poll 3-381-2 may be revised on the basis of additional results.
The Newhouse News Service reported that a poll it conducted with the Chicago Daily News found that Carter had "fallen dramatically" in his electoral vote edge and was left shuffled from the Carter column to the "uncertain" category in the last two weeks.
THE NEWHOUSE survey found Carter leading in 21 states and the District of Columbia with a total of 224 electoral votes—46 fewer than the 270 needed for victory. It said Ford held steady with 84 electoral votes in 14 states.
Pollster George Gallipn Jr. said during the weekend that two earlier polls by his organization understated Carter's strength and that it would switch to a later same.
The latest Catapoll poll, released Friday,
gave Carter a 50 to 42 edge, with 8 per cent
favoring other candidates or having no
opinion.
narrowly ahead in six others with 38, a total of 84 votes.
BOTH THE NEW York Times and Time magazine said the latest findings in their studies were based on a large study.
New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio, with 93 electoral votes, are key states where Carter's office has dwindled, and California, Illinois and Texas are so close neither candidate can claim an edge, the Times said.
The Times said Carter had a sense leon in 10 states with 84 electoral votes and a shaky lead in 16 states with 210 electoral votes. By contrast, he has won 294 votes, 24 more than needed to win.
It said that 11 states appeared even, and that in none of the important states did Carter's lead exceed 5 or 6 percentage points. By gaining a few points nationwide in popular support, the Times said, Ford conceivably could win the election.
Time magazine said its September poll by Yankelovich, Skelly and Showed White and Carter in a dead heat among 1,308 registered voters sampled, with 43 per cent supporting each candidate and 14 per cent undecided.
The Times said that a survey it conducted with CBS showed Carter holding an advantage in enough states to win a majority of electoral votes, but that his edge was narrow in most of the states and was dwindling in some important ones.
Davis said some construction work had begun before the court ordered storage.
The five finalists for the HOPE Award
announced yesterday by the HOPE
award committee.
Henry said that the parking lot expansion had been planned about six months and that he hadn't seen a list of the citizens' complaints.
5 in finals for HOPE
IT SAID FORD leads comfortably in eight states with 46 electoral votes, and is
The finalists are Allan Cigler, assistant professor of political science; Edwynna Gilbert, associate professor of curriculum and instruction and of English; J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business; Jean Pyfe, associate professor of physical education; and Peter Turk, acting associate professor of journalism.
Randy Brown, HOPE Award committee co-chairman, said 489 KU seniors voted Oct. 6 and 7, almost three times the number that voted last year.
"I's my impression that they feel the paved area will be a less attractive area," he said. "It's also my impression that some kids play football on that grass area."
KU seniors may vote again for one of the finalists Oct. 27 and 28. The winner will be announced Nov. 6 at the halftime of the KU- Iowa State football game.
The HOPE Award (Honor to an Outstanding Progressive Educator) was established by the Class of 1959. Calder received a Journalism, received the award last year.
Stadium vendors climb the stands to serve the fans, see the game
By MARTHA FASSETT
Staff Writer
Aside from the players, the pompon girls, the band and the fans, one essential part of a football game is the army of young stadium fans who are raiding selling soft drinks and poocorn.
"NO KU students have applied yet, but we take them if they use," Remick said.
Kevin Remick, Kansas University concessions manager, said Saturday that 150 to 200 vendors, aged 12-16, sell concessions at KU football games.
THIRTEEN-YEAR-OLD Dana Griffin said he became a vendor because “it’s something to do and a way to earn money” and that it’s $8 at a game by selling 228 cobs of Cake.
Don Cooper, supervisor of the vendors, recently signed on some new employees.
Some vendors said they received tips from customers.
THE consensus among vendors was that they had the most luck during the K-State, Oklahoma and Band Bay games. John Steele, of Oklahoma and Band Bay games, busiest time was the second quarter of a
Cooper said that only nine or ten vendors sold popcorn and that these vendors got discouraged because popcorn doesn't usually sell well.
"JUNIOR HIGH is the best age," Cooper said. "Usually the younger ones get scared, and the older ones think they're too sophisticated."
"it put more than half of the bank and saved the rest for the high school games," he said.
He said that the vendors get 4 cents for every box of popcorn or soft drink sold and that even though some vendors might sell a pack, they don't sell on a daily day, the younger ones might sell only 100.
Twelve year-old Kerry Cobb said she usually put her earnings in the bank
The earning of the 18 vendors move averaged $5 to $10 a game, for selling 125-250 cups of soft drinks from noon, when they arrive, until after halftime.
The only requirement is that they've got to be able to make change.
game when two vendors "can sell a case within two steps of each other."
The vendors seem to be selling to a captive audience. "You get halfway up the stairs and sell them all," said Tommy Thompson, an 13-year vendor.
Pat McElheney, an 11-year-old vendor, said he sold more in the student section than in the alumni department because students "mix booze with it."
"People get mad if you sell out before you get to the top row," Steve Laber said.
THE JOB HAS its problems, too. Some vendors said that their arms and legs got tired, and that climbing up stairs loaded with travs of soft drinks wasn't easy.
"They yell at you if they give you a big bill and you don't have change. And some people like that."
Twelve-year old Jimmy Church said he ran into a little trouble once, when one customer had only a quarter to pay for his car and Jimmy ended up paying the rest himself.
One young vendor said that when he finished selling, he often sat on the 50-yard stretch.
One incentive for taking the job is free admission to games. Although vendors are busy selling their wares through halftime, you can find an empty seat during the last quarter.
Ohio hospital official to be Med Center administrator
KU Medical Center officials have selected Sheldon Krizelman, director of operations at St. Luke's Hospital in Cleveland, as the new hospital administrator.
Robert Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said yesterday that Krizielman was chosen from among five applicants on a background, experience and temperament "up."
Krizelman will start work Dec. 1, He replaces Merlin Olsen, who left the Med Center in April for a job at the University of Colorado Medical Center.
The search committee for the new administrator comprised Kugel; Russell Miller, acting hospital administrator and vice chancellor for Med Center administration; and David Robinson, vice chancellor for clinical affairs.
The hospital administrator is the chief administrative officer for the hospital
Kugel said Miller would work with Kruzelman or such projects as a plan to manage his own budget.
Krizelman was executive assistant to the administrator at St. Luke's from 1707 to 1733, and has been director of operations there since 1793.
He received his degree in hospital administration from the University of Minnesota and his undergraduate degree from the University of Nebraska.
Woman cited in journalism
Mamie Boyd, veteran journalist and associate editor of the Jewell County Record at Mankato until her death in 1973, was named to the Hall of Fame as part of the annual Kansas Editors' Day at KU.
Boyd, whose husband, the late Frank W. Boyd, was named to the Hall of Fame in 1960, is the second woman elected to the Hall of Fame by Kansas editors.
Boyd received the William Allen White Foundation Award for Journalistic Merit in 1972.
About 300 Kansas editors attended the program and were guests of the University of Missouri.
NSAC SAS
Ridina hiah
Karen Fleicher, Lawrence junior, sewerma helps support from two other pompon girls as she performs before the playground. (Andrew S. Krause/AP)
Staff photo by DAVE REGIBR
are Rita Hume, Topeka junior, left, and Debbie Blaylock, Overland Park sophomore. The yell leaders and pompon girls tried to fill in the gaps in game action and create crowd enthusiasm with off-the-ground formations.
be 15...
10
Fridav. October 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
---
Systems prepared for space trips
During the next decade two Marine spacecrafts are scheduled to explore planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and the outside of our solar system.
On board the crafts will be experiments designed by the University department of print.
The experiments will measure cosmic
radiation and record solar polar characterization.
Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, said recently that the experiments would analyze a region of space outside the sun's influence.
Some of the data received from the spacecraft will be analyzed at KU and will be sent to the user.
IN ADDITION TO the radiation experiments, infrared measurements will be taken of various planets. Ultraviolet measurement techniques provide a structure of the planet's atmosphere.
"There will also be a celestial navigation experiment which will get precise measurements of planet motion and the motion of their satellites," Armstrong said.
Spacecrafts that go closer to the sun are able to use solar energy for power but the two Mariner spacecrafts will use nuclear power, he said.
"The Mariners will be able to transmit data back to Earth at a higher rate than any other aircraft."
He said scientists would have much data to process when the ships get to Jupiter in 1979 because in the same year Pioneer XI will arrive at Saturn.
BAD WEATHER could hamper the 1977 launch of Armstrong's strong, because it had high winds.
Armstrong said launching the spaceships in August was very important because it was only then that the planets had the right relationship for the Mariners to swing by.
When a spacecraft swings by a planet, it uses the planet's gravity to change its direction.
"But it won't be until 1808 that one of the spacecrafts will get to Saturn." Armstrong said.
FROM URANUS the satellites will go outside of the solar system to explore deep space.
Armstrong said scientists would have to worry about trouble on Earth first.
He said it would take one spacecraft longer to get to Saturn because one will swing by Jupiter much closer than the other craft will. The farther one will travel to Saturn slower, he said, but it will be safer to encounter it will encounter less radiation from Jupiter.
"Since they both have to be launched off the same pad and it takes 10 days to count down for the second launching, there could be some problems," he said.
"But there is always the next year."
Stitch On needlepoint shop
rette taxes, liquor taxes and the local ad valorem tax reduction fund.
a unique store
Students cause census problems for Douglas County, state officials
DOUGLAS COUNTY probably benefits from the fluctuation of the population fig-
- paterayn yarns-350 different colors
- large selection of painted canvas
COLD BEER & Wine
Banning's
Retail Liquor Store
NOW OPEN
- original & custom designs
University of Kansas students unknowingly
claim students for Douglas County in the
state'sblemic blight.
- project finishing-fabrics available
Every year that the University has a voter registration drive, the population figures for Douglas County rise. Every year following the drive, the figures fall because the names of students who failed to vote or were from the county are stricken from the list.
The 1976 census, released last week, indicated that the population of Douglas County dropped 3,241, from 63,833 in 1975 to 60,592 this year.
It's a big problem for Douglas County assessor Darwin Rogers. He said recently that he does not have an accurate count of the students. "He doesn't have an accurate method to use."
- gift items
THE FIGURES Rogers use are verified by the state Board of Agriculture, according to K. R. Boyer, assistant secretary of agriculture.
Rogers said that he was 'hup way the census was conducted, was about as accurate as a door-tey.
IO-5 Mon.-Sat.
Thurs. IO-8
Population figures are derived and vehicle registration lists for Lawrence and by door-to-door side the city. Rogers said door-veers weren't in Lawrent many people were missed.
Come in and browse.
I'll look forward to
The census figures are used to the amount of money the state recities and townships in the count capita basis. The revenue comes
מנהלים בעצמו
This is Wolfe's 52nd Anniversary and Grand Opening Celebration. Come in and see color prints made before your eyes, 20 factory representatives demonstrating their products, and fantastic sale prices on most items in the store. Take a second look at all the wonderful bargains on these 8 pages, then drive on over to Topeka (directions are given elsewhere) and take advantage of our celebration.
camp
116 West B
Topeka
KU, Haskell cooper
A program has been developed between the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Junior College that would permit KU graduate students at both the master's and doctoral levels to become involved in classrooms for practical work experience.
According to Paul Haack, associate dean of the School of Education and professor of music education, the "Cooperative Field Experience Program" is the first formal link through education between the two schools.
areas such as student counsell education, and administration.'
The purpose of the program is twofold, Haack said recently. First, it will provide graduate students with a unique instructional experience and, second, it would expand the number and kinds of resources University can share with Haackell, he said.
"All of the graduate students selected will be involved in 'practicum.' They will go into
education, and administration."
He said that this system regular student teaching projec involve only undergraduate as supervised by other faculty me student and he tailored to fit the expressed n student and his adviser from B "All the students who teach at selected by a joint screening on Haskell and KU faculty," he s The selections are based on submitted by a KU student and ad hoc experience the graduate want the program will last, and the week a hour he can devote it cium." Haack said.
Unless otherwise recom
graduate student appointme
made for a semester, he said.
SPIRIT GLOVES ARE HERE
- Jayhawk Cafe
- Weavers Dept. Store
- Britches Corner
- Campbell's Men's Wear
- The Jay Shoppe
- Town Shop
- Kansas Union Bookstore
- Alice's Closet
- Casem's Clothing
- Rag Tag
GIVE THE HAWKS A HAND with Spirit Gloves
A Division of
LOVE GLOVE LTD.
Bushnell Binoculars CHOOSE FROM MORE THAN 30 DIFFERENT BUSHNELL MODELS AT REDUCED PRICES
BINOCAPS
Super Value
7x35 Ensign by Bushnell
Limited Quantities
Perfect for sports, vacations, and gift giving. Powerful 7x magnification brings distant scenes close up. Light weight, take anywhere design. Complete with case and straps.
$19^{99}
Mfg Walfe's $1999
Retail 34.99 Low Price
BINOCOPE
11° Sportview
7x35
wide-angle
with Instafocus
Reg. 59.95 $39'99
Banner
7x50
with Instafocus
Reg. 80.00 $49'99
Banner
11° WIDEANGLE
7x35
with Instafocus
Reg. 67.50 $49'99
Banner Broadfield
8x40
$59'99
Reg. 84.50
HUAYIER
Banner Broadfield
8x40
$59.99
Reg. 84.50
Here is a superb low-light camera at an amazing low price, the XL 125 is a fine example of legendary Sankyo quality. Shoot even in the dimmest light with ASA 160 film. Take superb, takes automatic exposure setting and push button power zoom.
Sankyo XL Low Light Super 8 Movie Cameras.
Retails for 199.95 $13999 Now it is available at Wolfe's lowest price ever.
Look and Listen
Super 8 movie cameras are here and they are easier and more fun than ever before. Even if you never have handled a camera before, you can shoot professional quality movies even with your Sanyo camera. The best way to set up your Sanyo camera is setting and many more easy-to-use features. And as with every Sanyo camera and projector, the quality is second to none. Two year warranty. Come in to Wolfenstein's for a special offer.
1
SANKYO XL 25S Sound Camera '340 ... 239.99
XL 40 Sound Camera *430* 309.99
XL 60 Sound Camera '540 ... 399.99
XL 40 Sound Camera *430* ... 309.99
XL 406... 156
BENZER
TAPE RECORDER
WOLF RIDE
Sankyo 2000 Projector Now
Dual 8 projector with slow motion. Made to sell for 220 $159^{11}$
Vivitar Pocket Camera with Built-in Flash
Never buy a flash cube again. If you need flash just switch on the built-in electronic flash for sharp, bright pictures every time. You never need to focus, and you will never need to buy another flash bar or cube again.
Vivitar
VALUABLE COUPON
Wolfe's Low Price
$4999
**VALUABLE COUPON**
Trace out this coupon.
Buy it with your phone!
buy a Vivitar packet
camera case
and a $4.50
camera case for only $1
But hurry, Offer limited.
Model 602
---
FREE POLAROID INSTANT PICTURES
The Polaroid Camera Girl will be in our store to take pictures with the new Polaroid Proton on a SX-70 film.
SUPER SHOOTER
- Color Pictures in 60-sec.
clock mode and white on
30 seconds
• High contrast type
of self-distressing
harmonious exposures
• Multi-touch modes
FILMEMORIAL PHOTO KAMERA
The most versatile instant picture camera made $19.99
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Polaroid Pronto!
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EXTRA SPECIAL
AT
WOLFE'S
Ask about the exclusive
Polaroid camera with
guaranteed good pictures for life.
WOLF
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235 1386
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KU
KANSAN
Children enjoy KU production
Vol. 87 No.30
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, October 4.1976
See story page five
it's the real thing Coca-Cola
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Non-vending vendor
Rob Steere, 714 W. 209, samples some of his wares before the game Saturday. Steere, 11, said vendors must pay the full price of sodas they drink.
By JERRY SEIB STAFF WRITER
Citizens seek Linwood injunction
A hearing is scheduled for Thursday in Johnson County District Court to determine whether a group of citizens can stop the expansion of a parking lot at the University of Kansas Linwood Center in Overland Park.
Citizens of the area surrounding the center on Wednesday obtained a temporary restraining order stopting work on the parking lot. The citizens object to the expansion because they say it will prevent children from using the area as a playground and will make the area less attractive.
In Thursday's hearing, the citizens will be a court injunction stopping construction.
said yesterday that any order issued because of the hearing would be a temporary injunction that could be made permanent.
THE LNWOOD Center is a former public school building that opened last year as a part of the new school system.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
said the Kansas University Endowment
Association purchased both the school
building and the land surrounding it. He
said about three-fourths of the land
purchased was open space.
The University arranges to lease about half of the property to the city of Overland Park for $1 a year, Lucas said, and the land is now used as a football practice area.
THE REASON the kids are using the ground for football practice in the first week of school is that they get a better feel.
Plans for the parking lot expansion can for the resurfacing of some current parking areas and the construction of a new lot in the southwest corner of the grounds.
Lucas said about 180 parking spaces would be either resurfaced or constructed. The project would also include installation trees, plants and islands in the lot, he said.
Lucas, Davis; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; and Martin Henry, Endowment Association vice president for night with citizen objecting to the construc
DAVIS SAID that about 50 citizens attended the meeting, after which KU officials said they would go ahead with the project. The citizens then obtained the temporary restraining order, which will be good for eight days.
Polls show Carter, Ford even; Carter's lead falls dramatically
WASHINGTON (AP)—National political polls show Jimmy Carter even with President Ford or his edge narrowing as the fall campaign enters its last month. A third poll showed eight point ahead, but the poll 3-361-2 may be revised on the basis of additional results.
The Newhouse News Service reported that a poll it conducted with the Chicago Daily News found that Carter had "fallen dramatically" in his electoral vote edge and was calling for states he had shifted from the Carter column to "uncertain" category in the last two weeks.
THE NEWHOUSE survey found Carter leading in 21 states and the District of Columbia with a total of 224 electoral votes—46 fewer than the 270 needed for victory. It said Ford held steady with 84 electoral votes in 14 states.
narrowly ahead in six others with 38, a total of 64 votes.
New York, Pennsylvania and Owe, with 93 electoral votes, are key states where Carter's edge has dwindled, and California, Illinois and Texas are so close neither candidate can claim an edge, the Times said.
The latest Gallup poll, released Friday,
gave Carter a 30 to 42 edge, with 8 per cent
favoring other candidates or having no
opinion.
The Times said Carter had a solid lead in 10 states with 84 electoral votes and a shaky lead in 16 states with 212 electoral votes. By February, the number of votes have 294 votes, 24 more than needed, to win.
Time magazine said its September poll by Yankelovich, Skelly and White showed Ford and Carter in a dead heat among 1,300 registered voters sampled, with 43 per cent supporting each candidate and 14 per cent undecided.
Pollster George Gilup Jr, said during the weekend that two earlier polls by his organization understated Carter's strength and that it would switch to a larger sample.
It said that 11 states appeared even, and that in none of the important states did Carter's lead exceed 5 or 6 percentage points. By gaining a few points nationwide in popular support, the Times said, Ford conceivably could win the election.
BOTH THE NEW York Times and Time magazine said the latest findings in the study were based on 1,649 subjects.
The Times said that a survey it conducted with CBS showed Carter holding an advantage in enough states to win a majority of electoral votes, but that his edge was narrow in most of the states and was dwindling in some important ones.
Davis said some construction work had begun before the court ordered storage.
IT SAID FORD leads comfortably in eight states with 46 electoral votes and is
5 in finals for HOPE
The five finalists for the HOPE Award were announced yesterday by the HOPE
the opnager. Henry said that the parking lot expiration had been planned about six months and that he hadn't seen a list of the citizens' complaints.
The finalists are Allan Ciger, assistant professor of political science; Edwyna Burton, associate professor of instruction and of English; J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business; Jean Pyfer, associate professor of business; Peter Turk, acting associate professor of business.
"I's my impression that they feel the paved area will be a less attractive area," he said. "It's also my impression that some kids play football on that grass area."
Randy Brown, HOPE Award committee co-chairman, said 498 KU seniors voted Oct. 6 and 7, almost three times the number that voted last year.
KU seniors may vote again for one of the five finalists Oct. 27 and 28. The winner will be announced Nov. 6 at the halftime of the KU- Iowa State football game.
The HOPE Award (Honor to an Outstanding Progressive Educator) was established by the Class of 1959. Calder received the Journalism, received the award last year.
Stadium vendors climb the stands to serve the fans, see the game
By MARTHA FASSETT
Aside from the players, the pompon girls, the band and the fans, one essential part of a football game is the army of young stadium fans who are ripping selling soft drinks and popcorn.
Kevin Remick, Kansas University concessions manager, said Saturday that 150 to 200 vendors, aged 12-16, sell concessions at KU football games.
"No KU students have applied yet, but you take them if we remit," Remick said.
Don Cooper, supervisor of the vendors,
recently signed on some new employees.
THIRTEEN-YEAR-OLD Dawn Griffin said he became a vendor because "it's something to do and a way to earn money." He gave $9 at one game by selling 228 cocoa cups.
"JUNIOR HIGH is the best age," Cooper said. "Usually the younger ones get scared, and the older ones think they're too sophisticated.
He said that the vendors get 4 cents for every box of popcorn or soft drink sold and that even though some vendors might sell less, the younger ones might sell only 10%. The younger ones might sell only 10%.
Cooper said that only nine or ten vendors sold popcorn and that these vendors got discouraged because popcorn doesn't usually sell well.
The earning of the 18 vendors interviewed averaged $5 to $10 a game. for selling 125-250 cups of soft drinks from noon, when they arrive, until after halftime.
"I put more than half of it in the bank and saved the rest for the high school games," he said.
The only requirement is that they've got to be able to make change.
Twelve year-old Kerry Cobb said she usually put her earnings in the bank.
THE consensus among vendors was that they had the most luck during the K-State, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Band Day games. Nevada, Idaho and Oregon basked time was the second quarter of a
Some vendors said they received tips from customers.
game when two vendors "can sell a case within two steps of each other."
The vendors seem to be selling to a captive audience. "You get halfway up the stairs and sell them all," said Tommy Thompson, an 13-year vendor.
Pat McElheney, an 11-year-old vendor, said he sold more in the student section than in the alumni section because students "mix booze with it."
THE JOB HAS its problems, too. Some vendors said that their arms and legs got tired, and that climbing up stairs loaded with trays of soft drinks wasn't easy.
"People get mad if you sell out before you get to the top row," Steve Labery said.
"They yell at you if they give you a big bill some people take Cakes without paying.
Twelve-year old Jimmy Church said he ran into a little trouble once, when one customer had only a quarter to pay for his lunch and Jimmy ended up paying the rest himself.
One incentive for taking the job is free admission to games. Although vendors are busy selling their wares through halftime, they can also end an empty seat during the last quarter.
One young vendor said that when he finished selling, he often sat on the 50-yard table.
Ohio hospital official to be Med Center administrator
Robert Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said yesterday that Krizelman was chosen from among five candidates in a background, experience and temperment."
KU Medical Center officials have selected Sheldon Krizelman, director of operations at St. Luke's Hospital in Cleveland, as the new hospital administrator.
Krizelman will start work Dec. 1. He replaces Merlin Olsen, who left the Med Center in April for a job at the University of Colorado Medical Center.
The search committee for the new administrator comprised Kugel; Russell Miller, acting hospital administrator and vice candleholder for Med Center administration; and David Robinson, vice candleholder for clinical affairs.
The hospital administrator is the chief administrative officer for the hospital.
Kugel said Miller would work with krizelman on such projects as a plan to improve the way he sees things.
Krizleman was executive assistant to the administrator at St. Luke's from 1790 to 1793, and has been director of operations there since 1793.
He received his degree in hospital administration from the University of Minnesota and his undergraduate degree from the University of Nebraska.
Woman cited in journalism
Mamie Boyd, veteran journalist and associate editor of the Jewell County Record at Mankato until her death in 1973, served as president of the annual Kauai Editors' Day at KU.
Boyd, whose husband, the late Frank W. Boyd, was named to the Hall of Fame in 1960, is the second woman elected to the Hall of Fame by Kansas editors.
Boyd received the William Allen White Foundation Award for Journalistic Mert in
About 300 Kansas editors attended the program and were guests of the University
NSAS SAS
Ridina hiah
Karen Fleeger, Lawrence junior, seems worried about support from two other pompon girl as she performs before the 2015 N.C. High School girls' basketball game.
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
are Rita Hame, Topeca junior, left, and Debbie Blaylock, Overland Park sophomore. The yell leaders and pomp girls try to fill in the gaps in game action and create crowd enthusiasm with off-the-ground formations.
Mondav. October 4,1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest From the Associated Press
AMA accused of violations
WASHINGTON—The American Medical Association (AMA) has been accused of violating the limits on contributions to political candidates in a complaint filed
The complaint, which was filed with the Federal Election Commission (FEC), accuses AMA political action committees and AMA state affiliates of more than 20
Federal law limits the contribution by a committee to any single candidate for federal office to $5,000 for each election.
In its complaint, Common Cause asks the FEC to stop the AMA and its affiliates from making contributions collectively totaling more than $5,000 to any one candidate.
The AMA has said its state affiliates are independent bodies and may give their own contributions up to the limit, in addition to contributions made by the national government.
Flu inoculations begin
More states are expected to join the swine flu campaign this week, but many health officers say they won't offer shots to the general public until at least mid-October.
Th first shots were given Friday in Indianapolis, Los Angeles and a Boston suburb. Fort Worth's health department said people lined up for one-quarter of a mile when it opened a clinic yesterday. Officials predicted that 25,000 shots would be administered. New Hampshire opened its first two clinics Saturday.
About 6,000 persons were inoculated at a two-day health fair in Indianapolis,
Indiana. Indiescape Marine消毒站对 6,000 individuals to be treated.
About 6,000 persons were inoculated at a two-day health fair in Indianapolis, leaving Indianapolis-Marion County with about 50,000 doses of vaccine. Whether the vaccine will flow quickly from manufacturers to the states for orderly administration remains in question.
Schmidt German victor
BONN, West Germany—Social Democratic Chancellor Helmut Schmidt surrendered able坐席 to the conservatives and let this coalition government to a temporary power.
Final returns showed that Schmidt's coalition of Social Democrats and Free Democrats barely won. Its majority in the lower house of parliament, the Bunny Party, had a 35% advantage.
Helmut Kohn, Schmidt's conservative challenger, refused to concede defeat. Kohn said that because his Christian Democratic Party had made the strongest gains, it was entitled to form the new government, even though it fell short of an absolute majority.
Series dates announced
Dates and topics for the Museum of Natural History's Wednesday evening series have been announced. The lectures will be held on Wednesday of every month in the museum.
Ronald Turner, associate in mammalogy, will speak Oct. 6 on "Bubonic Plague: Cyles of Transmission," Charles Adams, assistant professor of anthropology, will speak Nov. 3 on "Music of the Basotho of Africa."
The series is sponsored by the Museum's associates.
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WASHINGTON (AP)—President Ford yesterday unresolved the thorny problem of how to deal with the latest issue of involving Earl Butz, secretary of agriculture.
Butz' racial slur causes uproar
A furoir has arisen over derogatory racial remarks attributed to Butz in Rolling Stone, and both Republicans and Democrats have accused the secretary to resign or for Ford to fire him.
An aide to Butz told The Associated Press that Butz, in a conversation with an unnamed White House aide Saturday, mentioned the possibility of resigning and offered to do so, but then decided to "sleep on it."
The Rolling Stone quotation was repeated in New Times magazine, which identified Butz as the speaker. The remarks were made in an attempt by Butz to explain why the Republican party didn't appeal to black people.)
Republican Gov. Robert Bennett of Kansas defended Baz, saying that people in
(A Cabinet secretary, later identified as Butz, is quoted in the Oct. 7 issue of the magazine as saying, "Tell you what colors want. It's three things: first, a tight pouch; second, loose shoes; and third, a warm place to shit. That's all!"
Butz apologized after being severely reprimanded by Ford at the White House.
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University Daily Kansan
OnCampus
Events
TOMORROW: THE UNIVERSITY SENATE HUMAN RELATIONS COMMITTEE will meet at noon in Alcove B of the Union. The HOMECOMING COMMITTEE will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Walmut Room of the Union. The STUDENT COUNCIL FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN will have an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 144 Hayworth Hall. The MT. OREAD BICYCLE CLUB will present a slide on showcase at 7:30 p.m. in the Walmut Room of the Union. The SUA will give a lecture at 7:30 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union. LAWRENCE MAXEY, associate, will give a recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Reef Hall. ANDREW P. DEHKIK, professor of Spanish and Portuguese will deliver the opening lecture of the HUMANITIES LECTURE SERIES at 8 p.m. in woodruff Auditorium in the Union.
the relegated Rooms of the Union.
TONGHT: OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will meet at 8 a 1029 h. 19th St. The SUA CLSS CLUB will meet in the Parkers of the Union at 7:30. PHELY WILL meet in the Curry Room of the Union at 7:30. THE ELECTIONS SUBCOMMISSION of the Student Senate will meet at 8 in the Governor's Room of the Union. THE UNDERGRADUATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will meet at 8 in the Oread Room of the Union. PLAY READINGS IN GERMAN will meet at 8 at 933 Centennial Drive. The KANSAS HARP CHAMBER MUSIC ENSEMBLE will perform at 8 in Bawning Recital Hall.
**TODAY:** KOMP KIPPER will be observed from 9 a.m., until noon in the Forum Room. Kansas Union *STUDENTS IN THE DEPARTMENT OF PORTHOLOGY*
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University Dally Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
Speed-up blood drive
It's a different scene in the Kansas Union Ballroom this week, now that the Red Cross Blood Drive, there last day, Tuesday and Wednesday, has ended.
The long lines have disappeared, the cookies and orange juice have gone back to the cupboard, and the nurses have stopped needing donors.
But if the statements made by many of those who gave blood and volunteered to work on the drive are accurate, the child have been reached and surpassed.
feeding donors.
THE DRIVE fully with a total of 730 pints of blood, although the goal was 750. A total only 20 pints short of the goal isn't bad, and those who gave blood, as well as those who organized the effort, are to be commended.
Before the drive began, organizers scheduled appointments for those who wanted to donate. The appointments, they said, would be acknowledged before any "walk-in" was allowed to give blood. But several students reported last week that such was not the case. Last minute line-shuffling, they said, allowed several people to practically walk in off the street and hop up on the table ahead of those with appointments.
ANOTHER problem, so some say,
was the extensive amount of paperwork
and preliminary medical checks that
had to be done before people gave blood.
Granted, such checks are necessary.
Qualified people must ascertain that the person giving blood is healthy. But such procedures take time.
blood pressure checks and thermometer readings. Others were formed by students who waited to recite their medical histories, histories they could have filled out themselves. After all, does it take a special talent to answer whether you've had a tooth extracted within the past 72 hours?
Lines formed for students awaiting
Still others, mostly volunteers, said people arrived to give blood in the morning before the staff was ready to do business. The early birds were turned away and told to return later. Whether they did is questionable.
THE GIVING of blood itself isn't time consuming. It takes only a short time to have the blood drawn and to wait in the canteen a few precautionary moments. But some people said they spent three hours just waiting to get to the nurses.
It's a tribute to the studentry that enough people were interested in giving blood that long lines formed. But the organizers should have anticipated such response and not let their blood drive the notoriety of a mini-enrollment.
A blood drive on a university campus should be run with the guiding principle of speed. It should be the sort of operation in which anyone can walk in, donate blood, or perform any other pressing, albeit less philanthropic appointments, such as work or class.
If the KU drive could one day be known for speed and smoothness rather than as an ordeal of several hours, it's likely even higher goals could be reached. By Mary Ann Daughtery Contributing Writer
"REALLY, MR HUGHES"
The cough carried him off
By BILL SNIFFEN
Staff Writer
There's a dungeon somewhere on the KU campus. I don't know where it is; I am not why it is—I found out last week.
But let me start at the beginning.
Having just won a three-day battle with the flu, I was headed toward Wescoe Hall to class.
I COUGHED. Immediately,
two campus cops grabbed me
Women coaches resent articles
To the Editor:
We, the coaches of the Women's Intercollegiate Athletic Department, haven't offered nor been asked our comments on questions in the program at KU. It seems appropriate at this time that we voice our position after suffering numerous attacks on our qualifications and abilities by the other "neutral" observers.
For the first time in the history of women's sports at KU, there is a unified staff working for an honorable objective: the best athletic program for women in the country.
Stram not busb
To the Editor:
Our job has been made more difficult by one particular Kanasan reporter and a series of women representing the women's sports program.
because some of us were hired this summer, or because some of us are male and some are female. We need a staffed firm to meet the demands for excellence in athletic competition. Our staff is striving to provide our athletes with the training and competition available to them.
The idea that Marian Washington must go on record every week in defense of the program also seems absurd to us. She has the support of the administration, the majority of the athletes, and she has our support. Now is the time to publicize
It's certainly not our intent to tell our athletes what to think, what to say, or to whom they should speak. They are free to voice their approval or concerns at any time.
Re: Steve Schoenfeld's article "Stram throws cheap shot," Sept. 28, 1976
Also existent, but infrequently mentioned, is the support provided for athletic Director Marian Washington and her decisions on hiring new coaches and rules for the women's sports program.
We've encountered no massive negativism among our athletes. On the contrary, all are working toward their individual goals, and all support the coach's effort to the women's athletic program.
There appears to be a misconception about what Mr. Schoenfeld calls "bush," specifically referring to the time-out called by the team's coach, Steve Stram with 14 seconds to go in the game with the Chiefs.
The instructor told me his course would consider the big
However, when no effort is made to contact other athletes involved in the program, or to talk to the coaches concerning whether we have encountered dissatisfaction or lack of perseverance in dealing with athletes because of changes within the department, we certainly question the objectivity of the reporter and the Kansas.
I have a great deal of respect for the call by Stram. It was a crucial game for him. He took a chance calling for a pass play. Any Sain't miscue (a fumble runback or interception) could
this semester. I was particularly interested in the material to be covered and the qualifications of the instructor. But before I told me that the subject of the course wasn't really cosmology but cosmogony, and that he titled it "Cosmology" because he knew the difference. I agree. Therefore, however, is fundamental: Cosmology is the study of the structure and universe; cosmology is the study of the origin of the universe.
We resent the insinuation that
Readers Respond
the future of our program, the success of our teams, the energy and enthusiasm of the athletes, and the opportunity for them to be involved in 10 areas of competition on a national level.
This is a futuristic women's sports program that doesn't need to be dragged through the past on a regular basis, particularly by a conspiracy of a few people with the intent of tearing down the growing pride the U14 women athletes have derived from seven of 10 teams to national competitions last year.
Pat Madden
We're giving our combined best efforts; the athletes are giving theirs. Can we at least help them? We can, and the Kansas to use their best efforts in reporting women's athletics fairly and accurately.
Women's swimming coach (Also signed by 12 other women's coaches)
(Note: This letter and its subject will be discussed in tomorrow's "Editor's Note.")
have conceivably given the ball game to Kansas City. The opportunity was presented to the Chiefs and they didn't utilize it. Shouldn't the sports writers be more charming or marvelous finfert catch, or questioning who missed their pass coverage assignment and allowed Chrysler to score? Isn't the primary function of a coach win? Isn't the primary func- tion of a coach win? Isn't the Stram and the Saints' offense merely fulfilled their duties, that Stram took such a chance when he could have "played it safe" is indicative of his guts, but AFL Championship night an AFL Championship night an Bowl victory to Kansas City.
Let's reconsider what is really "bush." Schoenfeld equates bush with "childish." Stram's actions certainly are cautionary. Bush is King of the Norton's management. Bishop叫 for Muhammed Alla's title to be stripped from him and given to Norton because the crowd and a large number of sports writers thought Norton was too unfit. The referee scored the fight unanimously for All (87), and both the AP and UPI gave All the victory.) Bush is KU fans booing opposing teams and cheerleaders before, during, and after the game. Fights in the stands during KU games. Bush is the complaints of sports writers and fans about a coach and a team doing the jobs they're paid to do. Bush is the attitude of fans and sports teams should be nice when the game is ostensibly won.
Since cosmology and cosmogony are different subjects, such a conclusion hardly is relevant. Astronomy doesn't even concern itself with the cosmogogy of the universe, so astronomers don't have to anyone he wants to create the universe. In other words, astronomers won't complain if you say God created the initial matter of the universe. (As parts of these last statements may make useful quotes for creationists, and as they always scientists," I hope the phrase is used if they quote me!)
Published at the University of Karnataka daily August 10, 2013
June and July only except Saturday and Sunday. Holiday June and July are on Saturday and Sunday.
Subscriptions by mail are $1 amount or $15
subscription. Subscriptions by phone are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are
a year outside the county.
The instructor's qualifications are 'a degree from KU in math and some reading on the subject.'
bang and steady state theories and their "inconsistency" with the second law of thermodynamics. He said the "inconsistency" left only the thermodynamic was created. Indeed, he said the course was sponsored by the KU Creationists Club.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Leo Durocher, where are you now?
Cosmic confusion To the Editor:
According to the Student Senate Code, Article 6, Section 1.1, effective student government requires fair elections "free from improper influence, preceded by campaigns characterized by maturity and responsibility, to acquaint the voters with the legitimate issues present for their decision."
Alan Goodwin Lawrence graduate student
My main purpose in writing this is that the course being offered titled Cosmology isn't about cosmology. Students signing up for this course to learn cosmology would become a professional creatorial view and end up with an incorrect view of cosmology
Aistant Business Manager Carole Roosterkette Advertising Manager Jamele Clements Manager Sarah Morrell Classified Manager Sarah Morrell Classified Manager Kurt G. Schiff National Bank Manager
As the only astronomer at the University, I was interested in the study of a free University course. Cosmology is being offered
young woman. I approached her.
Alan Gordon
"WHAT ARE you in for?" I asked.
DeBie Gump
Managing Editor
Bokmakh
Campus Editor
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Dabble Guests
beer for freshmen attending that coalition's rally.
"I have no complaints about the Free University offering a course called The Creationists View of Cosmogamy. I don't, however, think that the Free University should be used by a teacher in other ways under some other guse. Do so is neither有害 nor maleficent."
Somehow, campaign tactics, such as this rally, don't quite fit the spirit of those principles. It is also less effective if the festive group of beer-drinking freshmen earnestly debating Student Senate election issues. Could the coalition possibly be able to buy votes with the evil brew?
"LSTTD," she said, staring at the floor in front of her.
Business Manages Terry Hanson
Carnival campaign To the Editor:
"What's that mean?"
Section 1.1 goes on to say that supervision of elections is necessary to insure that the election process isn't filled "with a carnival air through the introduction of gimmicks which have no proper place in that process."
Stephen J. Shawl Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy
"Can't you tell," she said, pointing to the tube top she wore. "Low and Sagging Tube Top Disruption."
Pointing to one of the whistlers in the corner, she said, "They never would've told you that guy hadn't whistled at me."
I INSPECTED her, looking for a possible LSTDT. I found myself making a quite thorough inspection. So thoroughly, it took awhile for me to realize someone was shouting.
If the residents of certain fraternities want to give out free beer to freshmen, fine. But I'd hate to think the students for Student Senate comes down to who can buy the most beer.
Peter Orazem Manhattan senior
Politics is a funny business, and student politics is funnier than most. A case in point was the recent political ad (Kansan, Sept. 30) for the White Horse Coalition, which advertised free
Fearing the worst, I screamed, "I only coughed. I didn't whistle and lead a band or guitar! I didn't do anything!"
"You have violated Events Committee policy by disrupting classes in intensive academic environment, that, you must be punished."
"Comrades! This is an infringement of our 'First Amendment' insisted. "We must overthrow these first indications of tyranny. Join me in breaking barricades to our freedom."
But no one in the cell seemed to notice. Foster was still trying to conduct Tenant, who had broken a guitar string. The trio in the opposite corner still mirrored my own. I was still examining my LSTTD comrade. I asked her who the shouting man was.
and dragged me as I knocked
and dragged me as I knocked
and given an instruction to
give the amount of information
the sound of plating
"Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare and defender of the faith."
The sound of guitar playing rudely awoke me.
I looked around and was relieved to find myself not alone. Inside the windowless chamber, lit by only a bare hanging light bulb, were about 15 people, huddled against the stone walls of an underground cell.
I TURNED to survey the dungeon. I recognized several of my fellow prisoners immediately. There was Max Tenant, whose mediocre guitar player had awakened me. And conducting Max was Bob Marching Band. In the opposite corner were three people, two men and one woman, all whistling. And near me, against the wall to my墙, shivered a
"I coughed," I repeated
vapidly, the memories of my
capture flooding back. "I
coughed? Yes, but I had the fu,
you see, and, well I really
know what I'm going to cough
anymore." The guard
had prophed his feet up on
a desk and was reading.
STILL WOOZY, I crawled to the steel gate to ask what I had done: "Making noise in a HAIA," the guard growled.
"WHO CARES," she shrugged. "I just want to get out of here."
"... at least nine members constituting a quorum, a quorum call being necessary to meet and consider ourselves meeting, and afterwards, having met ..."
Suddenly a buzzy and crackling overhead stopped all noise in the cell. "This is Carryl Smith, chairman of the University Events Committee." Several grogons could be heard.
"Whose faith?"
he laughed, or whatever it is?" He turned over his shoulder to respond as he walked away, the keys to my freedom jingling from his belt loop: "You coughed."
He sighed, for my stupidity irritated him, "H-A-I-A. It means High Academic Intensity Area."
I GAVE up. "What did I do in the HAIA or whatever it is?"
I REALIZED it was a recording. And I also realized this 30-minute recording, played over and over again, was our punishment. I resigned myself to my fate.
I did learn, however, where one can make noise and not violate committee bylaws. For example, if you play guitar without getting caught, go someplace away from High Academic Intensity Areas—say, the parking lot behind Gibson's Or, If you would wear tubs to stand at the corner of 11th and Louisiana streets. If you want to wear tube tops, may suggest the women's rest area at the Phillips 66 gas station and Massachusetts streets.
Of course, time all of the above events so as not to interfere with students or classes. On yes. Coughing. If you've got that cold, emphysema, pneumonia that might make you cough, take my word for it. Stay at home.
AND, IF you're ambitious enough to want to lead a marching band, try Grambling he and his friends, La. They've got the best.
Energy answers not complex
BvK-CEE COLBURN
It has been almost three years since the Arab oil embargo caused the American people to turn their back on fossil fuel cheap fossil fuels was not infinite. The utilities and the government have responded by putting money into nuclear energy, an increasing demand for power.
But there are many problems with nuclear energy that have not only conservationists but scientists worried. Were some of these are nuclear terrorism, disposal of vast quantities of highly radioactive and virtually indestructible fuel, the safety of reactor plants.
AS APPREHENSION mounts concerning the feasibility of nuclear power plants, more people are turning to alternative form of energy. These include wind and solar energy.
Although solar energy currently is being used in a growing number of residential and commercial buildings, geothermal and wind power are still in their infancy. Interest in building these systems as a growing trend toward solving this country's energy problems by using simpler technology. Although this outlook may be
considered unique in the 1970's, it has many historical precedents.
In colonial times many plantations were equipped with deep cellars that, in addition to housing the cooker, in the houses cooler in the summer. This was accomplished by a series of vents that would allow the cooler air to be drawn the house as the warm air rose.
**IN THE** Southwest Indians used adobe bricks to construct thick walls for their houses. Because of their large thermal mass the adobe walls gained much heat and lost less heat in the winter.
MORE RECENTLY, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has constructed a robotic spacecraft that hope will generate electricity. Given these safe energy alternatives, it is difficult to tell whether a mission has given something as dangerous as nuclear energy
As recently as 1942, a solar house in Chicago that had large windows facing south was built. On a day when the temperature did not exceed 17 degrees this week from 8:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. without using any other source of heat.
ARCHITECTURE students at
such support and encouragement.
At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a plastic solar membrane is being developed, which would allow heat from the sun to be transmitted into a house during the day, but, unlike glass, would retain heat at night.
the university of Minnesota have built an experimental house that relies on a sod roof, good ventilation and solar collectors to heat and cool the structure. This house is important because it doesn't depend on sophisticated technology.
Even though Congress isn't enthusiastically supporting the various alternative energy sources, research by individuals and private companies has continued. Acorn Structures, Inc., a company that manufactures prefabricated solar homes for $70,000. This also includes a conventional heating system, which is used during extended cloudy periods.
CONGRESS has been unwilling to recognize that a change in attitudes and energy consumption is critical. More federal funds have been allotted to solar energy research-$7.5 million in 1974 and $32.3 million in 1978—but tax legislation may under consideration wouldn't allow credit to homeowners who insulate their homes. Another factor that influences Congress is the lobbying of the utility companies.
Insulation is the most obvious way to cut energy use, and it is readily available. The National Mineral Wool Insulation Institute has estimated that good insulation would save $17.1 billion nationwide over a nine-year period.
Although some of these alternative energy sources are still in the experimental stages there are others, such as solar that can be implemented now. Even conventionally heated houses could be made up to 25 per cent more energy-efficient and designed for their particular environment and well insulated.
In order for the use of safe, clean, and relatively simple forms of energy to gain access to electricity we need to change their way of thinking and realize more complex forms of technology aren't necessarily the only requirement to the fossil fuel shortage.
(K-eee Colburn is a graduate of the School of Journalism.)
---
Monday, October 4. 1976
MARANNE NENACO
SPECIAL FEATURES
ff
MAINLINE NEW
PEDAL FEATURES
ff
ed Events disrupting academic u must be
worst.
coughed. I
a band or
I didn't do
members orum, a necessary to ourselves afterwards,
was a realized recording, again, was resigned
Staff Writer
rer, where and not awars. For wawers. For caught, from High Areas—t behind you would be corner of street. If brees, may opns's rest 66 gas and
'Butterfly' theatrics charms youngsters
ambitious lead a rambling ng, La.
l of the to in- to classes.
if you've nysema,
it cough,
a cough,
Stay at
By BILLCALVERT
immesota
environmental
d roof,
d solar
cool the
is im-
mersion
of tech-
obvious and it is National In-ation good ae $17.1 nine-
In the gloomy darkness of a barn, a butterfly flies about looking for a way out. It was handered in by mistake and is now walking to the outside to be rebuilt with the sun.
these acceses are l stages
they are heated now,
heated up to 25
efficiently assigned
saturated, simulated,
of safe,
simple,
gain
people
more
nology
e only
l short-
The butterfly meets a variety of creatures in its quest. There's the grasshopper who also has lost its way, the pompous and learned fly who performs magic tricks and juggles invisible balls, and the fearsome, hungry spider, who threatens to eat the butterfly but lets it go when the butterfly promises to bring back something to eat.
This was the setting of the University of Kansas Theatre for Young People production, "The Butterfly." The play was presented by assistant instructor in speech and drama, and was performed Sept. 29-Oct. 2 in the University Theatre.
uate of (1.)
THERE WAS another setting in the audience, where about 200 children and their parents were sitting. The kids' squirms, giggles and murmurs combined to create a buzz like the insect sounds coming from a country pond on a moonlit night.
"It is a whole different kind of audience," Bruce Schentes, Clairmont, Calif., sophomore, said the final panel at the Butterfly. "Schentes played the part of Professor Fly."
"I's very strong. You have the feeling of a vacuum as the kids' concentration goes in on you when it becomes very still. Then they start shaking, and your body is in chain reaction. One kid starts shifting and all the other kids start shifting. One starts to laugh and they all start笑.
"YOU ACCEPT and learn to play to
that. The whole idea is for the kids to enjoy
And enjoy it they did. Professor Fly's magic antics were met with squeals of delight. The entrance of the seemingly mean spider, played by Steve Mofkowsky, Overland Park junior, or the beautiful butterfly, played by Joy Guffey, Futton, mo. senior, brought a chorus of muffled aids from the impressed audience.
"Iliked it all it just the same," Katherine
did, six, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Brown, seven, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Brown.
Katherine's comments on the play weren't totally favorable. She did spot one flair in her performance.
"There's one thing they did wrong," she said. "Whoever heard of tallow inserts?"
KATHELEN'S COMPLIANT that the fly didn't look much like a飞 seemed reasonable, because not many flies wear tuxedos and tophats.
Kathleen's brother, Julian, 9, at first said he liked everything about the play. But after
"The ending was kind of a blank." he said. "But it was still a reverty good ending."
a little more thought, he expressed mild criticism.
Julian was alluding to the final scene, in which the butterfly finally found the sun by moving a box and standing in the warm, yellow rays streaming in through the hole. The sun was also lost in the barn, couldn't find the sun and was left behind with the spider.
"I THOUGHT the sun effect was pretty good," Julian said. "I'd like to have the part of the scene where I play it."
SOLAR-X
REFLECTIVE FILMS
Leane Anderson, 7, daughter of Mr. and
Anderson, St. Joseph, Mo., had a
different marriage.
"I wasn't too crazy about him," she said.
"I'm just not too crazy about sniders."
Maybe this was because the spider was portrayed so realistically by Mokdsky. Leanne sniff all the insects on stage seemed to insect to her. The butterfly was her favorite.
Bedard, the director, said the butterfly was the character kids naturally felt close to.
"SHE'S TRAPPED in the barn, and in order to get out she has to make a deal with
SOLAR-X®
REFLECTIVE FILMS
* REJECTS $0 PER CENT SOLAR HEAT
* GLARE REDUCTION
* PRIVACY PAINING
* REDUCED ENERGY COSTS
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* ADDITIONAL DAYTIME PRIVACY
* OUTSIDERS CAN'T BE IN
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE
The play is unique, Bedard said, because of the unusual treatment it gives to the animal. The result is a dislike for the character.
"The struggle isn't over overt bad guy trying to get the good guy, and the good guy trying to get the bad guy."
The evil character in the play, if there is one, he said, is the lightning bug, played by Dave Cox, Clearwater, Fla., junior. The lightning bug tries to tempt the butterfly away from its search for the sun with his beautiful, but artificial, light box.
"Most of the children I have talked to haven't seen the evil in the lightning bug, but they also haven't the spider to be evil." Beard said. "In this play, I don't hate it. But he doesn't hate him; he's just hungry. He finds the butterfly is a good person and he lets he go."
Bedard said children in the audience were different from the adults because they were older.
REFLECTOR
CUSTOM WORKS & LAMPMAKERS
"That's just fine," Bedard said. "It's great. It's different for those who haven't played to that type of audience. There's that buzz of energy that they've just not used to."
University Daily Kansan
IDEAL FOR VANS, MOBILE HOMES
THE SUBMARINE
a nice place
happening in Lawrence
OPEN LATE
EVERY NIGHT
mon - thurs.
till 11:30
fri., sat.
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sun.
till 10:30
JUST WEST OF THE XΩ FOUNTAIN
happening in Lawrence
842-1117
1420 Crescent
Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358
VOTE
Jayhawk Party
—Mark Buchanan —Mike Harper
—Tom Byers —Ann Judge
—Steve Conklin —Bert Nunley
For Student Senate
Oct. 6, 7 Paid for by Jayhawk Party.
Those of us who work with the Commission do so because we are questioning. We want to know what our alternatives are and how to maintain them. We work to support women in whatever choice they make and to increase the options open to all of us. We work to stimulate thought on being a woman and how we can integrate these thoughts into ideas we already have about ourselves. We are interested in exploring the status of women on the KU campus.
If you are interested in working on a committee or applying for Secretary of the Commission Board please contact Maggie Flanagan at 842-1114 or Tracy Spellman at 841-4945 as soon as possible. Calls concerning the Commission in general are always welcome at the above numbers or the Dean of Women's Office.
If you feel the Commission has something to offer you there are many ways to get involved. Anyone is welcome to attend the bi-weekly programs (Oct. 5, 19 & Nov. 2, 16, 30.) on topics of interest to women and also to receive a monthly newsletter. The Commission consists of five committees, each dealing with a specific area concerning women, on which members are encouraged to work: Life-planning, Human Sexuality, Women's Recognition, Political Action and Publicity. The Commission is also looking for an efficient and enthusiastic person to serve on the Board as Secretary. This position requires time and energy as well as typing skills.
Saying you're a woman doesn't tell anyone much, because being a woman can mean many different things.
Commission on the STATUS OF WOMEN
Partially funded by the Student Senate
The western adventure of a lifetime.
PG
M.G.M presents
THAT'S
ENTERTAINMENT.
Part 2
The cast of the decade.
The western adventure
of a lifetime.
M-G-M presents
THAP'S
ENTERTAINMENT.
Part 2
PG
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30
JOHN WAYNE
LAUREN BACALL
"THE SHOOTIST"
Eve. 7:30-9:30
Sat.-Sun. 2:30
Granada
STANLEY
KUBRICK'S
BARRY
LYNDON
PG
Sat.Sun.
1:15
Eve. 7:45 only
WOODY ALLEN in
"Sleeper"
7:15
PG
"Bananas"
8:45
PG
"Everything . . .
About Sex..."
10:15
Hillcrest
Enjoy the biggest,
grandest, action-filled
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SWASHBUCKLER
PG
Eve. 7:30-9:25 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:30
Hillcrest
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MOVING Plus
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PG
Starts at 7:30 at the Sunset
PIRATE SHIP
Flamingo
A Titulating Experience Tues., Oct. 5 at 8:00 p.m.
with
Amateur 'GO-GO'
$300.00 in Total Prizes
1st Prize $150.00
2nd Prize
$75.00
4th Prize $25.00
2nd Prize $75.00
3rd Prize $85.00
3rd Prize $50.00
Private Club Members Only
Come Out for Details
501 N. 9
843-9800
Be the student you could be!
JOINAL CONTRACT 147
Do you fall asleep over your book? Spend all your time studying just to keep up? (Or feel guilty when you don't?)
In only six weeks you can
ENROLL NOW FOR EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
Nervous and unprepared for exams?
... Read most material over 1000 words per minute
. . Adapt dynamic methods to all kinds of material
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New classes begin next week.
Mondays 7-9:30 p.m.
Oct. 11—Nov. 22
Tuesdays 7-9:30 p.m.
Oct. 12—Nov. 23
100%
FREE SPEED READING MINILESSON
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M
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Located in ADVENTURE a bookstore
Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa Phone 843-6424
---
6
Monday, October 4.1976
University Daily Kansan
Cross country teams improve at OSU meet
Sports Writer
By STEVE CLAKK
Improvement—that's the word that describes the performance of the men's and women's cross country squads at the 2014 NCAA Division I Jamboree in Stillwater, Oka., Saturday.
The men finished second in an eight-team field, while the women placed third and qualified three runners for the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) national championships in November.
John Roscoe's sixth place finish and a time of 24:32 over the five-mile course led the men. George Mason was just a couple of strides behind in seventh at 24:34
Bruce Coldsmith led the rest of the Jayhawks as he placed 11th in 24-44. Then came Truck, 21st in 26-57. Bill McNeill, 31st in 29-60. Sean Connery, 26-34; and Joe JoCamron, 46th in 27-46.
kU tabelled 80 points to grab secound
kU tabelled power Arithmetic second
kU tabelled power Arithmetic second
Wichita State University was third with 80 points; Oklahoma University had 81; Oklahoma State University 122; Oklahoma Christian College had 142; Texas Tech had 143; and Eastern New Mexico University had 196.
Despite finishing last in the team standings, KNZM had the highest winner in Japan and it was a 23-4 win, a 23-3 win. a 23-3 win.
The women's weekend included a bit of everything. To start with, Mary Jolarkan
missed the van when the team left for Stillwater Friday morning.
Then Sena Frame, who has been slowed by a leg injury, was warming up before the race when the leg began to bother her. Coach Tom Lionvale decided not to run Frame and that left the Jayhawks with just five runners.
After the race started, Kim Glaswoff, who has been suffering from a severe asthma infection, began hyperventilating at about one-half hour after the one-and-a-half struggles through the remainder of the three-mile race, collapsed near the finish and literally crawled across to place 16th.
"We don't know whether it was the medicine that she takes for her asthma that caused the problem," assistant coach Teri Kushner said; there was definitely something wrong."
Meanwhile, back in the race, Kansas State's top five girls and Northwest Missouri's Ann Kinn, an ALW All-America runner, had jumped into the lead.
At the two-inte mark the group was still setting the pace, when it became confused and vveled off the course. That maneuver was Brown, KU's top runner, in first place.
"I didn't really know what to think," she said. "It wasn't long before a couple of the K-State girls turned around and passed me."
But two of the misdirected leaders, Joyce Urish and Cindy Worcester, finished their projects in a whirlwind manner.
made a rather curious ruling. They disqualified Urish and declared Worchester the winer—even though they had made the mistake. Worchester's time was 16:01
Undisturbed by the mix-up, Brown finished fourth in 18:04. Nancy Bissell was next for KU, placing 12th in 18:33. Connie Wilson placed 9th in 18:26 and 19th in 18:22; and Glasgow, 16th in 20:58.
KU placed third with 59 points behind K-State 18 and Northwest Missouri State 18. Following the Jayhawks came Oklahoma State with 95. Wichita State University entered but didn't run a complete team.
Brown, Bissell and Lane all qualified for the AIAW national meet by virtue of dipping' under the 19:06 mark.
NEW YORKER
1071 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Spaghetti Dinner
Meat Ball or Meat Sauce
$1.95 Reg. $2.25
Offer good Monday thru Thurs. Exp. Oct. 31, 1976
The cost of maintaining existing recreational facilities at the University of Kansas may result in an increase in the student activity fee.
Jill Grubaugh, chairman of the Student Senate Sports Committee, told the committee last night that administrators had wanted to include a $1.50 to $2 increase in the student activity fee and but an increase in the student activity fee must first be approved by the Student Senate.
Student activity fee faces possible rise
Grubbaum said a steering committee studying capital improvements for University recreational facilities decided last spring that more money was needed to keep existing facilities in good condition and to provide new facilities.
Judy, old Maine's new loafer on a flexible crepe soles. Nutan and Rosewood leather.
Cheers, a very soft wedge heel tie on a wedge crepe sole. Nutan or Rosewood.
Wellington, suede tie on a low wedge crepe sole
"I THINK EVERYONE's pretty much in the dark about this," she said.
A three-phase program of capital improvements for playing fields and tennis courts is now under way and Grubbaigh said there wasn't enough state money available for recreational services to pay for the improvements.
She said that she was at a meeting of the steering committee last spring when the team had been assessed, but that she didn't realize until this that any decision about it had been made.
mice
shoes.
813 Mass. St.
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But she said she hoped to learn more about the decision when she and Tedde McNeil, executive, met tomorrow with Del Shank, executive vice chancellor, to discuss the fee.
OLDMAINE trotters
Punch, foam padded tles. Soft Nutan leather with easy going crepe soles
The University recreation services program currently operates with a budget of $124,000. Students provide 27 per cent, or account, through their activity fees, she said.
SUA
FILMS
SCIENCE FICTION
SERIES
THE ILLUSTRATED MEN
Dir. Jack Smidt, with
Rod Steiger, Claire Bloom
Mon, Oct. 4, 7:30, 75c
CLASSICAL SERIES
FILMS OF THE MAYSLES BROS
Oct. 6,9
SALESMAN (NY)
Dir. Mayles Bros. and
Charlotte Zwein.
Documentary
CHRISTOPHER ALLEY CURTAIN
Mayles Bros. and
Charlotte Zwein.
Wed., Oct. 4, 7:30, $1
GIMME SHELTER (1970)
BEGINNING THE ROLLS, Ike and Tina Turner, Jefferson Airplane
(1946) 1000 and WHAT'S HAPPENING! THE BEATLES IN THE U.S.A. (1964)
CHRONICLES WITH Beatles Thurs., Oct. 7, 9:00 31
Woodruff Auditorium
GREY GARDENS (1976)
Writing with Edith Boulier Beale and
daughter Eileen. A non-fiction film
by 8 and 9
3:30, 7:00 and 9:30
POPULAR FILMS
SUNY AT DUNNELAND
Blane—Owner & Hairystyle
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• Oread Room, Kansas Union
PLAY TENNIS
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A
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IN CONCERT
OCTOBER 16, 1976 8:00 PM ALLEN FIELD HOUSE, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ALL SEATS RESERVED $5,6&7 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT SUA, KIEF'S AND CAPERS CORNERS
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For more info., write: Degree Design, Drawer 3306, Lawrence, Ks. 66044
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Monday, October 4, 197
PETER HENRY KENDRICK
University Daily Kansan
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SKI WINTER PARK, COLORADO WITH SUA TRIP INCLUDES
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Boogie to the music of Take Her as She Comes. Enjoy yourself all night for only a $1 cover charge.
737 New Hampshire
841-0817
Off the Wall Hall
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kennan are offered to all students without regard to national or national national. BALL ASSIGN TO 111 FLINT HALL.
CLASSIFIED RATES
... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
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AD DEADLINES
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ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or on the UKB business office at 664-4358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
Employment Opportunities
Want to buy tap 35mm Minolta or Viatar. Munt
matricole, 841-7288 after 6
matricole, 841-7288 after 6
AYON-good money, valuable experience. We have beautiful products. Call 824-8128 10-5
Marketing, Sales & Sales Management positions.
Full training opportunity plus commision,
up to $2800 per year. Sign up now.
Oc 6 & 7 in 2022 summerfield (Business,
2028 Summerfield) or Oc 9 in 2021 Gunnell (Goun).
New England Mutual, I-1235-SC1.
Spaecious furnished room, utilizes paid $110 per
distance during school to campus. Call 412-789-
2144. T江海
Jayhawk Towers 2 bedroom apt. All utilities
included. Parking. Free parking 30 min.
per month. Laundry facilities. On bus line.
Free bus transfers.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WEBSTER MOBILE-HOMES, 340th St. Street., Lawrence, KS.
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
GRAN SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
has the eyeglasses you want.
802. Massachusetts
Phone 814-7421
VISIONS
Call Ottis Vann!
For new Chevrolets and used cars
Turner Chevrolet
at
843-7700
Sunflower House. (a cooperative living facility) has rooms for rent. Residents are responsible for the food and furniture work, working co-od, democratic. Food staff preferred. Carriage at 1038-9421. Cambs. Call 10-55
Suburban 2 bedroom suite all unifies paid, furnishings, on site bathroom, on bus route, call in 133-845-6700.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS - Regardless of any price you see on popular hill equipment, you will find leases or close-out products, you will be able to lease them at the GRAMHOFION SCALE at KIEPES, if
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists
BEDA AUTOMOBILE BEDA AUTOMOBILE BEDA AUTO-
ELECTRIC, 935-7000, 935-9000, W. 0h, 1h
Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerator,
cooking utensils, kitchenware, dishwasher, stove,
32nd Bd man, Tropicala, Kitchen, 18 a.m.-6 p.m. Fax:
904-578-1112.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 20th
St., 30 West 45th Street, New York, NY 10017.
Western Civilization Notes—On sale! Make
sense out of Western Civilization! Makes
sense out of Western Civilization!
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
71 Vegas Hatchback, 4 speed, low mileage, silver,
white. Mitsubishi FJ6500. Mitsubishi FJ65-8385. Jnk.2. Prime, preferably evening.
for exam preparation
"New Analysis on Civilization" available
at now at Town Crier Store.
If
67 Flat, very clean & nicely—must see. $750
or best offer. #83-0469. $105
1975 Toyota station wagon, dark brown, 1000 cc.
AM- FM mag wheel, call after 6:00,
7042.
Must sell my 75 Honda 250. Its your chance to
sell a 85-90 model or a 105-135.
$459-8245 days or $4,193-16,913 for 6 a great time.
Check out www.chevron.com/creditcards.
1070 Opel Rally Kadett 72,000 miles, good condition, gets 20 mg. Call 843-3282-3828.
VW Fast back 1969. Slight body damage and repair were worn. Any reasonable offers call 841-1880 or visit www.vwfastback.com.
Fender Dial Showman Rows amp; JBL's. BFM,
Bell's, Tiny Joe's, Eddie Van Halen's best offer. Mtu 841-7845 before 3:30. 18-d.
99.99-$60.00.
1968 Grand Torino, 78,000 miles, good condition.
must sell. Call Bruehner. 8-10 p.m. 10-5
Corvette 71 engine rebuilt, leather interior. 52,000
miles. AC PS 71 rear defrost. 841-6927. 105-8738
Electric typewriter, Olivetti Underwood brand;
promotional, omma, elite needs. Teeps need
$90. Call 841-735-2610.
Calls 841-735-2610.
1971 Toyota Wagon Corolla Deluxe 1600. Excel
carrying a full gas mileage and auto-
transmission system. 54,900 miles.
jie drive brakes, battery, snow tires.
jie ice brakes for slightly large
wagons. 842-7305 or 842-3217
1870 blue VW Bug; one owner, 30,000 miles,
sheepdog breed; leather handle, handmade,
small sizes. 842-115-6.
1971 Dodge Challenger 318 V8, A/T, PS, PB, air
good condition, must sell, mkt. $2,495.
Dual 1210 turntable and Sony tuner Call 841-
10-5
Ampg U-2 Guitar amp. esx Maxwell E琴
at Love See Records, 15 W.90h, or
84-937-378
FABRIC SALE 10% to 40% off cotton prints and solids, kettle shirts, skirts, flannels and velveten.
PATRACHWORNS 709. Mass: 845-700. Twil-Fri: 3 a.m. to 10:30
and Sat. from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Famous FRYE brand bootts, gold leather, women's size a dkm or men's wdw, both only twice, worn in different settings.
One of the largest selects of musical instruments in the area at Rose Keyboard. Professional sound system, guitars, ampls, drums, special equipment. Reward program. Rose Keyboard. 1420 W, 843-7807.
Student and Faculty Special Rows! Rose $20./oal
and $35./al only. Also available: 824, Iowa, 842-120
and 826, Iowa, 842-130.
DO'S DELUXE
ROLLIN' MASS
LAWRENCE PARK
FALL 2014
Peugeot UO-18 for sale. 368 and almost new
safety brake lights, side mirrors, fenders, lips,
wheel arches or wheels. 943-8248 or 844-8042.
I have to sell '88 Pontine Le Mans. Automatic,
PS, take the best offer. M1-647-8781. 10-7
Yellow Labrador pups, AKC, Champeh血
field, and show stock. K43-8621. 10-7
Scuba outfit Tank, regulator, wet suit and weight belt 814-6134 after 5.
AM* FM Stereo with turntable and speakers Per-
formance for dorm room apartment. $25, Calm
4030.
78 Chevy Van, black, many options, partially
customized. Must see to appreciate. Call 413-625-9800.
Mimixer-Socket 500 35 mm cameras Allo Player
computer-based, plays player-recordings, both appros. 1 yr of
use.
We have speakers-armed head phones-turned on.
We have 4-way charging for Lot-Lay-away and financing available. Buy today.
*FREE SHIPPING*
Samui 1000x Receiver, 35 watts. Excellent concen-
tration. Great p.m. 841-8058. IB-8
loudest. Great music.
SPECIAL-AIR AIS speakers (Reg. $251 a.i.) new,
upgrade or away-available. Audi. Audio, 308
Hurry!
SUBARU 71,刀 42.50万米 4 miles, AC. AM
BURA 71,刀 42.50万米 4 miles, AC. AM
电话 842-1982 at 6 p.m. on week day.
电话 842-1982 at 6 p.m. on week day.
A good sound system is one of the most pleasurable things you can have. Let us show you an instrument that will deliver more music joy than anybody else's for less money. Audio 13 E. 8th. **10-11**
We have the Adventus -J L B. and Eses speakers
we have the Adventus -J L B. and Eses speakers
our speaker demo at Ray Audio, 15 Ft. B18, 10h
9:40am.
HELP WANTED
Part time secretary to take appointments for
the office of the Judicial Department.
Apply at the Jayhawker, 117 B Union, 864-7258.
FOOD SERVICE-full time superviving job. 8
hours per week. Must be a U.S. Citizen.
Approximately 42 hours per week. Paid holidays,
visations homes. Must have had previous food
service experience. Apply by September
19th'15 Mass.; Scrum Foods 5-5 daily;
Scrum Meals 6-5 daily.
Counter help part time. Must be able to work weekends, holidays and dependable with a variety of clients. Henry's. 811 WILFORD ST.
Live in house for halfway house for girls
13-18. 1 parent may be part time, starting salary
16-18. 2 parents may be room and board. Send
resume to Lincoln House.
Wksia, KS. 67211 by Oct. 8. Include references.
Custodial work at Shenanigans. Call for information ask for Joe, 814-6000. 10-7
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER: Available immediately under the direction of the Manager of Technology, tenance, and other programming tasks. College education required in school diploma required with programmer training in programming (COSOI desired).胜任职务: Computer Programmer. Work at O'Leary Hall, Lawn, Rc. 64%; Application Programmer at UNITY EMPLOYER--WOMEN, MINUTES ON HANDICAPPED ENCOURAGED TO I-B-PLY.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost: at Union 9/12; tan billfold identifying
identities of two persons who were
pleased to turn into Lod and Found in 4-4
and 4-3.
Found: one set of keys by Potter Lake. Claim at 10-4
Room 1027, Learned Hall
Found-Ladies Haze Mission NW Class ring
Call 841-4927 after 5:30.
10-5
Lost: I lost a set of keys. If you find, please contact 10-481-4215.
*Lost-Misplaced in dark竹舟 wagon at Green
Place. In dark baggage, with a small baggage
with wallet, keys, shades, plus Pleasen
in the bag.*
Lost: Hugh. Collea St.-Bernard mlk, Sunday save-
election. Call 845-6632 after Reward.
Wearn.
LOST - Red file notebook of Chemistry 184 notes,
on Monday - reward-card call at 834-6711.
S
金
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
BankAmericard
FOUND-Found one set of keys attached to a
keyboard. One set of a key to a Ford Car
Campground. Documents.
Found: set of keys on kennels ring on campus
Taken by: Conchanceler, 10:46
picked up at 105 Finel. 10:46
FOUND~Set of keys. Can be claimed at 2083
Wewocle. Call 864-315-3
10-5
Mastercharge
Lost; set of keys left Wed. between Blake and Lost. Call Mark at 841-256. Thanks. 10-5
FOUND—found in visibility of IIDS and Iowa.
FOUND—found in blue-belt call. Call to identify
403-721-8146 or ask for Karen Hewitt.
Lost: reward for return of small charm, "spid" left in mailbox in Jawahner Tower A on Sept 8, the mailboxes
Found: Texas Instrument instrument at Wescoe
Terrace on Monday. Call 843-5804. 10-6
Found: Bus Pass belonging to Lian Chilature.
In Clawe in患果 and found in office. 10-6
Found: set of keys in front of Hall Thur 59,
30. Sep 14. 823-7881 and identify.
10-6
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Alice at the House of UWJeal/Quick Copy Center.
Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Monday,
6 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at
Masr.
Désign doironne que practice TM House near
Berkshire and Sims $55 month utilities 18-4-
327-537
NOTICE
CASABA CAFE-Good food from scratch. Lunch
10:30-20:30 MwS. Mass. Please have backpack, eyeglasses,
mug.
Samsung Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dish
ware, cell phones, televisions. Open daily 12
am-5pm.
Not happy, with your bike? Maybe you need a set of skates or rollerblades to adjust your dersailer, an entire bike-job-site and
Need a professional Coffee and tea caterer in the large area of Westchester, NY near New York City, New York. Located in Lawrenceville, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Monroe, Troy, Newark, and Albany. Send resume to JD Smith at Cafe Desi.
ALEXANDER FLOWERS BATH BOUTQUE
TREATMENT SHOP.花瓣 special 28.¥ ROWS.
84-130 84-131
Jim's Steak House Delicious food at reasonable prices
213 W. 84th St, Birmingham, AL 36025 Closed Tuesday
8:30 am 8:30 pm 8:49 am 8:59 pm
SQUEEZER'S PALACE ANNUAL FALL PLANT
All plants. all tickets. 20% off. 10-6
Vista Restaurant, 1527 W, 6th, open daily tl 13,
a.m. and Ft. & Sat. tl 2 a.m. 10-4
Dorothy Harilah, call your heart out to G&S Services. You can help by visiting her website or joining her Everyone invited. For socializing activities, call 800-396-2145.
Cakes baked and decorated for special occasions.
Cakes with icing made from chocolate, chocolate,
information, call 454-6326. 10-4-8
Commission on the Status of Women: Alternatives in Sexuality October 7 - September 9, 2015 P.M. Lewis Hewitt
$83 REWARD for first person to offer a tape record of the NATIONAL SURREALIST PARTY & MUSIC FESTIVAL LIGHT BOASTER BROADCAST • RJHK J14-Set. 5, Sep 18. Original Rrta or Rrta at或864-745 or 841-4829. 10-7
Abilene High School invites all AHS alumni to
go on October 7 against Wageningen, beginning
with a home game.
Oracle Bookshop Closes Early, at 12:30 on Sat.
Oct 9 for maintenance.
10-8
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CARDIOUR
15 East Bath 641-200
10-5 Monday, Saturday
or Jay Counseling Service; call 842-7250 6-12 p.m.
or Referrals.
PERSONAL
FEMINIST COUNSELLING AND WORKSHOP*
in-
tervention. Also growth workshops.
61-1033 8482-7985
Tutor wanted for Sociology Statistics 321; Call
842-8989 or 841-2277.
The Community Mercantile is having a series of meetings to educate the occupants. All households that joined the coppie-buyer membership do not attend a rotationation or do not sell your property to the community. The occupation will be held per month. Call 844-7834 or contact us at: CommunityMercantile.com
SELL OR TRADE
Need a ride to Rutkinson Hall. October 10.
Will help with expenses 864-1332
10-5
RIDES --- RIDERS
SERVICES OFFERED
Excellent prices on new mattresses. We buy, sell,
and refurbish furniture at Lodon's. 103-420
843-3224
ACADEMIC BISSEARCH PAPERS. Thomason on campus at 1125 S. Lamar Street, Dallas, TX 75209. mail@bissearch.com. 1125 station Ave. near No. 368, Los Angeles.
Math Tutoring—competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 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2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2170, 2171, 2172, 2173, 2174, 2175, 2176, 2177, 2178, 2179, 2180, 2181, 2182, 2183, 2184, 2185, 2186, 2187, 2188, 2189, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 20
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8
Monday. October 4.1976
University Daily Kansan
KU big plavs crumble Wisconsin
By BRENT ANDERSON
Kansas' big guns went off Saturday, leading the Jayhawks to a 34-24 victory over a feisty team from the University of Wisconsin.
KU is 4-0, having beaten four non conference teams. But the 'Hawks don't have time to look back. They travel to Stillwater, Okla., this Saturday to play Oklahoma State, starting what Kansas football fans call the "Cowboy season—seven Bie Flight Conference games.
It took less than two minutes for KU to score its first touchdown, a 29-yard pass (yes, a pass) from KU quarterback Nolan Cromwell to wide receiver Waddell Smith, play earlier, on the first play of the game. Cromwell hit his Vick with a 43-ard pass.
IT WAS CROMYELL'S most productive passing day ever. He completed three of 15 passes for 123 yards. All three receptions were made by Smith.
"We've never been afraid to throw the football," Moore said yesterday. "They were playing our receivers close to the line of scrimmage and we thought we could pass on them. We should have completed more passes than we did."
Cromwell took the blame for that, saying it was off target on some passes and forced him to run.
"I had men open but just couldn't hit them," he said. "But I think we'reimproving. I got some time in throwing me. I think our passing willcome around."
KU SCORED a second time in the first quarter following the first of two interceptions by cornerback Skip Sharp, who returned it 25 yards, to Wisconsin's three. Cromwell scored on the next play, making it 14-0.
Kansas failed to convert two other scoring opportunities in the first quarter, the first set up by a 49-yard punt return by Sharp, the second set up by a 36-yard kickoff after KU's second touchdown.
The Badgers refused to buckle, although KU was in control throughout the game. They scored 17 points in the second quarter, but the team's defense pass with no time left in the first half.
Unfortunately for Wisconsin, the Jayhawks responded to the Badger's first two scores with two, two-play touchdown drives, making the halftime score 28-17. Cromwell broke away for a 64-yard touchdown run after Wisconsin's first touchdown,
and hit Smith on a 51-yard pass to the Badger's six.
"IT TAKES ALL that zip out of you from when you score," said Wisconsin coach John Jardine about KU's quick touchdown strikes. "It's an emotional game. I think they were a well played player and so are some of those other guys. They have a talented football team."
All the Badger's points came after long scoring drives of 60, 80 and 84 yards. But six turnovers - five interceptions and a fumble recovery - made a Wisconsin comeback
Wisconsin actually had an edge, statistically, on offense. The Badgers rushed for 246 yards and their quarterback, Mike Carlo, passed for 231, a 474-444攻 for Wisconsin in total offense. KU's 111 return yards, however, gave the Jayhawks good field position on several occasions and less area to move the football.
Halfback Laverne Smith dashed for a 79-yard touchdown on the first play of the second half, tying Bud French's career touchdown record of 23. It was Smith's second longest career run; the best is an 80-yard run last year against Iowa State.
Both Cromwell and Smith rushed for more than 100 yards against the Badgers.
Cromwell had 123 yards on 16 carries, Smith 115 yards on 11 attempts. Smith now needs only 28 yards to pass Gale Sayers as KU's second career leading rusher and 59 to pass John Riggins as KU's leading ground gainer.
Smith's touchdown was KU's only score in the second half. Wisconsin also scored one touchdown in the second half. Both coaches said the heat (94 degrees at game time) began to take its toll in the fourth quarter.
WBISCONS, who played top-ranked Michigan in its first game, 40-27, had great praise for KU but its players fell short of saving that KU was as good as Michigan.
"Kansas could line up against anyone in the country." Wisconsin's Carroll said. "They are faster than Michigan, and every bit as tough. But it's hard to compare them in other ways because they are so different."
Jardine said, "Kansas has a talented
team. They never gave up and
grew up."
Moore said he thought Wisconsin was probably the best team Kansas had played this year. It was KU's consistency, or lack of it, that Moore was concerned about.
"Both offensively and defensively, we had some great individual plays," he said. "But we had mental lapses that hurt us. We'll play consistently well to keep winning."
14
Nolan Cromwell (9) gets his head taken off but no face mask penalty is called
9
Andy Reust is congratulated after intercepting a pass
Kansas surprises Badgers early; bombs highlight passing offense
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
Sports Editor
All week long Bud Moore had been thinking of having his Kansas Jayhawks open up with a surprise play against Wisconsin, the nass
"He told me while we were eating breakfast that he was seriously thinking about it." **backbonal** Nolan Cromwell said, "We were going to do it," game, he told me we were going to do it.
Right before kickoff, Moore finally made up his mind.
Cromwell stunned Wisconsin and most of the 48,360 fans by dropping back and lofting a 43-yard bomb to split end Waddell Smith in Saturday's first play. By the time day 4 came, the ball was in front of those bombs to Smith, and the Jayhawks had a 34-24 victory over the Badgers.
CROMWELL WAS INSTRUCTED to tie up the cable in a certain defensive formation.
"I checked it out to see what kind of defense they were in," Cromwell said. "They were in a rock defense with an eight-nine man-front. If they would've come out in something we weren't expecting, we wouldn't have run that play."
Smith made a beautiful catch, taking the away from Badger corner back Rick Chirch
"It wasn't that I had great quickness or great speed on that play," said Smith, "but
just that the defensive back wasn't expecting it and wasn't playing pass.
"WHEN YOU PLAY Kansas University, you know KU will have great running backs, a great quarterback, but you don't expect them to throw."
Cromwell hit only three of 15 passes for 124 yards. But his first two were complete, with the second one being a 29-yard touchdown pass to Smith, who was on the other end of all three Cromwell completions. Still, he wasn't pleased with his performance.
"I wasn't consistent," he said. "I missed a few passes. I was rushing it. I had a lot of people open, but I didn't get the ball. I know I forced at least two or three."
NEVERTHELESS, CROWELL may have answered his critics who said he couldn't pass. KU receivers coach Don Blackwelder thought so.
"A lot of people talk about Nolan and say he's a great athlete, but can't pass," Blackwelder said. "He couldn't be a good athlete if he couldn't pass."
The Jayhawks had a very ineffective
the team. They were outrushed,
158-134, at half time.
"We got to leave them let us do," running back Laverne Smith, who creeper less to the KU career rushing mark by gaining 123 yards on 11 carries. "We were whipping them passing. They couldn't handle Waddell. We not known for our passing. That
will give Oklahoma State something to think about
IT DIDN'T BOTHER THE KU offensive brains woke up. It spent much of the first half passing
"We do it out our ears in practice," offensive guard John Mascarello said. "It's easier than blocking for the run. And it's not as tiring."
The Jayhawks weren't the only ones who moved the ball well through the air. Despite having five passes had picked the Badgers and the Hawks had picked 444, and 477 yards total. The Jayhawks had picked 444.
"WHEN WE HAD pressure on the quarterback," said safety Chris Golub, who intercepted one pass and got an assist on another, "that's when they threw wild ... lofted it up in the air and we got interceptions."
Of the Badgers' 231 yards passing, two were for touchdowns, one on a very controversial call. Split end Randy Rose made a dying end-zone catch of Mike Carroll's shot from half to half was running out. Moore didn't agree with the call and vehemently protested.
Golub, who had a good view of the play from his free safety spot said, "There was nothing Andy (Reus, KU cornerback) could've done. It was a perfectly thrown pass. And it was a diving catch and he held on to the ball. There was no way to defend
Regional golf meet here
Fourteen schools from seven states will be in Lawrence today and tomorrow competing in the Association of Women Region Six golf tournament.
Tee off w 9 a.m. today for the first round of the tournament at Alamzar Hill
Second round tee off time will be 8:30—with schools teeing off from both the first and the tenth holes.
KU's golfers will be Nancy Hoins, Beth Bozer, Charneil Hadl, Jackie DelLong and Sharon Sogren.
States in Region Six are Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri and Kansas.
In the second half, Roger Walter, Dan Katz and Bill McGillary each scored a try, and Rich Millard added two. Hay kicked two more conversions and the final was 41-0.
McGillvary kicked two field goals and a penalty goal. Katz and Pete Bloomfield each scored a try.
Varsity captain Doug Gunn said yesterday that when he was informed of the problem Friday he contacted Pittsburg, the game to come to Lawrence for a game.
In the City side game the score was a bit closer, but the 'result' was the same.
Rugby club takes pair
The Lawrence Rugby Club played the wrong team in the wrong place yesterday. But those details don't seem to bother the players, who attended intramural fields at 23d and 10a streets.
Originally, the ruggers were slated to play the River Quay club in Kansas City, but because of a conflict for River Quay, the match was canceled.
The University side had little trouble in its match and by halftime had built a 17-4 lead. Tries by Rich Coulson, Jon Mellon and Phil Hatch and a conversion and penalty goal by Dave Hay accounted for KU Lawrence's scoring.
The schools competing in the tournament are: Concordia College, University of Minnesota, University of Northern Iowa, University of Iowa, Iowa State University, University of North Dakota, University of Sebastian, University of Oklahoma, George Washington, Stephene College, Southwest Missouri State University, Wichita State University, Central College and KU.
Golf coach Nancy Boozer said Stephens and Nebraska would be the toughest teams there. Stephens placed 11th in the nation and also tied for fourth, and both have good teams again this year.
The University side wiped Pittsburgh's
a team, 43-4, and the City side stopped
with 51-2.
Controversial hit wins Brett title
"Those two will be tough," she said. "If we play up to our potential, we'll be up there with them, though."
The University of Iowa and the University of Minnesota could be contenders also,
By GARY VICE
Assistant Sports Editor
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—When is a hit not a
hit?
Well, never when you're computing batting averages. But to George Brett and Hal McAfee, a hat laden with controversy they thought was the silver bat they sought all season long.
Minnesota won the game, 5-3, in Royals Stadium to complete a sweep of the three-game series. The loss dropped the Royals to 90-72 and a .556 winning percentage, one game behind their 1975 record. Minnesota finished in third place, five games behind the Western Division Champion Royals, with an 85-77 mark.
Brett won the bat representative of the American League batting championship by .001 over McRae yesterday on a pop-up, inside-the-park home run that both players said should have been caught. Had Brett hit, which came in his final plate appearance of the season, been caught, McRae would have won the championship. Brett finished the season at .333 and McRae at .332.
four after walking his first time up and finished the season at .331. The two hits gave Carew, who faced four different Royal pitchers in the game, 200 hits for the year, but not enough to claim his sixth career win, which would have been his fifth in a row.
THE TEAMMATES finished 1-2 in fencing off the challenge of perennial batting (3) and (4).
McRae, who is black, then implied that he had more significance than a racial one.
aloft to the crowd's ovation when he turned to the Minnesota dugout and made his hard feelings known. Dropping his helmet on the ground, McKae made an indecent gesture with her hand as she began to Gene Mauch, apparently thinking Mauch had ordered Bryce to let Brett's pop-up drop.
MCCRAE, WHO WAS two for four,
described Bryre's fielding efforts, saying,
"I saw this guy come in, back up, then run
him up the wall." (He had his
(Brert) to get a home run off it.)
BRETT'S NINTH-INNING hit dropped in medium depth left field in front of the Twins' Steve Brye and bounded over the outfielder's head to the fence for a homer.
Mauch and McAfee charged each other, prompting both benches to embody onto the stage.
McGae, who followed his teammate the Royals, duagut with his batting helmet held
"Things have been like this a long time and they are changing gradually," he said. "I just have to accept them. It's too bad we were in 1976, but they probably always will."
Weekend Sports Roundup
Kansas coach Bud Moore said Butler went to his home town, Washington, D.C., after the game. It isn't known when Butler will return.
Butler's father dies
After Saturday's KU-Wisconsin game, KU defensive tackle Mike Butler learned that his father, Samuel Butler, had died Thursday.
Butler's mother, Jacqueline Butler,
backed no to tell him the news until after the
battle.
Ball control gave KU its fifth straight field hockey victory when it beat the University of Nebraska Saturday in Lincoln, Neb.
The teams battled to a 2-2 tie, but the Jayhawks won on penetration time—the time when the ball is within the opponent's 28-yard line.
Field hockey wins
KU's penetration time was 17:24 - 6:30 in the first half and 10:54 in the second. Nebraska's time was 14:29 - 4:54 in the first and 9:35 in the second.
After a scoreless first half, Alex Wagner put KU on the board first with a goal two minutes into the second half. Nancy second the second KU goal 10 minutes later.
"We should've won 2-0," said Diana Beeche, KU field击球 coach. "Defensively, we had down twice. We just relaxed and played a really fine game." I thought we played a really fine game."
Nebraska's scoring came with 15 and 10 minutes left to play in the game. Halves last
Although the victory gave KU a 5-0 record, it ruined its string of shutouts.
The Jayhawks will hit the field again tomorrow in a home game against Central Florida.
In the dual meet, which lasted four-and-a-half hours, Kansas picked up its second victory against no defeats. KU defeated Arkansas in 9-4, last weekend to open the fall schedule.
KU clips Cyclones
It took some time, but the KU women's tennis team was finally able to overcome a much-improved Iowa State squad, 6-3, Saturday in Lawrence.
In singles action Kansas won four of six from the Cyclones.
Carrie Fotopolous, playing at No. 1,
defeated Sue Patterson, 6-4, 6-1. Astrid
Daksa defeated Barb Knuntter, 6-3, 6-3.
Marlene Cook, playing on 4 singles, easily.
defeated Deb Parrott, 6-1, 6-1 Tracy Spellman, No. 6, downed Cheryl Wood, 6-2, 6-1.
Mary Stauffer, Topea freshman, suffered her first loss, falling to Dick Benson, 6-3, 6-3, in the 3. position. Stauffer is now 1-1.
"If the shoe was on the other foot I know they wouldn't have let it drol for me.
It took Iowa State's Sally Sharbo three sets to defeat Lydia Fonda, 1-6, 7-5, 1-0. In 5 action. It was Hill's first defeat of the season.
Kanass won two, of three doubles matches from Iowa State, which has been the best team in the state.
After losing the first set, Fotopoulos and Daksa rallied to kick Kentnurr and Patterson, 4-8, 6-2, 6-2 in No. 1. doubled action. Fotopoulos and Dakra are 3-2 this season.
The No. 2 team of Stauffer and Hill had trouble, losing to Sharper and Dickson, 34-6, 6-1.
Spellman and Cook picked up their second straight victory, downing Parrott and Wood
Kansas travels to Des Moines for a meet with Drake and Minnesota Friday and Saturday.
"They gave us good competition. I think their overall strength surprised everyone," Coach Korn Tivisto said. "They were a lot stronger than we had anticipated." We were stronger than we had anticipated.
"THE THING THAT disturbs me is how it happened. I wouldn't have been disappointed had he been a clean hit. That's what I said about—not losing, but because it was cheap."
Brett, who was three for four in the game, said, "I was surprised to see it drop. I thought maybe it fell on me for it to drop while I was running but I didn't believe it would."
When asked if he thought Brye let it fall in, Brett said, "I thought he did. He was coming in hard and then he stopped. I don't know why.
"I hated to beat Mac because he's helped me a lot. To see him so hurt, I just wish we could make it some sort of tie. But then, I take any individual honors I can get."
FOLLOWING THE game, a noticeably irritated Mauch said, "He (McRae) was mad at me and I can't understand it. I trust Steve Bryle implicitly and if I thought he missed it on purpose Dd run him out of baseball. I'd probably have to ask for that. It's sickening, you play hard all year long and end to it like this. Man, that hurts."
Brye, his voice quavering some after being bated by Mauch in the Twins' dugout, said, "I was playing deep and I thought the ball was hit harder than it was. That was my mistake. I was wrong. Gene had nothing to do with it."
Byre then admitted he played Brett deeper than he had been instructed to by
Just because the Jayhawks had success passing, KU isn't going to scratch their big goals.
"we're still blockers," said Blackwelder of hisre's trip. "That's still No. 1."
But Moore wanted to talk about Cromwell and his passing.
★
"He's no Joe Namath," Moore said. "But Namath can't run like he can, either."
KANAS
14 14 14 6 0-3-4
SUNIN
14 14 14 6 0-3-4
WILM - Smith 29 win from Crowell (Husack kick)
14 14 14 6 0-3-4
WILM - Carroll 2 run (Lamia kick)
14 14 14 6 0-3-4
WILM - Carroll 2 run (Lamia kick)
14 14 14 6 0-3-4
WILM - Lamia 34 field goal
14 14 14 6 0-3-4
WILM - Rose 1 pass from Carroll (Lamia kick)
14 14 14 6 0-3-4
WILM - Roadhouse 1 pass from Carroll (Lamia kick)
KANSAS
First downs
passing yards
Passing yards
yard loss
Pansen
Passing yards
yard loss
Punches-low
punches-low
3.14
3.14
2.74
WBCSON
WBCSON
69-221
97-260
83-221
16-34-8
6-3-1
5-1-1
INDIVIDUAL
KANSAS-Corpus Christi 16331, L. Smith II 15187, Mindy 1387
CANADA-Quebec 14209, R. Morgans II 14148, Carroll 1397
WESTVILLE-CONSIDERIA 1397, Morgan 1394, Carroll 1397
KANAS-Cromwell 3-15,232 (1 interception).
KANSAS-Cromwell 4 (4 interceptions), Matthias
0-1 (1 interception).
WASHINGTON—Edward F. Morgan, 384; Morgan 279;
Balley 26; Hodgdon 19; Howell 21; Carson 1-15,
Melvin 1
**RECEIVED BY:**
KANASAS -Dougherty 6-218 (35.8 avg.)
WISCONSIN -Milaager 5-148 (32.2 avg.)
Chiefs receive 50-17 thrashing from Buffalo
BUFFALO (AP) — O. J. Simpson ran for 138 yards in his first big performance of the season, and quarterback Joe Ferguson passed for three touchdowns as the Buffalo blush crushed the Kansas City Chiefs, 50-7, to win a straight National Football League victory.
Jeff Kinney, waved by the Chicks earlier in the season, came back to haunt them with a new look.
The Bills struck quickly, getting three points on newly signed kicker George Jakewenko's 30-yard field goal and Ferguson's first two touchdown passes to wide receiver Bob Chandler. The pair scored for another touchdown in the second period.
Simpson, who missed the preseason because he wanted to be traded, highlighted his ground game with a 49-yard burst in the first period. He also scored two touchdowns with 38 points and 378 points. The touchdowns were the 50th and 51st of his pro career.
Raven with a pipe and a fire extinguisher.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
A LITTLE COOLER
KANSAN
Inspector helps rental dwellers
Vol.87 No31
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
See story page seven
MORGAN STUDIO LEGENDS
VALLEY AMAZING
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
"I want a girl"
Brian Sheap, Carlisle Barracks, Pa., sophomore, and Pat Kershner, Gardner senior, put aside their drums and began
singing yesterday the KU Marching Band recorded in Hoch Auditthornthe best the recordings will be use to make a song for the orchestra
Med Center surgeon appointed to fill departmental head vacancy
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ Staff Writer
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-KU Medical Center officials today named Frank Masters, chief of plastic surgery and assistant vice chancellor for clinical affairs, as acting chairman of the surgery department, after resignation last week of Loren Humphrey.
Humphrey said last night that he had
tampered with a woman's day morning about
the surgery department.
"I told him I was overworked as chairman and didn't get any support, but I wanted to encourage him very much to take it. I worked five and a half years to build the department up. I don't want to see it go to pot."
HUMPHREY UNEXPECTLY resigned Wednesday in a letter to Robert Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center. In the letter he stated he had accomplished all he could in the department and that it was time to step aside.
Lack of administrative support and a desire to spend more time teaching and researching were reasons Humphrey later gave for his resignation.
He said that he thought the surgery department wasn't funded properly and
that more state funds should be directed to it, especially for salaries.
The state now pays only a portion of a surgeon's salary, Humphrey said. The rest is appropriated from private practice fees that are pooled into the surgery professional corporation fund. Salary levels are approved by the administration.
HUMPHREY HAD requested pay increases for the surgery staff in July and was turned down. Chancellor Archie Dykes last week approved a seven to eight per cent salary increase for surgeons effective Nov. 1.
Kugel said that there now appeared to be enough funds for the raises. Humphrey said that because the corporation funds consisted of what Med Center surgeons earned from private practice, surgeons had to work while they worked to earn a living.
Seven per cent of the funds earned, or more than $900,000 a year, according to Humphrey, are turned over to the state fund. Two per cent are used to fund equipment. One per cent, for a total of more than $70,000 over the last two years, are given to a vice chancellor's developing fund, Humphrey said.
THE PROBLEM is that every year, no matter how much the surgery makes,
Humphrey said, more money is distributed to other departments.
"For some reason they think surgeons are tough and can do it on their own," he said.
Last year, he tried to start a couple of programs and asked for some funding, Humphrey said. The money had be taken of the corporation pool to fund them, he said.
"You can understand why I'm frustrated," Humphrey said. "There's never any money for the surgery depart-ment, better things to do than play those games."
Lack of space, he said, was another factor
See SURGEON, page two
Kansan poll shows Ford crunching Carter at KU
By the Kansan Staff
Students at the University of Kansas would like to keep President Gerald Ford in the White House four more years, based on a poll conducted Sept. 25-29 by the Kansan.
The poll indicated a 48 per cent preference among registered voters for Ford, the Republican, compared with 28 per cent for former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Dickey and the Democrat. About 17 per cent of those voiced said they still were undecided.
The names of those polled were selected at random from a computer printout of enrolled KU students. A total of 421 students who have registered to vote were asked in personal interviews their preferences of presidential candidates.
THE MARGIN for error in the poll is 6 per cent or less, based upon a sampling error table used by the George Gallup polling organization. According to the table, each percentage in the poll results could vary as much as 6 per cent.
The Kansan poll indicated that 110 students, or 26.1 per cent, were registered as Democrats; 127, or 30.1 per cent, said they were Republicans. The largest percentage of students, 43.7 per cent, said they were independent.
Ford's lopsided win in the poll apparently was the result of strong support among Republicans and substantial support of independents. Ford captured 85.8 per cent of Republican support, compared with 63.6 per cent of the Democratic vote for Carter
INDEPENDENTS preferred Ford 40.7 per cent to Carter's 23.3 per cent. Twenty-six per cent of the independents said they knew who would get their vote in the election.
Other candidates listed in the poll were former Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy, who is running as an independent, and former Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox, the candidate of the American Independent Party, who also those polled, and Maddox received one vote.
California Gov. Jerry Brown received two votes, or four-tenths of a per cent. Former California Gov. Ronald Reagan received one vote.
Several students interviewed said the debates were ineffective because they appeared staged, the question format didn't allow the candidates to react effectively to each other and the candidates relied too much on statistics.
ONE STUDENT, a woman who said she was independent, said the debates confused
"I don't think either of them clarified anything."
Another independent woman said Carter sounded like "an uninformed rabbit-rouser," and others said Carter's policies were too generalized.
Based upon the poll, Democrats at KU are more likely to cross party lines to vote for a candidate of the other party than are Republicans. Only 5.5 per cent of the Republican population voted for Carter, but 18.1 per cent of Democrats said Ford would help their support.
DEMOCRATS ALSO were more undecided about whom they would vote for. Of
Democrats, 12.7 per cent said they didn't spare them with 7.8 per cent of Democracy.
In addition, the poll indicated that the second Ford-Carter debate tomorrow probably won't have much effect upon KU. The result will be in full by 34.9 per cent of those polled. About
See FORD page two
Poll Summary
Governor of Independence
Democrat 26.1 per cent
In politics as of today, do you consider yourself a Republican, Democrat or Independent?
Democrat 26.1 per cent
Republican 30.1 per cent
Independent 43.7 per cent
If the election for president were today, which candidate would you vote for?
Ford 48.4 per cent
Carter 28.5 per cent
McCarthy 2.7 per cent
Maddox 0.2 per cent
Other 1.9 per cent
Don't Know "I don't know"
Don't Know 17.1 per cent
Did you watch
All 34.6 per cent
Part 36.1 per cent
Glanced 9.9 per cent
None 19.2 per cent
of the debate?
Would you say the debate caused
you to change your mind or form
a new opinion about how you
would cast your vote? (of those
who watched all or part)
Yes 15.7 per cent
No. 80.8 per cent
Don't 3.3 per cent
Poll indicates Ford gaining independents
Staff Writer
About 18 per cent of the nation's registered voters are Republicans, a number so low that it is sure to worry Gerald Ford as he seeks election this fall.
Ford's solution should be to gain the support of the increasing number of independent voters, according to Allan Cigler, associate professor of political science. On the basis of recent polls, one taken last week by the Kananan, Ford seems to be
He said the number of independents was especially large this year among both students and the electorate in general. Voters under 30 are about 53 per cent independent nationally, he said, and those over 30 are about 44 per cent independent.
IN THE KANSAN poll, 43.7 per cent of the respondents said they were independent. Ford received 40.7 per cent of the in-
formative vote compared with 25.3 per cent for Carter.
Cigler, who was provided the results of the Kansan roll, also said:
—he was surprised by the margin University of Kansas students preferred
Ford over former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter.
—the number of people not committed to either major candidate was unusually high by the time he was elected.
—the effect of the first debate seemed to make voters less committed to Carter.
—much of the support for the candidates could be "soft," which might result in a significant portion of the electorate changing its mind about the candidates.
—he had expected former Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy, an independent, to get more of the student vote than was indicated in the poll.
VOTERS WHO identified themselves with a party seem to support their party's candidate, Cigler said. About 86 per cent of the Republicans said they would vote for Ford and about 64 per cent of Democrats said they would support Carter.
But Cigar said Ford's popularity with independent voters was "a big rain."
"Among those with no deep commitment either way, Ford made inroads among the independents," he said. "He's done very, very well."
The surprise of the independent voters'
See POLL, page five
Ford accepts Butz' resignation
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Gerald Ford yesterday accepted the resignation of Earl Butz, secretary of agriculture, and parting with Butz was "one of the saddest decisions of my presidency."
The resignation followed a weekend of
rapidly escalating controversy over an alleged obscene racial slur uttered in August following the Republican National Convention and traced to Butz last week.
The episode had become an issue in Ford's election campaign and brought
Soviet doctor-turned-poet at KU
By BILL CALVERT
Staff Writer
In 1966, a Soviet physician in Kiev practiced a device to write his life to writing.
That physician, Vitaly Korotch, is a guest of the University of Kansas department of Slavic languages and literature for the third annual Soviet writer-in-residence.
Korotich has published 15 books of prose and poetry since 1963. These have been translated into 20 languages from his native Ukrainian language. He also has written journalistic essays and has made several documentary films.
IN ADDITION to these accomplishments, Korodich has translated the works of several American poets into the Ukralian language and has written essays on those poets.
Korotich, a 40-year-old poet and journalist, arrived at KU last week and will be here until Oct. 4. He will be giving lectures on some poetry readings during his stay here.
Gerald Mikelson, associate professor of Slavic languages and literature, said that Korotich was the foremost translator in the Soviet Union of American poets and was the only Soviet author to write about them.
school, when he first tried his hand at writing poetry. He said he was ashamed of his poetry and wanted to keep it a secret because he was a wrestler and was afraid his athletic friends would laugh at him. He had decided on a career in medicine, he said, because his mother and father were doctors.
Korotich said his career as a writer began during his final years in high
KOROTCH BEGAN his medical practice in 1958 and practiced for eight years before he became a full-time writer. He said he kept writing poems and reading literature in medical school and during his practice, and eventually became aware of the need to express himself.
"I lived all my life in a world of medicine. When I started to write, it was a simple type of writing—poems about love, nature and things like that."
"The most suffering people are those who cannot live in a full way," he said. "With poetry I found I could impress people in such a way as to reveal myself. Each man must reveal himself and must find the best way he can do it. You can suffer because and a good house, but you suffer because you cannot reveal yourself."
took it to Maxim Rylsky, a noted Soviet poet.
RYLISKY WROTE a article on Korotich's诗作, giving it national recognition. This article led to the award for The Poet of poetry, "Golden Hands." in 1963.
"It was terrible," he said. "I had just written my dissertation and had taken it to the director of the clinic. I handed the dissertation in and then asked him to free me from it." He asked why and asked me 'Why? Why do you do this after all the work you have done?'
Three years later, Korotich changed
the move. The move was met with some
cricketing.
He received recognition when the poetry he had been hiding so diligently at the museum was given a new life.
Korotich said he finally decided to change careers because poetry had been on his mind all the time, even when he had been taking care of his patients.
"I WOULD SIT near the patient and think about poetry. This is not honest to be a physician and devote yourself to something else. You must be 100 per cent professional. All your life must be given to your profession."
The conflict between medicine and writing has been grappled with by many other doctors, Korotich said. He said some of these doctors became famous as physicians who was one writer-physician who married one profession and courted another.
numerous demands from politicians in both parties that Butz be fired.
"Chekov once said, 'my wife is one profession, and the other is my job'."
The transition from one profession to another wasn't a difficult one, Korotch said. Doctors, he said, become so well known that doctors attempt to make the doctors attempt to move.
"ALL LITERATURE is really a history of all illness," he said. Because of this, men who go into medicine can go into writing in a normal way. A physician becomes so full of impressions that he has to turn to writing."
Korotich that because of the experience in working with people his medical career provided a good education and a career of literature and journalism.
"I believe to become a great journalist, it is important to know something more. Of course it is possible to become a great journalist by studying it after high school, but me it was important that I studied in the medical school and eighth years in practice.
"I know people who studied journalism after high school and it became a real tragedy for them. They don't know life, they have never touched it, really. They are used to seeing their faces on side. They know only their friends, parents, their town and school."
Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter, campaigning in Denver, said that B仕 should have been fired immediately after he started the situation showed a lack of leadership.
Both Butz and Ford said the resignation was solely a result of the off-color story about blacks, but it didn't mean any change on the part of the Ford administration.
"This is the price I pay for a gross disinformation in a private conversation," Indzul told reporters in the White House press following a private meeting with Ford.
"For that reason, I have accepted the resination of this decent and good man."
The resignation was effective immediately. Understaffed.
After Butz left the White House, Ford appeared in the press room and told the reporters that Butz had been "wise enough and courageous enough to recognize that no single individual, no matter how distinguished his past public service, should window over the integrity of will of government by his comments.
Earlier, Butz, his eyes glittering with warm, hair said of Ford, "I shall continue to wear it. You'll never know."
In his brief letter of resignation, Butt told Ford, "I sincerely apologize for any offense that may have been caused by the unpleasant word." He also recent conversation and reported "..."
By resigning, Butz said he hoped to "remove even the appearance of racism as a national problem" (Jones 2017).
"The way this whole embarrassing and disgusting episode was handled by
But there were quick indications that Democrats wouldn't let the issue die that easily. Carter said Ford should have fired him, but it would be the question summer over the weekend.
P. V. G. P. I.
Earl Butz Staff photo
President Ford shows a continuation of lack of leadership. Carter told reporters at a
Republican vice presidential candidate Bob Dole said in Washington, "Secretary Butz was popular in many places, there's no doubt about it. But you have to weigh that against a very tasteless remark, one I felt difficult to swallow."
Dole, ranking Republican on the Senate Agriculture Committee, described Ford as a man of decency and integrity, and I think he made the decision" in accepting Butz resignation.
2
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Death penalty laws stand
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court yesterday declined to reconsider its decision upholding the capital punishment laws of Florida, Georgia and Texas.
Executions have been held up pending the court's decision on whether to reconsider.
Thirty-four states had death penalty laws on the books at the time.
The court upheld the laws on grounds that they provided juries and judges with adequate guidelines to determine whether to impose the death penalty in indictments.
The justices let stand a 4-3 decision of the Kansas Supreme Court upholding a law that required agencies immune from such suits. They said the high court didn't have jurisdiction.
The court also declined to decide whether Wichita State University may be sued damages because of the 1970 crash a charter airplane taking its football team to the airport.
Ford sians tax reform bill
WASHINGTON-President Gerald Ford yesterday signed a tax reform bill that he said was "sound, positive and long overdue."
The measure, which will affect every American taxpayer and corporation, continues current individual and business tax cuts through 1977 and makes hun-
dreds of millions of dollars in unpaid taxes.
The state shall award each holder of one to two.
In a signing ceremony in the Oval Office, Ford said the bill would close many tax loopholes and "insure that each taxpayer pays his or her share of the overall tax program."
The individual cuts total more than $18 billion.
Adviser to Carlos shot
SANEBASTIAN, Spain—Assassins in ambush along a downtown street opened fire on approaching traffic with machine guns yesterday, killing one of king Juan Carlos' advisers, his chauffeur and three bodyguards. Ten persons were wounded. It was the bloodiest attack against the Spanish regime in the 10 months since the death of longtime dictator Gen. Francisco Franco. Authorities said Basque separatists apparently were responsible.
The adviser, Juan Maria de Araluce, a member of the ultra-conservative council of the Realm, was cut down virtually on his doorstep as he was being questioned about his sexuality.
Africans against US plan
SALIBURY, Rhodesia—A black nationalist leader made it clear yesterday that black Africans don't like 'secret State' of Henry Kissinger's plan for achieving economic equality.
"The creation of a constitution now is ours, not the American's," Joshua Nkomo, leader of one of the two main factions of the African National Council, told a news report in 2013.
Nkomo, a moderate mentioned as the possible first black prime minister of Rhodesia, said black African heads of state and Rhodesian black leaders had been held under a police crackdown that one for moving this country toward black rule. He gave no details but indicated his timetable of black rule within two years may have been part of the objection.
Of those who watched all or part of the first debate, 15.7 per cent said it caused them to change their minds about how they would vote. More than 80 per cent said the debate wouldn't affect the way they would vote.
38 per cent said they watched two part of the
and about 10 per cent said they glanced
From page one
Ford leads Carter . . .
FORD, ACCORDING to the poll, benefited most from the first debate. About 2 per cent of respondents said they would switch from Ford to Carter, compared with more than 19 per cent who said they would switch from Carter to Ford.
Of the 16 per cent who said that they formed a new opinion after the debate, about 25 per cent said about 15 per cent to Carter. Among independents, Ford received the support of 35 per cent of those who said the debate had their minds. Carter received about 25 per cent
About 53 per cent of Ford supporters also said the debate made them more sure of their support, compared with about 38 per cent who were less confident. And the debate had reinforced their opinions.
SEVERAL STUDENTS said they would vote for Ford, but not enthusiastically.
"I'm not strongly for him," a man who called himself independent said, "but he is ex-
About 23 per cent of Carter supporters said they were less sure about supporting him after the debate, compared with 9.7 per cent of Carter supporters who were less sure about him, after the debate.
Among independents, 46 per cent said they felt more strongly about Ford after the debate, compared with 32 per cent who said they were more sure they would vote for Carter. About 35 per cent of the in-form said they were less sure that they would stay in contrast with about 11 per cent who said they were less sure they would vote for Ford.
A FEW STUDENTS praised the debate
and learned more about the
candidates from their classroom.
One male independent said there was "no clear-cut winner."
who, said who he would vote for. Carter, so the debt is irrelevant and he has no interest in voting for him.
The Kansas poll was taken at students' lawrence residences by students in labors' housing.
Surgeon picked
From page one
contributing to his frustration with administrative support.
A laboratory had to be remodeled into office space for the latest new staff member, he said. A surgery classroom was transformed for the breast detection center.
"I don't have a fight with Bob Kugel and Archie Dykes," he said. "I just think if I can't get anything for my troops, then I shouldn't be their leader."
"THE DEPARTMENT hasn't had any
office space since I've been here," he
said.
Humphrey said he wasn't looking for another job yet. He plans to continue as a professor of surgery and devote more time to research on the effect of cancer detection—and his own publications
needs more funds," he said. "We don't argue the point."
But enough money has to be generated in the department before it can be distributed.
KUGEL SAID there were space problems all over the Med Center that wouldn't be remedied until the new hospital was finished in Oct. 1978.
"The surgery department has been unimpaired. Mr. White's state of health Kugel said, "The Med Center who has been under-funded. Other departments can and would lay claim to the same com-
If the Med Center budget approved by the Kansas Board of Regents is also approved in the legislature, he said, the Med Center will be in good shape.
IT HAD BEEN mentioned that attempts might be made by Med Center administrators to persuade Humphrey to retain the departmental chairmanship.
"No one came to me and said, What would it take for you to reconsider?"
"We do feel the surgery department ministration would reconsider some of his
He said that if he thought the administration would reconsider some of his
Breakdowns by sexes were 52 per cent male respondents and 48 per cent female respondents. That compares with the University's enrollment percentages of about 55 per cent men and 44 per cent women.
provision in the poll to measure whether a person's support of an individual candidate is higher than that of the other.
Denvinger, Laurence's own melodrama. Tonight. "The Unlikely Event of Finding Gold in the Wakarusa." Performed by the Seven-To-Be Players
"I've accepted his resignation as chairman," he said.
Tonight!
However, it didn't seem that Kugel would reconsider the resignation.
Off the Wall Hall
criticisms, he didn't know whether the decision to resign would be final.
$2.00 cover
WITHIN RECENT days, national political polls also have indicated sharp shifts in Carter's support following the first debate. A poll made by the Newhouse News indicated that Carter had lost the edge in electoral votes in several populous states.
A search committee will be formed soon, be said, to conduct a nation-wide search of petitions.
--in the Kansas Union
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A poll released last Thursday by the WIBW radio and television stations in Topeka indicated that Ford leads Carter 46 percent in Kansas" second congressional district.
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IN THE WIBW poll, Ford led Carter 78 per cent to 11 per cent among Republicans. The Kaiser poll had Ford leading Carter, 68 per cent to 52 per cent Democrats in the WIBW poll, 69 per cent to
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GREY GARDENS (1972)
With Edith Bevier Beale and
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A New York Times poll is expected to indicate that Carter's support is declining in some states and a Time magazine poll in others. At 43 per cent, were neck-and-neck at 43 per cent each.
Oct. 6-9
GIMME SHELTER (1970)
Brings in the audience
Rolling Stones, Ice and Tina
Turner, Jefferson Airplane
Fall 2000 and WHAT'S HAPPENING! THE
BEATLES IN THE U.S.A. (1964)
Presents at Vince Gates Theater,
Thurs., Oct. 7, 9:00 & 11:30, $1
SALESMAN (1968)
Charlotte Zwempel and
Charlotte Zwempel
Documentary
CHRISTO'S VALLEY CURTAIN
Charlotte Zwempel and
Charlotte Zwempel
Wed. Oct. 6, 7:30, 1
FILM SOCIETY
920 W. 23rd
Open 7 days
11 a.m.—10 p.m.
--herbal essence CREME RINSE
- OZARK AUTUMN
- CANOE CLUB
SUA
- WHITEWATER
- CANOE TRIP
Oct. 8-10
TWO KAYAKERS LEAPING ON A RIVER.
- Oread Room, Kansas Union
--herbal essence CREME RINSE
- Tuesday, Oct. 5, 7:30 p.m.
Organizational Meeting
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The WIBW poll indicated that independents preferred Ford, 47 per cent, over Carter, 35 per cent, with 18 per cent having no preference.
16 per cent. In the Kansan's poll, Carter
among Democrats 48 per cent, 12 per cent.
Independents in the Kannan poll favored Eord over Carter, 41 per cent to 23 per cent.
Wanna get high & get down?
Sky Dive!
KU Sky Diving Club
in the international Room of the Kansas Union. For further information call Craig at 841-4704. Beginners welcome.
Oct. 7 at 9 p.m.
VASQUE HIKER
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$\textcircled{3}$ You' this fort.
$\textcircled{5}$
You'll be glad you've got a boot
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5. FULL GRAIN ROUGH LEATHER is dur-
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Change your
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A. S. PANDHARANI
at the
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REDKEN
9th & Illinois
Campus Beauty Shoppe
843-3034
VOTE Oct. 6th and 7th for the WHITE HORSE COALITION
Pros. NORM V.Pros. PAUL Sec. JULIE Tros. PATTY HARRIS RUSSELL BECK CRAY
for freshman class officers
KEITH SEVEDGE
RUTH BENIEN
DAVE COLBURN
LISA WILSON
BETTY RODRIGUEZ
BRINK ARNOLD
We have planned:
—Discounts at several businesses during finals week for anyone with a freshman class card.
—Computer Date Party
—Ten cents of every class card will be donated to a local charity.
O
—A Party the night before the KU vs. K-State basketball game
—Class mug of 1980
Co
We
We Be
allocated to the organizer
4. Account for all inventory.
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the student activity fee.
FROM: Tom Mitchell—Student Senate Business Manager
2. Sign an organizational management contract with the Student Senate.
3. Identify and organize a memorization for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
*All officers who are responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds must:
1. Attend a training session conducted by the office of the Student Senate*
2. Receive a certification from the College of Education.*
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met. Even though you have attended a training session last fiscal year, you will still have to attend one during this fiscal year. The training session will be scheduled once each month. The training session has been scheduled for the following time:
S
Tuesday, October 12, 1976 at 2:00 P.M.
International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
The session will last less than an hour. You must contact the Student Senate Office at 864-3719 to sign up for this session or for additional information.
The Student Senate Is funded from the Student Activity Fee.
★ Y
m?
b
of the
in-
4704.
Tuesday, October 5, 1976
3
University Daily Kansan
X
On Campus
Events
TODAY: PSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS will have lunch at 11:45 a.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. THE UNIVERSITY SENATE HUMAN REFORMATION COMMITTEE will meet at 10:30 a.m. in Alcove B of the Union. THE HOMECOMING COMMITTEE will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union.
TONIGHT: THE NAVIGATORS will meet at 7:30 in the International Room of the Union. The STUDENT COUNCIL FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN will have an organizational meeting at 7:30 in 449 Hawthorntown Hall. The COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will present a program, "Alternatives to Sexuality," at 7:30 in the Fireplace Room of Lewis Hall. The M.T. ORREAD BICYCLE CLUB will present a slide show on Switzerland at 7:30 in the Walnut Room of the Union. A panel discussion on the coverage of the Republican National Convention and the Women's Conference of Delta CHI at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. The KU SADDLE CLUB will Oread Room of the Union. LAWRENCE MAXEY, associate professor of wind and percussion, will give a recital at 8 in Swarthout Rectal Hall. Andrew Debicki, professor of Spanish and Portuguese will deliver the opening lecture of the HUMANITIES LECTURE SERIES at 8 in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union.
TOMORROW: The KU SOCCCER CLUB will play William Jewell College at 4 p.m. at the Shenk Reventure Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. Tom Averill will read from his fiction work at the SUA WRITERS SERIES at 4 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union.
It was incorrectly reported in Friday's Kansas that Casbah restaurant used microwave ovens to heat frozen meals. Casbah doesn't use microwave ovens or
Corrections
The Lawrence City Commission is expected to accept bids for a new sanitation truck and new switchboard system for the department at tonight's commission meeting.
City commission will hear bids
Public works Director George Williams said the new truck would mean that the sanitation department could route its trucks on one off the streets for maintenance checks.
The switchboard system, called an announcer, will be installed in the new Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center and is expected to improve the combined city and county law enforcement communications systems.
'Brel' tickets now on sale
Reserve tickets for the musical "Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris" are on sale at the University Theatre box office in Murphy Hall.
Tickets cost $3.25, $2.50 and $1.75. A student may get $1.50 any ticket by showing his/her ID.
"BREl" will play Oct. 15, 16, 22 and 23 at
8 p.m., and 24 at 3:30 p.m. in the
University Theatre.
P.S. Be sure to come! We would love to see you!!
You are invited
To a Terrific Party
so You can
Meet Your Candidates
Governor Bennet
Congressman Larry Winn
Damon Weber
Flatcheer Bell
Arden Booth
John Vogel
Nancy Hambleton
Lloyd Buzzi
Robert Neis
Beverly Bradley
Mike Elwell
Rex Johnson
Debert Mathia
Betty Leslie
Please Come
(Where)
4H Fairgrounds
Building No. 1
(WHEN)
October 6th
at
7:00
Co-Sponsored by College Republicans and Douglas County Republicans Paid for by Douglas County Central Committee John Lungstrum, Chairman
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS FALL 1976-77
6 Nunemaker Senators, Freshman Class Officers, College Assembly
VOTE
Wednesday, October 6 and Thursday, October 7
POLLING PLACES
October 6 and 7
8 a.m.----5 p.m.
Union-South Foyer
Wescoe-West End of 4th Floor
Summerfield-2nd Floor
★ October 6 (only)
5 p.m.—6:30 p.m.
Kappa Sigma Fraternity
Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity
Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority
Ellsworth Hall
Lewis Hall
Oliver Hall
G.S.P.-Corbin
THE TIME IS HERE TO GET INVOLVED with THE MINORITY STUDENT CENTER
- You need your KU I.D. to vote. Paid for by Student Activity Foo
What???
For some time, things have been sitting still for minorities on the K.U. campus. In fact, things seemed to have moved backwards. There are many reasons why the situation ain't like it should be, and you could go on for days listing those reasons. Well, the time has come for the end of complaining and the beginning of correcting the situation.
The time has come for moving things forward to where they should be.
Minority Student Center to Open in October
Location:
Level 3
Kansas Union
How Can You Help?
There are many ways to keep this thing going and growing. Recently, the Black Fraternities and Sororites sponsored two dances and used the money to pay for today's event. Their cooperation is an example (A damned good one) of how we can work together to get things accomplished for our own good.
When???
You can help by participation on the Planning or the Action committees of the Minority Student Center. The Planning committee decides which events will be coordinated through the Center; and the Action committee makes sure that these events get carried out. The most important way for you to help is to use the Center when it opens in October, or by joining the Minority Affairs subCommittee of the Student Senate.
This Minority Student Center will be one of the largest student offices in the Union and will serve Blacks, Chicanos, and Indians. A committee of students have been working on the plans for this Center, which will be a central communications and information location for minority students. But without your support (Yes, You!) the Minority Student Center will not work. WITH your support, the Center can grow into a strong voice for your needs.
Now is the time.
Some of you are already aware that things are beginning to move. The most important development in the last few months has been the approval of a Minority Student Center in the Student Union. This came about through the efforts of concerned minority students working through the Student Senate and the Student Union.
If you are interested in working on a committee or if you just want more information on the Center stop by or contact the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Suite 105, in the Kansas Union. (864-3710).
This ad paid for through Student Activity Fees.
Record Record Sale
1.98 AND UP
On Sale Now thru Oct. 8
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Main Level
Come Early For Best Selection!
Limited Time - Limited Quantity
4
Tuesday, October 5, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
Ford waited too long
There they were, the three of them, discussing the future of the Grand Old Party as they flew back to California after the Kansas City Convention. Pat Boone had become philosophical about his experience as a Reagan delegate. John Dean, the Republican Judas, and Sesame Sanders would be the publicity he got from being a First Family mascot during the convention, listened.
Then, according to Dean's article about the convention in Rolling Stone magazine, a certain shirt-sleeved arm overlaid amped to join the conversation.
BOONE, AS naive and pure-hearted as ever, asked the secretary why the party of Abraham Lincoln couldn't and forced more blacks. Sonny had dozed off.
Dean said Boone gulped twice at the secretary's answer, which was printed verbatim in the Kansan yesterday for those readers who may have missed it.
Now the country knows that the secretary was none other than U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz, and Butz surely regrets not giving Boone a tenacious answer instead of the tasteless racist joke that cost him his position.
WHEN BUTZ' slur was made public, the damage it could do to President Ford's presidential campaign was evident. Butz was called on the carpet to hate President, and one can bet that they didn't swap Rastus and Liza jokes.
Butz issued an apology "for the unfortunate choice of language" and said that even though it was no excuse, he was "merely repeating a comment made decades ago by a ward politician in a large Midwestern city."
He didn't say why the politician's
humor was so important or seemed
humorous to him at the time.
YESTERDAY. in response to the
controversy surrounding his words,
Butz resigned for what he called the best
interests of the President and his
campaign. He said there was no
pressure put on him by the White House
to do so.
Ford was reportedly prepared to accept Butz' resignation if public indignation over the incident grew. He had told Butz that his remarks were offensive to him and the American people and that such language and attitudes weren't acceptable from a member of his administration.
But Ford didn't fire him. It seemed that the President was waiting to see how the public would react to the slur. If it shrugged off the remarks as just another politician letting his mouth make a fool of him, Butz might have weathered the storm of disgrace and controversy.
IT COULD well have happened if Butz hadn't taken the initiative to do the right thing. Most newspapers and broadcasters withheld the precise language of the faux pas, couching it in such terms as "a derogatory characterization of fashionable women preliedictions." It's hard to get too indignant over such descriptions.
But Ford shouldn't have waited for some sort of spontaneous public outrage to sweep across the land before he fired Butz.
Ford's refusal to fire Butz or even put much pressure on him to resign was a serious mistake. If the "high moral values" that Butz said the President possessed weren't compromised by his inaction, they at least could appear that he had assured him that integrity of his cabinet and the public's esteem, he should have acted and shown the public that racism had no place in his administration.
By John Fuller Contributing Writer
WHUT IS THIS THING?
INFLATION, UNEMPLOYMENT, WHUTAGATE,
ABORTION, THE
ECONOMY, MY PLAYBOY INTERVIEW?
WORSE YET!
VOTER APATHY.
Women's attacks unwarranted
The Kansan has been called many things in its long life—a school workshop run by juvenile J-School groupies producing laundered news, a running dog lackey for the KU administration, a tool of the Student Senate, etc. We try to print such criticism with a touch of grace, a little humility for all of our patience; sometimes, however, people go too far.
from the women's coaching staff in yesterday's Kansas. Their letter attacks both the Kansas and its objectivity in our coverage of criticism of the department's management. The stricty of the letter fails to replace serious work or even simple accuracy.
WE HAVE printed three stories on the department this semester, excluding sports coverage. One pointed out that
Such is the case with the letter
KU ranked second in women's funding among Big Eight schools, one announced the university as sports information director and a third was a follow-up to dissatisfaction voiced this summer at Martian Washing- ing management of the program.
The coaches' first step case was in assuming that any "negative" story about the program stems from an interaction in a "conspiracy" against the program. Opinions about the program and Washington's management abilities are confined to the editorial page. It is the opinions of others that we
The coaches imply that the Kansan has helped those trying to tear down the University's pride in its women's teams. Wrong again. There have been an increasing number of Kansan stories about women's athletics and its successes. Despite our limited space, the Kansan has carried a higher percentage of Kansan's sports news this semester during the past four years.
'Doonesbury' captures the truth
THE COACHES say it is
Have you ever asked someone a question and been amazed when they didn't have the slightest idea what you were talking about? You had asked about something you thought it was known of, only to find out that at least someone didn't know.
Editor's Note
Debbie Gump
reporter. In all cases, Washington was contradicting an earlier statement.
Doonesbury is your average
I have felt that frequently recently when I have asked friends whether they have read the latest Donebyson comic strip.
Mark Rudd. But, the main character, was Mike Doonsbury, who can be traced back to "doon," a Yale term for "fool," and a Trudeau roommate named Pilsbury.
characters are still around,but many have been added.
THE COACHES asserted that they had never been asked for their views on the complaints in the complaints in the complaints were leveled against Washington, not the coaches. It is the coaches' jobs to coach, not to defend or to complain. The coaches and unagency athletes.
Even though Trudeau holds little to be sacred, he isn't out to get anyone, either. As he put it, "I'm simple, country cartoonist."
time a comic strip was ever so honored.
"Watergate profiles." Mark prematurely labeled John Mitchel "guilty, guilty, guilty," and the Los Angeles Times, Washington Post and Boston Globe all cut the strip.
IT HASN'T all been easy for Trudeau. He works hard at making the strip entertaining, and his strip is drawn closer to its publication time than any other strip is. Trudeau is always poised to poke fun at the front page news.
As Erich Segal has noted, Trudeau is great because what he says is so true, but so gentle. And his subjects are all of us. Which is why everyone should read his strip.
Zonker Harris, campus freak,
brought marijuana to B.D.'s
football huddle and convinced a
Time magazine reporter that sex
and drugs—especially peyote and clam dip—were the main interests of college students.
And Trudeau's political comments in the strip have gotten him into some trouble.
The most famous of these was a strip where Mark Slack-meyer, as a radio WBBC jockey, was reading one of his
"UH, NO I haven’t. I never read it, I don’t think. What did you say the comic strip was again?"
Greg Hack Contributing Writer
WASHINGTON has often been "unavailable" to our reporters, preferring instead to send a prepared statement through FILOR, the information director. Strange conduct for a KU administrator, especially when elaborate objection statements are often incomplete and sometimes hurt Washington's position.
The coaches said that we made no effort to hear from students who support Washington's policies. Wrong. Our reporter did talk to a group of those athletes, but when they were invited to join a group discussion, they refused.
For those of you sharing my former friends' ignorance, the strip is Doomsley, by Garry Trudeau. It is becoming an American institution, and rightfully so.
Trudeau began cartooning for the Yale Daily News amid the student protest of the early 1970s. His strip wasn't political per se, but was about general college life.
JOANNIE Caucus, a 39-year-old runaway housewife who couldn't take her husband's hand to help her with the local day care center. She is now a law student in California and campaign manager for her roommate, who is running for U.S. House of Representatives.
college learn, described on the jacket of an early Doonesbury paperback as "a hero of sorts, but basically an enigma, an incomplete man, and, above all, a turkey."
B. D., THE conservative field general of the football team, satirized Brian Dowling, the Yale quarterback. Mark Slack-meyer, campus radical, bore some resemblance to SDS's
"absurd" that Washington must frequently defend her decisions. Wrong a third time, if you think that an administrator's job includes justifying, explaining and announcing his actions.
The strip continues to be a fine satire of American life, and politics. His extensive work on Watergate was good enough to win the 1974 Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartoons—the first
Zonker's Uncle Duke is the spitty'n idea of Rolling Stone's Hunter Thompson. Trudeau made him governor of Samoa for a time, and Uncle Duke even wrote about his shoplifting case, but Samoa, "Fear and Loathing at Macy's Men's Wear."
The coaches said they expected the Kansas to report women's athletics accurately. Well, they're right there. We expect accuracy also, and we have been getting it.
Trudeau's early cartoons were thus concerned with football, romance (or at least attempts at it), student protest and less important college matters such as studying.
DOONESBURY wrote a biology paper on juxtabranchial organ secretions in the higher vertebrates. The title "Our Friend the Beaver,"
The strip was soon syndicated and newspapers have been buying it in great numbers ever since. When the strip went nationwide, so did Trudeau's subject matter. His original
The few times Washington has accused us of inaccuracy, I have double-checked with our
Flarup said she wanted to cooperate with the Kansan, and on the whole she has been helpful; her credibility was weakened, however, when she secretly tape-recorded a conversation with one of our reporters last week.
We aren't reporting criticism of the program as part of a personal vendetta (in fact, we have not reported articles because they lacked substantiation); we are reporting it because it is there. We have tried to be fair to both sides, but we have taken both sides to be fair to us.
WE DON'T mind criticism; however, when readers begin to blend fantasy with fact in their criticism, even the most tolerant of journalists cry "foul!"
Letters
To the Editor:
Funeral industry myths irresponsible
Not wishing to discoun the fact that Mr.Young was callously introduced to the funeral industry, I nevertheless find his article an example of unsupported, irresponsible
Re: Mr. Young's "Callous Lesson"
"the law-abiding citizens of this country should not be deprived of the right to have firearms in their possession."
MARK PETTER
journalism that borders on the libelous.
Let me begin by stating that I personally do not find much reason or comfort in the common funeral custom of calling those who do. From that perspective I find Mr. Young's "expose" callous in itself—completely without regard for those who may have had a fight with the funeral industry.
Secondly, I find that Mr. Young is doing a great disservice to an industry that, acknowledging its faults in the profession, has made great efforts at self-regulation, and to those professionals who are doing their utmost to dispel the "gruesome" myths of their profession that are only created by the likes of Mr. Young.
A case in point is Larry McElwain, director of the Warren McElwain Mortuary. "Perspectives on Death and Dying," I have found Mr. McElwain in his appearance as a lecturer in our class and as a professor at the very open, accommodating, sensitive and, above all, professional and sincere in his efforts to answer our questions about the complete picture of his profession.
I too have toured a mortuary-from church, viewing room and hearse to embainb facilities and casket viewing room. I found one of it was mutilated, was impressed with the services Mr. McElwain provides to those who desire them.
I suggest that Mr. Young's
friend was grossly immature and inappropriately employed, and that that should have been Mr. Young's conclusion, rather than an unsupported inference about the funeral industry.
If the editorial page is to be devoted to the subject of death, an excellent endeavor in our death-denying society, I would hope that the purpose is to ask us to face and examine our fears, rather than reinforcing them with careless reminiscing.
Paige J. Hunt
Manhattan junior
Faith and hope exist To the Editor:
In response to the editorial, "Death: a second birth?" (Kansan, Sept. 30), I believe John Fuller contradicts himself when he precludes the knowledge of life after death on the basis that he was in God for a marriage that is far from a fervent hope. Webster's dictionary defines hope as "to long with expectation of obtaining" providing the synonyms trust and expect. On the basis of J. John 5:13, I know that I have eternal life and it is on this knowledge that I base an ever-giving hope and expectation.
Juris P. Krievins Newton senior
Race not relevant To the Editor:
Chalk up one for poor reporting and editing. Your story in the Sept. 27, Kansas, "Student hit with gun," reports the race of the person who struck the school bus. The fact that neither race, religion or country of national origin had anything to do with
the crime. The story represents another example of how journalists inadvertently influence racism without trying to do so.
The reporter fell into a trap of using police jargon. Even if the police report did say, "The perpetrator was a black male," the good journalist is not a stenographer. He or she should have followed the policy followed by the major wire reporters. New newspapers. If race had been factor in the crime—a significant cause of effect it should have been reported.
Samuel L. Adams Associate professor of journalism
Many is the time I have felt compelled to express my unpublished opinions. But now is the time to come forward. Nay, this note doesn't pertain to more conflicts of student politics, to administrative policy or to free money from such much charitable acts. This note intended to express the frustration of the hundreds of KU students who decided to donate a pint of precious red
Donor frustrated To the Editor:
fluid in the Kansas Union Ballroom this week.
Brave are the many, placing only courage between their appended and the Red Cross needle. And what is their purpose? They have cookies, a sip of imitation orange and a free beer. With that, and the feeling of good deed, the masses year forth, only to encounter the final barrier—"The Eternal Line."
As if registration, parking permits, enrollment and the like weren't enough, the three-hour, 25-minute delay that I experienced in the Ballroom that gray Tuesday evening may serve as the proverbial straw. If the Red Cross drive on campus its predicted goal, it was only a slight existence of the over-buried staffers and the sheer lemming-like patience of its donors.
Take note, oh dear Red Cross of Topeka, or the teeming of the Jayhawk masses will be reduced to a trickle. And even I, participating my eleventh donation, will fail by the sideside.
Cary Badger
Garry Budget Gardner graduate student
S
O
1
1 F
2 A
3 A
4 7
5 F
6 C
7 B
8 C
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 17, 2014 **Missions:** June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscription by mail low $2 a semester or $18 a year. Subscriptions by mail low $2 a semester or $18 a year. A year outside the county. State university subscriptions are $18 a year. A year outside the county. State university subscriptions are $18 a year.
Editor Debble Gump
Business Manage Terry Hanson
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 6, 1976
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preferences was that they seemed to have made up their minds to support Ford before the first debate, Cigler said. He said that because 76.8 per cent of the independents hadn't changed their minds, the debate apparently made little difference to them.
Both Cigler and Donn Parson, professor of speech and drama, criticized the Kansas poll for not providing more information on the strong and weak support for each candidate. She said the poll didn't indicate whether a respondent's support was firm or wavering.
CIGLER SAID another interesting aspect of the poll was that more independent indicated that they didn't have a preference than indicated they favored Carter. On the other hand, 23.0 per cent of the independent vote and 28.0 per cent said they had no preference.
Parson said the poll corresponded with other recent polls he had seen and Cigler said the results, although surprising in some respects, appeared accurate.
THE BIGGEST surprise was that Ford
has to acquire a large margin over Carter,
Culver, supers.
"If someone had come up and asked me, 'I have said it was a toss-up on the campus within two or three percentage points,' he said. I would have thought that Gerald hadn't believed that he well. I for sure didn't expect there be almost a two-one-margin for Ford."
Both Cigler and Parson said they expected fewer people to watch the second and third debates than the number who watched the first debate. They have little actual effect on how people vote.
The Kansas survey also indicated that 19 per cent of student voters didn't know for whom they would vote. That is a high percentage this close to the election, Gliger said.
"THE EFFECT of the debate was to play a major role in confirming Ford's previous support," Cigler said. "Carter didn't lose support, but many people thought that Ford would get killed. The fact that he didn't made them think, 'Well, I guess he O.K.'."
The Kanas poll indicated that Carter gained about 15 per cent more support from those who said the debate changed their opinions of the election. Of the same group, Ford gained about 49 per cent and the remaining 36 per cent changed either to undecided, another candidate, or not to vote.
Cigler said, "The key fact among the important independent vote is that Ford did so well. He had a disproportionate lead among the independents and the debate apparently reaffirmed that Ford is moving the soft Carter votes."
MANY OF those who said they watched part of the debate, Gcier said, probably only glanced at it. Chances are, he said, that they watched the first part, during which Carter seemed nervous and Ford appeared to be in control.
"The debate was strong and confirming to Ford voters. Carter voters are more hesitant but they're not necessarily switch-ble," he said.
Cigler said voters seemed to be less sure of Carter following the debate. About 23 per cent of Carter's supporters said they were less sure about the way they felt about the election compared with about 10 per cent of Ford's supporter.
BECAUSE FORD has never run for national office and didn't rise through the ranks of the Republican party, and because Carter was virtually unknown nationally a year ago, two relative unknowns are running for president, Cigler said.
This may result in relatively "soft" support for both candidates, according to Cigler, who said 30 per cent of the electorate could change their minds before Nov. 2.
Another surprise in the Kansan poll, Cigler said, was that McCarthy received only 2.7 per cent of KU students' support. He said he expected more people to watch the debate, to be turned off by the two major candidates and turn to McCarthy.
Parson and Cigler said the traditional Republican strength in Kansas probably had an effect on the poll's result. In addition, Cigler said, the fact that Kansas Bob Dole was on the Republican ticket probably drew support to Ford.
Parson said a follow-up poll before the election would be more informative about what KU students think about the election. He said a later poll would indicate whether students' opinions are firm or subject to change.
AGEISM
KU-Y presents
Discrimination Because of Age: Too Old or Too Young?
Small group discussions on problems facing older people
Tuesday, October 5 in Kansas Union
1:30-3:30
Regional Room
2:4
Alcove A
3:5
Alcove B
7:00-9:00
Parior B
7:30-9:30
Cork II
8:10
Governor's Re
Donna
Schafer
Walter Crockett
Jodie Winchester
Shirley Patterson
Life Satisfaction
What happens
when you grow old
Death and dying:
Death of a spouse/parent
Governor's Room
Cal Broughton
Jodie Winchester
Susan Katz-Orloff
Panel on Youth Discussing problems facing today's youth
Agency aides
What happens when you grow old
Death and dying:
Death of a spouse/paren
7:30, Wednesday, Oct. 6
Parlor C, Kansas Union
Judy Sardo ... Employment Office
Donna Swail .Lawrence Public School
Colt Knutson ... Douglas County
Juvenile Court
Donna Flory ...Social Rehabilitation
Services
Arensberg's =Shoes
KU-Y is partially funded by Student Senate.
Go anywhere shoes from Zodiac
Go anywhere shoes from Zodiac
Arensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen
You may not have the most economical engine in your VW.
You can't have it when your VW is not performing properly. It's what you need to do with gasoline bills, performance with economy. Let your VW continue to give you the economy you paid for your Engine Performance Special.
Please bring this coupon with you to qualify for this Special.
Electronic engine performance analysis *Replace plus*, points. A mechanical cylinder mount, a dwell angle *Adjust valves* *Replace valve cover gaskets* *Compression* *Adjust carburetor*, including emission controls *Service air cleaner* *Check and adjust fan belt tension* *Change
Engine Performance Special
Bug $29.95 Bus $39.95
2522 IOWA (HIWAY 58) • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • PHONE 943-2200
All work is done by trained VM mechanics, using genuine VW
hardware. We all train our on-wear on your car for six months
or 6,000 miles, whichever comes first.
--with
Flamingo
A Titulating Experience Tues., Oct. 5 at 8:00 p.m.
Amateur 'GO-GO'
$300.00 in Total Prizes
1st Prize
2nd Prize
$150.00
3rd Prize $50.00
$75.00
4th Prize
$25.00
Private Club
Members Only
Come Out for Detalls
501 N. 9
843-9800
--evelyn wood reading dynamics
Be the student you could be!
KORAL CONTROL THE
MEN'S GUIDE
Do you fall asleep over your book? Spend all your time studying just to keep up? (Or feel guilty when you don't?)
Nervous and unprepared for exams?
ENROLL NOW FOR EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
... Read most material over 1000 words per minute
. . . Adapt dynamic methods to all kinds of material
. . . Organize, simplify,
remember
... Cut your study time in half
... Face exams with confidence
New classes begin next week.
Mondays 7-9:30 p.m.
Oct. 11----Nov. 22
Tuesdays 7-9:30 p.m.
Oct. 12----Nov.
(1)
FREE SPEED READING MINI-LESSON
You'll improve your reading within the hour—free! Wed., Thurs., Fri. Oct. 6, 7, 8 7:30-8:30 p.m.
M
Located in ADVENTURE a bookstore
Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa Phone 843-6424
6
Tuesday, October 5, 1976
University Daily Kansan
PLEASE RESPOND BY MAY 14TH TO THE ASSOCIATION OF GOLFING IN AMERICA.
KU golfer Sharon Shogren
Jayvees nipped by Washburn
The KU junior varsity football team was upset yesterday by Washburn University's junior varsity, 21-30. The game, half of which was played in the rain, was in Topeka.
The Jayhawks led Washburn, 20-9, with just over five minutes left in the game, after having trailed 9-10 in the first quarter. A bizarre turn of events, however, enabled the Ichabods to score two touchdowns in the closing minutes to win the game.
KU had Washburn on its own 3-yard line with 5.02 left, but a 97-yard halfback pass, which was deflected into the arms of a receiver, gave the iabchofs their second touchdown.
It was KU's two junior varsity game of the season. They beat Missouri Sept. 17.
Then, with two minutes left, when KU quarterback Bill Lillis was back to punt, the snap went awry and Washburn recovered, setting up the winning touchdown.
The junior varity's next game is Oct. 29 against Nebraska.
Intramural teams ranked by officials
Weekly ratings of the men's touch football intramural teams and the women's flag football teams was started this week by the Intramural Officials Association.
The ratings will be given for the A division team in the independent, fraternity and university teams.
The top teams in the fraternity division, Browne and Omega, will both with 20-5 against will play tonight.
This week's ratings:
1) Crimson Tide (2-4)
2) Green Machine (3-4)
3) Eagles (3-5)
4) Dart Action (3-6)
5) Mad Dog Midgets (2-1)
1) Lewis (2.0)
2) Gord (3.0)
3) Gerd (3.0)
4) Seven (2.0)
5) Searleh Sandwash (2.0)
6) Searleh Sandwash (2.0)
7) Alpha Tua Omega (2.4)
8) Beta Theta Pi (2.1)
9) Beta Theta Pi (2.1)
10) the Delta Uplition (2.0)
11) the Delta Uplition (2.0)
KU golfers 2nd after first round
Court Writer
1) Pi Beta Phi (2.0)
2) Kappa Alpha Theta (3.0)
3) Alpha Gamma Delta (1.4)
4) Delta Gamma (1.0)
5) Delta Gamma (1.0)
By DAN BOWERMAN
KU's women golfers didn't use their home course to their advantage yesterday and fell into second place after the first round of the Women PGA Championship for Women Region Six golf tournament.
The Jayhawks shot 341 after the first 18 boles of the tournament—six shots behind St. Louis.
The tournament, being played at the Avalon Hill Golf Course, concludes today. WIN
The University of Nebraska Finished the
in third in at 347. The University of Mpangasai
Julia Gumlia, a sophomore from Minnesota, was leading the tournament with a round of 80. She is the defending champion of the state.
"I had trouble with my putting." Gumila said after yesterday's round. "I think ever so soon."
SHE HAD 41 puts yesterday, Regulation,
allowing two puts on each hole, is 36.
"The greens are so big and so fast," Gumila said. "I know a lot of girls had been eating them."
Carle Pence, Stephens, is one stroke behind Gumilia at 81. Nancy Stevens, a University of New York student in Missouri; and Nan Circo, University of Nebraska, were all three strokes back at 83.
"I expected my girls to be in the 70s, but we were in the last group and played the first set."
KU's Kanye Hoirs, with tail four others at 84-four strikes off Gumila's
"I didn't play too well," Hoins said, "My
Boozer said that although KU's scores
Sports
game has been off for the last couple of weeks. I'm just going to try to make it up
BETH BOOZER and Charnell Hadl hit 83's for KU yesterday. Jackie DeLong shot 87, and Sharon Shogren shot 96. The top four scores count toward the team score.
Following Minnesota in the standings are: University of Missouri 349, University of Iowa 353, Iowa State University 359, Creighton University 385, University of Wisconsin 390, Michigan State University 415, Southwest Missouri State University 418 and University of North Dakota 418.
Wichita State University sent two golfers and isn't in the competition for the team title. Central College didn't show up for the tourney.
"The SCORES were higher than I expected," KU coach Cannity Boozer said, "but the weather was definitely a problem. It got progressively worse.
"We should have a home course advantage," she said. "We could easily make up six strokes on the back nine. That's just a stroke and a half aniee."
weren't as low as she expected, she had confidence that KU could overtake Stephens.
toe for off the day's round was 9 a.m. with
the last group going out just after 10 a.m.
The top six teams started at the first hole
and the bottom six started at the tenth.
KU 8th in AP poll
Free Public Lecture
The University of Kansas Jayhawks moved up to the No. 8 spot in the Associated Press press of 61 sports writers and broadcaster's kick the nation's top twenty football teams.
KU, ranked ninth in last week's poll,
defeated the Wisconsin Badgers, 34-24.
Saturday to remain undefeated. KU's
record is 4-10.
The top twenty teams picked were:
1. Michigan (42) - 4.00
2. New York (37) - 3.96
3. Arizona (35) - 3.92
Free Public Lecture
Tues., Oct. 5
7:30 p.m.
Gilliam Tenn.
TM Center, 841-1225
D. Oliphanton (23) 4-0
E. L. Baird (15) 7-6
C. LCA 4-0
F. LCA 4-0
Maryland 4-0
K. NANANA 4-0
L. NANANA 4-0
O. Ohio St. 3-1
P. Ohio St. 3-1
Florida 3-1
Tennessee 3-1
Note Damne 3-1
T. Texas Tech 0-0
T. Texas Tech 0-0
T. Texas A&M 3-0
T. Carolina 4-0
T. Carolina 4-0
824 874
858 688
658 104
515 100
595 100
389 324
389 234
314 277
165 142
165 142
106 43
106 43
27 27
22 22
20 17
10 17
'Hawks healthy after game, getting ready for Cowboys
KU celebrated Saturday's 34-24 victory over Wisconsin with a near perfect injury report yesterday. Skip Sharp, starting cornerback, who intercepted two passes in the game, and Franklin King, a first team defensive tackle, were the only players on Sunday to out with a bruised shoulder and King is suffering from a bruised leg.
We Write All Risks
Central Missouri State University will have
field hockey on Wednesday's unblemished field
hockey game today.
Both players missed yesterday's rain-shortened game, but neither injury was serious.
The game will be at 3:30 p.m. on the first field east of Robinson Gymnasium. The junior varsity game that was scheduled to precede the varsity match was canceled.
Automobile Insurance
"I had hopes he'd be able to play Saturday against Oklahoma State," KU coach Bud Moore said, "but after today, it doesn't look as if he will."
Defensive end Harry Murphy, who missed the last two games because of a broken forearm, was expected to return to practice yesterday, but wasn't quite ready.
Hammond at the number one right guard spot.
Defensive tackle Mike Butler, who went to Washington, D.C. after Saturday's game to attend his father's funeral, is expected to be back to practice today.
Gene Doane Agency
Moore made one personnel switch, moving Morris Pippin above of Roger
Field hockey team to play CMSU today
824 Mass.
SEMESTER BREAK SKI TRIP
SKI WINTER PARK, COLORADO WITH SUA TRIP INCLUDES
Round-trip transportation Beer and soft drinks on the bus 4 nights lodging in condominiums
4 days of skiing
4 days of lift tickets
4 days of ski rental
Jan. 9-Jan.15,1977
Cost $135 OPTIONS
5th day of skiing Ski lessons at special rates Sign up now in the SUA office.
Vista RESTAURANTS
Vista
RESTAURANTS
Pork Tenderloin
7.9¢
Reg. 95¢
MONDAY • TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY
1527 West 6th, Lawrence 842-4311
Pork Tenderloin 79¢
GRAB A PIECE OF APPLE PIE
Frosh. Officers
Senators
Margaret Berlin Robert Green Valerie Howard Barbara Jenson Mitch Rusbarsky Karen Thompson
Pres. Sandra Engwell V-Pres. Steve Graham Sec.Kelly Lyne Treas. Robert Scott
- Freedom of Speech on Campus *
Broader
Student Representation
Paid for by student supporters of the Apple Pie Coalition
The cast of the decade. The western adventure of a lifetime.
PG 400
M.G.M presents
THAT'S
ENTERTAINMENT.
Part2
JOHN WAYNE
LAUREN BACALL
"THE SHOOTIST"
M-G-M presents
THAT'S
ENTERTAINMENT.
Part 2
G EVA.7:30 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun.Mat.2:30
Varsity
STANLEY KUBRICK'S
BARRY LYDON
PG
Sat-Sun
1:15
Eva.7:45 only
WOODY ALLEN in
"Sleeper"
PG
7:15
"Bananas"
PG
8:45
"Everything ...
R About Sex..."
10:15
Hillcrest
Eve. 7:30:9:30
Sat.Sun. 2:30 Granada
LIFE
Enjoy the biggest, grandest, action-filled pirate movie ever!
SWASHBUCKLER PG
Eve. 7:30-9:25 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:30 Hillcrest
STANLEY MUSIC CO.
ROBERT SHAW JAMES EARL JONES PETER BOYLE GENEVEIRE BUJOLD BEAU BRIDges GEOPHREY HOLDER.
PG
VANISHING POINT
Sunset
Albuquerque in NM 84127 - West on Highway 50
Commission on the STATUS OF WOMEN
Those of us who work with the Commission do so because we are questioning. We want to know what our alternatives are and how to maintain them. We work to support women in whatever choice they make and to increase the options open to all of us. We work to stimulate thought on being a woman and how we can integrate these thoughts into ideas we already have about ourselves. We are interested in exploring the status of women on the KU campus.
Saying you're a woman doesn't tell anyone much, because being a woman can mean many different things.
If you are interested in working on a committee or applying for Secretary of the Commission Board please contact Maggie Flanagan at 842-1114 or Tracy Spellman at 841-9495 as soon as possible. Calls concerning the Commission in general are always welcome at the above numbers or the Dean of Women's Office.
If you feel the Commission has something to offer you there are many ways to get involved. Anyone is welcome to attend the bi-weekly programs (Oct. 5, 19 & Nov. 2, 16, 30) on topics of interest to women and also to receive a monthly newsletter. The Commission consists of five committees, each dealing with a specific area concerning women, on which members are encouraged to work: Life-planning, Human Sexuality, Women's Recognition, Political Action and Publicity. The Commission is also looking for an efficient and enthusiastic person to serve on the Board as Secretary. This position requires time and energy as well as typing skills.
Partially funded by the Student Senate
100
SUA Travel and Maupintour invite you to spend less money!
SUA Flights to CHICAGO
SAVE $39
$71 por person
roundtrip
Nov. 23 - 28
Based on minimum of ten persons. Early reservations are recommended.
Maupintour Train to CHICAGO SAVE $15
$45 per person roundtrip
Nov. 24 - 28
NOV. 24 - 28
Based on minimum of 15 persons,
traveling together, Deadline:
Nov. 5
]
with house
CARACAS
Maupintour
Travel Group Charter
January 15
Based on minimum of
227 persons
---
$316.50 per person roundtrip
SAVE $311
Deadline: Oct. 15
FOR DETAILS AND RESERVATIONS, CONTACT:
SUA Travel
864-3477
Ace ment are o sex, BRING
Maupintour travel service
843-1211
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Thr Fri
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Offices in the Kansas Union Lobby
AVON
offer
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Full
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1234567890
2018
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 5.1976
7
Timid tenants live with substandard housing
Fear is why many student tenants put up with unsuitable living conditions, a city where the housing prices are high.
The inspector, Sandra Francisco, said that tenants often feared they would be evicted if they complained about conditions in their houses or apartments.
Therefore, tenants often allow such conditions to persist. That causes problems for the tenant and the landlord. Francisco Valdivia unattended might grow into a large one.
Francisco, who has been an inspector in the housing inspection department since June, investigates complaints about violations of the city code.
THE CODE, a book about two inches thick, lists minimum housing standards allowable in Lawrence and is the city's law on housing and national minimum housing standards.
So far, the busiest time for Francisco was at the beginning of the fall semester, when students moving into houses and apartments found conditions they were unhappy
Most of these complaints concerned heating and cooling systems, bathing facilities, plumbing.
Instead of contacting their landlords to complain, the tenants often contact the landlord directly.
Francisco asks the complainter to put his complaint in writing. She then inspects the premises for code violations and contacts the landlord about any violations she finds.
However, if that approach doesn't work, the next step is intervention by the housing agency.
EVEN THOUGH they might fear to do it.
contacting the landlord gets results in a large percentage of cases, she said.
Although the city code allows the landlord 45 days to begin repairs, Francisco said she didn't need to require action within a specific amount of time.
"I like to give them a reasonable length of time," she said, "because I realize they are busy people."
IF DURING that time no action has been taken, Francisco then tries another approach.
"I try a more direct, personal type of contact with the person who is responsible for the property," she said. "I don't put them personally and discuss the problem."
In all but two cases, that approach has worked, she said.
The coupon for Ken's Pizza which appeared on Sept. 28 and 29 is incorrect. These coupons are not valid. We regret any inconvenience this error caused.
KU BACKPACKING
CORRECTION:
MOUNTAINEERING CLUB
Will meet at 7:30 p.m. on Tues., Oct. 5
in the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union Everyone Welcome--Will discuss boots and equipment
In those cases, the problems weren't solved and the landlords asked the tenants to leave. In both cases the tenants had only oral rental agreements with the landlords and they left without pressing the matter, Francisco said.
In all other cases, request for repairs or improvements have been met, Francisco said, and she hasn't yet had to take a case to court, the last step in the complaint process.
MT. OREAD BIKE CLUB MEETING
Tues.,Oct 5th,7:30 p.m.
Walnut Room —
Kansas Union
Slideshow: on Switzerland,
by Lou Houston
Saturday Evening, October 9
THE DRUNKARD
at
Perry Lake
$8 Includes:
Sign-up deadline Wednesday, Oct. 6. For more Information
- Transportation
- Food
- Play tickets
KANSAN WANT ADS
contact the SUA Office.
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kannan are offered to students of all levels of request to REAKE BALL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALT
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
one two three four five
15 words or
lesser
equal
international
... $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.75 $3.00
...01 ...02 ...03 ...04 ...05
Monday Thursday $ p.m.
Tuesday Friday $ p.m.
Wednesday Monday $ p.m.
Tuesday Tuesday $ p.m.
Friday Wednesday $ p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
JUDK BUSINESS OFFICE
(I11 Fint Hall)
864-4358
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Employment Opportunities
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These items can be placed in person or taken to the VTEB office business at 664-1583.
FOR RENT
Marketing Sales & Sales Management positions
training offered online, in-person
new interviews
Oct. 6 7 8 in 202 Summerfield (Business)
202 Summerfield Carruth (New England)
New England New England 123-5301
AVON-Good money, valuable experience. We offer training in the most beautiful way of selling your items.
Jayhawaii Towers 5 bedrooms apt. All utilities
included. Parking $75 per hour. Laundry facilities. On bus route
1400.
Spacious furnished room, utilities paid $110 per month, waiting distance to campus. Call 843-2144. Twain.
Sunflower House (a cooperative living facility) has rooms for rent. Residents are responsible for management. Food program, worksharing co-ord. meals selected. Preferred. Camp Dai 105 at 842-9421.
CALIFORNIA
STATE
BAND
1967
Armadillo Boad Co.
will be moving soon to
the Eighth Marketplace
for Grand Opening in UDK1
710 Mass. 10-5 Mon.-sat. 841-7946
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CREWEL
15 East 8th 6412 10-5 Monday Saturday
Sublase 2 bedroom bath, all palliums paid. Furnished apartment. on bus route, call 1230-845-9010, on bus route, call 1230-845-9010
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any price you see on popular hi-fi equipment for factory dumbo or more product will pay the manufacturer's benefits at the GRAMOPHONE SHOP at KIFES
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
Battery, charger, and regulator. BELL AUDIO
ELECTRIC, 843-9690, 3600 W, 60 hh.
BELL AUDIO ELECTRIC, 843-9690, 3600 W, 60 hh.
Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerator,
cookers, dishwashers, pots & pans, fridge & microwave,
freezer, refrigerator, stoves & ovens, freezer &
refrigerator, oven & gas cooker. 60% off.
www.piercedirect.com
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade supplies. Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
15th Street and 9th Avenue, New York, NY 10022
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sense from
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available
at New York Times Store. . . . .
67 Flat, very clean & very nice—must see $750
or more. @24.99/USD 10.5
1975 Toyota station wagon, dark brown, 1900 ce.
7042. AM-FM, mag wheel, call after 6:30.
7042.
1970 Opel Rally Kadet, 72,000 km, good condition, gets 20 mpg. Call Maul B44-3823. 10-8
Must sell my 75 Honda DS50. Its your chance to
become a Honda dealer in August after a for great
days! Give us a call at 612-348-1095 or visit
www.honda.com.
VW Fastback 1969 SLight bldg damage and damage requires some engine work. Any reasonable offers, please contact us at (800) 555-2222.
Fender Dual Sawshow Reverb armb. DJB. Fans.
Fender Dual Sawshow Reverb armb. DJB. Fans.
offer. buy all. 841-765-9430 before 10:05 10:50
1968 Grand Torino, 79.000 miles, good condition.
must sell, call BELL, 684-642-812, 10:5 p.m.
1. engne rebutt, leather interior, $2,000
miles. AC PS II rear defrost. 841-6927.
1971 Toyota Wagon Corolla Deluxe 1600. Excel
wagon. High-performance automatic transmission, 54,000 miles. New valve
job, die brakes, battery, snow tires. Asking
buyer. Battery for slightly larger wagon. 842-750 or 884-23217
1970 blue VW Bug; one owner, 38,000 miles.
$150. Three winter coats. American sheepskin.
£250. Black leather trousers.
1971 Dodge Challenger, 318 V-8. AT, PS, PB, aln-
Good condition--must sell. 83-125. 10-6
D126 1216 turntable and Sony tuner. Call 841-
4992. 10-5
Ampg U 2 Guitar amp. Used 6 times. Excellent
quality. See at Love Records. 15 W. 9th, or
70-738. - 3738.
FABRIE SALE 10% to 40% off cotton prints and
kettlecloth, skirts, shirts, panels, and velveten.
New through Oct. 9. PRAIRIE PATCHWORKS
Holdings. Shop at 28 W. 6th St. or 30-10-7
and Sat from 10 a.m to 5 p.m.
Peugeot UO-18 for book *26*’ and almost new.
Safety brake in book carrier, flinders, flags.
Roadside assistance in book carrier.
Famous FYRE brand boots, gold leather, women's
skirts. $499 now $599, $699 now $899,
$999 now $1299, $1499 now $1799, $2099
I have to buy 68 Canton LEs-Mans. Automatic,
PS, take the best offer. Bali 647-6787. 10-7
Student and Faculty Specialty Faculty $2.50/dot.
$15.00/book, $6.75/month only, Alexander's $8.50 town, 842-1300.
Alexander's $8.50 town, 842-1300.
Scuba outfit Tank, regulator, wet nut and weight belt. 841-6143 after 5. 10-8
75 Chevy Van; black, many options, partially customized. Must see to appreciate Call 641-1580.
Yellow Lubricator pups, AKC, Champion
labels, field and show stock 843-8921. blood-
test
Samul 1600 XReceiver, 35 watts. Excellent condition. 1600. After 5 m. 841-803. comes and needs cleaning.
Mamiya-Sekor 500 mm. camera. Also Pioneer
player-500 player-recorded, both approx. yr.
old. Includes recorder, both approx. yr.
old.
SUDARU 71, 71d, 54,000 miles, 4 speed, AC AM
SUDARU 71, 71d, 54,000 miles, 4 speed, AC AM
BURY 842-188-106, on p. week on day
We have: speakers-stupus-head phones-curiosities-technology-dining-and financing available. Phone: 138-679-2354, and financing available. Phone: 138-679-2354.
SPECIAL AIR ARS speaker (Reg. $215 a.m.) now
available on a-way availability Airbus A380,
16th Hurt, Huron
We have the Advent~J.J.L. and Es~Speaker set up for a flat and homesitting test. AAK 8405, KENYA, £159.00.
A good sound system is one of the most pleasurable things you can have. Let us show you an Advent system that will deliver more music and audio. Eileen's eighth. For $6, Audio 13, Eileen 8. For $10, 10-11
We buy good used cars
Corvettes, Camaros,
Novas, Mustangs,
Firebirds, and
Imported Sports Cars
UNIVERSITY MOTORS
26 & Iowa 843-1395
Assemble 371 file into 280 file with BAT3D
Assemble 371 file into 280 file with BAT4D
Main, assemble 371 file into 280 file with Mist
Most, assemble 371 file into 280 file with Hatchback, 4-sided, G-car
Most, assemble 371 file into 280 file with Hatchback, 4-sided, G-car
Must self, 1972, Musk Hallacock, Call Truyli 843, 2785 or 864-845. *10-11*
V.W. 73 Squeakbase automate good condition
V.W. 73 Squeakbase automated 1045 Wellington 10-11
10-11
1917 Ford WM - Custom inside wide tires that
are 24x8.5. See see at 130mm wide tires.
Phone: 843-269-9800
Wheel: 10-11 W
HELP WANTED
FOOD SERVICE - full time superviving job. *8 a.m.-4 p.m. daily. Some Saturday work. Must have a Bachelor's degree in vacationing leisure. Museums have previous food vacations required. Mass, Church, 3-5 dail apply 1791; Mass, Scrum Foods
Part time secretary to take appointments for
Administration, 117 B Union, 664-735-
Apply at the dyaskyw师, 117 B Union, 664-735-
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER. Available immediately. Under the direction of the Manager of Technology, and with tenure, and other programming tasks. College degree required. High school diploma required. Experience in programming (COBI desired). Send resume to O'Leary Hall, Law, K6495. Application number 100238. EMPLOYEE-WOMEN. MINORITIES AND HANDICAPPED ENCOURAGED TO AE.
Female model for freelance photographer: xx-xx-
XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-XX-
natural "girl next door" image: Call 911-246-3780.
www.female-model.com
Counter help part time. Must be able to work
in a fast-paced environment.
Apply in person. Henry's, W11 W. 61h,
10-6
Custodial tool for Shenanigans, Call for information ask for Joe, 841-6000 10-7
LOST AND FOUND
Found—Ladies Shawnee Mission NW Class ring.
Call 841-2939 after 5:30.
10-5
FOUND--Found in vicinity of 25th and Iowa.
FOUND--Found in vicinity of bike. Call to identify
& ask for bike.
FOUND—Found one key of attached to a
key to a Ford Car Campus
Documents. 861-462.
FOUND=Set of keys. Can be claimed at 2883
Weree: Call 864-3155. 10-5
Found: set of keys on ring on campus
Found: Chancellor's characterel pick up at 105 Fint. 10-6
Lost: set of keys wokt wed between Blake and
Lost: Call Mark at 841-256, Thanks. 10-5
kU BUS Fus and ID (KU ID No. 20055)
feed severely. Nice reward. 864-554-108
10-8
Last: reward for return of small charm, "spoof"
to the mailboxes in Jawahirway A on Sat
18 November. Mail to Jawahirway A on Sat
18 November.
Found: Texas instrument calculator at Wescoe
Terrance on Monday, Call 843-2904. 10-6
Found: set of keys in front of Hall Thur Hills,
30. Sep 14: 821-7681 and identify
10-6
MISCELLANEOUS
Found; Bun Paz belonging to Lia Chilmeire.
Claim in Wescoe lost and found office. 10-6
Left, left ally and turquque ring in Woman's
Aug 27. Please return to Mint at SUA Maidan
Aug 27. Please return to Mint at SUA Maidan
Lost- Khaki, colored jacket, size 38R. Reward.
643-1950. 10-7
Last-Fernale Sett. Red collar with rabies tag.
Last-Fernale Sett. Red collar with rabies tag.
& Vermont. Call 842-8024 if found. 10-6
Found. High school class ring. nee 1975 from
Stanford University; initially engraved on back of钥
initiality engraved on back of钥
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 8:34 Mass.
Desire roommate who practices TM. House near
desire and Sims. $5/month + utilities.
NOTICE
CABSAH CAFE- Good food from sarahst. Lunch
10:30-3:30 Mass. Mpss. Please be a backpacker, too.
10:30-3:30 Mass. Mpss. Please be a backpacker, too.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
clothes, clock televisions. Open daily 12
:34-8:37 PM
Goods • Vintage Clothing
BODES • VINTAGE CLOTHING
• EULAIRE • RETAILER
PERSONAL
Dorothy Hamilton, in her heart out! Go Gay Services!
Donate hardware. Visit www.gayservices.org.
Every person! For socializing activities, call
(212) 348-0500.
ALEXANDER'S FLOWERS BATH ROUTEUSE
SHOPT SHOP Flower special $29 lowe
sweepstakes $39 lowe
sweepstakes $59 lowe
sweepstakes $79 lowe
sweepstakes $109 lowe
Guy Counseling Service: call 842-7055 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals
SQUEZERES PALACE ANNUAL FALL PLANT SALE. All plants and gifts 20% off. 10-6
RIDES RIDERS
Selected Secondhand
Any airline employee dependents who would like to travel across the world, call Sushant Agarwal.
Sinn's Steak House. Delicious food at reasonable prices. Sunday, 12-9; Wednesdays, 12-9; Thursdays, 4-11. Closed Tuesday, May 8.
Need a ride to Hudsonfield October 15.
Will help with expenses 864-1322 10-5
SERVICES OFFERED
Excellent instruction in guitar, bass, as well as piano and keyboard. Three available. Keyboard Studios.
Oread Bookshop Closes Early, at 12:30 on Sat.
10-8
for maintenance.
Math. Tutoring - competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 0001, 001, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2901, 2902, 2903, 2904, 2905, 2906, 2907, 2908, 2909, 2910, 2911, 2912, 2913, 2914, 2915, 2916, 2917, 2918, 2919, 2920, 2921, 2922, 2923, 2924, 2925, 2926, 2927, 2928, 2929, 2930, 2931, 2932, 2933, 2934, 2935, 2936, 2937, 2938, 2939, 2940, 2941, 2942, 2943, 2944, 2945, 2946, 2947, 2948, 2949, 2950, 2951, 2952, 2953, 2954, 2955, 2956, 2957, 2958, 2959, 2960, 2961, 2962, 2963, 2964, 2965, 2966, 2967, 2968, 2969, 2970, 2971, 2972, 2973, 2974, 2975, 2976, 2977, 2978, 2979, 2980, 2981, 2982, 2983, 2984, 2985, 2986, 2987, 2988, 2989, 2990, 2991, 2992, 2993, 2994, 2995, 2996, 2997, 2998, 2999, 3000, 3001, 3002, 3003, 3004, 3005, 3006, 3007, 3008, 3009, 3010, 3011, 3012, 3013, 3014, 3015, 3016, 3017, 3018, 3019, 3020, 3021, 3022, 3023, 3024, 3025, 3026, 3027, 3028, 3029, 3030, 3031, 3032, 3033, 3034, 3035, 3036, 3037, 3038, 3039, 3040, 3041, 3042, 3043, 3044, 3045, 3046, 3047, 3048, 3049, 3050, 3051, 3052, 3053, 3054, 3055, 3056, 3057, 3058, 3059, 3060, 3061, 3062, 3063, 3064, 3065, 3066, 3067, 3068, 3069, 3070, 3071, 3072, 3073, 3074, 3075, 3076, 3077, 3078, 3079, 3080, 3081, 3082, 3083, 3084, 3085, 3086, 3087, 3088, 3089, 3090, 3091, 3092, 3093, 3094, 3095, 3096, 3097, 3098, 3099, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2901, 2902, 2903, 2904, 2905, 2906, 2907, 2908, 2909, 2910, 2911, 2912, 2913, 2914, 2915, 2916, 2917, 2918, 2919, 2920, 2921, 2922, 2923, 2924, 2925, 2926, 2927, 2928, 2929, 2930, 2931, 2932, 2933, 2934, 2935, 2936, 2937, 2938, 2939, 2940, 2941, 2942, 2943, 2944, 2945, 2946, 2947, 2948, 2949, 2950, 2951, 2952, 2953, 2954, 2955, 2956, 2957, 2958, 2959, 2960, 2961, 2962, 2963, 2964, 2965, 2966, 2967, 2968, 2969, 2970, 2971, 2972, 2973, 2974, 2975, 2976, 2977, 2978, 2979, 2980, 2981, 2982, 2983, 2984, 2985, 2986, 2987, 2988, 2989, 2990, 2991, 2992, 2993, 2994, 2995, 2996, 2997, 2998, 2999, 3000, 3001, 3002, 3003, 3004, 3005, 3006, 3007, 3008, 3009, 3010, 3011, 3012, 3013, 3014, 3015, 3016, 3017, 3018, 3019, 3020, 3021, 3022, 3023, 3024, 3025, 3026, 3027, 3028, 3029, 3030, 3031, 3032, 3033, 3034, 3035, 3036, 3037, 3038, 3039, 3040, 3041, 3042, 3043, 3044, 3045, 3046, 3047, 3048, 3049, 3050, 3051, 3052, 3053, 3054, 3055, 3056, 3057, 3058, 3059, 3060, 3061, 3062, 3063, 3064, 3065, 3066, 3067, 3068, 3069, 3070, 3071, 3072, 3073, 3074, 3075, 3076, 3077, 3078, 3079, 3080, 3081, 3082, 3083, 3084, 3085, 3086, 3087, 3088, 3089, 3090, 3091, 3092, 3093, 3094, 3095, 3096, 3097, 3098, 3099, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2901, 2902, 2903, 2904, 2905, 2906, 2907, 2908, 2909, 2910, 2911, 2912, 2913, 2914, 2915, 2916, 2917, 2918, 2919, 2920, 2921, 2922, 2923, 2924, 2925, 2926, 2927, 2928, 2929, 2930, 2931, 2932, 2933, 2934, 2935, 2936, 2937, 2938, 2939, 2940, 2941, 2942, 2943, 2944, 2945, 2946, 2947, 2948, 2949, 2950, 2951, 2952, 2953, 2954, 2955, 2956, 2957, 2958, 2959, 2960, 2961, 2962, 2963, 2964, 2965, 2966, 2967, 2968, 2969, 2970, 2971, 2972, 2973, 2974, 2975, 2976, 2977, 2978, 2979, 2980, 2981, 2982, 2983, 2984, 2985, 2986, 2987, 2988, 2989, 2990, 2991, 2992, 2993, 2994, 2995, 2996, 2997, 2998, 2999, 3000, 3001, 3002, 3003, 3004, 3005, 3006, 3007, 3008, 3009, 3010, 3011, 3012, 3013, 3014, 3015, 3016, 3017, 3018, 3019, 3020, 3021, 3022, 3023, 3024, 3025, 3026, 3027, 3028, 3029, 3030, 3031, 3032, 3033, 3034, 3035, 3036, 3037, 3038, 3039, 3040, 3041, 3042, 3043, 3044, 3045, 3046, 3047, 3048, 3049, 3050, 3051, 3052, 3053, 3054, 3055, 3056, 3057, 3058, 3059, 3060, 3061, 3062, 3063, 3064, 3065, 3066, 3067, 3068, 3069, 3070, 3071, 3072, 3073, 3074, 3075, 3076, 3077, 3078, 3079, 3080, 3081, 3082, 3083, 3084, 3085, 3086, 3087, 3088, 3089, 3090, 3091, 3092, 3093, 3094, 3095, 3096, 3097, 3098, 3099, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4
Commission on the Status of Women: Alternative
Schools 05 October 7, 5:30 P.M. Lewis 1108
Pirate Room, Roosevelt
$25 REWARD for first person to offer a tape record of the NATIONAL SUBURBAL PARTY AFFECTED BY THE HEADLINES HADECOLA ON KJHK Sat. Sep 18. Original 18 booklet Rita or Teri at 664-745 or 843-4629. 10-7
Middle East Dancing--1 2:30-4 00 United Ministers—Gary, 1:290-4371
10-5
PRESCHOOL OPENINGS. Preschool kindergarten and preschool program full day programs at Sunshine Acres Montessori Preschool for children ages 2-5. Child care and early learning working in well-equipped classrooms. Heuristics 1. 3 and 1.9 teacher-student ratio depend on group of 8 to 10 children first week of Oct. Also who is in public kindergarten. Non-profit sponsorship program. Scholarship program. Four acre playground. School session visiting hours. OFS at 104 and 1214 Maples Lane Phone 842-ACD. evening 842-
ACADEMIC RBISARCH PAPERS Thoughts on a
concerning issue. BRIAN SMITH No 266, Los Angeles
council, 1780 W. 45th St.
[730Mass.841-7070]
Professional Study Skills Service. Make study pay off. For more information, call 841-357-197-7
18-97
HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service
- Imported Clothing
HALF AS MUCH
Local呼叫灯 hauling done with van. Save $ Call 841-501 or 844-664-668
*
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Aztec Inn
Aztec Inn
Experienced typist—term papers, tests, mite,
scrapbooking, letter writing, spellings, spelliter,
843-855-9383. Mrs. Wright.
TYPING
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont 842-9455
American and Mexican Food
Typist editor, IBM PCaile editor. Quality work.
Participates in dissertations. Welcome to
Call down. 648-912-97
Need an experienced typewriter? IBM Selectle II
plc and keyboard? typing carbon
carbon, Palm Pam or Apple iPad.
Experienced manuscript and typist, ttyplist. Call w/ 841-3431 days; 941-1780 days. Call w/ 841-3431 days.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-29
THEISM BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us provide you $83 Manhattan按户 phone # 824-7567. Thank you.
ROOMMATE, male. Large 2 3/4m, on bus route
ROOMMATE, female. Extremely quieter for stu-
lor room. 865-792-7123
WANTED
Grad student homesite female roommate to share 2 bedroom house: $160 per apt. Pte ORK-5
18024
*Calculus and Analytic Geometry* Thomas H. Hungerford, ed., 1967; for Kimble in Computer Science offer, 15
IEEE Transactions on Computational Engineering, vol. 30, no. 4, 2008
Need KU-Nebraca game tickets. Name the Price.
Call 841-7753 after 4:00 p.m.
10-7
WANTED: Women interested in working with children, adults and newcomers. Wives, child abuse—often negrophiles and homosexuals. Help women take control over their relationships to meet those needs. Applications for volunteering may be directed to the Children's Training Start Oct 13, Call 844-4934. Women's Transitional Care Services. Inc. this ad fundraises to help pay for care.
Need Oka-KU, kitup to 6 by KU grad
Call 843-1839 before 9 p.m.
10-5
A needs assepersons at the game to sell the
basket. Earn a bark hat Call 843-00-
842-0411
842-0411
1 or 2 Females wanted to share house in country
built but share house duties and grow
vegetables together.
D desperately need 3 tickets to the OU game: bc-
4142. 10-6
Roommate rentals $35 per month, includes
utilities. 842-7928. 5:30 -7:30. 10-8
Roommum wanted to share furnished two bed-
room units, outside laundry facilities, etc. CU
outside laundry facilities, etc. CU
Wanted to buy 4 tickets to KU-NU game. Call
643-643-668. Separate or together.
California adult needs licenses for homebrewing
or food (488) 247-777 days. **10.19**
or (488) 247-777 days.
Need two tickets for Okla-KU and/or Neb-XU gane. Name your price. Call 843-747-FEEN. *
Female vocalise needs (1-2): guitar accompaniment now. Call 842-3582 between 5-7:30, 10-11
Need 3. tickets to Oklahoma-KU game Oct. 16
Call, Fwd: 841-781-7500 at 9:30 PM
Want to buy KU-UK DU football team. Will it pay? Yes, $359,000 per season. Will Kalamazoo Crisis Rush (465) - 386-2427 in Norman, Michigan. Will Oklahoma State (663) - 386-2427 in Stillwater, Oklahoma.
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8 Tuesday, October 5, 1976
University Daily Kansan
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2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
COOL
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.32
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
City approves airport request
Wednesdav. October 6. 1976
See story page three
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Comp staff awaits start of vacations
Staff photo by DAVE REGLER
By JERRY SEIB Staff Writer
Conversion to a new computer system meant a summer without vacations for some computation center employees, but the company will be made up beginning this month.
Paul Wolf, coordinator of the computation center, said last night that eight or 10 employees who played key roles in switching to a new system had to delay their vacations. The employees had to be on the job until April 25. Honeywell 66- and 68-IBM 760-145 computers, which were installed early this summer.
UNTIL THIS WEEK, one of the two old computers was still in operation while its programs were being transferred to the new machines. The old machine is to be brought tomorrow, Wolfe said, and employees will then be free to make up vacation time.
Wolfe said that computation center officials knew in May that some employees would have to stay on their jobs throughout the summer. At that time, he said, three or four of the employees already had made vacation requests.
ONLY ONE OF the employees had received tentative approval of summer vacation dates, Wolfe said. That employee gave a few days of his scheduled vacation, he said, but had to return to work for an important phase of the conversion.
Wolfe said that no employees lost vacation time because of the computer change.
RON OLIVER, systems programer in the computation center, said he had made his request for a vacation in February, and had been given oral approval for a vacation in June. He said he was told in early May that he couldn't have a June vacation.
Oliver, who has submitted his resignation at the computation center, said he took his
"I just went," he said. "I didn't have permission."
planter in front of the photo-finishing outlet in the Malls Shopping Center, 23rd and Louisiana streets, after they picked the pictures up. Lutz and Morrison had jogged KU to the shopping center for the pictures.
Photo finish
As an unclassified employee, Oliver is entitled to 22 days of vacation each year. He must work at least 150 hours a week.
OLIVER SAID the delay in his vacation was "the last straw" in his decision to quit his job. He said other factors were involved in his decision.
three two women wasted no time in finding a place to examine their long-wasted snapshots. Margie Lutz,仑达a freshman at the University of Arizona, found the
"There have been times this summer when the operations staff was operating three machines, without enough staff for one," he said.
Campus police say guns needed
Staff Writer
By DARYL COOK
Officers of the University of Kansas police department have always worn sidearms and will continue to do so, in spite of the rate of violent crime on the KU campus.
"We have a responsibility to be an active police force for the campus," Major Bob Ellison of the KU police department said. "We need to have an obligation to protect property and life."
"We attempt to keep a low profile on our weaponry, but if the situation arises and if we are wrong, we can warn."
Ellison said he had met few students who had objections to police wearing sidearms, and he thought most students viewed the police as necessary equipment for police work.
THE 34 officers of the KU police force are armed with handguns that can use car-
trigids no larger than .38-caliber specials, Ellison said. The officers buy the guns themselves and the most common brands used are Smith and Wesson and Coll.
KU police also carry 12-gauche pump shotguns in the patrol cars. These are standard equipment for any law enforcement officer that helps with road blockades, he said.
However, the KU police keep the shotguns in cases away from public view, Ellison said, unlike the Lawrence police department, which keeps its shotguns in an upright position in the front seat of the patrol cars for immediate access.
ELLISON SAID that the only time KU police officers were officially allowed to use weapons was when there was a clear and present danger to the officer's or someone
In other situations, such as traffic stops, KU police aren't allowed to move toward
their guns or to use them in a threatening manner. he said.
Ellison said that the KU police were responsible for patrolling the main campus areas, which include classroom buildings and residence and scholarship halls.
KU police have had no cause recently to use their weapons, as there have been no violent crimes on the KU campus in the past two years. Ellison said.
However, there have been 174 cases of assault and six robberies reported to the KU police department during that period. Ellison said, most of which were dealt with by KU police who were patrolling the campus.
OTHER AREAS where students are housed, such as fraternities, sororities and apartment buildings, are patrolled by Lawrence police.
However, KU police actually have a larger patrol area than the KU campus,
because they help the Lawrence police and the County Sheriff's department answer questions.
Ellison said that helping the other Lawrence police agencies created an
contrary to popular beliefs enhanced by television that police casualties occur while investigating violent crimes, Ellison said, "we face a greater danger while patrols."
THE IRREGULAR patrol pattern and the increasing rate of crime in the Lawrence area combine to create a job that always requires potential for confronting violent situations.
"We don't know what the guy is like when we pull him over," he said. "Most officers are killed in routine operations, such as stopping someone to tell him his tail lights are out or pulling someone over for speeding."
State fire marshal finds more violations
By DARYL COOK
Staff Write
Eight fraternities and one scholarship hall were inspected recently by the Kansas State Fire Marshal's office and none are completely in compliance with the fire state code.
One KU fraternity has no fire alarm
★ ★
They are the fire code instructions reported by the state fire marshal at its inspection from *sight KU*
DELTA TAU DELTA, 111. W. 118. Sf. An approved fire alarm system connected with an access control panel should be installed. Halls and exit signs should be property identified and listed. Alarm systems should be sealed with a fire resistant material. Electrical
sealed with fire resistant material. electrical wiring should be improved to meet the fire code standards. LAMBDA CHI ARIAA 250mm with regard to safety and regularly and evacuation plans posted. Halls and stairways should be sufficiently
DELTA TRETA, 1821 Edigedi. Salaries are based on the system should be installed. Fire drills should be regular and provided fire alarm system should be installed with a smoke detector that is regularly checked and evaluation plans should be posted. The system should be regular and evacuation plans should be posted.
PH KAPPA FHP, 1602 W. 153rd Street. A smoke detector on the second floor of the building. App approved emergency exit lighting in stairways and hallways.
GRAFM ALIA EPIONH, 180 W. Campus Head, Ansonville, FL 32679. GRAFM ALIA EPIONH, 180 W. Campus Head, Ansonville, FL 32679. Single sensor system and an autonomous lower watercraft. The GRAFM ALIA EPIONH is designed for underwater navigation.
The fire escape on the side west must all the way to the ground. Fire prifs should be regular and evacuation plans used.
An exit light should be installed on the southwest fire door and the exit sign should be removed from the northwest fire door.
SIGMA PHI EPSONISM
To be installed with a smoke detector system and an auxiliary power source, Halls and exit signs should be properly identified. The sensor panels of the Vending machines should be removed from the butter
Evaluation procedures should be posted and fire drills should be held regularly. Fire extinguishers should be mounted on the building.
TOWN VISION HALL, 1921 Sewickley Avenue. EATEN YARD, 1921-23 Ninth Street. (The horizontal bar is pushed against) should be attached to the wall of the building. The windows are located there.
Candidates set strategy for debate
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Like gamblers studying their cards, President Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter spent last night weighing how blunt they can be in their foreign affairs face-off tonight without inviting international misunderstanding of U.S. policy.
The two contenders for the presidency meet in the second of their three debates, at 8:30 CDT in this city's Palace of Fine Arts. The networks will broadcast the confrontation.
Foreign diplomats by the score will cable home their interpretations of Ford and Carter positions on international affairs and national defense. As important to the candidates are the American voters who carry their own impressions to the polls.
Carter, who boned up in seclusion at the Sheraton Palace Hotel, said he'll be more direct in his attack on Ford than he was during their first debate on Sept. 23. He has indicated that he expects the President to be more forthright, too.
Debate Project Director Jim Karayan of the League of Women Voters, which is sponsoring the debates, announced that the third and last presidential debate of 1978 was the CTX Oct. 22 in the Phi Kappa Beta bupahip and Mary College in Williamsburg, Va.
The third debate will cover general topics. The first, at the Walnut Street Theater in Philadelphia, focused on domestic affairs.
A site for the Oct. 15 debate between the vice presidential candidates, senators Bob Dole and Walker Mondale, hasn't been called. But it could be a per cent chance" it will be in Houston, Tex.
system and three others have systems that don't meet standards of the state fire code, according to reports released yesterday by the state fire marshal's office in Toekena.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, 1301 W Campus Road, doesn't have a fire alarm system, although Kurt Kippes, president and Shawnee Mission junior, said yesterday that a smoke detector system had been ordered.
"THEE NEVER HAS been one in the four years I've lived here and if there was one before that, I didn't know about it," Kienes said.
Phi Gamma Delta, Signa Phi Epion and Delta Tau Delta fraternities don't have fire alarm systems that meet state fire code standards.
Paul Markley, state fire protection technical adviser, said the alarms used by the three fraternities were outdated and not in use. They barely warm those in all parts of the buildings.
Earlier inspection reports stated that none of KU's 12 sororities were in complete compliance with the fire code, but that all 12 had fire alarm systems. The fire code infractions in the sorority buildings are being monitored by the sororites, which control their finances.
UNDER STATE LAW, the fraternities and sororites have 30 days to give a written response to the fire marshal's office about their plans for a planned arrest and 90 days to make the corrections.
However, Markley said that the fire marshal's office would consider each of the fraternity's financial obligations in meeting deadlines before bringing legal action against them.
"Our main concern is making the homes safe for people." Marklev said.
But, Markley added, corrections of the traiteness prevention infractions were overruled.
"NOBODY FEELS as if they could have a fire in their home," Markley said. "Sometimes it takes a tragedy like the one at Baldwin to get some people motivated.
"It's very easy to be apathetic about fires."
Markley referred to the fire in Baldwin in August that gutted the Kappa Sigma fraternity house there and killed five of the fraternity members.
See FIRE page five
Polls open today for student races
Voting begins today to elect six student Senators from Nunenaker College, freshman class officers and members of the College Assembly.
Polls will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow on the floor of Wescoe Hall, the 2nd floor of Harperfield Hall and in the Kansas Union.
Students also may vote from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. tonight at Kappa Sigma and Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternities, Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Ellsworth, Lewis, Oliver and Gerritude Pearson-Corbin residence balls
Students must have their KU-ID's to vote.
"we expect a good turnout with all of the candidates running," Benita Bock, chairman of the Senate Elections Committee, said yesterday.
She said that 1,500 students voted last fall, and that she expected more to vote this fall.
As soon as the committee has counted the votes Thursday night, she said, the results will be given to the senate. "We'll just go to the Senate office door in the Union."
Bicentennial groups seek $1,126 for wagon train bill
By JIM COBB
Staff Writer
The bill is for a 25-hour stay of the Bicentennial Wagon Train Pilgrimage in KU-A O-Zone parking lot at the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission. County Bicentennial Commission, which originally received the bill, voted last Thursday to invite the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission and the KU Bicentennial Committee to meet to discuss
Representatives of three local Bicentennial groups will meet tomorrow afternoon to try to find runs to pay a $1,128.78 bill from the University of Kansas.
The county group's executive committee, after hearing explanations of the bill from Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, and Max Lucas, chairman of the faculties planning, agreed to try to make payment.
THE COUNTY group has about $5,000 in its account, of which about $5,000 is owed for publications expenses, Julie Hack, the secretary, said yesterday. Cleenice Hill, county Bicentennial commission chairman, said some small expenses also would be to have paid from the $1,000 that remained.
hoped to spend its remaining funds for special Bicentennial projects, including locating a Bicentennial bell near the county's new law enforcement building at 11th and New Hampshire
THE KU BICENTENNIAL Committee can lend even less support to payment. This group doesn't have any budget and served only to coordinate bicentennial events. Mary Lou Reece, Scandia senior and member of the Bicentennial executive committee, said.
Joan Moffet, cochairman of the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission, said that almost all that group's $2,000 account had been committed to special projects for several months.
In addition, Hack and Hills said the commission
The original bill sent to the county group was $1,250.65. At Thursday's meeting, Shankel agreed that KU would waive $123.83, which was charged for the conference, during a wagon train show in Hoe auditorium.
The remaining amount is to pay overtime wages of Buildings and Grounds employees and KU Police employees.
SEVERAL MEMBERS of the county Bicentennial commission objected to payment of KU's bill, which is $175,000.
Shankel and Lucas told the commission that KU would forget the bill if it were able to do so. They said state law prohibited the University from having students overtime during events not affiliated with KU.
wagon train to Lawrence and that they hadn't been told far in advance what KU would charge for let-away baggage.
Members of the county group finally voted to pay the bill, which they had received in May, after Shankar said that University employees who had worked during the wagon train visit had not been seen.
HILLS RE-EMPHASIZED yesterday that the county bicentennial commission hadn't known how much KU's charges would be until a few days before the planned visit.
"We had to continue with the plans because there was no feasible alternative," she said.
The county group's funding is based on county tax revenue. More funds might become available, Hills said, when deliquent taxes are paid. However, she said, the commission couldn't count on getting more
Moffet said that after tomorrow's meeting the city Bientenian group probably would convene a
special meeting to decide whether to try to find funds to help pay the bill. The 25-member committee must deal on all expenditures, which will be decided by a vote of the bill at Thursday's meeting of the three groups.
THE WAGON TRAIN visit was actually a county project, Mefet said. She said she didn't know what the county group wanted to ask the city's commission to do about the bill.
The Lawrence Bicentennial group might have been asked to participate because the wagon train stopped here, she said. But, she said, it also stopped in Baldwin City.
Some local people think KU is a large institution
REPRESENTATIVES OF some of these groups objected to payment of the bill at last Thursday's meeting. Halls said the groups probably would be reluctant to help pay it, even if they had available
Hills said she didn't know why the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission had been asked to contribute to paying the bill, if other community Bicentennial commissions hadn't been asked to help. There are local Bicentennial groups in Baldwin City, Eudora, Clinton and Clinton.
with many resources, yet it can't come forward to help. Hills said. She has mixed feelings about the
"There's a sense of responsibility to pay the bill and get it over with. But yet these institutions have become so inflexible and unable to respond to the public that supports them," she said.
SIE ADDED, however that Shankel and Lacuna had effectively presented the University's case to
"I hope we can avoid this kind of problem in the future," Hills said. "Our commission's responsibilities are nearly over. But the University is in a position to many opportunities to deal with the community."
She said she hoped the University could deal with the community without billing it.
"and we known flatty that it was going to cost $1,250, we probably would have withdrawn our offer of sponsorship," she said. "We were in over our heads as far as our arms, but there was absolutely no money."
Representative of the three Bicentennial groups will meet at 3 p.m. tomorrow in room 202 of Central Campus.
2
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Mayaquez action criticized
WASHINGTON - U.S. Marines were ordered to rescue the Mayaguez crew from a Caribbean island despite reports indicating the crew was no longer there, a
White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen, defending the actions of Pres. Gerald Ford, said, "We disagree with that conclusion
"The President carried out the actions in the Mayaguez case and believed they were right."
The report by the General Accounting Office said U.S. jet pilots had accurately reported seeing all or most of the Mayaguez crew on a fishing boat off the island. But it said U.S. commanders relied instead on an inaccurate report that the crew was on the island.
The U.S. Marine assault May 15, 1975, on Koh Tang to rescue the ship and crew seized by Cambodian gunboats three days earlier 18 Marines dead or missing; 23 Air Force men involved in the mission were killed in a helicopter crash two days earlier.
UAW. Ford reach accord
DETROIT (AP) — The United Auto Workers and strike-bound Ford Motor Co. are demanding that the union keep driving a four-day work week for the union's long-range drive toward a four-day work week.
Announcement of a settlement on a new three-year accord was made in a statement by President Leonardo de la Vega, almost three weeks to the hour after Ford warned that their jobless
No details of the settlement were disclosed pending ratification by members.
However, sources close to the talks have said key provisions include 13 additional paid days off over three years, wage hikes averaging 3 per cent a year, continuation of the current cost-of-living wage adjustment formula and improved fringe benefits.
The strike is almost certain to last another seven to 10 days, however, because of the UAW's ratification process, and it could be another few days beyond that before the auto maker's 62 assembly and manufacturing plants resume normal operations.
Fallout dusts eastern U.S.
WASHINGTON—Slight radioactive fallouts from a recent atomic explosion are sprinkling parts of the eastern United States, but a federal nuclear agency is investigating the source.
Reports of fallout came from federal and state agencies in at least seven states: pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, South Carolina, Maryland, Delaware and California.
Michigan authorites reported a small rise in environmental radioactivity probably caused by the Chinese blast.
Senate staffer quits after faked hearings
WASHINGTON (AP)—The staff director of a Senate Appropriations subcommittee has resigned after disclosure that a series of budget-billion budget was based were never held.
Aides said the director, Harley Dirkens, submitted his resignation in a letter to Sen. Warren Magnuson, D-Wash., chairman of the labor and health, education and welfare.
Columnist Jack Anderson disclosed several weeks ago that the printed record of a series of subcommittee hearings last winter on the proposed budgets for the federal labor and health, education and welfare were faked—that the hearings were never held.
In addition, the transcripts were sprinkled with occasional remarks in an apparent attempt to make it seem the hearings were actually held.
As it turned out, the 4,500 pages of transcript contained printed testimony submitted by witnesses and written remarks by members of the subcommittee.
At one point, for example, the transcript has Magnuson calling a subcommittee session to order and welcoming several witnesses.
Magnuson was on his way to Seattle yesterday and couldn't be reached for comfort.
A Manuson aide, however, said the senator had accepted Dirk's resignation. Dirks gave personal reasons for quitting, and he admitted that he had to do with the so-called phony hearing.
Dirks, in a letter to subcommittee members June 30, said that changes in the way hearings testimony was handled had allowed printers to prepare a full transcript of hearings and make it available to members and their staffs in near-record time.
Mondale raps Nixon pardon
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(AP)—Democratic vice president candidate Sen. Walter Presley said yesterday that the timing of President Obama's visit to Nixon for Watergate crimes "made a mockery of the notion that in America, there is no sovereign who stands above the unlawful."
He told an audience at the University of Missouri at Kansas City law school: "That pardon was issued with no accountability, no official listing of crimes and no means of determining the specific offenses involved."
The Minnesota senator emphasized that he won't blamish President Ford for the killing of Senator Richard Burr.
The speech marked the first time that Mondale had spoken at length on the campaign trail about the Nixon pardon, a subject that Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter had said he wouldn't make a cammaim issue.
Instead, he said, he was attacking the weakness of leadership in *Ford*'s handling of the parishioner's demands in a time when the White House, by Nixon's hand, from the White House, and Ford's response to disclosures of illegal actions and other crimes by the FBI and various intelligence agencies.
The senator stressed that it was the timing of the pardon to which he objected, and was denied. The senator said:
ended the actions of Richard Nixon, long after it was obvious to many members of his own party, as well as most of the American government and administration was obstructing justice."
Teacher, Ford led the fight to prevent the first investigation of the Watergate break-in, a probe by the House Banking Committee. Mr. Ford "to the bitter end, strongly def-
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AMERICA'S FAVORITE PIZZA
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Mon.-Fri.
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$1.89
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The Magnuson subcommittee has jurisdiction over the second largest appropriation bill in the federal government. The $6.1-billion version for the 12 months last week over President Gerald Ford's veto. Hearings weren't legally required.
SUA FILMS
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Dirks is reputed to be one of the most able, and most powerful, aides in the budget handled by his subcommittee over the budget handled by his subcommittee often was referred to as Sen. Dirks.
CLASSICAL SERIES
FILMS OF THE MAYSLES BROS
Oct. 6, 9
SALEMAN (1988)
Dir. Mayes Bross and
Charlotte Zwein.
Documentary
CHRISTO'S ALLEY CURTAIN
Mr. Mayes Bross and
Charlotte Zwein.
Wed., Oct. 6, 7; 3:00
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FILM SOCIETY
GIMME SHELTER (1970)
Gimme, Gimme, Gimme, with the
Rolling Stones, with the
Tina Turner, Jefferson Airplane
and WHAT'S HAPPENING! THE
BEATLES IN THE U.S.A. (1964)
The Beatles, in Paris, in 1964.
Thurs., Oct. 7, 9:00 & 11:30, $1
POPULAR FILMS
GREY GARDENS (1976)
Gregory Gardens, a children's playhouse with Edith Bovier Beale and daughter Edie. A non-fiction film with Edith Bovier and 9 & 3: 30; 7: 50; 9: 30; 5: 10
Wanna get high & get down?
Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union
Room to rent?
Advertise it in the Kansan.
864-4358.
Sky Dive!
KU Sky Diving Club
Oct. 7 at 9 p.m.
in the International Room of the Kanax Union. For further information, in advance at 841-4704.
Beginners welcome.
REMINDER:
The KU Backgammon Club meets every day, at 7 p.m. Oread Road University Union, before 7:00 to play in the tournament.
BRING YOUR BOARDS
SUBMARINE
THE SUBMARINE
a nice place
happening in Lawrence
OPEN LATE
EVERY NIGHT
mon - thurs.
till 11:30
fri., sat.
till 1:30
sun.
till 10:30
JUST WEST OF THE XΩ FOUNTAIN
OPEN LATE EVERY NIGHT
1420Crescent
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STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS FALL 1976-77
6 Nunemaker Senators, Freshman Class Officers College Assembly
★
VOTE
★
Wednesday, October 6 and Thursday,October 7
POLLING PLACES
$ \star $ October 6 and 7
8 a.m.—5 p.m.
Union—South Foyer
Wescoe—West End of 4th Floor
Summerfield—2nd Floor
O
Ev
TOI
small
at 1 p
HALL
2:30 p
SOCC
Colleg
Comp
October 6 (only)
5 p.m.—6:30 p.m.
Kappa Sigma Fraternity
Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity
Kappa Alpha Thota Sorority
Ellsworth Hall
Lewis Hall
Oliver Hall
G.S.P.—Corbin
JOH anthro von I conduu Augus mus
GR
An
All i reside young Monst Murp to sim their
★ You need your KU I.D. to vote. Paid for by Student Activity Fee
Wednesday, October 6.1976
3
University Daily Kansan
On Campus
Events
TODAY: KU-Y'5 ISSUES AND IDEAS small group discussion on Marxism meets at 1 p.m. in 11B of the Kansas Union. A HALLMARK ART LECTURE begins at 2:30 p.m. in Wendydor Auditorium. The KU Y'5 series begins at College at 4 p.m. at the Shenek Reinforcement Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. SUA WRITERS SERIES hosts Tom Averill, who will read from his fiction works at 4:pm in the Union's Regionalist Room. SOCIETY WORKSHOP at 4:30 p.m. in 332 Malott Hall. Thomas Armstrong professor of physics and astronomy, will lecture on "A Tale of Two Planets," a preview of coming NASA projects. ROBERT SchMALZ, of the department of geosciences, Penn State University, is to present a paper titled "Evaporation, Sulfides or Petroleum," at 4:30 p.m. in 428 Lindley Hall.
TONIGHT: CAMPUS VETERANS meet at 5 in the Union's Cork Two Room. The SUA SPECIAL EVENTS committee meets at 5:30 in the Union's Governor Room. STUDENT SENATE meets at 6:30 in the Union's National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws, meets at 7 in the Union's Welcome Room. SUA BRIDGE CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Pine Room. CAMPUS CHRISTIANS meet at 7 in the Union's Jayhawk Room. SUA BACKGAMMON CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Creed and CREED ON YOUR YOUTH DISCIMINATION meets at 7:30 pm in the Union's Parlor C.
TOMORROW: The ALL-SCHOLARSHIP HALL COUNCIL meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room. As chapter of UNIVERSITY ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS meetings at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Kansas Room. Dan Adler of the national AUAP办公室; Joel Holmes of the university; and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, as to discuss financial exigency.
Grants and Awards
JOHN JANZEN, associate professor of anthropology, has received an Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellowship to conduct research from December 1976 to August 1977 in German and French museums and archives.
Announcements
All interested KU students and Lawrence residents may try out for the KU opera for young people, "Malaiole and the Fear Monster," at 7 p.m. tomorrow in 328 Murray area noon to midnight will be asked our army to join us and to provide their own accompanist.
City acts on airport improvements
By CAROL LUMAN
After a 10-year struggle, the city has decided to act on a plan to expand and improve its water services.
Staff Writer
The city commission last night authorized the city manager to submit a preliminary application for funds to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) that, if approved would contribute 90 per cent of funding funds for the airport improvements.
The city would pay the remaining cost. Funding for the purchase of the land on which the airport line has been the stumbling block to its development, provements in the past. The land is owned by the Kansas University Endowment and is leased to the city for one dollar a year.
THE CITY TRIED through two bond elections to raise money for purchase of the hospital.
And, until recently, the land had to be owned by a public governing body (in this case either the city or the University) to qualify for the FAA funds.
A recent change in FAA funding regulations allows the FAA monies to be applied toward improving facilities and the purchase of privately owned land.
The Endowment Association is a private corporation separate from KU, and has an annual income of $4 million.
Jack Harris, chairman of the Airport Committee of the Citizens Advisory Council, presented a report to the commission immediate action on the airport question.
WITH AIRPORTS across the country competing for FAA funds, any delay by the city could endanger its chances for getting the funds, the report said.
After submitting the preliminary application to the FAA, the commission probably will meet with University and KU Endowment Association administrators to discuss cooperation among the groups on improvement and future land ownership.
In other action, the commission authorized a change in the city code relating to street lighting.
A recent problem arose when patrons of
Fall budget tops Senate agenda
The major order of business for the
sales team is to忘会 will be discussion of
[all bags, lettuce]
Last week the Senate Fall Budget Committee heard requests for funding from campus organizations and set its allocation recommendations. The committee will
present its recommendations tonight to the Senate.
A petition to the chancellor requesting additional library funds will be presented to the Senate. The petition requests money for the salaries of student library employees.
Shenanigan's, a discotheque at Ninth and Mississippi streets, urinated on lawns in the neighborhood. The city attorney discovered law specifically deals with that problem.
MIKE WILDGEN, assistant city manager, recommended that the company address noisy behavior and offensive behavior, rather than just noisy behavior. The insertion of 'offensive' would enable the city to deal with complaints as urinating in public, Wildeen said.
Concerning a related matter, commissioners Barkley Clark and Carl Mibbe said they had observed the behavior at Shemangant's disco Friday night and were able to manage the management had been able to solve the problems some neighbors had complained about.
William Ingo Memorial Theatre presents ANATOL
by: Arthur Schnitzler
Sept. 30-Oct. 9
Tickets: 864-3982
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If you are a senior of high academic standing and
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NEW ITEMS
Bel Paese Chinese Dried Mushrooms Lily Buds Tree Ears Five Spice Powder Won Ton and Egg Roll Wrappers, Szechuan Pepper Corn
SALE GOOD OCT. 6-OCT.11
809 $ _{1/2} $ W. 23rd (Next to McDonald's)
The Stinky Cheese Shoppe
842-7434 Mon.—Sat. 10:30—6:00 Thurs. 'til 7:30
---
FEW CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS NEED $100
Taco Tico is holding their Annual Burrito Eating Contest Thursday, October 28th at 5 P.M. So far only 13 organizations have entered contestants in the hope of winning either the $100.00 1st prize or the $50.00 2nd prize. In the Women's Division, we have no entries at all. If your organization wants to try for the cash, stop by Taco Tico and register your entrant. The remaining spots will be filled on a 1st come 1st served basis.
BURRITOS FOR EVERYONE
BUY 1 GET 1 FREE
All day the 28th. (No coupon required) BITE THE BURRITO WITH YOUR BUDDY.
ALSO DRAFT BEER DRAWS 25c PITCHERS $1.25
TACO
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1 2 3 4 5 6
1 2 3 4 5 6
4
Wednesday, October 6, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
Conservatism shocking
Polls are weird creatures. I thought that I had figured out how the majority of students at the University of Kansas planned to vote when, all of a sudden, a poll by my own newspaper, the Kansan, the bushes and scares the hell out of me.
Maybe the fright is unwarranted. A poll is, after all, just a sampling. Not all of the 24,000 students were questioned, and not all of them answered. Does the poll accuracy within 6 per cent
WHAT SCARES me is that 48.4 per cent of the students in yesterday's poll said that they were going to vote for Ford. I had thought Jimmy Carter, who won a large majority of respondents, would win by a large majority in a liberal University town.
After all, if the 1972 election had been decided in Lawrence, George McGovern would be President and no one would care if Jimmy Carter was raising peanuts or posing in the nude for Playgirl.
College students are supposed to be liberal. They aren't suppose to even pretend to like a conservative like Jerry Winnery or there is that poll, shattering that theory.
ONE THING the poll did do was support the idea that most college
students aren't Republicans or Democrats, but are independents. Almost 44 per cent of the students polled they didn't belong to either major PRIKY.
However, the poll did blow another theory of mine. I had thought that the independents would lean to Carter or my favorite. Gene McCarthy.
No such luck. About 41 per cent of the independents said they favored Ford and only 23 per cent said they leaned toward Carter.
THAT POLL really stunned me. I had thought that there had been a little drift toward the right among students here since 1972, but not enough of a shift to give a Republican a solid plurality of the vote.
Maybe the poll means that KU students have swung around the political circle and are now mainly conservatives. Maybe.
I'm not willing to say that just yet. The poll did have flaws. Right now I am inclined to ignore the poll and go back to my own theories of how college students will vote. I may be setting myself up for a big disappointment when the Douglas County election returns are analyzed, but I doubt it. **By Carl Young**
Contributing Writer
Last weekend I thumbed through the 1970 edition of the Jayhawker yearbook. Like all young guys, I had a few chuckles about the way things were. The guys' crew cuts in group photos brought a few grims, and so did it with his skirts and patent leather boots.
But there was nothing comical about the seven pages of copy devoted to the turmoil that rocked this campus during the spring of that year. Here, at Alabama College, Mr. Hoffman of the Chicago Seven blew his nose on an American flag in Allen Field House, a professor said Chancellor E. Lawrence Chalmers displayed "physical courage" when he spoke to most of the student body. In August 2014, Memorial Stadium and David Awbrey, student body president, was arrested for a curfew violation.
BIGGER NEWS was made when the Kansas Union burned, the Kansas National Guard was pressed into duty in the area of 12th and Oread streets and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation thought to possibly the possibility that "outside agitators" were on campus.
I was just a ninth grade in Pittsburgh junior high school when "campus unrest" was making the news, I suppose I heard about what was going on up here, but I had more im-
These are the good old days
KUAC fumbles off field
To most people suffering through enrollment this fall, the new student football ticket system seemed a little silly.
THE SILLINESS didn't stop there.
I arrived at the stadium about
Staff Writer
Confused students had to fumble through a stack of computer cards, buy a small sticker for their KU-ID cards, trudge down to Allen Field House the next week and stand in a long line while the same student gets an enrollment was dragged out again. Only then did they get that small, red season ticket.
As 1 painfully discovered Saturday, the student who is forgetful enough to leave his KUID at home when going to a gym bare bars himself anew to the things and arrows of the system.
By JERRY SEIB
1 p.m. Saturday, Having been previously trained to enter Memorial Stadium only at the gate below the section in which my seat is located, I dutifully approached Gate 34.
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 provided their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
My driver's license bears a nice, full-color picture of me, for which I paid the State of California just such an occasion. My driver's license also bears my signature, which, strangely enough, exactly matches the one I received as a positive that I am me, I thought.
Wrong. The attendant at Gate 34 informed me that he couldn't let me in without a KU-ID. He said I would have to go to Window 15 to get the matter resolved.
GATE 24 is on the east side of Memorial Stadium. Window 15 is, of course, on the west side. I turned back and saw the seeshore end of the stadium, I turned the logic of the system over in my mind. It got a little messy.
When I paid for my ticket at enrollment, I went to great pains to prove that I was KU played against me on my fees in full, that I was member in good standing of the junior class and that I loved Nolan Cromwell. I was rewarded with a small sicker shirt and a wristband. That paid for a football ticket. I signed it to prove it was mine.
gotten that little sticker, I wouldn't have gotten a football ticket.
The sticker entitled me to pick up my football ticket at the field house. If I hadn't paid my fees and paid for my football ticket, I wouldn't have gotten that little stick. And if I hadn't
BUT I had a football ticket in my hand. If I have a ticket, I got that little sticker on my KU-ID. And if I have a ticket in my hand, what difference does it make if I have that little sticker.
And if it doesn't matter whether I have that little sticker on my KU-ID, what purpose does my KU-ID serve at Gate 34 other than to identify me? And if its only purpose is to identify me, why shouldn't my driver's license do just as well?
Window 15 put a stop to such musings. Here I was told that I would have to pay $2.50 to get into the game. I was assured I could get my money back later in the ticket office.
THAT WAS just about half of the $20 I paid for the entire season ticket. As any of my
friends can attest, the days I carry $8.25 in cash are few and far between.
But I had made a timely trip to the bank earlier in the week. I flipped the money onto the desk and touched its vengeance as I could muster.
Had it not been such a hot day, and had my apartment not been such a long walk from the park, I would have withheld the money. 88.25 in protest.
portant things to worry about, like remembering my locker combination. As I now recall, the news was devastating to my parents. They couldn't believe that KU could have fallen victim to the criminal schemes of what they thought could be no defense, a handful of hoodlums imported from one of the coasts.
AND HAD our team been the caliber of K-State's, I might have forgotten the rest of the season as well. But we are, after all, undefeated. I gave in to the system.
I guess the Kansas University Athletic Corporation realized I would. Try as they might to drive away students — and they must know that each of them they must know that a winning football team brings complaining students into the fold every time.
People who were in school here during 1970 tell me they weren't really afraid. There was a good deal of tension, they say, but no one actually feared that he would get shot going to class. Tension, however, made it difficult to communicate with people you didn't know. No one knows what you're feeling. That sort of tension just doesn't exist at KU now. We crowd into buses, share tables at Wescoe Terrace and jog after dinner, never questioning the
KU'S PROBLEMS that spring, especially the burning of
WELL, THAT was quite a while ago. I'm in my fourth year here, and I've yet to know what is happening in the world like or to wonder who put the
Mary Ann Daugherty Contributing Writer
seemed to have taken a back seat to other crusades. The most important crusade now seems to be a private one for each student. Being able to get a handshake than jumping on a bandwagon to save the world and, in the process, destroying it.
THE UNIVERSITY is no longer the place for expanding radical philosophy, breeding subversives and underscoring wonders or understory problems right with the way we live. Many still want to challenge timeless problems, but people have seen the wisdom of within existing social and political change.
PERHAPS events like those that took place here in spring 1970 are cyclical. Maybe the Union will burn again and maybe national guardsm will have to forfeit a free weekend. But if history is any indicator, we don't need restless weeks and people will get on to writing their term papers and cramming for tests.
We don't have to worry about one day sending our kids to KU--not if we can pass them our notions that college is the place to get an education and not to combat all mankind. In fact, we will be happy we can have to worry about is that one day someone will look back on us and laugh at our overalls and painter's paints.
the Union, troubled them deeply. It was always assumed that I would attend KU, but suddenly, my parents were here, sending me here. Surely there were other schools in towns where people didn't flink spiked boards in the paths of police cars or drop Molotov cocktails on them, more deadly than gum wrappers.
These fears were real to my parents and many others who sent children to KU in the years following spring 1970. Sure, the school year was gradually ceased, but parents remembered what had hap-
bullet holes in the rear of some fire truck. I guess there is a lot I haven't known at KU. I haven't even been to the police, duty policemen working up to 20 hours straight or students trying to take over the chancellor's office. To tell the truth, I don't think I've missed
When I look back on these years at KU, I realize I am here during a profitable era for both students and the University. By the time I arrived, the turmoil was gone, but I remember antwar sentimentations don't burn deeply in the minds of those on campus and such concerns
Lie isn't perfect at KU in 1976. We still have our problems. Questions we come up are often about whether University Events Committee is illegally restricting free speech, and we have our running battles over what the price of a season football will be. But these are little compared to what has gone before.
existence of some radical Bogie Man.
NUOVA MEMORIA
NUOVA MEMORIA
NUOVA MEMORIA
© 1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES
"Put it over in Fiction."
Reader tells all to confront Moonies
To the Editor:
While walking down Massachusetts St. the other day, I was approached by a smiling teenage boy with a basket of flowers. He held a camera and gave them out as an expression of love and asking for a donation to support his church group. I had to ask what group before he admitted it was the money he had saved from taxes, he said, went toward spreading love and "The Word."
I confronted him with the facts that Reverend Moon had personally absorbed millions of the church's funds and had invested in New York real estate, Washington banks, and
and funnelled large sums to the South Korean dictator, Chung Hye Park. I also mentioned that his flower children followers had been easily duped and asked him to refrain without-question. He said that news stories about Moon had been distorted by un-Christian reporters who had not witnessed this discipline of God in action. I subjectively observed that he was full of shit, and he ran away.
I walked on and met a couple of people who had accepted the Moonie's flower gift, one for a 75 cent "donation," the other for a gift that connected the smiling boy's pleas for church aid to Moonie.
are you so concerned about freshman-sophomore politics? I know who I am and I also am a coach. You are a teammate. Horse Rally. The only dif-
Smith was unable to supervise this event because she was busy sipping cider in the Kansas City area. Clearly, the University exists to
money, Caryl Smith couldn't get paid.
THEY SEEM TO HAVE
PREJECTED OUR PROPOSAL FOR
A TWO-YEAR TRANSITION TO
MAJORITY RULE. WHAT'S OUR
NEXT MOVE?
FEETS,
DO YOUR
STUFF!
Readers Respond
I caught up with the Moonie and followed him. Whenever he approached someone with a camera, I always wondered that his organization was a
Barry M. Shallinsky
Overland Park first year law student
farce and told the potential donor where the money would go.
I walked to the police station to file a fraudulent solicitation complaint but was told there was nothing wrong. He had been on public property.
So, these flower children will continue to rake in $20 or $30 an hour from unwary people for the sacred moon stash. I suggest that anyone approached by a Mounie sassar campress them off the street. If the solicitation is made on private property, such as a shopping center parking lot, a complaint should be made to the store owner, who will gladly evict the worker when their actions are based on lies and half-truths.
Help send Moon back to Korea, preferably to Pyongyang
Ed Bolstad-Summers
Clay Center senior
Not Malott
As a member of the research group mentioned in Jerry Seib's Sept. 28 article, I would like to thank him for mentioning our work on environmental mutagenesis. We are, however, not members of the Malcolm Hall team, but we have high stop Haworth Hall in the room with all of the windows covered with brown paper.
To the Editor:
Todd Shenkenberg Lenexa senior
Rally defended To the Editor:
Who are you Peter Orazem (Kansan letter, Oct. 4), and why
ference between you and me is that I will present a more accurate appraisal.
The assumption that the beer was being used to buy votes is ludicrous for the following reasons. First, the purpose of the rally was to relay issues to freshman and sophomores, who might not be reached otherwise, and to inform atmouses. Having attended the rally I can accurately say this was accomplished. Second, nowhere in the Senate code are rallies or beer prohibited. So loosely written rules are subject to any crackpot's interpretation. Third, student government officials and rallies are an integral part of any "real" political campaign.
Knowing that you don't stay for the rally, you really have no basis for support. If you wish to launch a vigilante Campaign Ethics Committee I would suggest you look at some of the down Jayhawk Boulevard as a source of carnival atmosphere.
Daniel Sullivan
Daniel Sullivan Louisville, Kv., sophomore
I think it is my duty to admonish the University Events Committee for failing to protect students from violence before Saturday before the Wisconsin game. About noon, members of the band disturbed my Civil Procedure class, forcing the alumnus class 10 minutes early.
Of course, I realize that Caryl
Double standard
To the Editor:
satisfies the needs of parents and alumni. Otherwise, the Union would give away free cider and sweet rolls paid for with cash. They also only students are on campus. And certainly the band wouldn't have been allowed to play on Jayhawk Boulevard on an orphanage day, a vacation day, Mom and Dad wouldn't have been there to listen.
I submit, however, that by allowing music to disrupt Saturday classes, the University is defeating its long term purpose of creating more alumni. If law students are disrupted, and don't graduate, and can't become alumni, and don't drink free cider, how can they be given money? As we all know, alumni exist to be coaxed into giving money, because without their
N
Ring confess he doe salesm he cont Christe when t folding horr horr horr
New Woodstein?
To the Editor:
Thes tured o Brothe scenees retrosp docum shown a 10-year
"WH the U initial.
If Courtney Thompson is trying to be another Woodward or Bernstein, she has succeeded in imitating the style of their second book. It seems rather realistic and surrealistic faction with their personal prejudices and partialities are continually represented as a factual source of information concerning decisions of the Women's Club. The clique must be having a gay old time getting worked up for each coming story that the Karasan will snatch up. It seems absurd and unfortunate that the Karasan can find front page room for these frivolous stories that would be adequate coverage of the women's sports events.
the machiev servat
Cassie Strom
Omaha, Mab. junior
Laura Cook
Eureka senior
Margaret Cortese
Omaha, Mab. junior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 17, 2014 *Journal of Library Science* June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday; January through April; May and October; June 66444. Subscriptions by mail are $3 a semester or $18 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county.
Editor
Howe film—a much release Market the rul In " succeedem semiprint backstays staged Hard I
Debbie Gump
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
Yael Aboulahouki Jim Bates
"SAI"
sophist
nopunp
group
watch
lives.
lives. $ older
thought
Managing Editor Editorial Editor Abidabul Akhbali Campser Stewart Brann Associate Campus Editor Bill Snitler Assistant Campus Editor Michael Shaffer Chuck Alexander
The cutting siderec
Business Manager
Terry Hanson
Assistant Business Manager Google Rooster承運
Assistant Business Manager Google Rooster承運
Classified Manager Google Rozer承運
Classified Manager Google Rozer承運
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By CHUCK SACK
Ringo Starr, the Beatles's drummer, confesses that his life is moving so fast that he doesn't know what town he is in. Bible salesman Paul Brennan fights back tears as he contemplates quitting his job. The artist Christo explodes at an engineering foreman when there is a crucial delay in the uninterrupted roller coaster of Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger stares in horror at the playback of a murder in Altamont.
These electrifying moments were captured on film by the crews of the Maysles Brothers, David and Albert. All of these scenes are featured in SUA's four-day retrospective of the Maysles Brothers' best documentaries. The four films that will be shown tonight and tomorrow evening cover a 10-year period.
"WHAT'S HAPPENING? The Beaches in
initial American tour. In many ways it is
University Daily Kansan
the most conventional of the four film,
to be observed through careful observation of the quartet.
Review
However, the cinema vertie style of the film—an unnarrated documentary—was much more unusual when the film was first released than it is today. Now, documentaries like Chris Marker, Donn Pennebaker and others are the rule, rather than the exception.
In "What's Happening," the Maysles succeeded in capturing the harried, semiprimate existence of the tour backstage, and the resulting portrait is much more intricate and revealing than the original. Rustier Richard Lester's "A Hard Day's Night."
"SALESMAN" (1969) is a more sophisticated nonfiction film. Dealing with nonpublic personalities, the film follows a group of door-to-door Bible salesmen, watching the men give their pitches and reporting the quiet desperation of their customers to the older Irishman, who begins to have second thoughts about his occupation.
The use of non-synch sound and cross-cutting between separate events is considered appropriate.
pursists. More disturbing, though, is the possibility that the presence of the filmmakers was the catalyst for not the recorder of Brennan's decision.
IN "GIMME SHELTER" (1970) the moral question of the filmmakers' responsibility takes a more immediate form. The camera inadvertently recorded a fatal stabbing at the disastrous Rolling Stone案件, and this highlight have been a gross exploitation of the tragedy. Instead, the Maysles employ the ingenious device of flimming the
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Politicians' clumps constantly on hane.
group's reactions when they see the murder replayed later.
In all three of these films the Maysles explore the tensions between the ideal and the day-to-day reality of their subjects' lives. The Beattes are shown sandwiched between their carefree antics onstage and the loneliness of their fam-imposed isolation. Paul Bramlet balances a sales conversation against the prudence of trying to sell a $90 Bill of people who can't afford it. Unable to control the crowd or the Hell's Angels,
ONLY IN "CHRISTI'S WEB Curtain" (873) on the website that treat a subject where the actual act is unknown to the actor.
Mick Jagger confronts the havoc brought on by his public image.
In documentary, the process is reversed. The achievement of the Maysles Brothers is that in working with reality, they are able to discover their own visions. How well these visions coincide with truth is for the individual viewer to decide. But as these four films attest, the result is both exciting and artistic.
Fire violations
Since the fire, the state fire marshal's office has been inspecting fraternity and sorority houses on college campuses in Kansas.
From page one
The 14 remaining KU fraternities will be inspected this month. Marklev said.
. . .
THE ALPHA PHI Alpha fraternity was being remodeled when state fire officials came to inspect it and will be inspected later, Markley said.
SEVERAL OF THE fraternities didn't had their fire extinguishers tested or conducted fire drills regularly, according to the fire marshal's report.
The fire marshal's office recommended that five of the fraternities, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Kappa Pi, Delta Tau Delta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Gamma
Delta, add smoke detectors to their fire alarm systems.
In its September meeting, the Council of Presidents, comprising chancellors and presidents of the six state-supported colleges and universities, selected Chan Dykes for the Dykes for the committee. Dykes asked Chankel to represent him on the committee.
Other members are Roger Lowe, vice president for business affairs at Wichita State University, and John Marr, professor of mathematics at Kansas State University. They will meet for the first time Oct. 14 in Topeka.
Shankel to study insurance plans
THE COMMITTEE will consider liability insurance policies that might be purchased jointly by the six state schools: the University of Kansas, K-State, WSU, Fort
Some fire prevention equipment in some of the fraternity houses was outdated,
Strips of metal on fire doors that melt at high temperatures and allowed the doors to close completely, called fusible links, were asked to be removed from fire doors in the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house, Markley said.
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, is one of three members of a committee to examine liability insurance policies for Board of Regents schools.
Hays State College, Kansas State College at Pittsburg and Emporia Kansas State College. A single policy would be purchased to protect faculty, staff and administrators in lawsuits stemming from their academic work.
KU employees voted twice this spring in favor of the purchase of liability insurance. The second vote was taken after the company that proposed the policy, Hass and Associates, made a Mo., said the rates would be higher than had been originally proposed.
The other Board of Regents schools also voiced approval of a joint insurance policy
SHANKEL SAID yesterday that the policy proposed last year might not be available again this year. He said the plan would need to be reviewed that offered a policy with acceptable rates.
THE
HAIR SUITE
this spring, and Shankel said the other schools still favored the idea.
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THE HAIR SUITE
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K-State, which has a liability insurance policy of its own, said this spring that it would cancel its policy to join the other state schools. Shankel said K-State was still willing to do that if a statewide policy could be found by the end of the year.
Shankel said the committee hadn't been given any deadline to complete its work.
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OPEN 11AM TO 9PM WEEKDAYS - 11AM TO 10PM WEEKEND
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VOTE Jayhawk Party
—Mark Buchanan
—Tom Byers
—Steve Conklin
SUA Forums present ELECTION '76 with JULIAN BOND
For Student Senate Oct. 6,7 Paid for by Jayhawk Party.
—Mike Harper
—Ann Judge
—Bert Nunley
Tuesday, Oct. 12
8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom Admission 50°
Tickets now available at the SUA Office
I
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Phone 843-6424
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
6
Wednesday, October 6, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Women golfers fade, finish fourth
Bv DAN BOWERMAN
Nancy Hains walked away from the 17th bale after begging it yesterday and said, "I'm sorry."
That typifies what happened to the KU women golfers in the second round of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women at the NCAA Tournament at Alamur Hills Golf Course.
After holding down second place in Monday's first round, the Jayhawks
dropped to fourth in yesterdays final standings.
KU finished the tournament with 693. It was 341 in the first round and 352 in the second.
Stephens College won the tournament at 677.
The University of Nebraska, 838, and the University of Minnesota, 802, came back to Iowa.
"WE THOUGHT WE could win," KU coach Nancy Boozer said, "and even after
"The weather hurt our home course advantage; the rain probably was a factor."
the first nine holes we thought we could pick up some strokes.
Carol Pence of Stephens won medalist honors by edging defending champion Julie Gumila of Minnesota in a sudden death play-off.
Pence said she was nervous and even
Both golfers shot 161 after regulation play. Pence shot a pair four on the first hole with a 7-4, 6-5.
HOINS WAS THE top KU golfer, tying two opponents at eight strokes back with a win. The team's ace had 26 points.
"choking" going into the play-off hole. Hole she made her four-foot杯 and Gumila hit the bucket.
"I'm real disappointed," she said, "I just had a bad two days. The whole team played badly. I think we all could have done better."
Fotopoulos fills KU tennis void
Sports Writer
By ERIC MARTINCICH
Whenever a team loses one of its top players it needs a replacement to be able to step in immediately and fill the gap. Such was the case for the women's tennis team when it lost its No. 2 player, Cecilia Lopez, to graduation.
This left coach Tom Kivisto with a gap high in his lineup to fill. Not only would he need a No. 1 or No. 2 player, he would also the first choice for Airdir Daksa on the 1. two teams.
During the summer months, Klivisto heard about Carrie Fotopoulos, who was supposedly disenchanted with the tennis program at Southern Methodist University, which she attended her freshman year. He got in touch with Fotopoulos in Prairie City, Missouri, where he met KU. Fotopoulos then decided to leave SMU and come to KU this fall.
P. J. H.
"She's as good as you can find," Kivita said earlier this year. She's one of the best
Carrie Fotopoulos
Kivisto hasn't been disappointed so far this season. Fotopoulos has stepped in and is now the No. 1 singles player. She has won both of her singles matches so far this
season, and along with Daksa is undefeated in doubles.
"Carrie has great potential," Kivisto said. She moves as well as anyone you'll ever see. She's playing better than I had expected."
Fotopoulos, who played No. 2 on SMU's team, which finished seventh in the nation last season.
Other Jadyhawk finishers were Charlene Jaishay 170, Beth Booster 173; Jackie Cook 171; Holly Boomer 172.
Coach Boozer said she was pleased that Heins and Shogren had come back from a bad first nine holes yesterday to finish well. Heins shot 44 on the front nine and 41 on the back. Shogren shot 47 on the front and 42 on the back.
Fotopoulos, who stepped in and won the battle with Dakas for the No. 1 singles position, said she felt that the team was a close-knit group.
*spouses has it hurt into KU's plans.*
*Whenever you lose a player that high, it*
*affects you line-up*. *Kwista to.*
*Carrie has balance things out by playing*
*as well as she has.*
"KU has a good team, a good coach and it's close to home, she said. "I loved SMU but there were problems with the coach. That was my main reason for leaving."
"At first, I didn't know how anyone would react," she said of her victory over last year's No.1 player. "I didn't know whether people would resent me. The girls here have really been good and we are all friends. There's great unity on this team."
Fotopoulos has fit well into KU's plans.
SUA Travel and Maupintour invite you to spend less money!
SUA Flights
to CHICAGO
SAVE $39
$71 per
person
roundtrip
Nov. 23 - 28
'She's played like everyone expected,
And the thing about her is that she can get
away.'
*I'll go see you.*
Following KU in the final standings were: University of Missouri, 700; University of Iowa, 709; Iowa State University, 714; University of Northern Iowa, 729; Creighton University, 736; Oklahoma State University of North Dakota, 831; and Southwest Missouri State University, 854.
PETER MURPHY
Maupintour
Train to CHICAGO
SAVE $15
Based on minimum of ten persons. Early reservations are recommended.
$45 per
person
roundtrip
Free Public Lecture
Free Public Lecture
Wed., Oct. 6
12:00 noon and 7:30 pm.
Gill Bldg, 90 room.
Temr.
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Nov. 24 - 28
SAVE $311
FOR DETAILS AND RESERVATIONS, CONTACT:
CARACAS
Based on minimum of 15 persons,
traveling together. Deadline:
Nov. 5
Deadline: Oct.15
$316.50 per person roundtrip
Maupintour
Travel Group Charter
Jan. 15
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227 persons
Maupintour travel service
843 1211
Offices in the Kansas Union Lobby
SUA Travel
864-3477
Young
and
Contemporary
843-1211
Find it for yourself at the VILLAGE SET 922 massachusetts
NEIL SEDAKA
IN CONCERT
OCTOBER 16, 1976 8:00PM ALLEN FIELD HOUSE, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ALL SEATS RESERVED $5,6&7 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT SUA, KIEF'S AND CAPERS CORNERS
Presented by SUA&KBEQ
SUA&KBEQ
FREE HAWK HAT
SMITH
WOLLINGTON
THE.
With New
LAWRENCE BANK
THREE LOCATIONS CLOSE TO CAMPUS
—Campus Bank
9th & Louisiana
(4 blocks north of the Union)
—South Plaza
27th & Iowa
Main Bank
7th & Massachusetts
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Member FDIC
DID YOU KNOW?
This film was filmed entirely in Kansas City—with an all-Kansas City cast.
Starts WEDNESDAY
This is CBX
the OUTLAW NETWORK!
This is CBX Starts WEDNESDAY
the OUTLAW NETWORK!
GROOVIER than GROOVE TUBE
BOOBIER than BOOB TUBE
Trashier than TUNNEL VISION!
69 MINUTES
PUTS TV BACK IN THE BATHROOM.
R RESTRICTED
69 MINUTES
th Je fi c Co w KI
WARNING***
Produced / Directed by Executive Producer
IAN MORRISON JACK POESBIGER
Associate Producer JOE LEAHY
NAUTICAL DONE BY JOHN
A NAUGHTY BOYS.INC. PRODUCTION COLOR
CERTAIN SCENES OR LANGUAGE MAY GROSS OUT DECENT
RECOVERY
Varsity
TOLLATELTE telephone V1-3-1065
Evenings 7:30-9:00
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30
---
The cast of the decade.
The western adventure of a lifetime.
PG 152
JOHN WAYNE LAUREN BACALL
"THE SHOOTET"
"THE SHOOTIST"
Eve. 7:30:9:30
Sat.Sun. 7:30:9:30
At the center there is Glenda Jackson's marvelously impartial performance," — REX REED. Voice Magazine
For those who enjoy foreign films, An Ibsen
classic play, *Royal Shakespeare*
appears great in Britain.
"" a startlingly fresh and perceptive version written and directed by Jackson, who skillfully interpreted by Jackson
"" so well served."
"HEDDA" on film is all Glenda Jackson."
ve
Eve. 7:30-9:30
Sat. & Sun. Mat. 2:20
Hillcrest E
CONSULTANT STUDY AND TRAINING
GLENDA JACKSON in
Hedda
PG PARENTAL ENTRANCE SUBSIDIED
BY WELLNESS AND HEALTH SERVICES
MEL BROOKS is back in the saddle. THE BLAZING SADDLES
Clevon Little, Madaline Kahn, Gene Wilder,
Harvey Korman
The Greatest Discovery of Our Time
In search of Noah's Ark
Bve. 7:25 & 9:25
Sat. & Sun. 2:15
R
Is it still there?
Eve. 7:15, 9:15 Sat. & Sun. 2,4
Hillcrest
The Hillcrest E
ENDS SATURDAY
MOTHER JUGS & SPEED
DUTCHESS & THE DIRTWATER FOX
PG 7:30
9:25
Sunset
512-463-7980 Bustling With Fun
Wednesday, October 6.1976
In la
Our Time
ofirk
m.2.4
DAY
7
Soccer Club faces Jewell
KU's Soccer Club attempts to get back on the winning track when it meets William Jewell at 4 p.m. today on the intramural fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
KU lost its last game, 3-2, against Colorado and wasn't that sharp last weekend in a scrimmage against a group of KU students from Algeria. Add to that the
Nolan wins Big 8 award
KU quarterback Nolan Cromwell has been named the Big Eight's offensive player of the week.
Cromwell, a 6-3, 195-pound senior from Ramson, rushed for 123 yards and three touchdowns and passed for 207 yards. The Jawaharskis' 34-24 victory over Wisconsin last Saturday. But be completed only three of 15 passes.
fact that William Jewell has a talented team and it is easy to see who coach BERNie Mullin
Volleyballers open home season tonight
KU's volleyball team opens its home season tonight with a meet against Benedictine College and Central Missouri State University. Games will be at 6:30; 7:30 and 8:30 in Robinson Gymnasium. KU will play in the 6:30 and 8:30 games.
Field hockey on tap
The field hockey match between KU and Central Missouri State University was rained out yesterday and rescheduled for 3:30 p.m. today.
Come on down to the Hall and listen to the free acoustic jam session. Bring own instrument.
Tonight!
★★★
Thursday Night Dance to the music of the Loose Brothers.
841-0817
737 New Hampshire
Off the Wall Hall
--one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
each additional
$.20.0 $2.25 $5.00 $7.50 $3.00
Ensure additional
.01 .02 .03 .04
25%
off
ALL PARTS IN STOCK
FOREIGN AUTOPARTS
--one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
each additional
$.20.0 $2.25 $5.00 $7.50 $3.00
Ensure additional
.01 .02 .03 .04
JAMES GANG FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
843-8080 BRING THIS AD FOR DISCOUNT Sat., 8-5
304 Locust Offer good thru Sat., Oct. 9th M-F, 8-5:30
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their financial circumstances. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FALL HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Friday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the URK business office at 864-3584.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
Snaeuel furnished room, utilities paid $110 per month, walking distance to Camp Calib 108
FOR RENT
Need to sublease immediately? Small apt. private
room available for lease. (See listing)
Included. Call 844-3387 after 4 P.M. 10-8
ATTENTION STUDENT BENCHERS - Drop in on my student desk for 10 minutes per session (time limits placed at WESTERN CENTER).
Jayphaw Tower, 2 bedroom apt. All utilities $75 per month. Laundry facilities. On bus route. 810-964-3050.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BALER ELECTRIC, 856-9800, 9500, W. 618-7430,
ELECTRIC, 856-9800, 9500, W. 618-7430
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you buy on popular hill equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, the same equipment is beneficial at the GAMMONPHONE店 at KEFE.
Western Civilization Notes—New on Make! Make
sense out of Western Civilization makes sense
out of Western Civilization.
Excellent collection of new and used furniture
trades. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
W. Third Avenue, New York, NY 10026.
2. For class preparation
3. For exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available online.
"Old Analysis of Western Civilization" available online.
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing
• Furniture • Antiques
• Imported Clothing
730Mass.841-7070
1970 Opel Rally Kadet, 72,000 km, good condition,
to be 20 mg. mpg. Paul Bailer 843-382-108-8
SAVE
1971 Toyota Wagon Corolla Deluxe 1600. Excel-
tionary automatic transmission, 54,000 miles. No
objet, die brakes, battery, snow tires. Asking
842.700-843.700 or 842-321.710 for slightly
lower prices.
1970 blue VW Bug; one owner, 30,000 miles,
handmade, small size, 842-118, 10-6
Model Regular Price Sale Price
TI-1600 $24.95 $20.95
TI-1650 29.95 25.45
SR-50A 59.95 50.95
SR-51A 79.95 67.95
SR-52 299.95 249.95
SR-56 109.95 93.50
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS ELECTRONIC CALCULATORS
SEND MONEY ORDER FOR CASHMER CHECK FOR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
BINCOLN CALCULATION SALES
DALLAS, TX 75230
PHONE 211-969-0925
1971 Dodge Challenger. 128 V-S, AT, PS, PBn. Good condition - must sell. 843-2500. 10-6
Famous FRIVE brand boots, gold leather, women's
shoes $39 now $39 - BVL 847-872 meshes. 10-6
now $39 - BVL 847-872 meshes.
Peugeot UO-18 for a 26" wheel and almost new.
Peugeot 3008 kit, tool kit, kit etc., 842-3986 or 842-4042.
18-7
Ampge 5 U-Gutter arm, Used 6 mm. Excellent
Ampge 7 U-Gutter arm, Used at Love Records, 15 W. fork, 10-7
843-7378
FABRIC SALE 10% to 40% off cotton prints and
soles, kettlecloth, shirtd flannels, and velvetweens.
PATCHWORKS
709 Mass. #845-709. True-PUFF. m-3, 10-7
and sat. from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
I have to sell 98 Pontie Louse Automate,
PS, take the best offer. Call 814-6778.
10-7
Student and Faculty Specialty Roles $2.50/doz.
and Alexander's $1.50/doz.
and Alexander's $8.00/doz.
and Alexander's $8.00/doz.
Yellow Lubradores pupa, ARC, Champion, Bloodfield, field and show stock. B43-8921. 10-7
Auto Parts
Scuba outfit. Tank, regulator, wet suit and weight belt 841-8143 after 5. S
AM/FM stereo with turntable and speakers. Per-
form dorm room or apartment. $125. Call 4030.
4030.
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9265 843-6960
75 Chevy Van; black, many options, partially customized. Must to see appraise. Call 842-1530.
MAKING OF THE
BEAR
1928
NAPA
Watch for Grand Opening ad in UDK1 710 Mass. 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 841-7946
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
For the Do-It-Yourself we
offer:
1. Special Prices
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it
overnight
4. Machine shop service
will be moving soon to The 8th St. Marketi
Armadillo Bead Co.
Wines and Liquor
NEXT TO OWEN'S FLOWERS
JAMES V. OWENS
RETAIL LIQUOR STORE
Sansui 1000X Reevel 35 watts. Excellent con-
trol. Great sound. 8 p.m. 841-850-108.
10-8
国家税务总局监制
Mamiya-Serio 500 . 35 mm camera. Also Pioneer
Mamiya-Serio 700 . 40 mm camera.
travels, treats—readers both approx. 1 yr old
and up to adult age.
We have speakers--amps-head phones-turned on and ready to go. We have way-to-move and financing available. We'll be there with you.
Aztec Inn
SPECIAL-ARL speaker systems (Reg. #211 ea). 30-
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8
SUBARU 71, 75, d4.5000 mils. 4 speed, AC AM
SUBARU 71, 75, d4.5000 mils. 4 speed, AC AM
Call 824-1382 after m 6 per .on week day
Acoustic 371 bass amp-365 watt MKS+ DAN
Armstrong Fortress bass. pass. B41-834-350
10-11
Mexican Food
We have the Wheeler J-B.L. and Esm speakers.
We have the Bassman J-B.L. and Esm speakers at our speaker demos at Audio Ray, J.B. E. 16-8.
American and
1968 Grand Turbine, 78,000 miles, good condition.
call, must bell, Dr. L. 8:10 p.m. m-1042. 10-6
400 W. 35th St.
Must sell, 1972, Vega Hatchback, 4-speed. Call
Trudi 865-2730 or 865-4464. 10-11
V.W. 73 Squareback装机, good condition
W.J. 73,104mm Wellington Rd after 6
10-11M
Aztec Inn
1969 Kodai Kadet Malir. Price negotiate. Good
price. 847-4411 afternoons. 847-6393晚讯.
847-6411 afternoons. 847-6393晚讯.
5-string banjo. Great condition. Case included.
843-5899 after 5.00.
10-8
1971 Ford Van–Custom, Inside wide tires and
base. See at 158mm Phone: 842-363-3800 Phone:
842-363-3810 W-10 18-11
Penning Equipment. Used, good condition. Fill, mask and gloves. $20. Call 864-6054 for details.
Excelent selection of used furniture, teffiger-
ing and cleaning. 80% of furniture is new.
60% of boxes. 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Free
shipping. Free delivery within the
US.
HELP WANTED
10 speed Peugeot cycle-European component=
8 wheels ($50 or less)
tools included-
10 offer
STOCK REDUCTION SALE—Avalance Vairi Guitar
Store price but untable at sale price. Charge
if music not available to gift card or other mode at 20% of
Good Thirti-14. Set at 35% of Good Thirty-
14. Recorded in the Located in the Audio
Recordings Studio 10-12
1965 Galaxie 600 Auto. Power steering, excellent condition. $50 or best offer. Phone 842-303-10-8
FOOD SERVICE-full time superviving job. 8.
applies. 40 hours per week. Applies on bp.
applies. 40 hours per week. Paid holidays,
vacations, must have. Must have had previous food
service experience. Apply by July 15th.
apply 1915' Mass., Schumf Foods. 5-3 dail
Custodial work at Shenanigans. Call for information for nake for Joe, 841-6400. 10-7
Counter help part time. Must be able to work
applicant. Apply in person, Henry's, 117 W.ib. 10-6
Female model for freelance photography-grapher-emailer-website-instructor "natural" next door "image" Call 919-265-8420
www.freelancermodels.com
VISIONS
has the eyeglasses you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 814-7421
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates
807 Vermont 842-9455
LOST AND FOUND
For new Chevrolet and used cars at
Found: set of keys on metal ring on campus
Inside the Chancellor's residence. Canopy
pick up at 105 Flint.
Call Ottis Vann!
Lost: KU Bus Pass and ID (KU ID No. 202551)
Need: Sesetion. Nice reward. 864-594-390
10-8
Last: reward for return of small charity, "gold"
from the mailboxes in Jawacker Town. A Canon Sextant
was delivered to the library.
Found: Texas Instrument calculator at Wescoe
terrace on Monday. Call 843-5904. 10-6
Found: Bus Pass belonging to Lia Chiumire, Claim in Wiesbaden and lost found店. 10-6
Turner Chevrolet
Found: set of keys in front of Hall Thurs. 30. Sep. 30: Ball 824-7881 and identify. 10-6
Loft left alive and harquere tied in Woman's
Knee. All three were shot in the second ATT
$27 Please return to Mini at SIA Maquette
and Box 301.
Lost~Khaki colored jacket, size 38R. Reward.
Katz 643-1950. 10-7
Lost-Female Sitter: Red collar with rabies tattoo.
Last-Female Sitter: Red collar with rabies tattoo and Vermont. Call 842-0290 if found 10-6
MISCELLANEOUS
Found. High school class ring. 1975 from
Bristol. Initially unengaged on back of ring.
Initially engaged on front of ring.
LOST: Just colored masked shoulder bag. Contents include contact lenses, eye glasses, pocket book with all identification. Victim of AJP parking lot. If found, contact Sharon at 864-2171. Reward $500.
Found - Gentile black male in vicinity of Mallu
Apt. owner Call 842-260-108
Found —Jean Jacket in Annex D of Summerfield
864-1291 10-8
NOTICE
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uher/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m. Mass.
Departed simply to find a house for $3 year old, then a new one for $10. All shots if no home is found by the weekend or Sunday.
Swap Shop, 60s Mass. Used furniture, dishes, lamp clocks, televisions.日常开放 12-5. 9-30.
CABASH AFCB -Good food from scratch. Lunch
10:30-3:40 9:30-Mass. 9:30-Mass. Backpack easy
breakfast. 10:30-Mass. Backpack easy
breakfast. 10:30-Mass. Backpack easy
breakfast. 10:30-Mass. Backpack easy
breakfast. 10:30-Mass. Backpack easy
ALEXANDERES FLOWERS BATH BOUQUET
843-120 Flower special day 12-6
843-1210
18-6
Jim's Stake House. Delicious food at reasonable prices.
Jim's 12:00, 12:30, 12:50, 4:15, 6:15, 8:15, 10:00, 12:00, 12:30, 12:50, 4:15, 6:15, 8:15, 10
SQUEEZER'S PALACE ANNUAL FALL PLAST
SALE. All plants and tills 20% off. 10-6
Oakley Bookshop Closes Early, at 12:30 on Sat.
Oct. 14, for naillance.
五
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS,
843-7700
RAASCH
SADDLE 4 BRIDLE SHOP
842-8413
Mastercharge
BankAmericard Mastercharge
FELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses - Liners
Heaters - Frames
Bedspreads - Fitted Sheets
Keep the Senate Cooks—Elect the APPLE PIE
Therapy! (and other things)
-please support us with your vote)
$20 REWARD for first person to offer a tape record of the NATIONAL SURREALIST PARTY AND NIH, RISE THE REGION. 18 Original Broadcast Riita or Tierra at 364-754 or 841-6492. 10-7
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND TIDERAY: in-
clinical and group. Also growth workshops
on gender, sexuality, & sexual relationships.
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
PERSONAL
Any airline employee depends who would like to get guests around the world, call Suzanne M. Ling for information.
Freshmen: One Fraternity now controls the student body. One of its class President (Sacramento, Junior and Senior). They want the fourth, your Freshman President! Vote against the entire "U.S.A." conference. Preference is given to freshmen.
THE APPLE FIE COALITIONIS for broaden the
applicant base. The APPLE FIE COALITION
campus, and vote student representation. Please
register at www.applefie.com.
You're being discriminated against because of
you! Come and learn how and why you can lose
opportunities and legal rights just because
you young. 3.8 P.M. M.J., Parler, Parker &
Union.
10-6
Would the dark-naked girl who got 60% for wardrobe
money help her get the dress for Friday? Fridays could
call me if she wants to see a dress.
SERVICES OFFERED
Math. Tutoring—competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 601, 001, 602, 103, 105, 106, 109, 111, 115, 116, 117, 123, 124, 132, 134, 135. Math. Tutoring—reliable, experienced tutors test preparation. Rates call: 842-7681.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thomson ond 18308 Halls Ave. No. 266 H Los Angeles 1310 Halls Ave. No. 266 H Los Angeles
PRESCHOOL. OPENINGS. Private kindergarten and preschool education are offered in the km., East Rand, and Montessori Preschool for children ages 2-5% of the total student population. Working in well-equipped classrooms. Curriculum based on lesson planings upon session. Starting new course circle group of 8 to 10 children first week of Get. Also includes many other students who is in private kindergarten. Non-profit sponsorship program. Four acre playground. Scholarship program. Four acre playground. Roll-in rollout school packet at school. Off east 13th at 2141 Maple Lane. Phone: 842-BACD. evening 842-MAPLE
Professional Study Skills Service. Make studying pay off. For more information, call 811-5628 or visit www.professordskills.com.
GRAN SPORT
Local light hauling done with van. Save $ Call 841-5051 or 864-6608.
10-11
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
Giftpacker Optical
DISTINCTIVE TEV WARE
All Vendor Locations
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
FOREST WEEKLY
FALL WEEKLY
WINTER WEEKLY
MARCH WEEKLY
FROZEN WEEKLY
FALL OPERATION
FROZEN OPERATION
POPULAR FESTIVALS
FESTIVALS & MARKETING
?th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week One Under 18 Admitted
TYPING
Typist editor, IBM Pica elite. Quality work.
Typewriter. Deserts dissertations welcome. Call
802-643-9217. Mail 802-643-9217.
Experienced typist—term paper, sheets, mkls,
notes, spellings. 843-935. Mr. Wright.
843-935. Mrs. Wright.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-29
Need an experienced tpier? IBM Selectle II
(rlbbon) with tpier 8527-7488 (rlbbon).
(Palm Paint at Am 6a4 7878)
- Foosball
Experienced manuscript and theme typist. Call Kamerik 664-1311; Days 814-1780; Events 814-1780.
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
Call 879-7534 at 4:06 p.m. to house in occupancy
free rest but share household duties and great
freedom to move.
WANTED
THEISIS BINDING COPYING The House of Udher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us send you a $83 Massachusetts or phone $28-745 Thank you.
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Foos-Ball
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
Need KU-Nebraska game tickets. Name the Price.
Hall 10, 7346 AVE, San Francisco, CA 94125.
Desperately need 3 tickets to the OU game. 842-
4142. 10-6
Ace needs telephones at the game to sell the
phone. Earn a bark hat. Call 843-0540 or
843-0541.
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
The Lounge
*Calculus and Analytic Geometry*, Thomas.著;
for Kintle in *Journals of Computer Science*. Oxford, 1982.
*Mathematica*, Thomas.著; for Kintle in *Journals of Computer Science*. Oxford, 1982.
ROOMMATE, male. Large 2 bedroom, on bus route.
To Gibson, hi. Extremely quiet for study.
10th floor.
Male roommate requests $35 per month, includes utilities. **Call** 812-7298. 5:30-7 p.m. 10-8
...west End or Hillcrest Bowl ... vmh and iowa
843-981-7200 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Rootoom wanted to share. Dirrilled two bed-
room setups. 1-bedroom outdoor pool, laundry
facilities, etc. Coordinated with the
contractor.
Wanted to buy: 4 tickets to KU-NU game. Call
843-6453. Separate or together.
P vocalise female训 (1-2) guitar accompaniment now. Call 842-4358 between 5-3:50, 10-11
Need two tickets for Obla-KU and/or. Neb-KU
Need your name. Please call 843-727-1267.
Call 843-727-1267.
California alum needs tickets for homecoming
for 400 alumni (or 688) at 747-777-1091
10-13
Call Fremont, 541-7833 after 5:20 PM
10-11
Call Gmail, 541-7833 after 5:30 PM
10-11
Treat any other end zone call. Will
arrest. Anything but end zone calls.
Will arrest.
Trade general admission tickets to Royal Sunway Stadium will trade for four tickets for two. Trade will trade for four tickets for two. Trade will trade for four tickets for two.
WANTED: CHRISTIAN MUSICIANS to form concerts on piano, flute, drums, keyboard, bass drum, lead guitar, drums, keyboard, brass. BMH 483-5068 or 5.00 P.M. Ask for Bob. 10-12 Roomeat for furnished Very close to home. Roomate for furnished Very close to home.
- Pinball
Corvettes, Camaros,
Novas, Mustangs,
Firebirds, and
Imported Sports Cars
UNIVERSITY MOTORS
26 & Iowa 843-1295
- Pool
We buy good used cars
- Bud on Tap
- Pool
Home of
Home of
26 & Iowa 843-1395
AIRLINES
Phone 843-1211
KU Union Lobby
Make Reservations
Thanksgiving and Christmas travelers should reserve now for best choice of flight, train and hotel. May we also assist you in planning your trip? No extra charge for our services.
SUA Maupintour travel service
in the summer.
Use the
student discounts
Keep your car healthy
at
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W.23rd 842-4152
HAPPY CAR
1
Wednesday, October 6.1976
University Daily Kansan
Workshop studies dating
Dating attitudes of University of Kansas male students are being studied in a four-week workshop that began yesterday and ended on April 4:30 this afternoon in 224 Fraser Hall.
"Dating is a very important thing at this time in a man's life," Jim Atsideas, workshop director, said last week. "It helps people get more about himself, as well as others."
Atsides, who has a master's degree in rehabilitation counseling and works as a counselor at the Veterans' Administration hospital in Kansas City, Mo., is conducting the workshop as part of his doctoral dissertation.
"THIS IS not a date-match type of program, and there will be no women present, except when we go into role-playing situations. The emphasis will be on assertiveness training, trying to help women take more efficiency-oriented in dating."
He said the basic aim of the workshop was to improve interpersonal communication between the sexes and to help men develop better social skills.
The program is used in many hospitals that deal with group interaction, and is called Training in Individual and Group Effectiveness Resources (TIGER). he said.
EACH PARTICIPANT will be given a "social interaction diary", in which he will record daily contacts with women during the four-week program.
"In that way, they'll be able to see how they interact with women, and notice how they improve over a period of time," he said. "This feedback will help them to better evaluate their own performance and what they might do to improve."
"We're not going to use students as guinea pigs."
A dating workshop for women is tentatively scheduled for next semester. he
Introductory sessions will be this week, with the regular four-week course beginning October 26 and ending November 19. Sessions will be twice weekly, he said.
Bennett. Winn here
Gov. Robert Bennett and Congressman Larry Winn will be the featured speakers tonight when the KU College Republicans and the Douglas County Republican Central Committee introduce state and local Republican candidates to the public.
Bennett's and Winn's speeches, scheduled to begin at 7, will be preceded by a slide show about the national, state and local Republicans running for offices this year.
The meeting will be in building No. 1 at Douglas County Fairgrounds at 30th and 60th Avenues.
Glover, Hambleton debate issues
Debating on subjects from public school funding to marijuana laws, two candidates for the 44th district seat in the Kansas City district of about 40 persons in Green Hill residential.
The debate between Rep. Mike Glover, D-D Lawrence, and his opponent, former Lawrence mayor Nancy Hambleton, was sponsored by the Student Bar Association.
In his opening remarks, Glover said his major concerns were supporting the University of Kansas in the legislature and secondary education programs, primary and secondary education programs.
"HE SAID HE favored a reduction in the burden property tax payers shoulder for education in Kansas. The alternative, which would not be an adjustment in income tax rates."
Hambleton said she also favored im-
'provements in the state's public education system, but said she didn't agree that lowering property taxes and increasing income taxes was the answer.
Hambleton also said that though representing the University was a major objective of the 44th District representative, her major concern was district housing.
"It doesn't matter what tax is increased,
it's going to hurt," she said.
"I DON'T PRETEND to have a lot of answers," she said. But it's something she doesn't want to tell me.
She said she would study housing programs and support those she felt wounded.
However, she said, any housing program the legislature might adopt should include a new permit.
Both candidates said that a problem for a.
The only way to be effective in such a situation, both said, is to be available to the audience.
legislator in this district was meeting the needs of such a diverse constituency,
GLOVER SAID HIS PERFORMANCE during the incarceration in the late 1970s and early 1980s, he said, be he public meetings in the Lawrence Public Library has a variety of subjects his family was involved with.
Hambleton said her approach was much the same.
"You simply make the effort," she said. "You go to them and find out what the problems are and let them know you are available."
CANOE TRIP to Pineville, Mo. Oct. 22-24 Organizational meeting for interested persons, on Thursday, Oct. 7, 9:15 p.m. Oread Room
SUA travel
Advertise in the Kansan.
Call 864-4358.
Commission on the STATUS OF WOMEN
Saying you're a woman doesn't tell anyone much, because being a woman can mean many different things.
Those of us who work with the Commission do so because we are questioning. We want to know what our alternatives are and how to maintain them. We work to support women in whatever choice they make and to increase the options open to all of us. We work to stimulate thought on being a woman and how we can integrate these thoughts into ideas we already have about ourselves. We are interested in exploring the status of women on the KU campus.
If you feel the Commission has something to offer you there are many ways to get involved. Anyone is welcome to attend the bi-weekly programs (Oct. 5, 19 & Nov. 2, 16, 30.) on topics of interest to women and also to receive a monthly newsletter. The Commission consists of five committees, each dealing with a specific area concerning women, on which members are encouraged to work: Life-planning, Human Sexuality, Women's Recognition, Political Action and Publicity. The Commission is also looking for an efficient and enthusiastic person to serve on the Board as Secretary. This position requires time and energy as well as typing skills.
paranity runaway by the Student Senate
If you are interested in working on a committee or applying for Secretary of the Commission Board please contact Maggie Flanagan at 842-1114 or Tracy Spellman at 841-4945 as soon as possible. Calls concerning the Commission in general are always welcome at the above numbers or the Dean of Women's Office.
THE TIME IS HERE TO GET INVOLVED with THE MINORITY STUDENT CENTER
For some time, things have been sitting still for minorities on the K.U. campus. In fact, things seemed to have moved backwards. There are many reasons why the situation ain't like it should be, and you could go on for days listing those reasons. Well, the time has come for the end of complaining and the beginning of correcting the situation.
The time has come for moving things forward to where they should be.
Location:
Level 3
Kansas Union
What???
There are many ways to keep this thing going and growing. Recently, the Black Fraternities and Sororites sponsored two dances and used the money to pay for today's event. Their cooperation is an example (A damned good one) of how we can work together to get things accomplished for our own good.
How Can You Help?
Minority Student Center to Open in October
You can help by participation on the Planning or the Action committees of the Minority Student Center. The Planning committee decides which events will be coordinated through the Center; and the Action committee makes sure that these events carried out. The most important way for you to help is to use the Center when it opens in October, or by joining the Minority Affairs subcommittee of the Student Senate.
When???
Some of you are already aware that things are beginning to move. The most important development in the last few months has been the approval of a Minority Student Center in the Student Union. This came about through the efforts of concerned minority students working through the Student Senate and the Student Union.
This Minority Student Center will be one of the largest student offices in the Union and will serve Blacks, Chicanos, and Indians. A committee of students have been working on the plans for this Center, which will be a central communications and information location for minority students. We support your work with the Minority Student Center will not work. WITH your support, the Center can grow into a strong voice for your needs.
Now is the time.
If you are interested in working on a committee or if you just want more information on the Center stop by or contact the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Suite 105, in the Kansas Union. (864-3710).
This ad paid for through Student Activity Fees.
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Botany '500 The first name to look for in a suit.
1976
Affluence comes early in Botany's new "Cartier Collection."
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Store hours: 9:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
1744 Massachusetts
7
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Tobacco taxes could finance KU cancer research
By JIM COBB Staff Writer
The KU Medical Center could establish one of the nation's finest cancer treatment and research
But it would cost a great deal of money.
The cost of improving Kansas' cancer programs was the justification for a proposal made last year. The fact that would have raised the state cigarette tax would also propel a proposal failed to gain enough support for passage in 1978 but will be introduced again in the 1977 session. State Rep. Lloyd Buzzi, R-Lawrence, said it
Buzzi said a glut of finance bills in the last session's closing days and fervent opposition to the bill by tobacco industry lobbyists doomed the government to a better response from the legislature next year.
"TD LIKE TO see us take a good look at it again," he said. "No one wants to increase taxes, but we've been fairly conservative in taxing in that area in Kansas."
If approved, additional revenue of from $2.5 million to $2.3 million would be added to the stock price.
probably would be made available to the Med Center and related cancer-treatment programs.
The bill was written by the Senate Ways and Means Committee and was passed by the full Senate after it deleted a provision that earmarked funds for the Med Center, apparently because of pressure tobacco industry. That industry's lobbyists reportedly tried to equating cigarette taxes with cancer research.
IN THE HOUSE, discussion of the bill was deferred until Buzii had it placed on the house calendar in the last days of the 1976 session. The full house voted to kill the bill, dashes the hopes of Buzii and University officials that it would be sent to a summer study committee.
Burza said he hoped it would again be sponsored by a legislative committee. HePresident Bennett supported the bill. Although Gov. Robert Bennett didn't speak out,he probably would like to get an earlier year.
Burzi said he had had private discussions with Bennett last year about the proposal.
James Lowman, director of the Mid-America Cancer Center Program and professor of pediatrics at the Med Center, said that among the proposed programs that the funding could make possible were
PAUL SCHLORER, dean of research admitting at the MES Centre. If the proposal were approved the appointment will be made.
clinics for early detection of cancer.
both existing cancer-treatment programs and creation of new programs at the Med Center.
- renalization programs for cancer patients.
- a regional surveillance program that would investigate and keep records of specialized types of cancer that occur within geographic areas.
research of cancer treatments.
INITIATION OF pilot programs to be expanded later across the state would be a major goal of improved cancer programs, Lowman said. Because patients would be charged for services, such programs would be mostly self-sustaining, he said, and he models for programs at various locations.
—some expensive research equipment that could be used by several research programs.
needed, he said, because about half of cured cancer patients aren't able to return to the same productivity that they had before they discovered they had cancer.
About 10 to 15 per cent of additional funding would be used for regional surveillance so that new types, cases and outbreaks of cancer within a region could be studied to determine their causes. The research would also use several university campuses, including KU's Lawrence campus and Kansas State University.
LOWMAN SAID an example of the expensive equipment needed for research that didn't always receive adequate funding from other sources was that his team used a virus-detection facility, which cost about $800,000.
A tremendous amount of money is needed for high quality cancer programs, Lowman said. He said that with strong state support, rather than dependence on "on-again, off-again" federal funding, Kansas could develop one of the nation's finest programs.
The goal of early detection clinics is to improve the survival rate of patients who have cancer from early diagnosis.
Buzzi said a "very few" legislators prevented the bill from becoming law last year. He has high hopes for its passage next year, he said, "but I don't want it to happen" optimistic in predicting what will happen.
THE TORACCO industry's lobbyists are very powerful, he said. Lowman that because the lobbyists also represented retail groups, they closely examined every proposed tax.
The Kansas cigarette tax now is 11 cents a pack. Buzz said that tax was very low compared with that of other states and local governmental units that have imposed taxes in the 20-cent range.
Missouri, for example, has a nine-citet tax. Both Kansas City, Mo., and Jackson County, Mo., however, each impose additional taxes of five cents per unit of cigarettes and cigarette bought in Kansas City to 19 cents a pack.
Lownan said he remained "the world's greatest optimist!" that additional cancer funding would be needed.
"I'm amazed that it went as far as it did. I’m excited to know that people are interested in bringing it up again, and I hope we'll get farther with it this year," he said.
The circus atmosphere was further enhanced by the animal performers, who danced and sang as well as easelese chewing the life of a circus act while chewing grass soaked by rain in front of Watson. Meanwhile, Otello the pony was playing a trumpet while callope music played in the background.
AUTUMNY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THERE WAS NO doubt that the circus' emphasis was on having fun, but there was also a feeling of sobriety about the final trick—a water escape-performed by the
the University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
"Our act is basically the same as far as what we do," Gary Glibet of Kansas City, Mo. said. "But we improvise according to audiences, timing and situations."
KANSAN
heber, from San Jose, Calif., injected a bite of local humor into his act after the whistle signaling the end of classes blew. "I didn't let a guy play a guitar!" he asked
"You can only do this trick wrong once," he said.
Vol.87 No.33
A
Winn denounces report's release
Staff photo bv GEORGE MILLENER
A MUTILIZED dollar bill was burned only to reappear inside a lemon recently cut in half. Nick Weber, the bearded and balding leader of the troupe, managed to maintain a running dialogue with the one man balancing a one-man plow on his face.
Roual performance
See story page nine
Thursday, October 7.1976
The players, wearing the white makeup so akin to circus clowns, all were dressed alike in multicolored, tunics in a diamond pattern over leotards and ballet slippers.
Mitch Kincannon of Severy, Mont., and Nick Weber of San Jose, Calif., went into a two step during his performance at the 2014
Comedy highlights circus
Staff Writer
Royal Lichtentheel Quarter-Ring Circus in front of Watson Library. The circus in our museum is open from September 17 to November 30. Circus time is 11:45am.
By PAUL JEFFERSON
Monty Python, watch out. The Royal Lichtenstein Quarter-Ring Circus is a growing force to be reckoned with among circus acts.
The four-member troupe, accompanied by a black bear named Dorothy, a small performance troupe and Jinglebells, enlivened the campus yesterday for a noon-hour performance in the courtyard.
Billed as "The World's Smallest Cricket," the group did a variety of card tricks, comical routines and balancing acts before 450 students who crowded around the ring.
one member of the troupe, Kevin Duggan of San Jose, Calif.
Duggan was lifted into a 100-gallon milk drum filled with water, the top was padlocked in four places and he was given two minutes to escape.
"I've gotten stuck in there a couple of
After two minutes and 12 seconds, Dugan emerged from the cylinder below.
The group's KU appearance was sponsored by the Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana St., and the St. Lawrence Student Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
times, and it's kind of hairy. But we have a safety system worked into it, so there no's around.
The troup's performing season runs from
september through May and they tour all
week.
Defense policies spark 2nd Ford-Carter debate
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—In a debate on foreign and defense policies last night between President Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, The President insisted that there could be no debate about the "experience and results" he had achieved. Carter contended that America's strength, respect and future chance had fallen under the Republicans.
Carter, the Democratic presidential nominee, accused Ford of abdicating foreign policy control to Henry Kissinger, secretary of state, and said that Ford had "always show a weakness in yielding to pressure" from foreign powers.
Ford countered that he had negotiated foreign policy successfully from a position of strength that would be undercut by our spending reductions Carter had adjourned.
WHEN THE SECOND instalment of their nationally televised Great Debate series was over, both White House candidates said they were satisfied.
"I think I won, and I'm sure he feels the same way," Carter said. He said he rated the first debate a draw, "but I feel better about this one."
Ford said: "I think we did all right."
A telephone survey conducted for the Broadcasting System by pollster Brianna Brooks asked 40 per cent of those surveyed thought the Democratic nominee had won the debate, 30 per cent gave it to Ford, and 30 per cent considered it a draw. His sample of about six per cent had a margin for error of about six per cent.
ON TWO POINTS Ford showed the political power that lies with the incumbent. He disclosed that the Soviet Union had signaled readiness to narrow differences and shape "a realistic and sound compromise" for a new agreement to limit strategic nuclear weapons. And Ford said that the administration today would answer the names of companies that had participated in the Arab boycott against Israel.
to provide leadership, Ford said Carter apparently didn't know the facts.
Repeatedly, Carter said Ford had failed
Carter said the administration had been outbargained by the Soviet Union; Ford said detente had been a two-way exercise, beneficial to the United States.
CARTER, IN A skip at Kissinger, said,
"Mr. Ford and Mr. Kissinger have continued on with the policies and failures of Richard Nixon. Even the Republican platform has criticized the lack of leadership in Mr. Ford."
Carter was referring to language inserted in the platform by backers of Ronald
Reagan, who opposed Ford for the Republican presidential nomination.
Carter said that Ford and Kissinger had functioned in secret, excluding the American people from the shaping of foreign policy. Carter said the two would have started another Vietnam in Angola, had they not been stunned by public outcry.
RESPONDING TO a question that listed the foreign policy successes of the past two years, Carter said: "I think the Republican Party was very good at managing both spectacular and not substance." He
See DEFENSE page two
Senate OKs funding ratifies library petition
The Student Senate had its own debate last night and spent nearly three hours before approving the funding recommendations of the Fall Budget Committee.
All of the 18 proposed allocations totalling
$10,000 are a $10 allocation to Operation
Friendship
A motion to fund the Oliver Hall Drama Guild was defeated and the committee's decision to withhold funding to the KU ice hockey club were endorsed by the full Senate
The only other legislation acted upon last night was a petition regarding additional University funding of Watson Library. The approved petition, requesting $33,000 for supplemental library funds, will be submitted to Chancellor Archie Dykes.
THE SUPPLEMENTAL funds wusa
the library's budget for student
assistance$^1$
Tedde Tasheff, student body president, said she thought it was important for the Senate to approve the petition and show the support its support of increased library funding.
Earlier in the meeting, Bill Blessing, SenEx representative, told the Senate that increased enrollment this year had given the University a larger budget than was expected. He said that "with a little encouragement it would spend that money on the library."
In her report to the Senate, Tashaseff said she had met with Jerry Rogers, director of the Office of Student Financial Aid, to discuss how the effects of next fall's tuition increase.
SHE SAID Rogers told her that the office's requests for government grants would increase in proportion to the tuition increase.
In other business, Steve Leben, chairman of the Communications Committee, asked the senators to report any violations of a bill passed that requires all organizations funded by the Senate to indicate on any of the documents that they are funded by the Senate.
He said that the Communications Committee may withdraw Senate funds from any organization that continued to violate the act.
Research funds scarce for basic scientists
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ
National interest in certain practical research projects and a shortage of funding have left some basic scientists shortened in their bids for research money.
Some established basic science researchers are having to scrape funds together for their projects, perhaps more so than clinical researchers whose research is popular these days and can be supplemented by a clinical department fund.
There is a difference between basic science and clinical research. Basic science research is geared toward development of new medical technologies tovolve human beings in research tests; clinical research is more practical because it is designed to apply information to human beings, Paul Schloebr, of research at the Med Center, said yester-
Although there's no hard data, Schloerb said, he thinks there has been a recent emphasis on "targeted research," for example, in the documentation for the cure of specific diseases.
R. E. Amulunxin, a Med Center microbiologist, said basic scientists at the Med Center were discouraged by research projects that were approved by national grant agencies but not funded because there wasn't enough money.
"IT IS FOR this reason that it has been more difficult for basic science researchers to have adequate financial support," he said.
Funds for basic scientific research have decreased, he said, and more money is being funded to clinical projects that deal with contemporary problems, such as strokes, heart attacks and especially cancer.
"WE HAVE A situation in which 60 to 70 per cent of the basic scientists are not being funded at all," he said.
Research funding problems are evident at two levels of funding, both federal and nonfederal.
Ninety per cent of the Med Center's total research funding of $12,983,356 is made up of federal funding, most of which are provided by the National Institutes of Health (NHI).
Researchers make individual applications to national granting agencies. A committee of scientists then reviews and evaluates grants according to a ranking by priority.
MORIS FAMAN, KU professor of pharmacology and a member of the NIH committee that review project ap
plications, said that an increase in overall research funding was offset by the decreasing value of the research dollar.
He said that the NIH didn't favor clinical projects over basic science projects, but that all applications were judged equally on the basis of scientific merit. Some federal tax dollars, he said, are appropriated by Congress for specific purposes.
One of these special projects is cancer research.
SCHLEROE SAID Congress gave more money to cancer research than to any other areas of health in a bill Congress passed in 1983 that would veto. The National Cancer Institute is to receive $151 million, more than twice as much as the Heart, Lung and Blood Infections program.
"It seems Congress just suddenly turned toward funding more of the research having to do with cancer and clinical projects." Amulukun said.
That left fewer federal dollars for basic science projects, he said, and basic scientists had to turn to nonfederal funding.
NONFEDERAL funding comprises funds from the University of Kansas Endowment Association, an institutional body that supports such organizations as the American
Cancer Society and the American Heart Association.
"Half of the basic scientists, or maybe 60 per cent, have no funds from outside agencies, but that's not to say they have no funding." Schloerb said.
Researchers without funds are encouraged to apply to private agencies for funding.
The Endowment Association Executive Committee gets $25,000 to $30,000 from the Fletcher Fund, a special Med Center fund, and also from some unrestricted funds and parcels it out to researchers who apply for the grants. The grant was contributed through the Endowment Association to the Med Center.
INSTITUTIONAL funds, from a biomedical grant from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, which tookarch from April 1976 through March 1982.
These funds are appropriated by a committee elected by the faculty.
Schloereb, chairman of the committee, said preference in institutional fund appropriations was given to new faculty to establish a laboratory and to start research.
Rolf Barth, a pathologist and another member of the committee, said institutional funds were distributed without clinical and basic science researchers.
BASIC SCIENTISTS are still doing basic research, he said, but there are several reasons why some basic science at the Med Center don't have funding.
One reason is that there simply isn't enough money in the institutional fund, be said.
Schoerb that from the available institutional funds, only a few thousand dollars apiece could be given to researchers. It usually takes much more to get the necessary equipment and to maintain the research project, he said.
"I HOPE THAT SOMETHING the state of Kansas will provide support for research through legislation in a manner similar to what the Lawrence campus," Schlieber said.
Last year $750,000 was budgeted by the state for research at the Lawrence campus. The Med Center receives no state funds for research.
"It seems that we should be getting a comparable amount here," Barb said. This was the first research was cut from the Med Center proposed budget by the Board of Regents
"I don't know of any solution."
Mulnacken said. "All I can say is an awful lot of money is being channelled in these groups and not being spread around."
2
Thursday, October 7,1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Mondale”s charaes denied
WILMINGTON, N.C.—Republican vice-presidential candidate Bob Dole said yesterday that Sen. Waltie Mondale's allegations that he and President Gerald Ford tried to impede congressional probes of Watergate were "baseless" and "indicate desperation and panic" in the Democratic camp.
The Democratic vice-presidential nominee said Tuesday that Ford, while House minority leader, tried to block the first investigation of the 1972 Watergate break-in by the Banking Committee. He also said Dole had tried to force the Senate Watergate bearings behind closed doors.
Reacting to Mondale's statements concerning his actions during the Watergate inquiries, Dole said that although he unsuccessfully tried to halt broadcast coverage of the Senate hearings, he never urged that the press be banned from them.
78 killed in plane crash
BRIDGETOWN. Barbados—A Cuban passenger jet plunged into the sea near this Caribbean holiday island yesterday while trying to return to Barbados after an extended stay in the country.
"The plane was 30 miles out of Barbados, about 1,400 miles southeast of Miami, when the pilot reported an explosion in flight," Carol Lencki, a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration in Atlanta, Ga., said yesterday. "He attempted to return to Barbados and ditched in water 11 miles southwest of Barbados."
The demands from a crowd in the Spanish capital followed a night of right-wing violence in San Sebastian. The northern Basque city was the scene of the killings of 18 people.
Spanish want new rule
MADRID, Spain—Angered over the killing of police by Basque separatists, right-wing demonstrators yesterday chanted a Franco annot and shouted for the killings to be stopped.
Government officials discounted the impact of the right-wing protest as the work of extremists without any real political base. But they acknowledged further outlaws were likely as rightist leaders called for a series of funeral masses and the slaying of the stalking of one of King Juan Carlos' advisers and his four police bodyguards.
The 90-minute match in the old, orate Palace of Fine Arts was sharper in tone, with more crossfire between the candidates and the opposing encounter in Philadelphia two weeks ago.
Defense policies . . .
said that he would bring openness and morality to American policy.
From page one
Ford, by virtue of a successful flip of a coin, had the last word.
"AS WE HAVE seen tonight, foreign policy and defense policy are difficult and complex issues," he said. "We can debate methods, we can debate one decision or both, but there are two things which cannot be debated-experience and results."
handling of the Arab boycott against companies dealing with Israel and in some cases with Jordan.
Ford said he offered both.
Carter repeatedly criticized the administration for a course that he said was at odds with traditional American values. He said that was shown by administration
He said it was "a disgrace that so far Mr. Ford's administration has blocked the positive legislation" that would force disclosure of companies that have heeded the boycott, and thus would prevent it from continuing.
THE DEBATE was essentially a review of the positions and criticisms both men had on the issue.
The candidates also touched on these issues:
—Carter said the United States had become "the arms merchant of the whole world." He said he would try to make the nation the world's breadbasket instead.
Both Ford and Carter voiced commitment to seeking normalization of relations with Communist China, but not at the expense of Taiwan.
Two of the victims were hanged and their bodies mutilated, and others set are off in the fighting at Thammasat University. The violence grew out of leftist protests against the government, led by dictator Thanom Kitkittchon, who was ousted by student protests three years ago.
Unconfirmed reports put the death toll at 35 or more.
Thai regime overthrown
American, said he didn't want Thailand to fall prey to Communists.
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)—A military man known for his tough stance against communism seized power in Thailand yesterday after savage battles between leftist and rightist students that left at least 10 people dead and about 180 wounded, by police courts.
Thanom wasn't believed to have played an active role in the coup itself. He and Sangad were on poor terms when Thanom was in power.
Ford said morality of U.S. foreign policy was evident in current efforts for settlement in southern Africa, where, he said, there would have been an "acceleration of the bloodshed" without the U.S. role.
Defense Minister Sangdah Chaiwayu, who was armed forces chief until six days ago, was commander of the Minister Semi Pramjo and decorated principal year-old Sangd, who is considered pro-
THE PRESIDENT said it was easy for "a grandstand quarterback" to criticize him now. But he said he would have been falsely audited he had not acted to rescue the crew.
Near the end of the debate, Ford was asked about a General Accounting Office report that criticized his handling of the situation involving the 1957 dives in a rescue mission for the crew of a
freighter captured by Combian gunboats 18 months ago. The crew was released while the ship returned.
Carter criticized Ford for what he said was failure to make a full and accurate estimate of the cost.
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Deadline near for complaints
All formal complaints concerning campaign procedures in the fall Student Senate elections must be submitted to the Senate at 1035 in the Kansas Union by 6 tonight.
Action on all complaints must be taken before election results are announced, Benita Bock, chairman of the Elections subcommittee, said last night.
She said the subcommittee would discuss and act on all complaints tonight before the meeting.
As of last night, no formal complaints had been submitted to the Senate, but Bock said that there had been several verbal complaints.
The subcommittee can prevent a candidate found to be in violation of the Senate's campaign rules from becoming a candidate or impose a fine of $5 to $40, she said.
Pollls will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today on the fourth floor of Wescoe Hall, the second floor of Summerfield Hall and in the south facer of the Kansas Union.
the nest
This Saturday is gonna be WILD! KU's Saturday Night Live. (You'll want to prepare mentally for this.) Read tomorrow's UDK, it'll tell you about the big blast this Saturday.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 6, 1976
2
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Lanyon's paintings a blend of animate and inanimate
By BILLCALVERT
Staff Writer
Giant ferrets crawling out of a chimney, an alligator reclining under a chair and a case full of awas all characterize the blend of wild animals and subjects in the paintings of Ellen Layon.
Lanyon, a painter and printmaker from Chicago, gave a lecture and slide show about her artwork yesterday afternoon in addition to a crowd of about 150 people.
Lanyon said that before 1968, she painted conventional depictions of people. When she developed an allergy to oil paints that year, she said, she switched to acrylics and watercolors as her mediums and decided to change subjects as well.
"I began to deal with objects of the realistic but inanimate world," she said.
THE INSPIRATION for much of her work comes from the pictures, photographs, paintings, drawings, and videos she said. The slide show consisted of her paintings and the pictures that inspired them.
"I like to construct fantasy from a variety of shapes," she said.
Some of the paintings she has done using the theme of exaggeration include giant forks standing on end next to a glass and a ladder, then mid-air preparing to quarter a giant gear.
AFTER HER "exagregation" period, Lanyon began to include animals in fantasy paintings. That idea stemmed in part from magic acts she had seen in which the magician made animals appear from boxes or bowls, she said.
LANYON SAID the combination of objects and animals in the paintings reflected the fact that she grew up in the city and had no contact with nature until her early 28s. The climax of her contact with nature, she said, came when she was commissioned in the S. Department of the Interior to do some art museum in Florida for the Bicentennial.
"I went into the everglades and saw a landscape like I had never experienced before. Because I grew up in Chicago, I had a fear of nature," she said.
Her fear of nature still persists, Lanyon said, but the contact with the everglades would have a devastating effect.
On Campus
Events
TODAY: THE ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGE UNIONS-International will meet today in the Kansas Union. The SUA library will open at 4 p.m., in the Union hall.
TONIGHT: ANGEL FLIGHT, the women's auxiliary to AFROTC, will meet at 6:30 in the Military Science Building. The BLACK BUSINESS COUNCIL will meet at 7 in the International Room of the Union. The KU SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 in the Governor's Room of the Union. The KU NAVIGATORS CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Forum. THE NAVIGATORS CLUB will meet at 8:30 in the Regionalist Room of the Union. The KU SKY DIVING CLUB will meet at 9 in the International Room of the Union.
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4
Thursday, October 7,1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
News quality hurt
Freedom of the press goes hand in hand with the obligation of the press to present news objectively and thoroughly. Although broadcasters aren't quite as free as the press, they have the same obligation. The power of the airwaves, especially television, is great indeed.
The press sometimes fails in its duties, but not so frequently as television does. Television news is, for the most part, rather shallow. Videos are obviously not, sometimes try to make the news more exciting for the viewers.
THIS CAN lead to making some events seem more out of the ordinary than they really are, or to playing up exciting stories that really aren't as important as events that are less exciting.
Half an hour is usually devoted to national news and another half hour goes to state and local news. About a third of this time goes to commercials, a necessary evil if broadcasting is to be free from government funding and the control that inevitably goes with it. Obviously, time is of the essence.
Time is a big part of the problem, because you can afford to show only so much news
OR PERHAPS it isn't so obvious. Our local newcasters all seem to think it much more important to trade a few jokes with the weather and sports commentators than to present more news.
It was bad enough when state and local news was sacrificed for such trivia. For the most part, national newcasters avoided such baloney.
John Chancellor plays it pretty close to the vest, Walter Cronkite's "and that's the way it is" takes up little time. Howard K. Smith has an editorial spot, but his comments are concise and rather informative.
UNFORTUNATELY, ABC, third among the nation's nightly news shows, has decided to go with a splashy new show called The Catfish Hunter, of television news.
Along with Harry Reasoner, Walters started this week to anchor a show that is relaxed, gimmicky and in many ways hilarious. But it isn't news. We get Harry and Barbara on a new set, backed by two new producers who bring the producers, nine new correspondents, two new senior producers and a new executive producer.
It is too bad that, at least after a couple of nights, there is no improvement in the news. We get Harry and Barbara trading opinions on a few stories from the news interviews of newsmakers, who are beamed to her side on a little screen.
THERE ISN'T time for her to deciently interview anyone, and the interviews and other unrehearsed severely cut the news that can be presented.
Perhaps ABC will get the rating points and advertising dollars they are seeking. But the people won't get the most news possible, and the inherent flaws of television news will be aggravated. It is good that one can change channels or, better yet, pick up a good newspaper.
By Greg Hack Contributing Writer
Ever since the venerable country doctors began disappearing from the rural towns and hamlets of America, the citizens of those towns have been faced with a problem. How can they cope with this practice in places most of them considered dull and provisional?
Many towns that could provide good incomes for doctors, including several in rural local medical services for too long and the residents of the towns and some state representatives are now asking hospitals to should state taxes support medical schools and bear the brunt of the cost of educating medical students when many people benefit from the investment?
Future M.D.s bleed taxpayers
THAT QUESTION gives rise to a broader one. With few exceptions, graduates of American medical schools traditionally have been assured of a secure and respected job in society. They are doled out and highly technical education also entitle them to generally lucrative incomes. Many graduates move into $25,000 to $40,000 yearly incomes during their first year of practice. The question then, is why shouldn't medical students pay most of the cost of their training in college for payers, who then have to turn around and pay costly doctors' fees?
During the Republican Convention in Kansas City this summer a former business consultant to physicians and dentists in Kansas City, Al Tikwart, proposed a plan to the human resources subcommittee of the committee. Although his plan was lost in the hubbub of the convention, it did receive some
Tikwart said his plan would provide more doctors at less public expense and also direct patients where they were sorely needed.
news coverage because it was a proposal that would generate great controversy in medical and educational circles.
HE CITED a 1973 study of medical schools that indicated
John Fuller Contributing Writer
that it costs from $61,100 to $104,000 to educate a medical student. Medical students paid $30,200 for services and fees. The taxpayer paid the rest of the tab. A medical education is clearly a good investment.
Tikwart proposed that the students' tuition be raised to $20,000 a year, which would be advanced to students as an
interest-free loan from a state-managed endowment fund. After having taken advantage of up to four years or $80,000, you should graduate could have one of several ways to repay the loan.
The graduate could just reply the loan in full, practice anywhere he pleased and the payments could be returned to the endowment fund. Or he could practice in one of the towns in western Kansas that a doctor so badly that they had worms was mad on streets advertising the fact. In return for a few year's service, the loan would be recognized as paid.
IF THE graduate chose to practice in an area of less acute need, but still one that needed doctors, then the time of service will the loan be charged off if extended, to perhaps 10 years.
endorsing this proposal, but I do think it has some merit and should be studied. Missouri Gov. Christopher Bond recently announced a program of his own that resembles Thwart's幼儿诊所. He says doctors leave rural Missouri every year, Bond proposed that the state provide loans in the form of scholarships that can be repaid by graduates by service in medically underserved areas. He also repay the loan in cash, freeing himself from the service.
I am not wholeheartedly
indenture themselves in some Siberia-like place of exile until their debts were paid. Some would charge that raising them would make the medical profession even more elitist than it is now.
Opponents of Tikwar's proposal could rightly say that if medical school tuition was $20,000 or even $10,000 could scare many prospective students away. The students with wealth backgrounds would be in a better position to receive the benefits of the poorer students would perhaps feel more pressure to
HOW WOULD the citizens of the towns that need doctors feel about getting a fresh, young and healthy patient? Five years or five years. Perhaps they would rather drive 40 or 50 miles to a town that had a doctor they liked.
There is no simple solution to this problem. Yet there must be a more equitable way to pay for medical education. And there should be a way to provide America's rural citizens with adequate local medical care. The family will bless them in the boondocks and produce the nation's food, there'll be no more exciting, fast-paced cities—their inhabitants will starve.
Political labels are myths
By PAUL ADDISON
Guest Writer
Several myths have run rampant through the recent history of American presidential sections that are more interested in the ambiguity and vagaries of the political scene.
A conservative is, by Webster's definition, opposed to change and falls into that other nebulous class, moderate.
RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT FROM A RECENT NUCLEAR TEST IN CHINA HAS BEEN DETECTED IN AT LEAST SEVEN EAST COAST STATES.
LIVESTOCK ARE BEING SWITCHED FROM CONTAMINATED PASTURES TO GRAIN FEED AND PEOPLE ARE ADVISED TO WASH GARDEN VEGETABLES.
HOWEVER...THE RADIATION HAS BEEN DECLARED 'NOT DANGEROUS' AND THERE IS NO CAUSE FOR ALARM!
Cosmic course misunderstood
To the Editor:
I would like to thank Dr. Stephen Shawl's letter of October 4 entitled "Cosmic Confusion" for positing out the cosmological principles in course Fundamentals of Cosmology. Although he misunderstood some of the facts, he did mention that the course was based on the state and big bang hypotheses in light of the laws of thermodynamics. He also mentioned correctly that the course was based on the supernatural creation as the only consistent conclusion.
Another misunderstanding, which resulted from his not being at the class last Thursday, gave him a course titled "catalog cosmology isn't about cosmology." In fact, our entire first class session was a historical review of cosmology. The class will now consider the cosmologies in explaining the cosmologies in explaining the origin of the universe and which
The misuse of Valium (Kansan, Sept. 28) stems from a long line of varied social drug abuses in which drugs were used for other than "strictly medical purposes." The problem isn't a new one, just an old one in a new form.
If Dr. Shawl had seen one of the posters advertising the class, or had accepted my personal interest in his letter, would have been quite different. The poster left no question as to the sponsor (KU Creationists Club) or the purpose of the class. It clearly stated that the course was a nontechnical examination of the laws of science as applied to the steady state theory, big bang hypothesis, and special relativity, along with consideration of cosmogony would be a part of the course.
answers to these questions are simple and easy. Drug misuse and abuse is clearly everybody's problem and requires the extensive attention of enforcement agencies, health professionals and law drug information groups like Headquarters.
Users careless To the Editor:
The excessive practice of
Readers Respond
But aside from the hypocrisy of society and in reference to John Fuller's editorial, the
The class was hardly a captive audience; it would more correctly be called a discussion group. I'm sure the remaining three class sessions will be no different.
is the most consistent extrapolation from known science.
In writing these things, I don't question Dr. Shawl's concern for what is taught in the field of nursing, just his information.
New medical drugs introduced today undergo extensive and rigid testing. Certain requirements must be met to insure the effectiveness and detect possible toxicities. These tests, which Valium itself causes, are used in the Food and Drug Administration and take about seven years to complete.
Thus, the validity of such a statement as "a basically
nonchallent attempt to relate the drug action to minor tranquilizers to that of manna tends to be confusing.
Daniel P. Goering Fundamentals of Cosmology, Instructor
prescribing Valium has long concerned physicians in this country. In an attempt to analyze such a complex and indept phenomena, shouldn't we look a bit further than the doctor who prescribes the drug for 'nonspecific aliments?'
harmless drug like marijuana" is questionable. It shouldn't be left up to the unqualified to determine
John Preble Coffeyville senior
Society as a whole has gotten into the habit of "taking a pill or something" to feel better. We see that individuals seek relief from "depression or anxiety and the symptoms that accompany the illness." Both conditions needed for development of character* The
More disruption To the Editor:
How funny it is that the University Events Committee would prohibit the playing of a lone guitarist, and then refuse to let the band march down Joyhawk Boulevard for the comedy show. This justifies their reasons by claiming that it will "disrupt classes." Well if the University Events Committee is so concerned with the disruption of classes, then why don't they teach in our campus? And they campus. Perhaps they should sit on in my English class in Marvin Hall. Or perhaps they should try to hear an instructor's lecture above the vacuuming in Wescoe Hall. If that isn't a disruption of classes, then I can't use idiots like these that will deprive us of our basic liberties and civil rights.
Mike Nelv
Lawrence sophomore
A LIBERAL, on the other hand, favors progress and reform in social institutions and in a free liberty of individual action.
All too often, however, a liberal is labeled a Democrat and a conservative is called a Republican. And all too often, the cap doesn't fit the person who wears it.
Painting ideological and political party affiliations frequently becomes merely an exercise in semantic artistry which makes one with no more than a vague idea of a person's beliefs.
RADICALS and reactionaries, reformers and revolutionaries, liberals and libertarians, conservatives and liberals, definitions go on and on and we become embedded in a sea of words, submerged beneath a morass of meaningless media terms that we all too frequently rarely stop to think about.
Ford calls Carter a liberal.
Carter calls Ford a conservative. Ford declares himself a moderate Republican. Carter says he's a moderate Democrat.
Ne'er the twain shall meet?
One never knows.
BENEATH the cool exterior of the two political opportunists endeavoring to grab the richest American politician whose logical differences are less distinct than we have been led to believe. The Republican and Democratic parties have never been far apart, but support from liberals and conservatives might have
been expected to vote for the opposing party.
Think back to 1964, when Barry Goldwater became the Republican presidential nominee. Some classified him as a right-wing conservative, others a reactionary. Goldwater proceeded to court the support of working people, long considered Democrats, leaving Johnson to gain the confidence of his party. A percentage of the middle and upper classes, long considered moderately conservative Republicans.
In the following two elections, each candidate acquired an identity tag by which persons judged his character. Eugene Wallsley received a "ultra-liberal," George Wallace the "southern conservative," Richard Nixon the "moderate conservative," and Hubert Humbert and George McGowen the "moderate liberals."
THIS YEAR the media and the politicians again have played the labeling game and left us in confusion about the reasons behind their decision. Remember Sen. Richard Schweiker, Ronald Reagan's Achilles' heel? Schweker is a fan of Republican leanings who won a place on Nixon's enemies list and voted to break up the big oil companies. However, he took responsibility for abortion, and gun control. Can Schweker justifiably be pinned down as a liberal or a conservative? It seems hardly fair to put Schweker ahead approach to different issues.
all these elections. Placing certain labels on politicians can win or lose them a lot of support, whatever their opinion regarding the issues. Carter can win with some concerns, one a liberal by others, and still believe in the same things. George Will, the national columnist can counter his conservatives. The values he cherishes and repeatedly invokes—pietry, family, industriousness, discipline—the soul of conservative Americans OTHERS SEE his proposals to reform the tax system, cut the number of government agencies and opt for change in other spheres as unmistakably
There is clearly a paradox in
In essence, the difference between Carter, advocating liberal measures, and Ford, advocating conservatism is simply one of degree. The terms in this case come to symbolize little more than minor polarities that don't two widely divergent meanings.
In the final analysis, Carter and Ford, whose philosophies suggest cautious change, agree on many issues and don't fit the stereotypes they represent. They don't busing for integration. Both personally abuse abortion but differ on the present ruling. Both see the need for at least matching Soviet defense spending and both believe in a balanced budget. Both say they will simplify the tax system and make it easier to home ownership programs.
(Paul Addison is a graduate student from Lymm, Cheshire, in Great Britain.)
An explanation has just come providently to hand. The telltale smell was'tmouthwash; it was whitewash. A reader in Minneapolis supplies a revealing letter of amplification.
THE COMMISSION's report was based in substantial part upon a series of public hearings about the country. The report goes to some pains to describe these hearings and the "evidence" obtained at them. The purpose was to gather data from those who idea was to cover "the entire spectrum of views and experiences concerning school desegregation."
The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights delivered itself a few weeks ago of a full-blown report on desegregation of the nation's public schools. The report had a curiously antisemitic smell, as if the authors had just gurgledrassacasassas that impression was that desegregation is being achieved without offending anyone.
As part of this elaborate search for "accurate information" four state advisory meetings were held in Minneapolis April 22-24.
"AS YOU know," Roberts began, "the United States Commission on Civil Rights is essentially a fact-finding or research agency." With disarming candor, Roberts
How whitewash is made
The session was as rigged as a clipper ship. Feb. 11, Clark Roberts, regional director of the Commission on Civil Rights, sent a letter to Minneapolis School Superintendent Donald Weihee we wanted to explain the national school desegregation study.
James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1976 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Roberts wrote, "to demonstrate to the nation that school desegregation can be effectively accomplished."
went on to explain precisely what kind of facts the commission wanted to find, and to understand the purpose of the commission's search.
"The commission has undertaken this major effort."
Let us pause to hail the finding of facts. Let us give praise to honest research.
ROBERTS requested the superintendent's cooperation in this admirable undertaking. It appeared that Robert Williams, a member of the school and "indicated concern about open forum." Roberts undertook to dispel that concern.
"The study is not designed," he said, "to increase the visibility of antidisegregation forces. We are not attempting to meaning that would have a negative impact on the school system."
Roberts was full of reassurances. "This is not a forum for the appearance of individuals permitted to speak at the open meeting would first be interviewed by the commission
staff Roberts identified the "types of individuals" he was interested in hearing. He wanted one pro-desegregation school board member, one antidesegregation board member whose any board views he had seen desegregation had become more favorable since implementation of desegregation.
Probably this whitewash job is harmless, for the commission had little credibility to begin with, but the report recalls a 1968 incident in which it published in Savannah about 187. It was entitled, if memory serves, "An Impartial, Nonpartisan and Unblessed Account of the recent War Between the United States and Confederate Point of View."
ONCE A token "and!" had been provided for, Roberts wanted, in effect, a halluilel chorus. He wanted a minority administrator, a representative of the teachers' union, two teachers and one white and one principal from schools "where problems are greatest, or where problems were expected but did not occur, and at schools where desegregation is most successful, white and minority religious leaders. He wanted "officials of NAACP or other major civil rights organization."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August ninth edition on Saturday morning June and July except Saturday morning days. Second-class paper at lawrence, Kan. May 29, 2015, no matter if $ a amstercher or $18 a year in Dougston College, the student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are paid, through the student office.
Editor Debbie Gumbp
Business Manager Terry Hannon
Thursday, October 7, 1976
selves in some
of exile until
we paid. Some
that raising
make the
mine the more
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5
the citizens of ed doctors feel fresh, young and alert; they they would they 50 miles to a doctor they
simple solution to there must be way to pay for ans. And there may to provide citizens with medical care. one doesn't live and produce there'll be no fast-paced habitants will
hs
University Daily Kansan
politicians. Placing politicians can a lot of supple their opinion es. Carter can conservative by others, and some things. like the Carter an conservative. cherishes andokes—piety, strousness, the soul of ill contends. his proposals e system, cutoffs with the ability for change in unmistakably
analysis, Carter
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websiteh job commission to begin instruction art recalls a number of unanswered abounds about, if memory needed, between the form a Con- linker. Between the form a Con- linker.
KU's Lawrence campus has a full-time
empartment (PTE) enrollment of 21,011, an
increase of 2.7 per cent. The university
won the award yesterday by Gil
Dekn, dean of admissions and records.
FTE enrollment up 2.7 per cent
Last fall's FTE was 20,449.
The amount of state funds and student fees the University is authorized to spend is determined by the FTE figures. FTE enrollment is computed by adding student credit hours and dividing by an average full-time student credit hour load.
One FTE unit is allowed for every 15
$595 burglary reported
The burglary of a KU student's apartment early Tuesday morning netted thieves about $956 worth of furniture, police reports stated yesterday.
Kirk Starks, Dodge City junior, was awakened about 1 Tuesday morning by noise in the downstairs of his unlocked apartment, he told police.
He looked out the window and saw four men loading furniture into a blue or green Chevy-GMC van, according to the police report.
One of the men saw him and told the
others, “There’s a guy up there watching us: let's put out of here.” Starks said.
The man left and drove west toward the University, he said.
Starks said he got the license number of the van-'KAN' 1976. F1-7833.
Starks told police that nine pieces of furniture were taken from his apartment: a vinyl sofa, worth $200; a chair, worth $75; a coffee table, worth $50; two end tables, worth $75; two table lamps, worth $75; and a mattress and boxsprings, worth $120.
Lawrence police are still investigating the burglary.
undergraduate credit hours, one for every 12 law school credit hours and one for every nine graduate student credit hours. According to Board of Regents regulations, School of Religion, ROTC and physical education aren't included in computing the FTE.
Dyck had announced last week that the
number of students enrolled in fall classes
was 22,553 on the Lawrence campus and
the campus—a combined enrollment of 24,372.
Both the FTE and total enrollment figures are based on enrollment on Sept. 20, the 20th
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said last week that the total enrollment was about 500 more than the University had budgeted for. He said the state legislature probably would allow KU to spend the money any students outside the budgeted number.
SUA Forums present
ELECTION
'76
with
JULIAN
BOND
Normally, state schools are allowed to spend only the amount budgeted by the state, regardless of the amount collected from student fees.
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Tickets now available at the SUA Office
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THE TIME IS HERE TO GET INVOLVED with THE MINORITY STUDENT CENTER
The time has come for moving things forward to where they should be.
For some time, things have been sitting still for minorities on the K.U. campus. In fact, things seemed to have moved backwards. There are many reasons why the situation ain't like it should be, and you could go on for days listing those reasons. Well, the time has come for the end of complaining and the beginning of correcting the situation.
What???
Location:
Level 3
Kansas Union
There are many ways to keep this thing going and growing. Recently, the Black Fraternities and Sororites sponsored two dances and used the money to pay for today's event. Their cooperation is an example (A damned good one) of how we can work together to get things accomplished for our own good.
Minority Student Center to Open in October
How Can You Help?
You can help by participation on the Planning or the Action committees of the Minority Student Center. The Planning committee decides which events will be coordinated through the Center; and the Action committee makes sure that these events get carried out. The most important way for you to help is to use the Center when it opens in October, or by joining the Minority Affairs subcommittee of the Student Senate.
When???
Now is the time.
This Minority Student Center will be one of the largest student offices in the Union and will serve Blacks, Chicanos, and Indians. A committee of students have been working on the plans for this Center, which will be a central communications and information loosely managed by the Minority Student Center will not work. You! Your support, the Center can grow into a strong voice for your needs.
Some of you are already aware that things are beginning to move. The most important development in the last few months has been the approval of a Minority Student Center in the Student Union. This came about through the efforts of concerned minority students working through the Student Senate and the Student Union.
if you are interested in working on a committee or if you just want more information on the Center stop by or contact the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Suite 105, in the Kansas Union. (864-3710).
This ad paid for through Student Activity Fees.
1
6
Thursday, October 7, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Soccer club reigns supreme, 3-0
By STEVE CLARK
Sports Writer
Following two lackiter outings, the University of Kansas soccer club dominated play to defeat William Jewell 3-0 yesterday in intramural fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
"Overall it was pretty good," coach Bernie Mullin said afterward. "We did the simple stuff—short, sharp passes—and that's what works."
KU was in control from the start and played its best soccer of the day during the first 20 minutes but couldn't score. Several shots came close, but none went in.
However, the constant pressure finally paid off when manson Takerazek headed abroad in 1976. He was a noted physicist.
THE GOAL seemed to inspire the laywatcher; just minutes later another score
Damasio, in turn, fired a perfect pass to John Cochran, who was breaking into an attack from behind.
Forward Pat Callahan took control of the ball in KU'S end of the field and skillfully dribbed into William Juan territory where he passed to Juan Damasio.
He took Damascus's pass and slammed a hard kick into the net. That made it 20,000 yards, well under the goal line.
Volleyball team rallies to tournament victory
KU's volleyball team won a three-tem-
tournament last night, but it wasn't easy.
The Jayhawks had to come from behind in three of four matches to defeat Benedictine College and Central Missouri State University in Robinson Gymnasium.
"We have a tendency to get behind early," KU coach Bob Stanciflask said last night. "I don't like it, but at least we can come back to win."
KU won its first game against CMSU, 15-13, but lost its second, 15-9. In the third game of the match, the Jayhawks trailed, 9-12. The team went on to serve and led KU to a 15-9 victory.
"TINA SHOWED real poise tonight," Stancill said. "This is the first time we let her serve and she got them in with something on it. She played really well."
In the final matches of the night, KU defeated Benedictine twice and had to come out with a victory.
The Jayhawks won the first game, 15-10.
Big 8 statistics indicate KU has unbalanced team
While KU's offense ranks first in rushing and second in both scoring and total offense, the defense is floundering in seventh in rushing, nassing, scoring and total defense.
TEAM RANKINGS
Big Eight Conference statistics released yesterday indicate that the Jayhawks might not be fielding a balanced 22-man start lineup.
Halfback Laverne Smith and quarterback Nolan Cromwell pace the conference's leading rushing team, which is also ranked second in the nation behind Michigan. The Jayhawks are averaging 363 yards on the ground.
Smith, is leading the conference with 108.5 yards per game and an amazing 8.2 per carry average. Cromwell, the conference's offensive player-of-the-week, is fourth in winning with a 92 yard game average and leading in scoring averaging 10.5 per game.
| Team | W | G | All Games | Pct. | Pct. | Pts. | Pts. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| KANSAS | 4 | 0 | 1.00 | .100 | 134 | 72 | 89 |
| RANGERS | 5 | 0 | 1.00 | .100 | 134 | 72 | 89 |
| NEBRASKA | 3 | 1 | 1.00 | .850 | 152 | 32 | 51 |
| Iowa State | 2 | 1 | 1.00 | .750 | 152 | 32 | 51 |
| Minnesota | 3 | 1 | 1.00 | .750 | 152 | 32 | 51 |
| Oklaho State | 2 | 1 | 1.00 | .750 | 152 | 32 | 51 |
| Oklahoma State | 3 | 1 | 1.00 | .687 | 168 | 80 | 47 |
| Arizona State | 2 | 1 | 1.00 | .687 | 168 | 80 | 47 |
| State | G | A | Ytd. | Avg. | Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Iowa State | 41 | 96 | 1754 | 32.8 | 32.8 |
| Kansas State | 40 | 104 | 1719 | 32.7 | 32.7 |
| Kentucky State | 39 | 117 | 1691 | 32.7 | 32.7 |
| Oklahoma State | 36 | 126 | 1527 | 33.5 | 33.5 |
| Oklahoma State | 35 | 136 | 1404 | 33.7 | 33.7 |
| Oklahoma State | 34 | 146 | 1384 | 33.7 | 33.7 |
| Oklahoma State | 33 | 156 | 1297 | 33.0 | 33.0 |
| Oklahoma State | 32 | 166 | 1248 | 33.0 | 33.0 |
| Oklahoma State | 31 | 176 | 1218 | 33.0 | 33.0 |
| Oklahoma State | 30 | 186 | 1193 | 33.0 | 33.0 |
| Oklahoma State | 29 | 196 | 1178 | 33.0 | 33.0 |
| | G | ALC | Yield | Avg |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Nebraska | 4 | 241 | 871 | 36.0 |
| Iowa State | 4 | 244 | 1548 | 39.6 |
| Colorado | 4 | 273 | 1146 | 297.0 |
| Colorado State | 4 | 273 | 1146 | 297.0 |
| Missouri | 4 | 295 | 1328 | 297.0 |
| RAINSAN | 4 | 202 | 1386 | 297.0 |
INDIVIDUAL RANKINGS Wrighton
Players, Tran M.
SHUKE, KJU
SKIM, HUU
BROWN, JEH
HOMMELL, KU
TURNER, JU
ANTONY, NU
Antony, NJ
Culuth, USU
Culuth, USU
BANK, RU
AMPLEFIELD, KU
AMPLEFIELD, KU
28
29
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15
40
69
40
46
39
60
42
61
61
31
31
31
49
49
28
49
49
49
49
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is looking for for men and women to be: political labor officers economic commercial officers administrative officers consular officers
"I don't think we played well," Kuhn said. "If we played up to our potential we wouldn't be behind, but it shows that we can stick together to come back to win."
In the second game, KU was down, 11-4; when Debbie Kuhn came in to serve. she sent KU ahead, 14-11, and the Jayhawks won it. 15-11.
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KU PUT the game out of reach when defensive mistake took advantage of a defensive mistake.
The second half was KU's, and Mullin substituted early and often. He even went on to score 25 goals.
his defensive man wasn't in sight, he was able to retrieve the ball and kick it past the goalie.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Alt-Amure had misjudged a pass near the
air, and it went over his head. But because
Sheer comfort By Warners
Mullin called the win a shot in the arm to KU, now 1-1. "I like we play like we did the first 20 minutes for an entire game," he said, "we'll beat anybody in the conference."
Jay
SHOPPE
Board of Examiners
Room 7000
Department of State
Washington, D.C. 2020-32
FREE PARKING
PROJECT 800
835 MASSE. +483-4.8433
LAWRENCE, KANS. 60444
Mullin and KU get a chance to test that theory Sunday in Ames against Iowa State.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
--to
CANOE TRIP
SUA travel
Pineville, Mo. Oct. 22-24
Organizational meeting for interested persons, on Thursday, Oct. 7, 9:15 p.m.
Oread Room
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IF YOU BELIEVE:
-Quality faculty is important to your education and that higher salaries are necessary to attract & retain such faculty;
—Better building and facilities at KU are important to your education;
—The state should give more aid to the University rather than raising tuition;
—A criminal record and jail sentence are unnecessarily harsh for possession of marijuana;
—There is still widespread discrimination against women and support the Equal Rights Amendment;
—No human being has the right to enact the death penalty upon another person;
—A woman's past sexual history should not be used to prejudice
juries in rape trials;
Then you need to register to vote in Douglas County and vote for Mike Glover your State Representative
Mike Gloyer, a graduate of KU himself, has been your Representative for the past four years. He not only believes in the importance of respecting others, but is also necessary to make these beliefs become realities. When other legislators have been afraid to take controversial stands, Mike has had to challenge his constituents believe in stronger university support from the state, and less state involvement in our private lives.
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Coach's return ends KU's unbeaten season
By DAN BOWERMAN
Sports Writer
Jane Markert had mixed emotions when she brought her Central Missouri State University (CMSU) field hockey team to the University of Kansas yesterday.
Markert, last year's KU coach, said she wanted her own team to win but still felt a strong kinship to the players she left. She said she had taught she to play field hockey.
But Market's players didn't let her sentimentality get in their way as they handed the KU team its first loss of the season, 5-1.
"I enjoyed the victory," Markert said, but it hard because I know most of these people.
CMSU DOMINATED the game both in scoring and in penetration time. Central Missouri had 8:06 of penetration time in the first half and 5:37.2 in the second. The Jayhawks managed 3:03.6 in the first half and 4:25 in the second.
Nancy Lambros scored KU's only goal with 14 minutes left to play in the first half, but CMSU led at halftime, 3-1, and scored two more goals in the second.
Because Janet Ballard, KU's varsity goalie, was injured Tuesday night and was
unable to play, KU coach Diana Beebe beebie had very little experience at the goalie position.
"I THOUGHT she played an excellent game," Beebe said. "She went into a position that she didn't know much about." She knew she had to have such praise for the rest of the team.
"We played field hockey," she said. "We couldn't stop the ball; we couldn't hit the ball. We weren't aggressive at all. By the way we played, we should've lost. But we're going to try to correct that by Friday."
IN THE junior varsity game that followed the varsity game, Central Missouri edged KU-1, 0. The Jayhawks did beat CMSU in penetration time, however, with 6:14 in the first half and 3:32 in the second, compared to Kansas' 5:04 in the first half and 7:31 in the second.
KU now heads into its toughest stretch of the season by playing four games in five days starting from Friday. Southwest Missouri State comes to KU on Friday, followed by Wichita Collegiate School on Saturday and the Kansas City Hockey Club on Sunday. KU then travels to William Jewell on Tuesday.
KC tabs Gura, Leonard
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Larry Gura, a New York Yankee castoff, will be the Kansas City Royals' start pitcher against the New York Yankees in Saturdays American league play-off games royals manager Whitey Herzog announced yesterday.
Dennis Leonard, a hard-throwing right-hander, will start Sunday night's second game. Herzog declined to name a starter for the third play-off contest in New York.
Gura, who doesn't hide his bitterness toward Yankee manager Bill Martin, fashions a jacket and brings to the club in May in New York that she said. Fran Healy to New York. He hurled a four shothut against Oakland on Sept. 23, the Royals last and most important victory of the season.
"I was hoping against hope I would get to
start Saturday," the 28-year-old left-hander said. "Martin told me in spring training he would use me for long relief and spot games." He never even let me warm up in the bullpen.
"This will be the biggest, most emotional game of my life. I don't have anything against the Yankee organization. But I do against Billy Martin."
Earlier yesterday, Martin revealed that his starting pitcher for Saturday, Cattfish Hunter, had trouble with his pitching arm much of the year.
Hunter, a 20-game winner from 1971 to 1975, finished the regular season with a 17-15 record. He also led the team in assists.
Martin has announced that Ed Figueroa, whose 19-10 record is the best among Yankee starters, would pitch the second game Sunday night.
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Thursday, October 7, 1976
Something's Always Going on at HENRY'S
Lax attitude frets Moore
University Daily Kansan
We have a New Series of Glasses
than trying to get ready to play Oklahoma State."
Only conference games remain on the Jayhawks' schedule and Kansas coach Bud Moore is apprehensive that his team isn't taking the new season seriously enough.
"I worry about our players and coaches realizing the importance of this ball game," he said yesterday. "They haven't displayed it as of vet.
"Our practice started off with various people dragging around. I thought the ofference improved a great deal throughout the week, and by the end, I ought to be home around a warm fire rather
CORNERBACK SKIP SHAP, who picked off two errant passes against Wisconsin last week, is still hampered by a sore shoulder. It might not be able to play, according to Moore.
Moore said he had several ways of shuffling personnel around in the secondary to replace Sharp if necessary, but he'd also recommend on freshmen Sam Smith or Dave Harris.
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84-5282
VASQUE HIKER
Closes at 12:30 Saturday, Oct. 9 for Maintenance
You'll be glad you've got a boot
**is good!** 1.) PADDED COLLAR A KNEE for comfort.
2.) PADDED TONGUE on healing for protection.
3.) FULL GRAIN ROUGHOUT HEATH is durable.
4.) VIRTAM LUG SOLID AND NEEL for support. 5.) VIRRAM LUG SOLID AND NEEL for support and traction. 6.) FULLY LEATHER LINED for inside comfort.
This medium weight backpacking boot is designed for rugged terrain with backpacks of 25 pounds or more. For an additional fitting, step in and see us.
SPORT
NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Spaghetti Dinner
Meat Ball or Meat Sauce
$1.95 Reg. $2.25
for good Monday thru Thurs. Exp. Oct. 31, 1972
Offer good Monday thru Thurs. Exp. Oct. 31, 1976
Louise's West HAPPY HOUR 3 to 5 Mon.—Sat.
Tall Draws...35
Cans & Bottles...50°
Pitchers...$1.50
Schooners...60°
H
1307 W. 7th
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the student activity fee.
FROM: Tom Mitchell—Student Senate Business Manager
*All officers who are responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds must:
1. Attend a training session conducted by the office of the Student Senate
2. Sign an organizational management contract with the Student Senate.
3. Obtain advance written authorization for each expenditure from funds
4. Obtain a Master's degree or equivalent in business.
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met. Even though you have attended a training session last fiscal year, you will still have to attend one during this fiscal year) and each session will be scheduled once each month. The training session has been scheduled for the following time:
4. Account for all inventory.
The session will last less than an hour. You must contact the Student Senate Office at 864-3170 to sign up for this session or for additional information.
International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee.
Tuesday, October 12, 1976 at 2:00 P.M.
--and her Blues Machine
Koko Taylor
Friday and Saturday, Oct. 8th & 9th
8:30 Midnight
841-0817
All tickets $3.50 at the door.
737 New Hampshire
---
Off the Wall Hall
KEBOBS
MIX 'N MATCH
CHOOSE ANY TWO FOR $3.99
Mr. Steak is servin up kebabs in four mix m
match flavors. Teriyaki steak kebab Buttery
scallop kebab Juicy steak kebab And teriyaki
shrimp kebab
Choose any two kebabs to make one scrumptious dinner. Mix & Match Kebab Dinner includes two kebabs, rice pilaf, plus your choice of soup, juice or salad. For all 3.99.
920 W, 23rd Open 7 days 11 a.m.-10 p.
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
Mr. Steak
1976 Mr. Steak, Inc
ALLY
carousel
carousel
ESPECIALLY FOR FALL
JUNIOR DRESSES
Carousel's picked a selection of sensational new dresses in fall perfect styles, colors and fabrics. For example, Left: Stunning black look from Young Edwardian, $38 Right: Swirly sleeveless wrap by Jody, $30.
BANKAMERICARD
with Amy
CAROUSEL CHARGE
STORE HOURS
M. — Thurs. 10—8:30
Sat. 10—6
Malls Shopping Center
BANKAMERICARD welcome here
BANKAMERICAN
professor key
CAROUSEL
CHARGE
master change
60 min
immaculate charges
the inversion bank
Malls Shopping Center 23rd & Louisiana
8
Thursday, October 7, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Beeson going forth to Cowboy showdown
By BRENT ANDERSON
Associate Sports Editor
Linebacker Terry Beeson figures that Oklahoma State will be more ready to reach the playoffs.
"They're looking to explode against us," Beeson, a three-year letterman from Coffeyville, said yesterday. "They're hoping they can put it all together against him."
But Beeson's attitude about the game probably can be better understood on a
which were unassisted, convinced any that he fully recovered from the last injury.
"It didn't hurt my ability to play," he said, "but it did set me back a year."
Beeason said he heard a lot about the Oklahoma State Cowboys this summer while working at an oil refinery in Coffeville.
"O-State people talk about football all the time," he said. "That are down there in person."
Sports
more head personal basis. Beeson will be going
head to head against Derrel Gourth, the
Oklahoma State center, someone Terry
Beeson knows all too well.
Gourdif is from Parsons, a town about 35 miles from Coffeyville, and played against
"WHEN WE were in high school, people heard my name as a star in southeast Kansas," Beeson said. "Now Gofourth is who is mentioned as a possible All-America."
"You can beet he he's going to be after me." It would be unfair to say that Goforth played better than Beeson in last year's game that Oklahoma State won, 35-19. But the fact that Kansas lost the game is enough to get him ready for the game. Beeson said.
"We haven't beat them since I've been he said. "We're going to do everything."
In addition to last year's loss, KU lost to Oklahoma State 24-13 in 1974 and die the Coyotes.
Beeson said he played better this year than he did last season. Considering that he led KU in tackles last year, that's saying a quite bit. But Beeson says he is able to handle blockers better, is quicker and faster and more agile than last season.
"I'm just now getting to where I should be last year at this time." Beeson said.
BEESON SUFFERED a broken leg in Feb. 17 when he slipped on ice in a parking lot. It was not known whether he suffered an injury to his first two years. But his 103挫臂, 68 of
in. I heard about our game last year a hundred times."
Beeson is a co-captain of the team and calls the signals signals.
He said he was concerned whether the kansas defense would be able to perform offense.
"WE REALLY haven't had any pressure on us all season, and I'm a little worried about that," he said. "All the games will be played at home, and there's going to be a lot of pressure."
Beson had 14 tackles at Wisconsin last week, the eighth time in his career at UM. that he has had 10 or more in one game. He has won two of them in KU history, having 203 tackles in his career. He passed All-America defensive end John McCain, who had 302 tackles in his career.
ALTHOUGH BEESON spends much of his time playing football, he is majoring in chemical engineering. He says he plans to graduate degree, even though it might be gobble.
"I'll be drafted in the pro," Beeson said.
"It might not be in the first round, but I'll go somewhere. I want to play professionally if I can."
Beeson hasn't been injured this year, but he says he has had a bruised and cut shoulder because of the way his shoulder pads fit him. He said he hoped he would get some shoulder pads that fitted before the game against Oklahoma State.
We Write
All Risks
Automobile
Insurance
Gene
Doane
Agency
824 Mass.
SOLAR-X® REFLECTIVE FILMS
1. Read the instructions and image carefully.
2. Identify the main subject in the image.
3. Describe the activity or movement the subject is doing.
4. Write a brief description of the scene.
5. Analyze the mood or atmosphere created by the visual elements.
- REJECTS ON PER CENT SOLAR HEAT
* PREVENTS PADING
* PREVENTS COSTS
* MEETS SAPTY GLASS CODES
* ADDITIONAL DAYTIME PRIVACY
* INFORMATION KEEPING
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE
RAFFLE ELECTRIC LIGHTING
CLOTHING, FASHION & HOME DECORATION
IDEAL FOR VANS, MOBILE HOMES
GET A great glass & a large drink for 49¢
'TWEETY'
great
"TWEETY"
Meet your favorite cartoon characters now on glasses at Ken's Pizza. Get a different one every week. Like Sylvester . Road Runner . Tweety . Bugs Bunny . Daffy Duck . and Porky Pig, yours to take home when you buy any large soft drink for 49¢.
ken's pizza
2040 W. 27th
78
Running backs make cuddly teddy bears for Beeson
HIT THE COURTS AND SLOPES IN STYLE THIS FALL WITH FASHIONS FROM first serve TENNIB & SKI SHOPPE
We offer the best in name brand tennis and jogging warm-ups
Before the cold weather hits Kansas, select your
such as . . . Head, Jelenk, Winning Ways, White Stag, Loomtogs and Tennis Trails to mention a few.
rom First Serve's collections of Combi, Cebe, Profile, Head, No. 1 Sun, White Stag.
Ski-Wear
Skiing
Skiing
Also In Topeka & Wichita
TENNIS RACKETS
RESTRUNG
REGRIpped
RESTORED
24 HOUR SERVICE
first serve TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE 1119 MASSACHUSETTS
Extraordinary. One of the oddest, most beautiful films ever
EDITH BOUVIER BEALE AND HER DAUGHTER EDIE
J. E. H. M.
GREY GARDENS
01 DAVID MAYSLES / ALBERT MAYSLES / ELLEN HOYDE / MUFFIE MEYER / SUSAN TROEMKE
A MAYSLES BROTHERS' FILM
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
OCT. 8 and 9
7:00 and 9:30 p.m.
3:30 Matinee Fri. and Sat.
$1.00 admission
Tickets available at the SUA office
Woodruff Auditorium-Kansas Union
100%
NOW!
175
the
Campus Beauty Shoppe
OPEN MONDAYS
is
Men and Women's Hairstyling
REDKEN
9th & Illinois
843-3034
DID YOU KNOW?
This film was filmed entirely in Kansas City-with an all-Kansas City cast.
This is CBX Starts WEDNESDAY
the OUTLAW NETWORK!
GROOVIER than GROOVE TUBE
BOOBIER than BOOB TUBE
Trashier than TUNNEL VISION !
69 MINUTES
PUTS TV BACK IN THE BATHROOM
60 MINUTES
PUTS TV BACK IN THE BATHROOM
RESTRICTED
WARNING***
Produced / Directed by Executive Producer
IAN MORRISON JACK POESBIGER
TREVOR MURRAY
A NAUGHTY BOYS. INC. PRODUCTION COLOR
CERTAIN SCENES OR LANGUAGE MAY GROSS OUT DECENT
PROGRESSIVE
Varsitu
THEATRE • Telephone V3-1065
Evenings 7:30-9:00
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30
---
JOHN WAYNE LAUREN BACALL "THE SHOOTIST"
The cast of the decade.
The western adventure
of a lifetime.
PG 10
Eve. 7:30-9:30 Granada
Sat.-Sun. 2:30 NUEBLO-SAN JOSE
For those who enjoy foreign films, An Isbn
classic. Priced by the Royal Shakespeare
Company.
"At the center there is Glenda Jackson's marvelously impartial performance." — REX FREED, Young Reader
... "a startlingly fresh and perceptive
film by the director directed by
Trevora Nunn and inquired into
interpreted by Jackson
who also well served." — MARIA CRIST
"HEDDA" on film is all Glenda Jackson."
Eve. 7:30-9:30
Sat. & Sun. Mat. 2:20
Hillcrest
ative
ceptive
by
y
GLENDA JACKSON in
Hedda
IPG PRESENTS DINNER BROADCAST
MEL BROOKS is back in the saddle. THE BLAZING SADDLES
Clevon Little, Madeline Kahn, Gene Wilder,
Harvey Korman
R
Eve. 7:25 & 9:25
Sat. & Sun. 2:15
C In search of Noahs Ark
Hillcrest
Is it still there?
Eve. 7:15, 9:15 Sat. & Sun, 2,4
MOTHER JUGS & SPEED
Hillcrest
DUTCHESS & THE DIRTWATER FOX
PG 7:30
9:25
7:30 ENDS SATURDAY
9:25 Sunset
IN THE HOUSE OF AN EXTRAORDINE
Thursday, October 7, 1976
9
Winn criticizes release of Mayaguez report
By BETH SPRINGGATE
A recently released report questioning President Gerald Ford's actions in the Mayaguez incident [the politics of] Rep. Martin Reagan came from the third district, said last night.
Winn, speaking to about 100 people at a meeting in Douglas County. County officials said she released the report received the approval of all members of the subcommittee on homelessness.
However, Winn said, the release was approved only by the chairman of the board.
"I'm the ranking Republican on the committee and I didn't even know the names of the candidates," she said.
The report, released Tuesday, one day before the second presidential-candidate debate and 18 months after the Mayaguz incident, was a "deceitful" political tactic to sway opinions in the presidential election, he said.
"THAT IS politics at its worst and I think
the american people are going to see through it," he said.
Winn mentioned taxes and unemployment as two of the major issues of this year's campaigns. He said the government should spend about $70 million, small businessmen and working people.
He said although there is about an eight per cent unemployment rate, "five per cent of those don't want to work and won't work."
Winn said he was one of few congressmen who were concerned about balancing the power.
"You young people are going to be sad
died with this, he said. I 'ry for you, and
me.'"
Winn also talked about the resignation of Earl Butz, former secretary of agriculture. He said he thought that Butz was the victim of a sex abuse scandal and that Butz was just repeating an old oke.
"It's too bad that a man who's been in politics for a long time, who's been a member of the cabinet, would even say that. He's a hard-hitting guy who usually says
Gov. Robert Bennett was also at the meeting to thank present officers for doing their part in building a better city.
what he thinks," Winn said.
election of Republican candidates this fall. The meeting was sponsored by the KU College Republicans and the Douglas County Republic Central Committee.
WHAT IS
MASSAGE
MASSAGE:
- tones your body
- releases your unwanted tensions
- helps you to get in touch with your own
body, and, in turn, with your whole self
- promotes your well being
* makes you feel good
HEADAMSTERS at 809 Vermont is pleased to announce that a masseur and massage services. Please call HEADMasters at 8434880 for a massage appointment.
- energizes your body
MASS. STREET DELI in
041 MASSACHUSETTS
PIE
Cherry Cheesecake 75°
Offer good the entire month of Oct. 1976
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without regard to race, religion or national origin. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO ILLUSTRATED HANDS.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times times
15 words or fewer
Each additional ... $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UK BUS business office at 864-1538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
Want to buy open room fume Call John week nights, 864-217. 10-12
BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Reconditioned Schwimms -Lawrence Schwinn
Cyclery, 1820. W. 64th; 842-633. 10-13
ENTERTAINMENT
BOKONKO--Largest paraphernalia and head shop in Lawrente. 12 Eard St. 841-811-6000. 10-13
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
HORIZONS HONDA
Sales, Parts, Service
1811 W. 6th
STUDY BREAK
1-6 p.m.
Schooners — 65°
Pitchers — $1.25
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
We buy good used cars
Corvettes, Camaros,
Novas, Mustangs,
Firebirds, and
Imported Sports Cars
UNIVERSITY MOTORS
26 & Iowa 843-1395
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and
visit the office of your college to pick up
your phone (doe phone, salute phone) at WESTERN
CITY UNIVERSITY.
Jawahar Tower 5, Bedroom apt. All utilities
include electricity, water, gas, and
$34 per month. Laundry facilities on husbands'
own.
Snaeuss furnished room, utilizes paid $110 per week. Traveling distance to campus: Cali. 108-214. Tlaht.
Need to sublease immediately? Small apt, private kitchen, general lease $99 per month, utilizes one large suite.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS- Regularity of any price you see on popular hull equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-products, but with a special coating at the GRAMHOUSE SHOP at KIEFS. **tt**
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BELLO AUTO ELECTRIC, 843-8000, 9300 W, 5th hp.
BELLO AUTO ELECTRIC, 843-8000, 9300 W, 6th hp.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trades. Trade Your Furniture and Appliance Center. TV
and Internet connection.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization makes sense
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) for exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. tf
dition, gets 20 mpg. Call Fuel 843-3628. b=4
1971 Toyota Wagon Corolla Celica 1600. Excel-
automatic transmission. $4,000 miles. New valu-
e $1800. Consider smaller tires for slightly larger
transmission. Consider larg
Ampge U- Guitar amp. Used 6 mus. Excellent
Ampge L- See at Love Records, 15 W. 9 H.
843-7378. I- D- 10-7
Peugeot UO-18 for sale 20% and almost new
model. Refurbished, includes handles, fenders,
tail fit kit, rLF, 82928 or 82929 and 84729.
I have to have 48 *Gentii Le Maens* Automatic,
PSL, take the best offer. Bk14-674778. 10-7
Student and Faculty Special. Room $50 per day.
Student and Faculty Special. Room $25 per day.
Anderson's Flower Shop. Room $100. Year $165-$245.
Croft & Hall. Room $200. Year $395-$475.
Yellow Labrador pup, AKC, Champion hounds, field and show stock. V43.882-10. 1b-7
Scuba outfit Tank, regulator, wet suit and weight belt; 841-6143 after 5. 10-8
Mamiya-Sekor 500, 35 mm cannisters. Also Pioneer
64mm, 25mm, 18mm recorders—both approx. 1 yr.
(no warranty). Receive a free 30-day money-back
guarantee.
Samuel 1000X Receiver, 3 watt. Excellent condi-
tion. After 5 p.m. $14,695. come and
pay.
75 Chevy Van: black, many options, partially customized. Must see to appreciate C14-10-8
A good sound system is one of the most pleasurable things you can have. Let us show you an Advent system that will deliver more music and less energy for your less expensive Audio, 13 E. 8th. $10.10
SPECIAL-AIR speakers (Reg. $21 aow). Audio
wav, a-may-way available. Aau. DVD.
8th Hurry! 10.8
YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDELPPOINT
RUGS—CANVAS—CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
18.5 Monday, Saturday
We have the Advent~J.B.L. and Es speakers set up for a fair and home listening list. Ask for details.
--will be moving soon to
1971 Ford Van–Custom Inside wide tires and
easy-to-drive. See off. At sales 13-10-11
Phone: 842-256-3111
Phone: 842-256-3111
V.W. 73 Squareback automatic, good condition
W.J. 73614615 Wellington Rd after P-68-
4M-22414615
Acoustic 371. bass pass - 465-wits RMS - 10-11
Armstrong Fretsess bass. Bq: 841-345-361. 10-11
Must sell. 1792. Vega Hatchback, 6-10.
Call Truck 8423-7255 or 864-1945.
10-11
Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerator,
wine racks, TV stands, bedding, towels 1225th St.
6th Floor, Ks 14 a.m.-p.m. Flr. Fireplace
Foyer
1969 Oqid Natat Ralye. Price negotiate. Good
price for a book. (2004) 847-893 hearing.
1969 Natat Ralye. 847-893 hearing.
1969 Natat Ralye. 847-893 hearing.
1965 Galaxie 500 Auto. Award, steering excellent condition, $50 or best offer. Phone 842-833-10-8
5-string banjo. Great condition. Case included.
843-8599 after 500.
10-8
Fencing Equipment. Used, good condition. Foll,
mask and glove. $20. Call 864-1005 for details.
BOKONON--Largest institute of bongs and encasements in Lawrence 12 East Bath st. 811-3600.
STOCK REDUCTION SALE - Alvarais Vair Guti
libre sale price but unavailable at sale prices. Classi-
sion models at 30% off, other models at 25% off,
and Blandie Island. Located in the Audio-18
bundle.
10 apex Peugeot cycle - European components-
16 apex Peugeot cycle - $500 or best offer.
AARP membership- 466-867-89.
73 Toyota Corolla sedan. Automatic, stereo 8-
72 Toyota Corolla sedan. Automatic, sterile
tread, excellent condition. Call 643-3000 at
18:30.
Three huge room overfitting with the best瑟
seats in town. Two large rooms, memorabilia,
high class junk, bargains.
Jewelry and Indian jewelry. light books Jewelry,
gift sets. 10 p.m. 5 p.m. Quarantine. New Mar
fest,
1 yr. old 105 mm Nikkor F 2.8 lens and 2 KLH
10-8 loudspeaker. 864-2353.
For Sale 55" color RCA ConeLabs, Pioneer, Ad-
dresser, Moving. Every W-ConeDuro carbono-armor,
Moving.Every W-ConeDuro carbono-armor
Silver Getzen trust, professional model. Best offer it! Cali Catris at 841-2547 or 841-6879
Garage Sale, Saturday and Sunday. 259 Kawaii
Brown, 74-103, Garage Sale and 78 records; tables, jars,
lamps, record player and 78 records; tables, jars, lamps,
records player and 78 records.
New Epiphone acoustic guitar with case. Best offer. 842-8578. 10-13
Must sell—Arp Ring Ensemble and Thomas org-
alized with Möhong Synthesizer. Tom Palmer. 10-13
Book Sale- the Lawrence Public Library will
have a sale on Saturday, September 10,
Sat. Oct. 9, 4 p.m.-5 a.m., and Sunday,
Oct. 10, 2-6 p.m. in the library garage at 7th
Kentuckt Books in all categories, reasonable
NILLCREST BILLIARDS
HELP WANTED
71 Flat 850 Spyder Special. Exceptual condition.
Over 30 MPG. B41-2730 to 10. 10-11
Female model for freebie photographer—rx-
5x4x5 inches, natural color. Natural girl next door™ image. Call 915-833-7222.
www.naturelargest.com
1972 Super Beetle Volkswagen. $43,000 miles. AM-
M-400 - tracker stereo, extra radio. Cal. 10.15.
AM-500 - wired stereo. Cal. 10.15.
● Pin-Ball
● Air Hockey
● Foez-Ball
Part time Housekeeper/Secretary immediately,
and for 8 mins to work half-a day a week, aver-
ages 5-7 hours of ironing. General letter correspondence, 3 refer-
ences necessary. Call 842-9901 morning or evening.
Custodial work at Shenanigans. Call for information ask for Joe, 841-6000. 10-7
. SELECTION OF BEER
TRY
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
RAASCH
SADDLE & MEDICINE BLOP
900 W. 16TH ST. NW
5th Floor, 28th Street
Suite 304, Boston, MA 02107
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS
LOST AND FOUND
Lost, left silver and turquoise扣 in Women's SCA. Aug 27. Please return to M1A at SGA Maunakee
Lot; KU Bus Pass and ID (KU ID No. 200538)
Nest; Need reward. Nice reward. 864-954-909
Lot- Khaki colored jacket, size 38R. Reward.
Call- 843-1950. 10-7
LOST- Hint colored鼻子 shoulder bag. Contents include contact lenses, eye glasses, pocket书 with all identification. Victimity of ADP parking area. Contact Sharron at 804-8217. Offered. 10-14
Found - Gentile black male cau in vicinity of Malsi
Apt. owner Call 842-260-9
10-8
Found—Jean Jacket in Annex D of Summerfield.
846-4291
10-8
Lott; bait pass with 2. football and the driver's license in ii. 864-2048. **Tenile** 10-13
Lost: dark blue billflied. Keep the money plus a
money bag. When asked when rekenen, tell
them to go back at 811-6960.
Lord, Tuesday, wears the plastic-frame glasses in
Balmoral and Windsor. Both wear black shirts and
black boots and Westerns call Laurie.
One of these is not to be missed.
Round: Money. Call 841-7840. Tell me how much and where lost.
MISCELLANEOUS
Found: *$10.98 book in Robinson Gym*: Human
Sexuality: Call 843-7709 or 843-9402. 10-11
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Usher/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday- Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at mass.
Departedly need to find a home for 3 year old and no shots. If no boo is found by the weekend all shots. If no boo is found by the weekend all shots. If no boo is found by the weekend all shots.
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
Siesta Steak House. Delicious food at reasonable prices. Sunday, 12-5:30 p.m., 4-11. Closed Tuesday, 12-5:30 p.m.
850 BHEARD $ 619,700.00 $ 634,800.00
850 BHEARD $ 619,700.00 $ 634,800.00
850 BHEARD $ 619,700.00 $ 634,800.00
850 BHEARD $ 619,700.00 $ 634,800.00
850 BHEARD $ 619,700.00 $ 634,800.00
Papas, lamp, 620 Mass. Used for furniture, dishes,
saws, lamps, clockies, televisions. Open daily 12
pm-5 pm. Call 800-333-3222.
HALLOWEEN MASQUEUR DANCE by Gay
Services, a MARY HARTMAN, MARY HART-
MAN LOOK A-LINK CONTENT will highlight
the day's specials. Bathroom 20, 8-15
Union Ballroom, $1.75.
Oread Bookshop Closes Early, at 12:30 on Sat.
Oct 9 for maintenance.
PERSONAL
Any airline employee dependents who would like to be placed around the world, call Suzanne 864-160-3951.
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
842.8413
Mastercharge
Freshmen: One Fraternity now controls the student body Vice President and three of the four presidents. They want the fourth, your Freshman President! Vote against the entire "U.S.A." conference. Preference will be given to
RAT FURY
Armadillo Bead Co.
watch for Grand Opening at 10:00
710 Mass. 10-5 Mon. Saf. 841-7946
Would the date-hair-enabled girl who got her forwash-
ing and friday plums call me on Friday? I can ask her for a
phone if I need it.
Fryer Furnace coffee house and interesting
friery. Ft. & Sat. 9 p.m. 1164 Louisiana. 10-8
POOI1—the overseeing staff and aider behind
their jobs. They also care for the health of
life meadows and become heirs. Happy
with life as they are.
Penguin
SERVICES OFFERED
Excellent instruction in guitar, bass as well as piano. Requires ten hours of experience less times available. Keyboard Studio Studios required.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thanon sonson to the
institute, 11325 daiso avenue N, 96th St., Los Angele
asian, 11325 daiso avenue N, 96th St., Los Angele
Math. Tutoring-competent, experimented tutors can help you learn to course 000, 001, 012, 062, 116, 167, 117, 123, 182, 143, 306, 353, 62, 81, 159, 167, test preparation, Reasonable rates. Call 842-7841.
Professional Study Skills Service. Make studying pay off. For more information, call 814-567-8097.
Learn the authentic art of Bolly Dancing from a private party. A gift park at 4850 Midge Island, La., offers a private dance studio.
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10
Thursday, October 7, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Funds for library employs low
By SUSAN APPLEBURY
A lack of sufficient funds to pay student library employees is of immediate concern, according to Earl Huyer, chairman of the University Senate Libraries Committee.
Last week, the committee sent a letter requesting $55,000 to supplement student wages to Chancellor Archie Dykes, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, and Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
Jim Ranz, dean of libraries, said yesterday that $165,000 of the $200,000 needed for wages was allocated to the library by the state. That money will be depleted in the latter part of next semester, be said.
Shankel indicated, however, that there wasn't any assurance that the funds would be available.
Hyser said that as of yesterday only Shankel had responded to the committee's request.
HUYSER SAID Shanker indicated that he was hopeful that additional work-study funds might be received, as they were last year when the same problem arose.
Joan Sherwood, director of KU's work-program, said that for KU to receive additional work-study funds, the federal government fund obligated work-study for fiscal 1976.
She said that the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators and the American Society for Education held a meeting.
study funds in September, but that it was delayed until November.
NASFAA again has delayed the de-obilization until February, she said.
WHEN THE FEDERAL funds are debilitated, Sherwood said, they will be given to the college work-study program or to the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant. The school there was "very good chance" that the funds would be given to the BEOG program.
If the money is instead given to the work-study program, Sherwood said. *UU doesn't care.*
She said that the library was a high priority or resource for the university funds that were allocated to it.
Huyser said both he and Shankel were aware that KU might not receive any additional work-study funds. He also said that there weren't now alternative sources of funding.
THIS WOULD deplete the library's book allocation fund and would cut back on the number of student and full-time employees. It also might reduce the library's hours,
Ranz said that if the library wasn't able to obtain additional funds through the work-study program, the library would have to "scrape it up from different accounts."
Watson Library currently is open 86 hours a week. Huyser said that the libraries of peer universities were open an average of 100 hours a week.
the library has been a "persistent problem."
According to Ranz, obtaining money for
In the fall of 1967, the library faced a similar problem. The lack of funds was partially the result of the federal minimum wage increases in the early 1970s, pay more money for fewer working hours.
Because of the $1 minimum wage at that time, the library didn't have enough funds to pay its employees and was unable to rehire them. The company employed at the end of the spring semester.
AS A RESULT, the library was forced to close at 10 p.m., instead of 11 p.m.
The needed funds, which were appropriated by the Kansas Legislature, came from additional student fees collected as the result of an increase in enrollment. The need for these funds was based
Huyser, Shankel and Ranz all indicated
the should be the present library hours
should be
"We don't satisfy the needs of our patrons." Husver said.
The number of student work hours has declined 33 per cent in the past five years, he said. During the same period, Huysser student enrollment has increased 25 per cent.
Ranz agreed that inadequate staffing at the library was "a long standing problem."
"THERE ISN'T enough processing
"I'm going to have student in
wait for me."
Huyser said that the Senate Libraries
"If the library does not purchase books that are published now," he said, "they have to go out and buy them."
Committee would try to find other sources of money, including work-study funds, so that other library funds wouldn't have to be cut.
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FUILTY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
CHILLY
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.34
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, October 8, 1976
KANS-A-N use being questioned
See story page 12
Faculty members dispute financial exigency attack
By JERRY SEIB
Half Writer
A small but vocal group of faculty members bristled last night at suggestions that they would be sacrificing their rights to policy to be used in a time of financial crisis.
Dan Adler, national secretary of the Association of American University Professors (an academic chapter of the association) chaired a chapter on financial exigency policy would give the chancellor too much power to dismiss tenured faculty members. Faculty members themselves, he said, should play a role in determining who would be dismissed.
ADLER TOLD ID audience members that portions of the proposals were "improper, roundabout, not completely ethical and probably immoral."
Several members of the audience obviously were agitated. Some shook their heads as he spoke, and the audience was shocked in its defense of the proposed document.
The financial exigency policy, outlining procedures to be used if a shortage of funds requires dismissal of tenured faculty members, is scheduled to be voted on by the University Senate Nov. 18. The policy has been in the making for three years and is intended to be an important compromise between the administration and the University government system.
UNDER THE PROPOSAL, the chanc-
ter, after consulting with government
officials, shall make a statement.
faculty members would be dismissed. The chancellor could also retain nontenured faculty members if he decided that their education was essential to the operation of the University.
That system, Adler said, would allow the chancellor to decide who would be dismissed and would give faculty members only an intermediate role in the procedure.
After the chancellor decides who would go, Adler said, dismissed faculty could appeal their dismissals to faculty government bodies. But faculty groups' decisions would then go to the chancellor for final action.
ADLER SAID THAT the chancellor would become the initial judge and final arbitrator.
"With one fell swoop, he can, depending on what kind of man he is, abrogate the tenure under rules you the faculty are promulgating." Adler said.
It is easier to give the decision to the administration, Adler said. But, he said, it is the faculty's duty to decide for itself who would be dismissed.
Letting the administration decide, he said, would be passing the decision to "someone whose role is appellate, not judicial."
'IT'S CLEAN SURGERY', he said. "But who the patient and who walks away with it?"
Audience members quickly defended the financial exigency policy, which was composed by a Senxh committee. David McMullen, executive director, thought that you not read our document.
There are things that indicate a cursory reading."
Adar asked Dimaen to list the portions in his remarks that indicated a brief reading, and Dimaen responded, "No, I don't want another five hours at this meeting."
Several audience members said that provisions of the document requiring the chancellor to confer with the faculty members on the matters pertinent to the university's guaranteed faculty participation.
DEL SHANKEL, executive vice chancellor, said the University's "tradition of faculty participation in decision making" to the chancellor would confer with others.
Richard Cole, professor of philosophy, said he feared "tearing up the University internally" if faculty members were forced to choose which of their colleagues would be dismissed.
"The politics within the departments would be horrendous," he said.
Allowing the administration to decide which faculty members would be dismissed would give the faculty a better chance to appeal, and the faculty could appeal, to the department, to appeal, the decision of a faculty body.
ADLER SAID HE realized that the legal responsibility to make all final decisions rested with the chancellor, but argued that he should be given the right to make a multilateral decision.
"The document you have here puts into
the hands of administrators the decision
to hire your intern."
See FACULTY page two
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The last remaining milkman in Lawrence with a regular route is Raymond Schimmel of Lecomptein. Schimmel, who has been
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Women's pay hiked to meet men's
By JERRY SEIB
Staff Writer
Some female faculty members have had their salaries raised this year to remedy possible sex discrimination. Ron Calgaard, exsecutor for academic affairs, said yesterday.
the level of their male peers. The number is an estimate, he said, because it is impossible to determine which merit pay rewarded solely to eliminate discrimination.
Calgaard said that about five women received pay raises to bring their salaries to
Between 60 and 70 cases of possible pay discrimination were investigated before any pay increases were awarded for fiscal 1977, Calgaard said. Except for the cases in
Hospital in a Wake-Up Date Treatment Room
Wichita Med Center facilities
Staff photos by JAY KOELZER
Above: Debbie Hinnen, a diabetes educator working on her masters at WSU, test reflexes as part of the diagnostic process. Upper right: the audio-visual center is equipped with an ultrasound machine and a cassette presentation. Lower right: Diana Guthrie, diabetes
murse specialist, monitors the response of Richard Allen, physician's assistant at WSU, on the Bifeed back machine. The machine gives a constant audio signal that can be raised to 100 dB or lower to show him how to control such things as blood pressure.
THEORY OF GENETICS
included in Med Center's scope
Rv RARRARA ROSEWICZ
Staff Writer
WICHITA—The University of Kansas is spreading its name in health care education beyond the confines of northeast Kansas.
Its health education program now includes the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., and a recent branch of the Med Center—the Wichita State University Branch of the KU School of Medicine.
The Wichita branch accepted its first group of students in 1974 but hasn't yet graduated.
"There's still a certain amount of mystery about us, because people are not really sure what we're doing up here on top of a dormitory," Brad Gordon, acting director for student programs and development, said yesterday.
The Wichita branch is the center of a clinical training program, the second half of a medical student's undergraduate education. Enrollment in the program was limited to 29 students this year.
A new building is to be built in about 2% years, he said, and will be shared with the College of Health Related Professions, a college within WSU. There are no legal ties, however, between the two programs.
STUDENTS COMPLETE basic science training at the Med Center before their 18 months of clinical training at Wichita. They receive the same degree from the KU School of Medicine as students in the Med Center's program.
Richard Walsh, associate dean of the branch, and the Wichita branch is unique in having a large library.
Unlike the Med Center, the Wichita branch has no hospital of its own but uses community hospitals as practicing grounds for its students.
"STUDENTS GET more exposure to private practice and family practice in the Wichita branch than in the Kansas City program because a large number of students have private practice and it is in their patients used for the training program," he said.
The Med Center gives a more practical exposure to patients, Walsh said, because there are many referred cases. The Center with rare and unusual problems.
number of community physicians as teachers.
Wichita branch students get their clinical experience in the Professional Practice Clinic, which deals with pediatrics, internal medicine and nursing. In addition, the St. Joseph Medical Center and Wesley Medical Center, all in Wichita. The
"Here, students see the bulk of the routine type patients that they'll see in
Wichita Veteran's Administration
Hospital is to do the orionam next year.
which raises were awarded, Calgard
expansion of department, school ex-
planations of difference
STUDENTS ARE offered instruction in family and community medicine, internal medicine, obstetrics-gynecology, pediatrics, psychiatry and surgery.
Medical students were out of town yesterday visiting with communities about residences that might be available when they graduate in January.
Students in the clinic do patient histories, conduct physicals and consult with physicians on a diagnosis, Tonya Gillespie, nurse clinician, said.
In the hospitals, she said, they make the rounds and care for the patients under the supervision of a faculty doctor. She also co-created 250 volunteer community physicians.
LORENE VALENTINE, director of business affairs, said that in the family practices, a private practice physician often works with a student one-on-one for three or four weeks. The students goes to the office, makes the rounds and
generally follows in the doctor's shadow, she said.
Walsh said the program was started so that more medical students could be trained and still receive enough clinical experience. More students at the Med Center would put a strain on the physical facilities there, he said, because there wouldn't be enough hospital beds and not for experience for all the students.
Because Wichita, the largest city in Kansas, has about 2,700 hospital beds that are usually full, he said, there are enough patients for students to work
Although WSU allied health students work with KU medical students in the clinic and the new administrative office on the WSU campus will be shared with students from KU but no legal tie to the university and that the programs weren't related.
IN MOST CASES, he said, pay differences between men and women can be explained by differences in length of service or in performance
"The major question is what constitutes sex discrimination." Calgaard said. "In general the approach is to look at it from the departmental level."
The cases of possible sex discrimination were listed in a study released by the Office of Institutional Research and Planning (OIRP) last fall.
"WE ASKED THE deans and department chairpersons to look carefully at the data to see if the differences were justified," Calgair said.
According to the study, average differences between the salaries of male and female professors had increased from the previous year in four of the five schools and departments that had both male and female professors. Associate professor salary differences, areas, and assistant professor salary differences decreased in five of seven areas.
CALGAIRD SAID he rejected the view that the difference between average salaries of men and women automatically constituted discrimination.
In one case, he said, a female professor received a "significant" increase in pay because the difference between her salary and her male peers' salaries couldn't be justified. That increase was granted before general salary discussions began.
The other increases in salary came in all three faculty positions and in various departments and schools. Calgaard are faculty members involved.
"You have to make peer comparisons within the departments," he said. "These global averages contain all kinds of differences."
Last year's OIRP study indicated that
See WOMEN'S page five
Senate seat still unfilled
A few Student Senators counted votes until 4 this morning, but were able to declare only five winners in the race for six Senate seats representing Nunemaker
Three candidates are still in contention for the sixth seat. The ballots will be recounted this afternoon before a winner is named.
The School of Liberal Arts will count the votes for College Assembly members and the president.
a total of 1,191 students voted yesterday and Wednesday to elect freshman class officers, student representatives to the College Assembly and the six senators.
Benita Bock, chairman of the Elections subcommittee, said she was surprised that so few students voted, because a record number of students did not vote in 1,500 students voted in last fall's elections.
The senators are Tom Byers (Jayhawk), 231 votes; Steve Conklin (Jayhawk), 206; Scott Morgan (Terra Firma), 205; Anne Minear (Terra Firma) 88 and Ralph Mannyan (Terra Firma) 195.
The sixth seat will go to Mike Harper (Daytime host) and Aylee (Apple Ple) or Kristine (Kimmie White).
Bock said she hoped to have the final results posted on the Senate office door by 6
The freshman class officers are:
president—Matt Haverty (Terra Firma), 174 votes; vice president—Chip Anthony (Terra Firma), 152; treasurer—Barbara Goolselk (USA), 183; and secretary—Dawn Daniel (USA), 180.
2
Friday, October 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
USSR buys more corn
WASHINGTON - A private U.S. trader sold an additional 350,000 metric tons of corn to the Soviet Union yesterday, bringing that country's total purchases for this marketing year to 6.35 million tons of corn and wheat, the Agriculture Department announced. It didn't name the trader.
At the same time, the USDA increased by 10 million tons its estimate of the
sales '1767 grain crop, bringing it to 215 million tons, the largest second onage
The department said it didn't expect the improvement in the Soviet grain situation to mean less exports of U.S. grains to either Russia or East European countries.
Jet explosion investigated
BRIDGE TOWN, Barbados—Investigators sifted from debris from a Cuban pitcher yesterday, seeking the DCE explosion before it plunged in the Caribbean.
The anonymous caller said the attack was made to mark the Oct. 10 anniversary of the beginning of the unsuccessful 1868 Cuban revolution against Spain.
The Miami Herald reported that a Spanish-speaking man telephoned the group called "El Condor" had placed the bomb aboard the Cuban Airlines plane.
Thai regime arrests 3.000
BANGKO, Thailand—Thailand's day-old military enforced martial law after Wednesday's bloody riot and clamped down on government machinery and security forces.
Police spokesmen said most of those arrested were university students. They were being held on various charges of subversion and some could face a lifetime sentence.
POLICE fired carbines in the air to disperse a crowd near Thammasat University, where savage fighting Wednesday between university leftists, right-wing groups and police left at least 26 dead and about 180 wounded, according to police count. Sangad Chalawywu, a former navy admiral and defense minister who heads the new regime, met with all ministry undersecretaries to explain new government policy but refused to speak to reporters.
Wholesale price rise to affect grocery bill
WASHINGTON (AP) - Supermarket bills soon are going to increase.
Wholesale prices rose in September at the fastest rate in 11 months, climbing 9 of 10
Consumers will first feel this latest price increase at supermarket counters. At least part of food price increases at the farm leading to the retail level within a short time.
Both agricultural and industrial commodities were affected by the price increases, the Labor Department said, and Gerald Ford's presidential Gerald Ford's economic policies.
A White House statement said the increase was "somewhat higher than expected, largely because of greater than expected increase in industrial prices."
Democratic presidential candidate Jimmy Carter, in San Francisco, mentioned the wholesale price report during a meeting with President Obama about institution was "the first in history to give us the highest unemployment rate and the highest inflation rate combined." The September price surge followed a period of relatively moderate increases. Although it did not affect job creation, economists caution that a single month's futures don't necessarily indicate trends.
From page one
Faculty . . .
to the educational mission of the institution and which must go." he said.
Alder attacked the document because it would allow the chancellor to maintain his position. He also treated faculty. He also said the document would allow financial conditions to deteriorate too much before a state of financial exigency would have to be achieved.
UNDER THE PROPOSAL, he said, financial exigency would be declared when a tenured faculty member had to be dismissed. Financial exigency should be declared, he said, whenever the University asks its full complement of faculty members.
Adoption by the University Senate is the only step remaining before the financial exigency document becomes University policy. Shankel assured the audience last night that the document would be accepted by the administration.
The Nov. 18 meeting of the Senate is the only one scheduled for this semester, Joel Gold, professor of English and presiding officer of the Senate, said that he wouldn't call the Senate meeting to order without a quorum.
If there isn't a quorum at the University Senate meeting, the financial exigency document would automatically become policy. In the past, the University Senate has frequently met without its quorum of 256 members.
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Despite the September rise, wholesale prices during the past year have risen 3.9 per cent, the smallest increase for any 12-month period since last November and a reflection of the slowdown in the overall inflation rate.
But Ford's economic advisers have expressed concern in recent days about the current sluggishness in the economy and were braced for more bad news with the September jobless figure, to be announced on Friday, jobless rate stood at 1.9 per cent in August.
Farm prices last month rose 1.9 per cent after declining nearly 3 per cent the previous month. Processed foods and feeds showed declines following declines in both July and August.
The .9 of 1 per cent rise in wholesale prices last month was the sharpest jump since last October when prices rose 1.1 per cent. It followed a decline of .1 of 1 per cent in August and increases averaging about .3 of a per cent since May.
Prices of industrial commodities, regarded by economists as a more reliable measure of inflation than farm prices, rose 9.0 of a per cent in September. It was the biggest jump in nearly a year for this key sector.
Among farm products, prices were higher for oil seeds and raw cotton, fruits and vegetables, green coffee and cocoa beans. For live poultry, eggs and cattle dechiles.
Increases for wood products, fuels,
transportation equipment, and rubber
and plastic products were reported. Among the
materials included in these reports are
for textiles and apparel products dropped.
In September the wholesale price index stood at 184.7, meaning that a variety of goods costing $100 at wholesale in 1967 cost $184.70 last month.
Ford defends saying USSR influence weak
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Gerald Ford faced a barrage of campaign criticism yesterday for his statement in the presidential debates that the Soviet Union doesn't dominate Eastern Europe. The United States does, he said, in the statement a blunder and a disgrace.
While Democrats were pouncing on that point and some Ford advisers issued inquiries about the United States policy on the Arab boycott of Israel, He ordered the Department of Commerce to make public from now on all reports of requests to U.S. companies to participate in the boycott.
The disclosure policy takes effect for all reports dated yesterday or later. A commerce department spokesman said the order didn't cover past boycott reports. The company has also filed a lawsuit his San Francisco debate with Carter Wednesday night. But a commerce
"I have concluded that this public disclosure will strengthen existing policy against the Arab boycott of Israel without jeopardizing our vital interests in the Middle East," Ford said in a statement distributed from the White House.
Ford, campaigning in Los Angeles, hammered away at his charge that Carter advocates dangerous cuts in the defense budget. He said the Democratic presidential nominee "wants to speak to men and carry a fly swatter" instead of a big stick.
department spokesman said the apparent discrepancy was no more than semantics.
But it was Wednesday night's debate that dominated yesterday's campaigning.
The major topics were Fords' statements, whichDemocrats, Polish-American and otherleft parties supported.
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said in New York that he thought Ford had intended to make clear that the United States would oppose Soviet domination of eastern Europe.
What Ford said Wednesday night was: "There is no Soviet domination of eastern Europe and there never will be under a Ford administration."
Pressed on that point, he added:
I don't believe . . that the Yugoslavians . . . the Romanians . . . the Poles consider themselves dominated by the Soviet Union."
AP poll says Carter won
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) -Jimmy Carter, impressing viewers with confident stands on foreign and defense policy, scored slightly better than President Gerald Ford in their second debate, a nationwide Associated Press poll found yesterday.
The telephone survey of 1,071 registered voters made immediately after the debate Wednesday night found neither Carter nor Ford the clear winner.
But 38.2 per cent of those polled said Carter had won, and 34.6 gave the nod to Ford. And 27.2 per cent called it a draw or said they didn't know who won.
Although Carter's margin over Ford was statistically small, the scores in his favor were consistent throughout the varied campaign. He gave giving strength to the poll's basic finding.
TONIGHT
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SATURDAY NIGHT
D
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Let's re-read line 148: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 156: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 158: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 159: "interested"
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Let's re-read line 160: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 162: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 163: "interested"
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Let's re-read line 164: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 168: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 174: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 178: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 180: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 187: "interested"
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Let's re-read line 188: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 192: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 193: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Let's re-read line 202: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 203: "interested"
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Let's re-read line 204: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 206: "will be"
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 208: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Let's re-read line 224: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 225: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 228: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 230: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Let's re-read line 236: "will be"
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Let's re-read line 237: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 252: "will be"
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 274: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 282: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 283: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 284: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 302: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 303: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 304: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 305: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 306: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
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Yes, it looks like "interested".
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Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 319: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 320: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 321: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 322: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 323: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 324: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 325: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 326: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 327: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 328: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 329: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 330: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 331: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 332: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 333: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 334: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 335: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 336: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 337: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 338: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 339: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 340: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 341: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 342: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 343: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 344: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 345: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 346: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 347: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 348: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 349: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 350: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 351: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 352: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 353: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 354: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 355: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 356: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 357: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 358: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 359: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 360: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 361: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 362: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 363: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 364: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 365: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 366: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 367: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 368: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 369: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 370: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 371: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 372: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 373: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 374: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 375: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 376: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 377: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 378: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 379: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 380: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 381: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 382: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 383: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 384: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 385: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 386: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 387: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 388: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 389: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 390: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 391: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 392: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 393: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 394: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 395: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 396: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 397: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 398: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 399: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 400: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 401: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 402: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 403: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 404: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 405: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 406: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 407: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 408: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 409: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 410: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 411: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 412: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 413: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 414: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 415: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 416: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 417: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 418: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 419: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 420: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 421: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 422: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 423: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 424: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 425: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 426: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 427: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 428: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 429: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 430: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 431: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 432: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 433: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 434: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 435: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 436: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 437: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 438: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 439: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 440: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 441: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 442: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 443: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 444: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 445: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 446: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 447: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 448: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 449: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 450: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 451: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 452: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 453: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 454: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 455: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 456: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 457: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 458: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 459: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 460: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 461: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 462: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 463: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 464: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 465: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 466: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 467: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 468: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 469: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 470: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 471: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 472: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 473: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 474: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 475: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 476: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 477: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 478: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 479: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 480: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 481: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 482: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 483: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 484: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 485: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 486: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 487: "interested"
Yes, it looks like "interested".
Let's re-read line 488: "will be"
Yes, it looks like "will be".
Let's re-read line 489: "interedi")
Yes, it looks like "interedi");
Wait, is there a '?' in the text?
Looking at the image, there are no visible characters except for the text itself.
Let's look at the image again.
The text ends with "will be" and then some repetitions.
In the text, there is a '?' after each repetition.
For example:
1. "interedi" - will be (will be)
2. "repetition" - will be (will be)
3. "repeat" - will be (will be)
4. "repeated" - will be (will be)
5. "repetition" - will be (will be)
6. "repeat" - will be (will be)
7. "repeat" - will be (will be)
8. "repeat" - will be (will be)
9. "repeat" - will be (will be)
10. "repeat" - will be (will be)
11. "repeat" - will be (will be)
12. "repeat" - will be (will be)
13. "repeat" - will be (will be)
14. "repeat" - will be (will be)
15. "repeat" - will be (will be)
16. "repeat" - will be (will be)
17. "repeat" - will be (will be)
18. "repeat" - will be (will be)
19. "repeat" - will be (will be)
20. "repeat" - will be (will be)
21. "repeat" - will be (will be)
22. "repeat" - will be (will be)
23. "repeat" - will be (will be)
24. "repeat" - will be (will be)
25. "repeat" - will be (will be)
26. "repeat" - will be (will be)
27. "repeat" - will be (will be)
28. "repeat" - will be (will be)
29. "repeat" - will be (will be)
30. "repeat" - will be (will be)
31. "repeat" - will be (will be)
32. "repeat" - will be (will be)
33. "repeat" - will be (will be)
34. "repeat" - will be (will be)
35. "repeat" - will be (will be)
36. "repeat" - will be (will be)
37. "repeat" - will be (will be)
38. "repeat" - will be (will be)
39. "repeat" - will be (will be)
40. "repeat" - will be (will be)
41. "repeat" - will be (will be)
42. "repeat" - will be (will be)
43. "repeat" - will be (will be)
44. "repeat" - will be (will be)
45. "repeat" - will be (will be)
46. "repeat" - will be (will be)
47. "repeat" - will be (will be)
48. "repeat" - will be (will be)
49. "repeat" - will be (will be)
50. "repeat" - will be (will be)
51. "repeat" - will be (will be)
52. "repeat" - will be (will be)
53. "repeat" - will be (will be)
54. "repeat" - will be (will be)
55. "repeat" - will be (will be)
56. "repeat" - will be (will be)
57. "repeat" - will be (will be)
58. "repeat" - will be (will be)
59. "repeat" - will be (will be)
60. "repeat" - will be (will be)
61. "repeat" - will be (will be)
62. "repeat" - will be (will be)
63. "repeat" - will be (will be)
64. "repeat" - will be (will be)
65. "repeat" - will be (will be)
66. "repeat" - will be (will be)
67. "repeat" - will be (will be)
68. "repeat" - will be (will be)
69. "repeat" - will be (will be)
70. "repeat" - will be (will be)
71. "repeat" - will be (will be)
72. "repeat" - will be (will be)
73. "repeat" - will be (will be)
74. "repeat" - will be (will be)
75. "repeat" - will be (will be)
76. "repeat" - will be (will be)
77.
he interested in the possibilities.
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Greenhouse
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Sale thru Mon.
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All plants in the greenhouse nothing held back. Everything big, small, hanging everything.
The Garden Center & Greenhouse
1 block east of Mass. on 15th Open Sun. 842-2004
MASSACHUSETTS ST.
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Spaghetti Dinner
Meat Ball or Meat Sauce
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Offer good Monday thru Thurs. Exp. Oct. 31, 1976
Extraordinary. One of the oddest, most beautiful films ever.
The London Sunday Times
EDITH BOUVIER BEALE AND HER DAUGHTER EDIE
1930
DAVID MAYSLES/ALDERT MAYSLES, ELLEN NOVE/DUFFIE MEYER/SUSAN FROEMN
A MAYSLES BROTHERS' FILM
P b l
GREY GARDENS
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
OCT. 8 and 9
7:00 and 9:30 p.m.
$1.00 admission
3:30 Matinee Fri. and Sat.
Tickets available at the SUA office Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union
Sell it through Kansan want ads Call the classified department at 864-4358
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 8, 1971
3
thrudon.
2004
S
DEMKE
HERE
4:30
THE
BOLIVIAN
KILLER WEED
REVUE.
Rich Hall
Performance by comedian lures crowd
The Bolivian Weed Killer Revue, a one-man improvisational comedy act, made an unscheduled appearance in front of Wescoe Hall yesterday afternoon.
1358.
The 20-minute, rapid-fire monologue was delivered to about 150 students by Rich Hall, a traveling comedian from St. Charles, Mo. Hall will repeat the performance at 12:20 p.m. today in front of Wescoe.
Some of the featured routines in the abbreviated program included a "non-performance" by 'Jack The Wonder Toad,' a ceramic figurine, and a story by Hall on the prejudices of marijuana plants against other forms of flora.
Hall is traveling to college campuses across the state.
Milk delivery days almost extinct
By DEB MILLER
Staff Writer
The figure of the friendly neighborhood milkman叫 it as familiar as it used to be in
At one time, there were eight All Star Dairy routes in Lawrence. Now there is one.
Milk delivery to the home has been on the decline for 20 years in Lawrence and across the nation, O. A. Olson, president of All Star Dairy, said recently.
"The customer can do more shopping for prices at a store, and the price of delivered milk is usually a little higher than that bought in stores," he said.
Olson said that the All Star route would be continued as long as it supported itself.
However, Meyer Dairy Co. has three routes in Lawrence and business is increasing, Fred Benson, assistant general manager, said.
BUT BENSON agreed that home delivery was an exception and that Meyer Dairy was an exception.
The reason may be that Meyer's routes are independently owned.
"The people who own our routes also own their own equipment and trucks, and they
Schimmel leaves All Star Dairy on his route at 3 a.m. and returns to 9 a.m. after delivering 240 gallons of milk to Lawrence homes.
The last remaining All Star route has been delivered for 50 years by Raymond Schmidt. The team is
set their own prices, so they look at their customers' grocery store owner. Benson and Jensen.
DURING HIS 30 years on the job, he has seen many changes in the city.
Traveling around Lawrence in the middle of the night has given Schimmel a different view of the city than most people probably have.
Lawrence has tripped in size, he said, and there are many more shopping centers.
"The traffic is light," Schimmel said. "I hardly see anyone, except an occasional Kansas City Star delivery man, or some kids, especially on football weekends."
In the past, Schimmel said, he saw other milkmen on their routes, and everyone stopped to talk. That rarely happens now, be said.
THIRTY YEARS have provided Schimmel with a lot of memories.
He once found a drunken man in his truck when he returned from a delivery, Schimmel said, but he had no trouble getting rid of him.
Truck breakdowns and weather also have posed problems for Schimmel.
"The ice storms that we have now in the winter are nothing compared to what we used to have when I started my route," he noted, as they were to wear cloats to get from door to door.
When he began his航程, Schirmel had to adjust to unusual hours, but now they're怕水.
"I USUALLY L sleep for a while when I get home in the morning, then to go to bed about 10am."
When it comes time to retire, Schimmel,
$2, will be glad.
"I'll farm the 20 acres that I own near Lecompton," he said.
Schimmel, who says he loves to get up at 3 a.m. said his job got a little hortage at times.
"After 30 years, any job does," he said.
Wagon train bill a group effort
Lawrence and KU Bicentennial groups agreed yesterday afternoon to try to find funds to help the Douglas County Bicentennial Commission pay a bill owed to KU.
Representatives of the three groups met in Central Junior High School upon request of the county group, which had been billed by KU to pay University personnel who made preparations for a visit of a wagon train caravan in late April.
The combined budgets of the Lawrence and Douglas County Bicentennial groups don't have enough uncommitted funds to meet their needs. KU Bicentennial Committee has no funds.
AT THE MEETING, however, representatives of the Lawrence group said they would have to wait.
Joan Moffet, Lawrence Bicentennial coachman, said that funds collected from the sale of Bicentennial plates, funds allocated to committees that haven't been spent or possible public donations might be used to pay a portion of the bill.
W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history and chairman of the KU group, told the three groups' representatives that he had talked to D. Shankel, executive vice chancellor, about the possibility of finding funds to pay another one-third of the bill.
THE COUNTY GROUP would attempt to pay the remaining one-third.
other representatives who had thought KU's other Commitment would be unable
Clence Hills, the county group's chairman, said Robinson's comments surprised
Both Robinson and Shankel were out of town last night and couldn't be reached for
Hills said frustrations concerning the bill that were expressed last week at a meeting of the county group were mentioned again at yesterday's meeting. There was some concern, she said, that the state Biencential commission hadn't actively tried to override the governor because the state group originally had encouraged the wagon train to ston at KU.
THE STATE commission virtually is defunct now, she said.
No meeting date has been set for either the meeting of the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission or a meeting of representatives of all three Bicentennial groups.
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HOMECOMING Oct.16 Allen Field House Tickets $5,'6,and'7 Available this Friday at the SUA Office Beginning Saturday at Kief's and Caper's Corner
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4
Friday. October 8,1976
University Daily Kansan
Film records lives of 2 eccentric Kennedy relatives
By CHUCK SACK
Reviewer
"It's very difficult to keep the line between the past and the present," says Eldy Bouvier Beale II in "Grey Gardens." She then proceeds to have a skirmish with her mother about all the minor details of their life, and another is too trivial to concede. But what is unusual about these parent-daughter arguments is that the participants are 56 and 79 years old.
Big Ede and Little Ede are the aunt and the cousin respectively of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, and "Grey
Gardens" poignantly records their lives as seen by the Maysles Brothers and editors Ellen Hove and Muffie Meyer, who are listed as codirectors. The documentary takes its title from the dilapidated estate in Bremerton where the two women live with their cats and two lifetimes of mementos.
ECCENTRIC AND often antagonistic toward each other, the Beales had been hidden away in the chaotic squail of their mansion since 1952, when the mother's illness brought Little Edie home from New York City. It wasn't until the
Suffolk County Board of Health ordered them to clean up their home, causing a local scandal that made national headlines, that the duo was approached by the Maysies.
The resulting portrait, which has its area premier tonight in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union, is astonishing not only for its extensive canard, but also for its insights into the women’s bizarre brown apparel and bright colors that Jackie had the estate's walls painted when she paid to restore sections of the house. Big Edie and Little Edie replay the real and
AND WHAT troupers their performances prove them to be! Mrs. Bea. bore worries about her waning talent and declares, "I was wrong, way it was when I was 45." Then, lying in her cluttered bed and wearing a gay, floppy hat, she coyly sings "Tea for Two," a selection that ironically allure with her daughter.
imagined high points of their lives.
Little Eddie harbor ambitions of returning to New York and dancing in cabaret. She models a high fashion, and if they were high fashions, and
run through the VMI school song with a small, tattered flag as a prop. Out of her mother's hearing she cresses her "I only three things—the Catholic Church, singing and dancing."
YET WHEN Little Edie tries to sing in her mother's presence, she is bombarded by the music of Edie's sarcastic, "Till have to start drinking. I can't take it." Finally, Mrs. Beale calls for her portable music, saying, "I've got some professional music."
Shifting back and forth between affection and bickering.
the two women are locked into mutual dependence. Their aristocratic voices echo eerily in the building, from their shared bedroom with its single hotplate to the rotting attic, where Little Eileen implies of bread and milk that animals the wild animals that invaded it.
THEY ARGUE about the men they have known; Mrs. Beale brags about her friends and others she meets for driving away a beau 20 years her junior, Big Ede responds that her daughter was a girl named recalling a proposal her daughter refused in the 40s and
scoffing, "France fell, but not Edith."
The Beales are tragic-comic figures. Big Edie scoffs at her daughter's warnings that her bathing suit will fall down with a nonchalant, "I haven't got no warts on me." Little Edda, always wearing a scarf to hide the embarrassment, gone, is glimpsed standing on scales using binoculars to read her weight.
BUT THE MAYSLES have succeeded in depicting the duo's humanity so acutely that they never are made to seem so unfortunate with their loneliness and their shortcomings herocially, and
"Grey Gardens" possesses a fondness for its stars. They become archetypal figures, each striving for an independence and refusing to let the other have it.
"I see myself as a little girl," giggles Edith II shy, "I see you as a very immature little girl," rejoins her mother. Maysle Brothers, the viewer can see them both more ways than they can see themselves. (Editor's note; Maysle will be in the Council Room of the Union for a question-and-answer session tonight in 8 after the film and tomorrow morning at 10:30).
Arts & Leisure
109
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Potted pets
Interest in plants booming
Gary Popene, Overland Park senior, sits among some of the 25 plants he is growing in his house. Many students say they grow plants to decorate their residences.
By RICK THAEMERT
That o'l green magic has been casting its spell recently, and the result has been a green thumb epidemic. But why the sudden popularity of plants?
Rolf Borchert, professor of botany,
said Wednesday that he didn't know why
plants had gained popularity, but that he
was glad they had.
"Plants have received very little attention," Borchert said, "and there a lot of catching up to do. People forget that we all live on plants."
BUDY CURRY, owner of Squeezeer's
recognized the importance of plants.
"Why doesn't everyone have plants?"
"What could you not do if it
exempt it for ploble?"
Curry grows plants as a hobby and a part-time business. Squeezeer's Palace, a restaurant, wasn't planned as a plant shop, he said, but the large number of plants in the restaurant led many people to believe plants were sold there. Now Curry plants, and he, he makes just enough to buy more plants for the restaurant.
SEVERAL STUDENTS interviewed
SEVERAL STUDENTS because they were
challenging to grow.
Greg Looney, Kansas City, Kan,
junior who has worked in a greenhouse
two years, said he liked to watch his
plants grow.
"You get to see something develop
know how to take care of it
right," he said.
Plants might also be status symbols, ooc Leucypsis, Lenoxa junior and older. Leucypsis is the most common of the plants.
"IN A DORM," he said, "some people think their house is a lot nicer than other homes."
LeCluyse, whose advice often has been sought by people who had problems in growing plants, said plants seemed to give people a common ground for meeting one another. Similarly, Patti Dailey, Overland Park junior, said male friends often asked her to save their dying plants.
A COMMON reason for growing plants, is for decoration.
"They add a touch of color to the room," Daliay said. "In the winter when everything's brown and dead, they're green and alive, because they're green and alive."
Curry, however, said people who wanted plants for decoration alone usually didn't know much about caring for the plants.
"PEOPLE WHO think of plants as decoration usually have dead plants," he said.
Jim Freeman, manager of the Garden Center, 15th and New York streets, said 80 to 90 per cent of plant problems were cultural problems; that is, the plants weren't getting the correct amount of sunlight. The major cause of sick plants, Looney said.
He said, "People figure the more water they dump in, the faster the plant will grow."
FREEMAN SAID that it was important to let most plants dry out between waterings to prevent over-irrigation, nonetheless needed thorough watering.
Loney, who has more than 50 plants,
said that because he needed two hours to
water his plants, he left part of them at his parents' home. Watering is especially hard in the winter, he said, because he has to keep them inside the bathhut. He has to keep them inside the bathhut.
DRAINAGE IS important, according to John Groom, Arlington, VA., freshman. He said that clay pots with holes in the bottom were the best for drainage because clay absorbs excess moisture and keeps roots from rotting.
Traveling with plants is another problem, according to Groom who had to secure his plants with sticks during his car trip from Virginia.
JANET SOMMER, Eudora junior, had a different plant problem.
"My dog ate one of my plants," she said.
Eating house plants isn't advised
for Westside Greenhouses, Florida. N*
"Some plants are poisonous, such as the Dieffenbachia," he said.
A COMMON HOUSE plant, the Diefenbachia, when eaten, causes swelling of the threat, making breathing difficult, he said.
Plants also can cause allergy bothered by indoor bloomling plants
WITH WINTER approaching, several precautions are necessary. Freeman
Humidity decreases in the winter, he said, so some plants will need a humidity tray or humidifier, and most shouldn't be placed directly against windows.
"People don't realize how cold a plant gets right next to a window," he said.
Freeman said that knowing which window to place a plant in was also important. Generally, when seasons change, so does the sunlight, he said, so a plant shouldn't be in the same window all year.
ASBERRY SAID that to prevent winter plant problems, plants should be brought inside now because he knew of no plants that could survive the winter.
The easiest indoor plants to grow are cactuses and plants in the Philodendron family, he said. Looney said that Swedish Ivy was easy to grow, and that ferns were difficult. Freeman said the Hibiscus is the hardest plant to grow.
BUT CURRY said that once people were successful in growing plants, they could appreciate their potential, because there are so many new plants—some of them edible.
Asberry said that although not many students had the facilities to grow their own edible plants, those who did could save money. One restaurant, the Cornerwood Massachusetts St., often offers free evocado to customers to belm them start gardens.
SOME STUDENTS, such as Groom,
started growing plants after watching
them mothers, and others, like LeCluyse,
started plant collection with a gift
friend.
However they get started, Freeman said, students should always consult a book or a plant shop when problems arise.
SEVERAL STUDENTS said that talking to plants was a successful way to keep them healthy. In fact, Dailey said that she refused to acknowledge which plant was her favorite because she was afraid the others would overheat.
Kansas reflected in photographs
By LEROY JOHNSTON
Photography covering a wide spectrum of stylistic traditions now is being exhibited in a gallery at the TE Gallery, E. 7, Th8.
Ranging from straight documentary photographs to abstracts involving complex darkroom processes, the works of four Kansas photographers, Bury Burge, Clifton Ayres
Hall II, Keith Jacobshagen and Bob Richards, exemplify many things happening in photography today.
THE SHOW, which ends Oct. 31, is in many ways a statement about Kansas, especially the work by Burge and Richards.
Richards' photographs, from a series he did called "The Fayre," and "Festivals," are unique in one respect because they are in
Color as a documentary
technique seems to be used to make the camera even more faithful to the reality of events. Color, because it is part of our lives, is also part of Richards' work.
BURGE'S WORK is also documentary, but not nearly as documentary. Burge's work is tender to render things more beautiful. Burge loses some of the power inherent in a scene, but still maintains late afternoon, which becomes
New jazz album not up to par
By STEVE FRAZIER
However, Clarke is one of the major stylists in jazz, and "School Days" isn't his first album, but his fourth. One of the burdens of Clarke's success is that a promising but unfulfilling album by the group falls disappointingly short of his already proven potential.
If Stanley Clarke was still just a rising star on the jazz-rock scene, his new album, 'School of Rock,' has a promise for the young bassist.
THIS ISN'T to say that "School Days" is a bad album, for it has brilliant moments.
Clarke's compositions open many interesting doors, but the passageways beyond are seldom adequately explored. Almost every time a passage begins to build some real exteriors, Clarke can intrusions send the piece careening in another direction,
At the very least, the album is far too inconsistent to be boring. Clarke can be both damned and praised in his role as composer and arranger for "School Days."
almost too pretty, too contrived. The result resembles a poster.
These highlights, tempered by the many stale moments, create an overall effect that is several notches above average.
But just as an arrangement is
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 12, 2015. Subscriptions are due June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscription by mail is $8 or semester or $14. Subscriptions by phone are $16 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $14 per month. Mail subscriptions to: U.S. Postal Service.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Clarke's peaks and valleys are most onvious on "Life Is Just a Game," the album's only vocal.
After an attempt at a dramatic opening, Clarke inadvertently chorus, the total lyric content of which is "So life is just a game and there's many ways to play, and there's many ways to do choose. La, la, la, you
Editor
Drew Dump
Gimp
Managing Editor
Editorial Editor
Yael Abouhalakh
Jim Bates
Business Manager
A PHOTO BY Burge of the side of a red barn is tastefully done and contains much detail. Charles Sheeler, a photographer of great recognition in the first half of the 20th century, photographed barns with the same directness.
"LIFE IS JUST a Game"
continues with short synthesizer and guitar solos by George Duke and Icarus Johnson and astonishingly fast ensemble figures by Clarke over Billy Coleman and Bruce Cobham's explosive drumming. Clarke then launches a superb solo that is disappointing only in its brevity.
Business Manager Terry Hanson
enjoyable track is "Desert song," a pensive acoustic performance teaming Clarke on bass, John McLaughlin on guitar and Milt Holland on background percussion. Clarke's solo statements are soft yet energetic, erupting into a loud trio while acting as ideal counterparts to McLaughlin's liquid ideas.
The album's most thoroughly
PERHAPS IF Clarke weren't capable of so much more than slickness, the album would be a welcome release. Given Clarke's past, though, "School Days" offers nothing really new to those familiar with his work in the world, but the unacquainted to get a true picture of his substantial talents.
TRUE TO THE inconsistent nature of "School Days," the musicians have slatters the beautiful calm with what is easily the most forgettable music on the album, and it's hard to mess that is neither hot nor fun.
Even "Hot Fun" is better than the jazz-rock currently being released. On the whole, "School Days" is a slack play that many lesser musicians would be proud to call their best.
Although Burge's photograph is in color, it is in, effect, monochrome to work with. Another work with works from "straitl" photographers.
In contrast, Hall's work is far removed from the traditions of straight photography. Process manipulation to achieve a certain effect in his works means full exploitation of the Sabattier Effect.
THE EFFECT involves destroying the normally soft tonalities of a photograph and a palette of colors of minute detail. After edge reversal, Hall makes color silkscreen prints from the
JACOBHAGEN'S WORKS return to the Kansas landscape in documentary photographs of small towns.
The new vision possible from laboratory techniques is at the core of Hall's work.
His works are strangely unsettling. All are slightly surrealistic photographs of quiet scenes containing twists, perhaps an odd camera angle or unusual juxtaposition of objects.
THE RESULT of the exhibit is a feeling of proximity—a feeling that these are Kansas photographers who have a close attachment to Kansas. Although no new ground really broke, the refinements of photography traditions are very good.
Highlights
This Week's
Concerts
INCI BASHAR PAIGE,
mezzo-soprano, performs a
faculty recital tonight at 8 in
SWarthwort Hall. Real HalI
JACK WINEROCK, pianist,
gives a faculty retreat Thursday
night at 8 in Swarthout.
The Kansas City Lyric Opera gives its last performance of "ANDREA CHENIER" tonight at 8:15 at the Lyric Theatre, Lincoln Street Kansas City, Mo. *LA TRAVIAIT* is performed by the Lyric tomorrow night at 8:15 and Wednesday night at 7:30 at the Lyric Theatre. "THE TRAVIAIT" is performed Tuesday, and Thursday nights at 8:15 at the Lyric Theatre.
Exhibits
THE MAX
KADE
CINEMAS OF MUSIC
19th-century oil paintings
and prints by James Whistler
and is at the Kansas
Union Gallery.
"ST. PETERSBURG — PE-TROGRAD — LENINGRAD"
a pictorial and book biography
of Peter's life displayed at Watson
Library.
"PHOTOGRAPHS," a collection of color and black-and-white photographs by four area photographs, is displayed at the 7E7 Gallery, 7 E. Seventh St.
The Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St., BOSTON ALBERS, acrylics by BETTE BLEWITT, jewelry by LAURIE STEZTREE and photographs TRESLER and CHUCK BEMIS.
Nightclubs
JAY MCHANH, jazz sing of the '20s, plays Friday and Saturday nights from 9 to 12 a Paul Gray's Gravity. | Place JAM SESSION in Gravity | JAZZ JAM SESSION from 9 to 12
HEEDA-Gienda Jackson
Jackson's
informance
in the, the Royal
Shakespeare Company's filmed
production of 'Hibern' Ibsen's
KOKO TAYLOR, Chicago blues singer, sings tonight and tomorrow night from 9 to 12 at the hall's stage. Plays at the hall's Monday Night Last Chance Weekend Romance Dance from 9 to 12, and Wednesday night is the FREE FOLLOW KJAM. Thursday StAGE, when anyone can perform, from 7 to midnight.
69 MINUTES—A low-budget TV parody shot in the Kansas City area and Eudora, the film star of "The Breadwife," almost totally devoid of humor.
THE SHOOTSTIST—Under the careful watch of action director Don Siegel, John Wayne does a terrible job in the gunning death of cancer. With Lauren Bacall, Richard Boone, John Carrassel and Ron
IN SEARCH OF NOAH$^1$
ARK-$^2$ a pseudo-documentary
that is being hyped as in.
负数 filming. Rated G for
9P.
COLOSSUS: THE FORBIN
literate, if very conventional,
science fiction film about a
hero who tries to rieve
a mask from idiotism.
VISIONS A - collection of hifi movies from computer and video animation: IN THE YEAR OF THE PIG, INTERVIEWS WITH MY LAI INTERVIES SOLDERIER - Trio of Vietnam era documentaries.
BADLANDS—Inspired by the bloody Charlie Starkweather-Caril Ann Fugate murders, freshman director Terry Macklin wrote that the acra in this tale of two runaways. The narration and the acting of Martin Sheen and Sissy Spass highlight the film.
Books
EDWARD BURKE OF HEARTS, by
THE BOOK OF HEARTS,
[1946] A hard and
handling Little Langtry
and Sarah Burke, cuts above others of the genre.
UNQUILIUET, by Margot Pouker
(Pocket, $2.75) A biography by Beryl Burke best known for "Jane Eyre". The Brontes were tortured maiden ladies of the Victorian era, why they wrote their semi-tales, Exceptional.
THIRD GIRL, by Agatha Christie (Pocket, $135.)—Not too hard to do. Her drawer is better than nothing. Hercule Poirot is on hand to try to figure out the story of a young girl who may have committed
DEATH CALLING
COLLECT, by Don rracy
that he was one of the
detective in this one, getting
a call at 2:15 in the morning,
from his distraught uncle.
He knows that goes back many years.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 8, 1976
5
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collection of experiments on animation.
OF THE PIG,
BETH MY LAI
WIN OF Viet-
eries.
**SEVENTH:** **BARTS:** by ARTS, by and his and his Lily Langley dr. Several of the game. **$2,75】** - **$2,75】** Bute Bronte, Bute fortune for the Victorian buggins any Gothic- githic
by Agatha
$1.50—Not
but bottom
nothing.
hand to try.
of a young
be committed
By LEROY JOHNSTON
ALLING
Don Tracy
off Speer is one, getting the morning.
night uncle,
mystery that bears.
Visions from the past through the eyes of some of the finest printmakers of the western world can now be seen in the Kansas Union Gallery.
Master prints unique, expressive
The show, which runs through Nov. 7,
consists of selected works from the Max
Kade collection of the University of Kansas
Museum of Art.
H. C. Max Kade was a German immigrant who built up a large fortune after bringing a special cough remedy to the United States at the turn of the century.
His personal collection of prints was considered to be one of the finest in the late 19th century.
LARGELY THROUGH A personal friendship with J. A. Burzle, then professor of German at KU, Kade became interested in Kansas and the University.
In 1969 the Max Kade Foundation donated a group of 94 old master prints to the University. A large portion of that donation was donated from another donation by Kade last year.
The star print of the show is probably "Knight, Death and the Devil" by Albrecht Durer. The perfect clarity of the lines in this work shows that it was run through the press in 1513.
DURER'S WORK is largely allegorical. In this print the good Christian soldier is shown traveling toward a heavenly Jerusalem, undeterred by lurking devils.
Towns said of Butz' remark, "I think the governor called it 'stupid' but thought that it was just as stupid as what Carter said in Playboy. He said if he had a cabinet member who had said that, he wouldn't keep him around very long."
Bennett wasn't defending Butz for making a racist remark that prompted his resignation Monday, Towns said, but merely was stating a fact that Butz had been more popular with farmers than had most previous secretaries of agriculture.
Butz was popular, he said, because he worked to release government controls on agriculture so a farmer could make his own decisions.
"the governor considered it a matter between Forg and Butz," he said.
Towns said he didn't mean to imply that he thought Fed should have fired Bittman but instead he wanted Fed.
The figure of the devil in this print is perhaps one of the most unique and engaging ever done. Such a face could reveal the show at any Halloween party.
Bennett said Sunday on ABC's "issues and Answers" that farmers have a great deal of freedom.
WHEN THE ORIP report was released last year, the Office of Affirmative Action said it had identified 11 cases in women with at least as many years of teaching experience as their male peers were paid less. Bonnie Ritter, director of the program for orip, said those situations with Calgard but not the names of the persons involved.
She said, however, that her office had received several complaints of possible sex discrimination after this year's salaries were set. These complaints may have been due to the fact that in the departments and therefore never reached Calgaard, she said.
Last year was the fourth straight year in which a study of possible sex discrimination in salaries was made. he said. The number of discrimination has declined each year.
SHE SAID THE number of salary increases Calgaard reported seemed "neither high nor low." The number of cases that Calgaard said were investigated was more than the number of formal complaints filed in her office, she said.
Also by Durer is the famous "Saint Jerome in Penitence," another example of
women were paid more than men in two cases, but Calgaard said that no complaints had been received among those discrepancies.
An example of the immuno that was necessary to convey sexual themes in the novel is "The Tarquinas and Lacretia" by Agostino Veneziano. Because explicit depiction of humans making love was frowned upon; it was a taboo, and thus telling the story in a roundabout way.
Ritter said she was reluctant to speculate about the effect of the changes until a new study was conducted.
CALL, the Carnegie Association for the Lawrence Library, will sponsor its annual use book sale this week in the garage at Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.
Calgaard said he had received only one complaint of possible sex discrimination since the end of the budget process for the current fiscal year. In that case, he determined that the difference was justified, and he refused a pay increase.
Durer's amazing fusion of Gothic and Renaissance styles.
The sale will be from noon to 9 p.m. today,
a. 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. tomorrow and 2 o'c平m.p.
through 6 p.m.
Available books will include novels,
children's books and nonfiction books. A few
magazines, maps, prints, records and films
also will be for sale.
Over 10,000 hardback and paperback books can be on sale. Prices range from 10 cents to $25.
Review
From page one
Book sale today for city library
ONE CAN SEE the relaxing of expression in the 17th century by comparing a subject illustrated by both Veneziano and a later artist. Guisepe Ribera.
Women's...
Proceeds will go to the Lawrence Public Library.
The prints are called the "Triumph of
Silentis" by Venziano and the "Prunkeness of Silentis" by Ribera. The subject is
Ribera shows Silenus as a punchman, looking a bit like a tycoon on a holiday, surrounded by satys serving him wine. He carries a caricature of the drunken condition.
THE POLITICAL cartoonist Honore Daumier also is represented in the show. His librograph, "Mr. Guiz," shows the gentleman waiting calmly for the bank to open so that he can further stuff his pockets with gold.
The print by Veneziano isn't nearly as expressive and merely shows Silens being escorted down a road by assorted nymphs and satvrs.
The lone American artist represented was also one of Kade's favorites. He is James McNell Whistler, one of the earliest artists whose work defined of his work for its formal qualities alone.
Another interesting prints, almost surrealistic in the obscurity of its meaning, include this, a print from the Presence of Man with a Shield. This print of bizarre animals, fighting before an indifferent man, is by artist with the indifferent man, is by artist with the Beheading of Saint John the Bastist.
ALTHOUGH THERE IS obviously very little central theme in the exhibit, which
Another favorite of Kade's was Anders Zorn, a Swedish artist not well known in this country. His etchings display harsh lines that are strongly sturched, with imminent tactile renditions of light. His nudes are especially voluptuous and reminiscent of Reprint.
This recent statement made by Gov. Robert Bennett about Earl Butz, former secretary of agriculture, was misinterpreted by many who have referred to Bennett's press secretary, said yesterday.
spans several centuries, scanning from one print to the next allows comparisons bet-
These paintings, together with the many fine prints, provide a good look at what was happening in the world of art before the growing influences of the late 19th century.
Bennett aide denies stand lauding Butz
THERE ARE ALSO eight paintings in the show, examples of late 19th century European academic painting. This style was popular with the public at a time when the daring impressionism was just beginning to startle the world.
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—Campus Bank—
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—South Plaza—
77th & Iowa
—Main Bank—
7th & Massachusetts
THE LAWRENCE BANK & Trust Co.
Member FDIC
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Millions of children in the rural South and Appalachia are as poor as little Wilea. As a Catholic Brother, Sister or priest you can help them themselves. And you'll grow in the process.
Write for free information—without obligation.
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SUBMARINE
OPEN LATF
happening in Lawrence
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mon- thurs.
till 11:30
fri.,sat.
till 1:30
sun.
till 10:30
JUST WEST OF THE X.Ω FOUNTAIN
1420 Crescent
SUA Forums present ELECTION '76 with JULIAN BOND
Tuesday, Oct. 12
8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Admission 50°
Tickets now available at
the SUA Office
[Image of a man with curly hair, wearing a suit and tie].
THE TIME IS HERE TO GET INVOLVED with THE MINORITY STUDENT CENTER
What???
For some time, things have been sitting still for minorities on the K.U. campus. In fact, things seemed to have moved backwards. There are many reasons why the situation ain't like it should be, and you could go on for days listing those reasons. Well, the time has come for the end of complaining and the beginning of correcting the situation.
The time has come for moving things forward to where they should be.
Location:
Level 3
Kansas Union
Minority Student Center to Open in October
You can help by participation on the Planning or the Action committees of the Minority Student Center. The Planning committee decides which events will be coordinated through the Center; and the Action committee makes sure that these events get carried out. The most important way for you to help is to use the Center when it opens in October, or by joining the Minority Affairs subcommittee of the Student Senate.
There are many ways to keep this thing going and growing. Recently, the Black Fraternities and Sororites sponsored two dances and used the money to pay for today's event. Their cooperation is an example (A damned good one) of how we can work together to get things accomplished for our own good.
How Can You Holp?
Now is the time.
When???
Some of you are already aware that things are beginning to move. The most important development in the last few months has been the approval of a Minority Student Center in the Student Union. This came about through the efforts of concerned minority students working through the Student Senate and the Student Union.
This Minority Student Center will be one of the largest student offices in the Union and will serve Blacks, Chicanos, and Indians. A committee of students have been working on the plans for this Center, which will be a central communications and information location for minority students. But the primary responsibility of the Minority Student Center will not work. WITH your support, the Center can grow into a strong voice for your needs.
If you are interested in working on a committee or if you just want more information on the Center stop by or contact the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Suite 105, in the Kansas Union. (864-3710).
This ad paid for through Student Activity Fees.
6
Friday, October 8, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Sports Scene Steve Schoenfeld
Sports Editor
So the Bronx Bombers are coming to Kansas City.
So what?
I don't see any Babe Ruth, Leo Gehrig or Mickey Kantle in a New York Yankee uniform. And there's no Joe Dimaggio—wherever he's gone.
I get the feeling that the sports writers from the core of the Big Apple expect to see their 1930s, '40s and '50s wonder boys to show up tomorrow in Royalts Stadium in their baggy pinstripes and wash the good ol' country boys down the Missouri.
Brace yourself. Yankee fam. I don't think she looks at the two teams position by position.
FIRST BASE—Who would have dreamed the Royals' John Mayberry would sink to around the .240 mark and hit only 13 home runs this season. A year ago he was the Royals, Hercules; now he's booed, a fallen Goliath.
The edge has to go to the Yankees' Chris Chambliss, who just might be their most under-rated player. Chambliss, who isn't the most athletic of the guys, homers, knocked in 96 runs and batted, 283.
SECOND BASE-It's speed against speed—New York's White Randlem vs. the Royals Frank White. Randolph is a better hitter than White, although White has made it better with White in his better fielder of the two, but the edge still belongs to Randolph.
SHORTSTOP *The Yankees* designated out position—out meaning Fred Stanley or Jim Mason. Or as one person described Tina Winslow in "Twins." Both, however, are good fiddlers.
KC's Fred Patek has the advantage here. Patek has one of the best arms in the league and gets to balls very few major league shortstops ever see. His hitting is erratic, but much better than that of Stanley or Mason.
THIRD BASE--you've got two hitting champions here. The Royals' George Brett, who won the American League batting title, have made sure the home run king, Grail Matties (32).
Brett's a little better fielder, even though he's throwing is sometimes low and wild. So begging
LEFT FIELD—Both Roy White of the Yankens and Tom Pouget can hit. White hit 14 home runs and had a .206 average. White had an .895 average with a cracked cheek bone, bated. 302. Both players have speed, but they differ in throwing. White isn't your spear thrower, and Pouget is considered to have one of his team's best arms. The nod goes to Pouget.
CENTER FIELD—New York's Mickey Rivers can flip the ball all over the park. And when he gets on, you can almost rack up a stolen base; he had 43 of this season. His fielding is underrated—he looks bad after the ball, but he gets there. His defense is subpar. Watch for the Royals to go from first to third, whenever they single-to center.
Amos Otis can run, hit, throw and steal bases. His problem has always been motivation. He seems to be motivated now, and if the play-offs can't motivate him,
nothing can. Otis is the better of the two here.
RIGHT FIELD - The Yankees will either use "Sweet" Lou Pinella, former Royal, or Oscar Gamble. Pinella can hit; he's always been able to. But he also has always been able to misjudge a fly ball and turn it into a triplet. What Royal fan doesn't remember the bounce of a routine ball and ended up on his trousers as the ball rolled to the wall?
Gamble, who smacked 17 home runs, is a better fielder than Pinella, but still isn't.
The Royals' Al Cowsen hit a solid, 265, and can hit the bullyse with his arm. But he makes some dum mistakes, particularly in despaths. Neither team gets the edge here.
CATCHER-Thirman Munsion is the American League's best catcher. Enough said. The Royals have Buck Martinez, Bob Stinson and John Wathna. Each does an adequate job, but none can run, throw or hit like Munsion.
STARTING PITCHING - The Yankees have the advantage. Catfish Hunter is 17-15, Efigerino is 19-10, and Ken Holtzman and all but Efigerino have play-off experience.
The Royals can't match that, but don't be fooled. Larry Gara, who'll start against the Yankees this week, is brilliant recently and could be even better against the Yankees because of his dislike for Yankee manager Billy Martin. Gura, 4, will have to work hard after York retrained it to let him sit.
Dennis Leonard (17-10) will start the second game for KC. He's young, but loaded with talent. The rest of the rotation will be either right-handed Al Fitzmorris or Dong Cindy Hassler. They don't have the glittering start, but they've gotten the job done.
RELIEF PITCHING - The Royals get the edge based on stoppers Mark Littell and Steve Mingori. The Yankees tend to rely on Sparky Lyle. Both teams are strong here.
BENCH—The Royals look better here.
Cookie Rojas, Jim Wint Hoffen, Dave Nelson
and Jonah Hawkins come from the right side. Quirk and Simson, a switch-hitter, can help from the left. The Yankees have either Gamble or Pinella, costoff Castro Healy and Sandy Alomar.
So what's it all add up to? The Royals win
the, the Yankees four and there is one die.
The Royals win.
Kansas City has played bad baseball the second half of the season. In fact, they've lost nine of their last 11. And that's not momentum going into the playoffs.
The Yankees have been consistently good and hardworking, something the Royals badly need to power.
So I'm leaning toward the Yankas, right?
Nepo! we have a hunch Kansas City will win
Of course, the Yanks could win in three straight, but I don't think they are the iorv-yower team many people have been led to believe.
Sports Shorts
FIELD HOCKEY—The KU field hockey team has its work cut out for it in the next five days. The team plays four games in five days, playing Southwest Missouri State University first at 2 p.m. today on the fields east of Robinson Gymnasium.
Wichita Collegiate School comes to KU for an 11 a.m. match tomorrow, and the Kansas City Hockey Club will be at KU Sunday for a 1:30 p.m. game. KU is in first place in the conference with 4-2 record.
VOLLEYBALL--KU's volleyball team travels to Lemoni, Iowa, today to participate in the Graceland Invitational tomorrow. KU will be one of 25 teams at the tournament. The Jayhawks' first game will be at 8 a.m., and games continue all day.
RUGBY "The Lawrence Rugby Club will battle a tough Kansas City club at 2 p.m. tomorrow on the intramural fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
SOCCER-KU's Soccer Club goes after its second win of the week Sunday when it travels to Ames, Iowa, for a match with Iowa State. Early this week, KU played its best game of the year, easing by William Jewell, 3-0. KU is 2-1 this week.
Women's tennis team to face Iowa
nesota's Patty Moran, last year's Big Ten Singles Champion. Minnesota finished third in last season's Regional Six Tournament, which was won by KU.
The Jayhawks travel to Kirksville, Mo., Saturday for a three-mile race against a five-tone field that includes The University of Northwest Missouri State University.
"Last week we had only a five-girl team," he said, "and a couple of them weren't in good shape. I think we'll beat them this week."
KU can win the trophy by defending
their coach, coach Tom
Lanvaule calls it, aabama son call.
The KU women's cross country squad is going after a first-place trophy and alphabet soup this weekend.
Another goal for the Jawahks this race will be to get two additional runners under the 19-minute mark, which is the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women's qualifying standard for its national meet.
Regardless of what he calls it, the school has a good team. It's led by Aninn K, an American cross country runner, and it beat KU at last week's Oklahoma State
"On their堤盾 they have NWMSU" he explained, "so that's where I got the name."
Women harriers face NMSU for trophy, alphabet soup
At the Bambore three runners, Michelle Brown, Nancy Bissell and Connie Lane all broke the mark. Kim Glasgow and Sena Frame may qualify for nationals, which would give KU a full team for the November race in Madison, Wisc.
But that's in the future; now a trophy- and alphabet soup—are more important.
--memo: me year educ expense
University Jamboree. Lionville, however,
said he thought that would change.
--memo: me year educ expense
Off the Wall Hall
RED PIN BONUS: (When the red pin comes up as a head pin and you strike, then you win a free game.)
Koko Taylor and her Blues Machine
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Phone for information and reservations
OPEN BOWLING:
Mon.—9 a.m.-6 p.m. and 9 p.m.-midnight
Tues.—noon 6 p.m. and 9 p.m.-midnight
Wed.—9 a.m. -6 p.m. and 9 p.m.-4 a.m. Thurs.
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Fri.—9 a.m. till 5 a.m. Sat.
Sat.—noon till 5 a.m. Sun.
Sun.—9 a.m. till 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m.-midnight.
Need a car, a stereo, a job? Look in Kansan classified.
The women's tennis team will try to keep its perfect record intact this weekend when it travels to Iowa for two days of competition.
TACO SALE
4
TACO GRANDE
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FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY
Closes at 12:30 Saturday, Oct. 9 for Maintenance
The Jayhawks, who are 2-0, will face the University of Iowa today in Iowa City and will then meet Drake and the University of Minnesota tomorrow in Des Moines.
1720 West 23rd & 9th and Indiana
Carrie Potopoulos and Airstad Dakas will continue to play in their No. 1 and No. 2 podiums.
Coach Trem Kivisto has switched several players in his line-up for this weekend. Mariane Clark, after her strong showing last week against Iowa State, has moved from fourth to the No. 3 slot. Mary Stauffer, who played with Iowa State, Spellman, who played No. 6 against ISU, has moved to No. 9 and Lynda Hill will play No. 6.
In what could be the biggest match of the two days, Fotopotoulis will meet Min-
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Kansas
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Iowa
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Colorado
Texas
Texas
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Reasons
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 8, 1976
7
Incentive sits on Javhawks' side
By GARY VICE
The incentive is there.
Not only will the conference season begin at 1:30 tomorrow for the Jayhawks in Stillwater, Okla., but not one RU player will be able to play for the team he's played for the University of Kansas.
Although the Jayhawks lead the series, 22-11-1, they beat the Cowboys only 6-5. The Rams lost to the Redskins.
KU's last victory came in 1972, a 13-10 triumph in Stillwater. Since then, he was a 10-10斗, a 94-13 loss, and an embarrassing 68-56 victory, with an embroidered KU's homecoming last year.
BUT WHEN the game gets under way in front of an expected crowd of 40,000 in Lewis Stadium, KU coach Bud Moore will be on the side lines worrying that his team isn't fired up for the Cowboys. All week Moore has complained that his players and assistant coaches didn't realize the importance of this game.
Oklahoma State has yet to untruck their veer offense, and their 2-1 record hasn't impressed anyone. But they were impressive enough in the preseason to merit a place placed finish by the Big Eight Skewers. Kansas, 4-0, was tabbed for sixth.
MOORE, WHO FIGURES the Cowboys are ready to let loose against the 'Hawks, said. "They probably haven’t played up to their expectations. They’ll be ready for the University of Kansas."
In an attempt to psych everyone up for the game, graduate assistant John Morgan, KU's starting center last year, wrote areal notes on the court around the room locker Wednesday.
A victory for the Jayhawks would push their record to 9-4. The last two times a KU football team has accomplished such a start were in 1968 and 1920. KU also has a possible win with Oklahoma awaiting them next week in Lawrence should both teams win.
THE COWBOYS presumably will provide the Jayhawks with their strongest challenge to date. They return with basically the same team, 17 starters and 45 lettermen, that finished 7-4 last year overall and 3-4 in the conference.
OSU coach Jim Stanley said his team was approaching a five-game "Dead Valley"
But Stanley will be taking an offensive line that averages more than 250 pounds a man along with him and three all-American candidates in halfback Terry Miller, defensive tackle Phillip Dokes and center Derrel Gdourh.
march, beginning with Kansas, with
Colohea, Oklahoma, Missouri,
and Colorado in its success.
MILLER WAS half of the 1-2 running back punch that tore up KU's defense last year. The Browns' 63-yard punt was the team's most.
They Jayhawks will counter with a running attack of their own, the nation's top athletics. Through the nonconference season, UH has averaged 185 yards on the ground.
one touchdown while Robert Turner turned for 103 and two touchdowns.
senior hallway Laverne Smith, who last week tied Bud French's 1949 school record of 23 career touchdowns, is on the verge of breaking Jackie Robinson's 105. Smith, the conference's top roster at 108.5
yards a game, needs only 28 yards to pass Gale Sayers and 95 to pass John Riggins. Sayers rushed for 2,675 yards in his career and Riggins 2,706.
ALSO READY to bolt up the career rushing list is senior quarterback Nolan Cromwell. In only his second season of offense, Cromwell needs only 43 yards to pass Delvin Williams and 70 to pass Donnie Shanklin and move into fifth. Cromwell is averaging 92 yards a game, fourth best in the conference.
7
Free safety Chris Golub intercepts a pass against Wisconsin
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
THE PAUL WINTER CONSORT! Saturday, Oct. 23
Hoch Auditorium 8:00
General Admission tickets $4.00 in advance, $5.00 at the door.
Available at SUA and Kief's.
Brought to you by Fool's Gold and SUA.
ROCK'S at its BEST:
when
accompanied
with
COMFORT Have your own rocks concert,
just pour Southern Comfort
over you! Neal Super (eola, TUP,
tongue, orange juice or milk.)
COMFORT
There's nothing more delicious than Southern Comfort* on the rocks!
Kansan Predictions
Place a Kansan want ad.Call 864-4358
| GAME | SCHOENFELD | ANDERSON | VICE | ABOUHALKAH |
|---|
| Kansas at Oklahoma State. | Kansas 28-21 | Kansas 28-17 | Okla. St. 28-17 | Okla. St. 28-17 |
| Uah Iowa State | Iowa State 30-14 | Iowa State 30-14 | Iowa State 30-17 | Iowa State 30-14 |
| Missouri at Kansas State | Missouri 24-6 | Missouri 28-6 | Missouri 24-6 | Missouri 28-6 |
| Nebraska at Colorado | Nebraska 21-20 | Colorado 10-9 | Nebraska 31-18 | Nebraska 21-20 |
| Oklahoma vs. Texas at Dallas | Oklahoma 30-24 | Oklahoma 14-10 | Oklahoma 14-13 | Texas 14-10 |
| Univ. of Miami: (Pla.) at Pittsburgh | Pittsburgh 30-14 | Pittsburgh 30-14 | Pittsburgh 30-16 | Pittsburgh 30-10 |
| Tennessee at Texas A&M | Texas A&M 21-14 | Texas A&M 21-14 | Texas A&M 27-21 | Texas A&M 27-24 |
| Vanderbilt at Louisiana State | LSU 17-10 | LSU 20-10 | LSU 24-21 | LSU 28-14 |
| Prediction Records | 22-8 .740 | 22-8 .740 | 22-8 .800 | 22-8 .740 |
Making the Kansas fan predictions this fall are Steve Schonefeld, sports editor; Brendan Anderson, assistant Gary Voe, assistant sports editor; and Yale Abuhadouh, managing editor and Fall 1957 sport reporter.
Coach predicts cross country win
SPECIAL PRESENTING
Saturday
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Although KU cross country coach Bob Timmons wasn't even sure which runners he was taking to Carbondale, II, for the 2014 season. In Illinois, he was certain about one thing.
"We'll win." Timmons said yesterday before practice. "We may have some changes from the people who ran last week, but we'll have a full squad."
The positions in question are the fifth, sixth and seventh. Joel Cameron, Bill Riley, Michael Duncan.
THE
ARENA
AGENDA
- Sat., Oct. 9 -
- College Football Oklahoma Seamers meet the Texas Longhorns at 2:45
- Baseball - National League
Play-off at 7:00
Cincinnati Reds vs.
Philadelphia Phillies
- Baseball - American League Play-off at 11:30 Kansas City Royals or New York Yankees
- Arena will open at noon
- Baseball - American League Play-off Royalts vs. Yumboes
- Sun.. Oct. 10 -
- NFL Football—Chiefs vs. Redskins at 12:00
- o Baseball—National League Play-off Reds meet the Phillies
- Play-off at 2:00
Phillios meet the Reds
- THE ARENA A Private Club
- Mon., Oct. 11 -
- o Happy Hour 5-7 Drinks 1/2 price
- Play-off at 7:00
Royals vs. Yankees
— Tues., Oct. 12 —
have filled those spots during KU's first meets, but Timmons has been less than half as many.
o See all those events on our giant 7' T.V. screen
e Both American & National League Play-offs will be shown at the Arena
--regarding murder, rape, homosexuality (crimes for which God Almighty 'Laws demands the death penalty), and men believed and knew it would be promptly and faithfully enforced, would it not cleanse the city of murder, rape, homosexuality, etc., etc.! Would you like to live in a city, a state, a nation where these abominations have been stamped out? I would! i expect to in due time. Abraham, the Friend of God, The Father of The Failures is made God is God." This statement promises that "the earth shall be full of all his knowledge and glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea." Where will you be then in view of your present attitude, and actions, and witnessing concerning the abominations that fill the earth almost as the waters do the seas? Your present attitude, and actions, and witnessing concerning the Abomination of "Taking the Name of The Lord thy God in vain" by claiming to be a Christian and dishonorizing parents, and the abominations of murder, rape, homosexuality, stealing, covetousness, etc.?
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The Contest is coming! Oct. 28th
--regarding murder, rape, homosexuality (crimes for which God Almighty 'Laws demands the death penalty), and men believed and knew it would be promptly and faithfully enforced, would it not cleanse the city of murder, rape, homosexuality, etc., etc.! Would you like to live in a city, a state, a nation where these abominations have been stamped out? I would! i expect to in due time. Abraham, the Friend of God, The Father of The Failures is made God is God." This statement promises that "the earth shall be full of all his knowledge and glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea." Where will you be then in view of your present attitude, and actions, and witnessing concerning the abominations that fill the earth almost as the waters do the seas? Your present attitude, and actions, and witnessing concerning the Abomination of "Taking the Name of The Lord thy God in vain" by claiming to be a Christian and dishonorizing parents, and the abominations of murder, rape, homosexuality, stealing, covetousness, etc.?
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
The late great Evaestigel "Billy Sunday" said "PUT A POLLE CAT IN THE PARLOR; WHICH CHANGES FIRST? PARLOR, OR POLLE CAT?" He did not give the answer to this problem, probably thinking all would have sense enough to figure it out Surely there has been tremendous change in Churches since his day Could it be caused due to Spiritual Pole Cats getting in the Church The 10th chapter of Leviticus tells of THE FIRE OF GOD FLASHING UP AND BURNING TO DEATH KEITH SOME BONES of sons because of their offering 'Strange Fire' in a worship service!
The following is a reprint of the article in this column on May 6th,
1967.
In the 5th chapter of Amos, God tells His people He "hates" and "desires" their offerings of worship and will not accept them. There is nothing to their worship — except offense — unless they rise up and put away all their offerings. This is true in all cases, which when their land is defiled, Verse 21:24 — "I hate, I despair your feast days... Though you offer me burn offerings and my meat offerings I will not accept them; neither will I regard the peace offerings. Take thou away from Me the noise of thy songs; for I will not accept any such thing." Verse 21:26 — "A WATER'S RIGHTEOUSNESS AS A MIGHTY STREAM!"
The article in this column two weeks ago told about the writer's effort to obey this command of God to "Let judgement run down as waters, and righteousness a mighty stream" in his contact and experience with a hold-up man. Quoted: I told Mold. Hold-upp if I had the responsibility and power of the law in my hands, his body would probably now be in his grave, and his evil spirit — unless he truly reaped, and it don't take long to repent — would be in hell with his 'daddy, the devil' for both two witnesses, or definite proof of his guilt he would have been sunrise or sunset, which wherever he might choose don't take advantage of it, nor is he charged by God Almighty to take revenge for Him and do away with evil against law and order. Read the 138th chapter of Romans. The Bible not only says "Resist the Devil," but it also save "Give no place to the Devil!"
What do you think? It must know this was the law in Atlanta, and knew and believed it would be promptly and faithfully enforced, would it not have to do so? Or will it?
May another question be asked for your consideration? Can one be a Christian that rejects Capital Punishment? Was not Christ's Crucifixion on the Cross Capital Punishment? Though innocent He offered Himself to die for the gully! "GOD SLOVED THE WORLD THAT HE GAVE HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON" — gave Him for Capital Punishment that God's righteousness and holy Law might be carried out: "the soul that sineeth shall be tortured and die that WHOOVER LIFE." "Believe in Him," the PRESIBH BUT HAVE EVERLASTING LIFE." "Believe in Him," that He substituted his Sinless Self and took Capital Punishment that my Sinful Self might live eternally a redeemed soul
"1 THOUGHT ON MY WAYS, AND TURNED MY FEET UNTO THEY
COMPROMISEMENTS," Pallium 119; 86.
"1 THOUGHT ON MY WAYS, AND TURNED MY FEET UNTO THEY
COMPROMISEMENTS," Pallium 119; 86.
"VE THAT LOVE THE LORD, HATE EVIL." Psalm 97: 10.
"FOR THIS IS THE LOVE OF GOD, THAT WE KEEP HIS COMMANDMENTS; AND HIS COMMANDMENTS ARE NOT GRIVOUS."
P, Q. Box 405, Decatur, Ga. 30031
8
Friday, October 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
This Saturday night
'Nest' hatches Hawks' fete
Promoters Expect "Media Coup"
What the bell is a "Media Corp" And what's his buzz all about at "The Nest" this Saturday morning?
"Just about every type of media conceivable will be involved," Brinkerhoff said. "We've got this really professional mobile disc outfit coming from Kansas City to create the event. To cover it, Kansas City's Star Magazine is sending a writer and photographer. We're naturally very excited about the project and we know it's a little town! And we support there will be quite a bit of interest on the part of KU students."
"Whenever a newsworthy event takes place," explained Cory Brinkerhoff, Lawrence journalism student and promotional director of SUA's A night spot. "The Nest," Varius media make an effort to cover the story. Sometimes, especially if the story is a hot one, the media—radio, television, or film—become in use for that they actually BECOME the event. They sort of stalel the show."
Star magazine's coverage of the event at The Nest is sure to draw a geodesic crowd. "Till am he there!" aboutted Paulina Kramer. Lawrence and about ten of my friends are going too!
And that is exactly what Brinkwerth and other members of the SUA staff expect to happen.
Apparently the attraction of Star magazine photographers will result.
"Besides the Star Magazine coverage, KJHK radio will be broadcast live," said Brinkerbauer. "That will give people at the Nest a chance to say 'ii' to their friends that couldn't make it."
"We are going to be using a TV camera the entire night as well. The videotape replays should give dancers and spectators both a real charge. Just like a video game, it can be head and head of the TV crew. "Instalms replay of people dancing, camcorders trying to get their faces on, mini-screen tests for aspiring dancers."
"We want everyone that has a camera, or even a tape recorder, to bring it and use it. There's no reason why everyone can get in the 'media' side of this as well as the 'event' side," said Brinkerboff, claiming he will be bringing three cameras of his own.
The many media activities planned for the mobile device show this Saturday night at the Nest may indeed turn out to be the real spectacle. If you've often wondered what Marshall McCullan means when he refers to a "media comp", this could be your choice to find out.
KJHK-FM to broadcast
Millionaire at
Midnight
GRAND
OPENING
Next Friday
Oct. 15
the nest
live
Cindy Hutter, station manager for KJHK in Lawrence has confirmed that they will be doing live remote broadcasts from THE NEST to a media media event. Steve Dawy will be broadcasting.
the nest
What makes the situation even more unusual is the Nest's regular weekend format. "We're the places you go when you want LIVE entertainment, we have five bands booked and every week except this one. It was a real coincidence that Star Wars was on the schedule and we each weekend we didn't have a barked book."
According to Chris Kahler, SUA programming adviser in charge of the Nest, everything about the magazine's coverage, including the story they want to tell, has been grown from a mere recent phenomenal growth of "mobile diszi." What's most important to them is that there be a large crowd of students actively whipping up it, really having a good time. We told them if a bunch of people were going to show up at Star Magazine, KU is the place to go.
KC Star Magazine to Cover Event
Why is it prescriptive a magazine as the Kansas City Star's "Star Magazine" coming to Lawrence this weekend? A better question why, is why the city's star is prescriptive to the feature story? It seems a bit unusual.
flock 'n' rock
"It will no doubt cause a problem with some people confusing our image, thinking we changed to a disco format, but we figured the exposure Star magazine gets would be so beneficial, we could get away with it." Kalleb said. "Besides, our ultimate goal is to provide the best setting possible for students to have the best time at school," she added. The professional disco party, lots of beer, and a chance to have your picture taken for a magazine with national prominence."
Gene Murray of the Star's editorial staff was moved to do the story on the mobile disc by Billboard, an entertainment trade magazine. We asked him why we thought expansion their regular coverage of it, and feel that it's definitely the wave of the future for college parties. Murray said. "We are interested in showing our readers what it's all about by covering an event on a major school's campus."
So national fame for some glory seeking KU students may be realized this Saturday night when the magazine's photographers start shooting the event at the Nest. "I'm sure gonna get my face in there," one student said. "My parents will get a real kick out of seeing me in Star Magazine!"
Steve Johnson, radio-TV-film student, is getting very excited about this Saturday night. He'll be running the videotape recording operation at the Nest's "music club"
VTR to create its own event,with replay
"I think it would be very practical to use the videotape of people dancing as a form of therapy for dancers," Johnson said. "But don't quote me in this chapter because I can't recall how they'll look like parapherns on camera."
Kathar Kulshan, SUA staffer, dreamt up the idea of the VIT coverage of discourses because of the novelty of their work. You can take a picture of someone else can you do it with instant replay of yourself and your friends. It will be a lot of fun. I can see the crowd at halfway through the night, all a few hours, really hamming it up for the audience.
Anyone curious about how they look on TV should be sure to attend.
the nest
Level 2 at the Union
Who's heard of "The Nest"
"It's an academic question at this point," says John Hall, Lawrence senior, "because we have handbooks for every weekend this semester!"
Are KU students "disco crazy"?
flock 'n' rock
Hall is in charge of THE NEST, an SUA sponsored "night club" located in the Hawk's Nest restaurant area on Level Two of the Union. "We've spent $0,000 to remodel the place, and we've committed over $0,000 for bands this semester alone. Obviously we believe the KU students want to hear live music."
"This big disco event THE NEST is sponsoring tomorrow night (Oct. 9) an unexplainable departure from our format. I'm not sure how it all got started, but I think it'll get us some good public anyway," Hall said. "Disco is alright. There are good and bad things a person could say about it, but SUA is interested in getting into a We're like Bugsy's and Shannanagis' trip. With great talent like Millionaire at Midnight next weekend (Oct. 1-5) for our Grand Opening, I'm not worried about whether students will decide to come here for $1, or to a local disco for $2. The win I see it, THE NEST is best."
THE NEST was created to expand SUA's offering of activities for students," according to Mike Miller, Programs Advisor for SUA. "The only regular evening entertainment provided by Student Union Activities was the film series. We wanted to branch out."
Along with great entertainment, the NEST has plenty of cold beer—the cheapest in town at $1.70 a pitcher. Cover charge is always $1.00. "We thought about raising the cover, but this way we figured people could buy more beer," said Cary Brinkerbeck, promotional director of the NEST.
The Need is open every Friday and Saturday night, and prepares to bring in the highest quality students.
It could be that John Hall and SUA are on to something. "There is a definite lack of variety on weekends in Lawerence," Rod Randell, Lawrence senior, said. "I will be looking forward to a really nice place with good bands, dance music, and cold beer."
the nest
musical learners can listen and watch. These musical groups offer the best of both," explains Hall.
the nest
THE NEST could be the place.
The month of October is powerpacked with outstanding entertainment!
Coming Attractions to "The Nest"
Five piece group from Lawrence guaranteed to Flock 'n Rock you
MILLIONAIRE AT MIDNIGHT Oct. 15-16 One of Lawrence's most popular bands featuring great dance music
COLE TUCKEY Oct. 29-30
SQUEAKY FEET Oct. 22-23
COLE TUCKEY Oct. 29-30 The area's most up and coming act! Destined for the big time.
Stay tuned also in
November for some more favorites including:
ON TAP AIRBORNE
and BOB WYRE
Grt 109
the nest
KU to Debut "Mobile Disco" Night
By now, anyone who haven't spent the last year and a half on Sahabatical in Thetet is familiar with the "Disco" phenomenon. As with most popular trends, Disney started on the East and West coasts five to ten years ago and has moved in the Midwest only within the last two years. At least these disco houses have opened in the Kansas City area within the year as well as two in Lawrence.
ability to diversify and offer any possible combination of music is another advantage disco offers over live bands. Besides, most schools and organizations don't have the budgets to continually innovate their mobile disco offers an economical alternative and a change of pace. Glarewell explained.
The Milwaukee has been “discovering” disco, enterprise promoters on both coasts have taken the concept in a new direction. Reverting the principle of Mohammed going to the mountain, the mountain is being brought to Mohammed. In a word: Mobile Disk. Sound system, disk jockey, music, and lights are brought to the customer. S.U.A. in cooperation with Disco Party of Kansas will be premier mobile disco in the Hawk's Nest Saturday night with a dance open to all students.
"One reason mobile Diosco have become so popular on campus is because they provide a recreational release unmatched by live bands." (From Gildelwid of Diosco Party of Kansas City.
"People get physically involved with the music they move with it, dances to it, be it an extension of music rather than simply passive receivers of music or participants in it," the music and people are discovering that dancing is. Since disco began to rew up, the party scene on campus has changed from live bands to discos. Most mobile DJ jockeys program their music to be played live and recorded on vinyl or traditional disco records. This
FREE T.SHIRT
The Nest will give the T-shirt shown below to the 1st ten people at the Disc-Media Coup this Sat. at 8:30 p.m. The cost is $65,000 and logos appear on this page to win.
NATIONAL AUTO
SOUND, INC.
Presents
DISC PARTY
The Complete Mobile Disco
DISCO PARTY is a new entertainment concept bringing you the best in music combined with the finest sound systems available
DISCO PARTY offers your party:
A professional Disc-Jockey
The finest in sound systems
Disco lighting
Dance instructors
A library of music to suit
any occasion
Come to The Nest on level 2 of the Student Union on Saturday at 8:30 . . . Live radio coverage! See yourself on video tape instant replays! Disco Dancing!
7540 Manchester Hwy.
K.C. Mo. 64132
Phone (collect)
816-523-7206
Get Nesty
Get Nesty
Here's the kind of shirt you can look well dressed in, yet be comfortable enough to get "nesty."
Featuring the graphics of Bob Muenster in a total shirt design by Sique. The sleeves make it. You'll make it. So get nesty, in light blue, red, yellow, and pure white. Available at the SUA office.
STAY IN NES!
fock n rock
Friday, October 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
9
st
complete
file
-20
concept
d
)
ect) 206
Tide changes for waterbed uses
By DEB MILLER
Staff Writer
Mention waterbeds in a crowd and you'll probably be scared of the packers and a few other wild animals.
However, the waterbed no longer is just a conversation piece or a place to throw a
Kim Kern, owner of Fields, 712 Massachusetts St., said Wednesday that 30 per cent of his watered customers bought the beds for health reasons.
"Some of them have bad backs. one girl bought one because she has asthma, and waterbeds don't collect dust easily," Kern said.
FIELDS SELLS about eight different kinds of frames, but more than 200 sizes and shapes.
Kern owns a waterbed himself, not for health reasons, he said, but because it's more comfortable than a "dead bed," a waterbed dealer's term for a regular bed.
Accessories include heaters, fitted sheets,
matress pads for insulation and complete
bedding.
Kern said that he had a cross section of customers, including students, married couples.
These customers spend from $250 to $1,000 on waterbeds.
MANY STUDENTS are buying the mattress and liner and building their own frames, Kern said, because residence halls can also to allow waterbeds in rooms, students' rooms.
Most waterbeds come with a frame, mattress, safety line, heater and pedestal.
Mike Taraboulos, president of the Association of University Residence Halls, said that waterbeds were allowed in bedrooms as long as they were properly cared for.
Residence hall officials have in the past been reluctant to allow waterbeds in rooms where children were present.
A clause prohibiting waterbeds in apartments written into some leases for children.
"BUT THERE'S no problem with weight
the waterbed is in a proframe." Kern
cannot say more.
Promoting better communication and understanding among family members is the aim of a new five-ease Continuing Workshop, "Family Communication."
The workshop which began Tuesday night at the Adult Life Resource Center north of the Kansas Union, is conducted by Gary Counselling at the University Counseling Center.
KU workshop gives families chance to talk
"We want to teach people how to be good parents today, which means making them better examples for their children," Price said recently. "Too often adults raise kids who don't have trial and - andor method, which is a risky thing to do when dealing with people."
Participants in the Tuesday evening workshops will explore the content and process of their communication—what they say and how they say it.
Sara Scalipa, programs specialist at the Adult Life Resource Center, said the sessions would try to identify personal qualities in family members that occasionally hindered The Free Flow of communication, such as over-aggressiveness or shyness.
"There are some things to look out for in trying to eliminate barriers to equal expression by all family members," she said. "We'll try to touch on areas that some families avoid talk about openly and ask why."
Family members also will participate in role-playing sessions in which family members will assume atypical positions in a family situation.
Audio-visual aids and videotaping the discussions for replay may be used
Other sessions of the workshop will be in the next four Tuesdays from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Adult Life Resource Center, 13th Street and 14th Avenue, for orientation fee is $80 for each family member.
Leakage isn't a problem either because each bed has a safety liner.
"Most leakage problems occur when people let their cat on the bed. The cat starts playing with an air bubble, and ruins the safety jiffy with his claws." Keen said.
But this problem can be easily remedied because each watered ally comes with a patch of dirt.
Algicide, a substance that prevents the growth of algae, must be put in the water when the bed is first filled. Other than this, the required berries need little or no care, Kern said.
Kern said that the waterbeds on sale now were second-generation waterbeds because they were better made than the first ones that appeared on the market 10 years ago.
A NEW KIND of waterhed that Fields is promoting has an air frame instead of a window.
"This waterbed weighs about half as much as a bed with a wooden frame, but it is so soft."
ONE WATERBED owner who is sold on the product is Phil Grosse, Roseville, Ill., II.
The association standardized bed sizes
developed rigid inspection tests, Kern
said.
Carl Ceder, Concordia senior, owned a waterbed a year ago, but found it too much of a problem to drain every time he moved, he said.
The credit partially goes to the National Association of Watered Manufacturers.
Groves' present waterbed is the second one he has owned, and he thinks it much more comfortable than a regular bed, he said.
"I wouldn't switch back to a regular bed because I'm so scared now." Groves said.
"They're great, except when you'inre activated. Then they're being afloat on it."
He said that he would like to own another one someday when he didn't have to move.
PROPEL IN the medical profession also have looked into the pros and cons of wives.
Pat Fielding, chief physical therapist at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said that two years ago therapeutic use of waterbades discussed at every convention she attended.
Since then, several disadvantages have been discovered, she said.
"We found out that placing a patient on a waterbed makes it difficult to maneuver the bed."
HOWEVER, C. O. Moss, Lawrence chiropractor, said that waterbeds did have an advantage for patients who had to remain stable for long periods of time.
"Regular beds impede circulation, and this causes bedreses. A waterbed did not cause pressure, which eliminates the problem," he said.
Whether used for health or comfort, the waterbed apparently is becoming more sophisticated and better understood than when it first appeared on the market.
H
On Campus
Events
TODAY: KU ACCOUNTING CLUB members will have an opportunity to apply with representatives from Haskins and Sikkis, a Kansas City, Mo., account firm, at 3:30 p.m. in the Krauterkloom of the Kansas Union. The PEARSON TRUST p.m. in the residence hall or residence halls on funding requests at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Alcove B Room.
SATURDAY: SUA AND KU SAILING CLUB begin its all-day Sunflower Regata at 10 a.m. at Perry Yacht Club, Lake Perry
SUNDAY: THE KU CRICKET CLUB meets a Kansas City, Mo., cricket team at noon in Shenk Recreation Complex. SUCH CAHES CLUB meets at 2 p.m. in the Union's Pbar and C Rooms. A FREE CHINA CLUB film will be shown at 2 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. Those interested in the VENEZUELAN SCHOOLSHARPI GRAND MARISCAL PROGRAM should attend an informational meeting at 3 p.m. in the Union's Jayhawk Room. THE STUDENT SENATE TICKET SUBSIDY committee meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Regionalist Room WATER BAKETBALL begins at 7 p.m. in the KU Natatorium.
TORNIGH: KARL ILG, professor from the University of Isembra, Austria will lecture in German on German immigration in the South American countries.
FUN AND GAMES
PROF.
KATZ
ARCADE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!
Monday-Friday---3 to 12 Foosball Wheels II Saturday---9 to 12 Pinball Indy 800 Sunday---2 to 10 Pool Free Drawing Every Week - T-shirts, Record Albums, Concert Ticket 7th Street-Lawrence, Kansas
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the student activity fee.
FROM: Tom Mitchell—Student Senate Business Manager
*All officers who are responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds must:
1. Attend a training session conducted by the office of the Student Senate
2. Sign an organizational management contract with the Student Senate.
3. Obtain advanced 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. Even though you have attended a training session last fiscal year, you will still have to attend one during this fiscal year. You will also be sessions will be scheduled once each month. The training session has been scheduled for the following time:
Tuesday, October 12, 1976 at 2:00 P.M.
International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
The session will last less than an hour. You must contact the Student Senate Office at 864-3710 to sign up for this session or for additional information.
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee.
Jay McShann
Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass.
Great old-time band leader — Pianist — and his band Appearing for 2 nights only Friday and Saturday at
He's toured the U.S. and Europe many times and has made recordings in each of the last 6 decades.
Admission $3.50 Opens at 8:00.Music starts at 9:00 Try our new food service!
Admission $3.50
Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations Also beer & peanuts
1618 W. 23rd
2
Griff's
BURGER BAR
Griff's BURGER BAR Phone 843-9108
Fri.-Sat.-Sun.
Oct. 8-9-10
For
$1.00
2 GIANT HAMBURGERS For $100
The University of Kansas
CONCERT SERIES 1976-1977
proudly presents its 74th season
Gary Graffman
One of the very few thoroughly American pianists active on the international circuit
Mon., Oct. 11 Hoch Auditorium 8:00 p.m.
Students admitted FREE with KU I.D.
The Concert Series is paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
10
Friday, October 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
As season changes tomatoes' prices rise
Seasonal changes have resulted in an increase in the price of tomatoes at Lawrence and Gould's.
According to the weekly survey conducted by KU's Consumer Affairs Association (CAA), the price of tomatoes at seven Lawrence supermarkets has increased 12 cents over last week's average price.
Judy Kroeger, CAA director, said yesterday that other than the considerable increase in tomato prices, this week's survey indicated that prices were stable.
Only minor changes were recorded in price averages, she said, as a result of sale items being averaged, regular prices. The average next week's survey would concentrate on rice prices.
Dillen's (98 lb.)
Dillen's (Dillen's St.)
Brady's (120 lb.)
Wermer's (57 lb.)
Krager's
Shelfway
Ellings'
Milk - 12 per cent, 15 gal., S.B.
16 76 82 78 78 * 39 75 69 69 69 77
Cotton cheese - 24 oz.
10 90 90 81 89 * 39 75 69 69 69 77
Cotton cheese - 24 oz.
10 90 90 81 89 * 39 75 69 69 69 77
Colby cheese - 18 lb.
15 154 153 151 151 158 155 153 154 154
Garlic cheese - 18 lb.
15 153 151 151 151 158 155 153 154 154
Crisco oil - 8 oz.
1.05 1.05 1.05 1.05 1.05 1.05 1.05 1.05 1.05
Chicken-wool frier, 1 lb.
30 48 48 49 49 49 43 43 41 41 40
White rice-long grain, 1 lb.
X 31 31 39 39 39 33 33 31 30 35
Spaghetti - 1 lb.
89 89 117 109 125 99 99 102 103
Coffee-Pofer's, 1 lb.
5.15 * 294 1.09 1.09 1.25 99 99 1.02 1.03
Coffee-Pofer's, 1 lb.
69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69
Ratinol - dark, 15 oz.
89 X 89 89 89 72 * 27 69 67 72 70
Plato beans - 1 lb.
X 30 X 30 X 37 * 27 69 67 72 70
Orange juice-frozen, 6 on S.B.
29 29 29 29 30 30 30 30 30 30
Corn-frozen, 10 oz.
29 29 29 29 30 30 30 30 30
Pamela - 1 lb.
29 29 29 29 30 30 30 30 30
Carrots - 1 lb.
33 30 30 30 30 39 69 69 69 69
Onion - 1 lb.
19 19 19 19 17 17 X X 62 70
Onion-yellow, 1 lb.
19 19 19 17 17 17 X X 62 70
Pepper - 18 oz. with deposit
48 48 85 87 79 X X 85 87 84
Paper towels - Viva pack
85 85 85 87 79 X X 85 87 84
Paper towels - Viva pack
85 85 85 87 79 X X 85 87 84
> indicates sale price
X indicates item not available
S.B. indicates store brand
IN DEPTH SURVEY: FLOURS AND MIXES
Diline 5 lb
Diline 6 lb
Hairy 3 lb
Wavyman 1 lb
Pageger's 2 lb
Palmer's 2 lb
Average 1 lb
Average per lb.
Gold Medal - unbreded, 3 lb
89 .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.97 .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
Gold Med尔 - unbreded, 3 lb
89 .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.97 .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
.89 * .89
Gold Med尔 - self-rating, 3 lb
65 .65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.65 * .75
.89 .79
.79 X 1.09 1.13 1.19 1.29 1.09 1.11 72 .72
Swim 'n' Down cake mix - 2 lb
.45 * .45
.71 X 71 X 69 X 71 X 71 X 69 X 39 .39
National Farm cake mix - 18 oz. on
1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.84
Bliquake - 2 lb, 9 oz.
.81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81
.77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .81 .81
Ant Jimmie's wheat paste mix - 2 lb, 3 oz.
.77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .81 .81
Avoid Jimmie's wheat paste mix - 2 lb, 3 oz.
.77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .77 .81 .81
White flour lacks germ worm and bran and is therefore lower in vitamins, phosphorus, iron, magnesium, wheat flour. The vitamins replaced in enriched flour don't enrich it enough to equal whole wheat. However, white flour contains no phosphorus, leaving from the abundance of it in the stores.
Cake flour is milled from soft wheat, which has a lower gluten content than hard wheat. Gluten makes dough elastic, and the result is a dough that makes which are supposed to be crumbs.
Breads, on the other hand, should be made from a high gluten, or elastic dough, rather than a refined flour.
All-purpose flour usually comes from a blend of hard and soft wheat and can be
used for both pastries and breads. Beating or kneading dough develops the gluten, making it more elastic. Therefore, when using all-purpose flour, knead bread dough until smooth and elastic but don't overbake cake dough.
In comparing prices of straight flours and mixes, it is difficult to tell which is the best buy because the mixes contain more than just flour. Aunt Jemima pancake mixes combine a variety of flours (even the standby mix) in a textured mixture that one flour provides. Surprisingly, whole wheat pancake mix is less expensive than the standard mix, and it contains soya flour and wheat germ, which increase its protein value.
As expected, store brand flour is less expensive than national brands.
Electric game craze continues
Staff Writer
By ROB EMBERS
Electronic games, using TV display screens, are marking it possible for people to watch the game from their laptops.
Lawrence may seem like a quiet town, but every night there are baseball games, horse races, trap shoots, car races, demolition derbies and run fights—all indoors.
Warren Booster, manager of the Jay Bowl in the Kansas Union, said yesterday that electronic games were profitable, surpassing pinball and Foosball. He said he wasn't sure but much more electronic games are sure but much more profitable. Animated car race, was the most profitable.
Jim Howell, who works for John's Amusements, 622 Massachusetts St., said that the group has more popularity and more than 80 places John's Amusements had accounts with had some electronic games. He said some games lost their popularity fast and were replaced with other games.
THE ELECTRONIC game craze began about four years ago when electronic tennis appeared. Unlike air hockey, which came in the 1960s, tennis has had a large number of players, have retained much of their popularity.
"We have about everything they make," he said, "and if we don't have it, we can get it."
BUT ELECTRONIC games haven't completely replaced the pinball machine. Howell said there were still 10 pinball machines to every electronic game in Lawrence, and the addition of electronic games hadn't hurt profits from pinball machines.
One problem with electronic games is that they are harder to repair than pinball
machines. It sometimes takes a week or two to repair the electronic games, he said.
The Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., doesn't have electronic games any more, Larry Bazzell, a bartender there, said, because he had been given a reputation for several days before they could be repaired. Bazzell said he thought the novelty of electronic games had worm off him.
Tony Maida, a bartender at the Wagon Wheel, said the game was popular during the 1980s.
Electric games are easier to maintain because people tend to abuse pinball machines.
Scott Engleman, Great Bend senior, said he preferred electronic games because they were more challenging and more enjoyable than oinhall machines.
ABOUT THE ONLY enjoyable thing Boozer could see in the electronic games room was to play video games, would rather not have electronic games or pinball machines that they distracted people who played pool. He said a separate room was needed to isolate the games from the computer.
"We started with $200 in quarters Friday night and were out by Saturday afternoon with people feeding the machines," Boozer said.
But as long as they are profitable, Bozer said, he nlags to keep the machines.
Lawrence receives first vaccinations
The first swine flu vaccinations were administered yesterday in Lawrence, but shots won't be available to University of Florida and faculty members until early November.
Kay Kent, director of the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, said yesterday that allotments of swine flu vaccine would be distributed to the county health departments by the state over variable periods of time. She said she hoped the shipments of vaccine would begin arriving weekly.
The first shipment, which arrived a week earlier than expected, is being given only to high-risk people—those most susceptible to flu—particularly older than 65 or who have certain chronic ailments, Kent said.
Douglas County is to receive more than 48,000 total doses.
The first doses were administered at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, local nursing
As more doses arrive, clinics will be set up around the city by the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department to accommodate vaccinations for the public.
homes and some private doctors' offices,
she said.
Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Hospital, said the Watkins staff would work with county health officials to set up a clinic for the patients who had vaccinations. But he said that because the program was initiated by the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, students and faculty members could receive vaccinations at any of the public clinics.
To receive the free vaccination, people must read information about the flu vaccine.
CROSS SKI
From National Forest Roadhead Into Colorado Flattops Ski Ranch for 6 days & 5 nights WILDERNESS XC SKIING
instructions & Tours with former Chamonix Guide
Main Lodge & Heated Cabins wine with meals
Jan. 3-8, 1977
$208 from Glenwood Springs, Colo.
Bring sleeping bag and XC skis.
Reservations ($50 Deposit) Deadline Oct. 27, 1976
4503 W. 66th Terr.
Prairie Village, Kansas 66208
913-362-1915
QUALITY + PRICE = VALUE
BOTTLED BY
OF AMERICA
QUART
MEXICAN GRAND CITY
SUAREZ
TEQUILA
GOLD IMPORTED FROM MEXICO SILVER
JUAREZ
80 PROOF
TEQUILA
BY TERRAIA JANESA SA SMITH LUGS
MASSIVE
SUNSHINE HAT
This hat is quickly becoming the official K.U. Sports Hat.
- Fine Quality
The One & Only
PECKER
CAP
- Adjustable headband
$4.50 at the game but only $4.00 at THE STABLES
- Durable
&
THE SANCTUARY
DID YOU KNOW?
This film was filmed entirely in Kansas City—with an all-Kansas City cast.
This is CBX Starts WEDNESDAY
the OUTLAW NETWORK!
GROOVIER than GROOVE TUBE
BOOBIER than 8008 TUBE
Trashier than TUNNEL VISION!
69 MINUTES
PUTS TV BACK IN THE BATHROOM.
69 MINUTES
R RESTRICTED
NARNING***
Produced /Directed by Executive Producer
IAN MORRISSON EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
SUSAN MESSIGER
JOE LEAH
A NAUGHTY BOYS. INC. PRODUCTION COLOR
... SCENES OR LANGUAGE MAY GROSS OUT DECENT
PEOPLE*****
--at
The cast of the decade.
The western adventure
of a lifetime.
PG
JOHN WAYNE LAIREN BACALL "THE SHOOTIST"
For those who enjoy foreign films, An Ibn Asbex
Plastic. Proven to the Royal Shakespeare
College of Great Britain.
"At the center there is Glenda Jackson's marvelously impartial performance." — REX REED, Vogue Magazine
Eve. 7:30-9:30 Granada
Sat.-Sun. 2:30
..., a startlingly fresh and perceptive
written version and directed by
Jordan L. Hearn and interpreted by Jackson
by David M. Kraemer,
so well served.
*MOTHER CHIEF*
"HEDDA" on film is all Glenda Jackson. "
— VINCENT CANBY
je
Eve. 7:30-9:30
Sat. & Sun. Maf. 2:20
Hillcrest
GLENDA JACKSON in
Hedda
PG PARKETT ENHANCED SIGNATURE -C20
www.parkettenhanced.com
MEL BROOKS is back In the saddle. THE BLAZING SADDLES
Cleven Little, Madaline Kahn, Gene Wilder,
Harvey Korman
Eve 7.25 & 8.25
Sat & Sun: 7.15
Hillcrest
G In search of Noah's Ark
Is it still there?
Eve. 7:15, 9:15 Sat, & Sun, 2,4
Hillcrest
MOTHER JUGS & SPEED
MOTHER JUGS & SPEED PG 7:30
DUTCHESS & THE DIRTWATER FOX 9:25
ENDS SATURDAY
Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan, 864-4358.
Sandy's
2 Cheeseburgers
1 Large Fry
1 Medium Soft Drink
only $1.25
Sandra's
2 Cheeseburgers 1 Large Fry
Spocial good—Thurs., Oct. 7—Fri., Oct. 8—Sat., Oct. 9—Sun., Oct. 10
Sandusky
Just a guy who can
be fun.
Sandy's
REGATTA
KU Sail Club and SUA present The KU Sunflower Regatta
Oct. 9th 10:00 a.m.
6 participating schools
Perry Yacht Club, Perry Lake
Beer and food at lake
L
Elev one-hal decision pansi Center
SUA
Judge County describ dispute next Fo A ge
---
Accommodation ad are off sex, colo BRING
---
CLASS
15 word fewer
Each as word
AD DE
to run:
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
ERROR The 1 than ances mate
FOUND
Found
charg
days,
simply
at 864
UDK B
111 Flr
---
100
Want to nights, 86
Reconditi Cyclery,
SONY V.
2121 cas
3264
---
BOKONO in Lawren
ATTENTION ask us ab person (n MOBILE-1
Jayhawke
paid; can
$275 per ;
843-4933.
Spacious month, w 2114, Tosh
Need to s kitchen, a included
Available apartment 843-8613.
Nalsmith 1
Call Debby
For 11 offer:
NAPA
817 Ver
843-936
Soy
843
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 8.1976
11
Lot decision unsettled
Eleven witnesses testified in a three-and-one-half hour hearing yesterday, but no decision was made on efforts to stop stoxpene abuse at the KU Lincoln Center in Overland Park.
Judge Phillip Woodworth of Johnson County District Court asked for memoranda describing the positions of both sides of the case and memoranda will be submitted next Friday.
A group of citizens of Linwood Center
area is trying to stop the parking lot expansion. They brought eight witnesses to testify that the lot expansion would stop use of the center grounds as a playground, would make the area unattractive and would hinder drainage.
KU called three witnesses who testified about the need for the expansion and the role of the center. The city engineer of the city government said the accident wouldn't cause drainage problems.
GRAND OPENING
Friday, Oct. 8th
featuring
KEITH BROWNING
easy listening music
8:00-12:00
Pitchers 1.25
the Brewery
714 Massachusetts
BIG GROUP SPECIAL
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
1/2 lb. Delicious Fries FREE with purchase of any 4 Sandwiches
Thurs—Sun.
Oct. 7-10
Something's Always Going on at HENRY'S
We have a New Series of Glasses
Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358
A career in law without law school.
What can you do with only a bachelor's degree?
undergraduate education and a challenging respon-
sibility. A constant assistant is able to do
work traditionally done by lawyers.
Three months of intensive training can give you the skills—the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the seven courses offered—choose the city in which you want to work.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14
We will visit your campus on
since 1970. The Institute for Paralegal Training has handled the training of legal professionals in law firms, banks and corporations in over 75 states.
If you are a senior of high academic standing and
are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant,
we will accept you.
The Institute for Paralegal Training
235 South 71th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103
Operated by Paralegal, Inc.
KANSAN WANT AIDS
Assessment services, goods, services and applications.
Accommodation for clients.
Support of staff in various sectors.
International rel. support (e.g., NINDA).
Responsible for implementation of the project.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
time times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
- - - - -
Each additional word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or on the URQ website the URQ business office at 644-8385.
Reconditioned Schwimn - Lawrence Schwinn
Cyclery, 1820 W. 6th, 842-5633
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
Want to buy open tone flutes. Call John week-
nights, 864-2417. 10-12
ENTERTAINMENT
BOKONO-K-Largest paraphernula and
Lawrence L-East 8th St. 81-3600. 10-13
SONY V-FET TA-6500 Pioneer CT-F 24
* tape deck tape . Prismen架 10-14
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT BENCHERS-Drop in and
walk around the room. Call at 212-695-4300 if you
do not phone call please at 212-695-4300 when
traveling to campus.
Spacious furnished room, utilities paid $210 per month. Extended distance to campus Call 1845 7144, Tlai.
Jaywalker Towers 2 bedroom apt. All utilities included. Four year lease. $345 per month. Laundry facilities. On bus route.
Need to sublease immediately? Small apt, private
floor. Enquiry 212-850-6744. Available,
included. Call 811-358-4794 after 4 P.M.
10-8
Available immediately! 1 bdm, unfurnished
water paid, carpeted, air condition-
84-98135
Naismith Hall contract, through May, for sale.
Call Debby 814-3447. 10-14
NAPA
N.A.P.A.
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we
offer: 1. Special Prizes
Auto Parts
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have if or can get it overnight
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or else-what, it will cost you a little more at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFEPS. tt
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
ELECTRIC, 845-369-2000, W. 61h
ELECTRIC, 845-369-2000, W. 61h
Excellent condition of new and used furniture.
Trade in trade. Send furniture and Appliance Center, 701-854-3280.
**This Furniture and Appliance Center, 701-854-3280.**
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) for exam preparation
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to me.
1970 Opel Rally Kadet, 72,000 km, good condition,
gets 20 km. Call Paul 845-309-308. in.a.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Clerk Stores. If
dilton, get 20 mpg. Call Paul 842-3828. 10-8
Student and Faculty Special $25 per 50
mixed bouquets $1.50 with KU ID. Alex
.mixed bouquet $1.50 with KU ID.
.mixed bouquet 9 a.m.-5:30 Mixed
.mixed bouquet 9 a.m.-5:30 Mixed
.mixed bouquet 9 a.m.-5:30 Mixed
bath outis. Tank, regulator, wet soff and weight
16 lb.
AM/FM Stereo with turntable and speaker
for dorm room or apartment. $125. Call 841-
4030.
75 Chevy Vm: black, many options, partially
customized. Must see to appreciate. C413-850-
8889.
Samani 1000X Receiver, 35 watts. Excellent com-
fort. Great music. Great guest. 10-8
SPECIAL-A ASR speakers (Reg. $21 ea.) 10-8
SPECIAL-B a-wavy way Audio, Ray Audio, 10-8
Hurry! Hurry!
We have speakers-arms-head phones-turn-
out towers, cameras, and financing available. We
have tax-way and financing available. We
can meet any time of the day.
A good sound system is one of the most pleasurable things you can have. Let us show you an Advent system that will deliver more music and audio that it less for yourless. Audio, 13 E 8th. 10-11
We set the *Advents*-JBL and Es esparsers
we set for a fair and home music
session in Studio 3, Audio 1, 8:40-9:15
Acoustic 371 basi pass-605 wats RMS + 10-
Armstrong Fretless bass. pass B41 843-365. 10-11
Must sell. 1727, Vega Hatchback, 4-speed. Call
1035-847-2635 or 864-4945.
1971 Ford Van-Custom inside wide tire and
base. See offer at 130-150 Wheel-
phone. Phone 842-296-7230.
Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerator,
microwave, dishwasher, toaster, etc.
East 10th, Tuesdays, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Free shipping.
Midwest, Thursdays, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Free shipping.
V.W. 73, Squarceb automatic, good condition
V.W. 73, Squarceb automatic, good condition
1054 Wellington Rd after 8-24
10-11-14
1965 Galaxie 500 Auto Power, auctioning, excellent condition, $500 or best price. Phone 842-355-10-8
SALES, PARTS, SERVICE
HORIZONS HONDA
Fencing Equipment. Used, good condition. Poll mask and glove. $20. Call 844-6045 for details.
1896 Dip) Kadet Rakti Price, Price negotiate. Good
price for new phone. Call 844-753-8200,
电话 844-753-8200, aftercalls 844-753-8900,
电话 844-753-8900, aftercalls 844-753-8900,
5-string barrio, good condition. Case included.
843-589-1000 after 5.00.
STOCK REDUCTION SALE—Alverna Valli Guitar at list price but unobtained at sale prices. Charity fund, not listed at list price. Good thru Oct. 12. Lawson Music Center, Bldg. Located in the Audio Horn Studio Recordings Hall.
10 speed Pexel cycle=European components=
10 speed Pexel cycle=$550 or best offer=
tools included-848-687-88
BOKONON- Largest collection of bongs and pipes in Lawrence 12 East St. 81, BKONONON 10-13
Three huge rooms overflowing with the best collections of antique and good used furniture, glassware and other collectibles. Drewery and印第安 Jewelry. Used books. Everyday books. Fine art. Quaintville Fletch Marble 483-616, 811 New York
yr. old 105 nm Nikkor F 2.8 lens and K2K
Model 3 loudspeaker. 884-2533. 16.8
73 Toyota Corolla sedan. Automatic, stereo bra-
tch, excellent condition. Call 864-300-2900.
For Sale: 25" color RCA Console; Pioneer, Ad-
dressable; Wintersville Concert; 148-907-6231.
Guitar and amp; Gibson ES25-320 hollow body/
guitar; Gibbon deluxe reverb Taking on a
gibbon ES110-7
Pronto Polaroid camera. Leaded only 3 times.
Pat Call B41-3831, 1329 Ohio. 10-14
71 Vegh Jessica 4, speed 6, low mileage, glider,
245 Jeff, 143 Alumni Place, Rm. 2, Jeff,
8
Must sell - Arp Air Sengle Ensemble and Thomas orga-
tation with Moq Synthesize. Tom Failner. 10-12
Silver Getten it trumpet, professional model. Best offers it Trump at Christia at 814-7547 or 814-6879.
Bicycle touring Bags. Karrimor pannets and
capsule with handlebars. Like new, 1½ price.
4. 15:26 Cragar SS chrome lamp with Cooper
4. 15:26 Cragar SS chrome lamp with Very good
color. Very good color.
844-381-7200 10:14
1811 w. 0m
Tues.-Fri. 10-4
Sat. 10-4
Tues.-Fri. 10-6
CUSTOM JEWELRY. Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices, virtually any design Miniature sculpture. Mermals. Uniforms. etc. 841-3833. stone cutting. Satisfaction guaranteed. 841-3833.
Fender Bassman Amp. 50-watt top with 4-12
speakers. (Utham Electronics) Call 830-7615
9. 69 Chevy Nova. Call 864-5160
10. 10-13 Gate Saturn S/300; 20-300 Kissal
Kassal; 10-13 Dodge Ram w/ waterproof, padded record player and 78 records; tables, jars, lamps,
New Epiphone acoustic guitar with care. Best
11. 71 Fiat 800 Spyder Special. Exceptional condi-
tion. 12. 71 Ford Flex Book Sale. Book Sale - the Lawrence Public Library will hold its annual Book Fair on Fri. Oct. 8-19, 10-26, 10-28, 10-29, 10-26, 10-28 in the library garage at 7th and
categories, reasons prized
10. 10-11 Bass Bowie Volume radio, extra clean XL
11. 80-11 Black stereo radio, extra clean XL
HELP WANTED
Part time Housekeeper/Secretary immediately,
repeat for 4 hours every day, or up to
10 hrs. To do general cleaning, some steam
ironing. General letter correspondence, 3
references necessary. Call 844-9901 morning or even
afternoon.
For new Chevrolets and used cars
Call Ottis Vann!
Turner Chevrolet
The Lounge
at
843-7700
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
- Pinball
LOST AND FOUND
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
Lot; KU Bus Pas and ID (KU ID 20.90593;
Nest need. Nice reward. 864-894-304.
10-8
Graduate Student Council has a part-time job. Employees work 8am-5pm, weekdays; Standard office work, plus special project. Qualification: Knowledge of interest, in-depth understanding of the role of office procedure, typing skills. Salary: negotiable. Above minimum wage. When immature, may be eligible for an assistant position if you think you might be eligible for this job. Please call Elena Reynolds at 864-9143 only for this job by calling Ellen Reynolds at 864-9143 at any time. Or step by the GSB at 10-14 in the Union.
Lost, reward for return of small shark 'pold'
the mailboxes in Jaunwater Tower A on 1st Feb.
2007.
Left, left alver and turquque ring in Women's
Aigle. Arg, arg ring to Return to Minta at SUA Maestro
and Arg. Arg ring to Return to Minta at SUA Maestro
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Found. High school class ring. year 1975 from
Saint Louis, Missouri, initial imprint on back of
her neck.
- Feosball
Found - Gentle black mule cut in vicinity of Malls
Apt. Owner - Bldg 822-2600. . . . .
MISCELLANEOUS
Departedly need to find a home for a 3 year old child, a girl of about all shits. If no home is found by the weekend, call 911.
Found...Jean Jacket in Annex D of Summerfield.
864-1291 10-8
Plant Sale—last chance. 1108 Tennessee, Oct. 9th
10-8
Abbe at the House of Uhlers/Quick Copy Center,
New York. Monday, February 4, from 1 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 8:30
Mas. Friday, a 2-hour trip to find a home for 3 year old
NOTICE
Lost! bus pass with two football tickets and a driver's license in it. 864-2408. Reward. 10.9
Lott: dark blue billfold. The money plus a $20 reward and no questions asked when request is made.
I'll pass it over.
Found: Money, Call 841-7849. Tell me how much and where lost.
10-11
CASHAH CAFE- GOOD food from scratch. Lunch
10:30-3:30 Mw. Mass. Please be back early, as
baskets are full.
Jim's Steak House. Delicious food at reasonable prices. Free Wi-Fi. 6-11. Closed Tuesday, July 4th and August 25th. 847-873-3500, jimmerssteakhouse.com
**Found:** $19.98 book in Robinson Gym, Human Sexuality. Call 843-7709 or 843-9628. 10-11
Found: Female dog around 25 inches and Taw. Mixed
formula. Female dog around 7 inches and Taw. w/ jaws.
paw, call. Paw 841-6671.
Swap Shop, 620. Mass. Used furniture, dishes, tables, chairs, televisions. Open daily 12pm-5pm.
Found. Small black & white female kitten wearing
sweater, denim jacket, pants, leather coat.
Ladieslander forbid pet owner; please contact
us.
Found. Ring. south 3rd floor terrace of Weson-
Oct. 6, a claim in Kansas Business
DO'S DELUXE
BOTTLE FASHION
LAWFEDERIC
- Bud on Tap
- Pool
XXXXXXXXXX
XXII
Home of The Chalk Hawk
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Foos-Ball
*7m and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl*
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl!
E SELECTION OF BEER
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
Oread Bookshop Closes Early, at 12:30 on Sat.
Oct. 9 for maintenance.
PERSONAL
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND THERAPY: 1x-
61-383 in Leafworks growth workshops 10-
61-383 in Leafworks
HALLOWEEN MASQUEUR DАЕDE by Gay
Services, a MARY HARTMAN, MARY HART-
T-REVEAL, and the EVERYDAY CARE
the evening. Prizes for winners. Oct. 23. 8 to 1.
Kansas Union Ballroom. $1.75.
10-15
Any airline employee dependents who would IHCLe be placed around the world, call Surazanus at 684-164-1637.
Firy Furnace coffee house and interesting alter-
nators. Frt & S, 9 p.m., 116 Louisiana.
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
For Referrals. 11-4
Gitz-Have an absolutely fantastic Birthday-
Dinner-Mama Bear your sixth! Love you more 10-
-85
SERVICES OFFERED
Local light hauling done with van. Save $ Call
841-501 or 864-6649.
10-11
ACADEMIC RESEARCH FAPERS Thousands or
more.
320 West 18th Street, 206-248-7050, 206 H. Los Angeles.
Cell: (612) 497-7427
Mail: balford@ucr.edu
Math. Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 001, 002, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 138, 627, 668, Regular rates or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
Learn the authentic art of Belle Dancing from an
expert with over 20 years of experience. July 4th.
8:30 p.m. held at 648 Bridge Island. Isle of
Bounty.
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need
*Tune-up.* we will clean up and adjust your
bikes, store them in a safe place,
brakes and chain, true both wheels adjust your
bicycle's brakes. We also sell accessories
bought at time of "tune-up." Rates:
10 speed $15.00, 5 or 3 speed $15.00, single speed
$15.00, double speed $15.00, single speed 3
$15.00, single speed 6 $15.00. Complete pro
ride.
Generator sets $12.50 ~ now $9.50 while they last.
Lawrence Schwinn Cyclerey, 1820 W. 61h; $43.60-$45.00.
(See above.)
Commercial Printing-Invitations, stationery,
programs, brochures, cards, posters, & much,
much more. We do custom work to meet you.
We can call the Kansas Key Press 10-14
89. n42-8458
Need a new bike? Come and use the largest
bike you own. You can also bring a new bike to
offer! Bring along your used Schwinn to trade in!
Lawrence Schwinn Cyclery, 9-4 Mon.-Sat.
thru till 8:30月, Bum 14:12 Woch 8:00, 643-8363.
TYPING
Experienced typist-trial paper, thesis, mla,
and APA papers. Send resumes to:
483-654-504, Mrs. Wright
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. 10-29
Need an experienced typed IBM? ITM Carbide Air (carbondian) (rubbon). Pam at Num 845-709.
JAMES V. OWENS
RETAIL LIQUOR STORE
COLD BEER
Wines and Liquors
NEXT TOUCHS FLOWER
TRISISS BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us assist you with 83 Manhattan offices or phone 482-5791. Thank you.
WANTED
Experienced Ttypist- IBM-Memory-Call 843-12
9471, ask for John.
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/site, Quality work
through course. Desertations welcome.
Email: 843-9127.817
*Calculus and Analytic Geometry* . Thomas, oath-taking for Kinolee in Computer Science offered 15 hours per week for Kinetik in Computer Science offer 18 hours.
Official kde salensperson at the game to sell the official KDE hat. Earn a back a hat. $80 in commissions made at Wisconsin game. Limited number of salensperson needed. Call 415-634-8000 or $84.0541.
Male roommate requires $85 per month, includes utilities. Call 842-7298. 5:30-7:30 p.m. 10-8
Roommate wanted to share furnished two bed-
room, ensuite bathrooms, outdoor-airdoor pool, laundry facilities, etc.
Wanted to book: 4 tickets to KU-NU call. Call
843-6465 Separate or together.
Female vocalize needs (1-2) (1-2) guitar accompaniment now. Call 842-6288 between 5-3:50, 10-11
California alum needs tickets for homecoming
or evening (or 88) 247-717 days.
10-13
Need two tickets for Okla-KU and/or .kku-KU
game. Your name your price. Call 845-7471.
WANTED: CHRISTIAN MUSICIANS to form合唱团; cook and entertain guests; feed animals, dance, keyboard, guitar; CMF musicians; work as a band member.
Need three tickets to OU-KU game. Will pay good price. Call 843-3651. 10-12
Roomate for furnished apt. Very close to campus.
Call 843-0133. 10-12
Need 2 tickets to KU-OU or KU-Nebraska football. Call collect. McTomlrey at McDonals office in Topeka 913-575-5811. If not in, with an interview and I’ll help you in, with my secretary and I’ll get you out. 10-13
4 tickets to the KU-OU game. Need desperately, will pay $25 please. Call Gary at 842-568-5988.
One platinum room needed to fill up 2 room apt. Call Mark, 842-3770 eveins. 10-11
We now have openings for the remainder of the room furnished by a male or female room at Nainshi Hall B, 843-859. 10-20
Grad student needs daily ride between K.C. Mo.
Grad student will share expenses. In 10-11
S161-1062
Girlfriend
Optical
DISTINCTIVE DYNAWARE
82 Main Street
Washington, DC 20147
Eldbecker Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
212 Alameda Street
Milwaukee, WI 53209
* MAIN LAB SUPPORT
* OTC ADVANCE SUPPORT
* ALEXANDRA ACCESSORIES
* LUNCH & DINNER OPTIONS
* CONTACT US AT 800-664-2222
* FAX TO 800-664-2222
FREEDOM ADMINISTRATION
TOLLER ASSOCIATION
FREEDOM ADMINISTRATION
COMMON LIFE OFFICIALS
PORTRAIT FASHION
PORTRAIT FASHION
sPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
NOW'S THE TIME FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY
No extra charge
Gift Wrapping Free
HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass.
12
Friday, October 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANS-A-N may have its hang-ups
Staff Writer
By BRYANT GRIGGS
Since the installation of the KANS-A-N telephone system last April, users of the system at the University of Kansas have become aware of the system's usefulness and savings.
In interviews last week with secretaries and department heads familiar with the KANS-AN system, uncertainty was exasperated. The KANS-AN was all it wanted to be.
The system was installed to provide lower costs for long distance phone calls for state agencies throughout Kansas. The State Telecommunication Department predicted the system would save nearly $250,000 a year in telephone costs.
SINCE THE installment of KANS-A-N
in April, the state has saved about $17,000 in
telephone costs. In April the state has
saved about $138,000. This Septem-
ber it was $121,700.
Since April the state cost-per-minute charge has been reduced from 11.5 cents to 8 cents.
"Based on estimates, the more we use the KANSA-N system, the less it will cost per minute on long distance calls." Lawrence Kunkel, director of state telecommunications, said. "Since April, the amount of time used on long distance calls has increased from 900,000 minutes to one million minutes."
Kunkel said that the KANS-A-N system had been successful since its installation and had received wide approval from state agencies.
"It has improved communication between state agencies considerably," he said.
According to KU's Office of Business Affairs, it's too early to tell whether the University's telephone cost has been reduced.
HOWEVER, LARRY KNUPP, director of the Division of Information, said, "It's more expensive for our use. We make most of our calls to Kansas City and Topeka. We used to get these calls free of charge on the Wideband Network service (WATS) Line. Now we have to pay.
"However, it is cheaper to make calls in places other than the Kansas City and St. Louis areas."
Ermer Morgan, admission supervisor for Watkins Memorial Hospital, said that the KANS-A-N system worked fairly well, but that hospital staff members had difficulty in completing calls and that the system had them no more money than the WATS line.
"I don't believe I've ever heard anybody said that the KANS-AN was better than the KANS-BA."
A SECRETARY in Central Personnel Services said the new system "was good and extensive, but it was a bit more expensive than the other system."
"Right now we’re paying triple the amount we paid on the WATS line because
Organization to recognize top teachers
Students who wish to honor their favorite professors may do so by nominating them for the Mortar Board Outstanding Educator awards. Nominating forms are available in the Office of the Dean of Women, 220 Strong Hall.
Brad Max, Overland Park senior and chairman of the selection committee, said yesterday that 10 educators are honored each year by Mortar Board, a national honorary society. Five educators will be invited this semester and five next semester.
Max said the information necessary for filling out the forms could be obtained from the Office of University Relations, 135 Carruth-O'Leary. The forms must be returned to the dean of women's office by 5 p.m. Oct. 15.
SUA
FILMS
POPULAR FILMS
GREY GARDENS (1974)
Dustin Snyder, Aaron Bryant,
With Edith Bouvier Beile and
daughter Edie. A non-fiction film
based on the novel. 9:30,
3:30, 7:00 and 9:30, 9:30.
SCIENCE FICTION SERIES
COLOSSUS: THE FORBIR PROJECT
Dir. Joseph Sargent, with
Eric Braden, Susan Clark
Mon., Oct. 11, 70:35
ANIMATION SERIES
"We had no way of keeping up with long distance calls made by each individual department," Greeson said. "There was no one who could talk to me spoken, as the KANS-A N system can."
now we have to pay for Kansas City and Tooeka calls."
TOM GREESON, associate vice chancellor for business affairs, said that under the WATS system University departments didn't have to pay for Topeka and Kansas City calls because the University paid for the bills centrally.
"Right now it's a nuisance. It's extra trouble looking up new numbers."
Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Kansas Union, said the Kansas-A-N system was "one of those systems that once you set used to. it will be alright."
A SPECIAL KANS-A-N telephone number is assigned to each state office telephone connected to the KANS-A-N Agency Net-connects. The KANS-A-N connects more than 500 state offices.
An international collection of award winning short films.
Tues., Oct. 12, 7:30 & 9:30, 75c
Besides the problems of increased paperwork and difficult billing procedures, an administration secretary, who asked not to be identified, said that she had heard complaints from other secretaries about the inability to make proper connections.
All films shown in Woodruff Auditorium
"I heard from other secretaries of a few kinks the system had, but personally I haven't experienced them," she said. "Some said they had been cut off a couple of times and that connections between Kansas City and Topeka were poor."
KARRON FERGUSON, office manager of the Education Placement Bureau, said she had no problems with the KANS-A-N system. He talked about the system's billing procedure.
when they send the bill, they only give
us the date and the telephone number,' she
said. 'The bank will tell you how to pay.
difficult to determine where the calls come from."
James Collier, director of University Relations, said, "Now we have to make detailed records of each call, plus the time spent on that call, the person asked to and the purpose of the call. All this is required on a special computer print-out form."
MASS. STREET DELI inc.
041 MASSACHUSETTS
MASS. STREET DELI
1941 MASSACHUSETTS
Cherry Cheesecake
75¢
Offer good the entire month of Oct. 1976
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Pie
DON'T MISS THE
Play-offs
at
The Arena
See the play-offs on our giant 7' screen.
• Sat., Oct. 9
• Sun., Oct. 10
• Tues., Oct. 12
Pizza & Sandwiches
Pizza & Sandwiches Available
Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
Science
Now comes Miller time.
MILK
BREWED BY
MILK BREWING COMPANY
© 1976 The Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.
FANTASTIC
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.35
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
FIRST offers job career help
Monday, October 11, 1976
See story page five
Fire inspectors close ATO floor
The fourth floor sleeping area of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house, 1537 Tennessee St., was closed Thursday after an earthquake in the Kansas State Fire Marshall's office.
Eighteen members of the fraternity were told by the fire marshal's office that they would have to sleep in other parts of the fraternity house because the fourth floor of the building didn't have an adequate fire escape system.
"Just for extra safety, they wanted another fire door at the south end of the floor," Lee Green, ATO president, said yesterday. He said that there was already a escape door at the north end of the floor, and Mr. Walton's office required fire doors at both ends.
"It's no hassle," Jim Gund, Kansas City. Moz, freshman who was forced to move his sleeping quarters downstairs, said. "The room is very cramped." He floored and back going downstairs to bed.
Green said most members who had slept on the fourth floor still studied and kept their clothes there, but now slept in other parts of the building.
"As soon as the fire escape door is in, they'll go back up to sleep," he said. "For all practical purposes, they live up there, but they just don't sleep up there."
Jay Reardon, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, who also had to move his sleep quarters, said the move had caused some problems.
"The whole house was thrown out of kilter," he said. "Living on two floors can be a problem."
Green said the fire marshal's inspectors and found no other infractions of the state law.
The inspections were the latest round of investigations made by the state fire marshal's office of student housing on college campuses in Kansas. The inspections were prompted by a fire Aug. 29 that gutted the Kappa Sigma fraternity house at Baker University in Baldwin and killed five fraternity members.
Pie coalition gets 6th seat
The Student Senate Elections subcommittee announced Friday that Valerie Howard (Apple Pie coalition), Winfield freshman, was the winner in last week's election for the sixth Senate seat representing Nunemaker College.
The announcement was delayed until after the close race for the sixth seat could be recounted, according to Kevin Flynn, Senate executive secretary.
The other senators elected last week from Numemaker are Tom Byers (Jayhawk), Marysville sophomore; Steve Conklin (Jayhawk), Hutchinson sophomore; Scott Morgan (Terra Firma), Shawnee sophomore; Terra Firma, Fairway freshman; and Ralph Munyan (Terra Firma), Kansas City, Mo., sophomore.
Plains; Georgia
Jimmy. Carter
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Rosalynn's Rally
Rosalynm Carter, left, wife of Democratic presidential candidate Jimmy Carter, spoke to a crowd of 200 people Saturday on behalf of her husband. The crowd chanted and
Photo by MIKE STRONG
expressed support for Carter by showing signs that read, "Put Peanut butter on the White House Menu."
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Photo by RANDY OLSON
Shootin' the breeze
Jeff Smyer, Ark City senior, foreground, and LeeAnn Roberts, Lawrence junior, demonstrate their sailing skills during the KU Sunflower Ratagatta Saturday. See story on www.ku.edu/sunflower.
Soft-spoken Rosalvnn gives Kansans hard sell
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
TOPEKA-Rosalyn Carter, wife of Democratic presidential candidate Jimmy Carter, made a brief stop here Saturday in her campaign to be First Lady to participate in state party fund-raising activities.
In a news conference and speech to Kansas Democrats, Mrs. Carter demonstrated her ability to hard-sell Jimmy Carter in a soft-spoken, spontaneous way. She confirmed a statement she made earlier in the week that her campaign promises were important because, "I come with him" to the White House.
The first stop for Mrs. Carter was the Carter-Mondale campaign headquarters—an unimpoising, sparsely furnished room lacking the usual campaign paraphernalia—buttons, bumper stickers or pamphlets.
THREE LARGE posters listing the voter registration records of Topeka Carter campaign workers were the only indication that this was a functioning headquarters
Mrs. Carter, escorted by former Kansas governor and current Democratic state chairman Robert Docking, entered from a back door and was at the front of the room before the few persons assembled here realized she had arrived. She walked across the hall without creating the usual stir expected from a national campaign figure.
She was soft-spoken and shy-looking. But when she responded to questions about her husband's presidential campaign, she became a hard-sell campaign who let everyone know she didn't intend to stay on the sidelines in her husband's administration and would be outspoken about things of importance to her.
When asked why the Carter family "descended" on Kansas and the Midwest often, and in numbers—she said, "We don't want to leave you; we want a mandate so many mm. cardinals."
Within the past week, most of the Carter family has campaigned in the Kansas and MN races.
SHE SAID CARTER'S popularity ratings
were going up in all the polls since the first debate because people thought the debates were unfair.
Mrs. Carter repeatedly criticized President Gerald Ford for failing to answer questions about his administration and said those who accused her husband of fuzziness on issues were frustrated opponents who found anything definite to question him about.*
Of the Playboy magazine interview in which Carter said he'd "committed adultery in his heart," Mrs. Carter said, "I'd rather Jimmy would talk to people and answer their questions. It's sally with me if he wants to tell 40 million people about the Baptist religion. And that's what he was doing."
ABOUT 200 RESIDENTS gathered outside the campaign headquarters to greet Mrs. Carter. Signs read: "Put Peanut butter on the White House Menu," "We Need a Lemonade Stand on the White House Lawn," and "At Last Poles are Free—Jerry Told Me," an allusion to Ford's statement during the second debate that Poland was an Eastern European country free from Communist dominance.
Mrs. Carter encouraged the group to continue its enthusiastic campaigning and praised their "good, honest hard work" as essential to the Carter effort.
After about a five-minute hand-shaking appearance at the reception, Mrs. Carter left to attend with a $10-a plate memorial dinner for Henry Lucek, a former Democratic governor of Ohio, and the dinner, held at Topeka's Municipal Auditorium, drew about 300 Democrats.
FOLLOWING AN introduction by Docking as "an intelligent and charming asset to her husband and the Democratic party," Mrs. Carter reiterated many of her earlier statements about Kansas, the pals and Ford's failure to answer questions.
Mrs. Carter said her husband's background as a farmer who has worked for a living and as a businessman who has worked in the farm to make his operation work were his strengths.
SHE ATTACKED President Ford for increasing the White House budget, for vetting a bill designed to reduce unemployment and for attempting to avoid disclosure of his entertainment expenses, an apparent allusion to recent investigations into his spending record while a member of Congress.
"Isn't that just like a Republican!?" she said.
Mrs. Carter said that, since travelling throughout the country talking with unemployed people, and listening to far-away speakers, these people had become stimulating to her.
“At first I campaigned just because I thought Jimmy would be a good president, but now I feel he have to work much harder so that when there are so many things I can do too.”
Royals' George Brett gets second chance
Sports Editor
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
KANSAS CITY, Mo..George Brett walked up to the barrage of microphones, looked a reporter straight in the eye and smiled.
He was relaxed and having fun. The Kansas City Royals had just beaten the New York Yankees, 7-3, to even American League play-offs at one win each.
And after the pressure the Royals' third baseman was under after Saturday's 41 loss to the Yanks, the victory was a welcome change.
"I probably won't get any questions because I didn't make an error," Brett艾伦说。
Brett was taken to his two first-ringing errors Saturday, which led to two Yankee hits and a walkoff.
But there was no talk of that yesterday. And there was no talk of Brett's dispute with Yankee manager Billy Martin over Martin's handling of Brett's brother, Ken, who pitched for New York before being traded early this season.
Martin didn't even yell obstacles at something Captain Billy did all afternoon.
"I didn't hear a thing tonight from their whole digout," Brett said. "I think it's all over with. I think it might have been over-publicized and blown out of proportion."
Brett admitted he was nervous Saturday.
"Ninny," said our Satur afternoon. "Nervous?" Brett said. "The time I was most nervous all day was when they were making the introductions, going out onto the field.
"I don't think I choked. I was nervous.
I'm not afraid to admit it. But I don't think I choke."
Brett scored the winning run in the second game after opening the Royals' two-run six by tripling over center fielder Mickey River's head. He also knocked in the Royals' first run in the first inning with a sacrifice fly.
"I'd been trying to hit it over him (Rivers) for two days," Brett said. "I finally got a pitch where I could try, and the hit just took off."
Gertt said he wasn't nervous on that hatch. "I was less nervous because I had the first play-off game under my belt," he said. "I want to what expect. I had the bad play out of it."
Brett's relaxed attitude carried over to his teammates, Brett said also seemed
"Even when we were behind, 3-2," Brett said, "we knew we would come back and we didn't die. We didn't lose any spirit. We knew we would come back."
And after Saturday's debacle, many people wondered whether Brett would come
Timely advice: Get sick during the business hours
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Staff Writer
Prescriptions written by physicians at Watkins Hospital at times other than these can be filled only with a 24-hour supply of the medication. The emergency room nurse causes the day's supply of the prescription when no registered pharmacist is on duty.
If you plan to get sick or injure yourself in such a way as to require medication, it would be a good idea if you could schedule your visit at 8 a.m. on Thursday through Friday or 8 a.m. to noon Saturday.
Before a regulation passed by the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy this summer, patients could receive a 48-hour supply of the prescribed drug.
MARTIN WOLLMANN, director of health services, and Byron Walters, physician at Watkins, said recently that they were concerned the inconvenience caused by the
one-day supply ruffing caused many students "follow through" on a instructional schedule.
If a student is sick enough to need medication, it's obviously inconvenient for him to make one or two additional trips to the hospital. Walters said.
Both doctors agreed that the regulation put the student who happened to get sick during nonbusiness hours at a definite rate. They gave two reasons for their concern.
"You know if you're really feeling lousy you don't want to face repeated trips up here—and that can be the case if the timing of your illness is poor."
WALTERS ALSO said that not all students would have a roommate available during a weekend to get the medication for him.
students who begin feeling better after the 24-hour period, Walters said.
Certain illnesses, such as strep throat and other bacterial respiratory infections, require a six-to-10-day course of treatment, he said, but the patient begins to feel better almost immediately after beginning the drug dosage schedule.
There's also a problem involved with
"Because they start to feel well soon, patients think whatever they had miraculously 'went away'," he said. "But they still've got the infection, just at a reduced level. When medication's stopped, the bacteria can do their thing with no deterrent and the person feels bad again by about the third or fourth day."
WALTERS TSA this "apparent instant cure" resulted in "double exposures" of the patient to a doctor, of unhealthy patients to other unhealthy patients and of unhealthy patients to unsuspecting healthy hospital personnel. The reco-exposures occur when the
student visits the hospital again to find out why he gets 'better right off', but feels uncomfortable.
Anytime a contagious illness such as a cold or flu is involved, repeated contact of the patient with others increases the rate of infection. Walters said.
"The student ought to be able to get enough medication so he can stay at home at least a couple of days to recuperate," he said. "He certainly shouldn't be here adding his germs to the milieu of bacteria already around, with people coughing and swine."
"I FEEEL. A little embarrassed and foolish as a doctor when the patient sees us and ends up with only four Achro V (tetracycline). That's probably all he'll take. And I get frustrated when I ask a student if he's been taking his medication and I get, 'Yeah, but they only gave me four capsules.'"
Walters said the previous 48-hour supply limit wasn't much better, but it did give the student sufficient doses to carry him through a weekend.
He said the inconvenience wasn't the fault of the pharmacy. Sunday hours from noon to 2 p.m. recently have been added to accruals in the system. Matters questioned the logic of the ruling.
"I DON'T SEE the difference between a nurse taking an order from a physician for an in-patient medication order and one for an out-patient prescription," he said.
Watkins Gillipie, chief pharmacist at Watkin, said the new regulation was part of a broader effort to make sure medicines are safe.
Wollmann said the hospital's medications were individually prepackaged and labeled so the nurses didn't have to transfer medication from the original container.
pharmacy law. The intent was to avoid mislabeling, misuse and volume dispensing of drugs by nursing personnel, he said.
"FILLING prescriptions really isn't the nurses' job," he said, "and so far we've had no complaints from the students. We try to follow up by phone on all antibiotic medication orders if the patient doesn't come in for the remainder of the prescription within a day or so."
Wollmann said that the regulation was up for review in January 1977 and that he had indications that several people connected with the state Board of Pharmacy favored a three-day supply limit rather than the current 24-hour requirement.
"The patient would obviously have more leeway with that type of arrangement," he said, "and I'd definitely agree it would be a more understandable decision."
2
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Auto pact OK uncertain
DETROIT-Ratification of a new three-year contract between the Ford Motor Company and United Auto Workers (UKM) remain uncertain yesterday as the company said it will have to issue a new contract.
Early tailless showed regular production workers in at least one local unit voting $j$ in favor of the industry pattern pact, tentatively reached by union and company politics.
A UAW spokesman said official vote tallies would be released until after all votes have been counted. The ratification vote deadline has been set for 5 p.m. on Friday.
But skilled tradesmen in some locals reportedly voted to reject the contract, despite recommendations from the union's 77-member skilled trades council that the company must accept the contract.
2 peace leaders attacked
BELFAST, Northern Ireland—the top two leaders of the women's peace movement were attacked yesterday at a hall in a Roman Catholic section of Belfast where they tried to speak. Outside the hall, a club-swinging mob demolished the cars the two women had arrived in.
Betty Williams and Mairad Corrigan "had to be forcibly taken out for their own safety, and a group of men formed a ring around them to protect them," said a lawyer.
She said the two ran for their lives from a hostile crowd of about 600 at a meeting of the Turt Lodge Tennants Association, which was called to protec the death earlier this month.
Lebanese talks to resume
BEIRUT—Only sporadic exchanges of mortar and artillery fire were reported in Lebanon's civil war yesterday as all sides awaited the resumption of a new round of attacks.
Random shelling caused numerous casualties in Beirut and its suburbs.
After one shell landed in a Moslem neighborhood, an ambulance picked up four wounded, raced toward the American University Hospital and collided with a car driven by a student.
The peace talks resume today in the Syrian occupied town of Chortova in eastern Lebanon. Representatives of Lebanese President Elias Sarik, Syria and the United States will meet in the capital on Wednesday.
After the first session Saturday, mediator Hassan Sabri Kholia of the Arab League, which is sponsoring the talks, said the various sides had agreed on most of the issues and decided to move forward.
Hua solidifying promotion
TOKO-YA - A Peking broadcast yesterday said the Chinese army had pledged obedience to the party Central Committee headed by Hua Kuo-feng, a further sign of the government's confidence in Beijing.
There still was no formal announcement of Hua's promotion to the party chairmanship, the post held by Mao until his death Sept. 9.
But the official Hainua news agency continually used the phrase, "headed by Hua" for the Central Committee, indicating that he was China's top leader in Asia.
It appeared likely that the 195-member Central Committee would have to endorse Hua's selection, and there has been no report of a committee meeting since 1996.
Foreign press reports from the Chinese capital Saturday said wall posters disclosed Hua's elevation to the posts of party chairman and chairman of the Central Committee's military affairs commission, a position also formerly held by Mao.
Saint Nick's helpers hope card games raise money
Project Santa is comin' to town.
For the sixth consecutive Christmas,
Santa's little helpers in Lawrence won't be elves but members of the Acacia fraternity and Delta Gamma sorority.
Members of the two houses will play 123 consecutive hours of spades—in shifts—in front of the First National Bank at 9th and Massachusetts streets.
The card game will raise funds to be donated to local organizations. Pledges for Project Santa will be for each hour of the marathon.
Jim Obermeyer, Chesterfield, Mo., sophomore and Project Santa co-chairman, said Friday that solicitations had begun last week and would continue until Oct 25.
OBERMEVER SAID the project goal this year was $2,000. In previous years, about $3,500.
The money will be donated to the Lawrence Christmas Bureau, the Gene and Barbara Burnet Burn Center at the K.U. Medical Center and the Heart Fund
Each member participating in the project will play two hours. Obermeyer said he didn't have any trouble getting Acacia members to play in the middle of the night, because that was the time it was the most fun to play cards.
"We hope to have a celebrity hour where we'll have a celebrity claw." he said.
HE SAID HE was going to ask Bud Moore KU head football coach; Ted Owens, KU
Center elects 3 to board
The newly incorporated Community Learning Center elected three persons to its executive board of directors last Tuesday in a meeting at the Lawrence Public Library.
Elected to the board were Karl Edwards, professor of curriculum and instruction; Joel Colbert, Lawrence graduate student; and Sandee Crowther, an elementary school teacher at Deerfield Elementary School, 101 Lawrence Ave.
The meeting, attended by about 30 people,
included an address by James Gunn,
professor of English and science fiction
author, called "Discovery of the Future."
The new center, 1204 Oread Ave., was organized last summer as a nonprofit learning resource and workshop center for educators to help students build up Bob Hubert, director of the center.
Cindy Burdy, Overland Park junior and co-chairman of Project Santa for Delta Gamma, and delta Gamma had sent 300 men and women merchants to inform them of the project.
He said last week that the center would provide low-cost learning materials and promote the exchange of ideas among all levels of education in the community.
The center is open Monday through Wednesday from 4 to 6 p.m. Thursdays from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., and Saturday from 9:30 to noon.
head basketball coach, and members of the Kansas City Royals baseball team and Kansas City Kings basketball team to play cards during the celebrations hour.
It will sponsor a "learning fair" for preschool and elementary school teachers in the county.
"We are doing this earlier than last year because we're competing with the United Fund," she said, "so we're trying to beat them.
"The only problem we're going to have is getting girls to play playsets at four in six to five."
As Republican and Democrat spokesman each claimed yesterday that their side holds the momentum in the presidential campaign, President Ford and Jimmy Carter each continued to capitalize outlift from the other's public mistakes.
Ford, Carter aides claim campaign momentum
Bv the Associated Press
Ford, winding up a vote-seeking slapstick to Texas after his debate with Carter last Wednesday, won the endorsement of a politically outspoken Baptist preacher, the Rev. W. A. Criswell, who reportedly had been leaning toward Carter before the now-depleted boy magazine interview in which Carter talked about lust and adultery.
Carter continued hammering away at Ford's statement in Wednesday's debate that there was no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe. Carter told audiences in South Bend, Ind., and other areas rich in ethnic votes that Poland's Communist Party had a success on Ford's "terribly misinformed" concept of freedom in that part of the world.
Later, Mondale appeared on the same reviewing stand with Betty Ford at a Pulsak Day parade in Buffalo, and Dole flew from Newark to Chicago suburbs where he alighted from his lousiness to attend a Veterans Day American parade. He also visited a bingo game in the Slavic-American Club in Berwyn, Ill.
It was a banner day for ethnic voters who wanted to see the political celebrities. Both vice presidential candidates, Democrat Walter Mondale and Republican Bob Dole, took part in a Columbus Day parade in Newark, N.J.
"this is the week we overcame the incumbency," one Carter campaign official said, alluding to the obstacle which some of them have previously cited as their most difficult-Ford's ability to campaign from the White House itself.
As Carter moved through the densely-populated area of northern Indiana en route to Chicago and Milwaukee, his campaign staff aides continued to talk in optimistic terms of what they claim has been a turnaround in the campaign.
Jody Powell, Carter's Press secretary,
reported that Ford could no longer em-
ploy him.
"Until Ford agrees to answer questions you're going to hear us asking them over and over and the longer he waits the longer we wait. "And we've got the momentum." Powell said.
Ford's campaign manager, Baker James III, acknowledged to reporters aboard Air Force One that "we hit a bump last week" when Earl Butz, Secretary of Agriculture, went into a racial slur against blacks and when Ford made the statement about Eastern Europe.
But Baker said the Ford camp firmly believed they had regained whatever momentum they lost with the post-debate foray into Oklahoma and Texas. Baker said the present Ford campaign strategy had been successful and they would murge it.
Ford won the endorsement of the Rev. Mr. Criswell, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, after Ford heard him assail Carter for having an interview with him. He called Playbya a "salacious, pornographic person." Carter's reported proposal to tax church property other than church buildings themselves.
Cricket club plays on despite few opponents
"It's a summer game, but while the weather and ground last, we'll keep on playing," Jim Heylar, faculty adviser for the club, said westerday.
Most of its members began playing cricket in their native countries of Pakistan, India, Britain, Australia, New Zealand or the West Indies, he said.
The club is made up of about 20. KU students and a few faculty members who have been playing together for two years, Ashok Bhatia, cocontain of the team. said.
The KU team has also been victorious this year in matches against Kansas State and Iowa.
CRICKET IS PLAYED by two teams of 11 players each. A red leather ball is pitched, or "bowled," to the batman who tries to hit it with a three-foot wooden bat.
BUT THERE AREN'T many teams in the area for them to play. Bharat Desai, a member of the Kansas City team, said he had spent only in Wichita, Manhattan and St. Louis.
By CAROL HOCHSCHEID
The playing field at 23rd and Iowa streets isn't the ideal setting for a cricket game, but members of the University of Kansas can play there to play to play there until the weather gets cold.
The batsman who stands in front of the "wicket," made up of three wooden poles, tries to protect the wicket from being knocked over by the bowler.
The Rev. Mr. Criswell, whose church of 19,000 members is claimed to be the world's largest Baptist congregation, is noted for her leadership in these meetings from the pulpit and in interviews.
He warned in a 1980 sermon that the election of a Roman Catholic to the White House would "spell the death of a free press," and that his government sequently modified. He also criticized former President Richard Nixon for going to China, and Ford for refusing to meet with exiled Soviet writer Alexander Solzhenitny and the Helsinki agreement with the Soviets.
Yesterday the beat team a team from kansas City in what will probably be its last season.
If he hits the ball and it isn't caught, he runs to the other end of the "pitch," the smooth playing strip in the center of the cricket field. He may make these "runs" until either an outfielder returns the ball to the bowler or the wicket is knocked down.
ACCORDING TO the rules, a match lasts for two innings during which both teams have a chance to be at bat or in the field. But, Bhataia said, a complete match in international competition may last 30 hours over a five-day period.
For the novice spectator who is unaware of the strategy of the batsman, bowlers and fielders, a cricket game may seem slowly paced. Cricket is very much a team sport,
He noted Carter's comments concerning church taxation as published in a Seventh Day Adventist magazine and observed that "a church can't be separated from its schools, its hospitals, it orphanages and its other institutions. To tax any of them is to tax the church itself, and that brings with it the possibility of church destruction."
Carter has sought to clarify his original statement by saying taxation should apply only where there is a current tax.
After bidding the president goodbye, the Rev. Mr. Criswell went back into the church where he drove down in tears while leading the benediction, saying, "Thank God he came." He than knelt before the congregation in silent prayer.
"It is good if you have a few good players, a team working together, a team working together," Bhatia said.
The pastor said he had been present when Ford told a group of radio evangelists that he had refused to be interviewed by the church's media team, and he opposed taxing church properties.
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THE HAIR SUITE
Introductory offer Redken Creative Curl Wave, a low ph perm wave that is ammonia free but lasts as long as the old alkaline waves. IF you just want body or lots of curls you can get it with Creative Curl now thru Oct.31. Reg. 35.00 Now $30.00, which includes haircut. Call for appt. 842-8600
THE HAIR SUITE
6th & Iowa in Ramada Inn FREE PARKING
The University of Kansas
CONCERT SERIES 1976-1977
proudly presents its 74th season
Gary Graffman
One of the very few thoroughly American pianists active on the international circuit
Mon., Oct. 11 Hoch Auditorium 8:00 p.m.
O
Students admitted FREE with KU I.D.
The Concert Series is paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
A mir this stau Tha F cut
Monday, October 11. 1976
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Cost of holiday visits can be cut
By DEB MILLER
Staff Writer
Although midterms are occupying the minds of University of Kansas students at this point in the semester, it's also time to start thinking about what can be done for Thanksgiving and Christmas vacations.
For students, several travel options with cut rates are available.
All major airlines charge the same rates because they are controlled by the Civil Aeronautics Board. However, some, though not all, airlines offer nighttime rates that are more than daytime rates. One discount airline offers the excursion rate.
UNDER THIS PLAN, a 30 per cent discount off the regular price is charged. The traveler must buy his ticket at least 14 days before departure, he must spend from seven to 30 days at his destination, and he must买 a round-trip ticket.
Airlines offer different excursion rates to different cities, so the prospective traveler should check with each airline. Toll-free number or phone number of the airlines are listed in the Yellow Pages.
After a certain percentage of seats on each flight are sold at the excursion rate, no more are offered. It is advisable to get tickets well in advance.
The flight leaves Nov. 23. Reservations must be made through the SUA office in the Kettering Building.
THIS YEAR SUA is sponsoring a group travel round trip flight to Chicago at a less expensive rate. A minimum of 15 and a maximum of 30 seats are available.
As an example of how these different rates compare, the regular cost of a round trip flight to Chicago is $110, the excursion is $38 and the SUA group travel cost is $71.
Although the only organized group travel rate offered by Lawrence travel agencies so far this year is to Chicago, a group that desires to travel to a certain point can contact any travel agency to inquire about group rates.
AIRLINE RATES increase with inflation, usually by about 2 per cent, in increase from March.
For students without a way to get to Kansas City International Airport, Lawrence Aviation, Inc., offers 15 commuter flights to KCI each day.
The flight schedule starts at 6 a.m. and continues on the hour up till 9 p.m. There is no 8 p.m. flight. The charge for one-away trip is $14.
If a student decides to travel by train, an Amtrak train goes through Lawrence once each day. It leaves Lawrence at 1:15 a.m. for Chicago.
A traveler must take an Amtrak train toamasas City If he wants to go to an amtrak train toamasas city,
AMTRAK ALSO offers a group travel round trip to Chicago. The special rate requires a minimum of 15 members in a group. The regular round trip fare to Chicago is $60, and the group travel fare is $45.
USA rail passes offer the traveler unlimited travel on Amtrak's 26,000 miles of rail in the United States for certain periods of time.
Purchase must stay within 15 days of
travel, and ticket, and the offer expires
July 1977.
The charge for 14 days of travel is $165;
for 21 days, $220; and for 30 days, $75.
In some cases, air travel can be less expensive than rail travel. For example, a round trip (coach class) to San Francisco costs $256. By the excursion rate, it costs $133.
BY AMTRAK, the cost of a round trip to San Francisco is $254.
For short distances, taking a bus can be inexpensive.
All bus lines charge the same rates.
Prices usually go up once a year, perhaps
up to 10% per month.
A round trip to Denver costs $41.15; to Los Angeles $152. The trip to Los Angeles
With four or more people sharing the costs, car rental is another option that can be inexpensive. The price depends on what city the car is rented in, what type of car is rented, and other factors. The travel buys his own gas, and is charged either by the day or by the mile. The average cost for by-the-day rental is $14.
TRAVEL AGENTS offer this advice to student travelers:
Get tickets and make reservations for the 10th Annual Booking Fair. This fair is already heavily crowded.
Don't be afraid to ask questions of any travel agency. Agencies represent many different companies, and they have a library of information at hand.
Travel agencies located in Lawrence are:
Maupinot Travel 900, Massachusetts St., the Malls shopping center, the Kansas Union lobby and the University of Missouri. Travel Service, 2222 6th St., and Sunflower Travel Service, 703 Massachusetts St.
'77s predicted to sell big in city
By CHRIS COTTRELL
"The buying public has more enthusiasm for buying a new car. Sales are up." Ray Schauke, salesman for Turner Chieferolco, of Inglewood, Calif., said then it was a year ago at the same time."
Despite price increases, new car sales are expected to boom this year in Lawrence.
Depending on the make and model, 1977 prices are up from 2 to 6 per cent over last year, according to city car dealers. But for a comparison, the S-Class was as optimistic as Schaake about sales.
"The price increases that we've incurred are affordable," Wiley said. "I anticipate sales being better than I've enjoyed for three or four years."
IT WAS THE same story from R. W.
Sanders of Sanders Motor Co.
"It looks like sales are going to be pretty good. Interest is pretty high," Sanders said.
"Buyers are cautious but people are spending money."
Changes in the style and design of several models have also taken place. The line of models shown here is a single model.
"Cadillac, with the exception of the Seville and El Dorado, has been completely re-styled." Willey said. "The re-stylning has resulted in a much more efficient operation."
"THE CADILLAC has got a slightly larger interior and more trunk space but the re-styling hasn't altered any of the traditional luxury of the Cadillac. I think it's a more efficient car to drive because of the smaller weight."
Willey said that Pontiac also had been made smaller and more efficient.
"Both Pontiac and Cadillac are extremely quiet."
In the American Motors line, Willey said Gremmert and been re-styled and made smaller.
Willey said the public looked for three
things when buying a new car; styling, passenger comfort and fuel economy. He added that the Environmental Protection Agency's rating for gas mileage of an average Pontiac had improved by 10 per cent over last year.
WALLY WORKMAN, salesman for John Kerrigan's automobiles; changes for Ford cars were two new models.
"We've got a completely new Thunderbird," Workman said. "It has grown smaller and has also dropped in price by a huge amount to appeal to a much broader market."
Workman said that option prices, notably on radios, had decreased somewhat in 1974.
Vans are among the biggest selling items for Haddock Ford.
"VANS ARE AN awfully high-demand item," Workman said. "A lot of the younger people want them. But you don't have to be under 30 to want a van."
Changes are in store for Volkswagens.
"The big changes are on the Rabbit,"
Volkswagen is trying to push the hardest.
too, according to Debbie Nitsch, automotive consultant for Javhawk Volkswagen.
"They're going to dress up the interior and it will have increased gas mileage. Sales should skyrocket because people will be getting them're getting more for their money."
SCHAKE SAID THAT the Caprice and Impala have new bodies with a shorter wheel base, but that the rest of the Chevy has a re-styleled version of last year's models.
Sanders reported little change in the Lincoln-Mercury line.
"We don't have much change when you get right down to it," Sanders said. "The Montego has been dropped, but other than the risks, we very few changes of any consequence."
Sanders said the public was becoming more interested in big cars.
"Everybody looks for economy," he said. But over the past year, people have been more optimistic about their jobs.
KU sailing team wins regatta at Lake Pery
KU sailors came in first in the KU Sunflower Regatta Saturday at Perry Lake. But KU didn't face much competition, because the schools entered in the race failed to show.
Rick Sales and Linda Deines sailed a KU boat past teams from Southwest Missouri State to win one of two first place trophies. The other first place trophy was won by sailors Brad Max and Judy Tucker, who captured a victory in the second division.
Kevin White, publicity chairman for the regatta, said that because only two schools showed, each school ran two teams in each race.
The attendance, White said, wasn't as good as it had been in past years. About 60 people attended the regatta, which was conducted by the SUA and the KU Sailing Club.
Sailing was good, White said, even though dings were strong enough to help any tutorials. "It was a lot of work."
The schools that failed to attend were Iowa, Iowa State, Kent State and Arkansas. White said traveling long distances was a problem for some sailing teams.
which teams race backwards while drinking a six-pack of beer.
Southwest Missouri State won the Miller Cup for winning the last race of the day in
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Monday, October 11, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
Press dream fulfilled
This year's presidential campaign has been a dream come true for members of the press.
Unlike other presidential election years, reporters haven't had to take the boring to try to make it the sublime or, at least, the noteworthy. The candidates have done it for them and have left few closets closed while doing so.
WHAT REPORTER would have thought last spring, when the primaries were getting under way in snowy New Hampshire, that by early October he would have written of such things as a Playboy interview with one candidate and the racial slams uttered by another's cabinet member? Such good fortune rarely comes along for those reporters who think campaign coverage is tedious and hope for some spice to sprinkle in their copy.
They've been able to write of lemonade stands, the price of tuna sandwiches, the not-so-tiny village of Kansas City, a First Lady's expertise at the bump, ripped-out convention telephones, war heroes, Sonny Bono, premature running-mate decisions, "ethnic purity," plans to dig latrines in a park, Baptist doctrines and peanut harvesting.
They've drawn political cartoons spoofer teeth, Southern drawls, football players and careless descs from airplanes. Everything has been laid before them, all the sex, drama, action and suspense that many thought went out with the penny press, about the only thing they haven't had is a torrid romance. But who knows what would happen if Susan Ford and Jack Carter would appear together at some auto race?
IT'S GETTING to the point that few reporters really object to an obligation to report on political rallies or fundraising dinners, even ones involving local politicians. The events of this
year's top race have left them thinking that anything can happen, and we are confident.
A reporter's duty is, however, to report anything newsworthy that happens to those running for public office. Often, the subject matter is dull and unexciting. But this year, the subject matter has more often been taken up by candidates. The candidate have made, the cheap shots they have tossed at one another or the tacies they have used to get the public to think of them as "the boy next door."
PUBLISHED records of these more interesting items may adversely affect the vote in November, we know, but there's not much reporters can do about it. Candidates take precious time from serious campaign to regroup, outline strategy and retaliate after the press publishes items that have tarnished their public images. If blunders are page-one news, local races also are affected. Partisans at all levels will take time to patch up the holes a presidential candidate or his rival may put in his man's sail, detracting from the amount of time a local man has to give to issues important in his own race.
Worst of all, we may have an election wherein the President of the United States is voted into office on the basis of a number of trivialities. Maybe some voters will think there was shoddy business involved when Ford played the lead in certain business others will like the lingo Carter used in Playboy. Still others may like what one candidate's children say about marijuana.
And the fanfare will be over. The schemes, anties, surprises, drama and so forth of this election will fade away. The press will then have to tell the important things about the man the people have elected.
By Mary Ann Daugherty Contributing Writer
WESTPHAL
MOSSAWI NEWS
FORD SAYS
EASTERN
EUROPE NOT
DOMINATED
BY U.S.S.R.
B9EZHNEV in'76
`IVAN, LOOK! WE'RE FREE!`
Check balance unbalances mind
I will never understand banks and checking accounts.
For years I have tried to balance my checkbook, but no matter how carefully I record the amount, number and date of my checks, I always come up with a different factor from the bank's.
AFTER those years of trying, I gave up. I now go over my
This trusting attitude on my part has gone on for years, and would have continued until I received a statement for this September.
checking account statement at the end of each month, and as long as there are no obvious on my part, I trust the bank.
No one had stolen a check and
written it for a million dollars (it
was $70,000) to the bank's balance was correct, and all the deposit slips were there.
taste like cotton? Why is it that breast of chicken looks and tastes like supermarket mozarella cheese, that is, with no oil, colored water fit only for alcoholics and others who drink
"Oh, yes, I remember now," she said. "Wasn't that for about $100?"
Carl Young Contributing Writer
NOW I admit that I work cheap, but there was no way that $100 was all that I made this summer. The woman at the bank said to call back in the morning, and maybe they would have some money for me by then.
Government ruins food
bank transfer check, which was supposed to shift the money I had earned this summer to my home bank, hadn't been canceled. The bank transfer, which was dated May 3, was in the hands of the depositor, but it wasn't listed on the bank statement.
Again I tried not to panic. Try as I might though, I had visions of what life would be like trying to live for three months on $34. I sought help from my roommates.
Then I found the problem. The
I had a balance of $17.52. Not bad, you say? No. Except that I had a check for $10.00 that checking account to pay for a semester's worth of school.
its color and symmetry. We won't eat the apple with the spot in it. Anyway, how many of us know how to cook even if we can imagine it? We don't worth spending time and care preparing? Where would we
All three checks were bounced. The bank didn't pay the one for $23.81, $5 or $3.89, even though Sid had a payment all three checks back and kept the balance of $29.91.
"You think you got problems," Sid, one of my roommates, said. "Take a look at this."
Have you noticed the candidates always talk about agriculture, never about food? Hardly surprising, since one of them is known to subsist on a meal. The woman was once quoted as saying, "Eating and sleeping are a waste of time."
AND THAT $171.52 didn't include checks I had written for rent, newspaper subscriptions, utility payments, and all those other things that must be paid at the end of each month.
And for a lousey $2.79 discrepancy, the bank charged him $13.50.
BUT THEN, I decided not to panic. I would look at the situation logically, and try to figure out where all that money I thought I had had gone to. I went over the statement, looked
By my calculations, that balance left me $34 to live on for the rest of the semester.
I thought it might be time to call home.
Did you know, for instance, that the Department of agricultural sponsors and National agricultural organizations one year the contest was won by a sand-wichened the U-Betcha, consisting of factory cheese, bologna and pineapple coated with vinegar sauce and horseradish.
GREAT, I thought. All I have to do is call up my bank and tell them that they forgot to add money from my other account.
Nicholas Von Hoffman (c) 1974 King Features Syndicate
In this, too, the government has played a destructive part, both direct and indirect. It has aided in destroying the distribution system that might have enabled men to ship, and people to buy, nonindustrial food. Interstate Commerce Commission regulations have impeded the shipment of unauthorized food so it can't get to where the man wants. Its renewal has destroyed the farmers' markets. So there's no place to sell it anyway.
When they're with the farmers they say no more embargoes, and when they're with the consumers they say they'll find some way to keep the prices down. Producers and consumers. Have you ever heard any of them talk to the president? We've told a president to promise we'll all have cheap crap to stuff our faces with? Why do we have to have crap at all?
learn? Our generation wasn't taught to cook. Schools don't teach how to cook but how to open cans.
WHY WON'T the cream whip? Why do the tomatoes
I CAN'T tell you what Sid said about all that.
If we could get good food,
would we want it, would
we know what to do with it? We've
been taught to pick our food for
This is October, the harvest season, month of the cornucopia. But it's been so long since we've had a chance to get at it, most of us have no idea how bountiful nature can be.
food one eats tastes good? Maybe we ought to vote for Lester Maddox next month. He runs a restaurant, but how's the food there? For Ford there isn't much hope, even if you could convince him that good cooking isn't the expense account slush his lobbyist friends feed him. And that's because of the difference between him and his predecessor is that Nixon ate his luncheon cottage cheese with catup and Jerry put A- sauce on it.
THERE ARE a lot of people who'd like to learn how to cook, but many of them are bamboo-fired. They're accustomed to the gourmeturers, the glamour cooks of TV and best-selling cookbook fame who push the rich gastronomy of French haute cuisine, which, as the cookbook's author once mutable for over-wing one's meals than feeding them.
"The 3 check(s) shown above totaling $32.70 were presented for payment today," the statement read. "Since your balance in account 001-007-1 is $29.91 we have returned the checks circled above due to insufficient funds."
BY SOME lights, the government doesn't or shouldn't have anything to do with the taste and quality of our food, except that it has contributed so rightly to its ruin. John and Karen Hess in their soon-to-be-released, instructive novel *The Grossman Publishers*, N.Y., 1977), give many examples of how the government makes eating a savoury occasion.
It will take 40 years to create the economic conditions to bring back decent food. It may take 40 years just to get the government to preferential treatment to the corporate barbarians of the palate. It may take that long to get the government to refrain from training school children to like bad food and teaching them about bad food, feathers and aluminum filings in a plastic sack isn't cooking.
Beyond that, these touring politicians can be a little more useful than they are to the quality of life. Do they mean by that a society in which the
That was wishful thinking on my part. The bank couldn't find a record of the transfer.
I left Sid with his own problems and tried to solve my own. I was still thinking about it when the mail arrived.
"But I have the transfer slip right here," I told the woman at the bank.
Sitting in that pile of mail was a post local patron flyer from a local politician, a copy of the statement from the account I thought I had closed a month and a half ago.
I opened it up, and sure enough, there was the money I earned this summer. That bank transfer check had gone from me to my present bank, back to my old bank, and finally to my present bank and back to me without doing a thing.
LITTLE JOKE THERE
ABOUT COLORPERS!
HAW HAW HAW.
OH. HAW. HEE!
HAW! HAW! HAW!
HEE! HAW HAW!
HAW!
AN!
I had my money, but never again will I trust a bank.
Article no laughing matter
To The Editor:
Mercy sakes, will those giggles never cease? It’s enough to jar a feller’s preserves. That’s hilarious. The rest of the saga is carried him off, "Oct 4, 01ly 'mediocre' guitarist Max Tenant, "shouting man" comrade" Norman Forer and the Events Committee, all cast in a mythical KU dungeon, has real dungeons everywhere. Everyone knows that free speech issues are a gas, manufactured by kooks and komni professors, "Who cares?" the author asks. Ap- pocalyptic coverage to the author, that's the biggest splitter of all.
What Kid Chuckles neglects to tell you is that the Kansas editors, through willfull misrepresentation and suppression of information, have labored quite successfully to find a way not to allow you see Mousekeeters, there never was a simple guitar issue. Here's the rib-tickling chain of events:
Now for more sport. The
The day after the campus police stopped Max, the "medicoe," from plunking his guitar, the Iranian Students Association was reprimanded for distributing (of leaflets) and soliciting (petition signatures, not money) in front of the Union without proper authorization." Student organizations have had little say in the University of the Union since Hector was a pup, but it's those radical iranians who apparently need controlling. When these actions were challenged as illegal acts of free speech, the University's right to control public expression.
same week this fun-o-rama was played at KU, Iranian students at Kansas State College at imporia were informed by a counselor that would be arrested if they distributed an unauthorized leaflet there. Under the guise of a cultural event, an Emporia administrator presided over the film supporting the Shah of Iran.
and free speech. Earl Butz,
where are you now that KU
needs help?
Norman "shouting man" Forer
"Comrade" Professor of
Social Welfare
cellor, referred to "Regents policy . . . regarding political activities on campus" and stated that "Distribution of political handbills and other advertising is banned from areas where public events are held." The legislator formed of this, a Kansas legislator wrote the chancellor that the memo, if acted upon, would be "an abridgment of free speech" and warned of its
This joyous dictator has been
Truth before jobs To the Editor:
Readers Respond
The Kansas, despite a story filed by its own reporter, failed to report these events. There was also no subsequent report on the memo that was under discussion by the Events Committee.
condemned by Amnesty International as having the "worst record in human rights in the world." When an Iranian student asked for the right of response, the administrator was shut off, the chair was shut off, the chairs collected and the chief of police appeared on the stage. The Iranian students were then ushered out of the Union by police. A state board member was present. Civil Liberties Union was present and recorded these flicks.
Although the Kanan declined to see any relationship between the above events, the national office of the ACLU saw an investigation into their legal support to a test case at KU. On Sept. 23, Iranians and the guitarist with the support of KU-Y, set up a table and picked guitars without official permission, the police didn't materialize.
Ms. Daugherty seems to believe that the most important objective for a student is "to get good grades." She has just justified the continuation of the war in order to make available the maximum number of jobs, i.e., in munication and other businesses of death.
This memo, from the chan-
potential for lawsuits against
*you* (the chancellor) or other
officials of KU (who) interfere
with the speech rights of
citizens . . .
The university exists not only to train students for the job market but also to expand their awareness of the question. The question seems to be whether freedom of opinion in search of truth, or a blind scramble for the almighty shall rule our hearts and minds.
If the laughter hasn't devastated you by now, there are more simultaneous goodies. The International Club was named after the Senate committee. The Kansan reported that the I-Club's proposal was "vague." Some of those present at the meeting confessed it was the politics of unions that was the real reason.
point out that the "handful of hoodlums imported from one of the coasts" were protesting the killing of a woman who was a crime against humanity.
Kent Ketnzer
Why this obsession with Iranians? Apparently, Iranian students aren't shy about denouncing the U.S. government's support of the Shah of Iran, support which includes the supplying and training of his military forces, and the latter adDED to the delights of widespread political arrests and torture.
Aekt Keuner
Andale junior
John Peters
Long Beach, Calif., senior
Now, hold your breath,
Mousekeeters, the number of
Iranian students on American
campuses is expected to double
next year. It's obviously better
to silence them now before the
laughter deafens everyone.
Enough said about guitarists
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 14, 2017. Subscription rate is $5.95. June and July expel every Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscriptions by mail are $1 amender or $18 fee a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county.
A r study
It histor histor are s struc
Editor
Debbie Gum
An are a histori Unive Rita histori
"B been famil
"F/impor has no been f
Yael Abuhalikh Alaf Yarbushahk Jim Bates Campus Editor Stewart Branen Assistant Campus Editors Sherrt Baldwin Chuck Alexander Photo Editor Stuff Photographers George Miller, Sports Editor Steve Schieldren Assistant Sports Editor Hire Gary Vie Entertainment Editor Alicia Giwon Contributing Writers John Young Contributing Writers John Falker Alison Gwin, Copy Chefs Gene Wilson
The prog
comp
Anon
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the U
famil
have
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Business Manager Terry Hanson
NA assign
stude
KU, a
stude
Assistant Business Manager Carolie Rosenkoetter
Advertising Manager Janice Clementes
Advertising Manager Sarah McAnnay
Classified Manager Sarah McAnnay
National Advertising Manager Timothy O'Shea
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"Hi intere impor that i the pik kinds begw
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For family see him the pa
University Daily Kansan
Monday, October 11, 1976
5
---
d
1
1
$2.79 charged
Sid said
History can become a real family affair
By CHRIS COTTRELL
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A new branch of the social sciences, the study of family histories, may be dawning. It isn't yet considered a science, but histories are beginning to use family histories as a research tool, and teachers are starting to use them as a tool for instruction.
believe int ob-
t to get would
uation make
rimimum unition
nesses
ot only the job d their n con is to be inion in blind ninighty ts and
An increasing number of history teachers are assigning their students to do family history projects. Two such teachers at the University of Kansas are Mark Rose and Rita Napier, both assistant professors of history.
senior
Concern with the history of families, however, is a relatively new phenomenon just now gaining interest, Napier said recently.
"FAMILY HISTORY hasn't been an important topic very long," she said. "It has not been something that historians have focusing on for more than a few years."
"But in the last 10 or 15 years, there's been a tremendous growth in interest in them."
The University of Minnesota has a program in which family histories are compiled. The program, called the Anonymous Families History Project, requests that history teachers throughout the university compile family history papers that their students have written. As the name indicates, each paper is kept anonymous.
NAPIER SAID that she had been assigning family history papers to her students in the three years she has taught at UNC, and is fullful tools for both students and instructors.
"Historians have discoverd that it's interesting to do and fun to do, and more important than that, they've discovered that it's significant in trying to understand how our culture has grown kinds of exciting new things since we've begun to do research into family history."
For the student, Napier said, writing a family history paper presents a means to see himself in today's society in relation to the past.
"The THING that makes it exciting in class." Napier said, "is that it gives students a springboard into the past. It allows students to take personal experience and things that are important to them, and to move from that to an understanding of how other people lived in terms of what must have been important to them."
Rose said that his purpose in assigning family histories was to make the events of American history less of an abstraction and more personal.
HE SAID THAT by understanding what effect history has had on people as individuals, it was easier to understand history itself. Writing a family history paper is a three-way learning experience for students, he said.
"They see what impact their families
have had on American history," Rose said. "They see what impact American developments have had on themselves and on their families. And they understand their family as an internal structure a little bit better."
Assigning family history projects has worked well in class, he said, and his purpose has been accomplished to a surprising degree.
JOYNNE GAMBA, Osage City senior who wrote a family history paper for one of Rose's classes last year, agreed that the project was useful.
"The thing I was amazed about was that all that stuff I'd heard in class really did apply to my family." Gamba siad. "You hear a lot about World War II, but it doesn't really become vivid until you hear your dad's war stories."
Gamba said the project also was valuable because, through writing the paper, she found out about her family's past she might otherwise never have known.
"ONE THING I liked about it," she said, "was that my family has never talked much about its family history before. It's just something that doesn't get brought up very much, and I didn't know a lot of the things I found out."
Rose said it was important to know about one's family history because it was important to know about oneself. He said most of the stories he read about their family's past as they should.
"I myself know very little about my family," he said. "We don't know exactly where they came from. We don't know exactly how they reared their own children. And as a result, we know very little about ourselves."
KICK OFF
OLDMAINE
trotters
HE SAID THIS result was consistent with the American value scheme, in which people perceived themselves as atoms, each free to make his own choice. Americans don't see themselves as tied to past generations, he said.
"Students at KU are the products of American historical development and of their own family's historical development." Rose said. "They cannot escape that."
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VI 3-2091
Kansas residents who want information about career or educational opportunities need only pick up their telephone and call the FIRST line.
PUFFY
By BILLCALVERT
Staff Writer
FIRST, which stands for For Information and Referral Services Toll free, is a phone service that provides information about career guidance, vocational and technical training offered at various opportunities. The line has been in service since March 1 and is jointly sponsored by the continuing education divisions at the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and the University of Mid-America in consortium of several mid-west schools.
School, job facts on FIRST line
Jane Curry, assistant professor of political science at Vassar College, will lecture on "All the News That's Not Fit to Print: Polish Journalists as Seen Through the Minutes of the Polish Journalists' Association."
Kansas residents can call FIRST at 1-800-
523-7872 between noon and 5 p.m. weekdays,
noon until 9 p.m. on Wednesdays, and 10 a.m.
to noon on Saturday.
Polish press topic of talk
An American professor who received permission to microfilm minutes of the Polish Journalists Association meetings and the training of journalists and the treatment of news in Poland.
"THE LINE WAS started to provide information to advance the careers and education of adults who don't have access to this information anywhere else." Elizabeth Babcock, coordinator of FIRST, said Friday. "Some people, such as in those
The lecture is being sponsored by the political science department, the Slavic and Soviet area studies department and the School of Journalism.
D. L. MARIE
The lecture is at 8 tonight in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. Curry spent a year in London, microfilming records from the archives and interviewing dozens of Polish journalists.
Mall's Beauty Salon
Babcock said FIRST wasn't a placement service. Because counseling over the phone is against the law, she said, FIRST can only tell people where to get training and education, and what the requirements are for a certain career.
Blane—Owner & Hairstylist
There are three basic types of information given over the phone, Babcock said. One type is formal education opportunities information about courses in all types of schools as well in home study programs, information about such things as language or information and information on career requirements and training are also given, she said.
(In Malls Shopping Center)
Western Kansas, would have to travel 100 miles to see a counselor."
842-1144
REDKEN $ ^{n+1} $
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Don't miss the action at the game or on campus.
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AN EXAMPLE OF what people can learn by calling FIRST, Babcock said, is how they use their phones to take general Education and Development (G.E.D.) tests. She said she would tell a person calling from Topeka, for instance, that the GED course given on channel 11.
The cast of the decade.
The western adventure
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PG 12+
THE STABLES &
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JOHN WAYNE
LAUREN BACALL
"THE SHOOTIST"
Eye 2:10:9:30
"At the center there is Glenda Jack's marvelously impartial performance," — NEX REED. Vogue Magazine
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MEL BROOKS is back In the saddle. THE BLAZING SADDLES
"The whole idea is for an adult to make an informed choice with information he can receive without getting a big runaround," she said.
JUDITH CHRIST
Saturday Review
GLENDA JACKSON in
Hedda
DANA HAYES
Clevon Little, Madaline Kahn, Gene Wilder,
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The Greatest Discovery of Our Time
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Eve, 7:25 & 9:25
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Babcock said the idea for the FIRST line came from Robert Senecal, associate dean of continuing education, after he reviewed the results of several state-wide assessments of the vocational guidance needs of people throughout the state. She Kansans had no assessment revealed that Kansans had no convenient source for guidance.
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PUT5 TV BACK IN THE BATHROOM
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Is it still there?
Eve, 7:15, 9:15 Sat. & Sun, 2,4
BABCOCK SAID the line had been a success in its seven months of service.
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Show starts 7:30 Sunset
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ANIMATION SERIES
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About 100 initial calls are received every month, she said. This doesn't count the follow-up phone contact she has with people to trace the different steps of their journey. The program that Babcock estimated that FIRST had received a total of 2,000 phone calls.
Carol McLaughlin, Topeka, said she was satisfied with the information provided by her colleagues. Students pursued courses from Louisiana Technical University in Rustin, La., through correspondence.
CLASSICAL SERIES
"IT WAS MARVELLOUS," she said. "I didn't know who or where to call about taking the courses. I found the First line to be very helpful."
IN THE YEAR OF THE PIG (1968)
Dir. De Antonio plus
THE EARS WITH MY LAI
VETERANS
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WINTER SOLDIER (1971)
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Wed., Oct. 13, 7:30, 75c
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with Monty Python's Flying
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Fri. & Sat., Oct. 15 & 16
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Babcock said the number of calls FIRST received didn't indicate the total number of people served by the line. Many of the people who received the calls who get information for their students.
One of the counselors is Dennis Butler of Shawnee Mission South High School in Indianapolis, where he helped by FIRST, he said, was a student who had dyslexia, a reading disability, and wanted to go into a radio and television program. He said he'd get writing instruction in Great Britain.
"I think it's fantastic," Butler said. "I don't know what we'd do without it. We can call FIRST for any information we need which isn't in an occupational handbook."
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BADLANDS (1974)
Dir. Terrence Malkie, with
Marian Shein, Sissy Spacek
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6
Monday, October 11, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Cowboys gun down 'Hawks, 21-14
By GARY VICE
STILLWATER, Okla.—As winners, KU's football team has walked about their locker room following a game displaying satisfaction—nothing more. They hadn't been overly exuberant in compiling a 40 record
And following Saturday's game against Oklahoma State in Stillwater, OKla, the atmosphere was much the same, only more subdued. The Jayawacks had just trudged off the field after 21-14 loss to the Cowboys, KU lost once in its last nine games against OSU.
Not quite knowing how to cope with defeat, players sat around the locker room in silence, not talking about the game, which many felt they deserved to have won. There were words like "worries," no excuses, just their own words, and their own duty to mentally punish themselves.
SOME BEGAN to slowly work their way out of swayly uniforms and yards of clothing that are too small, blank expressions and their heads bowed. Wide receiver Waddell Smith sat near the locker room entrance with his hands crossed under his shoes in his mouth. Defeat tasted bitter.
"Idon think our players are going to lay down and die," coach Bud Moore said yesterday. "And our fans aren't either. If we did, we wouldn't be a very good team. And our fans wouldn't be very good fans if they did."
"Sure I'm upset about the loss, but people are going to be disappointed when they lose."
There's no doubt in my mind that we'll bounce right back."
WHAT SEEMED to bother several players was that they believed they had outplayed the Cowboys most of the game, only to lose in the final minutes. KU, relying most on its running attack, ground 21 first downs and 367 total yards compared to Ohio State. The Jayhawks did, however, carry two more burnovers in the game.
Senior free safety Chris Golub emerged from the showers and said, "That should have been our game. It was our game all the way."
Defensive tackle Franklin King agreed, saying, "Definitely I think we whipped em."
WHEN ASKED he thought his team beat the Cowboys on the field, Moore said, "No, because the score doesn't say so. Statistics are for losses. We played fairly well but so did they.. It was a good ballarame."
Offensive guard John Mascarello said that although it hurt to be shot down from the infliction of an undefended record, KU's offense and they' d just have to win the next one.
"I think we outplayed them," Mascarcelo said. "We won the battle but lost the war. We'll just have to go out and win." We've known our record against Oklahoma teams.
The game was the first conference match for both teams. Oklahoma State is now 3-1.
FOLLOWING THE game, which was played before 37,500 fans in Lewis Stadium,
victorious coach Jim Stanley said, "It's very rewarding to win a football game. And in my opinion we beat a good football team that has a good coach. There were a lot of good licks on both sides. You can't forget Kansas, she still in the picture."
Stanley's players, however, believed otherwise.
OSU cornerback Milton Kirven, referring to KU's national ranking in the associated Press poll showed, "Who's number eight?" as he headed for the locker room. Defensive tackle Mike Robinson said, "We're going to the Orange Bowl baby."
There were, to be sure, representatives from the Orange Bowl committee at the game, which prompted coach Stanley to cancel a game and probably were here to see Kansas first."
AND KANSAS scored first, driving 80 yards in nine plays on their second possession. Fullback Norris Banks, who alternated garnering first downs with the fourth, was dashed off right tackle for 10 yards and the touchdown. Dennis Barker, playing in his first game this season, converted the extra point. Kerbel, who was the Hawks No. 1 placekicker last season until he twisted his knee in a game's kicking chores with Mike Hubach.
The Cowboys came back to tie the score at 7-7 in the second quarter when running back Robert Turner burst up the middle from six yards out for a touchdown. The scoring opportunity came following a fumble by Cromwell on the Jayhawk's 42-yard line. A
busted play that OSU quarterback Charlie Weatherbie converted into a 21-yard gain and a face mask penalty set up Turner's touchdown.
ON THE 'HAWKS' ensuing possession,
running back Bill Campfield capped a five
play 80-yard drive with a 45-yard touchdown
gallon.
At the half, Kansas had 209 yards rushing and a 14-7 lead. In the second half, the Cowboys continued to relinquish yards, but scored and scoring two touchdowns for the victory.
Another fumble, this one by halfback Laverne Smith, gave the Cowboys all the help they needed for the go ahead score. On the first play after the fumble, Weatherie hit split end Sam Lisele on a 35-yard touchdown pass that split the Javahws' zone.
A 51-yard pass play to wide receiver Gerald Bain in the third quarter set up running back Terry Miller's one yard touchdown plunge that tied the game at 14. Bain was positioned in position to pick off the pass thrown from Weatherbeer, but was outfanned by Bain.
COSTLY PENLITES and strong outside containment of KU's running attack stalled the Jayhawks' efforts to maintain their scoring punch in the second half.
run outside. They took the pitch away from us and we weren't strong enough to run inside on them."
Breaking Riggins' rushing record gives Smith hollow satisfaction
Smith, however, was able to pick up 78 yards, enough to surpass both Gale Sayers and John Riggins on the career rushing list and move him into the No. 1 position with 2,786 yards. Riggins is second with 2,706, and Savers is third with 2,675.
78
By STEVE CLARK
STILLWATER, Okla — Laveney Smith
studied at the University of
Rushen. rusher
Saturday, but he wasn't
appointed.
Sports Writer
The Wichita senior fought for his 78 yards on 13 carries against a stingy Oklahoma State defense to claim the No. 1 spot in KU history. His 728 yard total held him past former Jayhawk great Gaiers (2,075) and John Higgins (2,706).
"Man, that turf ate me up," he said as he checked his forearms and elbows.
Now every time Smith gains a yard it will add to his record, but those thoughts didn't seem to be on his mind following KU's 21-14 loss to Oklahoma State.
SMITT SIGHED and began assessing the day's damage. His muscular upper body was covered by a grey T-shirt that was soaked with sweat, but it didn't hide the scraps and burns that come from playing on an artificial surface.
Smith sat on a bench in the visitors' dressing room in Gallagher Hall and answered reporters questions as they wandered by. He rested his arms on his thighs and stared at the floor waiting for the questions.
A trainer approached him and offered to cut the tape from his heavily wrapped ankle. Smith declined, took the scissors and began snipping away. The tape finally fell and fell to the floor, which was littered with still more tape, bandages and equipment.
"Yeah, it takes a whole bunch of the excitement away," he said, referring to the loss. "I think we should've won. We're a better team than they were."
IN TERMS of first downs, 21, and rushing yardage, 318, KU was better. But the Jayhawks also were guilty of three turnovers. One of the miscues came in the kickoff. The Cowboys took the lead on the ensuing play. Smith said he didn't fumble.
Staff photo by JAY KOEI 720
"I was on the ground," he said. "I thought whistle should've been blown. I was on the ground." He had to stop.
Ironically, it was on that carry that he tied Rigins' record mark.
SMITH, WHO has had more than his share of electrifying runs, was limited to a few.
"They were playing to the outside a lot," he explained. "They had too many people out there for us on our side. They didn't runnng backs to get outside, period."
More reporters found their way to Smith and began asking the same questions he'd already answered—and would answer again later. He remained sitting, leaning on his hands, but still staring at the floor, as if looking for the answer as to why KU lost.
Cromwell, in only his second season on offense, moved into fifth on the career rushing list after 89 yards against the Cowboys. Cromwell, who now has 1,670 yards gained, passed Delvin Williams, 1,623, and Donnie Shanklin, 1650.
Several doors away bud Coach Moore was also gazing at the floor searching for an answer.
MOORE WAS slumped in an easy chair, but he didn't appear to be comfortable. His hands were on the desk.
during the game, remained uncombed. In his right hand, a can of Coke, in his right hand a cigarette.
From the adjacent football stadium, sounds of the celebrating Oklahoma State fans and strains from the Cowboy marching band filtered into the tiny room.
Moore's voice was hoarse and at times barely audible 10 feet away. "I don't think our players quit or gave up," he said. "It was just a matter of being outcoached in the game."
Jayhawks' Beeson, Balagna and King surround OSU's Robert Turner
"The MISTAKES that we made were coachable mistakes and we made several of them in the second half." Falling under the heading of coachable mistakes were the two fumblies, the interception, and the penalties, all of which worked in the Cowboys' favor.
Note pads rustled and tab tops popped in the awkward gaps between answers and answers.
If there are some problems that can be corrected before Saturday, KU will need to find the answers if it expects to win against the Oklahoma Sooners Saturday.
Against many teams KU could have made the mistakes it did and still won. Not against Okahanna State. And the Jayhawks don't think they should think and think about what might have been.
And if the answers were hidden in the text, that Moore, Moore and Smith shouldn't found them.
Thers's another university in Oklahoma and its coming to Lawrence with a visit from the late 1970s.
Rovals' win evens series
Sports Editor
KANAS CITY, Mo.-M Paul Splitterff took a vacation last month. But he wasn't yachting.
The Royals' left-hander was working in the Florida Instruction League, trying to get back with the big boys after suffering tendencies on the middle finger of his pitched ball.
The trip paid off—although the New York Yankees might not agree. Splitter hurried 5-2 3-mings of shutout relief to pace Kansas City to a 7-3 must victory over the Yanks and even their American League play-off series at one game annie.
"I don't think I would have pitched," he said. "I don't think it would've been fair to the rest of the guys for me to pitch hadn't I gone down there."
Last night was the most Splittoff had pitched since he suffered the injury July 27. But there were times when Splittoff wore a uniform over pitch for the Royals again this season.
“At one point I was told to take the spint off the finger after three weeks and it swelled up again,” said Splitorff, who had been suffering from a fractured hip. If bleep up again surgery, was possible.
"I waited a week and tried it again and it
was well. It was weird. I thought I was going to run out of time."
Many of the record crowd of 41,091 at Royal Stadium also thought Kansas City was the best.
But the Royals' milded offense was still stuttering. That is until the sixth.
Third baseman George Brett, the league's batting champion, led off with a triple that center fielder Mickey Rivers first came in on and then watched sail over his head to
First baseman John Mayberry put away his year long anemic bat and followed with a line single to left-center—his first hit in the play-offs to drive in Brett. Left fielder Mo Pouquerie doubled one out later up the alley in left-center, scoring Mayberry with the go-head run. That was all for Yankee Royals to only three hits before the sixth. Figueroa still hasn't beaten the Royals this year.
The Royals put the game away in the eighth, adding three runs without hitting any ball hard. With one out, Pouquette, who also singled in the Royals' second run in their two-run first, reached Yankee reliever Dick Tidrow for a walk.
to the very same spot—driving in Poquette with White going to third.
With the Yankee infield pulled in, it happened again. Buck Martinez hit a soft fly ball that barely got over one baseman's "fleece" glove. Both White and Pete scapel
"We outfaced them," Royals' manager Whitey Herzog said. "We hit some bloops. We hit some strange balls like they did and we make them like them. We haven't scored in a while."
Poquette said. "Sure, we hit a couple of chins tonight. But we've hit a lot of balls hard that have been caught. I guess it has to even up.
The Yankees pounded Leonard early, scoring one in the second and two in the third before Splittorr bailed him out of further trouble. Split left after the eighth, and the Yankees ended up walking one before turning things over to Mingei Gorky, who pitched the ninth.
The two teams take today off and meet again in game three at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in New York. The Royals will send lefty Nick Johnson to mount against right-hander Dell Ellis.
The Royals will still be playing within center helfer Armas Otis, who grappled an injury on Sunday.
"Amos won't play the rest of the play-offs," Heroz said. "He can't play until at least Thursday and even if we make the Series, I doubt he'll be ready."
C
Max Ediger, John Algee and Waddell Smith sit in a subdued KU locker room pondering their defeat.
Royals fish for runs but Hunter nets KC
By BRENT ANDERSON
Associate Sports Editor
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Play-off and World Series veterian Catfish Hunter held the Kansas City Royals to one run and five hits to lead the New York Yankees to a 4-1 win in the first game of the American League playoffs.
Hunter, who pitched in several play-off and World Series games for the Oakland A's before being sold to the Yankees for $3.5 million after the 1974 season, had a two-run victory against the Royals, benefiting from the game by Royals third baseman George Brett.
Hunter retired the first 10 batters he faced, and he faced the minimum number of pitches he took.
back or two runs after two were out in the ninth to make it 4-1.
The Royals could have easily gone into the ninth inning leading 1-0 had George Brett been able to complete a double play one out and the bases loaded in the first.
THE ROYALS got a run in the eighth to make the score 4-1. After Al Cowerta triumphed, the Rockets went on to win.
Having backhanded a hard grounder by Yankee first baseman Chris Chambliss, Brett stepped on third, but his throw to second was not good. The ball was low and awaing by Mavryllus.
"John told me Chamblais kept him from fielding the throw," Brett said after the game. "I think I tried to aim it too much—I would have had him on a good weapon."
★ ★ ★
Weekend Sports Roundup
SCOOKING
RANSAS State 7 7 0 0 9–14
Oklahoma State 7 7 0 0 8–21
KU 18U
First downs 9
Hunts yards 67,318 50-185
Hunts yards 67,318 50-185
Return yards 8 61
Return yards 8 61
Poundless -10-4 50-184
Poundless -10-4 50-184
R1- Klinker 10 km (Klinker bik)
R2- Klinker 10 km (Klinker bik)
R3- Milrer 10 km (Dingkik bik)
R4- Milrer 10 km (Dingkik bik)
R5- Milrer 10 km (Dingkik bik)
IT WAS Brett's second throwing error of the iming. Lead-off hitter Mickey Rivers chopped a grounder to Brett, and, after a pump-fake, Brett's throw to Mayberry went awry and Rivers advanced to second. But Royals manager Whitley Herzog and Brett both said the errors didn't cost the Royals the game.
K - Crumpler 32, 69.400; Kappel 9, 69.1; L. Smith 17.878;
USU - Milier 28.400; Tursed 17.700; USU 14.14; H.
Huynh 13.540.
K1- Crowerum 3-04-8 (1 interruption)
K2- Crowerum 3-04-9 (1 interruption)
K3- Crowerum 3-05-7 (1 interruption)
Receiving
K4- Campfield 3-05-10 (1 interruption)
Basis 2.59, Link 2.50, Taylor 1.79
Dougerty 3-00-7 (41.4 avg.)
Miller 3-00-6 (37.6 avg.)
"We're still making the same mistakes," coach Bennie Mullin said yesterday. "We played for about 20 minutes, but the rest of the game was taking our shots and getting pussed around."
SOCERC-KU's soccer club saw its record slip to 2-2 as it dropped a 2-0 decision to Iowa State in Ames, Iowa over the weekend.
"They were a very poor team and it's really a backdrop for us to lose to them," but within a year, he put it on for a time, but he haven't put it together the way we need in to order be a good team."
Iowa state scored both its goals in the second half, but KU never could find the ball.
states and covered different distances, but George Mason and Michelle Brown returned to Lawrence with the same result—a first place finish.
CROSS COUNTRY--They ran in different
Sparked by their teammates' individual honors, both the men's and women's cross-country teams are proud.
The men defeated Southern Illinois in a duel, 25-1, in Carbondale, III, and the women won a three-team meet in Kirksville, M. MO, KU won with 25 points, Missouri was second with 46 and Central Missouri State was third with 71.
Mason's five-mile mile of 25.17 was 32 seconds under the Southern Illinois course record. Brown's two- and-a-half mile distance was 16 seconds ahead of her closest rival.
were: John Roscoe, fourth in 26:25; Bruce
Coldsmith, fifth in 26:28; Trial,鼎,七
in 26:38; Joel Cambron, fifth in 27:14
Bicknell,七 in 27:55; and RIK Enza,
18 in 29:49.
Following Mason across the finish line
For the women, Sena Frane was third in 15:58; Lauren Marty, fifth in 15:67; Nancy Bissell, 10th in 17:01; and Kim Glasgow, 12th in 17:04. Connie Lane was 14th, Mary Jo Kolark is 18th, and Jennifer Howe and Jane Brock finished the race.
RUGBY—The Lawrence Rugby Club split a pair of home games Saturday against a tough Kansas City club. The Lawrence city side lost to the Kansas City "A" team in the first game, 14-4, while the varsity upset the Kansas City "B" team, 10-7, in the second game.
In the second game, Roger Walter and Bob Tucker both scored tryts in the second half against the Kansas City "B" team. Dan Katz kicked the conversion, two points, after Tucker's score, and Lawrence held on for a 10-7 win.
Rich Millard scored the only points for Lawrence in the first game with a first half try, a score earned by advancing the ball to or beyond the opponent's goal line, to put the city side ahead, 4-0. But Kansas City came back with a try and a penalty kick to put Lawrence out. She added another penalty kick, three points, and a try, to put the game out of reach.
"Brett made a great play on Chamblis' grounder," Herzo said. "I didn't cost us the game. What cost us the game was that we couldn't run. That's what I'm worried about."
Next weekend, the club's top 20 players will play in the Heart of America Union Invitational Tournament against players from 40 other clubs.
Brett said that if anyone thought he had not the game, he would gladly take the "I"
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"I've never said I was a good fielder, just a good hitter," Brett said.
LARY GURA, who was traced to the Royals from the Yankees this year, pitched 8 2/3 innings, giving up 12 hits and taking 15 hits. The team's season and was used primarily as a pitcher.
"I didn't have very good stuff, Gura said. "I was giving them stuff to hit, hoping they would hit it to our players. They just seem to the big hit when they need it."
After the Royals had held them scorele for seven straight innings, the Yankees scored two in the ninth on a well-placed but unproductive run by Roy White, the Yankees' left fielder.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, October 11, 1976
50000000000000000000000000000000
7
Sports Shorts
FIELD HOCKEY-KU$'s field hockey team started its season very strong, winning its five first games. But things have grown worse for the chukas and they have lost their last three.
KOELZER
Southwest Missouri State University (SWMS) handed KU its second loss of the season Friday afternoon, and the Kansas State University Club gave KU its third defeat yesterday.
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Jani Ballard, Haviland senior, was back at goaltie after being out last week with an
The junior varsity also lost to SWMS- 5,0. The JV squad won two games Saturday against Wichita Collegiate School, taking the first match, 3-0, and the second, 2-6.
Anne Levinson, Derry, N.Y., freshman, and three goals for the day, and Maura Gaudau, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, Denver, deliveromphore, each scored one.
The Kansas City Field Hockey Club shut out kU's varsity yesterday, 34, and the junior team won.
But, aside from Nebraska, nobody was tougher at the Lamoni Invitational Volleyball Tournament Saturday at Graceland College, Lamoni, Iowa, than the Jayhawks, who took second in a 25-team field.
VOLLEYBALL—The University of
Texas is simply too tough for the KU
volleyball team.
KU won six matches and lost one, and had a game record of 124. Two of the game losses came in the final match against Nebraska.
The 25 teams were split into four pools to start the tournament. KU won its pool with a win in the second round.
The Jayhawks beat Gracedillo in their first match 15-7 and 14-10 Gracedillo had a strong performance.
KU met the University of Missouri in the second match, the Jayhawks won, 12-6.
But Nebraska, which defeated KU in the Jayhawks' first meet of the season, won the tournament by taking a 15-7, 15-4 victory over KU.
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room. $225 plus electric charge, gas 814-706-3955
Sublure furnished one bedroom apt, air conditioner, electric kitchen $178/month. 10-15
843-380-391
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment, we offer a low or close-price benefit, you will pay the least and be rewarded with the GRAMOPHONE SHOP at KIFEES. **tt**
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
ELECTRIC, 845-903-3000, W. 618, BELL AUCTION,
ELECTRIC, 845-903-3000, W. 618
Excelent selection of new and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, MSA
of the city.
Western Electrical Nfety-Non on San Sale! Malik
Wester Chilmatical Nfety-Non on San Sale!
Western Electrical Nfety-Non on San Sale!
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. If
A good sound system is one of the most pleasurable things you can have. Let us show you an Advent system that will deliver more music and sound to your home. Audio, 13 E. 8th. 10-11
Acoustic 371 bass arm-365 warts RMS -丹
Armstrong Fretless bass arm. 841-385. 10-11
Must sell, 1729. Yuga Hatchback, 4-10-sec.
Call Truf 845-2635 or 864-1945.
Truf 845-2635 or 864-1945.
1971 Pord WC - Custom inside wide tire and
easy to drill. See at 158 Mile-
phone. Phone 842-2969. 10-11
V.W.-73 Squareback automatic, good condition
V.I.-73 Squareback 1648 Wkd after
10-11-11
10-11-11
Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerator,
oven, microwave, dishwasher, toaster, kettle, espresso
machines, Ekta Edi, Topkaa Kebab, Tampa Brewing
Company, Toshiba DVD player, mower. 6 p.m.-free.
Call (800) 243-9155 for more information.
STOCK REDUCTION SALE—Alverna Vail Giuliani Reduction Awarewares are bargaining at list price but unbalanced modal models at 30% off, other models at 20% off, and the lowest price available. Located in the Audio 10-12 Recordings Studio
10 speed Pouget cycle-European components= 10 speeds 550 or best offer
tools included-841-687-667
BOKONON-Largest collection of bongs and accessories in Lawrence 12 East 8th Bldg. 81-360, 360-
72 Toyota Corolla sedan. Automatic, stereo B-
inch, excellent condition. Call 864-390-2000 or
www.yotacorolla.com
Three huge rooms overflowing with the best aseptic lockers, large white cabinets, ware, memorabilia, high class junk, bargains. Jewelry and Indian jewelry. Lend books. Everyday electronics. Cashiers. Fees. 846-8161, 819 New Haven. 846-8160, 819 New Haven.
For Sale: 25" color RCA Console Pioneer, Adder
Elevator, Moving equipment for go-183. 841-760-1033.
Moving equipment must be go-183. 841-760-1033.
1. Vega Hatchback 4 speed low mileage, silver.
2. Honda Civic 3-speed low mileage, silver.
3. Jeep JK 4253 Albums Club, Room # 1, Pm 2 w/47"
4. Jeep Wrangler XL 4x4, Room # 1, Pm 2 w/47"
5. Ford Explorer Sport Trac 4x4, Room # 1, Pm 2 w/47"
6. Toyota Camry 4x4, Room # 1, Pm 2 w/47"
7. Nissan Altima 4x4, Room # 1, Pm 2 w/47"
8. Kia Optima 4x4, Room # 1, Pm 2 w/47"
9. Chevrolet Impala 4x4, Room # 1, Pm 2 w/47"
10. Volkswagen Golf 4x4, Room # 1, Pm 2 w/47"
Must sell - Arp String Ensemble and Thomas org-
ain with Mog Synthesize. Tom Palmer. 10-13
Silver Getten trumpet, professional model. Best offer it take! Call Chris at 814-5247 or 814-6875.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermaids. Unicorns, etc. Stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantees. 841-3683.
Pronto Polaroid camera. Leaded only 3 times.
Pat Call P81-8331. 1329 Ohio. 10-14
4. 15XB XCrger SB chrome phone with Copper
Cover Very good condition Very good
Phone Tom Ba4-3270 late to 10-14
10 a.m.—12 p.m.
Everudou Is
wagon wheel
Everyday Is
Ladies' Day.
wheel
10 a.m.—12 p.m.
Everyday Is
Bicycle Touring Bags. Karmitor pamiders and
handsbike bag. Like new, 10³⁴
841-7786 10³⁴
Pender Basman Amp. 50-watt with 4-12" speakers (Ultralectric Electronics) $350 Call Boat, 866-733-4090
39 Chevy Nova Call 864-5160 10.12
New. Epiphone acoustic guitar with case. 10-13
Bewit 842-8578
Book Sale—the Lawrence Public Library will hold a book sale from 7 p.m., Sat, Oct. 9, 4 p.m., a-m-d, and Sunday, Oct. 10, 2-8 p.m. in the library garage at 7th and Kentucky. Books in all categories, reasonably priced, are welcome.
71 Flat 80 Spider Special. Exceptional condition.
Over 30 MPG. 841-2790 after 6. 10–11
Demonstrator Clearance. 1976 International Scoot-
ing; 1978 International Train; 1979 FARM, FM,
deluxe interior; deluxe interior $800, miles $153.
1976 International II. AXS, PS, PB.
1976 International III. AXS, PS, PB.
Knuck Truck & Tractor Company. 10-15
1973 Datsun pick-up with soft camper top $2500
1974 Datsun pick-up Tractor Co. 1548 E. IMB 148-
430-240
148-430-260
Epiphone electric bass, perfect condition, rarely played, very quick action, includes hardcourt gear.
CLEARANCE: Discontinued radial tires $25 each
$35 per pair. Save up to 1/4 off a 2.14" tire (kown As78-15-18 $15.18) radials for Wakwagek included) May Store these in the garage or store con thru Woolworth's parking lot for tire service.
1966 TB-A, complete reconditioned. 1983 Chevrolet
4000 mw 9.5M wmp 1:30 or 7-10
1982 Chevrolet 4000 mw 9.5M wmp 1:30 or 7-10
Heck and Hardtier Realty, 960 W. Main St., Coral, N.W. $15,000; 843 W. Main St., Alamogordo, N.D
Complete 10-gn. aquarium and stand. Call 841-2131, ask for Harold.
Olda Studio model trumpet, excellent condition. Contact Tom Shepherd at 864-470-10 from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. ask for Tom Shepherd by Shop M-89 or, 912-263-1025 for p.m. anytime.
Check out th
1973 Honda CU750 $1499
1973 Honda CU750 XL55 $2399
1974 Honda CU750 XL55 $2899
1974 Honda MT125 $495
1975 Honda MT125 $495
1975 Honda CU750 XL75 $2799
1975 Honda CU750 XL75 $2799
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th, 84-13
3333.
HELP WANTED
Baked wheat straw—good for parties, munching,
etc. Call 843-0848.
10-15
Part time Housekeeper/Secretary immediately, help with cleaning of the room or age of 10 hrs. To do general cleaning, some steam ironing. General letter correspondence. 3 references necessary. Call 842-9601 morning or evening.
Ektrovision Optical
MANAGER OF TECHNICAL SERVICES AND COMPUTER OPERATIONS. Available immediately for computer and applied computing. Directs activities of large staff in the application of technical assistance and software improvements and troubleshooting technical issues. Provides technical assistance and programming, technical services, and operating degree of managerial ability and technical knowledge. Requires graduate education and programming, including programming of advanced software. Send resume to Jerry R. Magnus, University of Kansas Administrative Information Services, 160 W. 25th Street, Oklahoma City, OK 73104. Applicant deadline: October 30th. AGE APPROVED: 25 YEARS AND HANDICAP ENCOURAGED TO APPLY.
Part time evening work available for junior and
graduate students. 20% of UCU students are available for baby-sitting.
Must have a job, be willing to travel.
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
32 Minute Treatment
10% OFF
Graduate School Council has a part-time job open to students interested in teaching or working at Standard office work plus speci- project. Qualifications: Knowledge of interest in, and experience in, teaching or working at office procedures, typing skills. Salary: negotiable. Above minimum wage. When Immediately Offered, you may be eligible for work if you think you might be eligible for work in the office. For this job by calling Ellen Reynolds at 864-951-3720 any time. Or stop by the GSC in the Union.
LOST AND FOUND
Found. High school class ring, year 1975 from
identifying identities engraved on back of ring.
Identifying identities engraved on back of ring.
Lost: bus pass with two football tickets and a driver's license in HI: 864-2048. **Road:** 10-13
Found: Money. Call 841-7849. Tell me how much and where lost. 10-11
Found. $10.98 book in Robinson, Gym; Human
Sexuality. Call 843-779 or 843-9402.
10-11
Found. Small black & white female klent wearer. Wash only once. No longer available. Landscaping forbid if owner please contact us.
Found. Kirk. Ring. South 3rd floor terrace of West- Oct. 6, a门. Claim in Kansas Business
Found. Female dog end up 25th and 10a. Mixed.
Trainer: Cynthia D. Tan. TEN-10
& paver. Call 814-6474.
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Thursday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Park, Mass.
NOTICE
CASABAH Cafe.-Good food from scratch. Lunch
10:30-16:30, mid-May. Maa. Wass. take a backpack哦.
10:30-16:30, mid-May. Maa. Wass. take a backpack哦.
snap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
lamps, swamps, clock televisions. Open daily 12 p.m.
to 5 p.m.
Jim's Stock House. Delicious food at reasonable
bills. 12pm - 3pm, Weekdays 11am - 11pm, Closed Tuesdays
10am - 7pm.
HALLOWEEN MASQUARED DANCE by Gay
Services, a MARY HARTMAN, MARY HART-
MAN, or MARY HARTMAN, the evening
Prizes for winners. Oct. 2: 8 to 13.
Kansas Union Ballroom. $1.75.
10-15
RIENWARD Nissan New Jersey office offered the following job:
**Job Title:** Assistant General Manager
**Location:** KOHR JERSEY, Sep. 11th. Original was held. Call (504) 638-2900.
**Duties:**
* Req. Master's degree in Business Administration or related field.
* Exp. in financial analysis, budgeting and financial reporting.
* Responsible for managing the financial operations of the company.
PERSONAL
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
To the boys of 38th floor, Paul Michl, Brian,
Jason, and Steven. 100 lt. I & G love 10-1
danny Ground L. Y
"C.A.F.E. satisfies the hunger of an uninvolved student." 10-11
NAPA
Local light healing done with van. Save $ Call 815-3011 or 864-6844d. 10/11
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 if or can get it overnight
overnight
4. Machine shop service
5. Two chairs
5. Two stores
817 Vermont 2300 Haskel
843-9365 843-6960
Generator t$ bits=92.55 -now $95.15 while they last
Lawrence SchwartzCycler, 1839, Yugioh 82,683-6836
Learn the authentic art of Belly Dancing from a
Leisure Arts instructor. Attend at 6am or
7am at 9am held at 64th Shore Island Lake.
The course includes demonstrations and
workshops.
Need a new bike? Come and see the largest
bike shop in town. See our offer to bring along your used Schwinn trade
trade. Schwinn Schwinn Cyclery, 9-6 Mon-Sat,
Thurs till 9:30, Sun-1 4:30, 1-18 5:30, 8:42, 62-8336.
TYPING
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a brake. Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a brake! - lubricate and adjust your dryers, brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your tires, tire pressure and accessories bought at time of "tune-up." Rates 10 speed $15.50, 5 or 3 speed $15.50, single speed $20, two-speed $20, three-speed $15.50, single speed $20, three-speed $15.50, single speed $20, three-speed $15.50, single speed $20, three-speed $15.50, single speed $20, three-speed $15.50, single speed $20, three-speed $15.50, single speed $20, three-speed $15.50, single speed $20, three-speed $15.50,
Commercial Printing-Invitations, stationery,
programs, brochures, cards, posters, & much,
much more. We do custom work for you.
We call the Kansas Canter Press 1046
812, 942-8458.
Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 009, 010, 011, 012, 013, 014, 015, 016, 017, 018, 019, 020, 021, 022, 023, 024, 025, 026, 027, 028, 029, 030, 366, 358, 627, 648. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Rateable rate. B47-7831.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERHouses on americana plantations at 11253 lane ave. N, No. 268, Los Angeles, CA 90046. Mail address: 11253 lane ave. N, No. 268, Los Angeles, CA 90046.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-29
Experienced typist—term papers, books, misc. materials; 843-525-6301, Mrs. Wray,
THISIS BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you need 838 Massachusetts phone number 482-7560. Thank you.
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selective LL
phone: 847-5299 (ribbon). Paint at Call 847-5299.
WANTED
Experienced typist; manuscript theses, etc. Call
weekdays: 041-3431 days, 841-1780 weeks and
weekends.
Experienced Typist- IBM - Memory-Call 843-109,
9471, ask for John.
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/pile; Quality work. Typewriter, thesis; dissertations welcome. Codes: 842-3921.
sPORT
- Pin-Ball
* Air Hockey
* Foo-Ball
- Pool
* Snooker
* Ping Pong
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
California alum needs lukework for homecoming
or visit (415) 247-7177 or
enroll at (408) 247-7177
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week. No One Under 18 Admitted
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CREWEL COURTED
15 East 8th, 841-2634
10.5 Monday-Saturday
Home of The Chalk Hawk
Need three tickets to OU-KU game. Will pay good price. Call 861-3051.
10-13
Roomate for furnished apt. Very close to campus.
Call 843-0133.
10-12
Ace needs saleperson at the game to sell the official KU hat. Earn a bac a hat. $60 in commissions made at Wisconsin game. Limited number of saleperson needed. Call 345-8548 or df 6541.
WANTED: CHRISTIAN MUSICIANS to form com-
panions in a music department; lead the
band/feed guitar/drum键盘, keyboards, Call
the band to record your music.
One platinum roommate need to fill up
宴客 app. Call Mark, 342-3770 evenings
10-11
Need 2 tickets to KU-OU or KU-Nebraska for McDonnell. Call collect. McIntyre at McDonalds in Topeka. 913-573-3631. If I'm not in, with my secretary and I will return you. info. with me 10-13
- Foosball
9th and Iowa
We now have openings for the remainder of the rooms in Room 12, for female roommates. Ninthall Hall, B4-839-99 10:20
9th and Iowa
Grad student needs daily ride between K.C. Me.
Grad student needles. Will share equipment. In K.10-11
321-182.
Christian Musicians. Group to perform "The
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame" on May 16, 2015.
Wednesdays, noon; perform 11-7/17
Female voice callers (1-2) (1-) gear accompaniment now. Call 842-4256 between 5-3:50, 10-11
Student wishes own room in together household
Bathroom, toilet, laundry and kitchen
cleaning and cleaning. Must be college
educated and have 2 years of work experience.
- Foosball
Top dollar paid for 4 KU-OU tickets (anywhere in stadium)
10-15
The Lounge
Male roommates wanted for large 2-bedroom apartments. See at 1011 Indiana, Adm. No. 5, after clicking here.
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
- Pinball
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Turner Chevrolet
1-6 p.m.
Schooners — 65°
Pitchers — $1.25
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
- Bud on Tap
- Real
843-7700
Call Ottis Vann!
STUDY BREAK
- Pool
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
For new Chevroletst and used cars at
DO'S DELUXE
BOTH MASS
LAWRENCE
BRILLIANCE
PUBLIC HOSPITAL
AIRPLANE
Phone 843-1211 KU Union Lobby
Thanksgiving and Christmas travelers should reserve now for best choice of flight, train and hotel. May we also assist you in planning your trip? No extra charge for our services.
Make Reservations
SUA Maupintour travel service
Keep your car healthy
in the summer.
Use the student discounts
at
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W.23rd 842-4152
Smiley face
8
Monday, October 11, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU, Lawrence study effects of sewage on crops
In this environmentally conscious age, everything from beer bottles to newspapers have been recycled. And now, sludge, the material produced by the treatment of sewage, is to be spread on land as a soil conditioner.
A study to determine the effect sludge has on crops is being conducted by the city of Lawrence with the aid of University of Kansas facilities.
Because of high standards placed on treated liquid waste by the Environmental Protection Agency and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, K. T. Joseph, city chemist, said last week that Lawrence now has a multi-million dollar secondary treatment facility. And the research by this faculty is the subject of the study.
BEGINNING LAST March, lubes have been placed in varying amounts on akzers for use during use.
coordinator of the study, who is a KU graduate student of environmental health
Tomato, sweet corn, bean, carrot, cucumber and cantaloupe plants were tested to determine the traces of elements absorbed from the sludge content in the soil. These elements were transferred to the soil by different types of plant. Joseph said there was a danger of metals like cadmium, nickel, lead, chromium and mercury being present in the sludge which could be accumulated by the plants. These metals were transferred to consumers of the plants.
THE EXTENT of metal accumulation in the plants depends on soil characteristics, the type of plant, concentration of metals in the soil, amount and frequency of the studies's application.
According to Joseph, the study is aimed at establishing the rate that sludged could be
safely applied each year on a proposed land site.
Joseph said that over a long period, there was a danger of ground water being drained from the well.
Because municipal sludges are rich in nitrogen, Joseph said, crops raised on the sludge-enriched soil must have the nitrogen before it sees into the ground water.
"CORN APPEARS to be a good crop from this aspect." he said.
Field experiments on growing the crops have been finished, but the lab work is
expected to take another six months to complete.
"This is an excellent example of how KU and the city work together," Joseph said. "Without KU's lab equipment this work could not be done."
When his lab work is finished, a proposed crop management plan will be submitted to the EPA and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. The city currently has 60 acres of land near the plant ready for application of the pludge.
A
On Campus
THE PURCHASE of most of this land, as
Events
TODAY; SENIOR CLASS PICTURES will be taken all day in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. THE UNIVERSITY SENATE FOREIGN STUDENT COMMITTEE will meet at 11:30 in Alcove B of the Union, NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS will meet at 11:30 a.m. in Alcove E of the Union. THE SERBO-KU-Y'SISSUES AND IDEAS will present a small group discussion on Maristax at 1 p.m. in 11B, Level 3 of the Union.
TONGHT: SUA FINE ARTS AUDITIONS will be at 7 in the Big B Room of the Union. The SUA CHESS CLUB will meet at 7 in Pine Room of the Union. THEST TAU will meet at 7:30 in the Pine Room of the Union. The STUDENT ASSOCIATION will meet at 9 in the Pine Room of the Union. The UNDERGRADuate PHILOSOPHY CLUB Shakespearean ideas at 8 in the International Room of the Union. PLAY READINGS IN GERMAN will be at 8 at 16/42½ W. 5th JANE CURRY, assistant professor of political science at Vasar College, will lecture on "All the News of the French Revolution" at 10:30 in the Minutes of the Polish Journalists' Association" at *in the Council Room of the Union*.
TOMORROW: A UNIVERSITY DATING WORKSHOP will be at 4:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. in 224 Fraser Hall.
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the student activity fee.
FROM: Tom Mitchell-Student Senate Business Manager
*All officers who are responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds must:
1. Affend a training session conducted by the office of the Student Senate
1. Treasurer; see the time listed below.
2. Sign an organizational management contract with the Student Senate.
2. Sign an organizational management contract with the Student Senate.
3. Obtain the organization for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met. Even though you have attended a training session last fiscal year, you will still have to attend one during this fiscal year. Training sessions will be held approximately once each month.
Training sessions will be held approximately once each month. The training session has been scheduled for the following time:
Tuesday, October 12, 1976 at 2:00 P.M.
International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
The session will last less than an hour. You must contact the Student Senate Office at 864-3710 to sign up for this session or for additional information.
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee.
MIX
'N MATCH
KEB CBS
CHOOSE ANY TWO FOR $3.99
Mr. Steak is servin up kebabs in four mix m match flavors. Teriyaki steak kebab. Buttery scallop kebab. Juicy steak kebab. And teriyaki shrimp kebab.
Choose any two kebabs to make one scrimptious dinner. Mix & Match Kebob Dinner includes two kebabs, rice pilaf, plus your choice of soup, juice or salad. For all 3.99
920 W. 23rd
Open 7 days
11 a.m.—10 p.m.
Mr. Steak
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
1976 Mr. Steak, Inc.
MILITARY AIR CENTER
KU Needs Mike Glover
IF YOU BELIEVE:
IF
Quality faculty is important to your education and that high salaries are necessary to attract & retain such faculty;
Better building and facilities at KU are important to your education;
—The state should give more aid to the University rather than raising tuition;
A criminal record and jail sentence are unnecessarily harsh for possession of marijuana;
-There is still widespread discrimination against women and support the Equal Rights Amendment;
"A woman's past sexual history should not be used to prejudice juries in rape trials;
-No human being has the right to enact the death penalty upon another person;
Then you need to register to vote in
Douglas County and vote for Mike Glover一
your State Representative
Mike Glover, a graduate of KU himself, has been your Representative for the past four years. He not only believes in the importance of making college accessible to everyone necessary to make these beliefs become realities. When other legislators have been afraid to take controversial stands, Mike has made his constituents believe in stronger university support from the state, and kept state involvement in our private lives.
You must register to vote here before
Douglas, County. Courthouse, 11th & Mass.
Open Man., Fri., 9 a.m., - 9 p.m.
Wed., Oct. 13thI
Paid for by the Mike Glover Re-election Campaign, Betty Jo Charlton, Treasurer
But the expense to the city is minimal, Joseph said.
with the cost of the secondary treatment facility, was partially funded by a federal grant that paid 75 per cent of the costs. The city paid the balance.
"The only cost is the price of the seeds" he said. No fertilizer or insecticides were used, and Joseph and water plant personnel did the work in their spare time.
According to Joseph, applying the sludge to an area of land was the most economical way to dispose of it in this part of the world. The alternatives include landfills and incineration.
"With one you have transportation costs and still the nitrate pollution problem. And with the other you have ashes to dispose of and air pollution to cope with."
mondaynitelast chanceweekend romancedance:
Tonight, cheap beer, good music and drinking contest to boot. Dance to FAT LYP, $1 cover.
$1.25 pitchers from 9-12. Pitchers go down to $1.00 when contestants finish key.
Tuesday Night
The Seem-To-Be-Players
This season's last performance of "Duevinger"
A melodrama concerning the unlikely event of Gold in
the Wakarusa Valley.
841-0817
737 New Hampshire
Off the Wall Hall
2.
For college students preparing for careers in the visual and performing arts
Parsons/New School Arts Apprenticeships in New York Your opportunity to ear
MSW W 101K Your opportunity to earn
a masters degree in business administration.
purchased a master's degree in business administration.
Aoprenticeships are available in a variety of areas
PAINTING
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CINEMA
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MUSIC
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Tuition $1,250.00 for 12 credit hours *Fall and Spring*
For more information mail the coupon below or call collect: 212) 741-8975
Parsons/New School Apprenticeship Programs in New York
PARIS/SOUTH NEW SCHOOL CREATION Programs in new AWARD
PARSONS SCHOOL OF DESIGN 6E/6H Fashion New York N.Y. 11017
1528 W. 23rd across from post office 842-8861
PARSONS SCHOOL OF DESIGN 66f illen AVenue New York
Please send me more information about the Parson's
School.
Please send me more information about the Pursons New School Apprenticeships Programs in New York.
I am interested in the □. Feb. 77 June 77 or □ Sept. 77 semester
indicate area of interest
--main Eight cord feren
--main Eight cord feren
Mexico
Offer good Mon., Oct. 11 - Thurs., Oct. 14
99c reg. $1.59
Texas Burrito NOW ONLY
Don Chilito's
SUA Forums
SUA FORUMS present ELECTION '76 with JULIAN BOND
Tuesday, Oct. 12 8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom Admission 50 $ ^{\circ} $
Tickets now available at the SUA Office
ALEXANDER BROOKS
11
B
SCHO
Univesi
Univesi
Univesi
Iowa S
Oklaho
Gr
sludge
economical
of the
landfills
on costs m. And response of
--through what is now housing to 10th and Pennsylvania Streets; following Pennsylvania street to Eighth Street; curving through a housing area to Seventh Street between Pennsylvania and New York streets; following seventh Street to New Hampshire Street; and following New Hampshire Street to Sixth Street where it would run into the street. In the end, we connect with the proposed U.S. 59 bypass east of Lawrence to create an efficient loop from K-10 to U.S. 24-40 at Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
Haskell Loop impact report draws praise, criticism
By KENNA GIFFIN
An environmental impact report on the Haskell Loop project released last week emphasizes the project's advantages that Lawrence city officials are upholding since the project began five years ago.
The report was prepared for the city by Oblinger Smith Corporation of Wichita, planning, design and development contractors. The report is required under federal law because the city is applying for funding from the Federal Highway Administration for urban Urban Development (HUD) to build Haskell II.
The federal agencies will review the report and then decide whether to allow federal funds to be used for the loop. The report released to the public in August 2014 by a final report after public hearings are held.
THE HASKELL LOOP was designed to carry traffic efficiently through East Lawrence from 11th and Haskell streets to Sixth and Massachusetts between industrial and residential areas.
The plan shows the loop following 111th street from Haskell Avenue to Delaware Street; curving
The report's summary cites the advantages of moving traffic efficiently through the east side of the city, alleviating traffic congestion and reducing existing pedestrian-autoautomobile and automobile-infrastructure industrial and residential areas and improving access to the Kaw Industrial District, along the river.
IMPROVED ACCESS TO THE Kaw Industrial District will encourage further industrial development there, adding to the city's tax base and economic resources, the report said. "Separation of the residential area from the industrial uses will help stabilize the neighborhood, prevent the intrusion of conflicting land uses that would jeopardize its residential character, and encourage
ADVERSE ENVIRONMENTAL effects listed were acquiring 18 more residences and five businesses and moving the occupants; taking over two acres of land now used for recreation, in this case Municipal Stadium and a lighted baseball diamond; and removing 45 trees.
redevelopment and reinvestment in East Lawrence."
However, the necessity of connecting two particular intersections, Seventh and Connecticut streets and 11th and Haskell street, limits the possibilities for other locations, the report said.
The possibility of not building the loop at all was rejected in the report because of the current and future problems.
ROUTING THE LOOP farther west would place more residents on the industrial side of the loop and set them apart from the main part of the East Lawrence neighborhood.
A more eastern route would require substantial displacement and relocation of business firms and industries and interfere with existing railroad tracks and right of way, according to the report. It could also increase costs and moving because more of the road would be built from residential or industrial land. The
proposed loop would incorporate some existing streets, but would primarily be a new roadway. The rebuilt's list of adverse effects was accompanied by the addition of a new plan to the plans to minimize or compensate for them.
THE CITY HAS made efforts to replace the baseball篮ard and find a new location for the East Lawrence Center, a community center on the southeast corner of 10th and Delaware streets. The center, on the eastern edge of East Lawrence, on the east side of the loop, and thus harder to reach the report said.
The report said the stadium is in poor condition, suffers much vandalism and has declined in importance.
The city is considering moving the center to the New York Grade School building, which is a more affordable option.
THE CITY HAS added four lighted baseball stadiums since 1973, for a total of 12 in the city. none are in East Lawrence, however, and none are in West Lawrence to city recreation superintendent John Rose.
The report said that Brook Park, situated % mile east of the center between Brook and Prairie streets
on the west and east, and 12th Street and the Santa Fe tracks on the south and north, would have a baseball diamond without lights, a basketball area, and a parking area. It was to have been finished this year.
Ross said the city planted grass in the area between 12th and 13th streets this summer, and hoped to have picnic tables for next summer. The East Lawrence Improvement Association is looking at catalogues for playground equipment that they want in the park. The land between 12th Street and 13th Street was finally purchased this summer, Ross said, and the city hopes to seed it by fall.
The report said the loop will "provide an impetus to re-evaluate the park and recreational need of East Lawrence residents. Whether or not the Haskell Loop project is constructed, the East Lawrence park and recreational facilities are relatively inaccessible to most residents and are on the periphery rather than near the center of their neighborhood. The community has therefore of only minor importance as a neighborhood recreational area. The community center is in relatively poor condition and is underutilized."
See LOOP page three
WOW
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.36
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, October 12, 1976
KU's increase largest in Big 8
See story page five
Piano concert evokes feeling
By JERRY SEIB
The University of Kansas had the largest main campus enrollment increase of Big Eight Conference schools this fall, according to a report prepared by the conference.
KU's Lawrence campuses enrollment increased 815 students over last fall for a total campus enrollment of 22,553. That makes the Lawrence campus the second largest in the Big 8 behind the University of Missouri's Columbia campus. There are 23,325 students enrolled at Columbia, according to the conference study.
Last fall, the Lawrence campus was third in the conference behind the Columbia campus and the University of Nebraska's main campus, in Lincoln. The Lincoln campus lost 201 students this fall, however, reducing its enrollment to 22,179.
CHANCELLOR ARCHIE Dykes said yesterday that he wasn't surprised that KU's enrolment increase was the largest in the conference, but that he hadn't expected half the conference's school to experience enrolment decreases.
THE ENROLLMENT figures are for the conference's largest campuses. They don't include auxiliary campuses, such as KU's Kansas City campus or the University of Oklahoma's health center campus in Oklahoma City. Enrollments in extension courses taught by main campus faculty members are included.
The study indicates that four of the conference's schools had main campus enrollment declines this year. The universities of Missouri, Nebraska, and Oklahoma experienced main camp drops ranging from 18 to 1,366 students.
Dykes said that the University of Oklahoma's decrease of 1,300 students included the loss of 500 students who transferred to the health center campus when the OU School of Pharmacy was moved to the Oklahoma City campus. But Dykes said that he couldn't explainOU's loss of more than 800 other students.
That loss alone would still have been the largest enrollment decline in the conference.
THE UNIVERSITY OF Colorado's Boulder campus probably lost students because of its efforts to meet an enrollment lid imposed by the state legislature, Dykes said. The CU main campus dropped 557 students for an enrollment of 21,061.
(
Here is a breakdown of fall enrollments at Big 8 schools and the school's change in enrolment from the fall of 1975. The main activities and are for the main campuses only.
According to final KU enrollment figures released last month, the freshman class had the greatest enrollment increase. There are 4,446 freshmen, 464 more than last year. They are sophomores, junior and graduate students, but the number of seniors dropped by 55.
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Fingertip stretch
during a practice of the Beta Theta Pi intramural football team. Tom is a freshman at KU.
Big 8 main campus enrollments
University of Colorado (Boulder) 21,061 - .35
University of Oklahoma (Norman) 20,018 - .57
University of Texas at Austin 20,018 - .57
In 1961 Bond married Alice Louse
Clopton. They have five children.
He is a Democrat and served in the Georgia House of Representatives from 1965 to 1975. He once was banned from the House because of statements he made about Vietnam. He was later reinstated after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the ban violated his constitutional rights.
Tom Dykes, son of Chancellor Archie Dykes, stretches for a pass
OU's enrollment decrease includes 500 students who moved this fall to the school's new location.
Julian Bond, politician, civil rights leader and writer, will speak tonight at SUA's Election 76 Forum Lecture.
Bond, 36, was a reporter and feature writer for the Atlanta Inquirer from 1960 to 1961 and also served as managing editor in 1963.
The speech begins at 8 in the Union
Ballroom. Admission is 50 cents.
Julian Bond here tonight for speech
Bond has been serving as a Georgia state senator since 1975. He is also a member of the State Democratic Party.
SCHOOL 1978
University of Missouri (Denver) 23,322
University of Kansas (Lawrence) 22,535
Iowa State University (Ames) 21,261
IOWA State University (Ames) 21,261
ENROLLMENT 1978
University of Missouri (Denver) 23,322
University of Kansas (Lawrence) 22,535
Iowa State University (Ames) 21,261
IOWA State University (Ames) 21,261
Archie's son busy but inconspicuous at KU
By PAUL JEFFERSON
There are about 2,448 other freshmen attending the University of Kanaa who marry their husbands.
But he is the only one who can command the attention of Archie Dykes more quickly than any Kansas Reagent or University student. He is an expert student who can call the chancellor "Dad."
“There’s really no difference between me and any other student going to school here,” Tom Dykes said Wednesday. “I can’t see any different attitudes toward me.”
Dyke, the younger son of Archie and Dykes, is in his first year at KU and will be a junior.
connection. Only one of my teachers knows, because he came to the faculty reception at
"MOST STUDENTS don't even know that I'm the chancellor's son, he said." The Chancellor told me.
A straight-A student in high school, Dykes said that he had little trouble adjusting to college life, but that his study habits had been shaped by choosing a course, choosing premised as a course of study.
"I was prepared for the study part of college," Dykes said. "In fact, the main reason I joined the fraternity was that it was a good school." I attend our study hall regularly."
HE SAID his parents didn't pressure him to attend KU or any other particular college.
"My parents showed confidence in me and my brother that we could do well in college," he said. "They let us choose. The main thing they stressed was to get involved, that education was more than formal classroom learning."
John, the older of the Dykes' sons,
attends Rice University in Houston.
Tom said, "I didn't even think about living at home when I decided to go to KU, and my parents didn't expect me to. They attend a lot of fraternity events and were impressed with the Beta house. They were wanna be a good influence on my college education.
"At first, I kind of a negative feeling about frats, you know, always partying. But the Beta home reflects a lot of my own views in its organization."
DYKES SAID that while he was in high school he was involved in a Christian student group called Campus Life, and that they were using weekly bible sessions in the fraternity.
"I don't have much free time any more to see my parents," he said. "My pledge duties, fraternity social functions and playing on the intramural football team
keep me pretty busy during the week. Then there are football games on weekends."
Frequently, his parents travel without their sons, now that he and his brother are in college. Dykes aid. When he is at home, he says to him, he said, he sometimes travels with them.
"IN A CONVERSATION around the dinner table, my father may talk about some administrative things going on, and we all usually put in some comments. But he doesn't poll family members about a possible program or action."
He said that there were advantages and disadvantages to being the chanceIor's son.
"I get to travel and meet different people, but I can also do that in the fraternity here," he said. "I really like the diversity of people here." He's still reminiscent or singled out with the phrase "You better be nice to him, he's the chancellor's son."
THE STATUE OF THE PIONEERS
Green scene
Staff photo
Whether it's catching up on the latest gossip or girls on the playlist that's been popular with KU law students throughout the scale from one to 10, step-taking in front of Green Hall is a building's history.
Tradition could be stepping out
BvCHRIS RIGGS
Staff Writer
Step-sitting in front of Green Hall-a University of Kansas law school tradition—may be fading as fast as the new law school is being built.
Step-sitting is still popular with the law students, but not for the same reasons as in the case of jury duty.
Kathy Prusserman, Wichita third year law student, said that she sat on the steps because she thought that Green Hall was better. She felt like that, but that she wanted to watch the students go by.
"It's also nice to have something behind my back and you don't get chiggers sitting on my bed."
JANICE FAHRENHOELT, Wichita second year law student, said that she sat on the steps because she wanted to get into the sun.
"I like to come out, especially on Monday,
because I can get caught up on what everyone did over the weekend," Fahrenholz said.
Cheryl Bailey, Stanley second year law student, said that last year some of the male law students were rating female passbyser on a scale from one to 10.
In 1926, the law students had become so
"It was discontinued," Bailey said, when one of the girls brought out a ruler to measure the height.
HOWEVER, TRESE activities haven't encouraged the faculty to pass any rules.
obnoxious that the law school faculty passed a rule that said, "Loafing and loitering on the law school steps in front of the law school during class hours is forbidden."
BOTH RULES WERE forgotten in a few years and the students received their bet
The rule was passed to stop the "horseslip" between classes that had drawn numerous complaints from female students passing in front of Green Hall.
To enforce the first rule, the faculty passed a second that limited the time between classes from 10 to five minutes, and then asked a, 10-minute break wasn't necessary.
The winner of that contest was to meet the champion Kansas State University hogaller at the KU-KState football game, because the state championship would be decided.
Step-sitting wasn't the only activity of the 1928th, Oct. 8, 1928, law students were among 15 contestants in "the first annual and probably the last annual log-calling contest of the University of Kansas," as it was reported in the Kansan.
STEP-SITTING WAS only one of many school traditions that endured. Also popular was cane-carrying, begun by senior students in 1910. They acquired the new tradition from law students in eastern Virginia, and the cane-carrying had been long-established.
In 1913, white canes with intricate silver tops were popular among senior law students, but by 1948 these were replaced by plain wooden canes.
Earl Shurtz, professor of law and a KU law student in the 1940s, said that the male students in the late 1940s were very rrowly in front of Green Hall, but that the women passing by sometimes got back at the law students.
"One TIME SOME girls came along and the boys were given them a hard time," Shurtz said. "The girls whipped out some perfume and poured it all over the fellows."
Canes were still popular in the late 1960s, Martin Dickinson, dean of the School of Law, said, but by 1969 the seniors carried canes only one day a year.
"They carried them for one of the football games in the fall," he said, "but now the team is losing."
Carrying canes became so popular in the 1950s that March 23, 1950, Paul Nye, president of the 1950 law school senior class, said most of the seniors had become devoted to their "sticks" and would feel lost without them.
NEY SAID THAT the canes had practical uses, such as tapping to the cadence of the footsteps of women passing in front of Green Hall.
"We don't use the handle to hook the girls." Nye said. "A lawyer can do that with a key."
2
Tuesday, October 12, 1976
News Digest
Gunmen raid embassies
Pakistanian gunmen raided the Syrian embassies in Italy and Pakistan and subsequently captured them for Syria's intervention against Pakistan. The guerillas in the Lebanon civil war
In Rome, three men with submachine guns and grenades stride into the embassy in the Paroli district, shot and seriously wounded a diplomat, and held five
A third man reports said one of the Raiders was killed and the other two were wounded in the ensuing gun battle.
In Islamabad, Pakistan, three Palestinians attacked the Syrian embassy and ambassador's residence but were intercepted by police, informed sources said.
Unconfirmed reports said one of the raiders was killed and the other two were wounded in the ensuing gun battle.
The Palestinians also lobbied a grenade into a room of Syrian Ambassador Mohammed Shaird Drail's house but no one was injured in the blast, the sources say.
U.S. to aive Israel missiles
WASHINGTON—The United States has agreed to give Israel a new, extremely sophisticated missile system for use primarily in antitank warfare, Israel and U.S.
The deal doesn't involve an increase in the cost of American military aid scheduled for Israel, but will make new weapons available that weren't previously available.
Israel is set to receive $1.5 billion in direct military aid and another $800 million in economic assistance from the United States.
The new program involves a top-secret antitank missile system within that financial framework, according to an Israeli official.
Presidential press secretary Ron Nessen confirmed that the U.S. would give Israel "certain additional items of military hardware," adding that "it is in our interest to maintain such equipment."
U.S. Steel vows cleanup
PITTSBURGH-UG. S.U. Steel Corp. agreed by yearly day to clean up the air around the world's largest coke-production plant by 1863 but said that such a move could cost
The proposed settlement to bring the nearby Clairton Coke Works into compliance with local, state and federal clean air standards could cost the steel producer up to $600 million. But a spokesman said no promise had been made to actually spend that much.
Allegheny County President Judge Henry Ellenbogen presided over negotiations leading to the proposed settlement. It sets deadlines for the company to install new coke ovens or rehabilitate those in use. It doesn't, however, rule out the possibility of U.S. Steel could reduce production at the plant to meet air quality standards.
20 die in Rhodesian battle
SALIBURY, Rhodesia-Fighting has increased, despite preparation by black white leaders for tarmac in Rhodesia's future, the reported government sentenced a former officer to death as "terrorist killed."
Government security chiefs also said guerrillas had shot three black civilians whose bodies were found roped together.
In Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, a key black rationalist leader, Robert Mugabe, said that he was pessimistic about the chances of success for the British-sponsored Geneva conference, scheduled to begin Oct. 21 and is designed to produce a biracial interim government for Rhodesia.
The Columbus Day holiday dominated the campaign movements of President Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter yesterday as they debated the issue of racial migrants family members and their descendants.
Rv the Associated Press
Ford, in a published interview, accused
nimis Democratic opponent of “pure
tendency.”
Each candidate used a special Columbus Day event to work for support among predominantly Catholic voters, seen by some observers as a key to winning populous industrial states from the Northeast to the Midwest.
Candidates trade holiday charges
AT A WREATH-LAYING ceremony at a statue of Christopher Columbus outside Washington's Union Station, Ford declared: "The people of the Old World still look to the great as the champion of human rights. And they are the champion of their help and we will never let them down."
He made no mention in his brief speech of the Eastern European nations, which have occupied a central place in recent campaign oratory, following Ford's remark in the debate with Carter last week that they weren't dominated by the Soviet Union.
Later, aides said that Ford had invited leaders of about a dozen ethnic groups to the White House today to make clear to them his "longstanding position on Eastern Europe," Ford planned a public statement after the session.
Among those invited was Aloysius Mazewski, president of the Polish-American Congress, to whom Ford apologized by telephone Friday. Mazewski, who had criticized Ford's comments earlier, said that he accepted the payment for his past record supporting the reduction of Soviet dominance of Eastern Europe.
THE ORGANIZATIONS, all representing Americans of Eastern ancient ancestry, included Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Slovak, Slovak, Ukrainian and Serbian groups.
Carter went to a Columbus Day Mass in Chicago with Mayor Richard Daley and various Italian-American political leaders, and he attended the city's Columbus Day parade.
Mao's widow arrested in purge
Daley gave Carter another ringing endorsement, praising him as a president who would eliminate "leadership without direction."
FORD'S ATTACK on Carter appeared in the San Francisco Examiner, whose editor, Dr. Scott Foster, said:
LONDON—Chairman Mao Tse-tung's widow, Ching Ching, and three other ultrafiltrate Chinese Communist party Politburo members have been arrested by the police on charges of plotting a coup, the Daily Telegraph reported today from the Chinese capital.
The conservative daily's Peking correspondent, Nigel Wade, quoted sources
in the capital as saying the arrests were
the political organizers at special
weekend briefings.
The 69-year-old Ching Ching—a onetime movie actress who became Mao's fourth wife—and her three alleged coconspirators were apparently arrested some time after Sept. 30, their last known public appearance, when they attended a meeting on
the eve of China's national day, the report said.
Write-ins stall election tally
The Assembly elections, which were combined with Student Senate elections,
A large number of write-in votes is delaying final tabulation of the College Assembly elections, according to Eleanor Johnson, president of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
A total of 145 student representatives are being selected for the Assembly. Twenty-nine seats for each class and 29 graduate seats were open.
Turk said yesterday that the write-in candidates would be contacted to find out whether they wished to serve in the Assembly.
Wade named the other Politburo members as Wang Hung-wen, second vice chairman of the Chinese party, who is about 52 years old. Wang Chun-chiao, Shanghai whiz kid'; Chun Chun-chiao, about 63 and first vice premier, and Yao Jia, Shanghai chief minister, was as a leading ideologue and politician.
"The College bylaws specify that no person can be elected unless he wishes to serve," she said. "It appears that everybody who was on the ballot has been out but the official results will not be out until the write-ins have been contacted."
The Telegraph said few details of the alleged coup plot were known, but Wade said the suspects apparently had little support from the army.
KU directories expected Nov.1
This year's student directories will be available by Nov. 1, Larry Knapp, director of the Division of information, said yesterday.
He speculated that the charges made against Chiang and the others may refer to other treasonable actions, such as forging currency or paying taxes, which were made by Mao in the last months of his life.
Knupp said a second computer run was
corrected the error that voided the
first tape.
The report of the arrests coincided with the appearance of wall posters announcing that Prime Minister Hua Kuo-feng was succeeding Mao as party chairman and commander-in-chief of China's armed forces, the Telegraph said.
The directories will be sold at the Kansas Union Bookstore for 25 cents and are provided for each campus telephone extension.
Usually the directories are ready by Oct. 15, he said, but a problem with the first directory is that it takes longer.
Hua appears to be aligned with party moderates, Wade reported. He quoted observers in the capital as saying the formal announcement of Hua's promotion had been delayed while his faction purged him from the upper echelons of power in Peking.
The arrest of what Wade described as "the Shanghai clique" would be the biggest political upheaval in China since the alleged terrorist former Defense Minister Lian Piao in 1971.
VISIONS
An international collection of award winning short films.
Tues., Oct. 12, 7:30 and 9:30, 7:5c
ANIMATION SERIES
SUA
FILMS
Carter has demanded that Ford hold a formal news conference to answer questions about a 1972 audit by the Internal Revenue Service. The audit said that Ford, in 1972, used money from a home town bank account in Michigan that contained some political contributions to pay for some clothing and a family ski vacation.
FILM SOCIETY
The audit said Ford agreed to count the clothing expenditures as personal income and to pay tax on the amount. The audit said Ford reimbursed the account for the vacation.
BADLANDS (1974)
Dir. Terreze Malick, with
Martin Sheen, Sissy Spacek
Thrus., Oct. 14; 7:30 to 9:30
7:50
CLASSICAL SERIES
Texas over the weekend, Ford accused Carter of impingering his integrity by raising questions about his past campaign finances and relationship with lobbyists.
POPULAR FILMS
IN THE YEAR OF THE PIG (1968)
In. De, Antonio plus
INTERVIEWS WITH MY LAI
VETERANS
Dir. Christopher Strick plus
WINTER SOLDIER (1971)
Winter film collective, Vietnam
Veterans testifying on
our warriors.
Wed., Oct. 13; 7:30, 75c
MONTY PYTHON AND THE
HOLY GRAIL (1975)
Dir. Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones
with Monty Python's Flying
Crocs
Fri. & Sat., Oct. 15 & 16
3:30; 7:00 & 9:30 $1
CARTER ALSO SAID that Ford should explain the IRS finding that Ford got along on $5 or less a week in pocket money during 1972. The IRS accepted Ford's explanation that many expenses were picked up by others.
Woodruff Auditorium
in the Kansas Union
COME TO AUNT MARTHA'S HOUSE FOR LUNCH ...
Aunt Martha has cooked up some delicious specials for lunch, in addition to her regular Italian cuisine ... hearty soups, flavorful sandwiches, fluffy omelets, and crispy salads await you at the Campus Hideaway.
●PIZZA ●SANDWICHES ●SALADS
●SPAGHETTI ●OUPUS ●DINNERS
●LASAGNA ●VEAL PARMAGIANA
open 11/1/12
Fri. & Sat.
Campus Hideaway
EST. 1957
106 N. PARK
843-9111
Carter, although not accusing Ford of any wrongdoing, has criticized long-term federal officials who develop close friendships with lobbyists, as Ford acknowledges having done.
In a statement issued yesterday, Carter also assailed Ford for trying to take credit during the foreign policy debate for signing a bill that imposed tax penalties on U.S. firms that cooperate with an Arab trade boycott against Israel.
"I personally resent this attack on my integrity," Ford was quoted as saying in the interview. "He knows the charges are not true. They are pure demagoguery."
"HE FOUGHT TOOTH and nail against such a bill," said the Carter statement, "withdrawing it from the treasury."
BOMBAY, India (AP)—An Indian Airlines Caravel jet with 34 crashes just after takeoff from Bombay's Santa Barbara airport, killing all 89 passengers and the crew of six.
The three-engine jetliner crash-landed in a grassy area near the end of the runway after one of its engines caught fire on takeoff.
Emergency crews found much of the plane and many of the bodies charred, of
An initial list indicated nearly all the passengers were Indian.
Capt. K. D. Gupta, the pilot, tried to turn the plane back for a safe landing and even signaled the tower for permission.
French-built, aircraft, witnesses reported.
Reports said 17 of the 89 passengers were women and the six-member crew included
Many friends and relatives who saw Flight 171 off from the terminal watched as flames erupted from one engine and the plane plunged back to earth.
Officials said Capt. Gupta managed to keep the disintegrating aircraft away from the runway during the mission.
Treasury Secretary William Simon to Sen. Abraham Rubio; D-Conn., a member of the Senate Finance Committee, criticizing such legislation.
"It is time that Mr. Ford told the team that he must not have done nothing meaningful to break the back of the boycotts—that he has opposed every effort to declare the boycottil evidence." Carter
THE
TURQUOISE SHOP
Turquoise & Coral Rings
$5.00 and up
Turquoise Bracelets
$6.00 and up
1828 Mass.
Mon.-Sat. 10:00 to 5:30 p.m.
Indian airliner crashes, burns; 95 are killed
SUA
Indoor Recreation QUARTERBACK CLUB
- Completo game film of the KU-OKLAHOMA STATE game
- Time has been changed to 6:00 p.m. to avoid conflict with the American League Playoffs.
AIRLINES
Big Eight Room in the Union OPEN TO EVERYONE!
TUES., OCT. 12
6:00 p.m.
DON'T MISS THE
Play-offs
at
The Arena
Tonight at The Arena see the Royals close in on the Yankees on our giant 7' screen.
Pizza & Sandwiches Available
In Concert
SEDAKA
Lo
HOMECOMING Oct.16 Allen Field House Tickets *5,*6,and '7 Available this Friday at the SUA Office Beginning Saturday at Kief's and Caper's Corner
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 12, 1976
3
Loop report
From name one
ROSS SAID 1,200 to 1,500 more people used the center in the first six months of 1976 than during the first six months of 1975. He said there was a definite need to have an emergency room. "A 'green belt' proposed in the report for the west side of the loop would include a sidewalk for pedestrians and a bicycle path built according to the city's proposed limits. The road would be a buffer between the industrial zone and the residential zone."
A noise analysis was made of the entire length of the loop by the Remote Sensing Section of the Location and Design Concepts Department of the Kansas Department of Transportation (DOT). The analysis, using standards set by the FIWA, concluded that the loop would increase with or without the loop because of the increasing volume of traffic.
AN UPDATED NOISE Analysis Report, based on new guidelines, is being prepared by the Kansas DOT for inclusion in the final environmental impact statement.
No air quality analysis was required for the project because it is located within city limits. Lawrence isn't classified as a Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area, for which air quality studies must be done. The report said, however, that increased effluent from the facility could increase exhaust fires now emitted from traffic making frequent starts and stops.
The report was criticized by several East Lawrence citizens for being blased.
FRANK SMITH, co-owner of Obinger Smith, said that the company thought the loop was needed or they wouldn't have proposed to the city and that the report probably did reflect professional opinions. He said he knew of some organized opposition but didn't think there was a deep feeling of resistance to the idea.
She said she worried about whether the people forced to move could pay the taxes and unkeep on the houses they would move and she also didn't like to see so much housing placed where she weren't enough places in residence for people to live.
Barbara Wilts, public relations director for the East Lawrence Improvement Association.
BROOK PARK WOULDN'T be a satisfactory replacement for Municipal Stadium because it is on the other side of the field. He was also a boy bornhood, he said. And there isn't any place to move the East Lawrence Center if New School won't let it use its building, she said.
She also criticized the report for failing to prepare for additional traffic on Haskell
--baby since the beginning. They've been in the city on so many projects. Their reputation is enhanced by the city that thries them, because they want to make that the city of Lawrence wanted," she said.
"The report has been Oblinger Smith's
WILLIES SAID THE 13 houses that would remain east of the loop were left so that Stokley Van Camp camery could expand. If that area was zoned residential, she said, the residents could improve their houses. But if it was zoned commercial, she said, in in their homes "depends on how long they can stand the pressure from Stokley."
The report simply mentioned that 13 houses would remain east of the loop.
City manager Buford Watson said he was pleased with the report.
it's supposed to outline the problems and measure the environmental impact. It's not supposed to be an unbiased statement," he said.
HE SAID PEOPLE on the east side of the loop understood that the plans couldn't include everyone. The 13 houses eventually changed to industrial property, he said.
The city would help displaced residents find standard housing if they couldn't find something on their own, he said. Residents could receive up to $15,000 in relocation payments and would receive a moving allowance covering whatever it cost them to move to the city. The city would payment of the difference between interest rates on their mortages, Watson said, and the property would be bought based upon the appraisal of a qualified appraiser.
Dole schedules visit to campus
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., the Republican vice presidential candidate, will be in Lawrence Saturday for the KU homecoming football game.
Officials of the Dole campaign staff contacted the office of Chancellor Archie Dykes yesterday to confirm the visit, which is sponsored by the College Republicans.
Doug Bell, Fort Scott senior and president of the KU College Republicans, said Dole was tentatively scheduled to attend the 1:30 p.m. game with Oklahoma University and a post-game reception for Rep. Larry Winn, R.Kan., who is seeking reelection for the Republican nomination. The reception will be in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Dole attended KU for two years before joining the Army during World War II. He later received a bachelor's degree from Washington University and a law degree from Washanb University.
MASS. STREET DELI
641 MASSACHUSETTS
Cherry Cheesecake
75¢
Offer good the entire month of Oct. 1976
Desmond Hawkins, British naturalist,
spoke last night about the past, present,
and future of the British Broadcasting Corporation's wildlife documentary films.
Briton talks on BBC films
"About 100 people listened to his speech,
'About a Natural Evening with a British
Naturalist.'"
Make a great impression this fall!
In OLDMAINE trotters
fast footgear!
McCalls
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Downtown Lawrence
Through his presentation, Hawkins demonstrated his concern for the future quality of documentary wildlife films, their popularity and their rising cost.
Hawkins is more than a film-maker, however. As a member of the BBC staff from 1945 to 1970, he founded its natural history unit. He is better known for his work as a publisher. His most recent book is "Thomas Hardy."
The speech was sponsored by the Jayhawk Audubon Society, the Natural History Museum and the Division of Biological Sciences.
He said that the documentary programs on BBC were an effort "to establish a healthy relationship between ourselves and what remains in our environment.
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SUA Forums Present: ELECTION '76 with JULIAN BOND
Tuesday — Oct. 12 — 8:00 p.m.
Admission 50c Kansas Union Ballroom
Tickets now available in the SUA office
MATHEMATICS AND LANGUAGE MAJORS...
Think about your future.
THE PQT COULD BE THE KEY TO YOUR FUTURE.
If you are receiving a degree in Mathematics or Language before September 1977, the National Security Agency's Professional Qualification Test (PQC) is required as a rewarding career.
You must register by November 6 in order to take the PQT on campus - it will not be given again during the school year. By scoring well on this test, you will qualify for an employment interview. During the interview, an NSA representative will discuss the role you might play in furthering this country's communications security or in producing vital intelligence information.
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY
STATES OF AMERICA
The PQT helps to measure your aptitude for career areas such as:
LANGUAGES - Foreign languages are valuable tools for research, analysis, and documentation projects. Advanced training can be required for perhaps a new language can be expected.
COMMUNICATIONS—Developing and testing logical designs for global communications is a unique pursuit. It follows that the area will be both extensive and esoteric.
PROGRAMMING—Our vast communications analysis projects could not be effectively managed without the latest computer knowledge and people who know how to use them.
PICK UP A PQT BULLETIN at your college placement office. It contains a registration form which you must mail prior to November 6 in order to take the test on November 20.
Electronic Engineering, Computer Science, Slavic, Mid Eastern and Asian language majors may interview without taking the PQT.
Citizenship is required.
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY
Attn: M321
Fort George G. Meade, Maryland 20755
An equal opportunity employer m/f
Wedo.
4
Tuesday. October 12.1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
Atom may bring chaos
Albert Einstein said in 1947 that perhaps it was good that mankind had seen what a menace atomic power could be.
"It may intimidate the human race into bringing order into its international affairs, which, without the pressure of fear, it would not do," he said.
IT'S DEBATABLE whether the presence of nuclear weapons in the world has brought any kind of order into it other than the precarious balance of terror that exists among the nuclear powers. Imperfect as it may be, that balance of terror has at least prevented a third world war. The nuclear powers have had to rely more and more on diplomacy, propaganda and economic strategy than on their military might to gain their objectives in world politics, thanks to the pressure of fear that Einstein spoke of.
But as the rise of international terrorism in past years indicates, the pressure of fear can also bring chaos into the world. Recall all the assassinations, airplane hijackings, kidnappings and senseless bombings and killings for this terrorist in last weekend's papers—A Princeton University senior says he has designed a workable nuclear bomb based on public documents.
THE BOMB would weigh about 125 pounds, be as big as a beach ball and have about one-third the power of the 1945 Hiroshima bomb that killed 70,000 people and wounded thousands more.
The bomb would take about 18.5 pounds of plutonium and differs from other attempts in that the conventional explosive needed to trigger the nuclear reaction would be included in the weapon. The name of the explosive used by the Army in its atomic tests through a telephone call to the E. I. DuPont Company.
Government and military officials in the capitals of the nuclear countries will certainly point out, as they have in the
past, that it would be "impossible" to smuggle that much plutonium out of an atomic plant or weapons stockpipe. They will enumerate the various technical obstacles that stand in the way of building a "homemade" nuclear device. And someday, when the IRA or the PLO or perhaps a band of West German anarchists explode a nuclear bomb in a skyscraper or a sports stadium in some sort of bloody protest or blackmail attempt, those officials will say it happened because their strict and foolproof instructions weren't followed.
How can anyone doubt that if the capability for building a clandestine nuclear device exists, some mad and desperate group of terrorists will use it? It would take dedication, skill, organization and daring to build a bomb; many terrorist groups have shown those qualities before. And if those groups can rationalize the deaths of one or 100 innocent persons for their causes, why couldn't they rationalize the deaths of a few thousand?
The spread of nuclear power throughout the world for peaceful purposes has heightened the danger of terrorists gaining access to plutonium. India and Israel have shown that bombs can be made with the byproducts of atomic plants used for generating electricity, and that assume that as the number of atomic plants the world increases, some plants will have less stringent security than others.
SOMETHING must be done to eliminate that risk. If nuclear power is to be used worldwide, then there should be an international agency to oversee all nuclear facilities and ensure that dangerous materials are properly guarded or disposed of. Corporations such as Du Pont should be more careful about releasing information, and public documents detailing the mechanics of nuclear devices should be classified. Of action isn't taken, the menace of the atom won't bring order into the world, but will bring chaos.
By John Fuller
Contributing Writer
To the Editor:
Letters Good old days gone
Re: Mary Ann Daugherty's editorial in which she contends that these are "the good old days."
My first reaction, one of indignation, has since calmed to one of resignation. We, in 1976, have learned nothing from the past. Apathy is ever-present and our consciences are in peril.
It is comforting to note that no one has burned down the Kansas Union of late, that Archie Dykes need not fear for his life or chancellor's office and that the Kansas National犬 does not enforce a curfew on the streets of Lawrence.
I, too, have read with interest the Jayhawk yearbook of 1970. And it would seem to me that those were the best of times and the worst of times, and 1976 a year of stagnation.
But as the nation and Kansas both move steadily to the right, it is not at all consoling to hold that the genuine concern that (at disruption in 1970) is no longer prevalent in 1976.
Racial tension, antiwar and anauthortitarian sentiments have not and will not take a crusade to crusades" Ms. Daugherty applauds in her reactionary rhetoric. Self-concern is not the virtue, and a productive turmoil evil she would have us believe
The assertion that we have rediscovered the "good old days" is at best pretentious and at worst dangerous. I hope I can learn from these mistakes in which the notion of saving the world was more a practice than an ideal. And then I'll send my kids to KU or any other university to save the world a greater role for the real good old days.
John Cound
englewood, Colo. junior Destruction decried To the Editor:
Anyone who cherishes freedom of expression should detest the actions of the person who destroyed several thousand issues of Origins newspaper Oct. 1.
Origins was distributed free
of charge that morning, with the approval of the Events Committee, no less. During the afternoon, though, a buildings and grounds crew was told to destroy the remaining issues because the wind had scattered them so widely. That's quite remarkable on a windless day! According to Patrolman
We who published the newspaper at a great expense of time and money realize that the subject of Origins, creation versus evolution, isn't popular with many people. We realize that the ideas are revolutionary and amusing university supposed to be a forum for concepts and ideas? If someone opposes the creatismist point of view, he should speak out openly.
It wasn't just the right to give information that was violated. The right every student has to be informed information was also violated.
Doug Lamborn President, KU Creationists Club
Seven days ago a member of the President's Cabinet, one of the most influential men in the country, was forced to resign because he forgot that he was one of the most influential men in the country.
Butz' remark for public record
Earl Butz, former secretary of agriculture, proved that at least in his case, lightning can strike twice in the same place. Two years ago, Butz made a claim that lightning would hit the Pope. This time it was the blacks' turn to enjoy Butz' brand of humor.
BUT VERY few Americans today know what Butz said to bring about his own downfall. Most newspapers and broadcast media told their audiences that it was a racial remark about the "colored" man's sexual and bathroom preferences. People were told that Butz' colleagues in and out of Washington were clamoring for his resignation. The Republicans, who Roy Baldwin Republican vice presidential candidate, and Gov. Robert Bennett, among others, were saying Butz' racial slur was comparable to Jimmy Carter's remarks on lust and adultery.
THE KANSAN'S decision to print Butt" remark verbatim last Monday was based on the assumption that blind faith can go only so far. It took about 15 minutes of reading, and I decided to rush in where even the Washington Post posted to tread.
And almost everyone had to accept what they were told on faith—faith in the media, faith in the righteousness of Butz' and in the judgment of Dole and Bennett
And almost no one seemed to mind. After a day's hazing from a couple of teachers, the rest of the week was filled with students from students and faculty members.
Later, in the Post story of Butz resignation, the newspaper was a bit bolder "... Butz replied, 'Because colors only want three things... first, a tight (women's sexual organ), second, a tight and third, a warm place to defecate)'
When one sentence can threaten the job of a Cabinet member, people have the right to know exactly what that sentence is. It is an integral part of a news story
The New York Times: "... a reference to blacks as 'colored' who
Editor's Note
Debbie Gump
and to delete it is to cut out the heart of the stove.
IF PRESIDENT Ford was waiting to evaluate public reaction before plotting his course of action, the public reaction was quick and opinions of a few highly placed officials.
And when the media report that people like Dole and Bennett are comparing Butz' comment with Carter's, who is there to dispute them? Certainly not the public, because they don't know what Butz said.
Most newspapers paraphrased Butz' statement—his explanation of why many blocks don't join the Republican party—but some did. The flavor and taste could be unheild, a few samples:
THE WASHINGTON Post : "... the unnamed cabinet member said the vote could be won as it has in the past and then used a vulgarism for sex comfort."
Readers of area papers didn't fare any better.
The Topeka Capital-Journal: It didn't even try to paraphrase the comment "She had a boy." Then, it was 'a comment about the sex and bathroom preferences of blacks."
THE WICHTIA Eagle: "The comments themselves expressed in vulgar language the attitude that a black man is not interested in the political process as long as he has good sex, easy shoes and a warm place to go to the bathroom."
The Kansas City Star at least explained why it didn't print the comment. Under the heading "Omitted," the Star said, "I was not aware that you are vitiously are of reader interest, they are."
not printed as part of the news story because of their content, which many readers would find highly objectionable. The Star further said that it had more than curiosity to be served by reprinting the offensive words."
Curiosity usually surrounds an unanswered question.
The Lawrence Journal-World: "In his comment, as quoted by Rolling Stone and by the magazine New Times, Butz referred to blacks as 'coloreds' and promised to inform what he characterized as their sexual, dress and bathroom predications."
A STUDENT-EDITED paper, the Iowa State Daily: "... there are only three things that belong to your best, first a tight second, second and third, a warm place to (gulagard)."
Finally, the Manhattan Mercury protected the feelings of their readers by not printing it, but magnanimously offered to sell it at a dime a copy.
An obscurity by any other name does not smell the same. Paraphrase Butz' "joke" and you whitewash the man's cruelty and of judgement—any kind of judgment. The Londoners than Americans who know the full extent of his comment—both the London Guardian and the Daily Mirror ran the quote. Only the Toledo (Ohio) Blade, the Madison (Wisc.) Capital newspaper, let the readers to let the readers make up his own mind.
Then, if stones are to be cast, they can be cast intelligently and by those most skilled.
PSST...ORVILLE!
DID ANYONE THINK TO
BRING THE BULLET?
WESTPHAL
NEWS ITEM: CAMPUS POLICE SAY GUNS NEEDD
Campus sights cure doldrums
What to do on a Sunday afternoon? Especially a Sunday during the midsemester drolrums. The school work I had punted all week and weekend for some reason hadn't done itself. I just drove around campus.
The campanile looked inviting, so I parked and walked
MUSEUM
OF NATURAL HISTORY
TYRANNOSAURUS
SINGLE FAMILY RESIDENCE
GERTRUDE Sellards Pearson and Corbin halls peaked above trees on the hill to the right of the stadium. Miles north of them, but seeming so close as to be connected, big gray grain elevators jutted to the hillside beyond the drought yet rolling and beautiful, stretched to the horizon.
up the steps by Spencer Research Library. The view was great. Memorial Stadium is beautiful, and quiet—not like most October days. Hurdles on the track lay in disarray, much like the football team's hopes after the Oklahoma State the day before.
Most of the trees were green or slightly brown, but one's leaves blazed red, demanding attention. I could see the top of old Greed Hall, waiting rather than be turned into a parking lot.
A painter should have set up an easel next to me and captured the scene on canvas.
I WALKED to a bench by the campanile to read the Sunday newspaper I had with me. A flagphone and the Rock Chalk Cairn, a 1928 memorial made of stones from KU's first building, were the only things between me and the stadium. No one was there. Could I have two nearby tennis courts were empty.
The sun warmed my right shoulder. The breeze and shadow on my left shoulder chilled it.
People wandered by, usually young couples and their
children, enjoying the incredible weather. One such man in particular was a smaller of two brothers. He updied on top on me the
Greg Hack
bench to get a look. We traded smiles.
HIS OLDER brother, trailing,
was hoisted to the bench by
his father. The older boy recalled
having been there before.
"That's where the football team and the band play," the father said.
"I can't hear the band,"the younger boy said sadly.
"No, they aren't playing
"now," the father said, under-
standing his son's confusion.
There was a short silence
there. There were three
somes took in the scenery, looked
up and they were gone.
A FAMILY poured out of a van with Nebraska plates. It seemed natural that the stadiums evacuate to a football stadium.
"Nebraska's stadium is probably twice as big," one said.
I wanted to tell them I had sat on that hill in October 1967 when Bobby Douglas led KU to a 10-victory over Nebraska, but there were at least six of them, so I kent盯.
I had run out of interesting newspaper articles and, it seemed, visitors, so I moved to a tree overlooking Putter Lake.
A FEW trees were bright red, and even the murky water of the
lake and the dying grass around the pavilion looked all right in the sunshine.
A couple in leotards were doing stretching exercises. I expected some acrobatics to follow, but instead they just plopped down in the grass and dozed or looked at the sky.
Predictably, a Frisbee and a football were being tossed around. A blonde on a blanket took in some sun.
A YOUNG couple and their son, just down the slope from me, were fairly fairy. The boy charged into the duel and then their duel changed form as they hurled pinecones and berries at each other. The boy charged his mother, who kissed him up and over herself.
My eyes having invaded their privacy long enough, I looked back to my left. A brown-haired friend was trotting down the hill to join the blonde who was sunning.
Undaunted, the boy made another sweo. His dad intervened, tossing him over one shoulder and running off with him. The boy's laughter, mixed with anger, showed that he really didn't mind.
AT LEAST for a moment, I couldn't understand why some people are lured by the ocean, or mountains. Then I realized that, at least during Indian Summer, at KU, few people are.
0
My peace was turning to drowsiness, which I couldn't afford. I picked up my paper and walked into one of one of those tennis courts.
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 20, 2014
June and July except Saturday. Sunday and Holiday.
660414 Subscriptions are pay $9 a semester or $18
a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Debbie Gurn
Leigh Goss Editorial Editor
Managing Editor
Mary Ann Mahakah
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editors
Billy Boulton
Sharon Beaver
Chuck Alexander
Dale Eichler
Business Manager Terry Hanson
Assistant Business Manager Carole Reinhardt
Associate Business Manager Marcel Koehler
Assistant Business Manager Claire McAulay
Chief Information Officer Maureen McCarthy
Tuesday, October 12, 1976
5
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Concert brings out emotion of master's works
By BILLCALVERT
Staff Writer
A masterful showcase of musical technique and emotion was provided last night by pianist Gary Graffman in a concert before 1,000 people in Hoch Auditorium.
Graffman, who won the prestigious Leventitron competition in 1949, is the third pianist to be an artist in residence at the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts.
The showcase started with "Sonata in C Minor" by Franz Schubert. Melancholy passages characterized by glassy runes of the right hand clashing with ominous rumblings of the left set the original mood of a piece that captured the essence of the tragic life of its composer. Schubert led a life of poverty and sickness in his last years
and died at the peak of his creativity at the age of 31.
Review
"The problem with Schubert is to make an architect's whole of the disjointed sec- tions feel like they are earlier yesterday." "The emotions change more than they should and that's why it's so difficult to keep it as one whale. The audience is conscious of the fact a piece is lost."
NO ONE in the audience seemed to notice the length of the piece, which was about 25 inches long.
THE MOOD OF the piece wasn't totally one of depression. The second and third movements gave occasional buoyancy to the music, while the fourth and bouncy dance rhythms, which were beautifully executed by Graffman. But these always lapsed back into sadness and turbulence with awkward transitions in rhythm and fall with a new one taking its place.
Lonely practice
Garv Grafman. KU artist in residence this semester, practiced
yesterday afternoon in Hoch Auditorium in preparation for his evening performance.
of Graftman's "architects whole" and the warmly, applauded at the end of the peace.
Sharp contrasts in texture marked the entire piece, which switched frequently from the clear, passionate notes of the soft bass to the bold, emphatic chord composition of the climactic passages.
warmly applauded at the end of the piece. The variety continued in the next piece, "Variations on a Theme by Paganini" by Johannes Brahms. It opened softly like a nullaily and built to a thick textured tempest followed by an anticlimax of intricate runs, which Graffman did well throughout the concert.
GRAFFMAN SAID THE Brahms' piece was a collection of studies that employed almost every kind of technical problem on the piano. The beauty of Graffman's performance made the variations sound like anything but a collection of technical problems.
"Sonata No. 3 in A Minor" by Serge Prokofiev gave a new setting to the concert in the form of hard marital passages, which Graffman described as sounding "like an angry young man." The angry young man's lighter side was also displayed in the piece as interspersed serene and flighty melodies.
Several short works of Rergi Machaninoff capped the concert. These included Two Preludes, "Barcarolle," and Three Etudes Tableaux. These pieces had the greatest beauty of any in the program. The works were a significant romanticism of Rergianne's compositions.
THE BEST PART of these was the runs that Graffman executed with clarity and delicacy like waterfalls. Graffman's playing here, as well as in the Chopin
preludes he played in the encore, left a lasting impression on the audience of the thoughtfulness and emotionalism of his style.
REMINDER:
The KU Backgammon Club meetings every day, at 7 p.m. in the Oregon Dome in Kansas to score the score in 7:00 to play in the tournament
BRING YOUR BOARDS
On Campus
Events
TODAY: SEN. ARDEN BOOTH and ARNOLD BERMAN, candidates for the second Kansas Senate district seat, will debate at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green Hall. DESMOND HAWKINS, a staff member of the British Broadcasting Corporation, will deliver a lecture, "Dramatizations of Hardy's novels for the B.C.," at 4 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. A UNIVERSITY DATING WORKSHOP will be a 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. in 224 Fraser Hall.
TONIGHT: THE SUA QUARTERBACK FILM will be at 6 in the Union's Big Eight Room, PRE-NURSING CLUB will meet at 7 in the Union's Jayhawk Room. The KU SADDLE CLUB will offer a class on modern dance at 7 in 220 Robinson Gymnasium. The KU SADDLE CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Union's Orread Room, Joe Eagleman, associate professor of meteorology, will lecture on the KU SADDLE AND TORNADO SPOTTING at 7:30 in the Apollo Auditorium of Nichols Hall.
TOMORROW: MORTAR ARBO will meet at 7 p.m. in the Union's Oread Room. SUA BACKGAMMON CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Union's Parlors B and C. SUA BRIDGE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Union's Pine Room. KU BOXSTORE will meet at Power and Light Co., Ninth and Tennessee streets, for a cooking demonstration.
Grants and awards
People wanting to participate in the HOMECOMING WINDOW PAINTING CONTEST should contact Richard Branham, associate professor of design, at 864-4401 for contest rules. Judging will begin Thursday at 3 p.m., and the winner will be awarded a $25 prize before Saturday's game.
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Take a walk, a long one. Up mountains. Through towns. In Dexter hiking boots. Built for comfort and long, long wear. With sturdy steadfast soles and heels. Hike in and see our collection. Your feet will love you for it. That's DEXTERITY.
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6
Tuesday, October 12, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Bauer says Royals have a chance, but Yanks tough to beat at home
By GARY BEDORE
Now that the Kansas City Royals have split the first two games of the American league play-off, a major question remains: How many games will the Royals win in New York to win the five game series?
A man qualified to answer the question is Hank Bauer, retired New York Yankee rightfielder and former manager of the Baltimore Orioles and Kansas City A's.
Bauer, who now owns a store and stores in Kansas City, Kan., played on seven world champion Yankees teams, including the 2016 World Series champion. He also managed the Baltimore Orioles to a
four-game sweep of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 1966 World Series.
"The Royals have a good chance to win," Bauer said. "But the Yankees know how to play in New York and will be tough to beat there."
Bauer spoke of the winning tradition of
the team, how it might affect the
teams in the play.
The Royals' Andy Hassler is to face New York's Derek Elliott on the third game in the Western Conference.
Bauer talked about the young players on
"Some young players on the Yankees might want to live up to tradition, but others are forgetting about the past," he said. "We're used to them or themselves and start a new tradition."
Randy Robinson and Terry Potter thought they were going to spend yesterday afternoon working on their basic photography class assignment.
'I Spy' returns to KU, but it's no laughing matter
They never dreamed they were going to become involved smack in the middle of the road.
Robinson and Potter, both Kansas City, Mo., sophomores, were filming from the top of Tower A of Jayhawk Tower Apartments when KU head football coach Bud Moore saw them from his tower at the Jayhawks' practice field. Moore assistent head coach Lance Van Zandt to check out the situation.
Van Zandt arrived to the surprise of Robinson and Potter, who weren't aware of the spying charges circulating in the Big Eight. Both Texas and Oklahoma State were charged on their practices. The Sooners are the Jayhawks' opponents this weekend.
"I said, "What's the deal," Robinson said. "He (Van Zandt) grabbed the camera out of my hand and grabbed the lens out of Terr's hand.
"He asked me. How do I know you aren't being paid by the Oklahoma people." He took in his car and took the film and told us to come to Allen Field House if we wanted it."
"Coach Moore was very fair to us," Robinson said. "He said it was just a mistake and that he realized it was a class assignment. He is a very nice guy."
Robinson and Potter met Van Zandt at the field house, talked to Moore, who apologized for the whole thing, and then had their film returned.
Both Van Zandt and Moore declined to comment on the incident.
Things didn't go much better back at practice. The Jayhawks worked without them, and the Nets did not end Jim Michaels (sprained arm), cornerback Andy Reusel (deep cut on his chin), nose guard Dennis Balagna (brushed arm) and Jim Young (pulled leg muscle).
Moore said he wouldn't know later in the week the extent of the injuries.
the Royals and how the playoff pressure had affected them so far.
"If they miss one more practice day it's going to get critical," he said.
Harry Murphy, junior defensive end,
returned to practice yesterday after
missing the last three games with a broken
forearm, but reinjured his arm in the
workout. The seriousness of the injury won't
be known until later today.
"The Royals" youth is no big factor. Bauer said, "Mistakes happen to the best of players whether they are young or old. The players are doing a fine job so far."
Bauer has worked with Royals' manager Whitey Herzog and Yankee manager Billy Martin. He played with Martin on four Yankee world championships teams. Bauer and Herzog were associated with the Tidewater minor league management.
"Whilie did a great job this year, and I think he should be manager of the year." Bauer said. "He's got a lot of young talent and the team into a winner."
Bauer also complimented Billy Martin. "The players on the Yankees respect Martin and he's a good team leader," he said.
Bauer looks for the Cincinnati Reds to be the team to beat in the National League. The Reds lead the Philadelphia Phillies two games to nome in the National League play-off.
"The Reds are a great ball club, but a little weak in the bulpen." Bauer said.
Top-ranked teams make nice targets. And in intramural football action last weekend, the No. 1 rated team in the Fraternity A game against the No. 2 rated team shot down by the No. 2, Phi Delta Theta.
He said that no team would ever match the old Yankee dynasty because of the free agent draft. He said that it would be too hard for a team to play players and have a potential dynasty胜勺m
Phi Delts beat ATO in showdown
The Phil Dhi 21-13 victory boosted their record to 4-0 and the number one rating, as given by the officials. ATO, now 3-1, fell back to second.
Bauer criticized the high salaries players are making today.
A touchdown pass from Phi Delt quarterback Dave Fuchs to split end Jim Fender on the first play of the second quarter broke a 7-7 tie.
"I personally don't think any ballplayer is worth more than $100,000 per year." Hauser
Noting another change in baseball, Bauer said: "The players talked a lot less in the past, and did all their talking in the field. They played more on the field and play hard or to not play at all."
Reflecting on his past, Bauer said his biggest thrill was hitting a bases loaded triple to beat the Giants in the 1951 World Series. Another major triumph, he said, was managing Baltimore in the 1966 series sweep.
Intramural rankings change
There are two new leaders in the ratings of A division intramural football teams as announced yesterday by the Intramural Officials Association.
This week's rankings:
Phi Delta Theta (4-0) took first place in the Fraternity division, and Green Machine climbed from second to first in the Men's Division Den menia after last week's action.
1) Phtl Delta Theta (4.0)
2) Alpha Tau Omega (3.8)
3) Delta Ipsilon (4.0)
4) Delta Upsilon (3.1)
5) Alpha Kappa Lamda (3.1)
Alpha Tau Omega (3-1), which had been rated first in the Fraternity division, fell to second, with Crimson Tide (3-1) previously the Independent Men division, dropped to fourth.
1) Pi Beta Phi (2.4)
2) Alpha Phi (3.0)
3) Alpha Phi (2.1)
4) Alpha Phi (2.1)
5) Alpha Gamma Delta (1.1)
1) Green Machine (4-0)
2) Class Action (4-0)
3) Eagles (4-0)
4) Bad Dog Title (3-1)
5) Mad Dog Midgets (3-1)
1) Lewis (3-0)
2) Joes (3-0)
3) Trevor (2-1)
4) GDI (3-0)
5) Sellards Swatlogs (2-0)
The University of Kansas Theatre and
The School of Fine Arts present
at 8:00 p.m.
A Musical Experience Oct.15,16,22,23
Murphy Hall
Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris
Oct. 17 and 24 at 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre
Ticket Reservations 864-3982
K. U. students receive seat tickets without charge upon presentation of current I.D. card.
We Write All Risks Automobile Insurance
This program is partially funded
Gene
This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund.
The University of Kansas dropped to 15th in this week's Associated Press poll of 61 sports writers and broadcasters. KU was eighth last week.
KU drops to 15th after loss to OSU
The college football poll is based on a
20-18-16 14-12 10-9-8 7-6-5 4-3-2 1
point system (No. 1 team gets 20 points, No.
2gets 18, etc.)
Doane Agency 824 Mass.
2018-16-14-12-1, 2018-16-14-3-2-1
point
System. 1. No team gets 20 points, No. 2
gets 18, etc.).
Michigan 6 (7-0) 6-0
Oklahoma 5 (7-0) 1.027
Nebraska 1-0 1.027
USA 4-1 64
Maryland 4-0 1.027
Minnesota 4-1 483
Missouri 4-1 483
Ohio State 3-1 406
Texas 3-1 406
Georgia 4-1 202
Dallas 3-1 174
Tennessee 1-1 174
Note Darnel 3-1 130
ISU 1-1 129
Mississippi 4-1 124
Arkansas 3-0 27
Houston 3-0 18
Arizona 3-0 18
843-2931
Business Discount
Admiral Leasing & Rental
RENT-A Ford
23rd & Alabama
Make Daily Weekly Weekend Relays Overtime
Pinto 9.00 plus 1c a mile 39.00 plus 1c per mile 7.50 plus 1c per hour 1.50 per hour
Mawerick 18.50 plus 10c per mile 65.00 plus 10c per mile 7.50 plus 10c per hour 1.50 per hour
Mustang Staircase 11.00 plus 11c per mile 29.00 plus 1c per mile 9.00 plus 1c per hour 1.50 per hour
Granada Pick-up 11.00 plus 11c per mile 70.00 plus 1c per mile 9.00 plus 1c per hour 1.50 per hour
LTO 15.00 plus 12c per mile 39.00 plus 12c per mile 10.00 plus 12c per hour 1.50 per hour
Station Wagon 13.00 plus 12c per mile 89.00 plus 12c per mile 11.00 plus 12c per hour 1.50 per hour
Above Rates Include Insurance
Insurance Laws Require You Must Be 21
Can't
Buy It . . . Yet
the sound alternative
kunk smyl
Can't Buy It ... Yet
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kink FM91
The cast of the decade. The western adventure of a lifetime.
PG 45-9
The western adventure of a lifetime.
PG 35
JOHN WAYNE
LAUREN BACALL
"THE SHOOTIST"
Eve, 7, 30-9:30
Sat. Sun. 9:20
Granada
... a startlingly fresh and perceptive version written and directed by Jackson, who was basically interpreted by Jackson. The classic been so well served.
For those who enjoy foreign films. An ibn Isbn
Company of Great Britain. Royal Shakespeare
Company of Great Britain.
"At the center there is Glenda Jackson's marvelously impartial performance." — REX REED
"HEDDA" on film is all Glenda Jackson." — VINCENT CANDY
PETER PARKER
Eve. 7:30-9:30
Sat. & Sun. Mat, 2:20
The Hillcrest COLLEGE OF SCIENCE ENGINEERING
/
GLENDA JACKSON in
Hedda
PUBLIC ENTRY SUGGESTION
MEL BROOKS is back In the saddle. THE BLAZING SADDLES
Clevon Little, Madeline Kahn, Gene Wilder,
Harvey Kerman
Eve. 7:25 & 9:25
Sat. & Sun. 2:15
Hillcrest
R "69 MINUTES"
C In search of Noah's Ark
15 is it still there?
Eve, 1/15, 7:30, Sat. & Sun, 2,4
Hillcrest
PUTS TV BACK IN THE BATHROOM
Eve. 7:30,9:30
Varsity
102-725 ... Georgetown 91.464
"MONTY PYTHON & THE HOLY GRAIL"
and
"THE ROLLING STONES"
Show starts 7:30 Sunset
Vista RESTAURANTS
Vista
RESTAURANTS
Pork Tenderloin
79¢
Reg. 95¢
MONDAY • TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY
1527 West 6th, Lawrence 842-4311
COLD
REMEDY
THE
NORTH
FACE
The North Face Sierra Parka is America's number one cold fighter, engineered for comfort, warmth, and freedom of movement. It's filled with 10 oz.of the finest prime goose down, and we carry it exclusively.
GRAN SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
Tuesday, October 12. 1976
7
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O-State coach accuses Oklahoma of spying
KANSAS CITY, Mo—Oklahoma State coach Jim Stanley believes Oklahoma may have planted a spy in the Cowboy camp before last year's Sooner-Coyboy game.
"It's the most unethical thing a coach can do," Stanley said as the controversy continued to swirl over Texas coach Darrell Royal's claims that Oklahoma had obtained information from a spy before last night's Sooner-Longhorn clash in Dallas.
"They tell me a guy posed as a painter painting the ladies restroom and watched our practices all week last year before the OU game." Stanley said yesterday.
"This is all heresay," Stanley added. "But information came from the Texas Army Corps."
Stanley also indicated that he had reason to believe that Arkansas had spied on his RB.
Royal charged that a man identified as Lonnie Williams had relayed information to Larry Lacewell, Oklahoma's defensive coordinator.
University Daily Kansas
But Barry Swizer of Oklahoma and
brank Beyroles of Arkansas flatten the deni-
tion.
"Do they practice in the ladies restroom?" SWIZI laughed last night from his office. I needed this. I've been waited on for months, and Laverne Smith and I needed a laugh."
were "the most ridiculous thing Ive ever heard. What we need to do is check and see when the ladies restroom was last painted and if they practiced there."
Broyles, reached at his office, said
Akansas had never spied directly or indi-
dicate.
"I don't want any information gathered
I don't know," he said. "If it were offered, I'd
turn it down."
Not since a security guard smelled something amiss in the Democratic National headquarters at Watergate has such a furor over arrests and sviping.
Denials from both Lacewell and Switzer prompted Royal to offer to resign from coaching if the Sooners would take and pass a lie detector test on the matter.
All other Big Eight coaches said that during their careers they had heard rumors and allegations about spying. And all agreed that potentially valuable information could be obtained by a qualified observer.
There is no NCAA rule as such prohibiting spying. There is a rule against paying the expenses of a scout. And Big Eight Competes in the NCAA's women's agreement" not to scout each other.
"I don't know if anyone has ever spied on us," said Nebraska coach Tom Osborne. "I've heard rumors, but I've never known for certain. I'll occasionally receive a letter from somebody living in Boulder, Colo., or Lawrence, but you usually disregard it.
"I know I'd be very upset if I caught anybody on our place," said Missouri coach Al Onofrio. "I don't think it's right to watch anybody practice."
"But it could be of great value. It could be worth seven to 10 points depending on the astuteness of the observer. I really don't know if anybody in our conference would do
Coach Bud Moore of Kansas said if he caught a spy in his camp "I'd try to hold him down."
"I'd prefer not to comment," he added. "I would appreciate it if you guys would let me come in."
Colorado boss Bill Mallory said he had suspected somebody might be spying on his job.
"Oh, maybe I thought we've got skunked, but we've never had proof. I don't know what I'd do to him. He better be darn fast."
Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
Mallory said every week teams work on certain things in their game plans, "certain wrinkles you're working on that if the other team wants to look for it could be advantageous."
Kansas State coach Ellis Rainberger doesn't believe spying is in cormorant form. "It's nothing like that," he said.
Earle Bruce of Iowa State said, "I don't think there's much spying going on. I plan to keep my eyes on it, there's only so much you can do in football today. If I caught a guy spying on us I'd ask him to leave, or ask him down and show him what he'd probably know more than I would."
"I'd try to do what Darrell Royal did and
to our team's psychological advan-
tuation," he said.
Wanna get high & get down?
Sky Dive! KU Sky Diving Club Oct.14 at 8:30 p.m.
in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. For further information call Craig at 841-4704. Beginners welcome. Movie will be shown.
The Lawrence City Commission will be asked to approve the final development plan for a section of Parkmar Estates at tonight's commission meeting.
Parkmar plan on city agenda
The plan for the planned unit development was given preliminary approval by
the commission in August and has been recommended for approval by the planning
In more lighthearted business, the mayor will designate this Homecoming Week in his office.
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Spaghetti Dinner Meat Ball or Meat Sauce
$1.95 Reg. $2.25
Offer good Monday thru Thurs. Exp. Oct. 31, 1976
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanman are offered to all students without regard to their background. Please contact BIRL NAMING CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HAUS.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
AD DEADLINES
times times times times
15 words or
dozen $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word 01 02 03 04 05
to run
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
the UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UR business office at 864-5355.
864-4358
Want to buy open tone flute. Call John week
night. 884-2417 10-12
Reconditioned Schiwins -Lawrence Schwinn
Cyclery, 1820 W. 6th, 842-6353 10-13
V-S PET TA-5650 amplifier. Pioneer CT F-
2121 cass deck.皮板 Deepeen 结构. 1-232
4-749 cass deck.
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
BOKONON—Largest paraphernalia and bead shop in Lawrence, 12 Resd 8th St. 941-3600. 10-12
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and return only on your behalf (private calls please) at WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY.
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing
• Furniture • Antiques
• Imported Clothing
73Q Mass 841 7070
730Mass.841-7070
HORIZONS HONDA
Sales, Parts, Service
HORIZONS HONDA
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Jayhawk Towers 2 bed apartment ALL空调
Jayhawk Towers 3 bed apartment ALL空调
$275 per month. Laudry facilities. On bus line.
VIP only. Call (612) 498-0044.
Nimishit Hall contract, through May, for sale.
Call Debby 814-3447. 10-14
2 bdmr. apartment, very big, A.C., dilwash,
pool. $225 plus. electric plus. gas. 814-750-125
Sublase furniture one bedroom air, airtight furnished, electric kitchen $170/month (call 212-846-9355)
Sublease 2 bed room at all utilities paid, furnishings and cleaning on bus route. Call Ken after 12:30am or call Terry at 504-268-7691.
Reward. Must submit immediately to Succunct.
Must have a high school diploma or very close to
bedroom. 843-1811 or 864-1575. 10-14
Need to submit immediately! Small apt, private suite, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, located in the heart of the city. Included: Kit 811-5387 after 9 am, 10:14am - 6:14pm.
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 842-960-3000, 3200 W.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS, if you want it from the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS,
Excellent selection of new and used furniture.
Trade the Furniture and Appliance Center, 784
North Main Street, New York, NY 10026.
*Wetterstein Cultivation Not-Now on Malte! Make
*Western Cultivation Not-Now on Malte! Make
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Clerk Stores. tf
Excelent selection of used furniture, vertigrip-
ery windows, TVs and monitors, at any time.
m.p. free 6pm - p.m. free delivery.
1-345-687-1234 or 1-345-687-1235
STOCK REDUCTION SALE-Alivear Vaiit Gauri
Warehouse, 13100 Gurgaon Road, Delhi,
stock price but unbeatable at sale prices.
Chevron oil, 62.5 g/km, other models at 20%,
and Rhode Island. Located in the Auditoo
Ridg
10 speed Panasonic cycle-European components-
Gold and titanium parts $500 or best offer-
10-12 months warranty
78 Toyota Corolla sedan. Automatic, stereo 8-
track, excellent condition. Call 864-309-2800.
BOKONO—Largest collection of bons and
nacconies in Lawrence 12 East St. 814.
10-15
For Sale: 25" color RCA Console, Premier, Adver-
sure Stories: 18" BW-BCound stereo-albums,
36" TV-Stereo: 47" DVD-player
Silver Getzen trumpeter professional Model. Best offer takes it Call Chris at 814-2547 or 814-0897.
1. 4:5X8 Cragger CSR chrome telephone with Cooper
Charge Cord. Very good condition. Very
good phone Tom Ba43-3470 late-sale.
10-14
71 Vega Matlockback, 2 miles low mileage, silver,
416-843-1550; 416-843-1551; 416-843-1552; 416-843-1553;
416-843-1554. (415 Almpla Place, Num. 2, Ram.)
Must sell - Arp Ring Ssemble and Thomas orig-
nal with Mog Synthesize. Tom Palmer. 10-13
wagon wheel
10 a.m. — 12 p.m.
Everyday Is
Ladies' Day.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CRAFTSMAN
15 East 8th 844-2664
10-5 Monday-Saturday
Ponto Polaroid camera. Leaded only 3 times
Pat Call Mat 841-3831, 1329 Ohio.
10-14
Bicycle Touring Bags Karimur panniers and
hardwear with hardback bag. Like new, 10-14-
841-7766
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermals. Unicorns. et al. stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 843-3883.
Fender Basman Amp. 50-watt top with 4-12” speaker (Utah Electronics) Call 617-385-8244
New Kylophone acoustic guitar with case. Best offer: 892-8378. 10-12
'69 Chevy Nova. Call 864-5160. 10-13
1972 Super Besteel Volkswagen: 43,000 miles AM-
-rack track stereo radio, extra clean. Call 10-133
864-555-0000.
Demonstrator Cleanance. 1976 International Scout FM radio, deluxe interior kit, 800 miles; MF radio, deluxe interior kit, 800 miles; AMFM radio, deluxe interior kit, 800 miles; AM/FM radio, deluxe interior kit, 800 miles; ATV and Tractor Stock. 10-15
423, 243-440
1973 Datsan pick-up with软装 top baggage $20.00
1986 Datsan pick-up & TractorCo. 1548 $10.00
1983-434-2449
1983-434-2449
Epiphone electric base, perfect condition, rarely plays, very quick action. Includes hardcase shell and strap.
Markdown markers on all 76 Magnavox console stereos and components. Beautiful $49.95 command line interface at $39.95 or as point speaker speakers at $29.95. Rocky Bayhound 82a Maa. Open `till 15:30 p.m. (Thurs, 8:30)`. 10-22
CLEARANCE() Discussedin costy tires $2 each
500 miles. Drive with a low profile 1-2"
21" ill left (left) AW781 35-60-150
radials for Volkwagen included! Rock Stone
Rockstone Thru Woworth's front for tree service
Come thru Woworth's front for tree service
1966 TRA-A, completely reconditioned 1963 Chev-
lors. Includes 1963 MWF after 13 or 14 T威-
tever 2.30 pcm.
Complete 10-pgl. aquarium and stand. Call 841-213, ask for Harold.
Old Studio model trumpet, excellent condition.
Contact Alison 1230 Sharp Hall. 12:30 a.m. or for Tom Shepherd in Electrical Shop M-F. or 913-242-2732 after 5 p.m. anytime.
10-15
Check out tl
1930 used unicell base cpw= 56
1930 used unicell base cpw= $138
1930 used unicell base cpw= $479
1930 used unicell XL100
1930 used unicell MTS128
1930 used unicell MT152
1930 used unicell XL100
Baked wheat straw-good for parties, munching,
etc. Call 843-0848.
10-15
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th, 843-353-
10-15
HELP WANTED
FOR SALE- Classical Classical Yaril-Handered
for sale - Classical Yaril-Handered
portable ipv4 wireless- $32, 843-7268-10
10-18
AKA1 1721 W. reel-to-reel tape player/recorder
$616. Price includes Call 842-258. 10-18
Speakers: very efficient, crisp and clean 3-way
system. Must sell $200, $450, $941.
Part time Housewife/Secretary immediately,
adult to adult, with up to 18 hrs. To do general cleaning, some steam ironing. General letter correspondence, 3 references necessary. Call 842-9001 morning or evening.
Part time work; needed work available for Juniors and Seniors. Two TWO students are available for haining study. Two TWO students are available for haining study.
1919
Armadillo Bead Co
will be moving soon to
LOST AND FOUND
IBM equipment management and information system-management level position in administrative consulting services (IBM 730, 148) IBM and applied systems. Provides technical assistance and software improvements and troubleshooting technical wave improvements and troubleshooting technical softwar
Graduate Student Council has a part-time job opening in the Office of Hours. Hours are required for the position, project Qualifications: Knowledge of interest, concern for graduate student issues Knowledgeable, above minimum wage. When Immediately offered you may be eligible for work if You think you might be eligible for work on this project or for this job by calling Ellen Renyao at 843-614 or 842-144 any time. Or stop by the GSC Office at 843-614.
Watch for Grand Opening ad in UDKI
710 Mass. 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 841-7946
soon to The 8th St. Marketplace
Found: Small black & white fortune killer wearer. A large black purse with a small Apte Lafond forbidden pouch owner please cut out the bottom part of the purse.
Lost: bus pass with two football tickets and a driver's license in it. 864-2048. Reward: 10.3
MISCELLANEOUS
Found: Key ring. South 3rd floor terrace of Weston,
Oct. 6, a claim in Kansas Burial
Room.
NOTICE
Found: Female dog around 25th and iowa. Mixed
dog with male. Tan and Tan & waver.
& paws. Call 811-6471.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m. Mass.
CASHAF CAFE - Good food from scratch. Lunch
10:30-3:40 Mw. Mass. Please take backpacks.
10:40-3:50 Mw. Mass. Please take backpacks.
Swap Shop, 420 Mass. Used furniture, dining
table, cameras, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-
3pm, 8:30-5am.
Jim's Steak House Delicious food at reasonable prices 213-649-8700 4-11, Closed Tuesday, 8:45-9:45, 848-792-8500
HALLOWEEN MASQUARED DANCE by Gay
Services, a MARY HARTMAN, MARY HART-
T, and MARY HARTMAN. For the evening,
Prizes for winners. Oct. 2 to 8. 10-
15. Kansas Union Ballroom. $1.75.
GAY RAP GROUP: Thursday, Oct. 14, 7:30, 82-12
Kentucky
NAISMITH HALL
Now accepting
Applications
for Spring Semester
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
PERSONAL
"CAFE ain't got no servicee charge." 10-12
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
For Referrals.
Excellent instruction in guitar, banjo, as well as piano. Frequently available times available. Keyboard Stuckon (Schaumburg) 210-564-3987.
Paula, you finally made it in the DKY. Happy 39th,
20th, you old bag, Love H & J
16-12
SERVICES OFFERED
Math. Tutoring—competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 600, 601, 102, 103, 111, 115, 116, 117, 122, 123, 124, 136, 366, 358, 652, 653, 654, 656, test preparation. Rates are: B4-764-761.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH FAPERS. Thousands on campus.
Call: (800) 527-3222, mary.j.milho@lcs.harvard.edu
Marsh Lake, MA; Ave. 100, 306, HL, Los Angeles
Learn the authentic art of Belfry Dancing from a One-Owner, privately parked at Rhode Island Island. Learn how to dance with friends.
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a
bike that is durable and has good grip for all
entire bike -hibate and install your deterra-
ber, hub, crank and head and install any parts or
instruments you need.
10 speed $35.0, 5 or 3 speed $15.0, single speed
$35.0, 3 speed $15.0, 3 speed $35.0, complete pro-
grams $15.0, single speeds $65.0. Complete pro-
grams $15.0, single speeds $65.0. Need a new bike?
Come see us and the largest bike show in New York!
Bring along your $20 swimmer to trade in!
Lawrence Hall will be closed 1-4 p.m. W. 6th, B4-8280.
Generator sets $12.95—now $9.95 while last
Lawrence Schmidt Cyclery, 1820 W. edt (H: B6-6363
TYPING
Commercial Printing-Invitations, stationery,
programs, brochures, cards, posters, & much,
much more. We do custom work to meet your
needs. We call the Kansas Key Court
E. 9th; B42-48435 10-14
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-29
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mike.
Experienced typist—writing, spelling, copied,
corrected, 84-83, Mrs. Wright.
Need an experienced tpinter? IBM Selectle ITC
and HP Compaq tpinter bac tpinter (rcbion).
Pam Call at 825-7979
THEISI HINDING COPYING The House of Uder's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawsuze. Let us know if you are in Massachusetts or phone 848-753-0191 Thank you.
Typerd editor, IBM Pica这片, quality work.
Typerd director, IBM Pica这片, dissertations welcome.
U. School, 485-892-7180
Experienced Typist-IBM-Memory-Call 843-
107, 9471, ask for John.
Experimented ttymager, manuscript, thescal, call E
weekend. 844-631-521, 841-789-120
weekend. 10-15
FIELDS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
WANTED: CHRISTIAN MUSICIANS to form com-
music band in New York. Drums, bass, keyboards,
cello, keyboard. Call 212-546-7300.
WANTED
California alum needs tickets for homecoming
(415) 268-2390 or (408) 247-7177. 10-12
*
Need three tickets to OU-KU game. Will pay good
price. Call 843-2013. 10-13
Roomate for furnished apt. Very close to campus.
Call 843-0133. 10-12
Need 2 tickets to KU-100 or NU-Ketubang finders
2-2-15pm at KU-100, 2-2-15pm at NU-Ketubang.
Please be with info, with my secretary and I get back
information.
STUDY BREAK
1-6 p.m.
Schooners - 65c
Pitchers - $1.25
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
We now have openings for the remainder of the school year or for female roommates at Nainath Hall, 843-859-8989.
The
Need 1 ticket, anywhere, to Nebraska game. Call 843-7204. So keep. Keeping. 10-12
Student wished own room in together household with kitchen, dining table, cooking and cleaning. Must be close to campus and no nugs. After 4 p.m., 811-6139. 10-15
Ton dollar paid for a KU-GU tickets (anyway)
Christian Musicakers, Group to perform, The
Christian Musicakers, Group
Written Wednesday, please attend, 11:57
C44 898-6300
C44 898-6302
Male roommates wanted for large 2-bedroom apartment: See at 1011 Indiana, Apt. 5, att.
We buy good used cars Corvettes, Camaros, Novas, Mustangs, Firebirds, and Imported Sports Cars UNIVERSITY MOTORS 26 & Iowa 843-1395
TRY
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
- Pinball
The Lounge
GARAGE
- Pool
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Bud on Tap
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
- Foosball
- Pin-Ball
* Air Hockey
* Fooz-Ball
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
Aztec Inn
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
● Pool
● Snooker
● Ping Pong
Open Daily to 8 a.m. - Midnight (except Sunday)
American and Mexican Food
Hawaiian Wildlife Conservation
The Chalk Hawk
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont 842-9455
in the summer.
Use the student discounts
Keep your car healthy
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
at
Smiley car
38
8
Tuesday, October 12, 1976
---
University Daily Kansan
FALLEY'S
2013.11.15
FALLEY'S
2525 Iowa
Next Door to Gibson's
Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days
Prices Good Tuesday Through Sunday
Oct. 12—Oct. 17
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
Rodeo Golden Smoked
Boneless Ham $1.59 lb.
Rodeo All Meat Wieners 12 oz. 59¢
Swift Premium Bacon 1 lb. $1.29
Hot, Medium and Mild
R.B. Rices Sausage 1 lb. $1.19
Fresh Grade A Whole FRYERS...lb. 39¢
Rodeo All Meat Bologna...lb. 89¢
Ohse Luncheon Meats...5 Varieties 12 oz. 79¢
Van-De-Kamp Fish Fillets...12 oz.
Birdseye Cool Whip 59¢
9 oz.
FALLEY'S — The store that sells only choice grade beef, because only the best is good enough for our customers.
If you haven't tried shopping at Falley's, give yourself a treat instead of a treatment and come see your friends at Falley's.
Minute Maid Frozen Orange Juice 59¢
12 oz.
Libby Blue Lake Cut Green Beans 5 16 oz. Cans $1
Libby Golden Corn 4 17 oz. Cans $1
Libby Peas 3 17 oz. Cans $1
Libby Tomato Juice 46 oz. Can 49¢
Stokely Tomato Sauce ...8 oz. 6 for $1
Del Monte Pink Salmon ...15½ oz. $1.59
Falley's White Bread ...16 oz. loaf 4 for $1
Falley's Glazed Donuts ...dozen 99¢
Instant Nestea ...3 oz. jar $1.19
Paco Taco Shells ...Pkg. of 12 49¢
Coronet Bathroom Tissue ...8 roll pkg. $1.19
Tampax Regular or Super ...40 count $1.29
Colgate Toothpaste ...7 oz. tube 99¢
Q-Tips Cotton Swabs ...88 count 59¢
Pringle Potato Chips ...Triple Pack 99¢
Kraft Grape Jelly ...18 oz. 79¢
Heinz Country Brand Soup 19 oz. Can 3 for $1
Allsweet Margarine 16 oz. pkg. 39¢
Washington Red or Golden Delicious Apples 15 for 99¢
Fresh Cranberries 16 oz. Bag 3 for $1
Glacier Club Ice Cream ...1/2 gallon 87¢
Meadow Gold Yogurt ...8 oz. tubs 4 for $1
Golden Grain Mac & Cheddar Dinners 7¼ oz. 4 for $1
Shurfine Pure Cane Sugar ...5 pound bag 89¢
New Crop Tangelos ...10 for 99¢
All Purpose Red Potatoes ...20 pound bag $1.59
Mild Yellow Onions ...3 pounds 49¢
Snow-White Mushrooms ...8 oz. box 69¢
Olympia Beer 12 pack 12 oz. bottles $2.59
Bake-Rite Shortening 89¢
42 oz.
Fresh Tender Broccoli Large Bunch 59¢
Fresh Sweet Hawaiian Pineapple 79¢ each
Seven Seas Italian Dressing ...8 oz. 39¢
Seven Seas Family French Dressing ...8 oz. 39¢
Keebler Club Crackers ...16 oz. 59¢
Libby Small Whole Beets ...16 oz. 29¢
Libby Sliced Beets ...16 oz. 29¢
Libby Apricot Nectar ...46 oz. 79¢
Libby Fruit Cocktail 2 16 oz. Cans 79£
Libby Pear Halves 2 16 oz. Cans 79£
Libby Peaches 29 oz. Pumpkin 29£
FALLEY'S SAVE $4.85
Over Falley's Low Discount
Prices with These
Valuable Coupons
FALLEY'S REGULAR $6.49
BUTTERNUT COFFEE
3 pound can $5.39
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S HEFTY LAWN CLEAN-UP BAGS
5 pk. 79¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S REGULAR $3.49
BOW WOW DOG FOOD
25 pound bag $3.59
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S REGULAR $1.09
SKIPPY PEANUT BUTTER
18 oz. Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S REGULAR $1.03
KELLOGG'S FROSTED RICE CEREAL
16 oz. 83¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S REGULAR $1.31
HEAD & SHOULDERS LOTION SHAMPOO
89¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S REGULAR $2.65
SANKA COFFEE
$2.09
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S REGULAR $1.09
CASCADE
89¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S REGULAR $95c
BUC-WHEATS CEREAL
15 oz. 79¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S REGULAR $1.48
DIAL BATH SOAP
5 oz. Limit 4 with coupon good thru Oct. 14
Birdseye Cool Whip 59¢
FALLEY'S — The store that sells only choice grade beef, because only the best is good enough for our customers. If you haven't tried shopping at Falley's, give yourself a treat instead of a treatment and come see your friends at Falley's.
Minute Maid Frozen Orange Juice 59¢
12 oz.
Libby Blue Lake Cut Green Beans 5 16 oz. Cans $1
Libby Golden Corn 4 17 oz. Cans $1
Libby Peas 3 17 oz. Cans $1
Libby Tomato Juice 46 oz. Can 49¢
Stokely Tomato Sauce...8 oz. 6 for $1
Del Monte Pink Salmon...15½ oz. $1.59
Falley's White Bread...16 oz. loaf 4 for $1
Falley's Glazed Donuts...dozen 99¢
Instant Nestea...3 oz. jar $1¹⁹
Paco Taco Shells...Pkg. of 12 49¢
Coronet Bathroom Tissue...8 roll pkg. $1.19
Tampax Regular or Super...40 count $1.29
Colgate Toothpaste...7 oz. tube 99¢
Q-Tips Cotton Swabs...88 count 59¢
Pringle Potato Chips...Triple Pack 99¢
Kraft Grape Jelly...18 oz. 79¢
Heinz Country Brand Soup 19 oz. Can 3 for $1
Allsweet Margarine 16 oz. pkg. 39¢
Washington Red or Golden Delicious Apples 15 for 99¢
Fresh Cranberries 16 oz. Bag 3 for $1
Glacier Club Ice Cream...½ gallon 87¢
Meadow Gold Yogurt...8 oz. tubs 4 for $1
Golden Grain Mac & Cheddar Dinners 7¼ oz. 4 for $1
Shurfine Pure Cane Sugar...5 pound bag 89¢
New Crop Tangelos...10 for 99¢
All Purpose Red Potatoes...20 pound bag $1.59
Mild Yellow Onions...3 pounds 49¢
Snow-White Mushrooms...8 oz. box 69¢
Olympia Beer 12 pack 12 oz. bottles $2 59
Bake-Rite Shortening 42 oz. 89¢
Fresh Tender Broccoli Large Bunch 59¢
Fresh Sweet Hawaiian Pineapple 79¢ each
Libby Small Whole Beets...16 oz. 29¢
Libby Sliced Beets...16 oz. 29¢
Libby Apricot Nectar...46 oz. 79¢
Seven Seas Italian Dressing...8 oz. 39¢
Seven Seas Family French Dressing...8 oz. 39¢
Keebler Club Crackers...16 oz. 59¢
Libby Fruit Cocktail 2 16 oz. Cans 79¢
Libby Pear Halves 2 16 oz. Cans 79¢
Libby Peaches 29 oz. 49¢
Libby Pumpkin 16 oz. 29¢
Heinz Country Brand
Soup
19 oz.
Can 3 for $1
Fresh Cranberries 16 oz. Bag 3 for $1
Libby Fruit Cocktail 2 16 oz. Cans 79c Libby Pear Halves 2 16 oz. Cans 79c
FALLEY'S SAVE $485
FALLEY'S
SAVE $485
Over Falley's Low Discount
Prices with Those
Valuable Coupons
FALLEY'S
Regular
$6.49
BUTTERNUT
COFFEE
3 pound
can
$539
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $6.49
BUTTERNUT COFFEE
3 pound can $5.39
ButterNut
Coffee
MILK FOATS
Butter Nut
Nut Milk Beef
Coffee
FALLEY'S
HEFTY
Lewitt
Bags
FALLEY'S
HEFTY
LAWN CLEAN-UP BAGS Regular
$1.15
5 pk. 79¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 17
COUPOON
FALLEN 3/$1.47
MEINZ KETCHUP
14 oz. 3 for $1
Limit 3 with coupon
good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
NEINZ KETCH
14 oz. 3 for $1
FALLEY'S
Regular
$4.29
BOW WOW
DOG FOOD
$3.59
25 pound
bag
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.09
SKIPPY
PEANUT BUTTER
89¢
18 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.03
KELLOGG'S
FROSTED RICE CEREAL
16 oz. 83¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.31
HEAD & SHOULDERS
LOTION SHAMPOO
4 oz. 89¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
$2.65
SANKA COFFEE
$2.09
16 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
$1.09
CASCADE
89¢
35 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular 95c Buc-Wheats
BUG-WHEATS
CEREAL
15 oz. 79¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
4/$1.48
DIAL
BATH LOAD
4 $1
5 oz. for
Limit 4 with coupon
good thru Oct. 4
COUPON
SEACONT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
ats
N
7
8
N
PLEASANT
KANSAN
Royals lose, 5-3, near elimination
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, October 13, 1976
Vol.87 No.37
See story page six
Coca-Cola
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Quick supper
Julian Bond, former Georgia state representative takes a quick supper break between a press conference and his 8 p.m. speech in
the Kansas Union. Bond spoke to a packed Union Ballroom about the coming election and blacks' rights.
Bond focuses on Carter,blacks
By BETH SPRINGGATE
Julian Bond, Democratic state senator from Georgia, said last night that he would vote for Jimmy Carter for two reasons: Rep. Morris Udall, D-Minn., wasn't a candidate and Carter wasn't President Gerald Ford.
Voicing concern about the betterment of blacks in America, Bond said he expected Ford to continue the same policies that had marred his political history.
"The reigns of our government have been seized by the comfortable, the callous and the smug," for the "gratuous gratification of the gross and the greedy," he said.
BOND SPOKE to about 450 people in the SA's Election 76 Forum Lecture Series
"The government's attitude toward the poor has changed from benign concern to hostile and intolerant."
During Ford's 25 years in Congress, Bond said. Ford is against much legislation that would limit the use of carbon dioxide.
In the meantime, he said, the black infant mortality rate is double that of whites, black males die on an average of seven children. The black family earns less than $4,000 a year.
He said, "We remain the first to be hired and the first to be fired. For black people, it is sadly true that despite the war on Haiti, one-third of our children still live in poverty."
BOND PROPOSED to help the poor by federalizing the welfare system, creating a negative income tax for the poor and giving them free health care financed by the U.S. treasury instead of insurance companies.
He said that blacks were partly at fault for the position because they hadn't exercised their right to vote.
In the last election, 14 million blacks were eligible to vote, he said, half of them were registered and half of those who registered didn't vote.
He said that as long as peaceful options such as voting luked it been exercised, street protests would not be able.
AND HE NOTED that in the United States, it was hard to keep interest in movements as indicated by the decline in vigor for the civil rights movement of the 1960s.
"Only here do popular movements among the depressed seem to rise and fall as rapidly as do the phases of the moon," he said.
Despite new freedoms for blacks, Bond said, their condition in society has changed
"It is almost as if we were climbing a molasses mountain in showcases while everyone else rides a ski lift to the top," he said.
AT A PRESS conference before the speech, Bond said that he was bothered because the Georgia governor was a Republican candidates for president. He said that even Lester Maddox, former Georgia governor and candidate to run in the state, can Antioch wasn't included on the ballot.
"Neither was as impressive as he ought to have. Carter came off better in the game."
governor of Georgia, "Gov. Carter's reorganization made the state government into a more efficient machine."
He criticized both Ford and Carter for their poor showing in the debates.
He said that despite Ford's criticisms of Carter's programs while Carter was
"Each is allotted a mistake a week. I'm sure either could make a mistake that would condemn him to instant oblivion," he said.
He acknowledged that both candidates were guilty of blunders in the campaign.
Bond said that Carter's statement was a fault that Carter recognized and that Butz' statement was obscene and racially derading.
CARTER'S RECENT statements in Playboy magazine and former Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz 'racial remarks' are not at all the same thing." Bond said.
"It's like comparing the Magna Carta to
scribbling on a jooft wall." be said.
Bond said that blacks probably would lean toward Carter in the election.
"We are yellow dog Democrats. Some of us would support a yellow dog if the Democrats nominated one for president," he said.
ALTHOUGH BOND said he wasn't a yellow-dog Democrat, he said he would vote for Carter, but not because of Carter's party affiliation.
"Ideological differences by party are not as important as ideological differences by the person."
Inspection reports made by the Kansas State Fire Marshal's office on seven more University of Kansas fraternities and one scholarship hall stated that none of the buildings fully complied with the fire code.
He explained further that Ford was tight on spending for the poor, loose on spending for private business and defense and warm to people who were against civil liberties.
About Ford, he said, "Like Earl Butts, we face to talk about things that are tight, like the war."
"Anyone that tight and anyone that warm deserves to be turned loose," he said.
More fire violations found
The reports, issued Monday, brought the number of KU firemattenies in violation of the state fire code standards to 16. The reports on the remaining six other fraternities are still being processed by the state fire marshal's office.
Two fraternities, Triangle and Pi Kappa Alpha, don't have fire alarm systems in their buildings and Tau Kappa Epsilon, Alpha KappaLambda and Stephenson scholarship hall don't have fire alarm standards that meet state fire code standards.
BOB COLLISTER, president of Triangle fraternity, said yesterday that his fraternal body was moving.
because it was waiting to find out what fire alarm systems were acceptable.
"We'd hate to put something in and have the marshal come along and say it's not the right way."
Chris Carter, vice president of FI Kappa Alpha fraternity, said that in the past few years, the fraternity has
"When the house was built, they weren't required," Carter said. "It has been inspected since then and passed everytime until this year."
HOWEVER, LARRY Stemmerman, an inspector from the Lawrence fire department, said that fire alarms systems had been required in organized student housing since 1970 when the Kansas fire safety was revised by the fire marshal's office.
Since then, organized student housing buildings that didn't have fire alarms were built.
Deaths don't disrupt local vaccination plan
Bv BARBARA ROSEWICZ
Staff Writer
Local plans for swine flu vaccination are continuing despite the deaths Monday of three elderly Pennsylvania hours after they received the vaccine shot.
Kay Kent, director of the Lawrence Douglas County Health Department, said last night that the Kansas Health Department should continue vaccine distribution as scheduled.
Vaccination of Lawrence nursing home patients began Thursday. So far, she said, she has not received any word of severe reactions to the vaccine.
High risk individuals, those 45 or older and those with chronic health problems should receive the vaccine. Diabetes, can receive the vaccine in about two weeks, she said. Enough vaccine should be available for the rest of the Lawrence community the first or second week of vaccination.
THE KU MEDICAL CENTER immunization program is to begin Friday with vaccinations for top priority, high-risk employees, such as doctors and nurses that work directly with patients. Part of the vaccine supply is to be reserved for high-risk patients until more vaccine becomes available.
There are usually little or no side effects, Chin said, except for people allergic to eggs. The vaccine virus is grown in chicken embryos.
TWO OR THREE per cent of the adults who receive the inoculation may have some fever and aching, or redness and soreness in the area of injection. he said.
There are four manufacturers of the vaccine, Kent said, and Lawrence receives its vaccine from three of the companies. But she said she didn't know whether one was manufactured in Detroit, which manufactured the vaccine given to the three victims in Pennsylvania.
IT'S A "killed" vaccine, he said, which means it doesn't give a person a mild form of the virus, like "live" vaccinations, but it does allow them to be exposed to substances in the body to fight off the virus.
The vaccine distributed to nghr-risk patients is for swine flu and also for the
KU gets few benefits from group
ByJIM COBI Staff Writer
But University of Kansas officials say KU's limited participation in the organization of seven universities has cost little money. Although solid benefits of that participation are still available, the UMA has brought KU some grant money that it otherwise wouldn't have received.
Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said Monday that in addition, KU might be able to learn about adapting new technology to education.
The University of Mid America (UMA) hasn't received rave reviews for its accomplishments during two years of operation.
KU HAS BEEN more of an observer than an active UMA participant. Hutchison and Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said KU had been cautious about adapting, UMA's methods to educational programs offered in Kansas.
Jac McBride, executive vice president of UMA in Lincoln, Neb., said the program had four goals: to design and develop courses, to evaluate the effectiveness of using new communication methods in adult education, to assist member universities in the development of systems of education and to defend its expertise and results to the federal government.
In Iowa and Nebraska, the courses are offered by state television networks. The University of Missouri offers the courses through public and commercial stations Kansas State University offered one course last year over a local station.
MCRIDE SAID that "two or three" courses have been developed for television, but that six more were being planned and developed. He said new courses could be developed only when grant funds were made available.
most Kansas communities with local educational programs for adults. For further, Calgard said, the costs of attending courses by television would be prohibitive.
Although UMA officials are reluctant to admit that there have been problems with the equipment,
KU hasn't yet offered UMA courses.
HUTCHISON AND Ciliagar said Ramsay's extensive communication with parents in private schools provided
of developing such courses apparently have prompted some concern.
But Calgaird said participation in UMA could help KU develop the kinds of courses that could be used in the future in such areas as nurses' training or social work.
"NO DOUBT THE time will come when we'll see increased use of this media in instruction," he said. "To stay abreast of the latest developments, I am in touch with these kinds of programs."
Hutchison said that although television hadn't lived up to expectations in the field of education, it could be important in the future and should be studied.
Group plans teaching tools
Victoria strain of virus, which was the prevalent fun last winter. Chin said.
The University of Mid America (UMA) has no campus, a limited number of students and involves the people of five states.
It is an organization of seven universities that works to develop new teaching methods for people who haven't or won't come to college campuses for post-secondary education. It is a model program, the only one of its kind in the nation, and is funded by federal and private foundation grants. It is used by universities for people who live in isolated areas or for those work schedules prevent them from taking college courses.
UMA was begun in 1947 after officials of the State University of Nebraska (SUN) discovered that Nebraska's population of about 1.5 million couldn't support SUN's educational programs. Those programs include radio and video cassettes and newspapers.
In an attempt to gain higher enrollments in these programs to justify their costs, the cooperative group of UMA was formed. Schools other than KU and SUN that are participating are Kansas State University, the University of Iowa, Iowa State University, the University of Missouri and the University of South Dakota.
Television instruction is costly. Calgary and Hutchison agreed, and remote because they have a large network.
"I personally don't expect an epidemic of swine influenza, but vaccination would not be a problem."
So far, Guam is the only place that has reported large numbers of fau cases, he said. The virus has been isolated and found to be of the Victoria strain and not swine flu.
"It doesn't replace, in the eyes of students, the kinds of relationships that students seem to prefer. It's more a device for information or entertainment," Hutchison said.
Chien Luu, director of the Med Center Division of Infectious Diseases and a vaccination advisory committee member, also said it was unlikely that the vaccine would cause death and that a swine flu epidemic was imminent.
CHANCELLOR ARCHIE Dykes, a member of UMA's board of trustees, said KU was handicapped in trying to use UMA materials because the University lacked an educational television network. However, he said, KU had no reason not to participate in UMA because there was no financial involvement.
KU's only financial commitment to UMA is the expense involved in sending information on the KU website.
Cailgaard said KU hadn't developed any courses for UMA and had little community interaction.
"We were invited to become involved. It was possible in theory that we all could join together and do a better job of developing courses than and individually." Calgaud said,
"OUR INTEREST is principally to get them to deliver into new areas," he said. "The department of psychology graduates no longer in school, Calgaird said, might be a possible adaptation of UMA concepts. He said programs could be used to prepare students for degrees or relicensing examination."
See BENEFITS page nine
"I think it's a good idea to take the vaccine if you're in high-risk group," he said. "I have never recommended flu vaccination for healthy, young individuals. I don't want you to go without itself. And flu vaccine is generally only 75 per cent effective."
Milton Hassel, director of development for the State University of Nebraska. (SUN)
Earlier reports had said that Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity had been forced by the state fire marshal's office to either remove them or move their third floor or build approved fire escapes.
However, Ed Hite, president of Phi Kappa Sigma, said yesterday that fraternity members were still allowed to live on the third floor, but they couldn't sleep there.
★ ★
Hite said that the fire marshal's office had issued his fraternity a report that stated that the present stairway would qualify as an approved fire escape if a door was admissible. The fraternity house already had another fire escape leading down from the third floor.
the inflections of the state fire code found in
the Kansas State Fire Manual and one scholarship hall by
the Kansas State Fire Museum.
ALFHA-KAPPA LAMBADA- All exit doors should be installed with a locking system detector system should be installed with an alarm.
BETA THEA TREX-Pl. The unit contains five secures should be mounted on a wall or door. It is also suitable for boiling with metal hardeners, metal foil and boiling water. Metal hardener is one of the materials being tested.
PHI KAPPA THEETA - Fire extinguisher should be
installed and maintained.
Emergency lighting should be installed and all bees in the walls and ceiling should be sealed with a fire resistant
The installation should have an approved air leak leads to the fire alarm system and an auxiliary power unit and the fire alarm system with an auxiliary power unit and a control panel.
coded and maintained in an approved alarm and smoke
power unit and an approved automatic extinguisher.
Power unit and an approved automatic extinguisher.
Deducts should be removed from halls and stairs and Debt should be removed from office windows. Debt should be removed from a door and a fire door should be installed at the bottom of the building.
the stairway.
The north exit door should be repaired.
STEPHENSON SCHOOLBLAIR HALL. An approved building with an auxiliary power unit to repair the outdated fire extinguishers and fire extinguisher stations should be trained and maintained, and the area under the infrastructure should be off with emergency access.
The refrigerator should be wired in accordance with the electrical wiring standards in the National Electrical Code. The sensor detector system should be installed with an auxiliary detector system to be tested. Fire extinguishers should be tested and maintained.
Fire doors should be adjusted to be self-cleaning, and the furnace room should be required to be flammable.
TRIANGLE- An approved fire alarm and smoke detector system should be installed with an auxiliary
Fire extinguishers should be tested and maintained and the emergency lighting improved.
Approved fire execcs should be installed on the east and all exit doors should be properly identified as such.
the emergency inputs require that all food be served in the kitchen range hood should be serviced and all hose links should be.
KANSAS
HAWKS
Jewish festival
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Brian Salvay, Shawnee Mission sophomore, sits in theukkah that he built for this week's Jewish festival, Sukthok. The festival celebrates the end of harvest and commemorates the exodus of Jews from Egypt. At that time they wandered in the wilderness and lived in huts. See story page 9
2
News Digest
From the Associated Press
UAW settlement approved
DETROIT—United Auto Workers, including sometimes disident skilled tradesmen, have approved a proposed settlement in the four-week-four Ford Motor Corp. strike.
The strike by 170,000 hourly workers in 22 states will continue because of the continued threat to the health and safety of its workers. **11A President Leonard Woodock announced ratification nearly one week to**
Law President Leonard woodcock announced ratification nearly one week to the hour after the agreement was reached with company bargainers.
He said that the vote among production workers was 35,192 to 22,026, and that tradesmen voted 8,957 to 8,468.
Cover-up convictions upheld
WASHINGTON—The U.S. Court of Appeals yesterday uphold the Watergate cover-up convictions of three of former President Richard Nixon, Robert Koehler and Robert Mapplethorpe.
In a 300-page opinion, the six judges said defendants in the four-month-long conspiracy trial had been properly tried and found guilty of "wide-ranging conspiracy."
A fifth defendant, lawyer Kenneth W. Parkinson, was acquitted when the jury returned its verdict on New Year's Day 1975.
A separate opinion said Mardian, a former assistant attorney general, should have been tried separately from the three other co-defendants, John Mitchell, H. R. Jones and J. E. Hood.
Coffee prices rise again
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.-General Foods Corp., the nation's largest coffee producer, said it had raised wholesale prices for the second time in more than five of its five locations.
The 5.5 to 6.4 per cent increase follows a move by Nestle Co., which earlier this month boosted wholesale prices on instant coffee by 7 to 14 per cent. In both cases, company spokesmen said the increases were caused by sharply rising green coffee prices.
General Foods last raised prices June 17, and a spokesman said the latest increase may be felt by consumers in about a month.
But a New York supermarket executive said many stores, fearful of losing customers, were selling coffee at little profit or at a loss.
"Some stores haven't passed on a March increase, others are absorbing the July increase," he said.
Ford retracts statement about USSR domination
By The Associated Press
Jimmy Carter rested and studied yesterday while President Gerald Ford tried to mollify ethnic groups and took off on his fourth trip of the presidential campaign.
for the sixth time since he asserted during last Wednesday's debate that there is no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe, Ford explained his position. He told 18 ethnic leaders in the White House Cabinet form that he had made a mistake in saying that
The President then flew to New York City and told a largely Jewish audience that if elected he would visit Israel and the Middle East to contribute to a permanent peace settlement.
Ford also said he was "pressing for a new movement" to relieve what he called 'the plight of Soviet Jewry,' promising to continually raise the subject of Jewish emigration from the Soviet Union with Soviet leader Leenid Brezhnev.
Carter's staff issued criticisms in his
name of the Ford administration's farm and health care policies. But the Democratic presidential candidate himself, back in Plains, Ga., after eight days on the road, said he was devoting two days to his family, not his campaign strategy.
Little new ground was broken on campaign issues.
In his morning meeting with leaders of groups that represent Americans of Eastern European descent, Ford said, "The president didn't express myself clearly. I admit it."
He went on to say that countries of Eastern Europe "are, of course, dominated by the Soviet Union." If it weren't for the presence of more than 30 nations there, these nations would have lioned since achieved their freedom," Ford said.
But, he said, "the United States never has, does not now, and never will recognize, accept or acquire in this Soviet domination of Eastern Europe."
Less than two weeks after it began, the nationwide swine flu vaccination program was suspended in eight states yesterday after three elderly persons died within hours of taking the flu shots in Pennsylvania.
Inoculations were mated in Illinois, Texas, Wisconsin, Missouri, Germany, Austria and Alaska.
By The Associated Press
Florida officials also reported that a 63-year-old man suffered a fatal heart attack after 91 minutes after receiving a swine flu inoculation. However, state health officials said they doubted the attack was caused by the vaccine.
Florida health officials said the vaccine injected into Saufel Gelman came from the same batch used in Pittsburgh, where three nurses died after getting swine flu inoculations.
Swine flu shots suspended after three deaths
Robert Bowers, director of the Oklahoma City-County Health department, said he had received two reports of elderly persons in Oklahoma dying about one hour after receiving swine flu shots. He said that physicians handling the cases also died of chronic pulmonary disease and not from the inoculations.
Paul Hughes, director of the Broward County Health Department, said he doubted there was any connection between Gelman's death and the inoculation.
Officials in New York, Michigan and Utah ordered the with-holding of more than 200,000 doses of vaccine that came from the same lot of vaccine used in Pennsylvania. The vaccines they would withhold another 40,000 doses, it wouldn't stop the program in that state.
The swine flu shots continued in at least 15 other states, Officials in Massachusetts, Florida, California and elsewhere said they have no intention of停顿 their program
Officials of the federal Center for Disease Control said there were no plans for a nationwide halt in the swine flu program because of the Pennsylvania deaths.
"We have no evidence to suggest that these deaths were caused by vaccine or the vaccination programs," David Sencer, director of the center, said. "Nevertheless, this is a highly unusual cluster of deaths and requires a full investigation."
In New York City, the largest municipal swine flu program in the nation began on
All three of the Pennsylvania deaths were attributed to heart attacks, which occurred Monday within hours of the time the people were being evacuated by Alhenghey County Coroner Cyril Welch. said.
The cause of the heart attacks wasn't known, however, and that was the concern of state, federal and local health investigators.
Supreme Court won't test 'equal time'ruling
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court yesterday declined to consider an equal time challenge to this year’s test against the federal and to news conference held by candidates.
An FCC attorney, Stephen Sharp, said the only remaining suit over the presidential debates was filed by Eugene McCarthy last week.
"Although the court's action today is not hearing on that case, for all intents and purposes," Mr. Sanders said.
The court refused to review a Federal Communications Commission ruling that political debates and news conferences by the committee are exempt from the equal time principle.
The television networks, the FCC and the League of Women Voters, sponsor of the debates between the presidential and vice-president, voted to reject the court to let the FCC ruin stand.
The equal time doctrine, shaped by Congress in 1934, says that if one candidate is given use of broadcast facilities, other candidates must be given the same opportunity; office must be given the same opportunity.
The court, with only Justice Byron White recording his disagreement with the decision, said it would not consider an appeal that could have been filed by Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N.Y., the National Organization of Women and the Office of Communication of the United States.
chances for success more difficult," Sharp said.
McCarthy, a former Democratic senator from Minnesota and now an independent candidate for president seeking to be included in the debates between President Gerald Ford and Democratic candidate Jimmy Carter, filed his challenge in the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals here last Tuesday.
That court, which has already upheld the FCC ruling, hasn’t reached a decision on the MMI.
The Democratic National Committee argued that presidential news conferences gave unfair advantage to the incumbent, Chisholm and the National Organization for Women called the FCC decision 'a setback for minority and female candidates who traditionally have had the most difficult time obtaining media exposure.'
In other actions Tuesday, the high court refused to reconsider its decision striking the school board's license.
The court ruled on July 2 that although executions in general are constitutional, laws like those in Louisiana making capital punishment mandatory for certain crimes are not.
In seeking a rehearing, Louisiana officials said that a two-year-old state constitution empowered the Louisiana Supreme Court to guard against unconstitutional application of the death penalty.
TOKYO (AP)—Mao Tse-tung's widow and about 30 other top radicals in the Chinese leadership have been arrested or detained in a purge of those who opposed Mr. Huang Zhenqing's elevation to Communist party chairmen, news reports from Peking said yesterday.
The newspaper Ashi said the radicals had been plotting to name 62-year-old Chung Ching, Mao's widow, to the party and would be by her husband until on September 7.
Mao's widow arrested for opposing premier
Kyoto news service, in a Peking dispatch, said a government spokesman announced last night that Hua had been named party leader. Wall posters had appeared in Peking last week indicating his succession, and Mr. Hua, an official announcement, apparently used the unresolved power struggle between radicals and moderates.
The reported arrest of Mao's widow and other radical leaders meant, if true, a victory for the moderates and a reaffirmation of Mao's commitment with the United States and the West.
It also could mean tentative moves in Peking to improve relations with the Soviet Union, which have been seriously strained because of ideological differences.
China's official Hishina news agency continued to refer to Hua only as premier.
The immediate impression was that Hua has joined those who stress economic development with outside help, and effective results, rather than endless revolution.
Experts in Washington said the ascendancy of moderates could bring increased economic ties with the United States and, in turn, a pressure against U.S. support of Taiwan.
Ahsai quoted a reliable source in Peking at saying the radical group was accused of being a terrorists'帮派.
Chiang Ching, Mao's fourth wife, rose to prominence as a leader of the 1960-69 cultural revolution and was a key influence on her husband during the past decade.
his name during the six months of his life. They tried to use the forged will to get Chiang Chied elected party chairman, the source was quoted as saying.
Besides Chiang Ching, those arrested included party Vice Chairman Wang Hweng; Vice Premier Chun chiao-chao, who was frequently mentioned as a possible premier; Politburo member Yao Wenyu; Cultural Minister Yu Hui-hung; Mao Yuan-hsin, nephew of the late chairman and secretary-general of the People's Daily and executives of the official press.
The Asahi report quoted the source as saying that Chiang Ching and the three top radicals-Wang, Chang and Yao—were arrested when they attended a meeting of
Ahali saiited its source as saying Chiang Ching and her supporters were able to issue directives in Mao's name during his last years, but the leaders weren't allowed access to him.
the party's Central Committee last Thursday. The others were arrested or detained
Kyoto news service said Chinese officials commended it, to all inquiries about the report.
Foreign residents of Peking, reached by telephone from Hong Kong, said reports of the arrests at the party meeting were circulating freely in the city.
The arrests, if true, were underscored by the fact that Chiang Ching, Wang, Chang and Yao were among the first six officials listed as attending a forum in Peking last Thursday, the eve of the 27th anniversary of the People's Republic. Such lists are an indication of rank in China. Chiang Ching lost her invulnerability after Mao's death,史
Health officials in Allegheny County said the vaccine in question was produced by Parke Davis & Co. of Detroit and was part of Parke Davis vaccine lot A19333A.
The dead, two women and a man, were all in their 70s and had histories of heart or lung problems. Wecht said. Their deaths could be caused by the stress of getting the inoculations, he said.
Vaccine from the lot was distributed around the country and caused some states to suspend inoculations. At the same time, officials in others states said they were going ahead with flu shot using vaccine from the Parke Davis lot.
A Parke Davis spokesman said the company had distributed more than eight million doses of vaccine and confirmed that if it had been shipped to Allegheny County.
Although there is no evidence of problems
with the vaccine used in Allegheny County, Sencer said, some unused samples will be sent to the Bureau of Biologics at Rockville, Md., for testing.
Sencer said he thought one reason the Pennsylvania deaths came to light was the close attention being given the swine flu program by health authorities.
The Disease Control Center, a branch of the U.S. Public Health Service, is running the government's $123 million program to provide immunization against a possible swine flu outbreak
The center dispatched two doctors to Pittsburgh to investigate the deaths. A spokesman said they were sent to "assure ourselves that this was just a coincidence."
There have been no reports from anywhere in the country of deaths or serious reactions directly attributable to the swine flu, even Mr. Greetho, the spokesman for the Center, said.
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Few students demand to see files
By KENNA GIFFIN
Staff Writer
University of Kansas students haven't yet descended in hordes upon administrators, demanding to see their confidential files, documents and accounts of family Educational Rights and Privacy Act.
The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act provides that present and former students have the right of access to educational materials within 45 days after access is requested.
The act is better known as the Buckley amendment, after Sen. James Buckley, Cons. R-N.Y., the bill's author. The bill went into effect Jan. 1, 1975. Some confidential letters filled before that time, including letters of recommendation, still is confidential.
ADMINISTRATORS WHO deal with confidential records, such as those in job placement, say few students have asked to see their letters.
Earl Nehring, chairman of the department of political science, said yesterday few students were interested in seeing their files. The department doesn't even have a written statement for students who wish to waive their right to see their confidential records. Other administrators structors usually understood whether recommendations were confidential
POLITICAL SCIENCE students may see their confidential files, but the files are screened first, he said. Letters written before Jan. 1, 1975, would be removed before the files are opened because they are still considered confidential.
Herold Regier, director of the School of Education placement bureau, said the
majority of education students had waived their rights to see their files. About 100 students exercised their right of access within the last year.
He said professors probably weren't influenced in writing recommendations even when they knew students could see the letters. Although some departments strongly urge students to waive their right to placement because the appropriate placement bureau didn't, be said.
One advantage for a student knowing the content of his recommendations is that he can judge how to approach job searches and interviews better. Regier said.
GLY, DICK, dean of admissions and records, said the Buckley amendment hadn't affected the central records administration. Strong Hall are permanent records, which are transferred to students' transcripts. There are no confidential records because the University doesn't require letters of recommendation for admission to the University.
The Buckley amendment regulations did create a considerable amount of paperwork for the Office of Student Financial Aid, Steps II, associate director of the office, said.
ANY INFORMATION the office has on a student can be shared among offices within the University, but students must fill out forms approving the release of the information to anyone outside KU that may need the confidentiality of student and parental records, he said.
Buckley amendment took effect, Weinberg said. The reasons why a student receives less financial aid than he thought was right, or doesn't receive any financial aid, are explained to the student in writing by the financial aid office, he said.
There haven't been any student requests for access to financial aid files since the
The amendment hasn't made life any more difficult for the University Relations Division of Information, which writes press releases about KU students and activities.
LARRY KNUPP, director of the information division, said his division didn't usually try to get student permission to use information about them unless parents'
names and addresses were used. Then the student is asked to sign a form giving their name.
Students who are on an honor roll can call the information division if they don't want that information sent to their hometown and send it automatically if they don't call, Krupp said. Graduating students can choose whether their graduation is announced by indicating their preference on the application for graduation and they fill out the semester they graduate.
When the privacy act was passed in 1974, the Office of Student Affairs prepared a list of student records at KU. The list describes the nature of students' nature and the nature of access policies.
KU credit union has open house
The KU Federal Credit Union will celebrate the opening of its new office in 101 Carruth O'Leary with an open house between 9 am. and 3 p.m. today.
Class to see British plays
This winter students at the University of Kansas and other institutions can take advantage of a seven-day tour to London for a visit to a criticism of contemporary British theatre.
"The purpose of the tour is to give students background in current British theatre, criticism of British performances and to study actual British production techniques." John Bush Jones, associate teacher, English and course instructor, last week said.
The credit union, a nonprofit savings and loan agency for faculty and staff members, was housed in the basement of Strong Hall moving to Carruth-O'Leary last spring.
The 15-year-old credit union offers its members free life insurance, payroll deduction on loan repayments, annualization of the faculty payroll program, in addition to low interest loans. Janet Sterns manager of the credit union, said yesterday.
About 1,200 faculty and staff members belong to the credit union, she said.
"We'll see a range of British plays- classical, early modern, newly received music."
Each student planning to participate pays
$200 for round trip tickets and stays at the
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Performances will be conducted by the Royal Shakespeare Company, the National Ballet and the English Stage Company, and the English Stage Company of the Royal Court Theatre.
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The combined course and tour, the first of its kind at KU, is scheduled to begin Dec. 31 and return Jan. 8. Aside from attending plays in London, there's also the possibility of seeing plays in other parts of England. The tour, sponsored by the English department, is a three-hour credit course offered for both undergraduate and graduate students.
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In London the group will conduct daily discussion seminars and schedule interviews with prominent English directors, playwrights, actors and producers.
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The tour will be opened for all students, including those in adult education. Adult education students will participate in only the tour.
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Wednesday, October 13, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
Campaign: pappy days
Jimmy Carter and Jerry Ford continue to hound each other on such important topics as the freedom of Poland and the wisdom of giving an interview to someone he is going to discuss something equally important: the Nielsen ratings.
Two ABC shows, "Happy Days" and "Laverne and Shirley," are No.1 and No.2 for the second week of the current season.
1 SAW the opening show of "Happy Days" and it disappointed me, but I haven't seen the No. 2 television show in America, "Laverne and Shirley." The preview of two girls driving over a sidewalk in an old convertible failed to attract me to this popular show. Perhaps I am missing something, but for the most part I think I will ignore No. 2.
3. NBC Monny Night Movie, "Dawn Portrait of a Teenaged Runaway"
4. NBC Sunday Night Movie, "Earthquake" (Part II)
5. "Bionic Woman"
6. "Charlie's Angels"
7. "All in the Family"
8. "Rich Man, Poor Man"
9. ABC Sunday Night Movie, "The Way We Were"
11. "M-A-S-H-'
12. "Family"
10. "Baretta"
13. "Alice"
14. "Welcome Back, Kotter"
15. "Good Times"
16. "Barney Miller"
17. "Captain and Tennille"
18. "The Waltons"
20. "Little House on the Prairie"
19. "One Day at a Time"
MOST AMERICANS, if the television people can be believed, spend their leisure time in front of the boob tube. That list, then, is the ranking of what Americans like to watch while enjoying their favorite pastime.
Both presidential candidates seem more interested in debating the use of dirty words than in debating their political differences.
For the most part, I think that people are better off watching "Happy Days" than listening to the speeches of the current campaign.
As long as sex, lust and racial jokes preoccupy the candidates, most people would be better off watching to see whether "Laverne and Shirley" can edge out "Happy Days," than listening to Carter and Ford.
By Carl Young
Contributing Writer
A requiem for an era
By K-CEE COLBURN
Quarter Writer
The man crouched in front of the students. His face, etched with lines, barely began to show. He pursued his beliefs—prison, harassment, and leaving the priesthood. The students assumed the lines were merely decorations, not all, the man had white hair.
Guest Writer
The students, some comfortably clad in their carefully styled denims, others outfitted in their polyester slacks, the students who are concerned over the threat to world peace and the dangers of nuclear power. The students listened politely, but passively
THE MAN wasPhilip Berrigan, the former Catholic priest and outspoken critic of the Vietnam war. He had been used as a speak in Missouri City students. But what he actually did was unconsciously conduct a requiem, a requiem for a
bygone era that had beer, characterized by antiwar activism, opposition to nuclear arms proliferation, and the desire to improve the quality of life in this country.
The epicenter of these movements had been on the college campuses, and Berrigan had been one of the national leaders whom students had idealized. But the students Berrigan found at UMKC last week were far more articulate than the student group he had rallied in the '60s. The UMKC students lacked the zeal and devotion their brothers and sisters had felt so passionately for this man—to these contemporary students he was something of a failure. They have sympathized with what he said, they lacked the visceral empathy other students had felt in the past.
THE UMKC students weren't of the generation who agonized with Berrigan over the draft, who supported him during the
trial of the Cantonsville Nine, and who watched him go to prison, having lost in his attempt to prevent young men the most atum atUMK the threat of being drafted is history.
The man now lives in a black ghetto in Baltimore, Md., with his wife, a former nun, and continues to pursue his ideals. He is now living to reflect the toll his commitments have taken on him.
The man sounds more weary now. For years he has been fighting for what he deeply believes to be right, and now he is facing a new obstacle. In the past he has struggled with hostility and resistance to his ideas; now he must overcome complacency.
The students detect his weariness. They assume he is merely tired from his long illness, and in a sense, they are right.
(K-cee Colburn is a graduate of the School of Journalism.)
I'll tell you who won these debates: THE AMERICAN PEOPLE WON THESE DEBATES!
Diligently, she rehearsed her act, which included mimicking an Alabama accent just for effect. If she only remembered
1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES
SHE WONDERED from the beginning whether the bouncer would believe she had gained 20 pounds, grown three inches and was wearing blue contacts. But her best to make the story believable, having borrowed an LD, from a cooperative but rather odd-looking friend. Her mother memorize the information on her three pieces of borrowed LD—a driver's license, a social security card or a movie pass. (No KU-ID. Any picture would wind up eating pizza at the hall.)
The faking starts her auaking
"May I see your LD?"
Last weekend, college students were asked this question as they tried to get into local nightclubs that, by law, admit only adults. For those who were actually 21, it was no big deal. For those who weren't 21 but who had played the game before, it was a new challenge for an inexperienced beginner, the question started an evening that went something like this:
"May I see your LD?"
to keep her head down, her stomach in, hands steady and lines straight she might have a chance. A good "Oh come on, you've got to be kidding" could be used as a last resort.
The HE appeared. That gorgeous guy she'd seen in HDFL all semester. Her lucky night had at last arrived, and as she sauntered toward him through the mass of people, she envisioned an evening of meaningful disco dancing that
THE BOUNCER wasn't as
Mary Ann Daugberty Contributing Writer
her say she had to have the I.D. back, either.
tough as some she had heard about. He seemed rather preoccupied with trying to change his flashlight batteries and cooing to the tall blonde beside him. She thought herself fortunate when he briefly scanned, and waved her hand before giving up. She had time. Just to be safe, she drawned "Thanka, ya."
Inside, she remembered the cardinal rule of using a friend's I.D. More enemies are made over lost I.D.'s than anything else. She used the plastic folder out of her wallet, put it in her pocket and buttoned the flap securely. She put her own I.D., such as it was, in her wallet, making use of the claw if the police raided the place it was to be the bouncer, not her, who would be reprenumbrated.
Bubwa's debut: forget it
The debut of Bubua Watches on the XYZ Network's evening news as cochoronomer is the biggest thing to happen, Captain Kangaroo had his 20th anniversary. Harvey Goldbrick, XYZ's board chairman, said that Bubua is his network's answer to the Six Million Man-a-Five Million Dollar Woman.
be made into a movie, is "That's News."
"BUT EVEN as great a journalistic star as Bubwa Watals, with her knowledge, her experience, her brilliant news judgment—it isn't enough. You need depth to win in news, so that Miss Watals is being backed up by two chauffers, a hair Oscar de la Renta, a wizardrose Oscar de la Renta, a French gourmet-type chef, three reporters to read the teletype machines and two writers so Bubwa will always have something to say."
Answear: Yes, Bubba. I do. I swear at a little announcement program for you. I want it to be a little something of substance so they couldn't call you a lawyer.
BUBWA'S opening week performance set a record for exclusive interviews, bombshells and scoops on consecutive nonweek news days. Because the news on Bubwa's shows is copyrighted and intended solely for use and enjoyment, it may not be replaced by the express permission of the Commissioner of Baseball and the mayor of the city where the scoop took
Bubwa's debut exceeded all expectations. It was so good that for the first time in television history a network will be selling its old news programs for afternoon rumors. On or run syndication isn't yet because it's not as popular as rights to Bubwa's shows so that they can be edited for movie house distribution as another sequel to "That's Entertainment." The tentative title for this, the first flick to premiere as a TV program and then
"Just as XYZ has forged into the entertainment lead by bringing the viewing audience the best in crime, we are sparing no expense to give TV "The Voice" a voice in journalism," Mr. Goldbrick said in announcing Bubba's debut.
weally fwesh and exciting that will intewest the people back here?
And then she remembered she didn't have the one that got her in the door. In short, the gig was a bit of an adventure and tried some lame excuse about being part of a sociology experiment. When he wrote her name down, she began looking at dime for her one phone call.
Bubba: America has no better friend in your part of the world than you. Anwah. So what did you save for me, kid?
place. So we can give you only snippets without have to pay royalties. XYZ does allow a synopsis and a few quotes for people who don't want to jail for the ransom, so here is the juicy answer. "No," we conclude, exclusive Anwar沙谈 interview:
Anwar: I'm taking this occasion to
Nicholas Von Hoffman King Features Syndicate
TO HER surprise, he then dismissed her with warning never to come back until she was really Z1. She had broken hearts and智能 smarta enough to know nice girls don't do things like that?
Anwar: Delighted to meet you,
Hawie. Buba, dear, everybody in Africa from Lesotho to Zimbabwe is delighted that you have got a show of your own. It warns my heart and that of Madame Sudi sat who longs for a new life in also, almost as much as a new shipment of the latest missiles.
Butt: Frankly, Buba, the uprour over this particular shirt has me puzzled. I've shared other groups, I have shared with others, and I have shrured, if you want to call my gentle jocasities alurs. I just happen to think people who are different from me in skin color or religion or national origin share with me. They don't look down on them any more
But at that moment there was no time to think of thwarted love. Three bully policemen entered the place. As non-violent people in couple hundred people began to move toward the back move
Bubwa's interview—another exclusive—with Earl Butz was fascinating, especially the part where he discussed the slur:
Bubwa: Anwah, I'm glad you're my first interwoo on the first night of my big new show. this gray-haired man shows that name was named Hawie. He helps me, Anwah.
BUBWA: Anchaw—or Mr. President as I should anw你 even though you and I are on closer terms than my colleague Howard Cosell and Muhammad All—Mr. Pwisdien, who have any news for us, something
AND SO a scoop was born, but that first debut week was stunning scoop with the Scoops brand. The Chinese used Buhna's program to introduce Mao Tse-tung's successor, Chairman Too Dang Fat, who asked if he would have been successful or final and did he still have a chance?
announce that in five minutes we're going to war with Israel again.
Bubwa: Hawie! !! Did you hear that? Oh, Anwah, how can I ever thank you?
than I look down on the chipmunks and the possums or the coons. We're all God's creatures, you know, but it's not like it. What I said about the colors—
Bubwa: We call them bwacks, Ehwell.
BUTZ: THEY'RE not all black, Bubba. Some of them, are of course. Some are so black they're blue, but some are tan, beige, coffee and high tea. That's not colorado. That's not bigotry, Bubba, and what I said about those people they ought to take as a compliment. It shows they're part of the revolution of rising expectations to want sexual expectations, shoes that fit and indoor plumbing.
Many were moved when she asked the audience to think of her work rather than how much she was getting paid. She was a manicurist, for after all these are private questions between her, and another network press agent who leaks them.
PANIC BEGAN to grip her as the crowd pushed and she realized she had no chance of being among the first to reach the door. How she wished she had opted for a pepperoni with double cheese instead of a banana daiquiri.
Bubwa herself made a lovely speech that first night. She was very gracious to Hawke . . . told him she was sure to go and together if he didn't get in the way.
She knew instinctively who was tapping her shoulder. He was big, very big. And so was she. She could tell you how to help it to revive the Alabama accent? Would she make points if she said she was a police chief's daughter? How fast can she fly on a floor soaked with beer?
But the biggest beat of the week was that terrific interview she got with the weeping Jebwie Fowd, particularly the part where Mr. President said, "Oh I'm going to miss him so he. He was the life of the cabin. As good as fresh water," he replied with a wonderful, dedicated, selfless public servant with a terrific sense of humor and now, dammit, he's never going to tell me his Jew joke."
would develop into a passionate romance.
AS SHE hoped, he was glad to see her. But not for the right reasons. Would she be a pal and give him the test answers to chapter 20 and, oh yes, would she mind terribly if his date, waiting outside, used her L.D. to get in?
Outside, she found the HDFL man sitting on the curb with his hand over his mouth to takeen. Yes, his date was crying. Yes, the I.D. was here some place. Well, it was a minute ago. She had been dropped during the hubbub.
Reluctantly, she handed over the precious commodity and agreed to give him her notes. Perhaps they could study together sometime, she said, but she didn't think he heard her as he disappeared into the crowd. Perhaps he hadn't heard
"Okay, little girl," he said in a voice not unlike that of a German shepherd. "Let's see your I.D."
Later that night, she deposited three soggy cards on her friend's desk. On her own desk she found a piece of cold pizza. The evening, as a whole, was difficult to swallow.
Within the past several years, several bills have been presented in Congress to establish, or partly establish in particular, national health insurance program. None have passed.
Recent disclosures of fraud and abuse in the Medicaid program raise the question of what type of health care Americans can expect in the future.
A NATIONAL HEALTH plan would mean that the federal government would play the role of overseer of its citizens' health.
National health care becomes more likely
Within the past nine months, the investigation has resulted in 40 convictions. Nursing homes and other buildings estimates by Mathews, have overcharged the government more than $750 million a year.
By JAY BEMIS
Staff Writer
A task force of more than 180 examiners and investigators has been set up by David Mathews, secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, to crack down on nursing home and doctor corruption that exists in federal-state program that supplies $15 billion a year toward health care for the poor.
Health care plans in this nation's history—whether it be private, public, or assistance, Medicaid, Medicare or benefits from labor unions—have been beneficial to many. But in each program some are left out. Such is not the case with Canada's health program.
Canada's plan was begun in stages dating back to 1948, with the final step of insured health
IN LIGHT of this corruption, a national health insurance program looks even more probable in the future.
Hospital rates are set in compliance with annual cost budgets that are sent to the government for approval. The federal government pays 50 per cent of the health plan's costs, with the remainder funded by general tax revenues.
Many were afraid that Canada's doctors would be swamped once the national health program went into effect. That isn't so, according to Robert Armstrong, director of the Department for the Department of National Health and Welfare.
"Bringing in universal health insurance," Armstrong has said, "does not result in one person having an additional case may find one additional case you weren't aware of, and maybe that's a good thing." Canada's success has been supported by groups in the United States.
HIGH QUALITY care is insured Canadians under legislation that requires each province to develop a system of inspecting and licensing hospitals.
Although dozens of health care proposals have been in-
care for each citizen beginning in 1968.
HOSPITALS IN Canada,
although most still privately
owned, send their bills to the
bureau of police. The bills
are paid by the government.
The Kennedy-Corman bill would cover costs of health for the entire population, being funded 50 per cent by a payroll tax and 50 per cent by general government revenues. The total cost of the proposed program would be $88 billion.
There would be no cost sharing under the proposal, meaning that no out-of-the-pocket payments by patients for the program were made if the Kennedy-Corman were passed in its original form.
The plan would redistribute tax revenues among lower income families, which would increase to receiving tax rebates.
The administration and Kennedy-Mills bills, considered stronger proposals before introduction of the Kennedy-Corman bill, have been tied to Kennedy-Corman.
Members of Congress hope that by backing national health insurance at least three goals be met; insuring that all citizens have financial access to health care; increasing financial hardship of medical bills, and limiting the rise in health care costs.
produced in Congress, the closest to Canada's (and one of the more recent proposals) is the Kennedy-Corman bill, in which he signed a law toward Kennedy, D-Mass., and Rep. James Corman, D-Calif.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
- counted at the University of Kansas daily August 14th, 2015
- June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday
- 606448 Subscriptions by mail are $9 a semester or $12
- a year outside the country. Subscriptions by order are $9 a year outside the country.
Editor Debbie Gump
Business Manager Terry Hanson
RIGHT
MANN NEUWA
Wednesday, October 13.1976
5
University Dally Kansan
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Wednesdav. October 13,1976
University Daily Kansan
Rovals blow 3-0 lead, faced with do-or-die situation
NEW YORK (AP)—Chtuch doubles by Thurman Munson and Elliott Mackey跋 a comeback rally and Chris Chambliss drove in three runs as the New York Yankees bounced from behind for a 5-3 over the Kansas City Royals last night.
The pivotal win gave the Yankees a 2-1 edge in the best-of-five American League championship baseball series. It left them without a playoff spot in the first World Series appearance in 12 years.
The Vankies can wrap up the pennant in
the fourth game, which starts at 2 p.m.
Right-handed Dock Ellis survived a shaky first inning **r**rendering three runs—and recovered to shut out the Royals through the final six. But they also three of them after the opening inning.
Sparky Lyle came on in the ninth timing for New York. He walked the first batter, then hit a home run.
Trailing by three runs before they ever came to bat, the Yankees had to come off the deck to take the game. And the man who got them going was Chambliss. The strapping first baseman finally solved Royals starter Andy Hassler.
Hassler the lanky southwest who had lost a near-record 18 straight decisions during two seasons before halting the string in August, had New York under control until first.
Lou Piniella drilled the ball off third baseman George Grett's glove into the left-field corner and, when a fan interfered with the ball, it went for a ground-rule double.
It was the first home run by either club in the series.
That brought up Chambbliss. With the Royals' bench waving towels to signal right fielder Tom Pouquette to play more shallow, Chambbliss walloped a one-strike pitch high over the bright blue fence in right-center feet from home plate for a two-run home.
Now, the Yankees were down by only one run. Two innings later, they caught and passed the Royals in Kansas City Manager Ted Williams to the mound in a vain tint to hail the rally.
NESA
DUNROSE
Parkhurst first took up field hockey in Singapore
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Field hockey player glad she's back home
By DAN BOWERMAN
Sports Writer
Americans are continually accused of taking things for granted, such as living in nice homes and having food to eat and clothes to wear.
But Poll Parkhurst accuses Americans of taking other things for granted: Seeing a high school team play, watching a game, listening and listening to a favorite radio station.
Parkhurst, an 18-year-old freshman on the *Ku*'s field soccer team, spent the last seven years in Singapore, an island country in Asia. He isn't sure how simple things to take for granted.
"It upset me when I found out we were living overseas for so long," she said yesterday. "I knew I would miss out on so many things that I dreamed about when I was younger, like football games, and going down to the mall shop."
PARKHURST'S FAMILY moved to Singapore in 1989 because her father was born in New Zealand.
The Parkhursts moved back to the United States in June. Here is new LaFayette, La.
"My parents came back," Parkhurst
said. "In the past a long time, they wanted a change.
She said it was hard for her to adjust to the American way of life—to do the things she had never done.
"Over there, you can't drive till you'll 18—I don't know how to drive," she said. We didn't have a radio station that played music, and there wasn't much on the TV."
AND, SHE said, a lot of records and
movies were banned by the Singapore government.
New York Manager Billy Martin sent left-handed hitting Carlos May to bat for Pinelli. Patin's only job was to throw four pitches, intentionally loading the base.
The change from high school in Singapore to college in the United States was also made.
Parkhurst wasn't prepared for KU's size. "I'm used to going to a small school and knowing everybody," she said. "I didn't know a soul when I came here."
PARKHURST SAID she had trouble adjusting to the climate here because she lived in a valley.
"At our high school, we had to wear a uniform and the boys had to have their hair cut to a certain length," she said. "Over here, everything is so casual."
Herzog called for left-hander Tom Hall to face Chambliss, a left-handed hitter. With the in-feld drawn in, Chambless grounded and scored second, scoring White with the tying run.
She went to a high school for Americans in Singapore with about 600 people, and has been teaching English for many years.
"THE PEOPLE that we played were Chinese or Indian," Parkhurst said. "They all grew up with field hockey, it's like football or baseball to them."
"The temperature never gets past 90, but the humidity gets really high," she said. "You never see anybody in a sweater or jacket." The air is ridiculously hot that you can't go outside."
Graig Nettles, another left-hander, then ripped a single center to target the Munson with the go-ahead run. That finished Hall. Herzog wave in southpaw Mingei.
Although field hockey is a very physical sport, she said, she likes playing it.
What abut KU's climate?
"It's cold here," she said.
Maddox run the count to 3-1 and then doubled up the right-center field alley, scoring Chambliss with the third run of the iming.
"I enjoy it," she said. "I got a lot of war wounds. It is a pretty dangerous sport, too."
Her life in Singapore did prepare her for one thing - field hockey.
Mark Littell became the fifth Kansas City pitcher of the inning—a playoff record—and
Parkhurst has mixed emotions about living in the United States.
"I really miss Singapore, but I'm glad to be back. It was like going away on a trip."
Ellis, who came to New York in a winter trade with Pittsburgh, took control of the game after his rocky opening innings. He had help from Munson, who cut down two pitches and then from Chambliss and shortstop Fred Stanley, who turned in sparkling defensive plays.
retired the Yankees by getting Rivers on a bases-loaded pop fly.
The way it started, this looked as if it might be a short night for Ellis. He got in trouble when he walked Jim Wohlford on a 3-2 pitch to start the game. Wohlford hit four shots and missed. It was unable to get the ball out of his glove. Brett singled to center, scoring Wohlford.
John Mayberry followed with another single to center, sending Brett to third, and Hal McAne's sacrifice fly made it 24. Then Mayberry took second on a passed ball and
Reds win NL crown
CINCINNATI (AP)—Ken Griffey chopped a little bouncer toward first base for a bases-loaded single to drive in Cincinnati's third run in the bottom of the ninth inning, giving the Reds a 7-4 comeback triumph over the Philadelphia Phillies yesterday for their second straight National League championship.
twice in a row. They did it last year by taking three straight from Pittsburgh, and then by beating Boston in a dramatic seven-game World Series.
The Reds seemed headed for a fourth game, but, with lightning suddenness, their bats exploded. George Foster and Johnny Bench, the first two batters in the bottom of the ninth, crashed home runs to left field and the game was tied.
With the three-game sweep of the best-of-five series, the Reds became the first team to win three games in a row.
After back-to-back horners, Dave Concino singled to left and then Cesar Cameron singled to right.
That brought up Ed Armbrister, batting for winning pitcher Prawy Eastwick. He dumped a sacrifice bunt down the third base against the opposition to third and Geronimo to second.
Pete Rose walked intentionally, loading tractors to set up a possible home at or near his location.
Griffey didn't allow that, sending a high bouncer toward first base. Bobby Tolan, first baseman, couldn't make the play, and the winning run scored.
KU's volleyball team heads into one of its toughest stretches of the season with a three-tteam tournament tonight in Robinson Gymnasium.
Volleyball opens with busy week
Stephens College, Columbia, Mo. and Emporia Kansas State College will be at KU tonight for games at 6:30, 7:30 and 8:30. The teams are Stephens at 6:30 and Emporia at 8:30.
Tomorrow, KU will travel to Oklahoma to take part in another three-team tournament against Tulsa University and the Tulsa WCVA.
eighth, he walked Wohlford with two out, but Stanley spearced a line drive by Al
On Friday and Saturday, the Jayhawks will take part in the seven-season Sooner
Entry fee is $5 a team. Managers must attend a meeting Thursday for their teams to be eligible. The men's division meets at 4:30 p.m. in room 258, the women's division at 4:30 p.m. in room 122 and the creation creation at 4:30 p.m. in room 265.
Those interested in serving as referees for volleyball should contact the recreation
Deadline tomorrow for volleyball teams
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
All teams interested in playing intramural volleyball this year must sign up Thursday in the recreation office, 208 Robinson Gymnasium.
THE
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McRae went down the same way. Down to the final out, the Royals sent Dave Nelson to bat for Poctiee. Martin made a quick trip to Cincinnati, where he bounced a bouncer to shortstop, ending the game.
Martin called for Lyle in the ninth. Brett opened the timing with a walk on four pitches. Then Mayberry filed to right for the first out.
raced home when Poquette drilled a double past first base into the right field corner
Ellis retired Frank White on a pop fly. It turned out to be Kansas City's last good shot at the Yankee hurler. He seemed a different pitcher from then on, working easily through the same batting order that had given him so much trouble at the start.
In the sixth, he got a boost from Cham-
bias, who started a double play on a shot by
Abbey.
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Wednesday, October 13, 1976
7
two out,
ve by Al
th. Brett four pit- it for the
D. Down to Nelson to quick trip a bouncer
Roscoe bears burden.
By STEVE CLARK
5. 8
John Rosece has run well during his three guests at the University of Korea.
Sports Writer
At most universities, his ac-
counts are from students.
Here he gets critical job
In 1975, he was the team's top cross country runner. His 2:31 time makes him the second fastest marathon runner in KU history. And his 8:44.3 time ranks him fourth on the school's all-time steeplechase list.
The reason that Roscoe—and other KU runners—hasn't been esteemed by KU students is that students have been spoiled by the outstanding feats of Jim Rvun.
ANY DISTANCE RUNNER who wears KU's pink and blue will inevitably—and unpredictably—leave spectations of students and fans have even greater when an athlete has had the type of success that Roscoe had at Southwestern Michigan Junior College in 1970.
At Southwestern, Roscoe captured three National Junior College Athletic Association national championships, cross country, steeplechase and marathon, and set several national records. During his two years at the university, he won two international cross country tours.
100 M
Staff photo
"It's been a burden," she said yesterday, referring to his past success. "People fail to realize that a championship in juco is ruthless—one's championship in GAIA."
1 "I was really happy about last year's
eason season and I don't have any com-
munity friends."
THE INJURIES, which might keep him from achieving results that others expect
But Roscoe has managed to satisfy himself, and that's what counts.
Three metatarsal bones on his right foot were hurt. he said. When the injury was finally mended, the track season was almost over. Roscoe still managed to make it to the NCAA championships in Philadelphia in the stelechase.
If the break had other effects on Roscoe, he kept it a secret during the team's first game.
Once there, however, his right foot began acting up.
"It started hurting me the day I ran my first race, but I didn't think it was much," he recalled. "The day after the finals it was hurting and I had to laff off all summer."
At the Wichita State University Gold Classic, he placed sixth, a couple runners behind teammate George Mason. In the next race, Oklahoma State's Jamboree, he was sixth again, but a couple of strides ahead of Mason.
John Roscoe
HOWEVER, DURING last Saturday's duel with Southern Illinois at Carbondale.
Ill., the foot began to hurt. He managed to pain and finish fourth.
Since then he has had the injury X-ray and diagnosed as tendonitis, which, in turn, has put pressure on a nerve in his foot. Treatment has consisted of taping the foot and taking medication to keep the tendon from swelling.
The problem has reappeared at an inportunity time for Roscoe. Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Kansas State and Colorado come to town Friday for a five-mile race, which could provide an accurate preview of the Big Eight meet. It is a race that Roscoe, a Terre Haute, Ind., senior, doesn't want to miss.
"ALL THE TEAMS have about the same amount of talent, which gives everybody a chance," he said. "If our last couple of men give it a good effort, we're going to have a really good shot at winning it and the conference."
Roscoe, whose goals for 1976 include a possible Big Eight title and all-America honors, should have an advantage over the Clippers, who can call on his international experience.
In 1974, Rocose went to Italy as a member of the United States junior squad to run in the International Cross Country Championships. He placed sixth--third on the team—and helped pace the Americans to the team title.
The following year, though, things didn't go quite as smoothly.
runs well
He qualified for the junior team again and left for the race, which was run in Morocco. However, upon arriving in that country he met his opponent, Bennie Roseo. He'd been told that if a runner was 19 years old at the time of the trial races, which Roscoe was, the runner would be eligible. The Moroccans didn't agree. They thought it would have been worse after the race. Roscoe was to turn 20.
IN AN EFFORT to avoid additional bickering, Roscoe was switched to the seniors team, which included Frank Shorter, former Olympic marathon runner, Gayle Goldaway, a top U.S. marathoner; and Bill Rodgers, a 1976 U.S. Olympic squad member.
Running with those teammates, and the World Champion athletes in the World. Rosace placed 27th.
"But they didn't give me 75th," he said.
"They moved me back to 128th."
The Moroccan had already won the men's junior and women's races and were trying to make a clean sweep, he said.
Roscoe put it another way.
"They were really trying to cheat the teammate back, and move another teammate back," said.
Roscoe still seemed to enjoy the experience.
"It was like the Olympics for me," he said. You got the U.S. A uniform. it was really cool.
The Olympics. The U.S.A. uniform. Based on his past success, some people think that Roscoe should some day run in the Olympics and wear the red, white and blue. But it will be the same way they happen, and that's why Roscoe's philosophy on running, though simple, makes sense.
"I try to give my total effort. Nobody can ask any more than that." He never asked.
Tryouts Friday for basketball
Troys for both the men's and women's basketball teams will begin Friday.
The men's varsity tryouts will be at 4 p.m. in Allen Field House. All candidates must be cleared through the basketball office in the field house and see one of the coaches before trying out. Candidates must bring their own clothing and shoes.
The women will have tryouts at 2:30 p.m. in Robinson Gymnastium. Tryouts will continue the following Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. in the field house for interested female undergraduates.
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8
Wednesday, October 13, 1976
University Daily Kansan
24
Good housekeeping?
Photo by RICK PADDEN
This house, once used by the University of Kansas as a practical training facility for home economics students, now is used for
practice by the Studier Wrecking Co. of Topeka, which holds a contract with KU for the demolition of the 46-year-old structure.
Dilapidated KU house torn down
An old home-management practice house, once used to teach University of Kansas woman to "keep house," is being torn down because it wasn't kept up.
Keith Lawton, director of facilities planning, said Tuesday that the small, wood-sided structure at 1700 W. 16th St. had become obsolete after the KU home was ended in the 1980s, and that it was allowed to deteriorate in the following years.
Lawton said that the demolition should be completed in another 30 days and that there
were no plans for erecting any new buildings at the site.
The department of anthropology had taken over the house in 1966 and used it for research, according to Alfred Johnson, director of the anthropology Museum.
Johnson said the house was referred to as the Anthropology Research Facility (ARF) until two years ago, when it had become so diapidated that it could no longer be used. He said the plaster had begun to fall from the ceilings.
thropology department, said that she could remember the house when it was "very charming," and that it was sad to have children, deteriorate and finally be published.
Barbara Pirtle, secretary in the an-
The little house, built in 1930, may be in bad shape, but it's not coming down too easily, according to Andy and Lou Stadler, partners and brothers in Stadler Wrecking Co. of Topena, who have the contract for the demolition of the building.
The two have been working on this job for two weeks, and Lou Stander said, "It'a a change." Ms. Hoyt said.
City re zones controversial area
Despite the objections of several neighbors, city commissioners last night voted 4-1 to rezone about three-fourths of an acre of a street in Brooklyn's streets from residential to commercial.
Most of the surrounding area is zoned commercial.
In approving the request, one commissioner, Marmie Argersinger, said she had reversed her first inclination to deny the request because, after looking at the property, she said she realized that those areas she could use for residential purposes.
The dissenting commissioner, Carl Mibeck, voted against the issue because, he
said, the objections of the neighbors should be made before the location would lead to traffic problems.
The traffic problem was also a major concern of the neighbors, who objected to the rezoning because they said, it would be too expensive. But that was rebuilding and revitalizing itself.
Area residents said that new people were moving into the neighborhood and were buying and fixing some of the older houses. Because a McDonald's restaurant is on the block, which is what owners propose to build on the lot, the residents said, new people would be reluctant to come in to try to rebuild the area.
On Campus
PARKS AND REAL ESTATE
Events
TODAY: GRAND MARISCAL scholarship interviews begin at 9 a.m. in the regional rostral room of the Kansas Union. A UNIVERSITY DATING WORKSHOP
TONIGHT: MORTAR BOARD meets at 7 in the Union's Oread Room. CAMPUS CHRISTIANS meets at 7 in the Union's Jayhawk Room. PHI THETIA MEETS at 7 in the Union's International Room. SUA BACKGAMMON CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Parlor B and C rooms. SUA BRIDGE CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Pine Room. KU HILLEL meets at 7 in Naismith Hall for a discussion of Jewish law and trivia. THE STUDENT SENATE COMMUNITY COUNCIL meetings meet at 7 in the Union's COUNTY YOUNG DEMOGRAPHS meeting at 8 First National Bank Community Room, 900 Massachusetts St. Pete Lewis, Kansas Corporation Commission member, will discuss Southwestern Bell and Kansas Power and Light rate increases pending before the Kansas Corporation Commission.
TOMORROW: A UNIVERSITY DATING WORKSHOP starts at 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. in 224 Fraser Hall, SUA BOARD members meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Regionalist Room. ANGEL FLIGHT meets at 6:30 p.m. at the Military Science building to discuss information from the Commander's Gall Conference. KU presents a lecture on the University of Chicago's PRISON, THE ISRAELI FOLK DANCE CLUB meets at 7 p.m. in Oliver Hall. AN OPEN MEETING for departmental and school promotion and tenure committee members, chairmen, deans and faculty members begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Big Eight Room to discuss procedures for promotion and tenure. An evening of IRISH MUSIC at the University of Chicago's JEAN LIBRARY. JACK WINEROCK, assistant professor of piano, will perform in the Faculty Recital Series at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
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In other business, a final plat for Deerfield Village North was approved unanimously by the commission, also over the objections of a number of residents.
Residents along Arrowhead Drive in Deerfield Park asked the commission to address the development to Peterson Road. They said that without such a road they feared traffic along the street would increase to unacceptable limits as the development
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However, the commissioners said they didn't foresee such a problem, but if it did occur, a solution would be to block Arrowhead Drive on one end, making it clearer from the interior of the development. That would reduce traffic to residents only.
DATING WORKSHOP has been developed. Come and hear details:
1528 W. 23rd across from post office 842-8861
4:30 or 5:30
Tues., Wed., Thurs., or Fri
Oct. 12, 13, 14, or 15
Room 224 Fraser
(KU students
over 18 only)
SINGLE MEN want to DATE more effectively? A
4:30 or 5:30
A new Minority Affairs Center in the Kansas Union should be open by November, according to Rodney Dennis, chairman of the Senate Minority Affairs Committee.
"The center will be a place where people can come with an idea, and we can plug it into the proper channels," Dennis said vesterday.
Minority Affairs Center will open soon
Construction of the center, on the third level of the Union, should be completed within a week, he said, and will open as soon as possible. The union are ended and duties can be delegated.
The center will include lounge, meeting and office areas. Dennis said there would be space for posting announcements and distributing information, as well as a "listening center," a library of music and lecture tapes.
"OUR GOAL IS to be like an umbrella resource center to fill in the gap that exists in terms of minority events," he said. "One of our goals is the participation of all major students."
Dennis said that he was pleased with student involvement in planning the center, but that he was afraid only a few minority students really understood the concept of the center.
The center will serve as an informational and referral office for all minority groups. He said the center would supplement cultural activities that are now available for minority students by sponsoring speakers, films and other programs.
**WE WANT TO SENSITIZE minority students** we are the channels that exist on this website.
Dennis said the staffing of the office, which is in charge of answering question. He said he baped that.
REMINDER:
The KU Backgammon Club
meets every day. At 7 p.m.
in the Oread Room, Kansas
City. In play, in tournament,
Lobl in play, in the fourman
7:00 to play in the tournament.
BRING YOUR BOARDS
WEST BEND, WI.
The Transcendental Meditation Program
Free Public Lecture
Wed., Oct. 13
7:30 p.m.
Registrar's Room
Kansas Union
SPECIAL ROSES $2''/DZ.
SPECIAL
ROSES $2.99/DZ.
Everything's coming up roses except our prices! Come see the colors. The low sale prices speak for it! Buturly! Call us or visit today!
UNIVERSITY FLORAL
843-6990
The Red Dutch Barn
2103 W. 28th St. Torr.
FTD
PRESERVATION HALL
JAZZ
BAND
A DAY IN THE HOLIDAYS
THE EFFECT UPON THE AUDIENCE IS DEVASTATING
THURSDAY. OCTOBER 14
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14
8:00 P.M. MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM
BAKER UNIVERSITY BALDWIN CITY, KS.
ADULTS $4.00 UNDER 12 $2.00
5014651 EA 926
several work-study positions would be available to staff the center.
For more information call: 594-6451 Ext.306
"We definitely need people to come in and charge of some aspect of the center," he said.
"This is a first step toward getting things the way they should be at this University. Diversity."
The center will receive student activity funds through the Senate.
Griff's
Griff's
1618 W.23rd Phone 843-9108
GIANT MEAL Mon. thru Sat., Oct. 11- Oct. 16
GIANT HAMBURGER ... 80°
GIANT FRY ... 45°
GIANT DRINK ... 35°
Value $1.60
Save 61c
Now Only 99¢
Indoor Recreation Mixed Doubles Racquetball Tournament
SUA
Oct.23 and 24 Robinson Gym Deadline for signing up is Oct.21 in the Intramural Office Room 208 Robinson Gym -Double Elimination Open to all K.U. students, faculty and staff
7 p.m.
INTRAMURAL VOLLEYBALL OFFICIALS CLINIC
205 Robinson
Wed., Oct.13
All students are eligible.
For more information call 846-3546.
WATER BASKETBALL Every Sunday
7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Form teams at pool or bring a team.
CARLOS BENAVENTE
Ski Trips for Every Budget Fly or Drive
Information on Accommodations in All Ski Areas
No Extra Charge for Reservations
Sunflower Travel Service
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesdav. October 13. 1976
9
activity
activity g things versity,"
Benefits
From page one
which uses UMA programs, said he wasn't disappointed with enrollments in UMA courses. The Nebraska's student newspaper, the Butler Nebraska, reported that the University of Nebraska, expected to reach 30,000 in SUN's first five years, had totalled 2,840.
THE NEBRASKAN said that 325 students currently were enrolled in SUN programs.
McBride said that the number of adults in the program hadn't reached original predictions but that the separate delivery systems, or state programs such as SUN, were responsible for enrollments, rather than UMA.
"The enrollments are now respectable," he said. "They're indicative of what can be
UMA programs are leased, for amounts ranging from $500 to $2,000, to universities. Students taking courses at one of the UMA colleges have access to television courses may pay fees to the universities.
McBride said UMA was experimenting with two types of charges, a flat rate of from $2,000 to $4,000 for use of the course and a charge based on enrollments.
HUTCHISON SAID total enrollments in UMA hadn't increased during the project's existence. Calgary said costs of ownership so low that slightly higherless there were "mammoth enrollments."
To effectively serve students, Calgaard said, a state program must provide offices, broadcast facilities, textbooks, some instructors who are knowledgeable about materials, people and amount of student's queries and regional learning centers.
Nebraska has five learning centers and Iowa uses county extension offices to provide students with local guidance on course material.
"SOME HAVE said it would be cheaper to put a MASTER in every town," he said.
Calgaard said fees charged by KU for courses wouldn't "begin to cover" costs, unless fees of from $150 to $150 were paid on the Board. Regents pxer would allow such charges.
Another finance problem is the development of courses. Calgaard said some UMA productions had been elaborate, movies and cartoons of professional quality. Professional actors were used in some cases, he said.
An example of the expense of an individual course was the "Cultural History of the Great Plains," funded by the National Endowment for the Arts. The course reportedly was stopped in production after projected costs ran to about $2 million.
McBride said that production was continuing on a revised version of the course and that the total cost would be only about $250,000. He said extensive research was being done in the development of the off-ahead Production has been "on-again, off-again," he said.
THE PROBLEM, McBride said, was that the courses' planners wanted dramatic television programs, "some on movie TV, some on professional produced series for public television.
Most of UMA's funding has been from the federal government through the National Institute for Education (NIE). NIE has been providing $1.5 million a year to UMA. Last year's UMA budget was about $2.2 million. McBride said,
The Nebraskan newspaper also reported that annual funding by NIE would be discontinued in 1978 with preparation of a new website. McBrien didn't know if the funding would be cut off.
THE REMAINER of UMA's budget comes from foundation grants. The Ford Foundation was the source of a grant that has financed FIRST, an inward WATS students at Johns Hopkins Kansas residents to call KU to ask about education programs in the state.
The grant for FIRST was given to KU by UMA. Calgaard, Hutchison, McBride and others contacted said that Robert Senecal, associate dean of continuing education, announced that the grant and other programs at KU that were begun with UMA's help.
However, a secretary to Senecal said twice that he wouldn't talk to the press
Use Kansan Classifieds
about UMA and that all information should come from the office of academic affairs.
A UNIVERSITY COUNCIL committee, the Committee on Cooperation Among institutions for Higher Learning, is trying to increase its cooperative agreements, including UMA.
Art Breipohl, professor of electrical engineering and committee chairman, said that UMA had been discussed at meetings, but that the committee had made no recommendations about KU's participation in UMA.
McBride and Hassel said they hoped that KU would be able to offer UMA courses in the future, but Calgaard said continued KU participation in UMA would depend upon the programs that were developed and their costs.
Hassel said UMA was progressing well and was accomplishing its intentions. McChride said, however, that it would be difficult to do so without indefinitely providing funding for UMA.
"If funding were cut off, there would be problems," he said. "In the end, it will either be so successful that it can continue in a self-generating mold, or so unsuccessful that other measures will have to be found."
Wanna get high & get down?
Sky Dive!
KU Sky Diving Club
Oct.14 at 8:30 p.m.
in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. For further information call Craig at 841-4704. Beginners welcome. Movie will be shown.
SUA
FILMS
CLASSICAL SERIES
IN THE YEAR OF THE PIC
Dir. DeAntonio plus
INTERVIEWS WITH MY LAI
Dir. Joseph Striple plus
WINTERSOLDIER (1971)
Winter film collective, Vietnam
Veterans testifying on war
archetypes.
Wed.. Oct. 13, 7:30, 75c
FILM SOCIETY
BADLANDS [1974]
BAD. Terrence Malick, with
Marian Sheen, Sissy Spacek
Thurs., Oct. 14, 7:30, 9:30, 75
POPULAR FILMS
MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY
GRAIL 1 (1975)
Dir. Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones with Monty Python's Flying Circus Fri. and Sat., Oct. 15 and 16 3:30; 7:00; 9:00
SPECIAL WEEKEND
FILMS
Independent/Experimental
film maker Mike Leggert from
campus to show his films
and THE SHEARED
(a collection of SEVEN
separate films)
Fri, Oct 15, 8:00; 3
Saturday
MIDNIGHT MOVIES
RIGHT MOVIES
Roger Coreman
"King of the BIS"
With Peter Fonda, Susan Strasberg
Dennis Hopper, Bruce Dern
IN PSYCHEDELIC COLOR
and
THE WILD ANGELS
With Peter Fonda, Nancy Sinatra
Bruce Dern, Diane Ladd
Sat., Oct. 16, 12 midnight, 5
Woodruff Auditorium
MIX 'N MATCH KEBOBS CHOOSE ANY TWO FOR $3.99
Mr. Steak is servin up kebobs in four mix m
match flavors. Teriyaki steak kebob. Buttery
scallop kebob. Juicy steak kebob. And teriyaki
shrimp kebob.
Choose any two kebabs to make one scrumptious dinner. Mix & Match Kebab Dinner includes two kebabs, rice pilaf, plus your choice of soup, juice or salad. For all 3.99.
920 W. 23rd
Open 7 days
11 a.m.-10 p.m.
By BETH SPRINGGATE
Mr. Steak
Jews celebrate harvest, exodus
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
4 1976 Mr. Steak, inc
There probably will be some cold Jews in the world this week as many of them celebrate a harvest festival, Sakshb, by building an outdoor frame structure covered with branches.
Brian Salvay, Shawnee Mission sophomore, is one of a few Jews in Lawrence who is living in one of the structures, a sukkah, to commemorate the exodus of Jews from Egypt and to recognize the end of harvest.
"It is a mitzvah (commandment) incumbent upon every Jew, every male Jew, to dwell in a sukkah," Salavy said yesterday.
face a judgment about whether there will be ample water in the coming year.
director at the Jewish Community Center and a conservative Jew, said conservatives of the Jewish community.
The purpose of fulfilling the mitzvah is to
She said that none of them would live in sokkhet but that a group of conservatives would build one sukkah to serve the needs of many people.
SALVAY IS AN example of how Jews have changed since the first Jews were forced to live in sukkoht for lack of better shelter while fleeing Egypt. Although the commandment calls for Jews to carry on normal living habits in a sukkah, Salvay and his friends had to leave because he said he wouldn't sleep in it because nights were cold and he didn't have a sleeping bag.
Salvay, a traditional Jew, doesn't follow the strict customs of Orthodox Jews.
THE SUKKAH must be built according to minimum requirements, he said.
"The reason for the sukuk is to dwell under the roof, but it's not a krother roof"
"It's a rothouse."
"I COME FROM a conservative background. I'm making a move to the right. This is the first year I've dwelled in a large city for the year I will make a more complete move."
However, he said, "I'm in the process of observing more Orthodox customs. I've made a personal commitment of living in a place that is so different from partially. I have to be honest with myself."
Although Salavy has a lax interpretation of Sukkoth compared with Orthodox Jews, he is strict compared with other Jews in Lawrence.
There must be at least three walls, each
hands tall. One wall should be at least one
wall shorter than the other.
Sig Lindenbaum, associate professor of pharmacology at KU, said the festival, which began Friday to sunset, lasted nine days in Israel and seven days in the diaspora. The difference was caused by a communication problem that existed when dates were measured by phases of the sun during the festival in Israel were often a day late in arriving in other countries.
LORIANE LINDENBAUM, educational
Your feet can be
well padded even
if your wallet isn't.
The Puff from Bass
Bunny
Blacks
Royal
College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
ANNOUNCING CAMPBELL'S
Each year we salute the World Series, and you can celebrate with us in the form of special savings on many items throughout our store.
10th ANNUAL WORLD SERIES SALE
STARTS TOMORROW 9:30 A.M.
Long Sleeve
DRESS SHIRTS
Reg.
12.00
to
16.00
Now
$790
Large Group SLACKS
Reg. 20.00 to $1390
Now 26.50
Long Sleeve DRESS SHIRTS
Reg. 12.00 to $790
Now 16.00
Corduroy SPORT COATS
Reg. 50.00 to $3990
Now 20.00
Print SPORT SHIRTS
Reg. 18.00 to $990
Now 20.00
Good Selection SWEATERS
Save 25%
Solids - Stripes
Ski Looks
Entire Stock LEATHERS
Save 10%
Short - Medium & Long Styles
Orlon RUGBY SHIRTS
Reg. 15.00 to $1090
Four Colors
Casual SUITS
1/3 off
Good Selection SWEATERS Save 25% Solids - Stripes Ski Looks
Corduroy
SPORT COATS
Reg. Now
50.00 $3990
Print
SPORT SHIRTS
Reg.
18.00
to
20.00
Now
$9.90
Orlon
RUGBY SHIRTS
Reg. Now
15.00 $1090
Four Colors
Casual
SUITS
1/3
off
Beautiful now fall fashions at those special prices truly makes this World Series event one you won't want to miss. . Come join the fun and save!
Sale lasts as long as the Series
Campbell's
Men's Wear
841 Massachusetts
Open late Thursday evenings
843-2828
10
Wednesday, October 13, 1976
WOLF CENTER
WOLFE'S
Grand Opening
And 52nd
Anniversary Sale
STILL IN PROGRESS If you missed out on the special bargains last week, don't despair. We are honoring the prices all month on those items still in stock. If you failed to get a copy of our 8 page special advertisement in the UDK, come over and pick one up. Some of the special bargins are sold out, but we still have plenty for you to select from. Check out the two full page ads in this issue of the UDK for some of the excitement we have for you. Drive over today.
HASSELBLAD...
when you need or want the best
T
Both the professional who needs the best and the amateur who wants the best choice the System.
the best choose the System
Hasselblad offers 13 of the world's top quality lenses, interchangeable film magazines and a wide variety of accessories. Come in for a demonstration and see the System
massoblad 500 CM Wolfe's
with 80 mm f2.8 and back Sale
Mfa. Price $1425 Price $899⁰⁰
Lenses and Accessories in Stock at Low Prices
Nikon GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY SAVINGS!
Discover All the advantages of a Nikon
Nikkormat
Buy a Nikomat F2T SLR and Nikon will send you a $15 Nikon System Certificate. The Nikomat F2T is your entry level full system, . . . a versatile, full system. Nikon quality camera
Nikkormat FT2 with 50mm f2 269 $ ^{99} $
Nikonformat
NIKON AF 35mm F1.4
Nikkormat EL Body Only
Wolfe's Low Price 319.99
(you get $35 certificate from Nikon)
LOW PRICES ON NIKKOR LENSES
Nikon
AUTHENTIC NIKKOR LENSES REGULAR PRICE WOLF'S
24mm f2.8
35mm f2.8
Nikon F2 Photomatic
Body only
Wolfe's low price
46999
*get a $5 gift from Nikon*)
105mm f2.5
399°0
135mm f2.8
306 $ ^{0 0} $
55 Macro
Nikon F2S Now at Wolfe's Lowest Price Ever Plus a $50 Certificate
293°0 219°0
Capro
Compartment
Case
with the
position of
any Nylon camera
29.99
WOLFE'S 52ND YEAR OF PHOTOGRAPHY
MEET MINOLTA'S LINE OF FINE CAMERAS
Minolta SRTSC
This is true quality and value at great price. The SRSCS is fast and easy to handle, with a compose, fice, handheld design that allows you away from your subject. Enjoy the Patented through the lens light metering system, and the versatile lenses and fuses and SRT accessories. It has hat shoe and 1/1,000 of sec.
minolta
SR T
Minolta
Minolta SR-T SC with 1.4
Wolfe's Low Price
Mfg.
Suggested
Retail $400
$229^99
YOUR HANDS KNOW IT'S A MINOLTA
minolta
SUNTORY
MINOLTA SR-T 202
This miniature is most completely equipped with handlebars 25mm ELEM and a leading edge of what you can expect on most road bikes. The handlebar mount, multiple exposure content through the lower motor, and many more feature love to use in this model.
Mfgs. suggested retail With fl4 lens $400
minolta
ZC31R-45M
$279^{99}
Minolta XE-5
Now you can select from a board of creators and commissioners with over 10,000 of your design's intellectual property, capability, built on that foundation, or with no affiliation to the current team you should Select from a complete list of current Bucks Rivers. A match will attach with your selection.
Mtg.suggested retail with 1 2 lens $500
Mrs. suggested retail with 12 x 25m $300
Wolfe's $31999
Anniversary Special
with fl 4 ... $369.99
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
116 West Eighth · Phone 235-1386
Topeka, Kansas 66603
WOLF
The Cameras that make "happiness" complete
Olympus OM-1 and Olympus OM-2
OLYMPUS
The OM I over 1.5" smaller and lighter than companion cameras. You have to hold it to it believe. And after that, you will want to roll it out. We will cost you too to own. Backed by the entire OM system of accessories from Macro to motor drive, is quiet and shock free, and utilizes a 6-inch high bright light that matters on your eyes.
The Contax RTS is a full-featured, fully-automatic professional-quality camera that accepts a wide range of lenses. From infrared remote control systems, to the data back, to the incredible Real Time Winder, it is a complete solution for building Carl Ziss T1 star lens especially designed for the Contax.
with 50mm f1.8
retails for 399.99 Price **299.99**
with 11.4 retails for $454.95 Wolfe's Price 349.99
- Center needle electrostatic meter
• Bright, accurate universal wadapter
• A abrasion of two lens systems
• Cordless Laser lens mount
FREE with the purchase of an Olympus camera during our grand opening sale you will receive a Capro SLR compartment Case. Regular value $39.99. FREE.
EXTRA SPECIAL
Wolfe's 23999 Low Price
OLYMPUS
- Use Compassman Shift release
* Use Lift Release feature
* Use Back Button release
* Use Wiimote Compass system permits
the use of the exigent compass model
VISIT WITH WOLFE'S ABOUT THE FANTASTIC CONTAX RTS AND THE ALL NEW YASHICA LINE OF CAMERAS.
Yashica FX-2
EXTRA SPECIAL
One of a Kind Demonstrator OM 1 Lens
Yashica FR
Wolfe 31999 Low Price
MONTANA
CORPORATION
BANK OF MONTANA
Here is the same remarkable features of the OM-1 plane performance of automatic exposures. And the OM-2 plane performance of automatic exposures that measures light directly at the Film plane DURING THE ACTUAL EXPOSURE Accurate outperforms the ACTUAL EXPOSURE Accurate in the base of the complete OM system OM-1 is the base of the complete OM system OM-2 is the base of the complete OM system while it captures the world for you autonomously.
VARIOUS VARIABLES
Wolfe's 36999 Low Price
with 50mm 47999
1.8 lens made to sell 599.99
MICRO SYSTEMS
with 50mm f1.4 mode to sell for $654.95 529.99
- Complete viewfinder display
300mm 14.5 429.95 279⁹⁵
40mm 16.3 999.95 599⁹⁹
600mm 16.3 1195.00 799⁹⁹
Came in, buy a new OM camera, and take advantage of these money saving prices on authentic Zuke lenses.
ZUIKO LENS SPECTACULAR
FUJINOX YAMAHA
Come take a look at what Yashica's doing now.
ZUMO INTERRANGELAB LENS GROUP WOISTE'S PRICE RETAIL
12.5 G. Daku Zoom-Auto-W 259.99 259.99
24mm 1.8 G. Daku Zoom-Auto-W 260.99 260.99
24mm 1.8 G. Daku Zoom-Auto-W 164.99 169.99
32mm 1.8 G. Daku Zoom-Auto-W 134.99 139.99
100mm 2.8 E. Zuiko Auto-W with lens head 164.99 169.99
100mm 2.8 E. Zuiko Auto-W with lens head 174.99 179.99
125mm 12.8 E. Zuiko Auto-T 194.99 219.99
13.5 E. Zuiko Auto-T 164.99 169.99
300mm 14.5 F. Zuiko Auto-T 324.99 329.99
300mm 14.5 F. Zuiko Auto-T 324.99
- New Coats, Tactics beyond mount with internal linkage
* Electronic shutter to both automatic and manual mode
* Complete wireless disables
YASHICA FX-1
THE COMPLETE
LIGHT MACHINE
IS HERE
VIVITAR'S NEW
283 AUTO THYRISTOR
Includes remote
sensor and cord.
Made to sell
for $124.90
ONLY
$8999
FLASH
FREE
ACCESSORY HOLDER.
WITH PURCHASE OF
A VIVITAR 283 AUTO
THYRISTOR ELECTRONIC FLASH.
A great opportunity to discover the exciting new world of the flash system with flexibility and ease. You can different flash lenses to the angle of illumination with your camera lens angle.
Or match six different flash filters to create color and intensity of illumination with your needs. (or whims.)
MORE SAVINGS— on Vivitar Strobes Mfg. Wolfe's Retail Price
Vivitor
273 ... 99.95
Vivitor
252 ... 49.95
Vivitor
202 ... 34.95
6999
Ae ment are sex. BRIN
2799
master charge
master charge
BANK&REALCARD
BANKAMERICARD
unlimited time
STORE HOURS
Monday 8:30 to 8:30
Tuesday thru Saturday
8:30 to 5:30
WOLF
-
Wolfe's
camera shop, inc.
Recor Cycle
SONY
2121
3264.
PENGUIN
BOKO
in La
Prese at 8 I
versit $20.0
LO
2 bdt pool.
ATTE ask u person MOBI
635. Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
Municipal Campus
Workshop
Grounds
University Dally Kansan
Wednesday. October 13, 1976
11
ns
RETAIL
329.95
279.95
219.95
169.95
299.95
219.95
249.95
180.95
269.95
429.95
By TERRY BAHNER Staff Writer
Financial laws hurt campaigns
The normal amount of campaign paraphernaemia that generally adenys car bumpers, lapels and lawns in a presidential residence are scarce this year in the Lawrence area.
The scarcity of the traditional bumper stickers, buttons and yard signs is attributed to the new campaign finance laws, according to Dan Watkins, chairman of the Douglas County Committee for the Carter-Mondale campaign.
Watkins said yesterday that because of the laws' financial restrictions on each presidential candidate, local campaign finance being hurt by the shortage of the material.
Some of the Democratic county committees have been slow in raising funds, he said, and it was taking time to come up with the material.
THE OFFICE now has several hundred buttons, and within the next few days, Watkins said he will receive 1,000 bumper stickers. The store also said the stickers were printed in Lawrence.
"We haven't had the viability we like, and in this way I think it has hurt us," he
The shortage of stickers and buttons is not a one-party problem.
Terry Edwards, chairman of the Douglas County Committee for the Ford-Dole campaign, said that she had few campaign materials.
SHE SAID SHE had received a communique lest Friday from the national Republican campaign headquarters informing her that the material had been depleted, but that she would be receiving additional material by Friday.
Edwards said she had never received supplies from them in the first place. She said they enclosed 25 bumper stickers and one button with the note. Edwards said she learned that 25 bumper stickers had been issued by the Republican Committee of Douglas County.
The local shortage of campaign material is a common one, according to Diane Hills, press secretary for the state campaign committee for Carter-Mondale in Tampa.
THE NATIONAL headquarters in Atlanta
"We are operating on a tight budget, and we can't get any more money. So it's up to the counties to put their money into the material." she said.
had decided not to use its money for bumper stickers and that it was up to the local counties to use their $1,000 allotments under regular regulations to buy stickers and buttons.
She said that the county couldn't raise enough money to meet even the $1,000 limit, and that this was reflected in the scarcity of material for that county.
The national headquarters supplies the material so counties aren't forced to raise rates.
Although the local headquarters doesn't have a "wasteful abundance," she said, it is adequately taken care of. The four cases of wastewater and discharged were being distributed to the counties.
MOST OF THE money for the campaign this year is being used on television promotion, she said, because of TV's ability to reach more people.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to a student on institutional or national origin. PLEASE HANDLE ALL CLASSIFICATION TO 111 FILT HALL
She said television had top priority in the budget. Then the administrative expenses, travel costs and media coverage were paid out. She also campaigned materials at the bottom, she said.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times time
AD DEADLINES
time times times times
15 words or fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word
___ $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the DUR business office at 664-8538.
JDK BUSINESS OFFICE
11 Flint Hall
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
Reconditioned Schwinn- Lawrence Schwin-
Cyclery, 1820. W 10th, 842-6363 10th-11
SONY V-FET TA-6550 pianer, Pioneer CT-F-
2692 cass plate deck. Prismen board.
10-14
SONY V-FET TA-6550 pianer, Pioneer CT-F-
2692 cass plate deck. Prismen board.
10-14
BOKONKO--Largest paraphyllar and head shop in Lawrence 12 East 8th St. 81-3460. 10-13
Preservation Hall Jail Band Thursday, Oct. 14 at 10am. The band will be performing at Baldwin City, Ks. Adults $40, Under 30 $25. Tickets: (866) 973-4822.
FOR RENT
2 bhm, apartment, very big, A.C., dwellhouse,
$225. plus electricity and gas, $413.
wagon wheel
10 a.m.—12 p.m.
Everyday is Ladies' Day
Armadillo Bead Co.
MAMMOTH
1930
will be moving soon to The 50th Street
The 8th St. Marketplace Watch for Grand Opening ad in UDK!
710 Mass. 10-5 Mon.-Saf. 841-7946
We buy good used cars Corvettes, Camaros, Novas, Mustangs, Firebirds, and Imported Sports Cars UNIVERSITY MOTORS 26 & Iowa 843-1395
Jayhawk Towers, 5 bedroom apt. All utilities
included. laundry. Landing Facility. On bus line.
843-6833.
Nalismith Hall contract, through May, for sale.
Cindy Debby 84-3447. 10-14
Bubbles furnished one bedroom kit, alt. air conditioner, 260-watt kitchen appliance $178/month. John, #82-3501. 10-15
Suburban 2 bedroom hotspot all pallida补贴, for two rooms on bus route. Call Karen after 12:30 PM.
Reward. Must submit immediately, Spacious,
Rent to the building.
Very close to campus 841-531 or 864-157, 10-14
Need to sublease immediately? Small apt., private
building. Fully furnished. Included.
Call 841-5318 after 4 p.m. 10-14
FOR SALE
3 bedroom apartment at Quirk Creek available for lease at 885-8831 between 9:30 & 6:00 p.m. Statistician of BHU-MSU between 9:30 & 6:00 p.m.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS- Regardless of any price you see on popular hh equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, we will assist you in obtaining benefits at the GHAMPOON SHOP AT SEA.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade goods from manufacturer trade,
The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
Broadway, New York, NY 10022.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BASIC ELECTRIC. AUTO ELECTRIC. BASED ELECTRIC. BASED ELECTRIC.
843-9200. 843-9000. W. 60 h.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make some out of Western Civilization makes sense.
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) For event preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. tt
Excellent selection of used furniture, retir-
gerable units. Furniture is shipped to:
p.m. P.O. Box 21406, New York, NY 10019.
delivery 1-312-758-3222 or 1-312-758-3232
BOKONON—Largest collection of burses and accessions in Lawrence 12 East Bath 81, 340-760
72 Toyota Corolla sedan. Automatic. sleeper 18-
6065. excellent condition. Call 864-300-2900.
excellent
For Sale: 55" color RCA Console; Fingerboard; Ad-
dressable; everything must be 841-676-10-13
Silver Getzen trump, professional model. Best
silver it takes. Call 812-3457 or 814-0897.
Must sell—Arp String Ensemble and Thomas org-
al with Arp Moss Synthesize. Tom Feller. 10-13
4. 135X Crane XS chrome keyboard with Cooper
adapter. Very good condition. Very good
phone. Tom Ba4-8270-litte 10-14
Pronto Polaroid camera. Leaded only 3 times.
Pat Call Bati 841-3821, 3829 Ohio. 10-14
71 Vega Hatchback, low mileage, alpine river,
245-863-6455. 71 Vega Hatchback, high mileage,
835-645-6455. 1425 Alumni Plaza, Room 3, potem
10-14.
CUSUM JEWELRY Professional gold and silver
accessories. Sizes range from 2 to 16.
Compete with Completely cut, Satisfaction guaranteed,
and FREE Shipping.
JAMES V. OWENS
RETAIL LIQUOR STORE
Wines and Liquors
NEXT TO OWEN'S FLOWERS
COLD BEER
- Imported Clothing
Goods • Vintage Clothing
[730Mass.841-7O70]
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Bicycle Touring Bags. Karrimo pannier and
baggage bag, handicap bag, like new. 10,
841-7768. 10, 10-14
New Epiphone acoustic guitar with case. Best offer. 842-878-75.
10-13
- Furniture * Antiques
50 CINCY ROW. Call 800-6100. 10-10
'69 Chevy Nova. Call 864-5160. 10-13
1. Super Bite Vollwacken: 43,000 mils AM-
2. Airtro stereo radio; extra clean. Cal.
1926.
4326.
**Demonstrator Clearance.** 1976 International Sec-
tors, 1976 International Firearms Corp.
FM, air deluxe interior, $800, $845,
1976 International Scout II AXE, a PFR,
$200, $200, $200, $200, $200, $200,
Kohn Truck & Tractor Company, Inc., I-10
435.
Epiphone electric bass, perfect condition, rarely
used. 12-string action, includes jack adapter,
$200. $44-612-612
1973 Datsun pick-up with soft top camper $2500.
1974 Datsun pick-up with Tractor & Tractor Co. 1548 $ 1480.
434-2400.
434-2400.
markdown on all 76 MagnaVox console stereos and components. Beautiful **84.95** console cuts as low as $300; powerful comp. sets with features like the MIDI-port, Bluetooth, Mass. Open 'til 5:30 p.m., Thurs. (8:30). 10:22
**CARRANCE** $120. Discounted radial tires $25 each plus $190 to $300 (even with tax). [Ewen ART-12] $25 radials for Volkswagen included] Rock Stone come thru Woolworth's parking lot for tire set
Heck and Hardtarfer Reality, Inc.
Complete 10-gal. aquarium and stand C84-11
2131, ask for Harold.
10-13
Olds Studio model trumpet, excellent condition.
Contact Tom Shepherd at 312-648-0790 from 11:30am to 5:00pm.
Electrical Shop M-F, or 913-242-2732 after p. m. anytime.
10-15
Two bedroom ranch, one acre, rural water, $238.
004-8352-5522; alr Algr, AirB19.817-0774
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 4th, 84-13
3233.
those used by speelman.
1923 Honda CLI150
1923 Honda CLI150
1923 Honda CTT70
1923 Honda CTT70
1923 Honda XL250
1923 Honda XL250
Check out these used bike specials:
Baled wheat straw--good for parties, munching,
etc. Call 843-8648.
10-15
Speakers: very efficient, crisp and clean 5-way
System. Must sell $200-$400. 634-9341.
FOR SALE: Classical Glassware - Yair-Handkered
Fits most glass containers. Portable typewriter - $35, 843-7288. 10-18
17 Mustang management condition. Alr.-FM, AF-
6218, stocks. must sell $1575. Call 841-7209 to 109
6218
78 Honda CL. 350, elec. start, good condition.
under $500.812-722. Ask for Lewis. 10-19
AKAI 1721 We'd re-tile in-record/recorder
1610 Price include 16 tapes! Call 439.289.108.18
Must sell $9 VW Bus. Auto stick Runs. Hum
looks good. Make买. 841-3377. 10-15
HELP WANTED
MGB "GT" 1972. Excellent condition. Overdrive, radials. FM-CAM. Must sell. 843-6334. 10-19
Female subjects wanted for Figure photography
in height. Write Pred, O' Box 205, Lawrence
1804.
Part time Housekeeper/Secretary immediately, help with cleaning of room for 10 hrs. To do general cleaning, some steam ironing. General letter correspondence, 3 referrals necessary. Call 842-6904 morning. 10-13
N.A.P'A.
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
NAPA
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we
overnight
1. Machine shop service
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it
Auto Parts
1. Special Prices
2. Open 7 days and nights
5. Two stores
Graduate Student Council has a part-time job opening in the GSC Office. Hours: 10 hours per week. Apply by January 28th for project. Qualifications: Knowledge of interest, concern for graduate student issues. Knowledge of availableble. Above minimum wage. When immediately offered you might be eligible for work if you think you might be eligible for work as a graduate student. For this job by calling Elena Reynolds at 864-8143 or 842-1444 any time. Or stop by the GSC Office.
817 Vermont 2300 Hasken
843-9365 843-6960
MANAGER OF TECHNICAL SERVICES AND MANAGEMENT—management level position in administration, management level position in administration, the areas of operations (IBM 370/45, VSI) and applied systems. Provides technical assistance and technical improvements and troubleshoots technical and programming, technical services and open training degree of managerial ability and technical knowledge and programming, including programming of computer software and programming, including programming of gree preferred. Send resume to R. Maguire, Management Systems, 3 Carratch-O'Leary Hall, Lawnridge University, B6. 3 Carratch-O'Leary Hall, Lawnridge University, B6. An EQUAL OPEN DOING ENVIRONMENT ENCOURAGED TO APPLY 10-14
Cook. Assume responsibility for preparation work.
Cook. Prepare lunch for week. Fork Lawrence Club.
Approx 20 hours per week. Fork Lawrence Club.
LOST AND FOUND
Lot: bus pass with two footbuckles to
driver's license in 8.144-2048. Reward. 10-13
Lost! Both pass with two football tickets and a driver's license in mi. 964-284-400. Reward. 10.
Lost! cat, large white, nenated dog In Papers 35, 363a area. If found or see please call 84-10-19
MISCELLANEOUS
Loc. (Sloley) Brown leather walker on 10-9-76
important contents: Calf Gag, 822-94-804.
Important contents: Calf Gag, 822-94-804.
Found small male white cat. Call 842-0158. Keep trying.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Alice at the House of Ubiqui/Quick Copy Center.
It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 838
Mass.
Found. High school class ring, Shawnee Mission West, at Holcom Park Call 843-2909 10-15
NOTICE
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used for furniture, latex clothes, clock televisions. Open daily 12-5pm. 128-736-7280.
CASABAH SCARE--Good food from scratch. Lunch,
dinner, dessert. 10:30-3:30. 893 Mass. Please take back homework, e-book,
notebook.
Jim's Steak House. Delicious food at reasonable prices. 3rd Floor, 212-785-6900, Jim's
Steak House, 3rd Floor, 212-785-6900, Claned Tuesday, 3rd Floor, 212-785-6900
part time work experience for juniors and
senior. Excellent pay, short hours. 804-764-105
www.seniorwork.com
HALLOWEEN MASQUEUR DANCE by Gay Services, a MARY HARTMAN MARY HART-
will win high praise the evening. Prizes for winner. Dec 28, 10: 8
Kansas University Ballroom, $1.75.
GAY RAP GROUP: Thursday, Oct. 14, 7:30, 822
Kentucky,
10-14
AIRLINES
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND THERAPY; indi-
dicate growth workshops 10-22
611-883-1833 in Leewasser
in Lewesbury
CHINA
American and Mexican Food
All Mexican Dishes served
on piping hot plates
807 Vermont 842-94-95
Thanksgiving and Christmas travelers should reserve now for best choice of flight, train and hotel. May we also assist you in planning your trip? No extra charge for our services.
- Pool
* Snooker
Ping Pong
TYPING
SUA Maupintour travel service
"A different kind of bar
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Foot-Ball
Make Reservations
SERVICES OFFERED
"CAFE-the only thing we deliver is satisfaction. 10-13
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476 10-29
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
Commercial Printing-Invitations, stationery,
programs, brochures, cards, posters, & much,
much more. We do custom work to meet your
needs. We call the Kansas Kaney Office
E. 9th, B42-4483. 10-14
Single Man, Come & find out details of a Dating workshop on 15, 14, 15. Room 294 Frank Koehler
PERSONAL
Phone 843-1211 KU Union Lobby
9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week. No One Under 18 Admitted
Cathy, have a HAPPY BIRTHDAY, love RON,
10.13
- Bud on Tap
Wanted: Two (2) females. Qualifications: Clean, fluent in English. Must have a job offered, interested in a seminal meaningful relationship with two (2) recently brittle genitales. Our goal is to provide the best possible sex with and without one. Call 841-3844 for your details.
Need a new bike! Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer. **8-12** Ride up to 120 miles on Schwinn Schwinn Cycley 4-8 Mon-Sat. Thurs till $30, Sun. 1-4, 1800 W 6th, 842-6353.
- Pinball
The Lounge
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on
the Internet to 360.hr. 269 H. Los Angeles.
phone: 602-2521 471-8748.
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
--during selection and display
- Pool
THEISIS BINDING COPYING The House of Ushers' Quick Copy Center is headquarters for thesis binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us visit at 838 Massachusetts or phone 412-5867 thank you.
Homo sapiens
Generator sets $12.95—now $9.55 while they last.
Lawrence Schroeder, Clyropolis, 1890; Wheeler 80; 43d
123.
Math Tutoring--competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 103, 109, 110, 119, 116, 117, 118, 123, 124, 143, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, test preparation, Reasonable calls, Call 842-7801.
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
EXCLUSIVE.
--during selection and display
Open 9 30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
GAY SERVICES MEETING. Oct. 19, 19th Wahunan Bansho Blanket, Executive Director for the ACLU Karen Blanket, Executive Director for the ACLU Her presentation will cover the issues of sexual harassment in the workplace. For inviting social media calls 854-276-3000.
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Foosball
842-8413 BankAmericard Mastercharge
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDES SHOP
9am - 5pm 10am - 6pm
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mime,
dialect, writing. Mail: 843-855-638, Mr. Wright
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a bike that fits better. We offer two enclosed bicycle - in-litre models, your deserts, brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your tire, incline, accessories at time of "tune-up". Rates: 10 speed $15.00, 3 or 5 speed $15.00, single speed $20.00, double speed $20.00, single speed $15.00, single speed $15.00. Complete protection.
The Chalk Hawk
in the summer.
Keep your car healthy
209 W B
Smiley Car
student discounts
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
Home of
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
RZ MedicalWorks
Eyedrokar Optical
Need an experienced ttyped1 IBM Selectric LT
card (ribbon). Pam Call at 842-797-8888.
(ribbon). Pam Call at 842-797-8888.
Call Ottis Vann!
For new Chevroletts and used cars at
Turner Chevrolet
843-7700
Experienced Typist-IBM-Memory-Call 843-
9471, ask for John. 10-29
California alum helps for homecoming
in the fall (48) 247-7177 days.
eighteen or more (48) 247-7177 days.
10-13
Typtik editor, IBM Pica'ilite, Quality work
dissections, dissertations welcome.
Horn, 841-937-8197.
Need three tickets to OU-KU game. Will pay good price. Call 863-3013. 10-13
Experienced typist! manuscript, thesels, etc. Call
at 364-811-3031; 841-719-8035 evenings and
weekends; 841-719-8035 afternoons
WANTED
Need 2 tickets to KU-OU or KU-Nebraska for
Call集. Collect. Tom McIntyre at McDonald's
in Topeka. 913-571-8511. If I'm not in
with amy, with my secretary and I will
be 10:13.
Ace needs salesperson at the game to sell the official KU hat. Earn a bac a hat. $80 in commissions made at WisconsinGame. Limited number of salesperson needed. Call 643-8540 or fax 0541.
We now have openings for the remainder of the register for both male or female roommates.
Christian Musician's Group to perform "The
Wonderful Wife" at 8 p.m. Wednesday nights, plenary lecture 11-7-78
849-609
Top dollar paid for 4 KU-OU tickets (anywhere
in stadium). **10-15**
MWP Jim 393-281-388
Nest 2 GUK-U football ticket Call Shiplion
402 276-325-281
Male roommates wanted for large 2-bedroom apartment. See at 1011 Indiana. Apt. 5, no 2.
Wanted to buy: Four KU-OU tickets. Together or
Needed, one ticket for the Kansas-Oklahoma
game. Call 841-5551
10-15
Roommate for very good Jaywalker Towers
Apartment to start immediately. From 6/15 until
8/15.
Need two tickets to Nebraka game. Will pay a good price. Call 841-4720. 10-19
Needed 1 grad student or full time working girl to split rent and util. in a 3 bedroom apt. at Quail Creek. Apt. furnished except bedroom. Between 6:20 & 9:00. 10-19 437-325 after hours
Female roommate, nice townhouse, $100 a month,
small pets OK. Suge 844-237-842, 840-690, 10-15
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Fenth
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
NAISMITH HALL
NAISMITH HALL
Now accepting
Applications
for Spring Semester
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
HAPPY SANTA
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
NOW'S THE TIME
HOW'S THE TIME FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY
No extra charge
Gift Wrapping Free
HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass.
12
Wednesday, October 13, 1976
University Daily Kansan
20. 7. 140000000000
1
Wolfe's Grand Opening Sale In Progress
CANON
NEW CANON AE-1 The electronic system camera that's changing the course of photography.
The AE is changing the way cameras will be made and the way
the camera sensor will be used. We will use a high-resolution and
sensitive photo cell from your own device to apply to your subject,
yet with all the same quality. You can continue to interact
with all the subjects at any time. To really appreciate it, you have
to pick up information if it
Canon
- Sturdy spacious automatic exposure room
• Professional lightweight compact and easy to clean space
• Non-smother moisture protection exposure room
• A motor for lighting and sequencing shading
• Auto flash and humidity fast shock and aperture
• Accepts Canon EF 45mm for AT
• Accepts performance at all AF
• Accepts performance at all AF
With f.1.8 lens made to sell for $413.00
Canon
AE-1
Wolfe's Price $33999
Film Winder and Flash Priced Separately
Canonet G-III 17 Perfect Pictures, Day or Night Automatically
The handcause compact 35mm camera gives you missile proof exposure control whether you shoot in bright sunlight or in the **[google] night** with addition of the superb Canonite D electronic flash. All you do is focus. While the Camonite G1 [T] 17 automatically adjusts the camera to a focused position, you can adjust it to the color spectrum uniquely unique [S]. Quick loading for fast film changing and an information view in the bright yellow make this an outstanding camera value.
CANON
CLASS 35mm
Now at Wolfe's Extra Low Price Madier to sell for $169.99
$109⁹⁹ Demonstrator
SPECIAL CANON SALE
5
Year
Warranty
Mfg.
suppg.
CANON
Canon FL Mount Lens by Bushnell
The ultimate SLR *removable prim*, at its caprot motor drive, is up to 1/2000 of a centrifugal motor.
Limited Quantities to fit Pentax, Nikon Canon, Konica, and Olympus. Try one of these rugged lenses for excellent performance. They come complete with a five year warranty and soft lens pouch.
Bushnell Lens Riot
Wolfe's Closeout
Now $199^{99}$
Only $35999 Demo Units
135mm f 2.8 $121.50 $³99⁹
300mm 15.5 $162.50 $¶99⁹
515-135 zoom $289.50 $1199⁹
Binge in your body and let us put up Buellhush灯 on it. All the models are available in limited quantities for Penthouse Models.
Cannon Long and Short Lens Special
Look at these low
Bushnell Lens Prices
52nd
Anniversary
Mid-Key
Rental
Canon
28mm f 2.8
Buy our long and short set for EXTRA savings. How you can buy to 300mm and a 21cm mirror, made to sell for over $350
Both for
$9999
102.50 $ 59^{99} $
Full operation metering B-1/50 of atl. of a second shutter speeds accepts all Canon FL & FD Series lens with 50mm f1.8 lens.
35mm f2.8
135 mm f 2.8
200mm f3.5
300mm f 5.5
142.50 89 $ ^{99} $
400mm f 6.3
194. 50 119 $ ^{99} $
90-230 Zoom
35-105 Zoom
2
425. 00 299 $ ^{99} $
Super Wide Lens Close Out 21 mm f 3.8 Bushnell made to sell for $200 only $6999
M
Very Limited Quantities on All Specials
WOLF
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
116 West Eighth - Phone 235-1386
Topeka, Kansas 66603
全国统一发票监制章
国家税务总局监制
GOSSEN LUNA PRO
PROFESSIONAL LIGHT METER
Here is the proven world standard for extreme sensitivity, range accuracy and versatility.
Anniversary Special
Optional attachments available at Wolfe's usual low price
DTI Lens
Close Out
Great Buy for all Memiya,
Pentax, Yashica, Fuji Camera
69'99
28mm f2.8
49'99
35mm f2.8
69'99
200mm f3.5.
SAVE MORE
Come see the new Mamiya
Professional System
SUPER TRADE IN SPECIAL
Bring in your old instantiate or polaroid camera in working condition and get a $20 trade in on a Mamiya SLR.
FUJINOSHAKAN
SPECIAL PURCHASE
ON BELL AND HOWELL
ELECTRONIC FLASH
870 made to
sell for 129.95
4999
880 made to
sell for 149.95
5999
Mamiya 500 DSX with f1.8
SALE 179.99
- 20.00 Trade-in*
159.99
WITH TRADE
KONICA MINOLTA
spot and averaging meter system and screw mount lens.
Mamiya 1000 DSX f1.8
Open operature metering, system and spat and averaging system
FOCUS DEFINDER AE-100
MAGNIFICENT 50mm F/4 LENS
179. 99 WITH TRADE
1000 DSX with f1.4
Open, supraoperative, metering system,
plus a flash of 1.4 mm.
SALE 219.99
-20.00 Trade-in*
1 99.99
WITH TRADE
SALE 199.99
- 20.00 Trade-in*
Come in to discuss the advantages of the Mamiya professional system. From $2\frac{1}{4}$" square to the super approaches of ideal format, Mamiya professionals have them all. Larger negatives mean greater sharpness, greater enlargements, and greater fun. See the ideal format cameras with greater flexibility through interchangeable lenses.
Mamiya
MAM 2000
59900
Save over 150.00
Mamiya
RB 67 Pro S
with 90mm lens
599.00
Mamiva 645 Complete Unit. Camera Body, Magazine. Waist Level Finder and 80mm Lens.
Mamiya C120
49900 PRICE HIGHER AS ILLUSTRATED
Mamiya C 220
Camera with 80mm lens.
Save 100.00
199 $ ^{99} $
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Gra Lab
Darkroom Timer
Model 300 . . . The perfect darkroom timer. Made to sell for $4.30.
Wolfe's Grand Opening Special
$3199
□
16 X 20
Print Trays
$499
Values $7.99 to $11.95 $4.99
NOW Only ...
WIDE NECK STRAP
WIDE NECK STRAP
Choice of 1 or 2. Floral design, solid pads, and stipes.
Protect your neck and your camera.
Usually $4.99 to 5.99 $2.99
Now Only ...
GAF SLIDE TRAY $1.99
85-205 f3.8 Zoom Lens
for rent cameras. Alaffs Fits
Mamiya, Miroku and Vivitar
cameras. Multicolored lenses imported
Innopate. Compete with $200 value
Wolfe's $9999
Special.
SPEED CHANGE SWITCH
Your choice of 35mm 36 exposure or
120 roll film. Usually $3.99
Now each
Stainless Steel Developing Reels
7" Stainless Steel
Developing Tank
Holds four 35mm or two 120 reels.
Usually 16.99
Now only $999
Made to fit SAVE $10-$20 Sale Price
$1099
Pentax...$199
...$249
Olympus, Canon, Konica ... $29^99
Close-up Bellows
Attaches to most any SLR with a "T" adapter (not included in the sale price) Usually $44.99.
Now Only $3499
Zoom Slide Duplicator
Fuji Film Buy four and Save
With Full Film you get speed (ASA 100) plus fine grain color.
Bollard red, natural green, vivid pastel, and excellent character in every light duration.
BUY 1, GET 2
BETWEEN
SOMEWHERE
4 pack of 36 exposure $6'99
usually 9.99 New
VOLCANO
Bulk Film Supplies
Watson 100 or Aiden 74
Loader Usually 14.00 to
20.00
$ 199
Now Only
Roll your own black and white or color Film and save money. Loader pays for itself Right Away. Practically cuts your film cost in half.
$249
Bag of ten
Get Your first set of cassettes now and save even more. Bag of ten all metal 35mm cassettes.
Usually $3.99
Now only ...
FABRIC HANGING TRANSPORTER
Reputation Maker Screens
Feature 40x40 Comet Glass Beaded Screen Top Quality Fabric in Mexico ogen Glass Retail Value over $20
Screen
50/50 Breasted Metis New Only
Usually 29.9 N $12 19
Limestone 29.9 N $22 29
70/70 Breasted Wall Screen
Limestone 39.9 N $34 39
Limestone 59.0 N
Soft Lens Pouches
Drawing top. Pushed lens held inside, and also photo used.
Usually 4.99, 5.99, 6.99, and 7.99
1/2 Price
Photo Reflectors
Set up a Studio in your home. Low cost set for
Portrait Lighting, carded, gimp and your choice
of 5" , 10" or 12" reflector. Usually 7.99 to
11.95
Now Only $499
CORE
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
© 2015 Aurora Press, Phone 719-386-4950
>The SPORTSMANS Camera<
Sale
Priced
OLYMPUS
OLYMPUS
40mm F2.8
OLYMPUS
An Olympus 35mm compact Camera is perfect for saving the fun of your favorite outdoor activity. Tucked away in your pocket, it is always handy for those exciting moments. And its fast shutter stops the most exciting action.
Olumpus $159.99 $119.99
35 ED
Olympus $159.99 $129 99
35RC
$129^{99}
Olympus
35 RD $199.99 $159^99
master charge
Give
BANKAMERICARD
announce there
STORE HOURS
Monday 8:30 to 8:30
Tuesday thru Saturday
8:30 to 5:30
WOLF
Wolfe's
camera shop, inc.
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
N
Municipal Building
Wing 1
Farmhouse
Workshop
Barnyard
Parking Lot
SS
ave
dies fine grain color
tails, and excellent
AND
ME
plies
Now $699
e or color Film for itself Right cost in half.
row and save
al 35mm cas-
$1199
00 or Alden 74
usually 14.00 to
$249
Bag of ten
on
s
DLL LATE
Glass Beaded Quality fabric in Hex Valve Value over 520
New Only
$799
... NOW 1299
... NOW 2299
... NOW 3499
uches
top. Push hosed case c and other photo 19, 5.99, 6.99, and
Price
low cost set for and your choice usually 7.99 to
Only $499
fe's
op.inc.
nera is per-
viorate out-
our pocket,
exciting mo-
s the most
KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.38
Thursday, October 14, 1976
Writing skills concern profs
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
See story page five
KU fee windfall to spur Regents
By JIM COBB Staff Writer
The Kansas Board of Regents is expected tomorrow to ask the 1977 Kansas Legislature to give the majority of Kansas votes in favor of a $2.5 billion in fees that were collected this fall.
KU also is to ask that funding for additional students be included in the fiscal
The fees were from the 810 more students enrolled than were originally projected. The University has state permission to spend $25,000 projected from a projected number of students.
The Regents and their committees are to act on lengthy agendas at both their regular monthly meeting and meetings of various Regents committees today and tomorrow.
THEY ARE expected to request additional funding for utilities because of energy costs that exceed allocated funds and may recommend that annual rates for
★ ★ ★
Three new Kansas universities, in name at least, could result from action taken this month and next by the state Board of Regents.
Regents to hear 3 state colleges play name game
Administrators from Kansas State College of Pittsburg, Fort Hays State College, and Wichita Falls have requested that their colleges' names be changed. Two Regents' committees will discuss the proposal today and tomorrow and approve the Regents' amend the names changes.
The Regents could act on the proposal at their monthly meeting Friday or at their November meeting. The Kansas nature would have to give final approval.
**NAMES PROPOSED** for the colleges are Emoria State University, Pittsburgh State University and either Fort Hays State University or the University of the Great Plains.
Tedde Tasheff, student body president and coordinating committee member, said yesterday that the proposal had been discussed in past meetings, but that there had been no action taken on the name changes.
Tasheef predicted that the coordinating committee would approve the changes. The sentiment of the proponents is that changing the title would make Kansas colleges conform with a general national trend, she said.
Chancellor Archie Dykes said the traditional definition of a university as a school with a liberal arts college, graduate studies programs and several professional schools was being changed to mean any institution of higher education.
"IT'S PARTICULARLY important to faculty members who think that if they could be teaching in a place called a university in another state, that they should be entitled to the same kind of title at a similar school here," she said.
For example, he said, most private and parochial "universities" in Kansas actually don't offer the programs of traditional universities.
students living in residence halls be raised by $35.
The Regents Institutions Coordinating Committee is to discuss a proposal that the names of three state colleges be changed to universities and also will discuss possible changes in the calendar of Regents' schools for the next two academic years.
One of those changes might be to postpone first-eventer examinations until after Christmas, holidays. Chancellor Ernie Johnson proposed the proposal discussed by the Regents' Council of President because 'some personal thought that school had begun too early,
DYKES SAID he seriously doubted that the current scheduling method of having final exams before Christmas would be changed.
Another proposal, if passed, would increase the number of holidays during spring
KU has asked the Regents to increase the expenditure limit on the Parking Fees Fund from $447,755 to $477,755. Dykes said the change would free additional money to finish painting the Ozone parking lot near gymnasium Gymnasium and other parking areas.
The Regents may recommend a 15 percent increase in retirement benefits for former University employees. In addition, a report of a budget committee on how eminent would be dropped if enrollment declines in Regents' schools will be discussed.
BASKETBALL
THE REGENTS are to request that the Kansas Legislature amend the wording of a description of the Service Clearing Fund so that University-related groups, such as the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, Kansas, University, Endowment Association, University, Education, Alumni Association and student groups, can use the service clearing account.
Receipts and payments from such University services as the computation center and the printing service are kept in the service clearing fund. Because of the current wording of this Fund's description, groups may not legally use the services.
Three new bachelor's degree programs in the School of Allied Health at the KU Medical Center will be up for approval by the Reents Health Education Committee.
The Regents' Council of Presidents, which comprises presidents and heads of Regents' schools, is to discuss liability insurance, refunds for students who withdraw from school and enrollment declines at some state colleges.
John Nigro of Topeka takes aim during a break in the action of the wheelchair basketball clinic last night at the Lawrence Community Building. The Lawrence Parks and
Wheelin' and Dealin'
Recreation Department and the Topeka Chairmen and Chaiettes conducted the clinic to find other interested people in Lawrence to join their basketball team.
Nursing at KUMC not 8 to 5 job
&talf Writer
Bv BARBARA ROSEWICZ
Staff nurses may complain about the odd work schedules at the KU Medical Center, but so far all they have been able to do is accent the hours or quit.
an eight to five work shift may be routine for many employees, such a shift is usually more favorable.
Shots still scheduled
Vaccinations for swine flu are to begin as scheduled Oct. 27 for high-risk people in Lawrence, despite the death this week of a person who had been infected by persons hours after receiving the vaccine.
Swine flu shots are to be given Wednesday, from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Oct. 27 at the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Clinic, 701 New Hampshire St., for people 45 years or older and those with chronic health conditions. The clinic will provide a written referral from their physicians.
A clinic in Watkins Hospital will be open 2 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Oct. 28 to give the women information.
The Kansas Health Department recommended Tuesday that Kansas clinics continue vaccination plans on schedule for patients who develop mendations after the deaths in Kansas yesterday, according to Kay Kent, director of evidence-Douglas County Health Department.
The first local swine flu shots were given Thursday to nursing home patients. Kent said she hadn't heard of any severe reactions to the vaccine in the Lawrence area.
center. They must work various combinations of day and night shifts to keep the team on task.
The day shift is from 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
The evening shift is from 3:10 to 11:30 p.m.
and then from 11:30 to 4:00 p.m.
Under the system of varying shifts, nurses sometimes get only one day a week off or get off at 11:30 p.m. and have to be at an office at half a hour later the next day at 7 a.m.
Vaccinations for others of the community should be available the first couple weeks in New York.
"NURSES MAYBE wouldn't feel quite so bad about working evening or night shifts if they were getting paid more." Sharon Center, said Tuesday.
A Board of Regents recommendation to this year's legislature asks for reconsideration of the Civil Service system, which controls nurses' salaries.
Chancellor Archie Dykes said the legislature could consider making nurses' salaries more competitive with other area hospitals and paying a shift differential. PAYING 10 per cent more for evening and
Seats available for KSU game
The KU-K-State football game, set for Oct. 23, already has been announced as a sellout, but Carol Adolf, K-State ticket manager, said yesterday that the team will be set up on the north side of KSU KSudium for the game.
By GERRY O'CONNOR
THE OFFICIAL attendance at the KU-KState game two years ago was 43,576, which was the KSU Stadium attendance record. This year, with the extra chairs, the attendance could reach 48,000.
Many probably remember the 1974 KU-KState game in Manhattan as being extremely crowded and the team's defense was inept.
SHARON LONGERG, Overland Park junior, said, "There was a really long line at the room. It took about 45 minutes to get to the bathroom. And the food was so good." The kids were excited and you couldn't walk around, but I thought it was fun."
"The ushers didn't know where to sit people," she said. "They sat KU people in the K-State section and K-State people in the KU section. I tried to sit with some friends but ended up having to sit in my assigned seat. At the game went on, it became more and more crowded. The game our row was so packed you couldn't 'budge.'
Linda Ramsey, St. Louis junior, described the conditions at the 1974 case as "mass confusion."
Tickets for these seats, which are 88, will on sale Tuesday morning at the K-State ticket office.
Larry Gasson, Topeka senior, said there were no aisles in the bleacher sections.
"Once we made it into the bleachers we stayed there because it was too much trouble to move." he said.
Leah Stevens, Garnett senior, said she had to treat people from her seat and finally leave.
"HAD ABOUT a half an inch to sit in," she said. "I felt they oversold the place. If they would me my seat, why couldn't 'it is there?' I didn't see my seat because he was not here. It was really it was no worse than a crowded game here."
At the 1974 game there were also temporary bleachers set up high on the south side of the stadium. Adolf said these bleachers wouldn't be set up for this season because they weren't available two years ago, and they weren't available this year.
THE TEMPORARY bleachers on the southwest and southwest corners of the stadium are up for all the home football games, Addlid say. However, the prices are a bit high. The game. A bleacher seat ticket for the 1974 game cost $8.
She said the tickets for bleacher seats usually cost $5, but if there were a large demand for tickets to a certain game, as there usually was for the KU, Nebraska and Oklahoma games, the price of tickets for the bleacher seats ros to $5. The decision on the price of the tickets for the game is made before the season begins. Adolf said.
The capacity of KSU Stadium is 42,000. That includes about 3,500 temporary bleacher seats in the upper level.
Although some KU students have complained that tickets to the 1974 game were oversold, Adolf said, this
A week ago K-State considered putting standing-
only tickets on sale for the game. However,
K-State will not do so this year.
assistant athletic director, said the business office decided to set up chairs instead because "we thought it was more comfortable."
COLLERT SAID that K-State hoped to set up 3,000 to 4,000 chairs, but that he wasn't sure-exactly how many would be up because final arrangements for the rental of the chairs hadn't been made. The K-State athletic department will rent the chairs from the K-State physical plant and a rental firm in Kansas City, MN.
Despite the crowded conditions at the 1974 game, Adolf said, she has received no complaints from either KU or K-State people about being crammed into the stadium. However, she said, she has received complaints from K-State fans about being crammed into the south side of Memorial Stadium at football in Lawrence.
Doug Messler, KU assistant athletic director, said he hadn't received complaints from people about being treated for an aneurysm.
HE SAID THE reason he hadn't received any complaints was probably that "It's pretty much expected that you have to take the seats you're given when you're the visiting team."
Messer said KU didn't sell standing room only tickets to its games.
"Sometimes we set up extra chairs for a game, but we're limited by the amount of space we have," he
"I think that with time, if you're going to work at the Med Center 10 years and make a career out of it, you should have some seniors and have the shift you want."
Messer said that every stadium had a listed capacity, but that more people than the listed capacity could attend a game as long as the aisles and restrooms conformed to fire regulations.
"THE LIFESTYLE of the nurse makes it hard to have a family and rotate shifts," Teresa Wilson, an RN who works two different shifts a week, said. "We expect as nurses to put in our weekends and holidays, but we also know some kind of pattern, some consistency."
The Civil Service system defines wage
and doesn't provide for shift differen-
Dykes has reported that Med Center salaries range from five to 12 per cent below the salaries in other area hospitals, and that most other hospitals nay shift differential.
WILSON SAID she hadn't applied for a day position because she wanted to work as a staff nurse on the pediatrics floor and no day positions were offered there.
She hasn't left the Med Center for a day job in another hospital because her work at the Med Center is more challenging, she has a lot of health care and treats more rare cases, she said.
Blevins said that even though other hospitals do offer day shifts, a new nurse at another hospital had worse hours than those at the Med Center.
"At another hospital, you start on straight nights for several months, but eventually you have the chance to be on straight days for the rest of your life."
JOANNA FRIERSON, who has been a licensed practical nurse for 13 years at the Med Center, said she would have to take a leave of absence if her salary is almost at the top of the pay scale.
she said. Salaries increase with seniority. Mary Elisseen, director of nursing seniority, director of nursing encouraged to work three different shifts a week to make scheduling more flexible.
When day positions become available in the patient clinics, she said, the jobs are given to the people thought to be the most qualified.
She said that many times the person with seniority was the most qualified, but that seniority didn't necessarily guarantee a person one of the day positions.
KC can clinch pennant today
The Kansas City Royals and the New York Yankees meet tonight in the final showdown for supremacy of the American League.
The last game of the league's best-of-five play-off series starts at 7:15 in Yankee Stadium.
Ed Figueroa, a 19-game winner in the regular season but a 74-loser Sunday night to the Royals, will pitch for the Yankees.
KC manager Whitey Herzog, however, said he was undecided on his pitcher. He was set to choose from the Giants and the Dennis Leonger and Marty Martin.
The Royals smashed New York yesterday, 74, to even the play-off series at two wins each.
The team that wins tonight gets to meet the National League champion Cincinnati Reds in the World Series, starting Saturday in Cincinnati.
Fewer calls to information since adoption of charge
The number of directory assistance calls to Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. has been reduced by nearly 60 per cent since the company's adoption of a 10 cent charge for more than five such calls a month, a new report from Commission Commission (KCC) said last night.
the commissioner, Pete Loux, talked informally with Douglas County Young Democrats about his job in the commission and state Democratic politics. Loux is a former leader of the Kansas House of Representatives.
THE FIVE PER cent who have gone over
Loux told his audience that about 95 per cent of Bell's customers hadn't been billed for any directory assistance calls, indicating they had stayed under the five-call system.
the limit have been billed an average of 65 cents a month, he said.
However, Louis said, the rate charge is still in the experimental stage and subject
A problem in the current system is the high residential turnover rate on campuses. Students can get into college for numbers that aren't in the telephone directory, as is often the case with students,
A possible solution is to require telephone companies to update and distribute directories more often, he said, or to make use of online databases in public places such as libraries.
ALTHOUGH individual city directories are undated every six weeks, those direc-
See DIRECTORY page eight
2
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Jet crashes in Bolivia
SANTA CRUZ, Bolivia—A Miami-bound cargo jet plunged into one of the main downtown avenues of this eastern Bolivian city yesterday.
It cut a path of destruction for more than 300 yards down the avenue. One wing smashed a school and the number of deaths was estimated at 100.
A Red Cross official said that 160 bodies had been found and that the death toll was expected to mount as rescue workers dug through the debris. The estimate of about 100 dead was made by the U.S. Embassy in La Paz, the Bolivian capital 350 miles to the northwest.
Witnesses said the jet—a Boeing 707 of a Miami Airlines crew of three Americans—faltered shortly after takeoff from EI Trumpillo airport on the city's outskirts and may have been trying to make an emergency landing when the jet crashed and attended classes when the wing smashed through part of a primary school.
Arab peace efforts upset*
DEHUTU, A Syrian armored battered Palestinian guerrillers left Lt. Col. Dehutu in a two-pronged offensive yesterday that upset American forces forces.
The assault on the approaches to Beirut, behind a heavy artillery and rocket barrage, came 24 hours after Syrian forces moved against the southern port city of
The Palestinian guerrilla commander at Baudum said the Syrians were trying to push through to Beirut before an Arab summit meeting scheduled for Monday in Israel.
The guerrillas and leftists held to their forward positions at Bhanduon, a mountainous region of 12 miles east of the capital, resisting Syrian tank assaults and fighting with the rebels.
Ford assemblu lines roll
DETROIT—For the first time in 29 days, a few Ford Motor Co. assembly lines cranked up yesterday following narrow ratification of a new industry-pattern law that permits use of fuel injectors.
The Ford Wixom, Mich., plant was set to roll out the first finished car since the coast-to-coast walkout idled 102 facilities in 22 states at midnight Sept. 14.
However, it remained uncertain when the nation's No. 2 car producers would have all its workers back on the job. There were still unresolved local labor disputes.
Hua's appointment doubted
TOKYO—China's millions still hadn't been told officially yesterday of Hua Kudeng's reported appointment as Mao Tse-tung's successor. Delay in the announcement raised speculation that Hua hasn't completely secured his position as China's top leader.
Assuming the military joined in the reported arrest of China's leading radicals, including Mao's widow, Chiang Chang, there was the question of what conditions powerful army commanders might have set for helping clear the path to power for Hua.
Nationalist experts on mainland affairs said Hua, who is seen as a compromise between radicals and moderates in the Chinese leadership, lacked the broad power base needed to keep control of the country. They said he had no influence in the Red Army and, at age 57, is relatively junior in the Communist
Ine Taiwan analysts said the power struggle wasn't over and predicted that with the demise of Chiang Ching's radical faction, the party moderates and regional parties would be able to gain control.
Federal health officials said yesterday that they had found no evidence that swine flu vaccine in the Pittsburgh area was effective in reducing elderly persons who had been vaccinated.
The preliminary results of the tests were reported by the Food and Drug Administration after more swine flu clinics. The incidence was a result of deaths among elderly people.
Health officials stressed there was no known connection between the $135 million vaccination program and 15 deaths reported in at least eight states.
Bv The Associated Press
Spokesmen for the Center for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta said that there was no evidence that the program should be used. The CDC said it did not implicate centers that had been closed.
The FDA said it had completed tests of 35 vials of swine flu vaccine gathered from the Pittsburgh clinic where inoculations were given to three elderly persons who later died.
"The tests did not indicate the presence of any foreign materials" an FDA spokesman said. "On the basis of the tests, the FDA has no evidence that the deaths in Pittsburgh were associated in any way with a bad batch of vaccine."
No connection drawn between deaths. shots
The agency said it would conduct other tests on purity and potency in about a week.
Officials of nine states suspended the free, public vaccination programs. But one of the measures was a stance yesterday, and, another —Vermont —announced that the immunization program would start again tomorrow. There were thousands of fellowings in about half a dozen other areas.
The mass immunization program started less than two weeks ago. It hasn't yet, but enlisted in 21 states. Most of the more than 500,000 people vaccinated so far have been older than chronically ill—the group considered especially vulnerable to the dangers of swine flu.
White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen said he didn't know President Gerald Ford's reaction to the deaths. But he said Ford, 63, to go ahead and get his vaccination today.
The furo started Tuesday with the announcement that three Pittsburgh-area residents, all in their 70s and all with a cataract from trouble, died after receiving the flu shots.
Ford stumps as Carter relaxes
By The Associated Press
President Gerald Ford had the campaign stump all to himself yesterday as he signed the renewal of federal revenue sharing and attacked Jimmy Carter's economics. He toured middle-class areas around New York with the other candidates stayed home.
Carrying familiar themes to new platforms in half a dozen New York and New Jersey cities, Ford treated his audiences to a wondrous array of contradictions on tax and economic issues.
He picked a financially distressed city with a Republican mayor—Yonkers, N.Y., in which to sign the 45-month revenue agreement. He provides stateides and cities with $2.5 billion.
Meanwhile, not a peep was heard from vice presidential candidates Walter Montale and Bob Dole. Aides said they spent the day in the company of briefing books and advisers, preparing for their debate tomorrow in Houston, Tex.
The family was staying at an Anaehim hotel so they could be near Disneyland, taking a bus there from the airport. But the trip from Anaehim to ABC's studios was rather than they had expected, so Winkler seated and brought on them to him, the spokesman said.
In Plains, Ga., Carter was keeping a promise to devote two days to his family rather than to his campaign. He planned a trip to New York state today that would give him extensive exposure in some of the same media markets that Ford hit yesterday.
At the signing ceremony in Yonkers, which is beside equally troubled but Democratic-controlled New York City, Ford said Democrats in Congress had wanted revenue sharing and that Carter had wanted to alter the program.
Unlike most other federal aid programs, revenue sharing provides money that states and cities can spend on virtually whatever they chose.
"That means you in Yonkers, you in Westchester County will be making the decisions rather than some bureaucrat on the banks of the Potomac," Ford said.
When it came time to leave, Smiley sused at the actor and the rest of the Happy Days cast and gave them all the Fonzie sign—a thumb in the air.
LOS ANGELES (AP)—A little girl sticker with a fatal kidney disease was granted her dying wishes yesterday—a trip to Disneyland and a visit with "The Fonx."
The visit was quiet. No reporters were permitted to look on. Susie made the journey from Great Bend with her parents and brother.
Towheaded, 4-year-old Susie Clark of Great Bend was shy as she was introduced to actor Henry Winkler, "The Fon," on the set of ABC's "Happy Days" television show.
"The Fonz," Disneyland trip fulfill wishes
The President said Carter had called revenue sharing "a big hoax and a miracle."
Carter has said the program should have been extended but revised to omit states and go to cities only, because local government may aggregate tax revenue as easily as states can
Before a crowd of 15,000 in White Plains, N.Y., Ford said, "the liveliest debate of this campaign has been between Jimmy Carter and Jimmy Carter."
"He says he's for a balanced budget, but he refused to support my 60 vetoes that have been taken by the Democrats."
"He says America is weak militarily, but he wants to cut the defense budget by $15 billion."
In another development, finance reports filed with the Federal Election Commission showed Ford had twice as much campaign money than Trump, five weeks before the election as Carter.
Through Sept. 30, Ford had spent only $5.5 million of the $21.8 million allotted to each candidate under federal law. Carter had spent $12.5 million.
The difference may have resulted from Carter's almost constant travel during September. Ford spent most of that time in the White House. But the reports don't show whether Carter may have already spent money for advertisements that have yet to be made, or that they may have already incurred obligations for which bills hadn't yet been received.
As funny as a movie can get. - Time Magazine
MAKES
BEN HUR LOOK LIKE AN EPIC'
MONTY
PYTHON
AND THE HOLY GRAIL
PO 62
FROM CINEMA 5
FRIDAY and SATURDAY Oct.15 and 16 7:00 and 9:30 3:30 Matinee Fri. and Sat. $1.00 admission Tickets available at the SUA office. Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union
A spokesman for the CDC said there was no evidence that the deaths were connected to the vaccine. He said a certain number of deaths could be expected each day among elderly or chronically ill persons whether or not they received vaccinations.
All the Pittsburgh victims received inoculations from one particular batch of vaccine, as did a man who died in Florida. The same patient stopped using vaccine from the same lot.
There were 12 other deaths, including three in Michigan, two in Oklahoma City, two in Kansas, two in Texas and one each in Tennessee, Florida and Louisiana. Vaccinations indicated these people were vaccinated with a different batch of vaccine.
The average age of those who died was 721, and but one had a history of heart disease. The average age of those who died was 721, and but one had a history of heart disease.
"The number of deaths recorded nationally to this time is within the range that would normally be expected among risk individuals," a CDC statement said.
The CDC also has said the vaccination program shouldn't be a dangerous stress for the elderly or chronically ill because they are often required to taking shots and other medication.
The spokesman said if such persons have any concern at all they should see a police officer.
SUA
FILMS
FILM SOCIETY
BADLANDS (1974)
Dir. Terrence Malick, with
Marian Sheen, Sissy Spacek
Thurs., Oct. 14, 7:30, 9:30, 75
POPULAR FILMS
MONTEY PYTHON AND THE
DIE. Terrry Gilliam and Terry Jones
with Monty Python's Flying Circus
at SpongeBob SquarePants, Oct. 16
9:30, 10:00, 9:30, 8:00
SPECIAL WEEKEND
FILMS
Independent/Experimental
Filmmaker Mike Leggett
From Great Britain will be on campus to show his films.
SHEEPMAN AND THE SHEARED
(a collection of 7 separate
(a collection of 7 separate films)
Fri, Oct. 15, 8:00, 51
Forum Room
MIDNIGHT MOVIES
Roger Corman—
King of the B'S'
TE TRIP
Peter Fonda, Susan
Strasberg, Dennis Hoppier,
Bruce Dern
"In Psychedelic Color"
and
THE WILD ANIMALS
Peter Fonda, Nancy Sinatra
Bruce Denn, Diane Ladd
Sat., Oct. 16, Midnight, $1
SCIENCE FICTION SERIES
ALPHAVILLE (1965)
Dir. Jean-Luc Godard
with Eddie Constantine,
John Tamiroff
Mon., Oct. 18, 7:30, 75
All films shown In Woodruff Auditorium
Cornucopia
Restaurant
Enjoy your Homecoming Weekend eating good home cooked food at the Cornucopia Restaurant. Our recipes, dressings and breads are made from scratch. We use the best basic natural ingredients possible. Featuring this state's finest salad and fruit bar, plus a large selection of omelets, crepes and sandwiches for the discriminating appetite.
Average meal price, including drink $3.00. Please don't be discouraged by a waiting line. Seating within 15 minutes. Capacity for 104 people and ample parking in the neighborhood, on the street, after 6:00 p.m. and on Sundays.
Good Food Notwally!
Cornucopia
1801 Mass.
842-9637
Lawrence, Kansas
10-10 daily
Good
Food
Notwrally!
THE GRAMOPHONE
the GRAMOPHONE shop
YAMAHA YAMAHA YAMAHA YAMAHA
PIONEER
THORENS
TEAG
KOSS
PHURE
PICKERING
KENWOOD
Carbon Vape
Garrard
TDKI
maxell
audio technical
BOSS
YAMAHA
YP-450
STEREO TURNTABLI
- Synchronous Motor
* Belt Drive
* Professional S-Type Low-Mass Tonnearm with Adjustable Height
* Viscous Damped Cueing (Up & Down)
* Anti-Skating
* Walnut-Grained Base and
* Bolt-Carriage Standard
УДМНН
KIEF'S
RECORDS & STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms. 2, and Acts 4:25
"I will also forget by children!" Is there not something wrong with the "young people today?" Maybe some light can be thrown on the issue.
"My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge: because thou hast rejected knowledge, I will also reject thee, that thou shall be no priest to me; seeing thou has forgotten The Law of Thy God, I will also forget thy children." Hoses 46.
Weigh these words! It is a terrible message of judgment Destroyed on account of "lack of knowledge" or ignorance. Rejection and ignorance of "The Law of Our God" The results: they shall be no priest to God, and God will forget their children, seeing they have forgotten "The Law of Thy God!" Protestantism gives us the true teaching of God's Word that every sincere believer is a priest unto his God. Have we not forgotten "The Law of Our God" We "breach the Sabbath" and destroy "The goods of God!" We mock and scorn His laws regarding murder and killing. We mock and scorn the murderers, and yet quite all of our states have decided that The Almighty did not know what He was talkking about when he Said:
"Whoso killeth any person, the murderer shall be put to death — Moreover ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer, which will die by the blood of your sword; you pollute the land wherein ye are; for blood it defileth the land; and the land cannot be cleansed of the blood that is shed therein, but by the blood of him that shed it. Delleite not therefore the land which ye shall inhabit, wherein I dwell for I The Lord dwell among the children of
Our land is also filled with stealing, with coveness and covetousness. If this writer's appraisal is correct even many of the laws of our nation and states encourage its people to covet that which in God's sight belongs to another instead of teaching and urging them to take heed to one of the very first laws of God to fallen man to live by "the sweat of his own brow." We are trying to run over almighty God Himself And in order to do so we must be wise. We must serve us, we serve, we turn and war make war on God himself SHALL WE HAVE PEACE WITH MAN BY MAKING WAR ON GOD ALMIGHTY? WAS it not Bill
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"My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge!" What is your vocation, doctor, lawyer, teacher, etc. 7 say you are a lawyer. If you had spent that same amount of time on your law books, court cases, legal advice, or school classes, would you judge, judgments, what kind of lawyer would you be? If a doctor, what sort of doctor would you be if you had spent no more time studying the necessary subjects than you have spent learning of the Creator of the body — "we are fearful and wonderfully made" — and taking he to a lawyer. If you have not studied the subject, whatever one's vocation may be, their success or failure doubles depends on their knowledge of the subject and their ability to make application of same. But fall or succeed, it is only temporal. But the human life, with our Eternal Life, or eternal death God says: "Be the man whose trust in man, and 'He that trusts his own heart is a fool'."
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"And The Lord said unto me, — O that there were such an heart in them, that they would fear我m, and keep all my commandments always, that it might be well with them, and their children forever!" Deut. 5:28-29.
"On that my people had hearkened unto me, and Israel had walked in my ways! I should have soon subdued their enemies, and turned My hand against their adversaries. The haters of the Lord should have submitted themselves unto Him; but their time should have endured forever. He should have led them with the finest of the wheat; and with honey out of the rock they had satisfied thee." Psalm 81-13-6.
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"Thus saith The Lord, the Redeemer, — O that thou hadst hearkened to my commandment! Then had thy peace been as a river, and thy righteousness as the waves of the sea; thy seed had been as the sand." Isaiah 48:17-18.
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P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031
Thursday, October 14, 1976
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Newsmen paid retroactive wages
By JERRY SEIB
Staff Writer
As a result of a U.S. Department of Labor investigation, the Lawrence Daily Journal World has paid wages for overtime worked by its employees during the last two years.
Several Journal-World newsroom employees during the period said yesterday that they were having excess of the Journal-World's 44-hour work week. All said they had received checks and a letter in which the Journal-World issued them to confirm that it was paying without admitme liability.
Dolph Simpson Jr., president and publisher of the Journal-World, and Ralph Gage, the paper's managing editor, declined comment on the investigation.
Vernon Critics, wage and hour compliance office for the labor department, conducted
GAGE SAID, "We consider all the matters related to that to be confidential."
The investigation was begun early this summer to determine whether the Journal-World was complying with the Fair Labor Standards Act. The act requires employers to pay time and a half for overtime hours and employers to keep track of hours worked.
MELINA MEERS, a former Journal-World reporter now working for the Grand Forks (N.D.) Herald, said the investigation was an outgrowth of a complaint she made against her employer in January 1976. Meers said she resigned in January 1976, because of working conditions.
"Unlike many other employees in the office, I had eight years' experience in the field. We worked with much larger paper previously," she said. "It occurred to me that the nonkeeping of time records and nonpayment of overtime wages was not in keeping with other departments."
WHEN MEERS left the newspaper, she contacted the Department of Labor and was arrested.
Critics examined payroll records of the last two years. A statute of limitations prevents adjustment of wages further back than two years.
Meers said she received a check for workers six weeks after six months she worked at the newspaper.
ANOTHER FORMER Journal-World reporter now working for a daily newspaper in the eastern United States said she had received a check for $12. The check overtime she worked before leaving the Journal-World in October 1975, 1978.
She said another former Journal-World reporter now at her newspaper received a check for $812. Some employees, she said, received payments as large as $1,000.
The reporter said she regularly worked a 4-hour week. Other employees, she said, are expected to work 10 hours per week.
"YOU WEREN'T told to be there from sump to sandown, "she said. "But the only way I could do it was by writing."
The reporter, who requested not to be identified, said she had received a Department of Labor form with her check. The form, which included copies for the employer, employee and department, was to be returned to acknowledge receipt of the checks.
By returning the form, she said, employees acknowledged settlement with the Journal-World and relinquished the right to file suit against them. For the period covered in the investigation.
worked during an average week of the period investigated. Those averages were used to make payments to all employees, he said.
ONE REPORTER said several Journal-
world employees were asked to make
these comments.
Normal pay for overtime, according to Department of Labor Standards, is time and a half the regular hourly wage for hours worked in excess of 40 a week. Journal-World newsroom employees, however, were paid by salary, not on an hourly basis.
Therefore, the Journal-World didn't have to pay for overtime at the time and a half rate. It had to pay only one third of time and a half overtime because the Department assumes that all hours, above and below 40, are paid once in the salary agreement.
The reporter said that he worked a 44-hour week, but that there was always a chance he would work more hours. Employees were encouraged to take time off to make up for overtime hours, he said, but often didn't.
Another reporter, who worked at the
Journal World for a year a half before going
to London, was a reporter with the
Pacific News.
"In all fairness to the paper, I'm sure this
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Correction on Village Set ad in Kansan,
Wednesday, October 13, 1976
20% OFF is GOOD ONLY for Thursday, Oct.14
Our walls feature art purchased from coast to coast over the years from art show and through personal consignment. All the art pieces are part of the Hideaway's private collection and number about 100 (oils, prints, watercolors, and oils). The stained glass used throughout the H hideaway was also recently acquired and was made during the 1890's.
THE HIDEAWAY . . .
Dine with us soon ... the Hideaway's philosophy has never changed — the best food for the best price is in a pleasant, comfortable restaurant.
A former Journal-World photographer now working for a newspaper in the Southwest United States said he received two checks from the Journal-World. The first check was for an investment for one month he worked. The second check was for the month originally left out.
Campus Kuleanay
EST.1957
newspaper's executives told him he could take his case in court if he wanted to pursue
The photographer said he had complained about the amount of payment because it was "only a very small part" of what he deserved.
THE PAYMENTS totaled $220, he said,
for the time from September 1974, until he
left in January 1975. He said he worked an
age of 85 hours a week during the perio
106 N. PARK
After he complained to the Journal-
World, the photographer said, the
843-9111
The photographer said he hadn't cashed the checks in case he decided to appeal the court. But he said he didn't think he would go to court because of the "hassle" involved.
WALTER GICKS, area director of the hour and wage division of the Department of Labor, refused to discuss the Journalism process. He resigned as process followed by his office in such cases.
Gicks said records of the investigation would become open to the public only if a lawsuit was filed in connection with the investigation.
"Any time we conduct an investigation and as a result of that, a repayment is made, that represents a voluntary payment on the part of the employer," he said.
--at 8:00 p.m.
Friday and Saturday Night!
Lawrence's own Prairie Rock with your socks off. with Bob Wire & The Open Rangers
$2.00 cover
737 New Hampshire
Off the Wall Hall
SUA
SUA Indoor Recreation QUARTERBACK CLUB
Everyone Welcome!
THURS. OCT.14
Kansas Union
6:00 p.m. Forum Room
A FOOTBALL PLAYER
- Complete game film of the KU-OKLAHOMA STATE game
- Coaches will attend and will answer questions.
A Musical Experience Oct.15,16,22,23
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!
and, at the same time, decrease the potential for damage," Shankel said.
Oct.17 and 24 at 2:30 p.m. University Theatre
Shankel said he asked the group to meet again after two student representatives were appointed to the committee. The group was able to meet in about two weeks, he said.
Ticket Reservations 864-3982
"The objective of this committee is to determine conditions under which we can establish a safety policy."
Donald Alderson, dean of men, will direct the work of the group, Shankel said.
FUN AND GAMES
PROF.
KATZ
ARCADE
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, meet yesterday with Doug Messier, assistant athletic director, and representatives from Buildings and Grounds and the SUA to discuss difficulties arising from concerts in Allen Field House.
Concerts in Allen mulled
Monday-Friday...3to12 Foosball Wheels II Saturday...9to12 Pinball Indy 800 Sunday...2to10 Pool Drawing Every Week - T-shirts, Record Albums, Concert Tick
The University of Kansas Theatre and The School of Fine Arts present
Specific problems mentioned at the meeting were damage to the field house floor, excessive debris, spilled drinks, and other damage to the partial damage to other parts of the building.
Hankel said the meeting wasn't intended to result in any final action because the new committee would be asked to recommend a plan which will be forwarded to the chancellor...
This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund.
K. U. students receive seat tickets without charge upon presentation of current I.D. card.
Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living
- east 7th Street - Lawrence, Kansas
SPORTS
SPORTS TOURNAMENT
International Club
- VOLLEYBALL
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BASKETBALL
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- OTHER EVENTS
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Register 7:00 p.m. Thursday, Oct.14
Cork Room II at the Union
or
Call Maria Rocka 843-8505
The International Club is sponsored by the Student Council.
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Thursday, October 14, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment on The Future
NO ?
FAMINE
DONT
NO U RN
1984
RADIATION
LOW ENERGY
WAR HEAD
WELCOME TO FUTURIA
END SPEED LIMIT
NO
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Future almost now
Traditionally, Americans have been optimists. Their future has been one of Manifest Destinies and Pax Americana. Their fantasies of the future have usually been full of robot maids and weekends on Pluto.
Lately, however, more and more Americans have become pessimists, lattestly awaiting the coming of a new president, beginning of the Second Dark Age.
THEY ARE becoming pessimists because they are beginning to realize that the earth's resources are very finite. And we are using them up fast. They are beginning to realize that it will be impossible to maintain our present standard of living. If we don't raise eight per cent growth rate, let alone give the Third World a chance to fulfill its expectations.
They are beginning to realize that, although having four or five kids may be fun, it can also be a disaster. The world's population is doubling every 36 years and you can't just add on an extra room to a planet.
THERE ARE still optimists, of course, and they are still confident
that technology and science will come up with a solution. A nice, easy solution, preferably, that wouldn't cause much change in anyone's day-to-day life and wouldn't increase taxes.
The optimists have the advantage of seeming right until something goes visibly wrong—even if by them it is too late. The pessimists have an advantage in that it's possible for them to be pleasantly surprised.
In a few decades, both optimists and pessimists will know who was right.
The editorials on this page have, for the most part, avoided making predictions, either pessimistic or optimistic. For, unfortunately, neither Nostradamus nor Jeanne Dixon are Kansan contributing writers. And, if we tried to cut open an ox to check its entrails, the ASPCA would be on us in nothing flat.
I will, however, make one prediction that is both fairly safe and fairly important. Tomorrow will come. By Jim Bates
Editorial Editor
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
It's nostalgia time for class of 1987
It's the fall of 1986. Leaves from various parts of campus are blowing around the base of the soon-to-be completed law school, which has been in a soon-confirmed state for 10 years.
Two students, Lisa and John,
are walking down from Daisy Hill to the satellite union, known to most students as "Short's," for a beer. They have just met at a party. They are at universities as at the University of Kansas, and they are in a mood to do a little reminiscining.
"YOU KNOW," John says to Lisa, "I sure wish we could have lived someplace besides those dorms."
"Yea," Lisa says. "I know what you mean. I wish the University hadn't shut down all their sororites and fraternities."
"I guess they had to," John says. "When enrollment went down, they had to fillup the dorms some way.
"I wouldn't have lived in one of those firetraps anyway."
"AW, COME on now." Lisa said. "One of my aunts used to live in one, and she said they weren't all that bad.
"She said they just closed a few for them for some minor violations, and the newspapers made a big deal out of it. She
"I don't know about that," John says. "But it was the University that finished them off in the long run.
"HEY, DID you hear the latest? Somebody told me they
Carl Young Contributing Writer
"You mean they're going to make faculty members live in the dorms?" Lisa asks.
were going to make some of the faculty members live up there."
"Yea, a friend of mine on the "Student Senate said so. The way he gets it, enrollment is going down again, and there's some old University policy that says tenured faculty can either be moved to live in campus housing if enrollment gets low enough."
"IT'S SOMETHING called financial exigency. It seems there were a bunch of profs that foiled the whole thing up once because they couldn't ever agree and the chancellor got so upset he didn't do anything with them. I think it serves them right for being so stubborn."
"It sounds kind of silly to me," says Lisa.
"I guess you're right," John
says. "But who would get upset
about something called 'the
murder'? It sounds pretty
dull to me."
"Yea," Lisa says. "Really dull."
"OKAY, I can take a hint," John says. "I hope they have this thing done."
John and Lisa walk through one of the side doors onto the main floor of Shorty's. The main entrance has been closed since the beginning of classes and the other staircase is being removed.
"I never did understand why they built this place with three staircases," John says. "I would just as soon they would leave the things in, though. This place is a mess."
"Oh, I think those new picture windows will look nice," says Lisa. "But it does seem like a place to remodel the place."
THEY WALK downstairs to the Pizza Inn in Shorty's. A "Pardon the Inconvenience" to them. A "closed for remediation" sign.
"Oh well," John said. "We can always go to the 'Hawk'."
KU's future in funding
"That's okay." Lisa says as they walk out the door. "I hear the chancellor wants it done by homecoming."
Most of us probably won't be here 10 or even five years from now. Some of us will settle in Lawrence and perhaps will get jobs at KU. But for most, KU is a temporary home.
Nonetheless, the future of KU is a very important question. The value of education, in terms of human development and economic benefits, can hardly be overestimated. And no institution of learning in Kansas rivals KU in the depth and breadth of its search for knowledge.
SO WHAT is to become of our alma mater?
In general, the future is bright. Earlier this fall, a study predicted KU's enrollment would stabilize and then drop sharply in the early 1980s. Few dispute that KU's enrollment will soon level off, and that leveling will be a good thing.
KU's large construction program will be completed soon, and after that the program will be designed to worry much about space.
THE AMOUNT of money spent on capital improvements can be cut or shifted to other concerns. Having a new law school and visual arts center, and a stable education, KU won't have to keep searching for money to expand facilities.
the need for professors will quit grow. But for everyone else, this probably will be good. The University, which already has generally good teachers, can become even more selective.
Unfortunately for teachers,
Greg Hack Contributing Writer
Furthermore, one hopes that the funding will still be here to attract good teachers.
This is the one uncertainty about the future that concerns most academicians—money. A stable enrollment would be fine. The money coming in probably also would be stable, and some funds could be shifted from education to conversion to improving quality.
troublesome prospect of rapidly declining enrollments. A survey by Kenneth Anderson and George Smith, professors of administration, foundation and higher education, says KU enrollment will drop to 16,000 in the middle 1980s.
BUT THERE is the
But there is good reason to question this prediction. Prediction in the 1980s said KU would stop rising in the early 1970s.
This fall's enrollment of 24,372 - 22,553 for the Lawrence campus—is a record. This is the fourth consecutive fall that enrollment records have been broken.
CHANCELLOR Arch Dykes was probably justified earlier this fall when he said KU's enrollment wouldn't drop
drastically in the future. KU is doing an excellent job of expanding the Outreach Program, which serves older students who know learning should be a lifelong process.
It would be good, however, if the University did more to prepare for the future than to be optimistic. Expanding the Outreach Program is an imminent challenge. Beefs up enrollment, but because it provides real services to the state.
FOR A while, KU faculty groups pushed for state funding on a merit basis. But when gloomy enrollment predictions turned into the reality of the recent enrollment increases, many of the camps seemed satisfied with the funding based on enrollments.
But even that isn't enough. For too long, most state funding for colleges has been based on enrollments. This is an easy way to do it, but it isn't the best valueable than others, and few programs cost the same to educate a student.
It is time the faculty and administration resumed, or intensified, their efforts to get the state to provide academic funding on a more realistic basis than enrollment figures.
Then, even if enrollments did drop to 16,000, KU would be in much better shape to maintain high standards. The future of KU will look better if educational funding is based on keeping good education, rather than on a numbers game.
Soleri plans future cities
Futuristic architect Paola Soleri, former Frank Lloyd Wright protege and a philosopher-designer in his own right, is a man with ambitions to design buildings that would like to see built someday.
His ultimate goal is no less than "transfiguring the earth
Nuclear capability threatened
Nuclear capability, that marvelous secret that was supposed to energy, defend the United States, is in jeopardy.
For years, most of the United States has thought of nuclear capability as the savior that will take us out of the heathen world of oil embargoes, high electric bills and air pollution. We watch weaker nations test nuclear weapons and feel good knowing ours are perfected and plentiful. The government lauds big business for selling nuclear weapons and feels confident our balance of payments. Nuclear capability is, to many, the supposed key to our continued dominance of the world as it nears the year 2000.
OF COURSE, some warn that the mere mastery of such a potent secret can be a double-take to care not to make it a take care not to make it a
mainstay of our society before the quirks are worked out. Many think these quirks can be worked out before we become dependent upon our nuclear capabilities for survival, but as that day draws closer, questions are answered become more grave.
IN 1988, the United States negotiated a nuclear proliferation treaty that now accords to it the status of being inadequately, the spread of
nuclear reactors. But the ever increasing impact of nuclear capabilities on energy and defense have, at least, led the United States to recognize its awesome potential.
the safety of having nuclear capabilities in a world that seems increasingly hostile and violent. At this point, the United States would be absurd to try to negotiate for a world without nuclear power. Ours is an age without a nuclear bomb, and without an atom bomb, and energy systems are inefficient if they don't include operation of
Mary Ann Daugherty
Contributing Writer
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during the summer. Priced at $25 per day. Second-class postage paid at Lawnresort, Kan. In a Douglas County and $1 a semester or $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 a semester or $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee.
Editor
Dalton Duckworth
Business Manager
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
without defiling or disfiguring its own cosmic aspects." However, he admits his designs for future cities will never be employed "until our society has cleaned itself of political, social and moral inequities," an admission that could of course preclude any hopes of his ideas being fully realized.
nuclear devices throughout the world. A lengthy document, the treaty has three main planks: Nations that have nuclear weapons won't give them to those who don't, nations who don't have them won't acquire them and, if both promises are kept, nations may sell nuclear weapons in a peaceful domestic operations
FURTHERMORE, the treaty is self-defeating. It has been estimated that reactors sold legally to Third World nations could produce enough plutonium by 1990 to manufacture about 3 million weapons annually. And it's to secret that defense designs as well as the very material needed to produce weapons aren't always kept under the tightest security.
Early this month, when fallout from a Chinese test blasted to eastern U.S. states, many residents lost their homes and disasters the future could hold.
The treaty, once hoped to be the solution to an array of problems, has serious deficiencies. Several major powers, including the United States and the Soviet Union, have signed the treaty. Among those who haven't signed are France, Russia, Greece, Rhodesia and China, all nations with unstable governments or governments that may be hostile to the United States.
The Associated Press reported this month that a Princeton University senior had designed a nuclear bomb that had one-third the power of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. The bomb, the AP said, was designed from information obtained by the United States. Clearly, the security of the United States and her allies remains in jeopardy, regardless of the proliferation treaty.
REACTOR safety, one of the most controversial of all issues evolving from the proposed effort to plant in Burlington, remains an issue for study. Several critics of the plant told of near disasters in existing plants as well as new developments in construction by waste water from reactor cooling systems. Of course, there's the constant uncertainty that nuclear wastes can never be adenine disposed of.
Until recently, then, our future in the nuclear age depended upon our ability to control the spread of nuclear weaponry and guarantee that nuclear reactors, which are now commonplace, would be the nation's rite from conventional fuel price hikes, can be safely operated. But an even more serious problem, a problem that challenges our very existence as a nuclear power, is released by the state department earlier this month.
THE REPORT said simply that we will run out of uranium, necessary for nuclear operations, in about four years if we continue to use it at the present pace.
The questions for the nuclear age ahead become even more grave in light of the report, for now we have more than just safety and friendly nations to worry about. We must secure more uranium, which, by and large, is exported to the United States by host countries and investments opposed to nuclear development. The question now is whether the United States, master of the bygone nuclear era, can be a nuclear power in the future.
However, Soler's ideas and designs are worth attention despite the obvious obstacles that may doom them to the drawing board. Dismissing the engineers and architects as "doodles on the back of the cosmic phenomenon" that produce squail, Soler concludes of cities as one-structure space that seek to reproduce the wholeness of a biological organism.
HE BELIEVES that man is acting in a suicidal manner and that the real problem facing the population of the environment. Antipollution measures, birth control and other palliative remedies are like treating people with a new medication and if present trends continue, a universal city could blanket most of the United States by the year 2000—the result of what he termed two-dimensional "spew."
Babelnah is a good example. It is one of the super-megastructures that Solei would build as a miniature alternative to today's urban landscape, anything but miniature. It would be more than a mile high and stretch across 18,000 acres.
He says the only alternative to a future in which even the last remaining natural areas will be "invaded weekly by waves of schizophrenic vacationers" is to turn to miniaturization and the merging of architecture with the environment. Soleri calls this merger "arcology"—an obvious conflation of the words miniaturism and fact, he sees miniaturization as the logical evolutionary progression for mankind. Man must miniaturize or die.
philosophisches on the problems and solutions facing society and architecture, but also includes and sketches of his future cities.
IN HIS book "The City in the Image of Man," Soleri not only
John Fuller Contributing Writer
The structure would house 6,000,000 people at home, work and play but would occupy only 10 per cent of the space of a modern city. Industry and agriculture underground, and residential and recreational areas would be contained on the upper levels. Light wells would go in the center of twin towers from top to bottom to provide light for who don't get an exterior view.
SOLERI doesn't restrict his designs to land, however. He has designed arcologies that could float on the sea, which can help digestive systems, taking water in through giant tubes and then expelling it ecologically safe after foodstuffs, chemicals or minerals had been trapped or arcologies could house 400,000.
The most fantastic of the archeologies is Asteromo, a space station that would house 70,000 people and enough farmland to feed them and replainish the oxygen supply.
Critics of Soler's concepts say that his designs test his credibility to its utmost limits. Some dismiss him as indulging in "fantastical erector set for futurism." One of the most
1
common reactions to his arcologies is that they resemble ant colonies. One major arcology is to find the people in Soler's work.
SUCH COLOSSAL visions as Soler's, warns Soler's friend Buckminster Fuller, aren't going to be easily interpreted. Soler realizes that and doesn't expect instant understanding in an age when most people are architecturally ignorant. Soler's new options, even though they are never specialized and rely heavily on abstractions, have drawn enough followers so far to enable Soler to bring one of his projects to life.
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He is currently building a model arcology called Arceantii in Arizona, which will eventually house 3,000 people in a single 25-story, 10-acre megastructure.
Wo the fresh
IT FOLLOWS the Soleri precept that the care of a city and its citizens is a first person role, and those who should be involved in. At Arcosanti, people pay for the privilege of building the city—a privilege that means Spartan leaders must hard work for the volunteers.
Fin acad stude Aid
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Soler believes that when and if his designs are adopted, they'll bring about great social changes. People won't be promised greater comfort or security—but joy, the joy of experiencing stimulating environment and the feeling of working toward achievements that go beyond one's own limitations.
Perhaps Soler's designs, other than Arcsanti, will never be adopted. There are certainly countless social and technical difficulties and obstacles that can be overcome by see any Babelinsoo soaring into the clouds; that is, if we ever even want to.
Thursday, October 14, 1976
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Poor writing skills concern profs
Staff Writer
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The Johnnies of this country, those unfortunate students who have been accused of being unable to write, apparently are enrolling in increasing numbers at the University. They are members and assistant instructors here don't agree on the cause of the increase
James Hartman, associate professor of English, said recently that there were probably more students who couldn't write well entering KU now than 12 years ago when he began teaching at KU. He said, "I don't think the number of students who are good writers."
But, George Worth, chairman of the English department, said he wasn't sure significance changed since he began teaching here 24 years ago.
TOMMY THINK Johnny's writing is that
way he was it was five years ago or 24
years ago.
Students' inability to write is a topic the media just want to bring up periodically,
The "literary crisis" in education has been fuelled by the steady drop in the average score on the verbal section of the scholastic Aptitude Test and a survey by the Association of American Publishers indicating that college freshmen read on what used to be considered a high school freshman level.
WORTH SAID he was aware of these figures, but attributed the increase in college students who couldn't write to a higher enrollment of students who wouldn't have gone to college several years ago. He said that because KU had always admitted and was taught in school graduate, there anyway were been many students with writing problems.
In an article in the September Harper's magazine, Gene Lyons, former English professor at Texas University, blamed university professors for not providing students with writing skills. Professors pay almost no attention to good writing, he said, and most are unwilling or unable to teach freshman and sonohome classes.
"ONE WONDERS about the logic of teachers who use incompetence and unwillingness to perform a task being paid by public funds to justify their elevation to a 'higher' level of activity," Lyon said in the article.
Worth disagreed with Lyons and said that he faculty at KU co-operated in teaching his courses.
"Here's a man making sweeping
Aid applications now available
Financial aid applications for the 1977-78 academic year are now available to all KU students in the Office of Student Financial Aid, in 26 Stong Hall.
Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said yesterday that the University would have $2 million for scholarships and grants, $1.75 million for National Direct Student Loans and $300,000 for work-study allocations.
"The deadline for applications is February 15, so students should pick them up and fill out the Parent's Confidential form before them to us as soon as possible," he said.
statements about higher education on the basis of sweeping generalizations about one category.
About one-half of the full-time faculty in the KU English department are teaching freshman or sophomore courses, Hartman and Meyer also teach their turns in teaching beginner courses.
He said that this year more than 6,000 students received some type of financial aid and that he expected at least that many again for next year.
CHRISTI WEIDLING, assistant instructor in the department of English, said the quality of writing was definitely worse when she began teaching three years ago.
She said students tended to write too much sociological and governmental "gobbledecked." Students also overuse the passive voice in their writing, she said.
The English department has introduced a tutorial program to help students improve
Weidling said the program, called V-6.
began this year and was the only program like it she knew of in the country. Students in the program review enough basic grammar and composition to enable them to pass the introductory English courses, she said.
HARTMANN SAID the University should go so far in providing remedial help to them.
Minimum scholastic requirements should be maintained, he said, and students writing well below the college level should have a semester to "get their act together."
"We should lean in their direction," he said, "but we can't take over the high school."
High school teachers generally have too many students, Worth said, and can't give the individual attention students need to improve their writing skills.
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Business Discount
Above Rates Include Insurance
Insurance Laws Require You Must Be 21
THE PAUL WINTER CONSORT! Saturday, Oct. 23
He said that the KU English department alone couldn't handle the task of teaching good writing, so other departments and in the University also should stress writing.
Hoch Auditorium 8:00
General Admission tickets $4.00 in advance, $5.00 at the door.
Available at SUA and Kief's.
Brought to you by Fool's Gold and SUA.
The quality of the introductory English course, English 101, has improved, Harold man said, and should do a better job at it. But, he added, problems will remain.
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"There always have been people who couldn't write well," he said. "But now we are seeing upper-middle-class students who can't write."
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And the heat goes on
The University heating system will be
continued to be uninspected weekly.
Buildings and Grounds set Oct. 15 as the tentative date for turning on the system, which heats main campus buildings and chairs in the scholarship halls on the east side of campus.
Holly Miley, supervisor of utilities, said
Tuesday that the system might not be turned on Friday in the temperature condition.
A Private Club
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The heating system was turned on last Friday after the temperature dropped, Miley said, but it was turned off Monday. Activating the heating system is time consuming, he said, because each building must be turned on individually.
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6
Thursday, October 14, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Compact John Mascarello keeps defensive behemoths backpedaling
By GARY VICE
Assistant Sports Editor
After starting 15 consecutive football games for the Jayhawks, John Mascarello was missing from KU's lineup two weeks ago.
Riddell
Mascarello, a junior from Ornaa, Neb, had an infected boil on his left arm, which kept him from practicing and starting against Wisconsin.
Who is Macarello anyway? Well, does the name "Butch" Macarello help any? Yes.
But when he returned to his starting role last Saturday against Oklahoma State, few fans even realized he had been absent.
John Mascarello leads the way for KU running backs
Sports
who No. 62 is, or because he doesn't play a glamorous position. But regardless of the reason, Mascarole has not received enough votes to be been a starter for more than a year.
THIS SATURDAY, however,
Mascarello will be rewarded. He was
named by coach Bud Moore as a game
captain against Oklahoma.
Mascarello, who was told by his mother and flamece to drop the nickname *Nick*, but he insisted on his name; plays offensive guard. He's one of those rarely acknowledged offensive linemen who make running backs big, big plays. KU's backs owe him plenty of thanks.
"Everytime one of our backs makes a good run," Mascarello said yesterday, "they come back in the huddle and say 'good job.' There's a lot of team unity on the offense. And for me, there's nothing I like to see better than the back of one of our backs. When I see their backs, I know we're moving the ball.
MASCARELO, WHO was moved to offensive guard after a freshman year at KU as noseguard, said the speed of running backs Nolan Cromwell, Laverne Smith and Bill Campfield made his job of blocking easier.
"If we don't do a very good job, just tie someone up for a moment, they can still get through," he said. "They make us look good a lot of times."
Although he often looks good on the playing field, Mascarello, at 5-11 and 220 pounds, never looks big when lined up against the massive defensive linemen. His size nearly kept him from playing Big Eight football.
"TVE ALWAYS wanted to be at least six foot, but I think I'm stuck at 5-11. Being smaller gives me a little more incentive going against bigger guys. I know I've got to work a lot harder because I've got a big job to do.
red in my blood," he said. "But when they came and talked to me, they told me they didn't know if I was big enough to do it." He didn't not be able to offer me a scholarship.
"I grew up in Nebraska with the big
"I'd rather be 5-11 and 220 than 6-3 and 220. I a little lower than most people, and the basis of a good block is getting low. I've got a good start against bigger defensive linemen because I'm smaller. I try to make up the rest in quickness."
Just how quick can a burly 220-pound football player be? According to Mascarelli, that remains to be seen. He plans to return to wrestling this winter to improve his quickness. He was the Nebraska state champion in the heavyweight wrestling division his senior year at Gross High School.
"WRESTLING IS a very good conditioning sport," he said. "And if I stick with the intramural wrestling program we'll be in good shape for spring ball."
Sophomore noseguard Dennis Balagna, one of Missouri's heavyweight wrestlers in his senior year at the University of City, Mo., said he intended to join the wrestling program along with Mascareello, Balagina, 6-1 and 240 pounds, and Mascarello have already had their first bout against each other. They tied,
"I think we were both too tired to finish in match," Balanga said. "We just waited a little longer."
MASCARELLO AND Balagna are hoping to get more of their teams interested in intramural wrestling, including defensive tackle Franklin King, who was a heavyweight wrestler in Idaho at Pocatello High School.
"We'll have to get Franklin involved," he said, "the 'The of' Pocatello palmo banco."
Without the 6-2, 60-pound King around, who might have wanted to toss "Butch" around like a hot potato, Mascarolle the subject to the Oklahoma Sooners.
"They don't have the All-Americas on the line this year," he said, "but they are more aggressive this year. Without the Selmons and (Jimbo) Elrod, they feel much less tough to be tough; Oklahoma is Oklahoma. Just their name alone scares a lot of teams.
"I'm glad I didn't have to face Leroy last year. Dave Scott had him and he really punished him in the second half. He was a bit like me in Dewey. We had him on rollerskates."
Frost, Boozer lead volleyball team to win
Sports Writer
By DAN BOWERMAN
The two turned in another round of good play to lead the Jayhawks to an easy victory in a three-team tournament in Robinson gymnasium last night.
Laura Frost and Bebo Zozer are helping to make things easy for the KU balloon football team.
"Frost is a very consistent ball player," coach Bob Stancift said yesterday. "She plays the net well and gets in some good defensive hits."
Frost played well at the net for KU, while Boozer had a strong serving attack.
"BOOZER scored about 60 or 70 points in Lemonia, Iowa, last weekend, and she did it again tonight. She attacks the line and he hits the ball in the out-of-bounds."
That kind of play helped the Jayhawks defeat Stephen College and Emporiauka
KU whipped Stephens in two games, 15-10 and 15-15. They took Emporia State, 15-4 and 15-5. In the first Emporia State game, KU came in to serve two points down and scored
12 points before giving up another point to Emporia State.
Emporia took second in the tournament by beating Stephens in three games, 15-8, 6-15 and 18-14. In the last game, Stephens held up before Emporia State battle back to win.
"I WAS REALLY pleased," Stantiff said of the win. "We were a little flat the first match, but we played much more consistently in the second match.
"We played with much more enthusiasm against Emporia. We got a couple good hits and stuffed their best hitter, so we picked up some momentum."
Besides Frost and Booster, Stanciflop also debided Debbie Kuhn for good play, noting that she got her timing back after spraining her ankle two weeks ago.
The Jayhawks travel to Oklahoma today for two tournaments. KU will meet the University of Tulsa and a United States Volleyball association team from the Tulsa High School team. The Jayhawks will go to Norman for the Sooner Invitational tomorrow and Saturday.
THE BOMBARDIER
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1959. A LOT OF PEOPLE WERE KILLING TIME.
KIT WAS KILLING PEOPLE.
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Thursday, Oct. 14 - 7:30 and 9:30 - 75c WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
News from The Hair Suite
We are proud to announce the return of Linda Haverkamp and the addition of two new hairstylists, Beth Cole & Diane Matthews. Also for the KU students, busy women and working men, we will be open late Mondays & Tuesday till 9:00 p.m. This will help KU students get in a Mon. & Tues. haircut discount days. Call 842-8600 h
THE
HAIR SUITE
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Katie Ainsworth - Owner - Stylist
Thelma Wright — Manager — Stylist
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See Arnold Berman on Channel 11-TV 9:30 p.m.Tonight
ARNOLD BERMAN
Senator for the 70's
Speaks on the Issues
A. L. BARRY
We are being told to blindly accept the assurances of promoters of nuclear power plants in Kansas as to the safety of these plants—even though much of the evidence and all of our better instincts give us concern.
As an engineer who spent many years in the nuclear industry, I will not blindly accept these assurances. As a father, I refuse to have these decisions made for me.
Isn’t it time somebody spoke for you!
Paid for by The Committee to Elect Arnold Berman, Charles N. Bitter, Treasurer.
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A
30
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 14, 1976
7
It's no secret: OU is after KU
By BRENT ANDERSON
Associate Sports Editor
The Oldahoma Sooners haven't forgotten—the University of Kansas Jaywunks are the only team that has beaten them in the last four years. Though the Sooners are still unbeaten, they've lost to Saturday, there is little doubt that Kansas is the team they want to beat this year.
Oklaahoma coach Barry Switzer is well aware that KU is the only team that has defeated Oklaahoma since he took over at OU in 1974. The reason for his defeat is, 12. He knows who caused that single loss.
"Every game is important in the Big Eight Conference," Switzer said yesterday. "But it's no secret that we'd like to beat Kansas."
either, though their grudge isn't a bitter one.
His players don't particularly like KU
"I HAVE A lot of respect for Kansas," defensive tackle Richard Murray said. "Their players showed a lot of class last season. We hope we have the same chance this time."
Cornerback Jerry Anderson, often mentioned as an All-America candidate, also said the Sooners wanted to beat KU, but didn't think of the game as a bait rivalry.
"For us, every game is a special game," he said. "We know Kansas is the team that beat us, but they didn't make a big deal out of it. I'm looking forward to the game." Free safety Zac Henderson, a junior from Burkertown, Tex., said playing Kansas would be a big challenge for the Sooners. But, he said, the great defensive game the
McRae breaks slump as Royals draw even
NEW YORK (AP)—They gave Hal Mrcae a glove and, all of a sudden, Kansas City's usual designated hitter discovered his bat.
Shucked by a slump that left him hitless in the first three games of the American League championship playoffs, McAe erupted for a double and triple yesterday leading a barrage of extra-base hits that carried the Royals to a 7-4 victory over the New York Yankees in the fourth game of their best-of-five series.
That tied the playoffs at two victories apiece and set up the decisive game tonight. The winner will advance to the World Series. The winner will go back to the National League champion Reds.
Graig Nettles slugged on home runs for the Yankees, but the Royals survived shots by raking Catish Hunter and Michael Perry. The two doubles and triples. McRae had one of each.
Rarely used in the field this season, McKee got a start in rightfield as the Royals shuffled their lineup. It paid off at the plate with his two key hits.
"I had been swinging badly," said McAfee, who lost the AL. batting championship and was knocked out of fraction of a point on the final day of the regular season. "I was trying to find a stance and a bat that would work. I must have used five or six different stances in the game."
In his second swing yesterday, McRae found the formula.
"I was hunging," he said. "I wasn't getting back far enough, I needed around, I went back too fast."
The change paid off with the two extra-
base hits that figured in a pair of Royal rallies.
And when it seemed the Yanks might stage a comeback, Royals relief pitchers Doug Bird and Steve Mingoril silenced the Nets' bats, forcing the series into a fifth game.
New York's Ed Figueroa was named to start Thursday night's game. The Royals will host the Knicks on Saturday.
Kansas City Manager Whitey Herzog, facing a must-win situation, shuffled his lineup in an effort to awaken the slumbering Rovals' bats.
"We've got to hold Laverne Smith and Nolan Cromwell if we're going to win," he said. "They were able to score a lot of points on fumbles and mistakes last year. But we were harding all week and I think we're going to minimize our mistakes against them."
McRae, usually the designated hitter, started in the outfield in place of Jim Wohlfhof and rookie Jamie Quirk inherited the designated hitter role. Veteran Cookie Rojas, who had played in only 63 games, left the Nets to start at second base, replacing Frank White.
Sooners had against Texas made him more evident that they could stop Kansas' offenses.
The moves were drastic ones for the Royals, but their situation also was drastic. And when Kansas City was finished, each of his switchups had paid off handsomely.
Hunter, who had hurled a five-hitter in the opening game of this series, was a different pitcher yesterday. The Royals solved him early, getting three runs in the second innning and knocking him out when they added two in the fourth.
Mistakes, indeed, were what hurt the Sooners most in their 23-3 loss to KU last year. Oklahoma fumbled five times, losing to the ayahawks. Ku also intercepted four passes.
In the fourth, McKea drilled a leadoff double that reached the 385-foot sign in right-centerfield on one bounce. It was his first hit of the series. A moment later, Quirk had his first hit, a ringing triple up the gap with a scoreless pick-off. Rojas greeted reliever Dick Tudur with a sacrifice fly that scored Quirk and made it 5-2.
"THEY NEVER let us up." All-America
tissue tackle Mike Vaughan. "They
plank." (And they don't.)
"What I remember most about last year was our offensive mistakes and fumbles. They caused some of them but a lot of the trouble was ours."
Like Henderson, Vaughan said the game against Texas last week should give the defense a lead.
"We have a lot of reasons to win," he said.
"We have Texas out of our mind, but the tie isn't really what we were hoping for. We really want this one."
One player Vaughan remembers from last year's game is defensive tackle Mike Lauter.
"We've coached each other for three years," Vaughan said. "He's one of the most physical players I've gone against, and one he's best, he" said. "He does a lot of things well."
THE SOONERS give every indication that they are expecting a very physical presentation.
"Whenever two wishbone teams get together, there's going to be a lot of hitting," cornerback Anderson said. "I'm sure that will be the case Saturday."
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KU Climbing Club
Will have an organizational meeting Thurs., Oct.14 at 7:00 p.m.in the SUA office (level 3)
If you want to climb,you should be there.
1. Who put the hell in Panhellenic?
3. Have you ever thought of taking a stab at the Fencing Club?
2. How can a rogollo, enable you to hang in there?
4. Is K-State permitted in the college assemblies?
Answers to these questions & more at Cafe-Oct.19 Student Union-Big 8 Rm. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
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ON-LOCATION BROADCASTING IN FRONT OF THE KANSAS UNION!
Free program guides, playlists and FM guides for you!
Register for the gigantic giveaway drawing, featuring...
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TWO FREE $10.00 gift certificates, courtesy of The Flower Shoppe
FREE sirtain dinner, courtesy of Don's Steak House
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8
Thursday, October 14, 1976
University Daily Kansan
JACKIE MAYER
Diana Coleman
KJHK ushers in 2nd year
To celebrate its second year, JKHK, the KU student radio station, will broadcast live from in front of the Kansas Union tomorrow.
The remote broadcast will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The station, formerly the AM station KUOK, started broadcasting on the FM band Oct. 15, 1975 and became officially licensed as JKHK.
Ernie Martin, general manager and faculty advisor for the station, said yesterday that, aside from playing music at the station, he would give away gift certificates and would give away gift certificates and
albums furnished by Lawrence merchants and manufactured-made KJHK T-urseries for the occasion.
Surveys conducted by the station, Martin said, indicated that the station had had a fire.
"We've seen it grow from no listeners the last three months to being the fourth most popular music artist."
some of KHJK's plans, he said, are to have more remote broadcasts and to provide music that better reflects the tastes of the studentry.
He said the station also was going to update its equipment.
Directory . . .
From page one
tories are used by the phone company and aren't available to the public, Louis said. Loux's talk then turned to his job philosophy.
In states in which corporation commission memers are elected, Loux said, campaign contributors rather than consumers are represented.
He said he preferred the current appointment procedure in Kansas because it reduced the potential for conflict of interest. KCC members are appointed by the governor and must be approved by the Kansas Senate.
EVEN WITHOUT the prospect of campaign contributors trying to influence commissioners, there is constant conflict over whether that the commission governs, Louis said.
"There is a fine line as to what is regulation and what is meddling." Loux said. "And often we're accused of meddling."
Although off the scheduled subject of his
talk, Loux fielded several questions about his views on state Democratic politics.
Democrats are making "terrible" progress in developing stature in state politics, he said, partially because the state has been interested in state legislative races.
"IT'S EASIER to get interested in a presidential race than it is for a gubernatorial race," he said, "and it's easier to get interested in a gubernatorial race than a state legislative race. National politics are more glamorous."
The problem bobs down to a matter of priorities, he said. A lot of races this year are being neglected as the state party talks are used to raising money for the 1978 elections.
Loux said he enjoyed his six-term stint in the state legislature.
"But you can't stay there forever," he added. "There are dragons to slain in the KC'c just as there are in the Witchcraft. I haven't any regrets about leaving."
Homecoming
GRAND OPENING
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FRIDAY & SATURDAY-OCT.15 & 16
Cover only
$1.00
Pitchers
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the nest
Level Two Union
the nest
Survey appoints woman director
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Diana Coleman, new assistant director of the Equal Access Survey, concludes her title misleading.
Coleman said recently that she considered her position different from an assistant director because that title implied more authority and responsibility than were involved in her new post. A better description of her duties would be assistant administrator for special program coordination. she said.
William Hambleton, director of the survey, said Coleman was, to his knowledge, the first woman appointed as a state geologist geological survey in the country.
Coleman was promoted recently to the position to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of William Hess, who left the former the real estate business in Lawrence.
THE KANSAS Geological Survey is a research and development organization which conducts surveys on the character, and amount of natural products in the state.
"THE REACTION of my male counterparts at a meeting last week of geologists and survey directors was one of obvious curiosity." she said.
Coleman said she thought her new post offered a challenge, but she said she felt no pressure to prove herself or to set up because she was the first woman director.
A group of Lawrence amateur musicians will present a concert of Irish folk music at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the auditorium of Seenear Research Library.
Coleman's responsibilities include planning, development, coordination and supervision of administrative services. Graphic arts, public information and education, editing and publication distribution are also under her direction.
ALTHOUGH THE job description sounds like a public relations director, Coleman marveled at the sheer complexity.
Local musicians to present concert of Irish folk music
The idea for the concert was conceived by Ann Hageodern, Lawrence graduate student and a librarian at the library. Hageodern said yesterday that the concert was intended to display the folklore of Ireland and to draw attention to the library and a book on Irish culture written by several University of Kansas faculty members.
An exhibit, "The Case of Ireland," is being shown in the department of special collections in Spencer. Rare books and manuscripts that were used in the publication of the book on Irish culture are included in this exhibit, she said.
Hagedorn had she originally planned a small reception in the library, but these
"It turned out that a lot more people were interested in doing something to publicize the book than were anticipated," Hagedorn said.
The performers in the concert come from a wide variety of backgrounds. The musicians are: Newton Bagghier, a stringed-instrument maker; Rik Dahlgjer, assistant musician; Nils Bønning, Mason Haelh, Lawrence graduate student; Steve Mason, co-owner of McKinney-Mason Stingled Instruments, 737 New Hampshire St.; and Gloria Thorne, director of the Kansas Folkle Center of Lawrence. All participants in the program as a narrator.
As a result, she said, an idea for a concert came into being.
The concert is a spirited and informal production, Hagedorn said. However, because of the interest of the participants, he and his band its activities in the future, she said.
Hagedorn said that the concert, which is sponsored by the KU libraries and the Kansas Folkore Center, also will be playing at grade schools in Lawrence and Topeka, and at Pohnomi, a folkcore and folk music center in Kansas City, Mo.
"We're thinking of doing shows in different places on weekends. A year from now, it may be a more professional production," she said.
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Coleman said she would work as a team coordinating various departmental efforts.
A primary project that Coleman said she hoped to begin immediately was a reorganization of the distribution and receipt of survey mailings. The flow of incoming and outgoing documents is in a personnel and result of personnel and policy changes.
about six years before she became secretary to the director in 1969.
COLEMAN, who attended KU, received most of the training for her position from practical work experience. She worked in several departments within the survey for
THE ATTIC
During that time, Coleman was involved in budget preparation, policy formulation and minority affairs programming. She also served on the KU and Kansas Geological Survey affirmative action boards.
"I know it it's unusual these days, but I really like my job, probably because I'm particularly interested in management," she said. "The systems can be used to do things better."
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中國之夜
Chinese banquet
EGG ROLL
SWEET & SOUR PORK
PEPPER STEAK
KUNG-PO CHICKEN
BROCCOLI WITH OYSTER SAUCE
FRIED RICE
ALMond FLAVORED JELLO WITH FRUITS
CHINESE TEA
BANQUET MENU
TIME: Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976 5:30 p.m.
PLACE: Kansas Union Cafeteria
TICKETS: SUA Box Office,
r call 864-2182, 843-5538
ADMISSION: Non-member $4.00, Member $3.50
*Free entertainment at Woodfruf Auditorium after Banquet (Chinese folk song, Chinese play, Chinese scenery, Kung-Fu, Prize drawing... and many many more)
of a lifetime.
PG
The cast of the decade. The western adventure of a lifetime.
JOHN WAYNE LAUREN BACALL
"THE SHOOTIST"
Eve. 7:00, 9:20 Sat./Sun. 2:10
Hillcrest
The Greatest Discovery of Our Time
In search of Noah's Ark
Is it still there?
Eve. 7:30, 9:30 Sat./Sun. 2:00
Hillcrest
APARTMENT FOR RENT
Quiet bldg
Furnished
7 rooms
Previous tenant committed suicide
No one does it to you like Roman Polarski
RPM presents
A Romans Polarski Film
Varsity
THE TENANT
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
Sat./Sun. at 2:30
RICHARD HARRIS
"THE RETURN OF A MAN CALLED HORSE"
An Englishman with the sack of an Indian
Every eve. 7:30 & 9:40
Sat./Sun. Mat. 1:30
Granada
PG
From the man who gave you "Blazing Saddles," "Young Frankenstein" and "Silent Movie": MEL BROOKS Presents
Zee Mostel & Gene Wilder As "THE PRODUCERS"
"MURDER BY DEATH" plus PG Show starts 7:30 Ends Saturday
"The STEPFORD WIVES"
Car Wasm
Where anything can happen... and usually does!
Frankigo Ague - George Carlton
Professor Irwin Leary - Ivan Brion - Laurence Guy - Jack Knight - The Prairie Stories - Richard Frantz
SPECIAL PREVIEW SHOWING FRI. at 11:30 p.m.
Box office opens 11:00, adm. $2.00
PG Hillcrest
APARTMENT FOR RENT
Quiet bldg.
Furnished
2 rooms.
Previous tenant committed suicide
No one does it to you like Roman Polypia
RICHARD HARIS
"THE RETURN
OF A MAN CALLED HORSE"
An Englishman
with the
soul of an
Indian
Every eve, 7, 30 & 4:40
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:30
Granada PG
CAREWASH
Thursday, October 14. 1976
9
has involved formulation
forming. She
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live action
became
days, but I
because I'm
management
how the
gts better."
$3.50 songs, many
文
PG
No one does it to you.
Like Roman Polarski
e. 7:30 & 9:45
.-Sun. at
2:30
图
ein"
1:40, 9:40
t.Sun.2:15
reste
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10 p.m.
adm. $2.00
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Backgammon, a popular board game for many years on the East and West Coastes, slowly is gaining popularity at the North American tournaments. The founder of the new KU Backgammon Club
Richard Boyer, Shawnee senior and president of the club, said Tuesday that the club would sponsor a backgammon tour with local players at the Jawahry Room of the Kansas Union.
The tournament will have championship and beginners divisions. The entry fee is $5 for advanced players and $3 for beginners. Boyer said Britches Corner, Ninth and Eleventh, is putting up the championship division first prize, a $5 backgammon board.
THE DEADLINE for entries is Oct. 22.
Entry forms are available in the SAU Office
of the University Union. Boyer said that he
expected the union would send a division,
but that he wouldn't accept more
than 32 total entries in that division. He said he hadected about 10-15 in the beginner classes.
Boyer, who said he had been playing backgammon regularly for more than a year in the Kansas City Backgammon Club, told me that the club this fall after having a bral (a bral)
The club, which meets each Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the Union, has an average turnout of about 20 people. He said that although dues were not charged, a table fee of 50 cents was charged at the Wednesday "mimi-tournments."
THE AIM OF the club is to provide backgammon, which is an expensive game, cheaply for the students." Boyer said. The national tournament will be in Dallas later this year, and the entry fee in the championship flight will be $175.
Boyer described backgammon as "a game of luck and skill involving tossing dice
The game involves rolling the dice to advance the counters around the board to the player's "home area," and from there the players take turns first to clear his side of the board is the winner.
There are twelve wedges on each side of the board, and 30 "counters," which are arranged on the wedges in a specific pattern at the beginning of the game.
and moving men in order to get your men off the board before your opponent does.14"
Boyer said the resurgence of the game, which is at least 5,000 years old, came with the invention of the doubling cube in the 17th century. This allowed powers of two from two to 64, enables the players to double and redouble the number of points a game is worth, increasing the size of the game. He said the doubling cube was invented in both divisions of the KU tournament.
KU has top FTE increase
Kansas Board of Regents figures indicate that KU had the largest full-time equivalent (PTE) enrollment increase this fall of itsATE-supported colleges and universities.
KU has almost 4,000 more FTE students than Kansas State University.
The numbers of FTE students don't represent the actual number of students
FALL FTE ENROLLMENTS AT
BOARD OF REGENTS SCHOOLS
Fall 1933, Fall 1936, Press
or Deference
University of Kansas
Kansas State University
16,843 18,531 17,170 +-2
16,831 18,531 17,170 +-2
10,529 9,923 9,923 +-2
10,529 9,923 9,923 +-2
Emprors Kansas State College
Kansas State College of Pittsburgh
4,175 4,214 4,154 +-2
4,175 4,214 4,154 +-2
enrolled at a college or university. FTE is computed by adding total student hours and dividing by an average full-time student's credit-hour load.
$5.00 and up
THE TURQUOISE SHOP
Turquoise & Coral Rings
$6.00 and up
1828 Mass.
ggs
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kananan for their use. Contact: (05) 483-2769; or cored, or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO I11 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00
Each additional
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
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 and calls can be placed in person or simply by applying the UDR business office at 641-458.3
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
BUY,SELL OR TRADE
ENTERTAINMENT
SONY V-FET TA-S850 pinheader. Pioneer CT F-
SONY case deck. PC keyboard. T10
10-14
Prevention Hall Jars Band. Thursday, Oct. 14
7 p.m., Baldwin City High School.
Baldwin City, KS. Adults $40.00. Under
adults $25.00.
FOR RENT
2 bdm. apartment, very big, A.C. dinkwash,
$825. plus electricity and gas; 841-750-
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in or pick up at the office (two phone, call) please at WESTER MAIN ST. #1020; drop off at WESTER MAIN ST. #1020.
Nalmish Hall contract, through May, for sale
Call Debby 814-3447. 10-14
Jachwah Tower 5 bedroom ap. All utilities
included. Bathrooms $129.50 per month. Laundry facilities on bus route
856. Residential parking available.
Sublase 2 bedroom apt., all utilities paid. fur-
ries provided. Call us on bus route. Call after 13:50 to
reach our office.
DO'S DELUXE
'QUALITY & WORKS'
Bot's Music
Lawrence Perkins
0123 4567 8901
北斗星
南斗星
西斗星
东斗星
Aztec Inn
American and Mexican Food
Sales, Parts, Service
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont
HORIZONS HONDA
on piping hot plates
807 Vermont 842-9455
---
Sublube furnished one bedroom air, air condi-
tion, a kitchen. $170/month. 10-16
85, #86-2001
Reward Must sublease immediately. Spacium.
Fees vary by location. Please contact very close to campus 843-101 or 845-472. 10-14
Need to sublease immediately? Small apt, private
room. Call 814-3587 after 4 p.m.
Included. Call 814-3587 after 4 p.m.
10-14
3. bedroom apartment at Quail Creek available for lease from 9:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Stephanie at 642-8851 between 9:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on your hifi equipment other than factory dumps close-out products, you will receive a discount from the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEF. *if*
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BELL AUF-ELLECTRIC, 843-6000, 900-600, W-601,
W-602.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
supplies, including hardwoods, metal,
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 7011
W. Third St., New York, NY 10024.
1811 W. om
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sense to me.
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. 1f
Excellent selection of used furniture, refi-
rifier and stove.
East 6th Eath | Topsika, Ile 1a 15-m-p Floor,
2nd Eath | Topsika, Ile 1a 6-m-p Floor.
1. 4.ISX6 Crager SS8 chrome wheels with Cooper
2. 3.ASX6 Crager SS8 Very good wheel
3. Tomi Phone 844-570-1201
4. 10-14
71] Vega Hatchback 4, paced 8, mileage 5, glary 6,
900 lb. 182 mi. 12 hrs. 37 min. 438 km.
1452 Alumni Place, Rm. p. 200,
evening events
Pronto Polaroid camera. Leaded only 3 times.
Call Pat 841-3831, 1239 Ohio. 10-14
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Minimize sculpture. Mermals. Unicorns, etc. No cutting. Satisfaction guaranteed. 841-3883.
Bicycle Touring Bags. Karimrani pameters and
plus handlebars bag. Like new, ½ pm,
841-7766
Demonstrator Clearance. 1976 International Scout Equipment Corp., Dearborn, MI. FM radio, air deluxe interior. 800 miles, $825. 1976 International Scout II, AX4, PS, PB, FM radio, air deluxe interior. 800 miles, $825. 1976 Kohn Truck & Tractor Company, Inc. (103) 810-3960.
1973 Datum pick-up with soft top, top $250.
1984 Saturn pick-up & Tractor co., Inc. 1548 KP
483-2440
483-2440
Final markdown on all 76 Magnax voxel console stereos and components. Beautiful $49.95 consoles cut as low as $30; powerful comp. sets with sound effects. Openable $19.95. Open, Mau. open '13尺' (thurs. 3:30). 10-22
CLEARANCE! Discounted radial tires $25 each
for a 10" rear tire. (Even a 24" rear
12" small '12' still includes.) May Store
for Wiksomken included!) May Store
Some thru Woolworth's lot for tire rent.
Heek and Hardtair Reality, Inc.
905-843-5232, after hours AI Grigury, 843-
943-5232; after hours AI Grigury, 843-
943-5232
730Mass.841-707O
Old Studio模型 trumpet, excellent condition.
Contact Tom Shepherd at 864-4700 from 11:30
am. Ask for Tom Shepherd in Electrical School MFPC, or 125-2702-105
p.m. anytime.
Speakers: very efficient, crisp and clean 3-way
must. Systm. must $200, $845-9441.
Baked wheat straw-good for parties, munching,
etc. Call 843-0848.
10-15
JAMES V. OWENS
RETAIL LIQUOR STORE
Furniture Antiques
Goods • Vintage Clothing
Selected Secondhand
Wines and Liquors
NEXT TO OOWEN'S FLOWERS
COLD BEER
HALF AS MUCH
Check out these used bike specials:
- Imported Clothing
Check out these used bikes like specs:
1975 Honda CL150 385
1975 Honda CX150 385
1975 Honda ZR150 385
1975 Honda MT125 495
1975 Honda MT125 495
1975 Honda XL250 475
1975 Honda XL250 475
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 60h, 84-15
3333.
FOR SALE--Classical Glass Vessel--Handerford
FOR SALE--Classical Glass Vessel--Handerford
typewriter--pyper 835, 843-7626
10-18
AKA1 1721 W reel-to-real tape player/recorder-
$60.00 Price. Insides Call 642-2482. 10-18
Price. Insides Call 642-2482. 10-18
75 Flat, good condition. Runs good. New sheets
875 Flat, $175 must sell. Call 841-7629
4218. 10-19
17 Mustard, excellent condition. Alm, AF-MM.
6208, must pay. $175. Call 841-1709 or
6218.
73 Honda CL 350, elec. start, good condition,
under $500; B412-67A. Ask for Lewis. 10-19
Must sell 89 VW Bug, Auto stick runs. Shift and
good make. Offer up, 814-4337. 10-15
Must sell 1941 Audi F4-doo automate, good
drive. Must drive wheel drive. Maint-in possible
843-5163
MGB "GT" 1972. Excellent condition, Overdrive, radium, FM-CAM. Must sell. 843-933-10-19
**WOW! THIS ONE'S GOT EVERYTHING-BIG**
the season's 15 Fiskar glasship skiing boat with 60 hp. Mercury model (cimap) 18-speed boats, fiberglass turbo-tilt, tape records, washers, turbine, turntable, tapes,
HELP WANTED
75 Capit 4 cylinder, AM-PL, mechanically per-
manent clean. By owner, 843-444-3660
864-345-365
10-20
Snow tires = G-604x15, studded with wheels for
Chevrolet 814-4422
10-14
Female subjects wanted for figure photography
*Write Pred, Word P, P Box 206, Lawrence, MA 71894*
*Write Pred, Word P, P Box 206, Lawrence, MA 71894*
MANAGER OF TECHNICAL SERVICES AND MANAGEMENT ATTENTION—management level position in administration of operations (IBM T70/45, VSI) and applied systems. Provides technical assistance and support for improvements to equipment, improvements and troubleshooting technical and programming, technical services, and operational degree of managerial ability and technical knowl- edge. Resumes for position with programming, including programming of an employee preferred. Send resume to R. Maginn Mampert Management Systems, 323 Carruth O-Layney Hall, Lawrenceville, VA 21136. **198** AS EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYMENT ENCOURAGED TO APPLY
Part time evening work available for juniors and seniors. Excellent pay, hours 841-794. 10-15
Graduate Student Council has a part-time job opening in the office of Elena Reynolds. Office work plus special project. Qualifications: Knowledge of interest, in field of education or related to office processes, typing skills. Salary: negotiable. Above minimum wage. When Immediately offered, you may be eligible for work if you think you might be eligible for this position. Please contact Elena Reynolds for this job by calling Ellen Rydena at 864-4814 from any time. Or step by the GCS on the Union.
Cook. Assume responsibility for preparation work.
Meet with the client to set a deadline. Approx. 40 hours per week. Visit adjunct学院.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost: cat, large white, nude male. In Park 25.
3003 area. If found or please call 10-19-19.
Log1: (Slölen) Leather wallelder on 10-9-6-7
important contents: Call Greg. 843-814-690. Reward
RAASCH
SADDLE & MIDDLE BOOT
Gym 5:30 AM to 10 PM
Game 9:00 PM to 3:00 PM
A
842.8413
Mastercharge
- Feosball
PINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
9th and Iowa
MISCELLANEOUS
Lost: bus pams, KU ID and other personal IDs
Required: no IDs
For: Jaeven in Room 600 Nasitam, REWARD
*1709-2030-8898-9454*
"A different kind of bar
featuring seclusion and quiet."
- Pinball
Found: High school clair class, Shwine Mission West, at Hosea Park, Call 843-920. 10-15
Found small male white cat. Call 842-9158. Keep trying.
10-15
NOTICE
Found: pocket watch at Kansas Union. Call 864-4291 and identify.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uher/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 835 Mass.
Give away cat box, cat litter, cat food and cat
Ball 841-2597 10-14
Found. dollar-niever bracelet on campus. Call and identify. 841-3376. 10-18
Open Daily 10 a.m..Midnight Except Sunday
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used for furniture, dishes,
pumps, lamp, clock televisions. Daily open 12
pm-7 pm. Call (844) 529-7030.
S Jimmy's Steak House. Delicious food at reasonable prices.
Sunday, June 13, 4-5pm. Weekdays 4-11. Closed Tuesday, June 17, 6-8pm.
FEMMIST COUNSELING AND THERAPY: indi-
cal and group. Also growth workshops (C)
(www.femmist.com)
You ought to be in pictures
make your appointment at
the HAWKER YHAWKER
864-8238 864-8238
10-15
PERSONAL
GAY SERVICES MEETING: Oct. 19. Walnut
Karen Black, Executive Director for the ACU
Nationale Karen Black, Executive Director for the ACU
Nationale presentation will cover the benefits of
the NATIONAL presentation with cover the benefits.
The paper will be for socializing activities calls
9029 after 10:19.
GAY RAP GROUP, Thursday, Oct. 14, 7:30, 823
Kentucky.
10-14
Blitz Brunch and Bake Sale Wednesday Oct.
9th, 9th and High Drive.
The Lounge
Do you want to study the Bible? Group will meet
with you on Monday. Please lead the call: 123456,
or write 1234 W. 1234. 10-20
10-20
Single Men, Come & find us at a Dating
Site. 12, 13, 14, 15. Room 28F Frank
or 29 F MW.
Wasted: Two (2) females. Qualifications: Clean, housewife. Contact: info@marysaday.com; interrupted in a semi-mature relationship with two (2) recently born gourmet girls. Our contact number is +1-844-3884 for with and one without). Call 841-8384 for with and one without).
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
Have you had problems getting to sleep at night for the past year? We are looking for people to participate in an innoma treatment program at Mt. Carmel Hospital, 841-309-3567, Don Hutchins (841-309-3567), evenings 10-20
"Soul enrichment-CAFE provides food for thought."
10-14
Excellent instruction in guitar, harp, as well as several other instruments. Three-length available. Keyboard Studio System.
Poll workers—thank you for giving us your time and eating enough to get involved. 10-15
NAISMITH HALL
Now accepting
Applications
for Spring Semester
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
Pool
Bud on Tap
--and iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl
Open 7 days a week One Under 18 Admitted
Home of
Home of The Chalk Hawk
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ding
Ping Pong
SERVICES OFFERED
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
● Pin-Ball
● Air Hockoy
● Fees-Ball
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERSP. Thousands on
computer disk(s). 364 pages. No. 268, Los Angeles.
$10.00
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a bike lift. You can buy one or two entire bike-hubrate and adjust your derailers, a center
Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2170, 2171, 2172, 2173, 2174, 2175, 2176, 2177, 2178, 2179, 2180, 2181, 2182, 2183, 2184, 2185, 2186, 2187, 2188, 2189, 2190, 2191, 2192, 2193, 2194, 2195, 2196, 2197, 2198, 2199, 2200, 2201, 2202, 2203, 2204, 2205, 2206, 2207, 2208, 2209, 2210, 2211, 2212, 2213, 2214, 2215, 2216, 2217, 2218, 2219, 2220, 2221, 2222, 2223, 2224, 2225, 2226, 2227, 2228, 2229, 2230, 2231, 2232, 2233, 2234, 2235, 2236, 2237, 2238, 2239, 2240, 2241, 2242, 2243, 2244, 2245, 2246, 2247, 2248, 2249, 2250, 2251, 2252, 2253, 2254, 2255, 2256, 2257, 2258, 2259, 2260, 2261, 2262, 2263, 2264, 2265, 2266, 2267, 2268, 2269, 2270, 2271, 2272, 2273, 2274, 2275, 2276, 2277, 2278, 2279, 2280, 2281, 2282, 2283, 2284, 2285, 2286, 2287, 2288, 2289, 2290, 2291, 2292, 2293, 2294, 2295, 2296, 2297, 2298, 2299, 3000, 3001, 3002, 3003, 3004, 3005, 3006, 3007, 3008, 3009, 3010, 3011, 3012, 3013, 3014, 3015, 3016, 3017, 3018, 3019, 3020, 3021, 3022, 3023, 3024, 3025, 3026, 3027, 3028, 3029, 3030, 3031, 3032, 3033, 3034, 3035, 3036, 3037, 3038, 3039, 3040, 3041, 3042, 3043, 3044, 3045, 3046, 3047, 3048, 3049, 3050, 3051, 3052, 3053, 3054, 3055, 3056, 3057, 3058, 3059, 3060, 3061, 3062, 3063, 3064, 3065, 3066, 3067, 3068, 3069, 3070, 3071, 3072, 3073, 3074, 3075, 3076, 3077, 3078, 3079, 3080, 3081, 3082, 3083, 3084, 3085, 3086, 3087, 3088, 3089, 3090, 3091, 3092, 3093, 3094, 3095, 3096, 3097, 3098, 3099, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 5040, 5041, 5042, 5043, 5044, 5045, 5046, 5047, 5048, 5049, 5050, 5051, 5052, 5053, 5054, 5055, 5056, 5057, 5058, 5059, 5060, 5061, 5062, 5063, 5064, 5065, 5066, 5067, 5068, 5069, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 5040, 5041, 5042, 5043, 5044, 5045, 5046, 5047, 5048, 5049, 5050, 5051, 5052, 5053, 5054, 5055, 5056, 5057, 5058, 5059, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 5040, 5041, 5042, 5043, 5044, 5045, 5046, 5047, 5048, 5049, 5050, 5051, 5052, 5053, 5054, 5055, 5056, 5057, 5058, 5059, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 50
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-29
Commercial Printing-Invitations, stationery,
programs, brochures, cards, posters, & much.
much more. We do custom work to meet your
needs. We call the Kansas City Office
E. 9th Bldg. 824-4485. 10-14
Experienced typist—term paper thesis, mike;
Experienced typist—term paper thesis, mike;
spelled correct; 843-654-0288, Mrs. Wright.
THEISM BINDING COPYING The House of Udder's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us help you at 858 Massachusetts or phone 842-3631.
Experienced typist, managent尉, etc. Call
weekdays 844-6011, 841-7180 weekends
10-15
WANTED
Typical editor. IBM Pitch/File. Quality work.
Please submit your thesis, dissertations welcome.
Call: 415-627-8300.
Email: info@ibm.com.
Need an experienced typi1? IBM Selectle II
carbon (ibnion) Callen 844-787-9288
Experienced. Typist-IBM—Memory-Call 843-
491, ask for John.
John.
We now have openings for the remainder of the room and/or female rooms at Nairnshalt Hall, 843-850-8960. 10-20
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CREWEL
15 East 8th 641-2634
10.5 Monday-Saturday
STUDY BREAK
Schooners -- 65°
Pitchers -- $1.25
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
Ace needs adeepersons at the game to sell the official KU hat. Earn a back hat, $80 in commissions made at Wisconsin game. Limited number of adeepersons needed. Call 843-5640 or fax 0541.
Student wishes own room in together household
Student wishes own room in together household
cooking and cleaning. Must be close to eating
room.
Christian Musicians Group to perform "The
Song of Joy" in Los Angeles on Wednesday nites, perform 12
singles. (Courtesy)
Top dollar paid for 4 KU-OU tickets (anywhere in stadium).
10-15
Male roommates wanted for last 2-bedroom apartment. See at 1011 Indiana, Apt. 5, no. 5, after checking out.
Need to join or start carpool. JoCo-Lawrence
MWT. Jim 383-3818
10-12
Wanted to buy. Four KU-OU kits. Together or separately. Michael at 843-6671. 10-15
Needed, one ticket for the Kansas-Okahoma game. Call 841-5551.
Two need two tickets to Nebraka game, Will pay a good price. Call 841-4780. 10-19
Need 2 OU-KU football tickets. Call Shirley.
814-6066. 10-15
Female roommate, nice townhouse. $120 a month.
small pets. U6 Sorce 843-742-8380. 10-15
Needed 1 grad student or full work working girl to split rent and util. in a 3 bedroom apt. at Quinn Creek. Apt. furnished between 9:30, 6:10 & 10:18. Apt. number 6 990. Apt. number 843-725 than 6 990.
2 male roommates wanted to share housework for
spring and summer. $89 month plus utilities. Call
(212) 637-5000.
Roommate wanted immediate Jawaharan
Jahawari to join his team. He had
admitted AC. AC Those interested Jawahar, welcome
to the job and contact him at 917-823-6500.
Need 2 tickets each for the following games:
KU-State KU-Nebraza 104-
841-3204
841-3204
Help! I call my well-mannered dog need a place to live. Call Jackie, 842-4267 10-20
Armadillo Bead Co.
POLARIS
The Old St. Marketplace
Watch for Grand Opening ad in UDK1
710 Mass. 10-5 Mon..Sat. 841-7946
will be moving soon to
FIELDS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Flitted Sheets
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Phone 843-1211 KU Union Lobby
We buy good used cars
Cars
Corvottos, Camaros,
Novas, Mustangs,
Firebirds, and
Imported Sports Cars
UNIVERSITY MOTORS
26 & Iowa 843-1395
AIRLINES
Make Reservations
Thanksgiving and Christmas travelers should reserve now for best choice of flight, train and hotel. May we also assist you in planning your trip? No extra charge for our services.
SUA Maupintour travel service
JOYFUL SANTA
NOW'S THE TIME FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY
No extra charge
Gift Wrapping Free
HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass.
10
Thursday, October 14, 1976
University Daily Kansan
---
On Campus
CITY OF BROOKLYN
Events
TODAY: A UNIVERSITY DATING WORKSHOP starts at 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. in
224 Fraser Hall.
TONIGHT: The SUA QUARTERBACK FILM will be shown at 6 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. SUA BBOARD members meet at 6:30 in the Union's Regionalist Room. ANGEL FLIGHT meets at 6:30 in the Military Science building, to discuss information from the Commander's Call Conference. Ben O'Neill coordinates for the Carter campaign, will speak at 7:30 in the KU STUDENTS room at 7 in Olive Hall. AN OPEN MEETING for departmental and school promotion and tenure committee members, chairmen, deans and faculty members begins at 7:30 in the Union's big Eight Room to discuss procedures for promotion and tenure. An evening of IRSH FOLK MUSIC CLUBs spencer Auditorium in Spencer College to present the KU SKY DIVING CLUB meets at 8:30 in the Union's Forum Room. Jack Winerock, assistant professor of piano, will perform in the FACULTY RECITAL SERIES at 8 in Swainborth Realtor Hall.
THE FACULTY RETIRES SAKES it at no New York Rehearsal Hall.
TOMORROW: PEP RALLY will be at 1:15 p.m. in front of Strong Hall.
GARY KRIEGER, Lawrence graduate student, recently won first lace and $150 in student competition during the annual meeting of the Radiation Research Society in San Francisco. Krieger is studying radiation biophysics.
Grants and awards
Sports for disabled here
Physically handicapped people in Lawrence leave school to recreation and create a reality.
A wheelchair basketball clinic was conducted at the Community Building, 115 W. 11th St., by the Topea Chairmen and Chaiettes basketball teams, sponsored by the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department.
John Ross, superintendent of Parks and Recreation, said this was the first time wheelchair basketball had been introduced to Lawrence. If enough interest is shown, a team will be formed to join the seven-team travel league, consisting of teams from Topeka, Emporia, Wichita, Kansas City, Tulsa, Ormaha, and Lincoln.
THE CHARMEN team was formed in 1970 and is one of the top 10 of 140 teams in the National Wheelchair Basketball Association.
"Players may have any physical disability that keeps them from participating in able-bodied athletics effectively." Ross said.
Ross said that some players could walk, perhaps with crutches, but leg or foot disabilities prevented them from playing in regular sports.
KU band forms honorary groups
Chapters of an honorary fraternity and a sorority for band members, Kappa Kappa Psi and Tau Beta Sigma, recently were formed at the University of Kansas.
Tom Stidham, assistant director of bands, said yesterday the KU chapters were formed by members who had transferred here from other universities.
Stidham was a faculty consonant of Kappa and Bayler University in New York before he went to Harvard.
THE PRIMARY function of Kappa Kappa Psi and Tau Beta Sigma, he said, is to advance the growth and development of the athlete by providing activities done in cooperation with the band.
Two persons who helped bring the
Cottley was a member of Tau Beta Sigma at Oklahoma State University before she transfered here this year. She said about 30 women in the KU bands had indicated an interest in joining the KU chapter of the sorority.
fraternity and sorority to KU are Caroline Costley, Stillwater, OKa., junior, and Ron McCurdy, West Palm Beach, Fla., graduate student.
"I wasn't sure how it was going to go over," Costley said. "We presented the idea to the band and got quite a few interested people to respond."
fasts for band members on the day of band trins
McCurdy, a member of Kappa Kappa Pai at Florida A & M University before transferring to KU this year, said officers of the fraternity would be elected today. Four other transfer students, also members of the fraternity, helped him start the local
Several projects are being planned, McCurdy said, such as building new cabinets in the bedroom for the percussion section, providing beverages for the band during rehearsals and setting up an honors recital for fraternity members. ...
Court interns aid countv
The Juvenile Problems Clinic, an internship program sponsored by the School of Law, assists the juvenile court as it provides a training field for law students.
Assisting Douglas County Juvenile Court officials is part of the job of 15 University of Kansas students who are interning in the juvenile court.
Second- and third-year law students who enroll in the clinic are designated deputy probation officers of the Juvenile Court of Atlanta, where a detective in investigative and probation services.
The two-hour credit course requires its interns to spend a certain number of hours each week at the clinic and attend a course on juvenile law.
Jean Shephard, student director of the program and third-year law student, said last week that the clinic helped the law firm become familiar with pretral preparation.
Shepherd said the interns this semester had been unusually busy. Since the latter part of August the interns had already handled 42 cases for the county.
The intern handle a wide variety of cases
that require attention to wayward and
delicate damage.
Shepherd said that as probation officers for the county, the interns represented the prosecution and had limited contact with juveniles.
MIKE ELWELL, juvenile probate judge,
said the clinic benefitted both the county
and the law school.
The Kansas Union BOOKSTORE
Although most of the interns agree that the experience in the clinic hasn't persuaded them to enter juvenile counseling as a profession, most said that they found the experience challenging. They went on to brief proceedings and to become accustomed to pretrail investigations.
is OPEN
9 a.m.—1 p.m. on Sat., Oct. 16 and for $1\frac{1}{2}$ hours after the game to serve alumni, students, and friends of the university.
kansas
union
BOOKSTORE
We Write All Risks Automobile Insurance
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
---
1021 MAßßACHUßETTß ST.
Spaghetti Dinner
Meat Ball or Meat Sauce
$1.95 Reg. $2.25
Offer good Monday thru Thurs. Exp.Oct. 21, 1976
SPECIAL WEEKEND FILMS
Experimental Filmmaker from Great Britain MIKE LEGGERT
SUA
Sat. Midnight Movies
In Person!
Presenting his 7 part,
21/2 hr. collection of films.
"SHEEPMAN AND THE SHEARED"
Fri., Oct. 15, 8:00
FORUM ROOM $1.00
KANSAS UNION
Including: "Sheep,"
"Sheopman," "Window,"
"Film Lane," "Farm,"
"Blue plus Green plus Red"
"Sheepwoman."
"Some players come in carrying their wheelchairs," Ross said.
A LOVELY SORT OF DEATH
IT WILL BLOW YOUR MIND!
PETER FONDA
SUSAN STRASBERG
THE TRIP
PSYCHELIIC COLOR
Dir. Roger Corman—King of the "B's"
"THE TRIP"
(1967)
with Peter Fonda,
Susan Strasberg
Dennis Hopper
Bruce Dorn
Nancy Belohavek, team member, said she had never been able to participate in recreational activities before joining the basketball team.
"In Psychedelic Color"
"TIFEES GOOD to be tired," she said. "I
feel good to be tired one point to
the other, but not from shotting."
Another member of the women's team, Angie Lair, said she had never played basketball before joining the team. Her arm muscles were strengthened from walking on crutches, which posed no problem when playing ball.
"THE WILD ANGELS"
Peter Fonda, Nancy Sinatra
12:00 Midnight - $1.00
Woodruff Auditorium
*layers demonstrated amazing dexterity with their chairs, some spinning on their back wheels to move quickly to a ladder or chair, and most rely solos on their arms for mobility.
"This is not an easy-nice game," Royce Miller, team coach, images of players wheeling slowly and gingerly down the court are misconceived.
JOE GREVE, team representative, said that one out of every 12 Americans had some type of physical disability and couldn't compete in regular athletics. Community teams for track and field, swimming, bowling and baseball have all given opportunities to handcapped people not available through public schools.
"Now disabled kids no longer have to write scores out of their minds." Greve said.
the sports out of their minds," Greve said. Miller said the rules of wheelchair and conventional basketball were basically the same.
Instead of continually dribbling the ball, players push their chairs twice while holding the ball between their knees, and bounding the ball once before pushing the other grain.
THE SAME FOUL rules apply to both kinds of basketball.
Miller said that some players learned illegal tricks, such as holding their opponents' chairs and preventing them from moving. The referee might not see the offender's hand hidden behind the immobilized opponent's body.
Greve explained that each wheelchair player was classified according to his disabilities. Greve, a paraplegic, can't move his legs and is a class one player. Miller has no knee caps, but can stand and move his legs, and is a class three player.
To avoid unfair advantages during play, Greve said that each team of five players could have no more than 12 points, compared with the classification numbers of each player.
Two more wheelchair basketball clinics will be from 7 to 9 p.m. Oct. 20 and 27 at the Community Building. Anyone interested in watching or in forming a team is invited.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Homecoming
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.39
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Homecoming 1976
Friday, October 15, 1976
Greek actions spur lively homecomings
"The enthusiasm with which Hill organizations have now gotten behind the project assures its success. There never was any doubt in my mind but that the Greek letter houses would come through in time. They are when properly acquainted with the plan."
James R. Patterson, Nov. 11, 1933
Patterson, then a University of Kansas student, was talking about a halftime parade he was organizing for the homecoming football game with Missouri. He could just as easily have been taking part in the celebration of KU's 60 homecoming celebrations.
Since a journalism professor named Leon Flint struck upon the idea, homecoming has had a distinctive Greek flavor at KU.
They have dominated the oldest non- homeowners homecoming activity, house opening.
Sororities played a leading role in homecoming queen elections before the queen concept sputtered and finally died in 1970.
And Greeks have regularly filled their houses with alumni on Homecoming Day.
It was a handful of fraternity brothers, with the help of seven Greek houses, who engineered what is perhaps the University's own homecoming stunt—an airborne panty raid.
IT WAS 1971, and the KU homecoming team was arch rival Kansas State
University. On the Thursday before the game, three crew members and a Kansan photographer boarded a plane in Topeka on Saturday to Manhattan, home of the Wildcats.
The plane left Topeka at 12:45 p.m. after reaching Manhattan, it circled the city once, then zeroed on the campus. The raid began.
From inside the plane came assorted "femine articles" and athletic supporters—all dyeed either crimson or blue. The crew tossed out 150 undergarments; the donations of four sorority and three fraternity houses. Except for a case of airsickness that struck one of the bombardiers, the mission went off without a snar.
Staff Writer
By Jerry Seib
Staff photo by DAVE REGIEI
★ ★ ★
The bombing was merely a one-of-a-kind stunt. If any single tradition has characterized homecoming at KU, it has been the way the buildings, and Greeks have led the way.
The first homecoming at KU was in 1912. It was the brainchild of Flint, who reported, "Several organizations have announced that they will be here to entertain and entertain and sororities and sororites are expecting a large representation from their alumni membership."
KT
Twisted leap
Tom Laney, Topeka junior, performs high above the field in front of a home football crowd. The yell leaders have been doing more challenging gymnastic-style leaps this year from a miniature trampoline, they say, to earn respect from fans and to fill gaps between game action.
The representation was large enough that Greeks were so busy filling their houses with alumni that they couldn't worry about decorations. The large turnout warranted continuation of homecoming, and, except for a four-year period surrounding World War I, the event has been an annual affair since.
IT WASN'T LONG until house decorations became an annual part of homecoming. And almost from the start, decorating living quarters became competitive.
At first, houses competed for one of four cups donated by downtown merchants.
THE WINNING houses in the 1920s had
the same number of rooms as the times.
The Kansen described them.
"The decoration of Sigma Phi Epison house, at 1252 Oread, which was awarded first place among fraternities, skillfully combined the homecoming idea with that of a fraternity of Cornwallers. Other fraternites given honorable mention were Acacia and Delta Chi.
"Sunflowers, with luminous brown centers, were the novel decoration displayed all around the porch of the Alpha Daughters. The sorcerer who won first place among the sorcerors."
There have been two attempts to do away with house decorations since those days. They are not as well known as the others.
The Men's House Presidents' Council thought the money used for decorations could be saved and put to better use. Its goal is to abolish decorations wasn't popular.
IT WAS SOON decided to let houses decorate as they saw fit.
The second attempt to ban house decorations, in 1970, was successful for one year. The reasons behind the move then, however, were social rather than economic. That year's homecoming committee recommended that "increased emphasis on community service projects" replace decorations.
The next year, however, the Inter-
national monumental in reinstating house decorations.
Don Alderson, then dean of men, says the move to stop decorations was typical of the period because it was "just an era where everything was being questioned."
Alderson has seen homecomings at KU both as a student and as an administrator. While serving as dean of men, he was often a judge in the decorations contest.
"YOU WEER SUPPOSED to be a secret body," he said. "But those groups could smell you out a block away. There weren't people walking around with clipboards."
"House decorations always remind me of pledges. Pledges have always put in great chunks of time putting paper into chicken wire."
★★★
A theme is designed to coordinate decorations, but it can also cause
In 1966, the first homecoming theme, "Songs for Victory," was selected, and every year since, there has been a theme adhered to in house decorations.
See GREEKS page four
MIAA MUNDIAL
Benefit frolic
Falling rain and puddles didn't dampen the spirit of Derby Day activities recently in Centennial Park. Martha Bizal, Prairie Village sophomore, participates in an event called the "clean
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
sweep," pushing a softball across the width of two tennis courts with a broom held behind her back. Derby Day was part of a week of activities run by the Sigma Chi fraternity to help raise money for its nationally supported charity.
Variety spices fitness offerings
Exercise keeps the body, supports the spirit and keeps the mind in vigor Or so he says.
If your body, spirit or mind are in need of such renewal, support or invigoration, the recreational facilities at the University of Kansas can probably serve you well.
KU's recreational facilities offer a variety of choices for the student or faculty member who wants to play on or root for a team, as well as the person who prefers to
By Courtney Thompson
pursue the quest of physical fitness alone.
pursue the quest of physical fitness alone.
THE RECREATION program at KU is a new one which is, in the words of one student intramural participant, "getting better."
Then explain KU's lackluster showing in comparison with other regional universities.
ruchard Marcs, director of intramurals, said KU's recreation facilities and programs aren't as good as those of several other Big Eight schools. He said he thought Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University and the University of Colorado all had an edge on KU in facilities available for university recreation.
"The best programs are found at
specific programs. Our
amounts to the recreation program's
their student fee structure," Marcks said.
"Some universities get up to $4 to $5 per student per year, whereas KU gets $1.05 per student per year—that becomes self-supporting."
MARCKS said the intramurals program received additional funding last year from sources "hard to put your finger on and difficult to enumerate."
"I can't tell you exactly where the "institution found" this extra money but I know when we were hurtling last spring they discovered about $2,000 extra from somewhere and gave it to the recreation program."
Marcks said the need for additional facilities also affected KU's recreational programs. An addition to Robinson Gymnasm, designed to double the size of the building, is being planned, but this increased space won the only for recreational
THE STATE WON'T pay for a facility designed specifically for recreation because recreational programs aren't academically oriented, he said.
"The only way we'd get the money for such a building would be through a student referendum or through the generosity of a sports-oriented alum or benefactor who wants his name on a gymnasium," Marcks said.
University buildings aren't as accessible to students for recreational activities as they are in larger campus buildings.
The only reason Allen Field House is so
open to the University in general is that the new floor was paid for by student fees $^a$ he
PARTICIPATION AMONG KU students in organized intramural activities is an unimpressive 35 per cent, according to a survey done last year, Marcks said.
Recreational facilities at KU are admitted not equal to those at Colorado, but with 14 intramural teams, 12 tennis courts, facilities at Robinson Gym and Allen Field House, playing fields (about 15) east of Robinson, south of KU, and west of (Shenk complex), the possibilities for ample recreation activities are obvious.
Intramurals
SEVERAL PERSONS now involved in the intramural program agreed that they will be
And judging from the cheering, jeering and overall tenor of the participants and spectators gathered last week to engage in football contests on the fields south of Watkins Hospital, support of the program is genuine.
Those who participate in the intramural program, albeit a small percentage by comparison with other schools, apparently are enthusiastic about the program.
"It's a good chance to get together with a
Sam Carroll, Lawrence sophomore, said he participated in intramurals because he liked competition and the competitive spirit.
bunch of guys and find how well you can work together—that's a challenge," he said.
Students also said they participated in organized team sports for physical fitness, fun, as a break from studying and using constructive to do with friends."
THE GENERAL opinion among those questioned was that more experienced referees were needed to officiate at the football games. Participants said they thought most student officials were unsure of the rules and needed additional training.
Terry Hartwick, Whitewater, Kan., senior, said he thought a major improvement in the programs would be closer attention to the care and watering of the playing fields to reduce the number of strained ankles and twisted knees.
The liberated, sports-minded, weight-conscious or otherwise athletic inclined woman no longer will hear coining oathing hilariously when she participates in intramurals.
Fling football is the major women's intramural activity in the fall.
MERKEY LAMBERZ, Pitsford, N.Y.
junior, said she joined a team for the fun of
it and found play to be a "little brutal at
times."
"We had the idea intramurals would strength Panhellenic relationships, but now I'm not sure," she said. I don't think it will be to as much fun as we'd
See RECREATIONAL page four
2
Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment on Athletics
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
Jocks have more fun
Admit it, all you pseudo-intellectuals and academicians. If you only had the chance, you'd love to be a football hero.
Jocks are loads of fun to put down, of course, and there is nothing like the sight of a "student athlete" in an Economics 768 class to set the average B or better student manufacturing snide comments. But, in their innermost heart of hearts, most Summerfield and Meriti would trade places with Nolan Cromwell.
(Yeh, I can see it now. Bates at the 20
touchdown!
His fourth of the game.
THE WORLD of sports, from a distance, at least, seems so much simpler and more fundamental than the real world. The goods and bads and rights and wrongs are clear and distinct.
And in sports, the ego-gratification is almost instantaneous. Cromwell scores a TD, and the crowd cheers. The pro scouts scribble little pluses in their notebooks. But when the University's star biochemistry student makes a discovery, there are no cheers. He will probably get his discovery published and advance his career, but it just isn't the same thing.
Logic tells the intellectual that his accomplishments are worth more than Cromwell's. His emotions, however, tell him something different. Sports, like high school, is one of those things an American never outgrows.
NO ONE knows how many Americans turn to the newspaper's sports page probably a plurality; possibly a majority. And it has been that way for decades.
Some have speculated that sports is a substitute for substance hunting or for
war. It is the modern-day, sabre-footed tiger for the modern-day cave man.
Some have said sports provides an organized framework in which to train one's body, and others have said sports provide an organized, formalized, complex and sublusive world.
OTHERS HAVE said sports is nothing
altronge parties.
Sports is all of those things and more. It is also one of the few segments of modern society in which there are still no heroes, in which there would be no heroes in the 1970's.
Politics is too corrupt, too dirty, too practical to provide us with heroes. Jimmy Carter and President Ford aren't heroes.
The movies are full of disaster and brawl, art. Is Bruce the shark a beaver? Quaint?
Science is too impersonal and technological to provide heroes. Viking II isn't a hero and neither is Sperry Rand.
BUT IN sports, despite the attempts of the team owners and some greedy players, there are still heroes. These heroes are individuals. They have individual faces and names and the individual performances they make matter.
In the fall of 1976, that is saying something.
Sports give the players a chance to be given and to make a difference. They give them a chance to succeed.
Editorial Editor
Modern sports may well be overemphasized, but it is no accident that college and professional athletics are drawn into many commercial businesses. By Jim Bates
Even though the importance of WINNING in sports has been responsible for more cliche than anything else, sports aphorism that says it all.
Winning: that's all there is
By John Fuller Contributing Writer
It should be engraved on every national monument, embossed on every textbook and included in a prayer said five times a day as we lay in the direction of Wall Street.
™ REFERRING to Vince Lombardi's famous words, "Winning isn't everything—it's the only thing." What other sentence could better characterize our political, social and economic systems? Surely it could be written in a language like "In God we Trust" as our national motto, particularly during football season.
But I write not to criticize our pursuit of victory after victory but to celebrate it. After all, this IS football season, and both of the teams I avidly root for (the Dallas Cowboys and the Jays) have undefeated seasons so far. I love my teams to win!
Give me a cool and sunny fall
Saturday with leaves blowing in
the air. Fill me with some fried
chicken and beer, hand me a
ticket or show me a mole in the
wire fence surrounding the stadium, and I'm ready for the show.
**WHAT A** bracing sight it is to enter the stadium packed with the raucous, multitud thron of spectators, especially when the Hawks are strong and ready to whip their opponent. As the teams come out on the field to warm up, drawing the first great rear from the team of the collective adrenaline of the crowd surge in anticipation of the action.
The Jayhawks' recent stars haven't disappointed me and other fans. Seeing Nolan Croman off hand to Laverne Smith at just the right instant, watching Mike Butler rip through the backpack or yelling my lungs out as KU returns an interception for long yardage are moments of sheer beauty for me.
It's hard to match the excitement and pleasure that a fan gets from watching a favorite team on watchers' and its on way to victory. When his team is winning, the rest of his life can be in relative shamishes and he'll still be happy. When it's losing, no matter how happy you are, everything seems gray and drab. How gray and drab depends on how much of a fan he is.
AND THERE's the rub. what about those poor fans who are cursed with a losing football team year after year—such as those loyal but perpetually disappointed K-State fans? Clearly, winning isn't the only thing for them. How much excitement and energy from seeing their team trounced again and again until it becomes one of the losiest teams in NCAA history?
However, any good fan is a superstitious fan. Was it that long ago when Kansas went to the NFL? It was recorded with a 1-9 record the next?
Because of special-edition deadlines, even this editorial could be out of date by the time it appears in print. Kansas and the Cowbys could be 3-2 in the rankings about winning and the beauty of our great team could be tragically satirical.
That's why I say that winning is the only thing—as long as you or your team is winning. Show me a good loser and I'll show you a realistic person who says that we all can't be winners.
Savor the victories while they last, for tomorrow we lose!
Football prestige wins coverage
Before every Jayhawk football game, there's a lot of talk about troning the opponent so KU, our wonderful alma mater, won't have to play at home in the bottom of that golden valley.
Winning means prestige for KU, and we want everyone to know we have it. We weer merclesly at Kansas State University cheers and the "red polyester pantuit syndrome" we wear, but we don't performenally go through. We don't explain that we come here because KU is the only school that offers courses in our major
or, well, because KU is an in-state school.
homecoming decorations to those who decide what football games will be seen on television.
SOME OF KU's prestige comes from academia, but in the fall, prestige is measured by
the kind of football team we
have. If we win big, we can say
we go to the best school in
The Big Eight Conference. If we
lose, we forfeit a lot of our
prestige.
But all that prestige doesn't matter a garbage can full of
In the sports television
Mary Ann Daugberty Contributing Writer
Welcome to "Weird Kingdom"
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(FADE IN a paneled, map-covered room. A white-haired, mustachioed old gentleman in a plaid jacket is striking a fuzzy, stuffed Jayhawk with his left hand.)
MAN: Good evening and welcome to Mutual of Tonganoxie "The 'Wird Kingdom.'" Tm Melvin Parkins and this is my little friend Sam. (Holds up Jayhawk and make a sound) We are going to Lawrence, Kansas, and that's where we're going today.
(CUT TO aerial shot of KU campus, drifting toward Memorial Stadium.)
(CUT TO pair of tipsy alums playing cards next to a rusted Wimnebago.)
VOICE OF PARKINS:
Mysterious Lawrence first discovered by Western experts, but now still unmarked on many maps. Here, Jayhawks like our little friend Sam romp and play. We are particularly interested in their skills. An older, more mature Jayhawks.
During most of the year, these birds wander far and wide, nesting with their almost imperilled mates. But on certain weekends every fall, they flock back to the breeding grounds at Lawrence Park.
VOICE OF PARKKS: And here they are. Just as the kangaroo keeps its young in its pouch, so these mature Jayhawks keep their pouches full of various liquids. They seem to be in an institutional manner determined by cions of evolution.
(CUT TO the parking lot near the stadium, full of taffigating alumn.)
VOICE OF PARKINS: In this ritual, two males struggle to
Jim Bates
Editorial Editor
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
establish dominance. By means of stares, stimaces and groans, each of them fights to be superior.
(One of the men disgustedly throws down his queen-high hand.)
VOICE OF PARKINS:
There! The older male has given up. He now must provide the man with a male with more of the liquid.
(The loser pours the winner a Dixie cup of Old Turkey.)
VOICE OF PARKINS:
Jayhawks are not herd birds. The dominant male does not get to work his will on all the nearby
females—although he might like to. He does, however, build himself up in the eyes of the Jawhaws.
(FADE TO small, blond kid with bill visor.)
VOICE OF PARKINS: After all the various levels of dominance have been
VOICE OF PARKING:
(Laughs) Ah-ha, Sam, there's one more your size then they're their own young with them. Eventually, the young will come to Lawrence on their own where they will be taught how to mate and to drink the sacred beverage.
(CUT TO the football game itself.)
Biologists believe that the two species fight these mock wars to establish territorial dominance and a sexual pecking order. The animals that attack each other and consists of movements and gestures long ago determined by Mother Nature. If not for these, the species might have wiped one another out long ago, and the fans wavest wheat after a score.
established, the Jayhawks gather in a large natural amphitheatre. Eleven of the most dominant young Jayhawks emerge from a form of embrace with 11 members of some other species.
VOICE OF PARKINS: Just as the American Indian climbed
business there is what is known as "wild card weekends," in which three or four football games can be chosen to be aired on regional television. On the Monday before a wild card weekend, ABC television and Fox News Association representatives confer on what contests merit air time that weekend.
VOICE OF PARKINS: The Jayhawk is a fascinating and weird bird. But his future is unsure. Already he is threatened by the encroachment of the ERA and the Federal Government. Luckily, a dedicated group of volunteers, of women from Tennessee, are fighting for its survival. If they win, the Jayhawk shall continue to engage in its strange and freakish habits. If not, that's the way it goes.
(CUT TO another aerial view of campus.)
trees to see into the distance, so the Jawhayk waves away dust particles in the air so he can see his chamons at war.
on television we determined by the success we had against our opponents in both conference and nonconference games.
The importance of television revenue was vividly underscored when the University of Oklahoma Sooners were prohibited from appearing on television, Baker says. During an estimated $220,000 was lost each school in the Big Eight.
THERE ISN'T much anyone at KU—except the football team—can do to assure KU air time during the football season. No amount of public relations or films of strolls down colorful Jayhawk Boulevard will affect KU. There is a handful of executives who decide what games will be broadcast.
For instance, Baker says the decision to televisie the Iowa State game, our sixth game of the season, can be large at times. Cromwell earned national recognition in the Oregon State game, the third game of the season, when he rushed for 294 yards in an NCAA record for single-game rushing by a quarterback.
DON BAKER, KU sports information director, says the Big Eight schedule does well in getting the nod from the decision makers. Reputed to be the best conference in the nation, having won 28 out of 32 games last season, the Big Eight season, the Big Eight schedule always seems to have a contest that is worth consideration.
Once a game has been aired,
the acquired revenue is given to
the conference, which in turn
divides it among its member
schools. The money represents a
big chunk of the total budget
for athletics at any school.
Baker says, KU is no exception.
The only thing that matters is the attractiveness of the final product, which is especially important to ABC because it must determine the ability to abstain from all abuse. That attractiveness is determined solely by the kind of football the Jahyhs play.
Last year, football fans watched KU on television when they played Iowa State in October. UW is the University of Colorado Nov. 15 and the University of Pittsburgh in the Sun Bowel Dec. 26.
EXCEPT FOR THE Sun Bowl game, which would have aired regardless of previous KU performances, our appearances
The decision to televise the Colorado game, Baker says, originally was made because of talent shown by the Colorado Buffaloes. But, when KU upset the Broncos in 28.3 the week before the game, the complexion of that decision changed.
KU fans can holler all they want about their prestige, their traditions and their hilly campus, but none of that is important to the Air. To get there, individual players or our team as a whole have to prove their superiority. That superiority will be noted by those who make broadcast decisions and rewarded in return for their role for the athletic corporations of Big Eight schools.
Separate teams sexist
The athletic program at KU is unfair on the basis of sex, causing much money to be spent wrongly. There wouldn't be much problem if everything were free.
But everything isn't free, and one gropes for the logic and fairness of separate intercollegiate teams for men and women. It is clear why the separate teams exist—the government in Washington, D.C., say it must be that way.
BUT WHY should it? Why not have one team for each sport and make it open to everyone? Granted, at least for the time between seasons, but most, if not all, teams. This would mean that many fewer
But why would that be unfair? Why shouldn't teams be picked for intercollegiate competition between schools that basis alone? One who says there must be separate intercollegiate women's teams is arguing for favoritism on the basis of sex, and on that basis alone.
THERE ISN'T enough money to provide intercollegiate
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Let fans pay for sports
If the Student Senate isn't remembered for anything else, it will be remembered for its hot and cold approach to student subsidies for football and basketball tickets. Every year the issue comes up, and every year the amount of the subsidy changes.
I am opposed to the subsidy.
Football and basketball at KU are big business, and the revenue from these two programs makes up a financial part of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation's budget.
FOOTBALL AND basketball are "winners" at KU. They make money. They are the only two sports for which a ticket subsidy is considered. The athletic corporation will survive whether or not it gets money from the Student Senate.
The ticket subsidy supposedly allows all students to pay for reduced tickets for a few of the
students. It's the same principle that applies to the funding of minor organizations, such as the Chess Club.
Such organizations are considered legitimate extensions of a student's education, the theory
Carl Young Contributing Writer
being that a certain club or activity will make him "well-rounded."
THE SAME theory applied to KU football and basketball when the average student had as good a chance to make a team here as he did when he tried out for his high school team.
That age ended many, many years ago. Intramural teams now provide students with an opportunity for exercise.
The idea of the entire studentry supporting organizations that are
self-sufficient seems to be a little fuzzy. The Chess Club and those other organizations that appear in small type in the Senate's list of subsidized organizations couldn't exist without student money. Sports can.
OKAY, NOW let us assume that going to watch a major college sport makes students better. Should all of the students have to take subsidies that will allow some of the students to buy cheap seats?
Offer me a ticket at a reasonable price, and I will buy it. But don't ask someone who doesn't know a skill from a field goal to help pay for it.
No. The fans should pay for their fun. A portion of alumni dues go toward getting cheap seats for the alumni, and there is no reason why anything different should be done with the student acticity fee.
athletics for everyone who wants to compete, regardless of ability. When you provide intercollegiate athletics on the basis of sex, rather than on ability, there is unfairness.
Chris Jones and Chris Smith are equal in basketball ability, and in their longing to play intercollegiate basketball. Chris Jones is playing intercollegiate basketball because she is a manm. Chris she does not have the ability making the KU team because he is a man. How can anyone say that is fair?
Some argue that because most women simply aren't as strong physically as most men there must be bias in the system to neutralize the naturalistic advantages men have. This setting plays and simple, and everyone should admit it.
MOST OF the better sprinters are black rather than white. Blacks dominate basketball. But does anyone argue that whites should have separate sprinting divisions in track, or separate basketball teams? Would they do that, or would the arguments of those supporting separate intercollegiate teams for women, is ridiculous.
Some say we need remedial programs for women to make
up for the years they weren't allowed to compete in most sports. Perhaps we do, but I don't know why. Are the wrong place to start.
People must realize that women of all ages should have the same opportunity that men have to compete for spots on the best-organized teams. There should also be programs at all levels of education, who wants to play, regardless of ability.
SOME ARGUE that sports are separated at the professional level, so why not in college? The two systems aren't name. Women's professional teams draw fans and make money.
In college, however, the money isn't there for most sports. Men's football and basketball are the only real sports in college, from those two, along with endowment money and state funds, is quite limited and should be spent in the fairest way possible. And that is for institutionate teams based on ability.
The Student Senate wisely cut the subsidy for football and basketball tickets last year. I didn't like the fact that my season tickets cost more, but I must admit it was unfair to ask them to subsidize those who watched football and basketball.
UNFORTUNATELY, last spring the Senate didn't question the $3,450 of student athletic programs in women's intercollegiate athletics. Much less money, $28,381, went to the intramural program, which serves many teams, than women's athletics does.
If you support teams separated on the basis of sex, don't let me stop you. But admit it is a sexist practice, and please don't do it with my money.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 15, 1976
3
IF YOU WANT TO BE A STAR, YOU OUGHT TO DRESS LIKE ONE.
CARLISLE
Some of us were born to be football stars.
Others of us are stars in the band. And a few of us are stars in the classroom.
- Blue jeans trimmed in leather
- But all of us can look like a star. At Garb-Age we cover you with clothes that say "star" in every stitch.
- Twenty different blue jean styles
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4
Fridav. October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
ALEXANDER
Ransom rambler
Nolan Cromwell, KU senior quarterback from Ransom, gets a breather while the defensive unit takes the Cromwell.
some All-American honors last year and is a strong Helmsman Trophy candidate this year. Much of KU's hopes for another postseason star will depend on his performance.
SINCE 1956, themes have ranged from somber to silly. In 1957, the theme was "Cartoon Characters," and seven houses chose the character Twitteie Bird as the main character of the movie, creating Dennis Demine the Monte was second in popularity, appearing on five houses.
"That got to be a sensitive enough problem that some years you had to present a proposal about what you were going to do," Alderson said.
From page one
Greek actions spur . . .
Other themes have been "Jayhawk Headlines," "Jayhawk Laugh-In" and "Higher Education—The Road to the Future."
House decorations were most numerous during the 1950s. In 1957, for example, 40 displays competed. then, houses have begun to combine efforts for displays, and an exhibition has been divided into two and three-dimensional and moving parts categories.
--years, the ninchies served as hostesses for the visiting football team and sat with it on the sideline during the game. From among the ninchies, KU football players chose a queen.
IN 1970, Robert Docking was governor. E. Laurence Chalmers was chancellor and Jim Ryun, KU track star, was preparing for the Olympic games two years away. And that year the concept of Homecoming Queen wasablished at KU.
In 1933, Alf M. Landon was governor of Kansas, E. H. Lindley was the KU chancellor and Glen Cunningham, a KU track star, was on the Olympic team. And that year Lucy Trees became the first University of Kansas Homecoming Queen.
Between those years, sororites dominated the ranks of homecoming queens and candidates. Lucy Trees was a Chi Omega. The next year, 11 of the 14 candidates were from sororites, and in 1935, 11 or 13 were Greeks.
A variety of election methods was used to choose the homecoming queens. In the first
IN SOME YEARS, the student body chose the queen. The final year a queen was named, a group of selected male students met the nominees at an informal tea and chose semifinalists. A panel of nonstudent members then selected the finalists and the winner.
Alderson remembers the homecoming queen tradition, especially the custom of transporting the candidates around town and the stadium in sleek convertibles.
"Gee, that used to be important when I was a young man," he said. "It was after the new cars came out and there was no trouble getting a convertible."
Like house decorations, queen competitions seemed to hit a peak in the 1950s. In 1953, 24 women were nominated, and in 1954, 27 entered the competition.
BY THE 1968S, however, the concept of the homecoming queen was being widely questioned. There were no black candidates between 1960 and 1967, the year a group of students petitioned to nominate an independent black candidate.
In 1969, the Black Student Union asked the homecoming committee to be allowed to crown a black homecoming queen with the traditional queen at halftime of the football game. The committee denied the request, and the black queen was crowned back to the black queen to be crowned before the game.
IN 1970 homecoming committee, the same one that put a one-year stop to housekeeping. It was queen. A statement by the group said, "It seems inappropriate in a multicultural environment such as a university to select someone who is not from that community. The 1970 homecoming
committee deems it more appropriate to recognize those who embody the academic spirit for which this community was established."
★ ★ ★
Greeks have been responsible for other homecoming traditions. While two professional fraternities had neighboring houses early in the century, they held a popular annual homecoming football game.
World War II interfered with the tradition of homecoming, just as it did with many of his students.
EACH HOMECOMING weekend, the men of Phi Alpha Delta, the law fraternity, and the most important intramural football game. The contests drew large crowds, and the losing team only required to buy a turkey for the winners.
NO HOMECOMINGS were cancelled because of the war, but in 1942, Chancellor Deane W. Malot told students, "In view of the war conditions and the obvious difficulties of travel, it seems unlikely that as large a number of alumni will be returning for homecoming as in former years, and I am confident that you will use usual homcoming festivities this year."
But by 1948 the Kansan was again reporting that, "fraternity and sorority presidents report that an overflow of old grads are (sc) expected."
And in 1938 the Kansan reported that Greek houses were preparing for large crowds of returning alumni. The Kansan reported that marked Greek houses that year:
"Delta Upsition's TV-radio console is a welcome addition on game days and 'Drageth' night. It seems the TV fad is growing in popularity. ..."
Recreational facilities offer variety.
From page one
hoped—some girls are really out there for blood."
Tami Sullinger, Pittsburg, Kan., som-
tami, agreed that the going sometimes
happens.
"It's been getting pretty rough and I think there should be more emphasis on enjoyment of the competition rather than just winning and going out to kill," she said.
CONFIRMING THE over-zealous nature of some participants, Marcks said, "Sometimes people get out on the field and think they are in the NPL. Maybe I don't mind that. But sometimes you think they often offer too competitive and forget that the main purpose is to have fun."
Club sports
For those persons who feel they're a cut above the intramural level, but realize they're not yet at the intercollegiate level, we want to make sure we're presenting and a selection of 'different' sports.
Rugby, soccer and cricket clubs are funded by the Student Senate.
Rick Whitson, faculty sponsor of the Rugby Club said the club now has about 50
members. The only requirement to join is an interest in the game.
"One of the advantages of rugby is that it's a cheap sport to fund. The students buy their own uniforms and pay their own travel costs." This is the tradition of rugby." Whiten said.
HE SAID THAT THE club, which began in 1964, teaches 25 to 30 new members each year and that it plays about 20 games from other clubs and clubs from other universities or cities.
The soccer and cricket clubs are similarly unded and structured.
The soccer club plays matches during the spring and competes in the Big Eight soccer tournament.
THE CRICKET CLUB is an example of KU sportmen whose enthusiasm and dedication to their sport makes up for their lack of numbers. The club plays regional university clubs and city clubs, but admits that competition is often hard to find in the midwest.
All club sports teams at KU are cosmopolitan in membership. Because these sports are more popular in other countries than in the United States, it's
logical that many foreign students choose to participate.
SUA offerings
The club is also open to out-of-town
business. Membership fees are $5 for
individuals.
If you've yet to find the sport or recreational activity right for you, the SUA also offers a varied selection of activities. The SUA is open to anyone with an interest in cycling.
The club promotes cycling for transportation, recreation and sport, according to Jeff Haynes, outdoor recreation chairwoman of the annual meet each month and every Saturday morning for breakfast rides, which originate at South Side it also publishes The Kensas Cycle magazine.
The bicycle club has about 75 members but hopes to build to 185 cycling enthusiasts by 2034.
★
The KU sailing club is als a **suA** activity, funded through dues and an **suA** subasby. The club has 80 to 100 members at nearby lakes—Perry, Lone Star and at nearby lakes—Perry, Lone Star and
Club members conduct classes enabling prospective sailors to learn necessary skills to qualify as "captains." Written and practical examinations must be passed before the beginner is left to cope with the whirms of a fickle Kansas wind.
The canoeing club recently took a trip on the Nianqiao River, and Haynes said he
SUA backpacking and canoeing clubs are struggling to get organized, Haynes said.
Douglas County. Boats are provided by the club.
The backpacking program also includes a mountaineering group, although the two
"These groups haven't proved as successful as our others because they lack a substantial organizational base and are totally dependent on SUA funding," he said.
The backpacking group tried to take a trip recently, Haynes said, but only three persons showed. He said the club seemed to have a hard time overcoming its 'off-and-on' situation.
Haynes said climbing clinics at a deserted DeSoat rock quarry were popular and provided sufficient thrills for those just starting to climb.
Wilderness Discovery is an equipment rental service sponsored by the SUA. Rental includes sleeping bags, stoves and life jackets are available to all KU students. The highest rental rate is $7 a day for a canoe and 64-quart Thermos- for a whole day yet.
All equipment for the activities is provided by the SUA.
A $10 deposit and KU ID are required to rent any equipment. A $5 charge is made if the equipment requires a major clean-up effort after being returned.
hoped to travel a different river each weekend.
The chess club meets Sunday afternoons and Monday evenings for informal play.
The backgammon club meets every Wednesday evening (50 cents charge to play, bring your own board), and the bridge club also holds regular playing sessions.
Tournaments are planned for each club.
Anyone connected with the University is
accepted.
For those who prefer to take their recreation indoors sitting down, the SUA also sponsors the following activities in the Kansas Union:
★
Similar outdoor and indoor recreational activities are available at other Big Eight universities through their student unions or athletic departments.
Foosball (25 cents per game), pool (90 cents an hour, 50 cents for additional cues), pinball (25 cents) and bowling (50 cents a line before 6 p.m., 60 cents a line after 6 p.m.) are also available in the Jay Bowl in the Union.
For persons who profess expertise in 20-20 hindgills, the Quarterback Club meets the Monday after an away game to watch game action. The club charges for this chair-side sportive event.
There's still another type of recreation available at KU, and it often proves to be the best—especially after pass receiving resulted in dislocation (of a knee), hitting resulted in relocation (of you to the bench) and hobbing via caroque resulted in pneumonia.
That activity, naturally, is the role of "spectator," a sport easy to pursue and readily available. And thanks to the efforts of the football team, basketball team and soccer team, virtually every KU student can participate as a spectator with minimal effort.
NU tops Big Eight in activity; KU last
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
A recent survey of recreational and intramural programs at other Big Eight schools indicated that KU ranked last in overall student participation percentage.
The University of Nebraska ranked first, with 79 per cent total student participation. Others were: Oklahoma State University, 51 per cent; the University of Oklahoma, 35 per cent; the University of Missouri, 46 per cent; the University of Missouri, 46 per cent; Iowa State University, 45 per cent; and Kansas State University, 42 per cent.
Nebraska
Gale Wiedon, coordinator of program planning for intramurals and recreation teams, teaches sports team sports. Third tennis courts, 13 multipurpose (handball, basketball, raquetball) courts and three swimming towers provide a university students and personnel.
OSU has 18 men's and 14 women's intramural sports, six multi-purpose courts, 17 tennis courts and 15 playing fields. Frye said the program was funded by activity and building fees, and an assistance in present facilities is planned.
NU doesn't have a separate recreation facility, Wiedow said, and it limits the time that the physical education and recreation classes are held in recreation on evenings and weekends.
Colorado
Mary Frye, assistant director of health, physical education and leisure services at OSU, said its program had been kicked out of the adequate administrative backlog.
CU students and faculty enjoy a separate recreation center, built with $5 million in student referendum funding, which provides unlimited facilities for intramural activities and individual "free play."
Oklahoma State
Richard Castrow, director of intramurals and men's club sports at CU, said he thought the University was unusual in that first priority for use of its recreation building was given to individual free play time, followed in by
tramurals and club sports. CU's recreational facilities also include 12 tennis courts, 12 multipurpose courts and 12 athletic fields, which is always open for recreational use.
OU has 25 intramural team sports, 20 tennis courts, three multipurpose courts and 12 playing fields. Free recreation, also centered in the "elderly" campus field house, is scheduled for four hours each evening.
Oklahoma
The main campus field house now uses for recreation activities is "walking a very fine line between remaining upright and falling down." Wilson said.
In contrast to CU's elegant recreational facilities, OU's recreation programs are based in a main physical hall of the campus. Students from Paul Wilson, director of recreation, said,
Laverne Wade, men's intramurals director at MU, gave little specific information about MU's programs, except that he was familiar with response from students talked to him.
Maa's said steam lines run through the outdoor playing fields to serve the new Vet-Med Complex had rendered many of the facilities useless for at least a year.
Gerry Maas, director of intramurals at ISU, said his program was funded entirely through the physical education department. He said the ISU program, which includes 36 intramural team sports, well supported by the university.
Iowa State
Raydon Robel, director of recreational services, said KSU offered more than 30 internships for students in which are shared with the health, physical education and recreation department, were available for student only during evenings and weekends.
"I think the recent passage of a referendum by the students to tax themselves is an indication of a new complex international support of the program here," Robel said.
Kansas State
WESTERN UNIVERSITY OF JAYHAVEN
Enthusiasm generator
Bryce Abbott, Junction City freshman, does his part to add to the volume of the KU marching band as it tries to draw enthusiasm from a home football crowd. The band is
Staff photo by DAVE RIGHT
directed by Robert Foster, the KU Director of Bands. Some of the band members think they help influence the outcomes of football games by leading cheering and by performing music.
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Fridav. October 15, 1976
A. C. G.
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.39
Triangle fraternity members David Rosebeary, Arkansas City sophomore, and Dan Abbott, Louis St. Louis student, attach chicken wire to the frame on their homecoming display, "Landslide victory." The Triangle display was destroyed by fire last year, so fraternity members will guard their display this year.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Paper 'Hawk
Dykes okays ombudsman study
By JIM COBB
Staff Writer
Members of SenEx and University Council were told yesterday that Chancellor Archie Dykes had made a "firm commitment" to investigate the possibility of creating a position of University ombudsman.
Eldon Fields, professor of political science and SenEx chairman, said he had met with Dykes yesterday morning. At that time, Fields said, Dykes indicated that the need for such a position, he wanted to meet the need for such a position, he wants oppose to the ambushman proposal.
The ombudsman would handle complaints made by KU students, faculty and staff, and would adduce people with complaints how to use existing grievance procedures.
An amendment to University Senate's rules and regulations, drawn up last spring, included a provision for the ambudman and a grievance panel to advise him.
As the plan now stands, Dykes would decide, after consultation with governance and departmental groups, which faculty members would be dismissed. Dykes could
SENEX ALSO agreed to change the date of a Nov. 18 University Senate meeting to Dec. 2. At this meeting, discussion of a financial exigency policy is planned.
The financial exigency policy outlines procedures to be used at KU to dismiss tenured faculty in the event of drastic enrollmentills and, consequently, funding.
THE PROPOSED policy was amended by University Council in May and Dykes said he would approve it in amended form. If it is amended further, however, Dykes might not accept it even if it is approved by University Senate.
Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, would have been unable to attend the Nov. 18 meeting, Fields said. Joel Gold, professor of English and presiding officer of University Council and University Senate, said he hoped Dykes could attend the meeting to say whether he would accept any amendments to the policy.
decide to retain nonrenowned faculty and make sure that their work was essential to operations.
Gold reiterated that he wouldn't call the University Senate meeting to order Dec. 2, unless a quorum of one-fifth (256) of its members were present.
THE POLICY that has been approved so far, he said, had been shaped by University governance groups that represented all segments of the University. He said he didn't want a "small" number of 60 or 100 students attending the existing document.
"It's improper to call together a body when the presiding officer knows there isn't a quorum present," he said. "Fifty people are not representative of the University. That would just play havoc with the University's democratic system."
The emubusman position could be created only after funding becomes available to pay for the position, office and staff. Fields said. It probably would be next semester or the next fiscal year before funds could be found. Fields said.
The Senate rules for the position designate that an applicant have a "comprehensive knowledge of degrees and at least years of service on the University faculty."
FIELDS SAID, "You can't pick someone like that overnight, and it won't come back."
Dykes will work to get funding for the position, Fields said. He said Dykes wanted adequate funding that would pay for an office and support personnel.
However, Fields said Dykes couldn't guarantee that he would be able to find him.
Nominees for ombudsman will be selected by the grievance committee. This committee then would serve in an advisory role to ombudsman. It would meet at Dykes' request.
Fields said he would talk to Shankel to see whether Shankel would appoint two committee members even before funds were available for the ambudsm师. This might allow an ambudsm师 to be appointed on a half-time basis with the assistance of a
OR IT WOULD allow the committee to be available to study grievance processes so that when money is made available, the ombudsman could begin work at once.
The grievance committee would comprise students, an alumnus, faculty members and administrators. All appointments have been made except for the administration's two
graduate student, if partial funding could be found.
Dykes previously had said that he didn't think an ambudman was needed at KU because he has a strong system for handling grievances. But those in favor of the ambudman, including the Graduate Student Council (GSC), said the grievance system is not for the ambudman.
THE FIRST indication that Dykes would support the proposal came in a reply by Dykes to a letter from GSC urging him to support the umbushman plan. Ellen Reynolds, SenEx member and executive director of GSC, said that Dykes stated in
Yankees nip Royals, 7-6
N-E-W YORK (AP)—The Kansas City Royals, embarrassed while winning the Western Division title, certainly weren't feeling losing the American League pennant.
See COUNCIL, page three
Battling back throughout the series, the courageous Royals last night lost the fifth and final AL. play-off game to the New York Mets on Sunday. The Mets snacked a nintendo ninth, leading off home run.
It came off Mark Littell, only the second one the right-handler救援 surrendered.
"I challenged him. He hit my best pitch," said the 25-year-old Littell. "You gotta give up."
"THE OTHER NIGHT he swung at the same pitch and missed it. This time, he got stuck."
"It was a high fastball out on the plate a bit. If I were in the same situation next," he said.
Vice presidential debate a rehash in opinion of KU forensics coach
Herzog bemanned the fate of his pitchers, who weren't particularly effective in allowing the Yankees' 11 hits, including four by sparkling catcher Josh Gibson, to send each one home. M里斯on and Champlin.
"I JUST COULDN'T find a pitcher," said Herzog, who used five last night. "I thought Mark might be the guy. If I knew he was the one, I'd have brought it. I would have brought in Steve Mimori."
The Royals had squandered a big regular-season lead while losing 22 of their final 34 games and just squeaked by the Oakland A's, who had won the title past five years. But there was no repetition of that pose-dive in this pulsating series.
Chambliss, who had driven in two runs and scored another earlier, stood at the plate to watch his blast soar toward the right centerfield stands. As it dropped into the pitcher's mound, the baseman thrust his arms in the air and the stadium exploded with the crowd's roars.
THE VICTORY sent the Yankees into the World Series beginning tomorrow in Cincinnati against the defending champion Reds.
The soft-spoken Chambliss, said he hit a big fastball from Littell.
Chamblis' dramatic blow, which overcame a dramatic game-tying three-run bonus by the Royals' George Brett in the 96th at Yankee Stadium on the field at remodeled Yankee Stadium. A record crowd of 56,821 celebrated the Yankees' 30th American League flag and won the NL title.
ball where it's pitched. The ball was inside and I pulled it. I couldn't be happier."
Kansas City Manager Whitney Herzog told
his disappointed players they should all hold the
hands of the team.
"I knew it was either an out or a home run, or I just stood and watched the ball," he said. "I thought we were going to fail."
Chambliss got around first base all right, but the rest was an adventure. He touched second base using his hand instead of his hand because the bag was being carried off by 8.
The he got knocked down between second and third.
and third.
"I was stepping on people," he said.
AFTER THAT, it was chased with a sea of humanity taking over the field. People dashed away with the bases and gouged chunks of infield soil.
"we battled the heck out of them and we have nothing to be ashamed of." Herzog汗
Somehow, Chambliss made it into the duet.
The ending came suddenly after the start of the Yankees' ninth was delayed by some disruptive fans in right field who littered the field with bottles and other debris.
By BILL CALVERT
When the "hatchet men" of Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford square off tonight in the vice presidential candidates' debate, the hatchets probably will be left at home.
Littell waited patiently on the mound for the disturbance to end. When it finally did, he threw just one pitch—and Chambss caught all of it.
The debate between Minnesota Sen. Walter Mondale and Kansas Sen. Bob Dole will be similar to the Carter-Ford debate, according to Donn Parson, director of
The homer was the 11th hit of the play-offs for Chambliss in the series, a record.
Parson is one of five debate coaches who have rated the presidential debates for the Associated Press and the Hearst newspaper chain.
This was a game the Yankees had to win twice. After spotting Kansas City an early lead, New York came from behind and in control with a 6-3 lead after seven innings.
BUT IN THE eighth, Brett—the American league batting champion—gave
"I think there will be a lot of time devoted to the issues." Parson said. "Some invective is possible—both men are sharp-tongued and both are verbal. I don't think it will get ugly, though. That would tend to backfire."
He said the vice presidential nominee won't tristraving have an ugly exchange because of the disfavor it would evoke among viewers.
Parson said he couldn't predict what would be most prominent in the debate.
THE 75-MINUTE debate, which will be televised on ABC, CBS and NBC, is at 8:30
"The format is governed a great deal by what the reporters ask. A lot of things are not brought up," he said. "Ford probably heaved a sigh of relief when the Butz problem wasn't brought up in the last debate. The researchers did a pretty good job last time. Most of the things brought up were important and not ugly."
Sec YANKEES page eight
Dole and Mondale probably will spend a good deal of time clarifying earlier positions taken by the presidential nominees, Parson said. Much of this discussion may center on the economy and Soviet-American relations, he said.
THE CANDIDATES also will have an opportunity to discuss economic information that has come out since the last presidential debate on matters such as unemployment, inflation and budget funding. Parson said.
Pep rally to inaugurate traditional homecoming
"They're pretty even. They're both articulate and are able to take fairly strong
Parson said he used a standard debate ballot in rating the debates.
Parson declined to make a prediction of who would come out on top in the debate.
THE BALLOT sheet, Parson said, rates six categories of the debaters' performances. Each category is worth five points for a total of 30.
Analysis—The candidate's selection and handling of the issues
Reasoning - The candidate's use of logic in moving from a basic premise to a specific premise.
Among all the homecoming events planned at KU this week, the pap rally today in front of Strong Hall is the one activity especially for students, Robert Foster, KU band director, said yesterday.
The categories are:
Presentation—The poise and persuasiveness of the candidate in presenting
Evidence-How well the candidate uses facts and statistics to support his position. Organization-How coherently the candidate presents his arguments and
Refutation—How well the candidate bandes his opponent's arguments.
"The really reflects a trend in this university to make homecoming a more important part of the year's activities," Foster said.
"KU's not ready for that," he said. Foster said that today's rally was important for Moore, because the team had to show appreciation for the football program.
The rally is from 1:15 to 1:30 p.m.
The homecoming rally will feature the KU band, yell players, pompon girls, Big Jayhawk, Baby Jay, and head football players with the senior football players
Parson, who said Ford won the first debate and Carter the second, said both Dole and Mondale seemed capable of handling themselves in arguments.
Tom Stumbland, assistant band director, said he felt that times had changed and school spirit among college students had increased in recent years.
He said that now students were more enthusiastic about sports and extracurricular activities.
Southern said that some southern universities had weekly pep rallies during football season.
Jonnie Gamba, Osage City senior, said she was surprised that KU didn't have frequent pep rallies like those in high school, to encourage school spirit.
"In the '60s, students thought pep rallies were irrelevant," Stidham said.
KU ready for 61st homecoming
Half of the KU Marching Band is to begin marching at 1 p.m. from the Chi Omega场aint the west end of Jayhawk Boulevard, and the remaining half of the band will begin marching, at the same time, from the Kansas Field in the east end of Jayhawk Boulevard. The band will meet at Strong Hall.
A pep rally at 1:15 a afternoon in front of Strong Hall will begin a weekend of homecoming festivities at the University of Kansas.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, has requested that instructors dismiss their classes at 1:10 for the rally and that band members, yell leaders and the pompon squad be excused from 12:30 classes.
FOURTEEN HOMECOMING displays, created by students in various KU living groups, are to be judged between 8 and midnight tonight. Judges are faculty and Alumni Association members and Lawrence businessman.
The Homecoming Committee has recommended that those viewing the displays follow a special route, which begins at Nith and Indiana streets.
Winners in three categories—three-dimensional display with moving parts, three-dimensional without moving parts and two-dimensional—are to be announced before the KU-Oklahoma football game tomorrow. This year's homecoming theme is "J. Hawk for
A SELLOUT crowd is expected for the football game, which begins at 1:30 p.m. The team gave the nine sixth-ranked Sooners their season in Northeast.
tomorrow's pregareg activities include open houses at most campus living groups and the All-University Homecoming Luncheon at 11:30 a.m. in the Union Ballroom. Eight recipients will receive the Fred Ellsworth Medalship, a distinguished University of Kentucky Gov. Kansas Gov. Robert Docking.
This year's recipients are Howard Crawford, Atchison; John Eberhardt, Wichita; Ray Evans, Mission Hills; Howard Ennell, Iowa; Dolph Simons Jr., Lawrence; Helen Spencer, Kansas City, Mo.; Orca Stuffer, Topeka; and Arthur Weaver, Lawrence.
NEIL SEDAKA, songwriter and recording artist, is the featured homecoming concert attraction at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Allen Field
The musical, "Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris," will be presented at 8 p.m. tonight and tomorrow in the University Theatre, Murphy Hall. A matinee performance will be given at 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
The class of 1951 will have its 25 year reunion at a cocktail party tonight at the Eldridge House. Saturday, the group will attend a reception at the chancellor's residence and, after the football game, a party to honor the class is at Broken Arrow Park.
A 38-year reunion of 1941 KU Law School graduates also has a party planned at the Eldridge house tonight. Tomorrow they are to attend a memorial service.
Most fraternities and sororities have special alumni weekends planned.
In addition, exhibits will be open to the public in the University's art, library and natural history collections.
These exhibits are in the Kansas Union Gallery, the Museum of Art,
Museum of Natural History, Watson Library and Spencer Library.
University of Illinois at Chicago
The University of Illinois at Chicago is a public research university located in the suburb of Chicago, Illinois. It was founded in 1864 by William C. Gates and Henry M. O'Leary, who were pioneers in higher education in the United States. The university is known for its strong academic programs and its commitment to research and innovation.
The campus is divided into several distinct areas, including the main building complex, the Student Union, the Library, the食堂, and the athletics facilities. The campus also features several athletic fields, a stadium, and a sports complex.
The university offers a wide range of undergraduate and graduate degrees in various disciplines, including biology, chemistry, physics, engineering, mathematics, and social sciences. The university also provides opportunities for international studies and exchange programs.
The University of Illinois at Chicago is a highly regarded institution in the field of higher education, and it continues to be an important part of the University of Illinois community.
Parade route through campus
2
Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Swine flu clinics to reopen
Swine flu clinics in several areas reopened yesterday, as federal health officials stressed again that there was no connection between the vaccine and the deaths of several elderly people.
President Gerald Ford and his family were vaccinated at the White House, to give a boost to the troubled immunization program, which bogged down after Tuesday's announcement that three elderly Pittsburgh residents had died following inoculations at a local clinic.
Wednesday, nine states had suspended their inoculation programs. By yesterday afternoon, clinics had been reopened or were prepared to reopen soon in all but three states. Local and country suspensions also were eased.
U.S. nets 3 Nobel prizes
STOCKHOLM-Economist Milton Friedman and two American medical researchers were awarded Nobel Prizes yesterday, giving the United States a clean sweep on the first day of the 1976 awards.
The Royal Caroline Institute gave the medicine prize to Baruch Blümberg of the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, and D. Carleton Gajdusek of the National Institute for Neurological Diseases at Bethesda, Md., "for their discoveries concerning new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of in-
fecubus disease. Friedman, of the University of Chicago, the dean of American conservative economists and a Newsweek columnist, was awarded the economics prize by the Swedish Royal Academy of Science.
Edith Evans dead at age 88
LONDON—Dame Edith Evans, who for six decades electrified every stage on which she played, died yesterday at her country home after a short illness. She was 88 years old.
"I never wanted to be on the stage, but once I was there I knew that's where I belonged." Dame, Edwin once said.
"She can bring tears to your eyes by the sheer splendor of her voice, which she brandishes like a string of emeralds," wrote critic Kenneth Tyan, echoing the sentiments of generations held spellbound by her performances on stage, television, radio and film.
Ford lashes out at Carter on foreign, defense policies
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Ford accused Democratic Jimmy Carter last year of "slandering the good name of the United States" in his challenge of Ford administration foreign and defense policies during the second presidential debate.
Carter, on a campaign trip to New York, said, "My criticism of this administration can't be translated into criticism of the whole country."
Ford lashed out at Carter during a nationally broadcast news conference, which he opened by declaring his pleasure that the special Watergate prosecutor had put to rest "once and for all" allegations of him financed campaign funds as a congressman.
The President called for a shift in the serious differences between him and Carte.
"Gov. Carter and I have profound differences of opinion." Ford said. "I hope in the 20 days remaining in this campaign we will remain and honestly about the serious issues."
responding to questions about his role in efforts to block an investigation of the Watergate break-in while he was minority leader of the House of Representatives, his acceptance of paid golfing vacations and his involvement in the sexual clothing. Ford said all such allegations had been thoroughly investigated and no wrongdoing had been found.
Oct. 19
10 a.m.—8 p.m.
Student Union
Big 8 Room
CAMPUS ACTIVITIES FESTNBL EXPOSITION
Funded from the Student Senate activity fee
BEIRUT (AP) - Thousands of armed Syrian troops broke through Palestinian lines east of Beirut yesterday and went to the southern port of Sidon, on order to deal a final blow to the Palestinian-left fighters in invading the Lebanese civil war to an end.
Syrian military sources said their forces drove the guerrillas from Bhandoun and turned their tank and artillery attack on the Dammascar-Beirut highway.
hours of fighting, each side asserted victory.
The Syrians slipped behind Palestinian lines at the mountain stronghold of Bhandoun, 12 miles east of Beirut, and stormed the early easterday. After
Although guerrillas and their left allies were seen retreating toward Aley, a guerrilla commune said the assistants had recaptured all roads to Bhauddun, and recaptured all roads to Bhadnum.
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- Britrail Pass
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Syrians break leftist lines
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Open 'til 11 p.m. Drive-up window 1209 W.6th
- Hotels - Cruises - Resorts
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Phone: 843-1211
- Car Rental / Purchase / Leasing
Stitch On needlepoint shop Welcomes you to KU Homecoming and Good Luck Jayhawks
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Thurs. 10-8
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1/2 block west of Weaver's
842-1101
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The Malls Shopping Center 711 West 23rd
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Cc
his rep
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In acr
their ar
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codes,
Univers,
A 19
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the chl
SenE be awa
and t he techi
Council
ad al so
execu
the two
---
The actions the Stu
SenE formal needed process casual any derstal and th
Requests
Anot
Council Traffic
associate
secretary
with a
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porary
hoped fringe the ne there year, reques
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Friday, October 15.1976
3
From page one
Council . . .
University Daily Kansan
his reply for the first time that creation of the position depended upon finances.
In addition, SenEx members instructed their assistant secretary, Barbara Baume, to send courtesy letters to Dykes in the future to notify him of actions taken by the Senate, including the codes, or the rules and regulations of the University Senate and Faculty Senate.
A 1969 Regents approval of the codes that all code changes be made with
SenEx had assumed the chancellor would be aware of their actions because both he and the executive vice chancellor technically are members of the University Council and the University Senate. They were also required to secretary to relay information. The executive secretary was also secretary for the two groups until last year.
SenEx members agreed that a more formal and consistent policy to notify Dykes needed to be made. Fields and the informal network of contacts had casual and the new method would eliminate any possibility of ambiguous understates between administration and the governance group.
FIELDS TOLD University Council that he hoped a plan to give faculty members some fringe benefits may be compiled before the next legislative session. Apparently there will be no big salary increases; there will be no salary changes to a plan to renest, fringe benefits may be needed.
The new method of notifying Dykes of actions taken will be similar to one used by them.
Another subject of discussion at the Council meeting was the Parking and Traffic Court. William Westerbeke, associate professor of law and SenEx secretary, said the court was overburdened with cases and the number of student members had been increased on a temporary basis.
Westerbeke said the court was supposed to have at least nine law student members, four faculty members and two representatives of the classified employee staff. Temporary appointments have increased the number of student members to 15.
Louis Burmeister, professor of mechanical engineering, said the court's number of cases, 1,200 last year, indicated that almost 25,000 tickets were given last year, based on a hypothetical five per appeal rate. He questioned whether too many tickets might be given and caused the backlog of court cases.
Westerbeck said the court's chief justice might investigate that possibility.
It's a better movie than 'Blazing Saddles' or 'Young Frankenstein'. - Mating Mine
or Young Frankenstein . . Baiting Shore
SETS THE
CINEMA RACK 800 YEARS
MOUNTAIN
PYTHON
AND HIS COW
AND THE Holy Grail
PAGE 40
Fri., Oct. 15 and Sat.,
Fri., Oct. 15 and Sat.
Oct. 16 3:30, 7:00
9:30, $1
MOTOR MACHINE COMPANY
Woodruff Auditorium
On Campus
Events
TODAY: A HOMECOMING PEP RALLY begins at 1:15 p.m. in front of Strong Hall.
Hullville's TRUST COMMITTEE meets at 3:30 p.m. in the Kansas
TONIGHT; FIRST NIGHTERS meets at 6 in the Union's Kansas Room.
HOMECOMING DISPLAY JUDges meet at 6:45 and 10:30 in the union's English Room. CAMPUS CRUSADE meets at 7:30 in the Union's Jayhawk Room. A KAPPA KITTENSDANCE舞 begins at 9 in the Union's Kansas Room.
SATURDAY: An AL-UNIVERSITY HOMECOMING LUNCHCHE begins at 11:30 a.m. in the Union Bailroom, SUA sponsors a post-game reception at 3:45 p.m. in the Union Lobby. BOB DOLE, Republican vice presidential candidate, will speak at a reception honoring Congressman Larry Winn at 4 p.m. in the Union's
SUNDAY: THE SUA GHESS CLUB meets at 2 p.m. in the union's Walnut Room. The KU SOCCER CLUB plays the University of Oklahoma soccer team at 2 p.m. in Shenk Recreation Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. TENNIS INTRAMURAL FINALS in singles and doubles matches begin at 2 p.m. in Robinson Tennis Courts. The SUA BRIDGE CLUB meets at 4 p.m. in the Union's Pine Room. Those interested in WATER BASKETBALL competition should meet at 7 p.m. at the Robinson natatorium. Teams comprise two men and two women, and will be formed before the games.
Announcements
The CONSUMER AFFAIRS ASSOCIATION food survey for this week will appear in Monday's Kansan.
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The grant would be used to develop a water distribution system, a primary power supply, a sewage disposal system and several small bathrooms.
Rep. Warn Winn, R-Kan, announced the project is to receive 100 per cent matching funding.
The U.S. Bureau of Outdoor Recreation approved a $186,758 grant last week for development of Clinton State Park in western Douglas County.
A
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Keith Springer of the Kansas Park and Resources Authority Board said yesterday
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Clinton grant okayed
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A similar grant approved a year ago funded a maintenance building and development of water and electrical systems, he said. More grants are expected in the next four to five years. They would provide funds to develop campuses, picnic facilities, shower buildings and a beach at Clinton.
PLAY TENNIS ALL WINTER INDOORS!
that construction of the facilities covered by the grant would begin early next spring. The project should take 18 months to complete.
©1996 DENTISTIC DESIGN CORPORATION
STUDENT MEMBERSHIPS only
Office and Google Maps New Negotiating Skills and Uses
- Lessons available at convenient times
- $10 a month (On a semester basis)
(Sept.-Dec.) (Jan.-Apr.) (May-Aug.)
- 40% off on all tennis clothing
FACILITIES:
FACILITIES:
2 outdoor courts
4 indoor courts
Saunas
Exercise Spa
Pool
Snack Bar
Party rooms
Locker facilities
ohromar
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club
---
-Sat., Oct. 16-
THE ARENA AGENDA
- Max Tenant
Vocalist & guitarist
9:30 - 12:00
- -Fri., Oct. 15-
- Late Movie
- Sun., Oct. 17-
- Live coverage of World Series beginning at 7:45
- LIVE ENTERTAINMENT AT THE ARENA
- Come see the World Series on our 7' screen at 7:15
- NFL Football
Chiefs vs. Dolphins
at 3:00
- Monday night football
N.Y. Jets vs. New
England Patriots
-Mon., Oct. 18-
-Tues., Oct. 19-
- Come see the World Series on our 7' screen
- A Private Club -
Pizza & Sandwiches available
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
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| MustangTorino | 11.00plus 11c per mile | 70.00plus 11c per mile | 9.00plus 11c per mile |
| GranadaPick-up | 11.00plus 11c per mile | 70.00plus 11c per mile | 9.00plus 11c per mile |
| LTD | 12.00plus 12c per mile | 75.00plus 12c per mile | 10.00plus 12c per mile |
| Station Wagon | 13.00plus 13c per mile | 80.00plus 13c per mile | 11.00plus 13c per mile |
Above Rates Include Insurance Insurance Laws Require You Must Be 21
Business Discount
4
Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Leisure
Camping: A way to get away from it all
Staff Writer
By RICK THAEMERT
When life becomes too hectic, some KU students study that the best way to escape is to run.
"There's an inward pressure on people in the city that makes them want to flee," Jeff Haynes, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, said recently.
Haynes said camping relieved that presently brining people closer to the peaceful landscape allowed them more comfort.
But, he said, he respected nature for the challenges it offered. Fighting blizzards too blinded to see through or asleep on top of him, he said, that can't be enjoyed in a city, he said.
JOHN GURCHE, Overland Park that he, too, enjoyed and respected nature.
"There are certain parts of nature I feel a spirit in," Gurche said.
Nature can bring friends closer together, he said, and his favorite camping adventures have been with close friends—including dates at interesting places.
These interesting places aren't
cessarily far away either, Gurche said. He often rides his bike to woods on the edge of Lawrence and has a "Kansas sleep-out" on Wednesday that he said would him time to think things over, he said.
SIMILARLY, Tom Gray, Overland Park senior, said he often camped near Lawrence—on the beach at the Kansas River or in the hills south of town. He said that many of the best camping spots around Lawrence were on private property, and that the property owners never seemed to care whether people camped there.
Gray said he also took interstate camping trips with friends, including one to the *Chapel of the Holy Cross*.
Those who camp for several days usually will have to travel beyond the edge of town, according to Haynes, who usually camps in Colorado.
"I'RE HERE isn't much wildlife around
it." She looks at you and sees sights and
tails out of the oak tree.
Meredith Marden, Evergreen, Colo.
comer, attorney and owner of
taking the three needs needed
"You don't need half the clothes you take." she said, "just extra socks."
for any lengthy camping trip—a backpack,
sleeping bag and food.
Clothes contribute most to the weight of a backpack, she said, so they should be minimized as much as possible—down to one pair of shoes and a warm shirt.
Haynes said the most important camping item was a good pair of boots, which could be called "traditional" and he said, as long as the camper uses a good sleeping bag that is suitable to the climate. He said that couples who didn't separate sleep accommodations could go out hiking with their friends.
"MY BACKPACK weighs about 30 pounds, which is pretty heavy for a girl,"
To stave off camping trip hungers, Marden said, she takes many freeze-dried foods and some sweets, such as apples and candy.
HAYNES SAID freeze-dried foods were too expensive for his tastes, so he took gorp—a mixture of honey, raisins, nuts and seeds—for healthy munching.
Not all campers, apparently, are concerned about good equipment and food, especially those who camp overnight in nice weather.
Gurche said that equipment could have a "dulling effect" on camping, and that people might overlook the beauty of roughing it. A campmenu for Gurche would likely be one a can of chili, he said, and most definitely wouldn't include freeze-dried
Gray said many of his camping trips were spur-of-the-moment affairs.
"WE JUST make a Joe's run and take some doughnuts out there with us," he said. "I don't mind. And I don't mind."
the planners and the spur-of-the-moment campers had advice to offer
Gray said campers should look for secluded areas where they wouldn't be bothered, and in the summer they should look for a spot with a water source nearby.
Marden said winter campers should camp under trees because they all fall in the snow and extinguish their
campires. Animals are seldom problems, she said.
"ANIMALS COME up and take your
they don't hurt you, that's okay as long as
they don't hurt you."
How do campers spend their time?
Haynes said that when he camped, he spent his time "puttering around"—taking pictures, taking with fellow campers or walking—and that on long camping trips, he took five or six-mile hikes, with periodic gorc stops.
Gray said philosophical talks or around-the-campfire ghost stories were common. Gurche said he recalled a time in the Ozarks when he and four others searched for shelter from a storm, with graves in the yard. Oddly enough, the house had just enough beds to accommodate the five campers, he said, so they spent the night.
"WE WERE all really jumpy with the graves outside and everything," he recalled. "One guy even slept with a knife under his pill."
Haynes, who is in charge of the SUA backpacking programs and clinics, recalled a camping experience illustrating the importance of knowing how to avoid dangers.
He, two females and two other makes planned to camp in the Colorado mountains, but the extreme cold foiled their plans, he said. The group was able to erect only one fence, so the cold became unbearable one夜, so they find to handle together to stay warm.
"ALL THROUGH the night we shivered and shivered," he said, and the group was later shocked to learn that the temperature had increased. The coldest night in Colorado in 47 years.
Gray said he also had a brush with death once—but for different reasons—when he and a male friend, both camp counselors, went to the campground to light the two camping with their daughters.
"The thought we were trying to rape their girls, he said," so the chasers used it.
Ah, the perils of camping.
Ab, to fall for leaves turning,flesh clashing
BY KUN HARU LING
Guest Writer
Now, here we were before we were so rudely interrupted by thoughts of lost, Butz and ill-fitting shoes? Of course—our hand was being bound to heal, to savor the unmistakable delights of autumn. The well-cooked nostril can't help but detect the aroma of woemen roasting on an open fire, and the eye is refreshed by the mystery of new-painted trees. Fail overwhims us with beauty.
Most of us welcome fall with open arms; some, sad to say, mourn its coming. For that unhappy few, fall is nothing more than the villainous slayer who wields the laddy who holds the door while winter, the Evil One, makes his entrance. The changing leaves are seen as portents of decay and death, and as the days grow shorter, the troubled fellow turns to thoughts of his own mortality. The fading flower, the dying vine, the bittersweet gold—all are strong denials of those promises issued by spring.
INDEED, THE weather itself is a fairly accurate indicator of the two-faced nature of fall. Summer and winter are locked
in combat, and as the tide of battle shifts, so do the temperatures. The mercury soars and plunges untold degrees, often during a single day. Halter tops and mittens can sometimes be seen on the same day—and sometimes on the same person. And that certain something nipping at your nose can make you sick, but it could just as easily be a freeze-dried grasshopper, warmed into a half-baked craziness by the afternoon sun.
**NOT FALL** is more than whimsical weather and decaying leaves. It's the beginning of a new chapter to the best of which is the School Year. For those of us in the academic trade, the approach of autumn automatically increases the amount of communicating us to rush out and buy three-ring binders new Nush Puppies.
And, by marvelous design,
autumn also brings the
Television Season, as if to softhe blow dealt the school-bound nippers. After a hard dayat the blackboard we can comeunder and see the fights between Rhoda and Joe,Archie and Edith, Starsky andHutch, and Martin Perkinsand most of the Wild Kingdom.
NEW CARS, new phone books, new presidents—good lord, news aplenty. But still there is that one indispensable byproduct of fall: the sickening flash-signaling—hut one! but two that the Football Season is apace once more.
Ah, the blitz, the onside kick,
the third-down-and-47. The game must have been devised by the gods. Its real beauty lies
in its ability to create it to appreciate it. Football provides ample vicarious thrills for those of us for whom a well-placed knee to the groin and a forced touch of artificial turf would put out but the stuff of daydreams.
CAN THERE be any more satisfying experience than watching 22 men trying to annihilate each other by the rules? Hardly. Even those who echew pigkin-kugel whines thrown spiral in flight, or a punt that sparks 60 vards through the air.
more obstacles in the language than they ever did on the field.
AND ALL the while the leaves go from green to red to gold to brown, and soon they carpet the sidewalks. September melts into October. October into October in August. Robert Frost telling of the "love of bare November days — Before the coming of the snow." We remember Jack Palance's advice to preface Stone into our radiators (even though Jack scares the pants off us by demanding at the start of his musical, "Are you like me?"!)
On television the football game becomes a fall festival, complete with dancing girls, bands and blims. The pace is slowed somewhat by the tongue-tied efforts of such fugitives from the huddle as Johny Unitas and Irv Cross, who meet
The pleasures of autumn are precious but teeting. Pumpkin pie, giblet gravy, Hostess Snails (some foods know no name) and a snowshovel make way for the snow shovel, and slush re-enters our vocabulary as well as our socks.
SO GATHER your acorns while you may. Indulge yourself many; take a pompom girl to lunch; jump out of your car into a pile of maple leaves.
Autumn is glorious. But soon the world will be frozen and the weenies roasted, every one—until the siren call of spring sounds its promises, and the cycle starts all over again.
This Week's
Highlights
Exhibits
"ST. PETERSBURG - PE TROGRAD - LENINGRAD"
a picture and book biography
displayed at Watson Library.
THE MAX KADE COLLECEL-
tary art paintings and prints by James Whistler and Anders Johnson at the Kansas Union Gallery.
"PHOTOGRAPHS," a collection of and white photographs by four area photographers, is displayed at the 7E Gallery, 7.
Concerts
The Lawrence Public Library, 70 Vernon St.,
Bloomington, IL 61803 Alber, ACRYLICS by Bette Bleiwt, JEWELRY by Laurie Stetzer and PHOTOGRAPHS Geier Kesler and Chuck Bermis.
MIRIAM GREA, soprano,
performs a faculty recital
Thursday night at 8 in Swarth-
field; Recital Hall, in Murphy.
Hall
JAMES FLEISHER, visiting artist, performs a clarinet recital Wednesday night at 8 in the Racial Hall, in Merville, Hill.
NEIL SEDAKA performs the homecoming concert tomorrow night at 8 in Allen Field House.
Theater
The Kansas City Lyric Opera
and the performance of
LA TRAVAIL at 8:15 at the Lyric Theatre, 11th
Floor, City-Metropolitan Theater.
City-Metropolitan BARBER OF
SEVILLE '15 is performed by the Lyric tomorrow night at 8:15, and Wednesday night at 7:30 at the Lyric Theatre.
"JACQUES BREL IS ALIVE AND WELL AND LIVING IN PARIS" opens tonight at 8 and is performed tomorrow night at row 1 of Murphy Hall. Murphy Hall. There is a 2:30 matinee of the play Sunday.
BOB WIRE AND THE OPEN RANGERS, a local country jazz band, plays tonight and on the opening off, On the Wall Hall. JUSTUS plays jazz and rock from 9 to 12 Monday night at the hall, and PAT AND GORDON CLEVEEN plays from 9 to 12 Tuesday night.
Nightclubs
THE JOE UTTERBACK TRIO, plays modern jazz from 9 to 12 tomorrow night. THE GASLISE LANG performs Dixieland jazz from 9 to 12 tomorrow night, and the JAM SESSION, plays Jazz from 9 to 12.
MILLIONAIRE AT MID-NIGHT, a local dance band, plays tonight and tomorrow at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union.
THE PRODUCERS—Mel BATES, the singer of Wilder and Zero Mosel as the scheming producers of a Broadway musical titled *I Shouldn't Have Been There*
Wednesday night is the hall's FRANK FRY concert and LEON RDENBONE, acoustical guitar recording artist is in concert Thursday
Films
ALPHAVILLE Godard's collection and the detective film embody '80s architecture and styles to create a future where the hero is involved.
LORD OF THE FAR ISLAND, by Victoria Halt (Crest a b) – Romantic soft balloons fitted to the ladies in condensed form in Cosmopolitan. The heroine goes to an island off the coast of Cornwall and then becomes drawn into dark and mysterious lands.
SHEEMPEN AND THE
experimental films made by
Mike Leggett, who will be
present at the showings to lead
THE TRIP AND THE WILD ANGELS—Roger Corman the star of "The Tride" primarily because of the early work of current superstars. The credits feature Jack Nicholson as the villain, and as an assistant director, and supporting stars such as Bruce Boxley and John Daly both. Check ads for showtimes.
VERONIQUE, by Virginia Gillespie, Paris in the years of the French Revolution, the heroin, an infiltrator, herself caught up herself Robespierre's Reign of Terror. Our heroin, naturally, joins up with the mob.
Books
REVEL HEIRESS, by Jane Alken Hodge (Crest, $17.5)—England in the era of the War of 112. Heilenstaff leaves Stamford and becomes the ocean and becomes the talk of London society, because, after all, she
THE MASTERS AFFAIR, by Burt Hirschfeld (Pocket, $1.95)—About the chap who heads up the internal Investigative Agency in this country and is murdered, and who has been garrisoned government in the aftermath. Totally written entertainment.
ASSIGNMENT IUNCRIN, by Edward S. Aaron (Gold Medal, $1.25) - Dumrel Surell is back in action, going to Southeast Asia to the funeral of a premier and a member of the American from America to the western islands of Scotland. Good fun, as usual.
THE CLOCKS, by Agatha Christie (Pocket, $1.50)—Four strange clocks, all set at the door of a room in a room of a blind woman, and a corpse shows up in the same room. Ah, but Hercule Poirt, with his mustaches and little hair, proves the case. Good vintage fun.
is as beautiful as Elizabeth Taylor.
THE WOMEN OF WATER-
GATE, by Madeleine Ed.
Morgan (Pocket), $1.95)—This was
invisible, Mrs. Hunt, Murs,
Magruder, Julie Elsenhower,
Joyce Fletcher, Woods.
A recent cartoon suggested that soon wed be buying Watergate books by the
THE POCKET BOOK OF PRO POOTBALL, by Herbert W. Dodd. A hardy book to have by your side as you watch the big games. Didn't KU have a Larry Brown, who played last year for the Washington Redskins? And pictures, all kinds of deep dope.
TOM KENNEDY
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Novice cook and author prepares his culinary wares.
A dash of imagination creates successful home-cooked meals
By JOHN THARP
If you lace a novice in the kitchen, cooking doesn't have to be enjoyable, money-saving and even tasty to make yourself a daily home-cooked meal. The kind of mom used to make
There's nothing more formidable than the idea of facing both an empty stomach and an empty stomach when you're lost on even the basic points of culinary experience. But all is not lost if you keep a few basic nutritional concepts in mind.
LET'S START with steak.
It's a nice break from the hamburger blues. Round steak and sirloin steak are both reasonably pricey, but you can buy your best buy, with prices ranging from $10 to $1.19 a pound. Select a cut with too much fat (the white bordering the meat.) When you get home, slice your steak into pieces. Cut a round steak that costs you $2 should yield from four to five servings, each serving enough to make one meal. Put this into perspective, take a Big Mac and an order of fries will now buy you a week's supply of steak.
TO STORE the meat, wrap each piece in aluminum foil, and place it in your freezer. When you wish to have a steak you should put it inside the number of pieces of meat you want, and place them in your refrigerator. Your refrigerator is another large metal container top, because you won't be taking a chance if you forget它.
After your steak is thawed, use a butcher knife to slice through the fat layer to the meat to prevent it from burning. Serve the meat in a Sprinkle meat tenderizer and pepper on both sides, and pierce the meat with a fork or a meat hammer.
STEAK CAN be fried in vegetable shortening, but use enough to cover the bottom of the pan. A cast-iron skillet is best for cooking, and teflon-coated pans are also good. Heat the pan over medium heat (between seven minutes over medium heat) and place the steak into the pan. Cook to your preference.
A nutritional entree is beef liver, usually about 69 cents a pound. Liver is high in iron and zinc. Riboflavin. Freeze it the same way as steak, but drain off the water first. Liver requires a little more milk than the meat is but tearful, treat with liver is a whole white onion—sliced and fried before the meat is cooked. Roll the onion slices in a flour and pepper mixture.
I'm not a colonel, but I like chicken—fried chicken, that is. It is cheaper than most meats—about 38 cents a pound for whole fryers, which have to be cut up.
IF LIVER is served with a sauce made from catsup, pepper, brown sugar and a vinegar. The sauce it secretes is it much tastier.
For those who don't know how or don't have the time to cut up a chicken, they sell them pre-packaged in a pound. Wrap your chicken in foil, saving the pieces you want for a meal.
and freeze them, Chicken should always be thawed out in the refrigerator, because it may easily at room temperature.
TO FRY YOUR chicken, place it, one piece at a time, in a brown paper bag containing flour, salt, pepper, poultry seasoning and your choice of herbs and spices. Shake, shake, shake your chicken, cook, sauté, skillet will need a lot of shortening, (about a half an inch) and will need to be heated to about 350 degrees (10 minutes on medium heat). The pieces must be turned with a fork occasionally to ensure thorough cooking. When the chicken has finished cooking, add the towel-lined plate to absorb the excess shortening.
While all your meats are cooking, you can fix your side dishes. Boiled potatoes are quick and easy. Whole white spuds should be washed, and then sliced into half inch slices. They can be peeled or mashed, and they can be boiling water until they are tender when pierced with a fork.
Baked potatoes should be cooked longer—one hour at 300 to 340 degrees. Smear them with shortening and place them directly on an oven rack. They also are snatched that are tended to the fork. Rice or baked sweet potatoes can be substituted.
A GREEN VEGETABLE adds color and nutrition to any meal. Fresh vegetables are best, but canned or frozen vegetables are more common. Peas, green beans, broccoli, asparagus and spinach are all good choices. Always cook
your vegetable over low heat, for a short period, so nutrients will remain in them. Peas, broccoli and asparagus are better topped with melted margarine. A dash of lemon or olive oil enhances its taste. Refrigerate leftover vegetables and eat within a week to get their best flavor.
Corn and carrots are both high in Vitamin A, a nutrient that helps the brain and see better in the dark. Fresh carrots are available all year and can be peeled, sliced and baked. Season them with salt.
ANY HOME-COOKED meal should have a bread, and this can be sandwich slices, rolls, biscuits, muffins or corn bread. These are available in mixes or as refrigerated rolls, which you bake according to directions on the package.
A salad is nice to eat while waiting for everything else to cook. Depending on the recipe, ingredients are lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers, radishes, carrots, green peppers, celery, diced cheese or fruit. Try building a salad from the bottom of the bowl up, in layers of your vegetable dressing — it's easier than tossing.
COOKING AT home is cheaper than eating out and is easier to prepare. You can cook in the morning and fix them according to your preference. A cookbook can answer a question you have for ideas different dishes.
A lack of imagination is the only thing that can limit your culinary capacity.
Friday, October 15, 1976
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By CHUCK SACK
Suicide tale terrifying despite inconsistencies
In Franz Kafka's famous story "The Metamorphosis," the main character awakes one morning to discover that he has been transformed into a giant cockroach. The hero of Roman Polanski's "The Man of Mystery" entertained with an even more drastic change.
Aided by the somber lighting and camera work of Sven Nykivist, Pol兰斯 traces the deterioration of a naturalized French citizen. This meek, sensitive man, played by Pol兰斯, takes an apartment formerly inhabited by a young woman who com-
AS THE TENANT is increasingly stiffed by the other people in his building, he begins to compare his situation with the circumstances of his friends. As his dissatisfaction increases, so do the bizarre events that take place when he is alone.
Tenant' is little more than a "Jaws" for intellectuals.
SUCH THINGS begin to happen more and more frequently, but the character's desperation is preceded by the viewer's exasperation with the pacing of the middle half of the film. By the time the character asks himself, "A what precise moment does an individual step being who he thanks to someone so much too aware of Dolanell's intentions?
He moves a wardrobe in his room and finds a hole in the wall behind it. In the hole is a human's tooth, wrapped in cotton. From his apartment he can see the building. At night he can always see someone there staring back at him. He returns late, and
discovers that his place has been ransacked.
However, despite these major miscalculations, Polanski does succeed in salvaging the most important sections of the film. The tenant's gradual adaptation of
mitted suicide. Soon he is convinced that he, his being manipulated toward taking his own life, is manipulating
Review
POLANSKI IS probably the master of cinematic horror. From the twisted mental distortions of "Repulsion" through the comic variations of "The Fearless Vampire Killers" to the exploration of social deprivacy in other genres, as in Chinatown and the psychological literature these films often inject. In "The Tenant," the more subtle elements of the style are used to examine the horrors of modern living.
In its best moments "The Tenant" depicts with chilling clarity the sense of a vulnerable human being hemmed in by the impersonal fear and hatred of his fellows. When the hero approaches the concierge (Shellay Winters) about the apartment and is to be escorted home, she also takes the hospital, he starts to apologize for being premature in his inquiry.
"Don't worry," says the concierge. "She won't get better."
THE OPPRESSION of that response is the first indication that Polaniak isn't going to loosen his grip on the viewer. For all of his techniques, Polaniak is a director of the old school. Every detail in the film is manipulated to create a specific reaction.
When the tenant visits his predecessor in the recovery ward and she lets out a hideous scream, the shock is more a result of editing or ripping at something. Later, at the funeral, the priest's sermon about worms destroying the body seems heavy-handed. In its worst moments "The
Haskell builds residence hall
Construction has begun on a new women's residence hall for Haskell Indian Union College.
frank Quiring, de student, said yesterday that the hall would be completed in February 1977. The cost of the federally funded hall is $2.25 million.
The new hall, which will house 128 students, is being built to better accommodate students already enrolled at Haskell, Quiring said.
In the future, one of Haskell's six existing halls probably will be closed, Quiring said, although no definite plans have been made. "The students won't be crowded," and they'll have adequate privacy," he added. Haskell officials are hoping that funds soon will be made available to build another residence hall, Quiring said.
WATER BASKETBALL
Every Sunday 7 p.m.—9 p.m. Form teams at pools or bring a team. Robinson Gym
CAROL LEE DONUTS
CHEF
and Sandwich Shop
1720 W. 23rd
842-3664
Try Carol Lee's Polish Sausages, Hot or Mild
GO JAYHAWKS, BEAT OKLAHOMA
The University of Kansas Theatre and The School of Fine Arts present
Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris
at 8:00 p.m.
—A Musical Experience
Oct. 15, 16, 22, 23
Oct. 17 and 24 at 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre
Murphy Hall
Ticket Reservations 864-3982
K. U. students receive seat tickets without charge upon presentation of current I.D. card.
This program is partially funded
This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund.
THE TURQUOISE SHOP
Liquid Silver Necklaces
Turquoise and Coral Rings $ ^{s} 5^{00} $ and up
Turquoise Nugget Necklaces
$3^{99}$ and up
$ ^{35}{}^{00} $ and up
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Turquoise Bracelets
Complete selection of fine hand-crafted Indian Jewelry 1828 Mass.
the suicide's dress and personality is a powerful piece of work, combining the predications of horror with the keen irony of Kafka. 'The Tenant' may not be the best picture, but its scenes are among the most terrifying that he has ever put on film.
"Extended Hours" during Holiday Season
The Kansas Union BOOKSTORE is OPEN
OPEN
9 a.m.—1 p.m. on Sat., Oct. 16 and for 11/2 hours after the game to serve alumni, students, and friends of the university.
kansas
sunion
BOOKSTORE
KEG BEER SALE
10% off keg,cups,ice and snacks when purchased together
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
616 Vt.
843-O350
Advertise in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
LIQUORS
100
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WINES COLD KEG BEER LIQUORS Complete line of chilled Domestic & Imported Wines
Call: 843-1301
OPEN: 9:00 a.m. -11:00 p.m.
Rissman Retail Liquor
(FORMERLY SWADLEY'S)
1302 W. 6th - East of Dillon's on 6th
GRAND OPENING
MILLIONAIRE AT MIDNIGHT Area's Dynamite Dance Band
FRIDAY&SATURDAY-OCT.15&16
Cover only $1.00
Pitchers $1.70
the nest
Level Two Union
6
Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sooners' memory not that short
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
At 4:30 p.m., last Nov. 8, KU's campus erupted.
Cherry bombs rocked through the air horns sound, toilet paper fallen from the ceiling.
The reason? Simple. Kansas had shocked Oklahoma, 23-3, leading the Sooners' winning streak at 28 and halting their string of 37 straight games without a defeat.
At 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Memorial Stadium,OU will be looking for revenge.And the dayjahws will be trying to stop the Homecoming crowd of 6,500 is expected.
Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer's troops haven't forgotten last year. Their fans have wavers.
"The thing I remember about Kansas is 23-3," defensive tackle Richard Murray told the Associated Press, "and they laid it on us."
But that was last year. Some think all will soon be forgotten.
"The revenge factor in football any more is about a five-minute thing." KU defensive line coach Vince Semary said. "This thing you've got to remember is they've only lost one game in three years. They don't know what Oklahoma like, that's what makes Oklahoma. Oklahoma."
The Sooners are 4-0-1 and ranked sixth in The. The Died Texas, 6-4, last Saturday.
But their record is deceiving. OU's high-powered wishbone machine has been killed. The Sobers team was averaging over 332 yards a game, and last in passing offense. They are
Elvis Peacock
4
led by halfbacks Horace Ivory and Elvis
Peacock.
"I think they have a young, inexperienced line," Semary said, "and that's given them a few problems. If they ever put it together, you could do it better as good as an Oklahoma team, has ever been."
Oklahoma's biggest problem on offense is at quarterback. Starter Dean Blevin won't play for the second straight week because of a groin injury. However, KU coach Bud Moore isn't convinced the Sooners will lose anything with Thomas Lott at quarterback. Lott started his first game ever last Saturday.
Basketball practice begins
The University of Kansas men's basketball team begins preparing for the 1978-77 season at 4 p.m. today in Allen Field House.
an All-Big-Eight forward last season, who
anchored for his first year of eligibility
to play in the 2013 NHL season.
The Jayhawks will be without Norm Cook.
Ted Wewns, starting his 13th season as KU's head coach, will have eight lettermen, including four starters, from last year's team. Forward Donnie Von Moore, who missed last season because of a concussion, will also be back with the squad.
The Jawahays will try to improve last seasons 13-13 record and fourth place Big East
"Last year we were hurt by our lack of depth," Owens said this week. "With the healing of our injuries and our strong commitment, this should no longer be a problem."
Announcing
THE KANSAS CITY STRIP STEAK
Only $3.89
at the Sizzler
1516 W. 23rd St.
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
SIZZLER
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"Ido, know if there will be a big drop in quality just because of his lack of experience," Moore, who will be celebrating his 37th birthday tomorrow, said. "It seems that every team we play, their quarterback wins, is the best game of the season against us."
OU's defense is a different story. The Big Red rank second in total defense in the conference, giving up only an average of 254.4 yards a game. They also rank first in scoring defense, yielding a stingy nine points a game.
"Before the season, we read that losing the Selmons and (Jimbo) Eldor would hurt their defense," Moore said. "But I don't see better because they play more as a unit."
" Their secondary has improved. And their front is just as quick and aggressive as the back."
But the Sooners' front five and defensive secondary, which calls itself "Murder, Inc.," should be severely tested tomorrow by the Jayhawks' wishbone, KU is second in the nation in rushing offense, having 1,770 yards on 323 carries, an average of 354 yards a game. Halfback Laverne Smith, now the all-time KU career running leader,
is second in the league in rushing and
second in fourth. Cromwell ranks second in
total offers.
“It’s the best wishbone offense I've seen in a long, long time,” said Larry Lacewell, OU assistant head coach and defensive coordinator. "I saw their films against Oklahoma State and they went up and down the field all afternoon long. They're potent. It'll be the toughest test defensively we've had all year by far."
KU has several players still banged up, but only tight end Jim Michaels (sprained ankle) and defensive end Harry Murphy (broken forearm) will be missing. Freshman Al Roberts will start in place of Michaels..
ne Jayhawks, 4* this year and ranked
15 nationally, also have some incentive.
Many of the KU players said they should've
won last weekend at Oklahoma State. They
realize this is a must game if they are to
surprise for the Big Eight crown. And if they lose.
"I don't think our kids would ever let the season go up in the air," Semary said. "Our kids have too much character. They throw their tails up in the air and give up."
PG
The cast of the decade.
The western adventure
of a lifetime.
PG
APARTMENT FOR RENT
Quiet bidg. Furnished.
2 rooms.
Previous tenant committed suicide
No one does it to you like Roman Polanski
JOHN WAYNE LAUREN BACALL
"THE SHOOTIST"
Eve. 7.30, 9.30 Sat. Sun. 2:10
Hillcrest 1
RITERGIE
President of Public Relations
A Roman Polanski Film
Varsity
THE TENANT
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
Sat. Sun. af
2:30
The Greatest Discovery of Our Time
In search of Noah's Ark
Is it still there?
Eve. 7.30, 9.30 Sat. & Sun. 2:00
Hillcrest 2
RICHARD HARRIS
"THE RETURN OF A MAN CALLED HORSE"
An Elegant man with the soul of an Indian
Every even 7:30 & 9:40
Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:30
Granada PG
APARTMENT FOR RENT
Quiet bldg
Furnished.
2 rooms.
Previous tenant
committed suicide
No one does it to you like Roman Polanski
RICHARD HARRISE
THE RETURN
OF A MAN CALLED HORSE"
An Englishman with the son of an Indian
Every eve 7:30 & 9:40
Sat, Sun, Mau, 2:30
Granada
PG
from the man who gave you "Blazing Saddles," "Young Frankenstein"
and "Silent Movie":
Zeo Mostel & Gene Wilder As
'THE PRODUCERS"
Show starts 7:30
Hillcrest
"MURDER BY DEATH" plus PG
"THE STEPFORD WIVES"
CAR WASH
Sunset
640-718-3422 | www.sunsetmills.com
SPECIAL PREVIEW SHOWING
FRI. at 11:30 p.m.
SHOWING
THIRD P.M.
Hillcrest
Professor Irwin-Cavey | Ivan Blum -
Box office open 11:00, adm. $2.00
MADRID
COCINA
QUARTO
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CON DISTILLADO
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The Silmarire
SUBMARINES
premier extra levee
1 Original Sub 1.34 1.89
2 Cheese 1.29 1.89
3 Roast Beef 1.64 2.09
4 Turkey 1.74 2.19
5 Ham Subs hot on request 1.64 2.09
6 Corned Beef 1.64 2.09
7 Pastrami 1.64 2.09
8 Balamì 1.64 2.09
9 Combination of any 1.79 2.24
10 Super Sub 2.09 2.54
11 Tuna Fish 1.74 2.19
12 Meatball 1.64 2.09
All garnished with lettuce, tomato,
onion, green Pepper, cheese and Salad Dressing
Delicatessen Drinks
on white, rue, pumparnickel, or wheat
A Cheese 1.19
B Cold Cuts 1.24
C Turkey 1.59
D Roast Beef 1.49
E Ham 1.49
F Pastrami 1.49
G Corned Beef 1.49
H Salmon 1.64
I Combination fish 1.64
J Tuna Fish 1.59
J Tuna Bottom Fell 1.51
K Peanut Butter + Jelly
Coffee 20 25
Iced Tea 25 35
Coke 25 35
Mr. Rubb 25 35
Snow Cream 25 35
Fruit Punch 25 35
Spiker 25 35
Miller 25 45
Lemonade 25 35
Gider 25
Hot Chocolate 20
when m season Hot Soup 60¢
Side Orders
Fountain
Shakes .60
milkies.60
Chocolate, strawberry
& vanilla
Thai奶 .65
Sundae .65
Chocolate, strawberry
& pineapple
Tambabies .20 30 40
Flavored cakes .30 40
Chocolate, vanilla cherry
Soft-serve Ice Cream
nuts .3% extra
Cole Slaw 40
Baked beans 40
Petite Salad 40
German Petite Salad 40
Regular, Frites, Bar-B-Q 20
Dessert
Pie Foods apple and peanut 65
Pres and others 45
Chocolate Layer Cake 45
Cheesecake 60
Pudding 35
Ice Cream Cones 254
14. 20 Crescent - west of the Chi Omega fountain
Open late every night
THE
birds NEST
BIRDS NEST
THRIFT SHOP:
Under Jay-
hawker Towers
Office. Every-
thing from
soup to nuts.
OPEN DAILY
10 a.m.—12 p.m.
ON WEEKENDS
10 a.m.—2 a.m.
Mon-Thur. 11:11-10:30 Fri-Sat. 11:11-10:30 Sun. 12:30 - 10:30
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Welcome Back Alumni!
Tom Boy Coordinates, Your Season Pass to All the Big Games
New corduroy coordinates... winning tickets for rooting on the 50 yard line! Six great ways to take on sporting looks | blazers, tops, vests, skirts, gauchos and pants. Priced from $14 to $30. In brown only.
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Mon-Thurs. 10-8:30
Fri.-Sat. 10-6
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23rd & Louisiana
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KU's success to the Column
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Stephe the Ja Stephe its No.
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The Swope for the Tourn
Som preser Kansa last ye far aw
Law play a of the bers.
Runners chase favored Colorado
By STEVE CLARK
Inventor
Colorado, which hasn't another big Eight school this fall, has been tabbed as the favorite in this afternoon's five-team cross county game at 3:30 on the Lawrence Club.
In conversations with the coaches of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Kansas State and Kansas teams, the Buffaloes were the unanimous choice.
Kansas State coach Jerome Howe summed up the feeling of the coaches.
Intramurals downplay competition
The system established by the intramur. office to rank men's and women's football teams has caused little controversy, a check with team representatives indicates.
By ROB RAINS
Sports Writer
The rankings, developed by Richard Marcks, intramural director, and the graduate assistants in the recreation department, are offered in intramural football and to give students other than star athletes a little attention. Marcks said.
a free uttered officials are selected by Marks each week to rank the intramural team.
About the only criticism the program had came from members of the Pi Beta Phi sorority, now ranked first in the sorority division.
They said there was a problem in trying to rank girls, ooath-bearing little girls, the same way we play very little.
In contrast, Roy Heatherly, Wichita junior and manager of the Crismon Tide, an independent men's team, expressed approval of the rankings.
"I think they're good. They give you an incentive and something to shoot for. It's something more for the students to look forward to," Heatherly said.
Stephens hosts Kansas netters
KU's women's tennis team, following successful success in Iowa last weekend, take to the road again tomorrow, traveling to Columbia. Mo., to meet Stephens College.
The Jayhawks, who downed the University of Iowa, 8-1, last Friday, put on another impressive showing Saturday, whiping Drake and Minnesota by identical numbers.
Coach Tom Kivisto will field the same
single line that won last week. Carrie
Fotopoulos will be in her usual 1. slot.
Astrid Dakks will be 2. N; Marlene Cook
will be 3. Mary Stauffer, Tracy Spelman
da Halle Will fall in the 4. 3, 8 and
6 spots.
Fotopoulos and Dakas will be the No. 1 doubles team again for the Jayhawks, Spellman and Cook have moved up to the No. 2 motif and Stauffer and Hill are No. 3.
Stephens College finished second behind the Jayhawks at the regionals last year. Stephens has everyone returning, including its No. 1 player, Sylvia Noster.
Ruggers go to KC
The Lawrence Rugby Club will travel to Swope Park in Kansas City, Mo., tomorrow for the Heart Of America Union Invitational Tournament.
Lawrence's first game is at 11 a.m. against the St. Louis Bombers.
some of the best teams in the area will be present for the two-day affair, including the Kansas City Bues, who Lawrence beat here this weekend. A far away as Minnesota will be represented.
“As far as I'm concerned, we can win it,” said KU captain Doug Goum. “All the teams in our division are about equal. We stand just as good a chance as anybody else.”
Lawrence is in the top division and will play again at 3 p.m. tomorrow, regardless of the outcome of its game with the Bombers.
"I see the University of Colorado as being particularly strong and it'll be difficult for anybody to challenge them," he said.
HE PREDICTED Kansas second,
fourth and fourth, Oklahoma
State fifth
The Buffalo are paced by junior college transfer Kirk Pfeiffer, who placed eighth in the class of 2013.
Olympic team. Providing solid support is John Hunsaker, the top retainer (fifth place) from the 1975 Big Eight meet.
Sports
They will be pushed for individual honors by KU's George Mason and John Roscoe, Oklahoma's Brian Gelssler and Stan Vernon, and Oklahoma State's Bernard
to show that trait this season, although KU and Oklahoma have promise.
HOWEVER, COLORADO is regarded with such respect for its depth quantify to go beyond the limits of our imagination.
*Indications from training and workouts are that our fourth, fifth and sixth men will be able to perform this exercise.*
Sooner coach Larry Rose said his squad has been improving each week.
Kansas coach Bob Timmons was a bit more reserved.
"I hope we get up there, because Colorado will be very good. It will be a very interesting place."
Bruce Coldsmith has been a consistent third man for KU and juco transfer Ted Crank has shown his ability to play in the fifth spot where KU needs help and that position could be filled by any of eight runners, with Joel Cambron, Bill Futherford and Rick Leavitt likely candidates.
OTHER KU RUNNERS making their first appearance of the year are Bob Garven, Jim Groninger, Paul Malott and Kendall Smith.
Injuries have naged K-State and Oklahoma State. The Wildcats lost two runners—Tim Davis and Ed Delushmutt for the remainder of the season with injuries. And Larry Beesley is just returning to action.
Kansan Predictions
Making the Kansas football predictions this fall are Steve Schofield, sports editor; Brendan Anderson, assistant Gary Vace, assistant sports editor; and耶鲁Abuhachoah, managing editor and Fall 1933 sports editor.
GAME
| SCHOENFELD | ANDERSON | VICE | ABOUHALKAH |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oklahoma at Kansas | Oklahoma 21-17 | Kansas 21-16 | Kansas 21-17 |
| Kansas State at Kansas | Nebraska 35-14 | Nebraska 36-3 | Nebraska 42-0 |
| Iowa State at Missouri | Missouri 28-24 | Missouri 17-14 | Missouri 21-17 |
| Colorado at Oklahoma State | Okla. St. 14-10 | Colorado 20-12 | Okla. St. 31-24 |
| Alabama at Tennessee | Alabama 21-7 | Alabama 14-7 | Alabama 20-14 |
| Miami (Fla.) at Pittsburgh | Pittsburgh 28-7 | Pittsburgh 30-10 | Pittsburgh 27-10 |
| Minnesota at Michigan State | Mich. St. 24-10 | Mich. St. 31-24 | Minnesota 25-14 |
| Louisiana State at Kentucky | LSU 20-17 | LSU 10-7 | LSU 18-14 |
| Prediction Record | 28-10 .736 | 27-11 .791 | 31-17 .801 | 29-9 .781 |
--juries. And Larry Beesley is just returning to action.
Cornucopia Restaurant
Enjoy your Homecoming Weekend eating good home cooked food at the Cornucopia Restaurant. Our recipes, dressings and breads are made from scratch. We use the best basic natural ingredients possible. Featuring this state's finest salad and fruit bar, plus a large selection of omelets, crepes and sandwiches for the discriminating appetite.
Average meal price, including drink $3.00. Please don't be discouraged by a waiting line. Seating within 15 minutes. Capacity for 104 people and ample parking in the neighborhood, on the street, after 6:00 p.m. and on Sundays.
Good Food Naturally!
1801 Mass.
842-9637
Cornucopia
JAZZ
Lawrence. Kansas 10-10 daily
The Cowboys top two runners, Lee Meade and Brent Schooley, haven't performed up to their past performances because of illness and injury.
"They just haven't run well and I don't anticipate us running well," coach Ralph
JAZZ
JAZZ
But Tate, the other coaches and all the runners know that, although today's race is important, it isn't the conference meet. It's just the practice meet, and it will be run Nov. 6 on the same course.
920 Mass.
only at
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
TONIGHT: The Joe Utterback Trio. Admission $1.50 OR Special of the Week, $3.00 includes admission and buffet dinner-All you can eat!!!
SATURDAY: The Gaslite Gang, great Dixieland
"They've got a completely new squad of people running them so they should be better just because of the new organization," coach Bernie Mullin said.
open at 8:00 p.m. music starts at 9:00 p.m call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations
Soccer Club to be host to Oklahoma
Last spring, KU's Sports Club pummed Oklahoma, 5-0, 7-0 and 4-0. When the Sooners come to town tomorrow for a 10 game series, they'll need to Iowa and Iowa streets, things could be different.
KU, 2-3 for the fall, continues to lack an effective offensive punch, which was a weakness of the team.
University Daily Kansan Friday, October 15, 1976 7
7
"We're just going to have to wait and see what happens," Mullin said hopefully, "Things will fall into place and we'll get some goals."
Madonna Indian Shop
Quality Turquoise Jewelry, Drum Clocks. Rugs, Shawls and Beads at reasonable prices.
prices.
842-3712 117 East Eighth
A MARY HARTMAN
MARY HARTMAN
look a like contest!!!
HALLOWEEN DISCO DANCE
By Gay Services of Kansas
Kansas Union Ballroom 8:00 p.m. $1.75
Special Notice . . .
Please do not bring alcoholic beverages to the dance. Beer will be sold with an I.D.
TACO TICO Homecoming Special BUY TWO SANCHOS GET 1 FREE
GET 1 FREE
No Coupon — No Limit Good Fri. thru Sun.
2340 Iowa
841-4218
TACO
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Draws 25°
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IOWA
Holiday Inn
T A C O
T I C O
Pitchers $1.25
Absolutely
no coach would
ever bench these
stars!!!
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by
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Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
8
Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Irish folk music fills intimate atmosphere
The sound of sadden Irish jigs, reels, and ballads filled the Spencer Research Library auditorium last night during a concert of Irish folk music.
The music was performed for an audience of about 40 by Newton Baggett, who played mandolin and mando-cello; Richard Dishinger, on fiddle and mandolin; Martha Haehl, flute and guitar; Steve Mason, fiddle and guitar; and Gloria Thorn, bass and guitar. Hagiodon, who organizes the concert, was narrator and sang in some of the songs.
"I was really pleased about the concert," he said. "I last last night at audiotourism was perfect for performance."
Hagedorn was referring to the intimate atmosphere of the auditorium, capacity 100, in which the group was close to the audience and played without the use of microphones.
Hagedorn said the concert was organized because of the group's interest in Irish folk music and to help publicize "Irish History and Culture." a book written by several University of Kansas faculty members and architect of Irish literature used for the book.
Mason said the group's interest in Irish music grew out of an encounter with an Irish folk group, the Dayhills, at the Wednesday night bluegrass jams on Attic
the wall Hall. Mason is a co-owner of the Instruments, which owns Off the Wall Hall.
"The Dayhills played off the Wall three times to shockingly empty houses," McKinney said. "Those who were there were treated to a jig workshop."
Mason said the group made tapes of the Dairys' Irish music and played it over the doors. "It was really fun," he said.
"Irish folk music is my favorite for now
and I love it," you say. You get so
sured of bluesgrass, he jest.
The group will play tonight at Fookiller, a folk music center in Kansas City, Mo., Mason said. He said the group is also considering playing in the Traveling Folk Festival this summer. The festival is sponsored by the Kansas Folkcenter Center in Lawrence and presents folk music concerts all over the state, he said.
The exhibit that was published by the concert, "The Case of Ireland," is on display in the department of special collections in the library. Alexandra Mason, assistant director of the special collections library, said the collection included books, manuscripts, maps and some art prints dealing with Irish history and culture.
The collection formerly belonged to P. S.
Regery, Mason said, and Irishman who
were among the people killed.
Kansas City second life with a home run to right field second singles by Al Cowens and Danny Wheeler.
From page one
Yankees nip . . .
In their ninth, the Royals tried to win it. With two out, Buck Martinez stroked his third hit of the game and Cowens walked. Wohlford hit a shot to third base that Craig Nettlebs grabbed on a shuttle and fired to Bismarck. Brinkman called Cowens out on a very close play.
If Brinkman had called Cowens safe, it would have brought up Brett, the Royals' most effective hitter in the series. But the out call ended the inning and the Royals could only wait for Brett to get his swings in the 10th inning.
BUT, BECAUSE of Chambliss, that 10th never came.
Kansas City had jumped in front quickly. With two out in the first inning, Brett doubled to right field. John Mayberry then homered to put Kansas City on top, 2-0.
But the Yankees got those runs right back in their half of the first.
Rivers, leading off against Dennis
had trapped a triplet when race
when Roy Rowsley hit.
White stole second and Munson followed
to third. She sent white to third
and finished Leonard's
Herzog, who almost started Paul Splitter to aid for the left-hander quickly. The move was quicker than his own.
AN INNING LATER, the Royals had the lead again.
grounder that tied the score, but Splittert got out of the jam without further damage.
With one out, Cookie Rojas ripped a single, E Figureau caught him leaining the wrong way and had him picked off first. But Rojas scampered safely into second, beating Chamblis' throw and avoiding Willie Dubbh's tag.
Rojas then scored on a single by Martinez.
The score was still 3-2 as the Yankees came in first in the third. Rivers singled to Edwards, who scored 5-4.
Munson followed with a single to right, scoring Rivers with the tying run, and then Chambliss banged into a force play that
scored White and put New York in front for the first time, 4-5.
IN THE SIXTH, Rivers dropped a bunt in front of the plate and beat it out for his fourth hit of the game. White sacrificed and Munson singled to right, scoring Rivers.
Munson was thrown out trying to stretch snout, but Chamblain followed with another snout.
Carlos May followed by hitching a bouncer to Brett, who threw the ball in the dirt at first, allowing Chambliss to slide home with the sixth Yankee run.
With Figuero cruising, that looked like it would be enough to wrap up the game and the pennant. But Brett's homenied缸 the game and created the dramatic finish that set off the first champagne party the Yankees have enjoyed since 1964.
SUA
SPECIAL WEEKEND FILMS
Experimental Filmmaker from Great Britain
MIKE LEGGERT in Person!
Presenting his 7 part,
2½ hr. collection of films.
"SHEEPMAN AND THE SHEARED"
Fri., Oct. 15, 8:00
FORUM ROOM $1.00
KANSAS UNION
Including: "Sheep,"
"Sheepman," "Window,"
"Film Lane," "Farm,"
"Blue plus Green plus Red
Sat. Midnight Movies
"Blue plus Green plus Red," "Sheopwoman."
A LOVELY SORT OF DEATH
IT WILL BLOW YOUR MINI!
PETER KONDA
SUSAN STRASBERG
THE TRIP
DEBORN HOPPER SACHS
PSYCHOLOGIC COLOR
Dir. Roger Corman—King of the "B's"
"THE TRIP"
(1967)
with Peter Fonda,
Susan Strasberg
Dennis Hopper
Bruce Dern
"In Psychedelic Color"
"THE WILD ANGELS"
Peter Fonda, Nancy Sinatra
12:00 Midnight -- $1.00
Woodruff Auditorium
图
Lee
HOMECOM
10% OFF
Reg. Price Items
With K.U.I.D.
Offer good thru Oct.
Lee
Jacket
& Jeans
European styled, the
French Lee Jacket and
matching Jeans feature
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JEANS — JACKETS
SHIRTS — SLACKS
LITWINS for LEVI'S
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Wrangler®
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French Lee Jacket. $15.00
Reg. 22.50
French Lee Jeans. $12.00
Reg. 19.00
BANKAMERICARD
master charge
THE INTERBANK CARD
GIFT CERTIFICATES
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Pizza Inn serves $1.00 PITCHERS & 25c DRAWS Friday 2 p.m. 'til 12 p.m. We also make America's favorite pizza.)
Golfers end year
The KU women's golf team will close out its fall season Sunday with a dual meet against the University of Oklahoma. Tee-off time will be 10 a.m. at the Alvamar Hills Golf Course.
LITWIN'S
ANIMATION SERIES
Pizza inn.
ALPHAVILLE (1965)
Dir, Jean-Luc Godard
with Eddie Constanine,
Mon, Oct. 18, 7:30, 750
Mon., Oct. 18, 7:30, 750
Hillcrest Shopping Center Next to Hillcrest theatres Dial 841-2670
SEXTOONS
an erotic Kartoon Karnival
Tues., Oct. 19, 7:30, 9:30, 75c
HOMECOMING
SUA
SCIENCE FICTION SERIES
FILMS
All films shown in Woodruff Auditorium
G
MONTY PYTHON AND THE
DIR. Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones
with Monty PyTHON's Flying Circus
15, 17 and Sat., Oct. 16
3:30, 1:00
POPULAR FILMS
SPECIAL WEEKEND FILMS
Independent/Experimental Filmmaker Mike Lengelt From Great Britain will be on campus to show his films.
(a collection of 7 separate films)
Fri. Oct. 15, 8:00; $1
Forum Room
MIDNIGHT MOVIES
831 Mass. Free parking in rear
Roger Corman—
"King of the B's"
THE TRIP
Susan Strasberg, Dennis Hopper,
Bruce Dern
"In Psychedelic Color"
and
THE WILD ANIMALS
Petra Fonda, Nancy Sinatra
Bruce Dern, Diane Ladd
Sat., Oct. 16, Midnight, $1
SHEEPMAN AND THE SHEARED
The University of Kansas Theatre and The School of Fine Arts present
by
TH
fourt
lingu
the U
which
count
Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living
—A Musical Experience
In Paris
Friday and Saturday Oct.15 and 16 8:00 p.m.
A HOMECOMING CELEBRATION
UNIVERSITY THEATRE — MURPHY HALL Ticket Reservations — 864-3982
H/
reas
stea
K. U. students receive reserved seat tickets without charge upon presentation of current I.D. card
This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund.
---
Friday, October 15, 1976
use out meet see-off Hills
9
University Daily Kansan
Word survey by KU indicates small variances
By CHRIS COTTRELL
A paper container for carrying groceries is called a sack. Right?
Well, there wouldn't be much controversy about that statement in this part of the country. But if you talked to a northerner, you might get an argument.
Regional differences in names for simple items, such as a container for groceries or a dish for lunch.
In the Midwest and in the South, most people care more about a sack. But in the North, one is more likely to carry a bag.
Such regional word differences are the sub-
surface linguistic survey at
University of Kansas
THE SURVEY IS in a display case on the fourth floor of Blake Hall, near the linguistics office. The display is a map of the United States and a list of 10 items for which people in various sections of the country have different names.
People are asked to fill out a card in
that case we are from and what they
call the various numbers.
The cards are tacked on the map according to each person's region of the
"The purpose is to discover regional differences in American English," James Hartman, associate professor of linguistics and English, said last week. "The survey going on here is sort of an informal survey."
ANOTHER COMMON item that has different names in different areas of the country is a "refreshing carbonated beverage."
"Soda" is the northern term," Hartman said. "Pop" is used more in the middle word.
Another item listed is "a breakfast food served with butter and syrup."
“The term ‘pancakes’ is nearly universal,” Hartman said. “When you get to Colorado, the term ‘flapjack’ comes into play.” The pancake ‘has become virtually standard.’
HARTMAN SAI there wasn't a known
HARTMAN term became popular instead
of another.
"As the old word gets pushed out, it tends to be seen as odd," he said. "The term that came with the word is not what it was."
"Why some terms spread and others don't is a very complex matter. It has something to do with how much need there is for the term."
Strictly regional words aren't as common today as they once were, Hartman said.
"But there are still quite a few terms that do remain regional," he said. "Part of the purpose of this survey is to find out which ones haven't been overcome because of education, scientific language and commercialization."
BIERSTUBE
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T.G.I.F.
Light and Dark Pitchers
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Live Jams
3-6 p.m.
HOMECOMING SALE
ZERCHER 1107 Mass PHOTO
4 - Velbon Tripods—ME3
Sug. List 24$^{95}$ SA
1 — Pontax F—with 50 mm F1.4 lens
Sug. List $425^{\circ}$ SALE *$285^{50}$
1 — 55 mm f1.8 lens for Pentax
Sug. List 90° SALE $62^{10}$
1 — Bogen Min—63$^{90}$ Enlarger with 50 mm lens
Sug. List 92$^{90}$
SALE $^95$90
1 — Honeywork Strobe 710
Sug. List 15410 SALE 511025}$
Nye's Homecoming Mum Special
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Nye's Flowers
Nye's Flowers
939 Massachusetts • 843-3255
the flower shop in the center of downtown Lawrence
10
LEATHER & CORDUROY
To add a touch of elegance to this sweater and corduroy slack combination, a leather sport jacket. Simple clean lines give this outfit the complete look.
The Look of '76
For the more traditional,
a 3 piece corduroy suit. Detailed stitching with leather covered buttons make this suit a classic.
Featuring special sleeve and pocket detailing
As the days get shorter and the nights get cooler-remember to take along a leather jacket.
Cassem's
811 MASS LAWRENCE
THE TWO OF US
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
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SCHOOL DAYS SPECIAL
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10
Fridav. October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Movie buffs, films flow steadily
By DEB MILLER
Staff Writer
In a university town, the student population makes a definite difference in a theater owner's choice of movies. Golden Age films, as well as the musicals and Theatres in Lawrence, said this week.
"You can't ignore 22,000 people," Harwood, manager for 11 years, said. He said he tried to book major films as quickly as possible in the Lawrence Commonwealth Hall and the Varsity, Hillcrest 1-2-3, and Sunset Drive-2 please student movie drivers.
Although occasional blockbusters such as "Jaws" are big box-office successes, Harwood said, he prefers a steady flow of high quality films.
"A BLOCKBUSTER can run only so many weeks, and then it'll," he said. "The last movies that Harwood considered blocked because of 'Silent Movie' and 'Murder by Death.'"
Getting current major films as soon as possible for Lawrence theatruses involves booking the film far in advance and paying higher prices for the film, Harwood said.
For example, Harwood has already booked the new version of "King Kong," to open Dec. 17 in Lawrence. This is the national release date, Harwood said, which means the film will also open in major cities.
HOW FAR BEHIND Lawrence is in showing major films when compared with Kansas City and other larger cities depends on the terms of the contract for that film, he
A buying and booking office in Kansas City for Commonwealth Theatres negotiates ars for booking Lawrence each. Each night brought on a separate contract. Harwood said.
Major movie distributors prefer to release their best films near holidays and at the beginning of the summer, Harwood said. This causes occasional dry spells.
During dry spell, Harwood said, his theaters fill in with movies that ran in the summer that students might have missed. For example, within the next few weeks, "Longan's Run," a summer release, will be shown again in Lawrence.
ANOTHER EXAMPLE of filling in a dry feature shown recently in Lawrence.
Harwood estimated that on the average, 2,000 to 4,000 people attended Lawrence movies on a Saturday night. The number varies from film to film.
"I don't feel that the new discs in town are taking away from the movie audience," Harwood said. "If there's a movie on that people want to see, they'll go."
To accommodate the crowds, Harwood said, he has finished negotiations for a contract for Twin Theaters, two new movie theaters near your year near K-Mart, Stark and Iowa streets.
tarwood said that the quality of the film, not the rating, determined the size of the film.
HE SAID HE hoped to show more art films in the law in Lawrence. However, he added, not all art films are successful when shown to a general audience.
"For example, 'Grey Gardens,' the film shown by SUA last weekend, wouldn't have been economical to show at a Commonwealth Theatre," Harwood said.
At Sunset Drive-in, second-run films and exploitation films usually are shown, Harwood said. Exploitation films are often made or horror films, often R-treated, he said.
THE SIZE OF the drive-in movie crowd has increased for the last several years. Harwood said,
Other people involved in the movie business in Lawrence see the business not from an economic viewpoint, but from a personal one.
One of those people is Tin Zink, Turon sophomore, who records year as a at the Hillebrandt Center.
"The type of the crowd varies with the time of the week." Zink said.
After watching the crowds night after
night, he has become an authority on movie
tourists.
Matines attract senior citizens and children. Friday and Saturday night crowds consist mainly of students. Weeknights are for 18- to 30-year-old age group, Zink said.
KU STUDENTS like action movies with intelligence, such as "Jaws" and "Rocky."
Humorous movies in the Peter Sellers style are also popular, because students who have been studying need a chance to laugh, Zink said.
The popularity of a movie that runs two weeks often causes a snowball effect.
"If a movie isn't too well known, but it's good, words get around after the first few nights and the crowds start getting bigger," Zink said.
However, the weekend crowds are still the biggest.
---
THE OFFICIAL KU SPORTS CAP
CHEER THE HAWKS ON with the PECKER CAP
'4*0' at the game
but
only '4*0' at
THE STABLES &
---
THE SANCTUARY
FUN AND GAMES
PROF.
KATZ
ARCADE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!
Monday-Friday---3 to 12 Foosball Wheels II
Saturday---9 to 12 Pinball Indy 800
Sunday---2 to 10 Pool
Mark Twain's Record Albums, Concert
Free Drawing Every Week. T-shirts, Record Albums, Concert Tickets
6 East 7th Street - Lawrence, Kansas
GC
BRITCHES CORNER
843 Mass. 843-0454
"Contemporary Clothes for Men & Women"
For those upcoming Homecoming parties check out Britches Corner for contemporary fashions by: Oscar De la Renta, Potage and Roggs by Kreasandra.
Open Mon.-Sat. 10-6 p.m. Thursday. 10-8:30 p.m.
SINGLE MEN want to DATE more effectively? A DATING WORKSHOP has been developed. Come and hear details:
4:30 or 5:30
Tues., Wed., Thurs., or Fri.
Oct. 12, 13, 14, or 15
Room 224 Frasor
(KU students
over 18 only)
GO BIG BLUE
BEAT
OKLAHOMA!
HECK &
HARDTARFER
Realty, Inc.
• GENE HARDTARFER
EXEC. VICE PRESIDENT
Residence: 843-0215
601 Missouri / Lawrence, Kansas 66044 / Office: 843-5522
TOWN CRIER
The pipe show lasts from 2 till 9:30 p.m., contest commences at 7 p.m.
A Pipe Smoking Contest & Exhibition of New Pipes
Friday, October 29, 1976 Over $200.00 in prize pipes!
930 Massachusetts
MONTREAL
This is just a small sample of our selection.
Haas Imports
1029 Mass.
Acme ment are sex. BRIN
CL.
15 W
AD
to the
The
Wee
Fri
ER
FO
FOR
UL
111
University Daily Kansan
Fridav. October 15.1976
11
Autumn festival gets under way in Baldwin City
Visitors can see more than beautiful fall colors during the festival. Area artists will display their creations at the arts and crafts show in the junior high school. There will be a quilt show in the grade school, adjacent to the booths. The area also displays booths downtown, Blanch Wise, festival committee secretary, said yesterday.
The 19th annual Maple Leaf Festival, celebrating the beauty of changing leaves, starts today and continues through Sunday in Baldwin City, 15 miles south of Lawrence.
SUA
Homemade foods of several varieties will also be available. The Jaycees will barbecue steak and hamburger at noon Saturday and Sunday downtown. The Masons and members of the Eastern Star will make doughnuts in their downtown booth. Homemade sausage and pancakes will be available all day at "Breakfast on
Indoor Recreation Mixed Doubles Racquetball Tournament
Oct. 23 and 24 Robinson Gym Deadline for signing up is Oct. 21 in the Intramural Office Room 208 Robinson Gym -- Double Elimination -- Open to all K.U. students, faculty and staff
TENNIS
A musical, "The Bear Likes '48s Music"
will be produced at 2:30 p.m. in Rice Auditorium, Baker University. It was written by Don Mueller, Baker University.
It will still replace the traditional musical, "The Ballad of Black Jack," also written by Mueller.
the Prairie" at Black Jack Park, three miles east of Baldwin.
Bus tours to historical sites in the area will be available every hour, and a carnival will be in Baldwin City all weekend.
Other festival events are a parade at noon Saturday featuring a musical salute to Kansas; a kiddle parade at 11:30 a.m.; a horseback ride and a pony pull Sunday afternoon.
GO
GO KU
720-22 MASSACHUSETTS STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
CHET Johnson FURNITURE CO.
Selling something? Call us.
QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET
Forty dealers under one roof with everything you could
possibly want.
THE WEST INTERNATIONAL HISTORY MUSEUM
Open every Saturday & Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 842-6616
國史
The image shows a historical illustration of a wagon with an open door and windows, featuring a design that appears to be from ancient or medieval times. The wagon is depicted in black and white with bold lines. There are two windows on the side of the wagon, one on each front side. The interior of the wagon is not clearly visible due to the angle of the photograph. The overall style of the illustration is reminiscent of traditional European art styles, which often include detailed depictions of historical machinery and structures.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their race or national origin. GLASSISED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
each additional word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
fewer
Each additional
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOUND ADVERSE BSA.BA.R.
the advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ad can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office at 454-835-2222.
2 bdm. apartment, very big, A.C., dullwasher,
pool. $223 plus electricity and gas. 841-750-9266
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and
pass the phone number (no phone calls) at WESTER
STATE HOSPITAL.
Sublease furnished one room apartment, air conditioned kitchen. $170/month. 10-15
826-3801
Must substitute two bedroom apt. at Gailight
unfurnished—Nov 1st leaves begin **489-722-722**
Sublime 2 bedroom apt, all alititted paid for,
with breakfast on bus route. Call Ken after 12:30 pm.
(800) 469-4547.
Jawharpwet Tower 2 bedroom apt. All utilities $253 per month. Laundry facilities. On bus rent $125 per month.
3 bedroom apartment at Quail Creek available for
rent at 85-883 to 85-900 & 400-406. Signature Staircase at 85-883 to 85-900 & 400-406.
Apt-2 rooms with kitchen to single male student. Phone 843-907-6901. Utilities paid with pass. Phone 843-907-6901.
Nainash Hall, contract through May, for sale call Debby 841-3447. 10-19
VISIONS
has the eyeglasses you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 814-7421
NAPA
N.A.P.A.
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we offer:
Special Prices
N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
2300 Haskell
843-6960
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS-Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment, you will factory dumps or dumpe out products, you will have to purchase the at GHAMPHONI SHOP at KIEFS` tt
817 Vermont 843-9365
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
furniture, including high-end and custom-
made furniture, Trade Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
15th Avenue, New York, NY 10022.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties.
ALTERNATOR, STARTER, AND GENERATOR. AUTO-
ELECTRIC, 8325-9000, 9009 W. 60 h.
8142 SINGLE MOTOR. 750 W. 60 h.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense.
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available at now Town Clero Stores. tt
Excellent condition of used furniture, refrigerator,
cooker, microwave, oven, sink, m-6 m-8 p.m. free
delivery 1-423-567-8900 or mail to:
Katie Garrison, Inc., 115 W. 45th St., N.W., New York, NY 10010.
CUSTOM JEWELRY. Professional silver and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermaids. Unicorns. iron stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3834. www.customjewelry.com
Demostrator Cleerance, 1976 International Scout FM radio, deluxe interior; 800 miles, $475. FM radio, deluxe interior; 800 miles, $475. FM radio, deluxe interior; 800 miles, $475. Backpack kit, AM-FM radio, deluxe interior, 800 kmh Kahn Truck & Tractor company, 10-15
1973 Dalam pick-up with软车 caper top. $2500.
1974 Dalam pick-up & Tractor Co. I 1548. I 15. 18.
483-240. 483-240.
Epiphone electric bass, perfect condition; rarely
handshear action, includes hardcourt bass.
802. 942-8227
Final markdown on all 76 Magvax console stereos and components. Beautiful $49.95 consoles cut as low as $300; powerful comp. sets, great speakers cut as low as $125. (Thurs. 8:30). 10-22
CLEARANCE! Discounted tire radial tires $2 each
for 15" and 19" radials. $4 each for 21"
and 24" radials. I'll give 15" radials for
Volkwagen included!) Rock Star,
Convex, Wheelchair, Come thru Woorworth's tool lot for tire serv.
Woorworth's tool lot for tire serv.
Heek and Hardfather Reality, Inc.
841-7532. breakfast ware, water $20,
948-8532-247, after hours. Al Grigby, 841-7574
or Emmia Jean Ellis, 841-7580.
Olds Studio model rumpet excellent condition
841-6790. 841-6790 from 11:30 a.m to 12:30 a.m. for TI
bishop in N.A.F., or 841-7422 for p.m.
a.m. anytime. 10-15
Baked wheat straw-grow for parties, muching,
e.g. Cali 841-6848.
Speakers: very efficient, crisp and clean 3-way
system. Must wilt-$200, $853-8541.
**
FOR SALE-Classical Classical Yairi-Handerford
fortable typewriter, 843-7828-600
portable typewriter, 935-8428-600
10-18
1978 Honda C350
1978 Honda C350 126
1978 Honda C350 126
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
1978 Honda MT125
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W, 6th. 84-13
3333.
JAMES V. OWENS
RETAIL LIQUOR STORE
DO'S DELUXE
BOIL & MASSE
LAWRENCE, FOREM
812-754-3
COLD BEER
AKA1 1721 Ware-to-reel tcp/ip recorder/
AKI60. Price includes 15 tape. Call 842-282. 10-18
Wines and Liquors NEXT TO OWEN'S FLOWERS
The Lounge
17 Must Marien, excellent condition. AlR.-FM FF.
4218 must sell. $135. Call 641-795-0209.
4218
71 Fiat, good condition. Runs good. New shoes
& batten. $175 must sell. Call 841-7290.
10-19
72 Honda CL, 350, elec. start, good condition,
under $800; BM142, Askie for KX.
10-19
HELP WANTED
Game Tickets Two KU-KR Kitues Sold inddn
on or together. Call 821-5838 between
Tuesday to Friday. 10-19
1976 Kawasaki KZ-750 touring motorcycle, 180-20
miles. 841-718 Negotiable. 10-20
Honda 350, 1970, good condition. **840** BICYCLE
641-528
841-528
10-21
Excellent White Chrysler 1888 '39 Full Power.
Sale price for 2014 model. No. 34. Need $50 or trade for "Pierk Upruck"
or "Buck Upruck."
Baked Wheat Straw-Good for parties, mulch,
etc. Bake 843-0848 10-21
WOW! THIS ONE'S GOT EVERYTHING-BIGGEST AND BEST garage and preservation setting with 50 h.p. Mercury motor (chapse), 10-speed blues, hot water heater, sound system, tape recorders, dishwasher, turntable, turtle, tape records, washers, dishwashers, wall mirrors, flocked wallpapers, TV monitors, CB antenna, CB network, sheet polyfilm coatings, books, port heater, port toilet, camp wheels (CVCam) airplane models, compass, whole wheel kits (CVCam) airplane models, sheet polyfilm coatings model Chev-GMC VAN, Chev engine pkg, Postrack, clutch assembly, gauges, AM-8 PM-8 Don't Miss HI SIT and Sun. Oct. 16 and 17, 10-55 $28.95 & Minor Tank (2 beds) for leisure of 10-15
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Cook. Amount responsibly for propagation work.
Cook. Amount responsibly for 30 hour post-west work.
Lecture Lawn Clubs. Amount responsibly for 30 hour post-west work.
- Pinball
Must sell 90 VW Bug Auto stick shift, Rim and
轮毂
10.15
MGB 'GT' 1972. Excellent condition. Overdrive, radial FM, CMass. Must, tilt 84-933. 10-19
T3 Capi 4. cylinder, AM-FM, mechanically per-
manent cleaning, byClean. 843-648-105
843-648-105
10-20
Female subjects wanted for figure photography
in the Art Department. Inquiry
written to Help Freed, P O Box 7389, Lawrences
Part time evening work available for juniors and
Enhancess. Excelent pay, short hours, 844-7640, 115
320.
- Poosball
Part time to full employment opportunity
and desire to develop and achieve a
and desire to begin an exciting career. Call
(212) 658-0497.
Must sell 1947 Audi Fork-4 autoautomatic,
Must sell 1947 audi wheel drive, In-possible in-possible
of 2018.
LOST AND FOUND
Applications being accepted at Brinchner Corner
from 10-3, 10-4, and 10-6. Contemporary clothes for men & women.
9th and Iowa
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Lost: cat. large, white, neutered man. In Park 30.
Gilbane area. If found or see please call 10-19-10.
Open Daily to a.m. Midnight Except Sunday
Lost! (Skeleton) leather wallet on 10-9-76
Inventory: 348
Important content: Cell Greg. $824-$149
Important content: Cell Greg. $824-$149
Bud on Tap
Eldridge Optical
Found small male white cat. Call 842-9158. Keep trying.
10-15
Found: High school class, Shawna Mason West, at Horton Park. Call 843-9200. 10-15
Lost. bus mass, KU ID and other personal IDs in the JAMBOOK. In for JANBOOK in Room 600 N635, REWAID A for JANBOOK in Room 600 N635, REWAID A
Found: pocket watch at Kansas Union. Call 864-191 and identify.
Found. Monday—alarm bracelet on campus. Call and identify. 811-3376. 10-18
PAPER CAPTURES
OFFICIAL LICENSED
at extremely sentimental girl's silver and
red jacket. (2) Reward: 83-9841. 10-18
Porter Lake on 10-9. Reward: 83-9841. 10-18
- Pool
Lost: Ladies' Watch, Gold Helixes with chain
Call: 842-0388
10-19
MISCELLANEOUS
NOTICE
Lust: Male black and white, long hairied kitten
841-3124 after 5:00. Aps. Reward. Please 10-19
841-3124 after 5:00.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available at Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 11 a.m. Mass.
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
CABSAH CAFE-Good food from scratch. Lunch
in 10-30, 15-30. Mass. Mass. Has hawkcow food.
In 20-30, 20-30. Mass. Mass. Has hawkcow food.
Swap Shop, 620. Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
lap mats, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-5.
(800) 439-2788.
Junius's Steak House Delicious food at reasonable prices
Sunday-12 noon 12-5pm 12-7pm 4-11 Closed Tuesday
Monday-12 noon 12-5pm 12-7pm 4-11 Closed Thursday
Security if you Call 443-1022 for a barn party for November 6, please call back. 10-21
HALLOWEEN MAUSERQUEAN DANCE by MARY Services, a MARY HARTMAN, MARY SERVICE
You ought to be in pictures. Make your
own photo of the YAWKEE TRAINERS.
Senior Pictures, 846-7288
10-15
Blintz Brunch and Bake Sale Wednesday, Oct.
10. 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. Community Justice
Weekend
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND THERAPY; indi-
dia-3643 in growth workshops 10-22
3643 - In Leworthwood
In London
GAY SERVICES MEETING. Oct. 19, Walnut
Gay Center. The meeting will be chaired by
Bernard Black, Executive Director for the ACU
Department. Her presentation will cover the issues sexual harassment and sexual assault in the workplace. The event is invited. For socializing activities call (212) 680-5300.
Flower Special Halliday--Rose, Mumu, Mixed Bouquet,
cash sale 12.95/halliday 8.25/halliday 7.
Sale ends April 30th.
PERSONAL
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
For referrals.
Single Men. Come & find out details of a Dating
Room at 14, 15, 16, Room 20, 21,
30 P.M. 10-15
**Wanted:** Two (2) females. Qualifications: Clean, decent looking morals were required. Applicants must have a strong relationship with two (2) recently burnt gentiles. Our goal is to recruit women with and without use. Call 841-3844 for more information.
GRA
SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
--an unbeaten goal to COPPING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawnry. Let us help you at 838 Massachusetts or phone 842-356-7811.
Linda, have a Happy Birthday, Love Tink. 10-15
Poll workers--thank you for giving us your time and earning enough to get involved.
10-15
Have you had problems getting to sleep at night? You may want to use the KPCHK phone or KPCHK Paycheck. David Dawell, store information specialist for KPCHK, said: "We get a lot of calls from customers who have issues with their accounts."
HI: "Adiph-Coors" You're right about studying
My major should be homework. Ante 10-15
TYPING
SERVICES OFFERED
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
Do you want to study the Bible? Group will meet
with the relevant leaders. Call 843-1090 or
write 842 W. 3031. **Kairos** 10-20
Vasce cassettee de Victor Jáurez, Vílatera, Inabel y Angela. Angelina Palacio, Pasión, Bustura, Santa Marta de Iquique, Javier Boltero y Mónicaos. Das discos grabados en cassette $4.00. Shelly. 841-623-6537 dos 10-21
CAFE-all you wanted to know about KU energies but didn't know where to ask."10-15
How Changing Roles of Women Affect Mgr Presses
TOMMIE F. TURNER
7 to 8 M. Tues.; 10 to 12 Jackhawk Bush, Union
Air Force Base, Washington, D.C.
BILLIARDS
● Pin-Ball
● Air Hockey
● Foos-Ball
Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer! Bring along your bike, Cycley, 4, Mon-Sat, Thurs. ill 8:30, Sun. ill 14:29, Wed. ill 8:42, 62-836.
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a new bicycle - upgrade it and adjust your tires,自行车-lubricate it and brake it and brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your hubs, crank and head, and adjust the timing of "tune-up". Rates: 10 speed $18.50, 5 or 3 speed $15.60, single speed $12.90, double speed $13.15, single speeds $6.50. Professional protection costs are new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycle lawsuits, has to be new bike?
Math. Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 0001, 0011, 0022, 0033, 0044, 0055, 0066, 0077, 0088, 0099, 366, 554, 627, 648. Regular sessions or one-line test preparation. Rates call 842-7801.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on
the market 1238 Alphabet Ave. No. 266, Los Angele
s 906-454-7777 or academicresearchpapers@ucla.edu
TRY
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-1476. 10-29
Need an experienced tpytest? IBM SelectLEl 9
tpytest. Install tpytest, tcp, cabon
(ribbon). Call Pen at 842-5799.
Tpytest/editor. IBM Pica/clite. Quality work.
Tpytest/editor. IBM Pica/clite. Dissertations welcome.
WCL.号码 842-5197.
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
9th and Iowa — West of Hillcrest Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week — No One Under 18 Admitted
Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, minis.
Designed by Mrs. Wright, spellin'.
843-5044, Mrs. Wright.
NAISMITH HALL
Experienced Typist-IBM-Memory-Call 842-
9471, aid for John. 102-39
Now accepting
Applications
for Spring Semester
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
experienced typist; 10-15
weekend; 644-531; may 19-18; these, Call
weekend; 10-15
weekend
WANTED
We now have openings for the remainder of the room on the south side or for female rooms in Nainthall Hall B-835-859. 10-20
Ace needs salesperson at the game to sell the official KU hat. Earn a bacon a hat. $5 in commissions made at Wisconsin game. Limited number of salesperson needed. Call 414-830-6000 or **tt**
Christian Musicians to perform "The
Rock of Ages" at Riverside Park in
Rochester. Wednesday nights, perform 11-7-28.
For more information, visit www.riverside.org.
Top dollar paid for 4 KU-OU tickets (anywhere in stadium).
10-15
Student wishes own room in together household
for study, cleaning and meal preparation,
cooking and cleaning. Make the choice to
eigenroom or room sharing.
Male roommates wanted for large 2-bedroom apartment. See at 1011 Indiana, Naples, No. 81-9743.
Need to join or start carpool. CoLa-wrence MWF Jm38-3818.
10-15
Ned. 2 OU-KU football tickets. Call Shirley,
841-4066. 10-15
Needed, one ticket for the Kansas-Oklahoma
game. Call 841-5551.
10-15
Need two tickets to Nebraska game. Will pay a good price. Call 814-4720. *10-19*
Wanted to buy. Four KU-OU kits Together or separately. Michael at 833-6671. 10-15
Nepeded 1 grad student or full time working girl to split rent and util in a 3 bedroom apt. at Quail Creek, between 9:20 a.m. & 6:00 p.m. and 8:43-725 after 6:00 p.m.
10-19
Female roommate, nice townhouse, $100 a month,
small pets Ou. Kee $834-4272, 865-0100
10-15
2 male roommates wanted to share houseware for
a family of 3 (80 months) plus monthly rent
$179-$189 and $179-$190, respectively
10-20
Need 2 tickets each for the following games:
KU-KiSU, KU-Nebraska
841-3204
841-3204
Resumate wanted immediately. Jaykawersh
wrote: "I am interested in working with the
AC." Those interested in Japan, welcome.
Thank you.
Help! I and my well-mannered dog need a place to
Call Jackie. 842-4267 10-30
Routinely needed for very small fitted apartments or spacious rooms ¥95.90 per month; size larger, call CELL: 82-643-4371.
Roommate needed immediately for nice house room. Room $85.75
Ask for Juju $85.75
Ask for Juju $85.75
Call Ottis Vann!
For new Chevrolets and used cars at
Turner Chevrolet
843-7700
NOW'S THE TIME FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY
No extra charge
Gift Wrapping Free
HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass.
A.
12
Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
V 01 BP x a
---
WELCOME TO HOMECOMING 1976
THINK
FLOOR PLATTER
THE KANSAS UNION
Pre-Game-For Your Dining Pleasure
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 3
PRAIRIE ROOM—10:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
NEWLY REMODELED, LEISURELY DINING
THE DELI — 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
OLD FASHIONED SANDWICHES
HAWKS NEST— 10:30 a.m. to 1:15 p.m.
FOR A QUICK SNACK BEFORE THE GAME
CAFETERIA — 10:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
COMPLETE MEAL OR LIGHT LUNCH
LEVEL 5
"BIG 8" ROOM—10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
RIVER CITY SALAD BAR
10:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
BUILD YOUR SALAD AS YOU LIKE IT
GAME DAY BUFFET — INCL. HEARTY SOUP AND DELI-STYLE "DO-IT-YOURSELF" SANDWICHES
POST-GAME
Immediately Following The Game
UNWIND WITH YOUR FRIENDS
POPCORN, HOT PETZELS, PITCHER OF BEER AND GOOD MUSIC PERFORMED BY THE TOM MONTGOMERY TRIO
HAWKS NEST—LEVEL 2
SUA RECEPTION—LEVEL 4
ENJOY A TOUR OF THE NEW LOUGE AREAS, THEN STOP FOR REFRESHMENTS.
J. Hawk for President
KU
© SANDY
J. Hawk endorses the Kansas Union
"The Union is my choice for campaign headquarters it should be yours for Homecoming. With the newly remodeled entrance and main lounge, it's an ideal place for meeting friends. Before the game, you have six choices for dining-one just right for you.After the game-stop by my headquarters-the "Hawk's Nest" for a cool beverage and good music. And remember to vote, J. HAWK FOR PRESIDENT"
Go Jayhawks Beat the Sooners!
KU SPORTS
Christianity Religious spirit draws wide range of athletes
"I want you to know that everything I did out there on the football field was today for Christ. I want to thank him for letting me play well and being with our everything we've done, and did today, we owe to him."
That statement was made by Lindsey Mason, owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates, who noted how this KU-Washington football game earlier this month drew 17,000 spectators.
Mason is only one of many athletes at the University of Kansas who have chosen the teachings of Christianity to guide their lives as well as their athletic talents. Most KU athletes aren't as openly Christian as those beliefs as Mason, but Christianity is apparently becoming a more important part of athletics here.
THE NEW YORK JOURNAL OF LITERATURE
THERE ARE several members of KU's cross country team who frequently meet to study the Bible. And, from the ranks of the football team, a fellowship group meets weekly to discuss their lives as Christian athletes and how they can guide their teammates toward the same philosophy.
Mason is one of the leaders of that group, the Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA). Five to 25 football players attend the meetings. Those in FCA said their strong beliefs in Christianity help
By Gary Vice Assistant Sports Editor
survive the burdens of long football practices as well as the regular traumas of academic rigors.
JIM YOUNG, junior defensive end, said, "Football kind of gets down on you because it takes so much of your time. Practicing every day takes a lot of effort and self denial. I manage to keep going because of Christianity, which is based a lot on the concept of denial of self."
Jim Emerson, junior noseguard, said, "Without Christ, I would have quit a long time ago. It is an awful big burden to fight by yourself and I need a lot more of that." Instantly a lot more, they're fighting a lot of things.
"I think it would help a lot of athletes if they became Christians. It would help them get through the day-by-day hardships of practice. When you have an injury, you have a lot more incentive to keep on going."
THE FEELINGS of athletes not involved with the Bible study groups and Christian meetings were varied, but were basically supportive of their faith. The group did not insist upon forcing their philosophies on others.
Tad Scales, junior pole vaulter, said, "I think every athlete defends with religion in his own way. Those in the top of the gymnastics world are like us."
"As far as him promoting religion on everyone he knows," she said, shoving him above it down my throat. I get irritated. On our team,
they just let us know they are having a meeting and they welcome us to attend. That's the way it like it."
Several players dodged in agreement when junior defensive tackle Doug Barrington said, "They feel they've got to tell you, me, everyone about it. And we'd just rather not have them flash it on us."
On another occasion, Barrington expressed what he considered the good points of having athletes in shape.
"THOSE THAT don't openly profess their Christianity) have an awful lot of respect for those that do," he said. "It has to be that way to have a Christian atmosphere—a team atmosphere. That's what athletics is all about. You wouldn't believe how much it has dissatisfied the racial problem."
Mason said, "My brother, he's tried every religion from Buddhism to Muslim. He's been searching and can't find himself. And he can't see why I'm a Christian because he calls it a white man's religion. He's blinded already. I tell him, 'Hey, we both came from the same woman.'"
Most of the Christian-achievers active in FCA at KU are black. Defensive tackle Franklin King offered his opinion of the situation, saying, "The reason that (more blacks are involved) is because it is more obvious for a black to believe in Christ because there is not much for a black to do in Lawrence. A lot of white athletes would rather go out with their friends. But I don't think it's just blacks (in Christianity). Once you become a brother in Christ, everyone's brother."
AT ONE weekly FCA meeting, several athletes discussed how they could get other team members involved in Christianity and how the team could benefit from it.
King said, "I'm not saying I am perfect, but I want to know every an example of what Christ can do in your life."
"In our day in society, how many times do you hear people say show me? That's what we've got to do.
Emerson said a strong belief in Christianity by many of his high school team members helped them
"Christianity really brought our team together," Emerson said. "Our friendship, helping each other and patting each other on the back during two-a-day trips to Chicago and New York, and more suvs joined us. They became Christians."
MASON SAID, "A lot of times when we are in the locker room talking about the Lord, people hear us saying how the Lord helped us through practice and learning. But we heard this little trickle of interest, the Lord can blossom."
Christian fellowship
King added, 'A lot of people believe it is a cop out attitude to believe in Christ. People say that athletes who believe in Christ do so they say that it is for them if they play badly. But everything we do is for him.
KU football players James Jackson, left, and Lindsey Mason. Clifford
and KU quarterback coach Gary Ruley discuss spiritual sources of endurance at a recent Fellowship of Christian Athletes meeting.
"Now we have more people who have come to the Lord and the more people we have come to the Lord, Jesus Christ."
Senior free safety Chris Golub, who said he considered himself only mildly religious, said, "The ones who are bringing us together on this team are Christians."
"IF KU GOES to the Orange Bowl." Mason said,
"that's what will take them there. The power of the
When asked about the role of Christianity on the Jayhawks' football team, coach Bud Moore hedged
You wouldn't believe how much it has dissipated the racial problem.
responding, then sternly requested that assistant coach Gary Rulledge answer further questions on the
Rutledge, who said he was asked by Moore to coordinate a more active FCA program, said that the FCA before Moore's arrival at KU hadn't been very long. Moore still desired a more organized and active program.
King said, "Couch Rutledge is the only man I know of our coaches who has confessed to Christ as his teacher." And even more importantly other coaches haven't found Christ because they are part of our team and are in authority over us. I have never heard anyone say that.
DISTANCE RUNNERS George Mason and Bill Lambert said that much of their strength to practice was due to their age.
Mason, senior co-captain of the cross country team.
as scriptures in the Bible spur his dedication to the Lord and to achieving goals in running.
"There's one Bible passage that says 'All men run in a race, but only one can receive the prize,' he said. "It goes on to say, 'Live your life as if to win and not just to run.'"
"One of the main things Christianity does for me as an athlete is give my faith ... faith that I can do well."
Landberg, a graduate assistant, said that it took him awhile to realize that God was responsible for all of his athletic talents. Landberg said he feels he must repay God for that blessing of athletic talent
"EVERYTHING THAT happens in my life, He's the cause," Lindberg said. "I can look back now and say that he blessed me with the talent to run as well as I did. This is the most important thing, I feel, that through the ability He's given me, maybe others will see it. By my running well, I can be a stronger witness."
Gymnasian Ford Culbertson said that the disciplines taught in religion helped him discipline himself in religious practice.
"Spiritually, gymnastics helps you follow God's truth," he said. "In gymnastics you have to do the moves correctly or truthfully. And since God is truth, you have to do it in God's way."
Gymnast Karen Mundy said her religious convictions helped her work towards achievement in the sport.
"I INCLUDE gymnastics in my prayer life," she said. "I pray before and during practice for the strength and courage to do the tricks. I don't depend on the Lord, but He belms me."
"I feel that gymnastics is a talent I have and I want to do my best for the Lord. I'm supposed to use the equipment."
Mason said strong religious beliefs would help an athlete be more powerful when he performs.
"THE LORD helps you be confident because he tells you to have no fear," he said. "He gives you confidence, not an ego. With the Lord controlling you, you don't need an ego. You won't be looking down on other people and saying, 'I am better than you because I play KU football.'"
"I think that in just the last few years, amateurs have shown they need the Lord in their lives."
Young agreed, saying, "It's growing everywhere." Young said he was proud. "Just three years ago, we had about 15 players left."
When somebody tries to shove religion down my throat, I get irritated.
magnus before games and pray. And amy only one to 10 of them were Christians. Now, we have 15 to 25".
EMERSON SAID Christianity was growing among football players because of the immense strain that football puts on their bodies.
Mason said that many Christians weren't immediately visible because "there are a lot of guys who aren't outward worshipers of the Lord. They worship from within."
In the Bible, namely Philippians 4:13, is where King said he got his strength. The quote reads, "I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me."
Says King, "I know I can do all things through Christ. Football, homework, all things."
Dun Boyman, Steve Clark and Steve Schoenfeld also helped prepare this story.
Jayhawk success runs the gamut in pro football
KANSAS
John Riggins — Washington Redskins
Every year the National Football League goes to the market in their annual draft shopping through the collegiate football talent.
And rarely do the NFL clubs purchase cut-rate or store brand spectacles. They check with the league before buying.
They shop for Buckeye, Bruin and Trojan brands. And, they stock up on Jawhaves.
"DENEAR" AS he is affectionately known by KU athletes past and present, remembers the college careers of John Deere, who was one of others as they aspired to make the pro
AND ONE MAN, DEAN Nesmith, KU's head trainer for the last 39 years, has been around to see them all rise to professional football.
Currently, there are 16 former University of Kansas football players on NFL rosters, one on the inactive (injured) list and three in the Canadian Football League.
"When they walk in here as freshman," Nesmith said, "it's difficult to tell if they have pro potential. Once they become familiar with the program, you pros prospect, but you can never be sure."
Nessmith cited the 1968 Jayhawks, which went 9-2 on the year including a 15-14 loss to Penn State in the Orange Bowl, as an example of what it takes. Seven Jayhawks from that Big Eight cochampion team are playing pro football.
Nesrith, who himself played pro football in 1936 on the New York Yankees after lettering as a tackle at KU, said that for an athlete he needed his pressure he needed more than athletic ability.
"IT TAKES mental toughness to make the ride." They have to be able to take the ride.
"They matured that year," Nesmith said. "They were a team that wasn't afraid of the big names like Oklahoma. They had real players that definitely helped them make pro ball."
Douglass, who now the reserve quarterback at New Orleans after a few years as
Chicago's starting quarterback, passed for 1,316 yards in 1988. In the backfield with him was Riggins, KU's No. 2 career rusher with a season-high 40 tackles. Washington Redskins, Riggins, who was a junior in 1986, was drafted by the New York Jets and played out his career at the Redskins.
OTHER STAR performers on that team were Larry Brown, who was the starting tight end on both of the Pittsburgh Steelers' Super Bowl Championship teams; John Zook, who was drafted by the Atlanta Falcons and is currently the starting
By Gary Vice Assistant Sports Editor
defensive end on the St. Louis Cardinals; Jim Baille, who plays defensive tackle for Atlanta after being drafted by the Baltimore Colts; and Donnie Shanklin and Mickey Doyle of the Canadian League. Shanklin, a running back named most likely in the 2018 Orange bowl, is now a wide receiver, and Doyle plays linebacker.
"I think anyone who plays major college football believes they can play pro football," Nesmith said. "All of them had an ace, and the other football, you just don't hear it out loud."
"WE HAVE guys on this football team who I will think make it. I won't give their names for obvious reasons but they are more demonstrate to me they have what it takes."
Responding to the suggestion of All-America candidates Mike Butler, Laverne Smith and Nolan Cromwell making it the pros, Nesmith said, "I think there is a possibility of 10 or 12 on this team. But you never know what those people who are running in the looking for them who are good persons as well as talented athletes.
"You know the scouts come around and
talk to me about our people. We have seven or eight guys who are seniors this year that are in the army.
NESMITH DISCOUNTS his own ability, or anyone else's, to make the right deduction every time about a college player's ability.
"You take a guy like Steve Towle (the leading tacker in his rookie season last fall). If you don't almost say, 'now there is a guy who will make it.' But you can't be 100 per cent sure. If you could point at a guy and say 'he could name your own salary as a scout.'
And Nesmith said that Towle, an all-conference linebacker his senior year 1974 before going to Miami, had an interesting personality.
"WELL, STEVE had the money and also he was a flashy dress," he said. "I don't want to give the impression he was a wild man or anything, but he liked to go out and have a good time. I guess you could say he like doug like Fairbanks. Now I'm showing my age. But nevertheless, he was very intense when it came to football.
Goode, who played defensive end at KU,
is the starting outside linebacker on the San Diego Chargers and Williams, who gained
1,233 yards rushing at Kansas between
hamstring injuries, is starting for the San Francisco 49ers.
"Fellows like John Koe, for instance; he was one of the toughest guys around. I was always sure he'd make it to the tournament and Delvin Williams were No. 1 picks, but evidently whose chose them knew what they were doing because they've turned out very well."
NESMITH SAID one of the most memorable days each year is draft day, when players like Emmett Edwards, the Jayhawks leading career receiver, was drafted. He was big offensive guard who was drafted last year by the Falcons, are selected in the draft, Edwards.
a second-round pick of the Houston Oilers,
w traded to the Baffalo Bills two weeks
"These fellows usually spend the day pretty close to the phone," Neaslith said. "When then they get the call, they come up and read the word and they are pretty jubilant."
"I remember when Delvin signed. He went out and bought a Cadillac. And Bobby Douglas, he bought himself a Corvette, one of those sports cars. But some are more conservative. Zook was a somber, studious type individual and when he signed he bought a conservative car and I'm sure he invested his money in land or something."
THE LIST of former Jayhawks now playing professional football is dominated by offensive backs, offensive linemen, and wide receivers. Only Scott, who at 6-4, 270 pounds, was the largest player on KU's roster in 1975, is an offensive lineman.
Scott's teammate in 1973, three-time all-conference safety strong safety Kurt Kniff, was drafted in the second round by the Denver Broncs. Kniff, who is out with an injury, was picked by the pro scouts for Time and the American team following his senior year.
Also at cornerback, the Jayhawks have turned out Steve Taylor, who is wearing a Kansas City Chiefs' uniform. Taylor was a former player at KU before being drafted last spring.
1969 GRADUATE George McGowan, who hauled in 32 passes for 929 yards in his junior season, is a wide receiver in the heisman team. That which he led in receptions several years ago.
Steve Lawson of the 49ers was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals before being traded to the Minnesota Vikings and then to San Francisco. The Vikings have in their second-string offensive backfield KU graduate Robert Miller. Miller went to
See PRO page two
2
Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Women athletes shedding roles to compete
Participating in women's athletics at the University of Kansas can demand an abbreviated social life, a lack of sleep and a need for high levels of exercise to constrain battle to correct the misconception
that all women athletes are muscle-bound monsters.
Members of the track and field, volleyball, field hockey, gymnastics, tennis, basketball, lacrosse, and soccer.
Staff photo by DAVE REGIE
WIA
Gymnastic coach Ken Snow teaching the ropes
Pro football . . .
From naze one
Minnesota after his senior season, his finest, when he rushed for 712 vards.
One of KU's most famous pros, John Hadl, is a back-up quarterback at Houston. Hadl, a two-time All-America at Kansas, had his best years in the pros as starting quarterback for the San Diego Chargers and Los Angeles Rams.
AT KU, Hadi was named an All-America in 1960 as a halfback and in 1961 as a fullback. At the University of pittsburgh, averaging 49.6 yards, including a conference record point of 94 yards against Oklahoma. In his first varsity season he intercepted pass 98 wards for a touchdown.
Nesmith said that wide receiver Ron
"Well, Ron wasn't exactly spectacular when he received 182 reception for 644 yards. I wasn't so good as to catch the ball but I never expected him to do the tremendous job be in now doing him."
Jessie, who played at KU in 1969 and 1970 before being drafted by the Detroit Lions, was named to the All-Pro team.
Defending against receivers like Jessie is Eddie Lewis. Lewis, a second-round draft pick last year, has been seeing plenty of players for the defenders in the defensive secondary.
that their association with the program at KU was worth the demands placed on them
"I wish I could be 100 per cent sure that a guy has professional ability," Nesmith said. "If I was never wrong I sure could strike it rich as a scout. But you just can't be sure."
LAURA FROST, Shawnee Mission sophomore, said that she regretted missed football games, but that she thought participation in athletics was worth it.
The 20 women questioned said they thought the woman life suffered, but not label them. Label them.
The athletes said that their friends could study during the afternoons, but that they would not.
Terry Frynn, Lewood senior, said her friends seemed to keep a step ahead of her in getting studying done so that they could party.
"I'm at practice when my friends are studying," she said, "so when they're ready to go out, I'm just starting to think about studying.
"When I do go out, I can't really party after the partying I can't practise."
**WEEK NIGHTS are definitely out as far as partying goes, the athletes said, because they don't get any classes so that their afternoons can be devoted to practices. Late-night cram sessions are also especially tiring for parents, and sleep can't be made up in afternoon naps.**
"Sidling till on week nights can mess you up, just like partying, because you're worried, nervous, and pooped." "It tells us how much we tell on your practice the next day."
Early morning departures to away games and late-evening returns from them often
SEVERAL ATHLETES said they didn't think that participation in athletics restricted how much they socialized but that it did limit the group they went out with. Other members of the team are the only they usually "do things with," they said.
Angie Wagle, Wichita sophomore, said her participation in gymnastics hadn't caused her to lose her social life, but to 'rechannel' it.
"I consider gymnastics part of my social life because I want to do it," she said. "Practice takes out five afternoons a week, but I don't like it, but it make up for it in the evenings."
An ability to organize study time and to stick to a schedule are requirements for women athletes. They must maintain a high level of university to remain eligible for competition.
Debbie Kuhn, Aitchison junior, said she is the only girl with a good diversion from study atraine. study routine
"I like it because it gets you away from the academics for a while. A lot of kids get bummed out on school because they aren't involved in anything outside of class," she
The problem of unused spare time isn't common among women athletes. Many are involved in more than one sport, and also play tennis or basketball. Participation of time even more important. Participation in volleyball and field hockey or softball is particularly common because
AS PARTICIPATION in women's athletics programs is increasing at universities, the training requirements are also becoming more extensive.
Members from all teams questioned said workouts and practices at KU were much more demanding than those they'd known in high school. Competition is more intense at the university level, they said, because are nationally ranked athletes on each team.
The women said training and work-outs in all sports became more difficult each year because the abilities of incoming athletes continued to improve. Records are broken when a player said, and each athlete must work harder to maintain or improve her standing on the team.
Women on the track and cross country
trails will have their training schedule
for spring testing in April.
CINDY SKILLIAN, Overland Park
sophomore, said. "I've never done so much
with the boys."
training program, but I'm not a quitter, so I stick with it."
Karen Schneller, Kansas City, Kan.
union, junior, all coaches in the program
By Courtney Thompson
Sports Writer
expected dedication from team members during practices.
"I get so tired I don't feel like doing anything, but when I think about it I realize I feel better after going through what seems like torture." she said.
WOMEN ON ALL the teams questioned said it was important to them to stay in shape, and many said they jogged on weekends in place of regular practice. No one had tried before, but athletes to keep them in shape, but all said they imposed restrictions on themselves.
The athletes agreed that practices helped prevent weight problems by providing them with a safe and healthy lifestyle.
Ever since the East German women dominated the swimming competition
BUT KU ATHLETES questioned we empathic in their belief that participation in sports in no way compromised their femininity.
Flynn said the idea that a woman must be in a muscle-bound dynamo to excel was a
"Our big things are flexibility, agility, speed and endurance. These qualities make for a better-conditioned athlete, not an Amazon," she said.
during the summer 1976 Olympics, the
community among women athletes
has been
Two sports were said to be specifically related to women.
"Field hockey is definitely a woman's sport," Parkliffhurst, Lafayette, La., freshman said. "And besides, we wear it all the time." A male or female, what's the difference?"
MEMBERS OF THE gymnastics team thought femininity was an integral part of that sport. Body structure and grace are the two most important elements, they said.
Frost said she thought the whole idea that women athletes weren't feminine was a mistake.
"Women aren't afraid to be involved in athletics now if they have the ability," she said, "and they don't have to be embarrassed about entertaining sports."
Involvement in the women's athletic program at KU is an avocation with little application to a career when most athletes graduate.
Most women see their participation in the program as an extra-curricular activity that provides an added learning experience from college.
SEVERAL ATHLETES said they were interested in coaching. But most said their participation in athletics wouldn't continue past college.
Some of the college majors the women are pursuing are prelaw, engineering, foreign languages, art, math education and physical education.
For most women, especially those involved in sports that emphasize individual achievement, the primary goal is improvement of their own record
THE ATTITUDE among members of the track, gymnastics, swimming and tennis teams, all of which emphasize individual rather than team performance, was that, despite the nature of these sports, there wasn't a lack of team spirit.
Beezoho, Lawrence junior, said she bought her pilot team an exception to the rule.
"We're all at the course together, but each player concentrates on her own game," she said. "For me, golf won't ever be a team sport."
If my score helps the team, great. but I haven't adjusted to the team aspect, and I won't. I'll probably stick to my core.
Dan Bowerman and Eric Martincich also helped prepare this story.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 15, 1976
3
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KU's tradition carried into pro basketball
KU has a rich basketball tradition. The Jayhawks enter their 79th basketball season sporting a .679 winning percentage. Only the University of Kentucky has posted more victories through the years than the Jayhawks have.
To accomplish a record as successful as KU's, a university must be blessed with fine coaches and exceptional athletes. Kansas has known both.
What better man to start the tradition of basketball at KU than James Naismith, the inventor of the game himself? Oddly enough, Naismith, who coached for nine years, was the only losing head coach in Kansas basketball history, winning 54 and losing 66.
THE SECOND head coach at KU was W.
D. Hamilton.
Mention Kansas basketball, and the name of Forrest C. "Phog" Allen will invariably come up. Allen coached at KU 39 years, and won 218 losses for a 729 winning percentage.
DICK HARP, who followed Allen,
coached eight years.
Following in the footsteps of Naimish, Hamilton, Allen and Harp is Ted Owens, coach of the Chicago Cubs. Owens KU. Through his first 12 years, Owens has compiled a record of 223 wins
and 104 losses. Under Owens, Kansas teams have finished first in the conference five times and have gone to postseason tournaments (NCAA and NIT) seven times.
THESE FIVE coaches have coached many athletes who not only were stars at
By Eric Martincich
Sports Writer
KU, but who also went on to play professional ball.
Perhaps the biggest player in name and size to come out of KU was Wilt Chamberlain. An All-American in 1857 and 1958, Chamberlain went on to become the National Basketball Association's all-time leading scoring. Chamberlain poured in six NBA championships and led Philadelphia Warriors (later the 76ers) and the Los Angeles Lakers.
Chamberlin ranks fourth on KU's all-time scoring list. In only two seasons at KU, he scored 1,433 points and grabbed 77 rebounds, becoming the second leading all-time rebounder. In a game against Norton State in 1967, Chamberlin scored 52 points, a school record.
ANOTHER BIG name to come out of KU was Bill Bridges. Bridges was All-Arsenal, but he wasn't Arsenal.
received All-America honors his senior year. Bridges scored more than 1,000 points and grabbed more than 1,000 rebounds in his collegiate career, to become the all-time Big Eight leading rebounder, pulling down 1,081 rebounds.
Bridges signed with the Kansas City Steers of the old A.B.A. after he left KU. After the team folded, he played with the N.B.A.'s St. Louis Hawks, where he gained his fame. He played for the Hawks' organization for nine-and-a-half seasons before being traded to Philadelphia in 1971. He ended his career with the championship team that year, but Brides was chosen for the All-Star team three times in his professional career.
Another Jayhawk who went on to play professional ball is Wayne Highower. The eighth-ranked all-time score was 154,000 points, finishing with 1,128 points and 573 rebounds. He led the conference in scoring in 1960 with an 21.6 average. Selected two times to the All-Conference team, Highower played against the Warriors and the Baltimore Bullets.
Schnellbacher's memory keeps sports history alive
Otto Schnellenbacher, University of Kansas football and basketball great, says we doesn't think college football has changed that much since he played in the 1970s.
"Sure, the players are bigger and faster, but the philosophies used by coaches today aren't that much different from when we played."
Schellbacher, 52, was the last Big Eight athlete to get all-
year-round honors. She played for only one of a few athletics in history; to play professionally in both sports.
He was named to the Big Eight all-conference basketball team four times, an unprecedented feat in the Big Eight, and was an all-around star.
SCHNELBACHER played varsity football in 1942, '46 and '47 and basketball in 1943, '46, '47 an '48. Like many others of that era, his college career was interrupted for military service in World War II. He was captoconn of KU's 1947 Orange Bowl team with former KU coach Don Fambrough and was named to the All-America team that year.
Although Schnellbacher played offensive end for the KU football team, a position where catching the ball is often brought one more step forward, he brings one more thing into play — he brings one more
By Brent Anderson
by KU coach Bud Moore had proved to be the one used by the best teams.
Schellbauer was the Jayhawk's leading receiver all three years he played varaty football, and is KU's fourth leading career
The great emphasis on winning is another kind Schnellbacher thinks is related to big time college football.
"WINNING GETS to be an obsession for too many people," he said. "Sometimes it's as if nothing else matters. But I think winning really depends on whether a team happens to have a great player or two who can make the difference."
Another reason that winning becomes so important to people, especially alumni, Schnellbacher said, is that if they have contributed money to the athletic program, they expect some positive results.
"I don't necessarily think KU) alums care that much whether the team win," he said. "If they see some creative and exciting things, I think we should."
"If you go to a businessman and ask him for money for a football program, you're going to hear from him if you don't get any results. I don't think a coach who consistently has 3-8 seasons can survive at KU."
Schellnacher, a native of Sublette, was recruited by KU basketball coach Phog Allen for his team, but was coaxed into playing football, too. The teams he played on, Schellnacher said, are hard to compare with this year's KU football team.
"EVERY BALL team has its unique personalities and qualities,"
66
Otto Schnellbacher
he said, "Each one is different. Ray Evans, for example, could do everything —run, pass, track, block—but he might not be able to run the race."
Evans, another KU All-America football player, was a teammate of Schnebellchner in 1946 and 47. Evans also was on the All-America team in 1953.
Schnellbacher, who has attended almost all of the KU home games since he graduated, has been an insurance executive in Topeka for more than 30 years. Before he moved to Topeka, he played for the New York Yankees of the old All-America Conference for two years, then played two years for the New York giants. He was an all-around defensive back in 1949, '50 and '51.
He also played one year of pre basketball, the 1948-49 season, for the St. Louis Bombers of the NBA, a team now known as the Atlanta
Schnellbacher was inducted into the Kansas All Sports Hall of Fame in 1972, the 32nd Kansan to be so honored.
NO IT'S NOT A MONSTER
WORLD WAR II
The image depicts two men in a close embrace, likely during a tense moment of war. The man on the left is wearing a white headband and a light-colored shirt, while the man on the right is wearing a floral-patterned sleeveless top. Their hands are gently touching each other, suggesting a moment of comfort or support.
This image is part of a collection titled "WORLD WAR II," which includes a wide variety of photographs from the era, capturing different aspects of life during that time. The images showcase the impact of war on people, their relationships, and their lives.
Call 843-2535 for an appointment.
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Big Eight in scoring, averaging 26.9 points a game.
LAWRENCE SCHOOL OF FAIRSTOWN 9361/2 Mass.
WESLEY, AN All-America choice in 1966 was the No. 1 draft choice of the Cincinnati Royals (now the Kansas City Kings). He spent nine years in the N.B.A. playing for Philadelphia and Milwaukee before winding up his career with the Lakers.
Another name that students are probably familiar with is Jo Jo White. White has been with the Boston Celtics since he was drafted by them in the first round of the 1969 draft. White played at KU from 1968 to 1969, and American honors his junior and senior years.
White, who scored 1,286 points as a Jayhawk, played in the University Games and the Pan American Games in 1967 and was a member of the U.S. Olympic team in 1968.
"HE'S A GREAT all-round player." Owens said of White, one of his former players. "I think that he finally gained the confidence he served so much throughout his career."
One of White's teammates, Bruce Sloan, was noted for his defensive abilities. Graduated from KU in 1968, Sloan served in the Army two years and tried out for the Philadelphia 76ers, who released him. Sloan is the publicity director of the Kansas City Kings.
This is Sloan's fifth year with the Kings' organization.
HONDA 32
ONE OF THE biggest names to come out of KU basketball in recent years is Bud
Stallworth, who led the Big Eight in scoring his senior year, is the third highest scorer in Jayhawk history. Many fans can recall his outstanding finish at KU in a game against Missouri in which he scored four goals and the most points scored in a conference game.
Ron Fanz was another KU player who joined the professional ranks. After graduation, Fanz played in the A.B.A. for a few years before he was now a housing contractor in Merseyside.
Stallworth, who was drafted by Seattle, was hit with injuries his second season there and put on the injured reserve list. The 28-year-old Stallworth was picked up in the expansion draft by the New Orleans Jazz before he begin his sixth season in the pros this fall.
DAVE ROBBSH, a member of the Inu-
tahua Careers, started his professional
career at UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS.
Bud Stallworth — New Orleans Jazz
A. B.A. Robisch is an All-America choice at Kansas in 1970 and 1971. In 1970, Robisch averaged 26.6 points a game to lead the conference in scoring. He is second only to Clyde Lovelieve in total scoring at Kansas and is the third leading rebounder behind Bridges and Robisch. Robisch was in a Big Eagle team in each of his last three years at KU.
Pierce Russell, who attended Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kan., had a brief career in the A.B.A., spending three years at Washington State University since retired and now lives in Kansas City.
Roger Brown, a teammate of Russell's and Robisch's, got his start with the Lakers, drifted around the A.B.A. and is now with the Detroit Pistons.
THE MOST recent addition to the pro ranks from KU is Norm Cook. Cook, a junior last year, decided to forego his senior year and sign with the Boston Celtics.
Owens said why he thought athletes at KU have gone on to star in the prox.
"We get talented recruits," he said. "We then teach them good fundamentals. The pros like this. They want complete ballplayers."
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4
Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Outshines other '73 KU stars
Williams blooms in pros
Remember Delvin Williams? The KU halfback who frequently had a hamstring pull?
You probably don't remember him, do you? But you do remember David Jaymes, Emmett Edwards, Don Goode and Milch Sutton? They were the stars of the 1973 Jayhawk team that had a 7-4-1 record and went to the Liberty Bowl.
None of them are stars in the National Football League—except Williams, Jaynes and Sutton were recently cut by several NFL teams. And though Goode is a starting linebacker for the San Diego Chargers and Edwards is a reserve split end for the Buffalo Bills, they didn't jump from oblivion to the leading rusher for the San Francisco 49ers. Williams did.
"THAT I DID well shows the scouting ability of the National
By Steve Schoenfeld
Sports Editor
Football League scouts," Williams said. "They knew we were runners even though we were a passing team."
Williams, a second round draft pick by the lakers in 1974, has gained 26 points and has a longest run of 50 yards. He has caught 11 passes for 101 yards.
And to think those stats are coming from someone who spent much of his college career blocking for a team that broke nearly every
"I felt all the while we were here we could run the football even though we spent much of the time blocking for David," Williams said. "We always did well running when we got the ball, but we were a passing team."
**WILLIAMS DID** indeed do well running when he was at KU. He left Kansas as KU's No. 3 all-time rusher. The rise of Laverne Smith, senior halfback, and Nolan Cromwell, senior quarterback, has surpassed his number of yards on 387 carries in three years with the Javahawks.
Williams also is No. 11 on the Kansas single season rushing chart with 762 vards on 198 carries in 1973, his senior year.
Williams' name probably would appear even more in the KU record books had the Jahwahys had a running offense. But Williams was a big influence on them, too.
"I HAD TO do it over again, I'd do the same thing," Williams said of teams trained in a wabone, and bocks piled up a lot of yards, he added.
"I had to block linebackers, catch passes. The things I did in college, and had to do in college, I've done here."
Don Fambrough, head football coach when Williams was at KU, said the pro set had helped and hurt Williams' college career.
"The kind of mess we were using didn't let him carry the ball that much," Fambrough said. "He but learned to do so many things well that he would do to later in the pros. He could block, catch the ball, make the big play. He was an all-round good back."
Williams, 6-2 and 194 pounds, was hampered by a hamstring injury for much of his career at KU. In fact, he was injured for most of his career.
"WHEN I FIRST got to KU, I had trouble with my hamstring," he said, "and kept having trouble with my hamstring because I wasn't used to coming from the warm climate of Houston. And then for some reason I tended to pull them a lot.
Farnbrough, now assistant director of the Williams Educational Fund, the athletic department's scholarship program, said, "After he hurt his hamstring, he lost some speed and quickness. His junior years he played with hardship and pain. Still, he played well for us."
Williams continued to have injury problems his rookie year with San Francisco. He suffered a broken wrist, keeping him out of games.
HE BECAME A starter for the 49ers at the beginning of last
THE BROADWAY OF BOOKS
Delvin Williams — San Francisco 49ers
season and has been there ever since. Williams finished the year as the 41st leader rusher with 631 yards on 117 carries, or 8.4 yards a season.
“If I keep myself in one piece, I’ll have a good year,” Williams said. “I don’t understand it. There are guys who have played 12-13 games.”
William was scholastically ineligible his freshman year at KU and came here on his own. Three years later he had accomplished the highest number of degrees.
"I was so proud of him," Fambrough said. "He didn't have a really good background in high school. His grades were really pretty bad."
"THAT SHOWS THE type of person he was. He was very conscientious. I can remember one day when he got a good grade on an English theme and showed it to me. He was all smiles. He's a perfectionist. I'm very happy for him."
But Williams is perplexed that he made it and some of the others didn't.
"I thought about that myself the other day," Williams said. "I can't really figure out why Dave (Jaynes) and Mitch (Sutton) didn't make it. Something must have happened to Dave's arm. Those guys I would make it. They were so highly sought, I can't understand it."
Many people couldn't understand how Williams made it, either.
Now look who's the star.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
M. B. HOLLINGTON
Steven Rhudy, 1972 graduate, says KU's tough professors prepared him well
Value of KU's training evaluated
It's Commencement at the University of Kansas and the just-graduated Jayhawk is unsure of his future.
"What's it like? he muses. "What if I don't find a job to my liking? what happens if I'm unprepared
Each spring several thousand KU grads face those same questions. Each student will find different answers to the questions, depending upon his knowledge to the University and his retention of that knowledge.
All KU schools and departments have different criteria to measure their students' abilities to move
into the "real world." By the same token, graduated students also can evaluate the training ability of new recruits.
In this special section, particular attention is
to evaluations by students and faculties of
savers.
Contents
MEDICAL CENTER page seven
BREAKING pages
PINE ARTS pages nine
ENGINEERING pages ten
EDUCATION pages eleven
Law school's reputation grows strong, grads sav
Five years ago, William Tanner was a student in the university of Kansas School of Law.
Later this month, Tanner will return to KU to interview job candidates who would like to work for the Los Angeles law firm of Latham and Watkins.
Tanner, in a sense, has made it.
This was the third successive year in which law school graduates scored 98 and 100 per cent on the Kansas and Missouri bar exams.
A HIGH SUCCESS rate on Kansas and Missouri bar examinations is another factor that lends prestige to the law school. In the July 1976 examinations, 98 per cent of the Kansas bar examinations passed. All 22 KU graduates who took the Missouri bar exam passed.
AT ONE TIME, six of the firm's lawyers were KU graduates. Three KU alumni remain on the staff and one is a partner in the firm. Tanner says that KU graduates are able to compete well with coworkers from California, Harvard and Yale universities and the University of Michigan, all of which have prestigious law schools.
As a member of the 100-man firm's recruiting committee, he will visit several other schools, including the University of Texas and the University of Southern California. KU's law school will be a part of the university's faculty of law for five years in fact, a failure of his alims matter, but because Latham and Watkins like the lawyers KU produces.
Graduates interviewed said high quality instruction and faculty members concerned
Other alumni, recruiters and law professors agree that high academic standards, a faculty concentration more on classroom instruction than on individual research and numerous opportunities for the student to contribute to the school's good reputation.
John Murphy, associate dean of the school, said. "Our reputation is very good."
Murphy said more national law firms were hiring KU graduates, a trend that continues.
with teaching were main reasons for the school's success. Each alumnus singled out a particular professor he thought was exceptional.
Steven Rhudy, a 1972 graduate who in 1974 joined the Lawrence firm of Rilling, Burkhead & Rhudy, Chartered, said law professors had to be tough to be good.
“IT ALL COMES back the old adage that the teachers that were the hardest are the ones I appreciate a lot more now,” Rhudy said. “I'm really responsive to those professors who really made you put your nose into the books, made you feel like
By Jim Cobb Staff Writer
a fool if you didn't have all the information in class.
"It's just like that before a judge in a case. If you don't have all the information, you'll lose your case. If you lose cases, you don't keep clients."
Barkley Clark, professor of law, said KU's school dealt with students on a one-to-one basis, unlike at his alma mater, Harvard.
"We'd never get to meet the teachers," Clark said. "The classes were enormous; the teacher was so good."
Clark said KU's faculty was better prepared and concentrated more on teaching than instructors at many other law schools.
ANOTHER RECRUITER, Robert Driscoll, who works for Stinson, Mag, Thomson, McEvers and Fizzell in Kansas City, Mo., characterized KU's law school as one of the most dynamic additions, he said, today's graduates have a better cramen of the practical aspects of law.
"They're not so much kept in an ivory or in a purely academic environment."
George Corgins, professor of law, said KU's law students were now better prepared to take on the job he came here seven years ago. He said that entrance qualifications were stiffer now and
that jobs for graduates had become harder to get, motivating students to work harder.
"When I first started there was much social ferment," Coggins said. "Frequently the substance of the law wished to be in a place where swallowed up leaved in ideological discussions that had more to do with social ferment than the subject of the course."
SOCIAL PROBLEMS remain a concern of the School of Law, but they now are an object of activist programs and not purely academic discussion. Law students may participate in the Douglas County Legal Aid Society, which provides legal assistance for juveniles involved in criminal defense Project, which provides defense counsel for indigent prison inmates; and in special clinics, which focus on such problems as juvenile delinquency.
Besides providing a service to individuals and groups that need help, such programs are valuable experience for the student who is new to the academic world for a job in the legal profession.
ROVERT OVERMAN, who works in labor law for the Wichita firm of Martin, Cooper, Churchill & Friedel, said he had no trouble making the transition from his 1973 graduation to his job after prior exposure to such programs.
"There's no substitute for actually practicing 'law,' he said. "Schools provide a ground, but you need experience, exposure to the law and a chance to work with it."
Serving as a clerk for district or county attorneys is another means of gaining experience. Such opportunities are limited, and many students can't participate.
Blake Hudek, a 1974 graduate who is now a lawyer with Hudson and Mullies in Fort Scott, said he wasn't prepared for general practice by his academic background at
"THERE'S NO WAY law school could have done it," he said. "I had to learn most of it out here."
Hudson said, for example, that he didn't
See LAW page six
"We don't necessarily have to hire new faculty, but we do need more equipment. We're not set up to use new equipment properly. We try to make the most out of outside speakers, visiting companies, movies, government publications and video tapes."
Ernest Angino Professor of geology
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Glamour jobs rare for natural science graduates
Even when a graduate finds a job, the battle to succeed may be only half over. The job must be satisfying for the student's educational investment to keep paying off.
Some recent graduates of the University of Kansas natural sciences department were pleased with work and had fewer students are all the graduate happy with working in their profession?
"I hate it," says Richard Van Dyke, a geology graduate who received his M.A. at KU last year. Van Dyke, 25, is working at the University Co. in Casper, Wyoming, in oil exploration.
CHARLES KOCH, now a professor in geography at the University of Nebraska, said, "It's okay, but it wasn't exactly what I wanted. However, it is a close substitute."1
Koch, 33, has worked at NU for five years, and he graduated at B.A. in KU in 1966 and his Ph.D. last year.
The graduates interviewed seemed discontented with the organization and productivity that their occupation offered. They worked for something new in their line of work.
Van Dyke said he wasn't sure how long he would stay at his job, but it would probably be worth it.
"This job won't what I wanted and I'm still not sure what I want," he said.
Kevin Condon, professor of geography at Fort Hays State College, said he also thought about leaving his job soon. Condon received his M.A. at KU in fall 1975.
When he does get a new job, it is likely to be near his home town of Cleveland.
"I GOT MY present job because it just happened to come up," Condon said. "I would like to continue academic teaching at a university where some independent research or writing."
Condon plans to stay at Fort Hays until Christmas, then go to Greeley, Colo., to finish his dissertation to complete his doctorate requirements.
By Bryant Griggs Staff Writer
"I do what I want to do. I don't have a boss. And I investigate the subjects I want to work with."
Koch is also thinking of moving on.
to investigate, but I don't think I'll stay much longer," he said.
'Right now I'm thinking about getting a position at the U.N. or in the state department.'
THE GRADUATES, to their surprise,
found the professional world less interesting
and less competitive than school. The
students from college life to job was easy,
they said.
The educational background they received at KU, they said, was invaluable in their obtaining their current jobs. They had trouble naming many deficiencies in KU's educational system, although some said they weren't prepared for teaching.
The graduates agreed that, although students received good training in conducting laboratories and assisting classes, their ability to teach was below par.
Condon said, "At KU the education process reaches various fields in natural sciences, but they haven't given me any training in teaching classes. I had no experience in preparing lectures and class formats."
KU MCGREGOR, 29, who got an M.A. in geology at KU last year, he wished the wide background of information he got at KU had been more specialized.
Illinois University, where he now works as a professor, demands more specialization and emphasis on teaching ability, he said.
"IN THE PAST, professors had to learn to
"There's so much information through books and the use of television that professors are concentrating more on getting that information to the students," he
"At Illinois, professors evaluate graduates teaching classes through video tapes and how they make up tests. I would have liked to have had some sort of class at that helped students in our field improve their teaching skills," McGeorgie said.
Paul Burton, professor in physiology and cell biology, said that because of an "information explosion" there was less attention on how to teach.
teach on his own or were naturally born with it. Now there's just not that time.
"It would be really nice if the state was really interested in teaching people how to use geology," Ernest Angino, professor of geology, said there were two sides to the story.
"Assistants teach science lab classes in the laboratory or laboratory internships," he said. "Grading papers is the least of their work. With all this, graduates should be able to organize a science class."
kU graduates and professors said KU tried to teach the same material as other universities, but tried to teach it in a more direct, personal way.
McGregor said that KU had a completely different educational approach from other universities.
See GLAMOUR page six
6
Fridav. October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Glamour jobs rare...
From page five.
"At KU, the philosophy was to make education enjoyable and psychologically
AT ILLINOIS University, he said, it is more difficult.
"I call it a war of attrition—only the strongest get through it," he said. "People are much more demanding. At Kansas, it's much less structured."
Sutton, who taught at KU for 12 years and previously at the University of North Carolina and St. Olaf College in Minnesota, said emphasis at KU was more on teaching.
"The faculty has a real commitment to its students," he said. "There's a real concern for students in the graduate and undergrad programs at the school and teaching are nicely wedded here."
Angino said, "KU gives a lot more per-
sonal opportunities. It's much more open."
Angino taught three years at Texas A&M before coming to KU 10 years ago.
JOE EAGLEMAN *professor in*
teaching he thought the best way
to understand it.
background." The student should then concentrate in one area of his own choice, he said, so that he would have some expertise.
"The courses now are too diverse," Eagleman said. "We offer students a liberal education. We don't have a chance to specialize." He cautioned that too much of a broad background and not enough could cause problems in finding jobs.
"IT'S NOT THAT students have to know every detail, but if they learn certain basics and are taught the different sources of information they need, that they need to know." Eaichler said.
It's basically up to the teacher to determine what is essential and what is not. It depends on what the students are
Professors agreed that today's students were at least as interested in the natural world as they were in math and science.
"This has made teaching more of a challenge." Angino said. "It's more time consuming with all the information we must give."
If there is anything Burton sees that is different in today's students from students in the past, it is their lack of communication and motivation.
"STUDENTS HAVE remained quite stable, academically," he said. "However, the quality of students has increased slightly.
Many scholastic programs are added to keep students abreast of changes in parliaments.
"Students are hesitant to speak out. They don't level with teachers, because of the possibility the teacher rnay take it the wrong way."
Annual meetings of the Geologist Association Board, which consists of all alumni, are excellent in reviewing programs and informing graduate students of recent trends in the business world, Angino said.
Short courses are also given in science fields that the University doesn't offer.
ANGINO SAID that the University still couldn't always keep up with the changes.
Law school's ...
From page five
know many court procedures, how to file petitions or much about writing contracts. "I didn't even know how to take a statement from a witness." he said.
Hudson said that if he had worked for Legal Aid or be a clerk for a public attorney he would have adjusted more easily to the professional world. He said, however, that the school basically had a solid program.
COGGINS SAID that law schools didn't attempt to produce graduates who could go out after graduation and be 'a competent practitioner in all things.'
Rather, Coggins said, the primary goal of school is "to get students to think like adults."
Hudson said he doubted that law schools could really prepare a student well for everything he might encounter during his career.
Legal training by its nature involves a competitive, adversary relationship among students, Coggins said, a relationship that carries over to the classroom.
"It's not as cut and dried as medicine or other other professions," he said.
GRADUATES WHO went to work for larger firms said that if there were gaps in their educational backgrounds, special education teachers might adjust to their professional careers.
The law school's problem mentioned most was a lack of space and inadequate library resources. The department should be alleviated next year when the school moves into new Green Hall, now located at 705 W. University Drive.
Rhudy questioned whether the school might need some type of general practice course that would outline the offices and functions of various governments. He said a similar course was now offered at Washburn University's law school in Toekee.
KU STRESSES a national approach to
law, Rhudy said, rather than a Kansas law
award, which was at Washburn.
Some graduates said that Washburn favored a practical approach to law, as opposed to a more academic and abstract approach taken by KU.
Tanner said that in the past some law schools hadn't struck a balance between the two approaches of abstract theory and real-world knowledge. KU graduates had balanced backgrounds.
CLARK SAID presentation of theoretical ideas helped students understand basic principles because they must be able to solve problems in math, science and seminars, independent research papers and
clinics would help students gain practical experience.
For students in the third or sometimes second years, specialization may be made in areas of particular interest to them. Such areas include corporate or tax law, prison reform and defense of the poor and labor law.
Overman said work in labor law at KU had been excellent preparation for his future work in that area. He, like other graduates, said he was glad he came to KU.
"TVE BEEN away more than three years. I remember many of the good things and I've forgotten many of the problems we had." I wrote in my problems that I'd like to see changing.
"We don't necessarily have to hire new faculty, but we do need more equipment. We're not set up to use new equipment properly. We try to make the most out of outside speakers, visiting companies, government publications and video tapes."
Outside recruiters don't usually come and interview students for job offers, except in the summer.
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Ray Tickner, coordinator of recruitment and placement at Exkon, said that the company will recruit quite a few geology students. But he said there was not one set hiring pattern.
P
"For us to come to KU and recruit, graduates must be very good in the first year."
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By asking for Announcement 421 forms, he said, graduate students with a bachelor's degree can job interview in such fields as biology, environmental science, forestry and other life science fields.
He said that the job market in geography was small, especially in meteorology, but that graduates could get jobs as city or state agents or in or government and private businesses.
Vernon Geisler of University Placement Service said the best way for graduate students in natural sciences to obtain better job opportunities was to get a placement application from the U.S. Civil Service Commission.
JAMES SHORTRIDGE, assistant professor of geography, said no agency came to his department to do any work. He did it by going to certain agencies themselves.
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Med Center furthers elimination of classroom, clinical difficulties
Midwives and doctors driving horse-drawn buggies have almost been laid to rest with the advent of hospitals' ultra-modern ambulance and helicopter ambulse service.
That evolution occurs daily at the KU Medical Center.
Changes are obvious when they occur over long spans of time, but there are also more subtle changes in the evolution of medicine and its application.
$10.00
Alan Thompson, Med Center physiologist, said instructors try to predict where the practice of medicine is going and don't just teach students for today.
"FOR EXAMPLE," he said, "it's very obvious that we're heading in the direction of more use of instrumentation to diagnose, and so we think it's important for medical students to understand some of the instrumentation.
"We have to try to teach them stuff they stuff
be handling in 15 or 20 years instead of only
the first."
Besides adjusting the training to fit the future, training is also updated when it's shown to be behind the times. Complaints and suggestions of the students in the health care programs are a big part of the impetus to change.
"There were some kids in my class that had never seen a patient while training." Cheryl Raupp Smith, a 1972 physical therapy graduate, said.
The students' first contacts with patients was during their semester of affiliation with a hospital, she said. The physical therapy department at that time required one semester of training at the Med center and one semester at an affiliated hospital.
NOW, SHE SAID, the requirement has been expanded to two years at the Med Center.
Changes in physical therapy training also extend beyond the educational realm.
"As a student, you couldn't measure me as rebellious," Smith said, "but there was one person who didn't."
She said there were very strict clothing regulations which required girls in physical therapy to wear white cotton uniforms and other protective clothing at a time when the mini-skirt was in style.
"If you could get away with it at mid-knee, knew you were lucky," she said. Clothing regulations have been relaxed since then.
Stephen Roth, the only male nursing student in the December 1973 graduating class, said he had seen a lot of room for his students and that nurses in nursing training at the Med Center.
In his clinical training, a nursing student would have only one or two patients to look after and would be heavily supervised by an instructor, he said.
"AT THAT TIME the nursing program was dwellingly heavy on theoretical aspects and kind of soft-pedaling clinical aspects, such as floor experience." he said.
"That's not very realistic."
The experience that he received outside of school training—working as a nursing assistant at the Med Center—made him competent as a registered nurse, he said.
A blend of theory and more real-life experience, he said, would be the best precept.
Besides criticizing a lack of realistic patient care experience, Roth also said he had been disappointed in classroom instruction.
"THE TEACHING was horrible," he said.
Instructors weren't the only problem, he said. Conditions such as little desks and cramped lecture halls weren't conducive to learning.
Beth said he probably hadn't been optimistic about the program because he'd had a chip on his shoulder during his training. As the only male in his class, he said, he had felt some pressure because of personal conflicts.
He started work at Trinity Lutheran Hospital after graduation and was in the
By Barbara Rosewicz
Staff Writer
graduate nursing program at the Med Center for two months before dropping out.
"I SAID TO myself, 'I'm not going to do this all over again.' It was the same atmosphere I'd been in for two years—the people teaching me the real razzmatzz.
Similar charges by students have caused a change in the nursing curriculum, Jean Watson, new director of the Undergraduate School of Nursing, said.
Roth is now in his second year of a graduate program in public administration.
Clinical contact work has been increased by 38 per cent over the former curriculum, she said. The first products of the new training will graduate in May. Therefore, no evaluation results of the new program have been collected yet, she said.
WATSON, WHO came to the Med Center this year, said she hadn't seen a faculty work together so well and so productively in a long time.
The problem of cramped, improvised classrooms has been eased for all students this fall by added classroom space in the new Orn-Major building on the Med Center campus, Mary Ann Kasper, a maternal health nursing instructor, said.
Recognizing both the advantages and limitations of programs aids the evolution process and puts KU's program in per- sonance with health education in other schools.
Robert Parker, a Leavenworth general practitioner who graduated from KU in 1971, said he thought KU was one of the best medical schools in his country. KU is ranked among the top academic aspects compared to graduates from other medical schools, he said.
FOR EXAMPLE, schools on the East Coast emphasize academics and don't emphasize the practical experience he thinks is valuable, he said.
He would like to see more attention given to individual students through smaller lecture classes and better faculty-student relationships, he said.
However, Parker said, he saw limitations and room for improvement at the Med.
Also, the family practices need to be emphasized so that doctors will be better prepared to handle the common cases, he said. Because the Med Center handles more of the exceptional cases, he said, it is kind of an artificial environment.
THE NEED FOR more experience in dealing with common problems was also recognized by Doma Vaughan, a Newton doctor and 1871 KU graduate.
It's important to teach students about the rare diseases, she said, and the emphasis
Private practice is different from work with hospital patients at the Med Center, she said. For example, she said, Med Center students order all types of tests for a patient and never think of the test's expense because they never see the bill.
should be shifted to the more common problems that doctors face in private
AFTER SHE started her practice, she had to be more aware of the test's expense and tell the patient in advance, Vaughan told me. The patient was unexpected $10 bill for tests, she said.
Vaughan said KU had a stronger clinical orientation than many other medical
Timothy Burch, a 1972 graduate in residence at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., said he had worked with some of the students in the faculty of Missouri at Kansas City (UMKC).
He wasn't too impressed with UMKC's system, he said, because it involves very little basic science background, compared to the work in the sciences during the first half of the training.
"Oddly enough, I don't wish I'd gone to a different school," he said. "I feel most of my competence in nursing came in working at the Med Center. That was very valuable. I'm still enthusiastic when I remember my work experience."
Marie Homberger, a 1974 nursing graduate who now works on the Med Center's surgical floor, also said her working experience has made the most valuable practical preparation.
DESPITE CRITICISMS of the KU nursing department, Roth said he had some doubts about her.
"For my particular area of interest, the preparation was adequate," she said, "but I felt that I needed more preparation so I got more."
HOMBERGER SAID she took a six week cardio-coronary class on the Med Center before she started her job on the surgery floor.
Lynn Jeffries, an August 1976 nursing graduate who works in the Med Center's neo-natal care unit, said the Med Center could prepare a nurse as well as any other
"It depends on what you want to put into it," she said.
A BACHELOR'S degree and four years of medical school prepare a doctor for at least three more years of training in a residency before he privately practices medicine.
Med Center training has the ultimate objective of preparing students to step into leadership roles.
KU's nursing program involves students' last two years of undergraduate study and prepares them to step immediately into a job as registered nurses.
There are also 15 fields of allied health care training offered at the Med Center. These programs for ferr students degrees or certificates in such areas of study as medicine, emergency medical technology, and emergency medical intensive care technology.
"We give them the science background they need before they learn medicine and surgery. We try to give them as broad and thorough of a background as possible." he
Lawrence Sullivan, a physiology professor, said medical students study the basic sciences for 18 months and then do clinical training for 18 months.
NURSING TRAINING is two-fold,
Watson said. Nurses are trained to be practitioners and are also qualified for leadership positions after some practical work experience.
An emergency medical intensive care program, an example of one of the allied health sciences, prepares individuals to give advanced life support therapy to patients before they reach the hospital. Mary Beth Skelton, associate director for emergency mobile intensive care training, said.
Students who complete the 12-month program and obtain the program's certificate can work as paramedics, like in the KARE emergency units, she said.
Placement of health care professionals isn't as difficult as placing graduates of many other schools. The great demand for doctors, nurses and allied health workers has resulted in communities searching out professionals when they graduate.
DAVID WAXMAN, vice chancellor for student affairs, said medical school graduates are matched with hospitals offering residency programs.
Nursing students find jobs through advertisements in nursing journals, lists that are posted outside the nursing office or on a bulletin board at agency agencies in other cities. Walson said.
Jack Madkoff, a placement officer for the Kansas chapter of the American Physical Therapy Association, said a clearing house program was implemented by employers and physical therapy students.
"they all find jobs," he said. "It's just a matter of finding one they like in a com-
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Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Business grads praise background training
Deborah Teeter hasn't traveled far geographically; she college days at the University of Arizona.
Now, instead of spending most of her days taking business courses in Summerfield Hall, she spends most of her days in Strong School and serves as a consultant, research and planning at KU.
Teeter agrees with many other business school graduates when she says that she is a very good teacher. She was received in the KU business school. She said her business school education had "provided technical and conceptual tools to solve problems in administration and organization problems."
JOIN MAUER, who graduated with an MBA from KU in 1975 and works in the trust of a large corporation. Lawrence, says his business education has given him a "good, solid base of learning."
Maurer said the KU business school does a "darn good job of preparing students."
David Lowerthal, a 1976 graduate who works for the Less, Barrand and Scheher law firm, says the business school education "gives a good starting point and a good understanding on how to approach things logically."
But Lowenthal said he wished that he had received a more practical knowledge of the subject.
'When you start working you come across forms you wouldn't run into in
MIKE MILLER is another who hasn't traveled far since graduating. Miller, who received a master's degree in business in 2013 and spent two days as Kansas University program directors.
"The business school gave me a strong background in the work I was doing and it helped me to function better in my job," he said.
However, not all graduates interviewed were full of praise for their education.
Dennis Leiker, a 1974 graduate who now works for the Peavey Corp. in Kansas City, Mo., he wasn't adequately prepared when he began work.
"The MBA helps you get in the door, but 90 per cent of my education wasn't needed," he said.
Leiker said he had needed more business writing and in building together resumes.
"The school also needs more guest speakers from the business world to help introduce the students to reality." Leiker said.
As pleased as most graduates were with
the business school, they weren't as complimentary about the school as the business recruiters interviewed, who come to KU to recruit graduates.
Norman Schwartzkopf, college recruiter for Hallmark Cards in Kansas City, Mo., said KU graduates received a good education.
"MANY OF THEM already have some
By Gerry O'Conner
work experience and a lot have had to work their way through school," he said. "They're people oriented, have been involved in activities, and many have had leadership roles. We hire five KU students last year and all are still working with us."
Stephen Lightstone, college recruiter for Peat, Marmell, Mitchell and Co., a public accounting firm in Kansas City, Mo., said the students attracted to KU were better caliber students than those at any other Big Eight school.
"The KU business school gives a
theoretical base to work with, whereas
other schools gear their programs more
tightly and thus are certified public
accountant) exam," he said.
MANY ACCOUNTANTS must pass the law to be admitted as lawyers must pass the law as justices.
Although some students and business representatives say the business school must teach students world, they still must find a job. The person responsible for helping KU business students find jobs is Fred Madau, placement director for the School of Business.
Madaus said that during the 1975-76 school year, 79 per cent of the students who had graduated from the business graduate college were employed, 11 per cent returned to graduate school, 6 per cent joined the military and 4 per cent were undecided as to what they would do.
Of the students graduating from the undergraduate business program and who have earned a degree in your department.
placement, 35 per cent went to graduate school and 14 per cent were devised as to
be employed.
MADAUS SAID HE did everything he could to get students jobs.
"I schedule on-campus interviews, help students write resumes, post job openings, organize job searches and mail job resumes to employers," he said.
The task of turning out students who are prepared to step right into the "real world"
Joseph Pichler, dean and professor of business, said he kept in touch with the business community to determine what businesses expected graduates to know.
Pichler said he had his students read the Wall Street Journal, Fortune and other journals and then critically analyze issues in them.
HE SAID HE was finding it more and more challenging to prepare for classes.
Shane Moriarty, assistant professor of business, said that in accounting there was
a well-defined body of knowledge that account gradients must know.
Moriarity said that accounting was similar to law in that the courses changed with time but that the basics stayed constant.
GLENN JOHNSON, professor of business, said he thought teaching was more challenging now than it was 10 years ago.
"Students are more willing to speak out and disagree with you." he said.
Leroy Randolf, assistant process
business, said the material he presented in his classes was based on his experiences as a businessman and lawyer.
He said he thought that students had discovered academically in recent years, but it was a difficult task.
HE SAID THE School of Business was considering several proposals for revising the curriculum, including adding a technical writing course.
"Students need to write better, especially in their own specific fields." he said.
J. Harmond McNish, adjunct professor of business, said he stressed things in his courses that he thought would be of practical value.
Nemiah, who taught here from 1946 to 1948, he brought students were much the same.
"Students come to the University with more knowledge now," he said. "They take things in high school that they used to take here."
MCNISH SAID HE thought the level of knowledge was higher now.
"I see nothing different in this area
writing today is just as good as it used to be."
The competition for grades is much stiffer now. he said.
"In the late '50s people were satisfied with a C. Now they take a C quite seriously. It's good to have students striving for better grades, but grade inflation isn't good."
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Creative and novel job searches keep fine arts graduates occupied
MUSIC! MUSIC! MUSIC!
PLAY NO. MON 14, TUN 15, TUES 21
Graduates of the School of Fine Arts and the department of speech and drama at the University of Kansas may be creative in more ways than one.
Paul Grav. 1969 graduate, owns local music store and leads Dixieland band
Besides applying their creativity to music, acting, painting and design jobs, many of the graduates exhibit creativity when they are looking for jobs.
that, literally, produces some焕
and oftentimes novel searches for jobs.
*PERFORMANCE IS so much a matter of opportunity—being in the right place at
By Bill Calvert
Staff photo by JAY KOELZEI
Staff Writer
Except for in the department of music education, there is no formal placement service for fine arts and drama graduates. That, naturally, produces a frantic
the right time," James Ralston, associate professor of choral music said.
He said most music graduates relied on faculty members who had contacts with potential employers, while other students, in the higher education centers as New York to find employment.
"Students interested in performing often have to work in a bank or sell shoes while attending school," said. "Performance is a tough life. Many graduates wind up teaching in colleges."
Paul Gray, a music education major who graduated in 1968, is well-known in the world for his work with The Gang, a Dixieland band, and as the owner of Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 282 Massachusetts
Gray said he found the professors in the music department very helpful when he worked with them.
Gray said working with people in a musical environment was his most work experience.
"ALWAYS FELT it was a great school," Gray said. "I learned a lot. I had a lot of good teachers who taught me organization."
Carol Wilcox, a voice major who graduated in 1968, said the best preparation she received for her career as an opera stace at KU, is the opportunity to perform on stage at KU.
"Being on stage helps you to test yourself." she said.
THE GENERAL music background Wilcox received in music theory courses, plus liberal arts courses also helped her career. she said.
While Wilcox was attending school, she got to perform semiprofessionally, she said, including a State Department tour of Eastern Europe in which she sang opera, performed of speech and drama was instrumental in her this opportunity, she said.
"I'm happy with my background there," she said. "You have to be a well-rounded person, and a background in the liberal arts certainly doesn't hurt you."
Wilcox went to New York in 1969 after her graduation, and landed a job singing with the New York Metropolitan Opera. She is also a performer, Mo., now in the opera, "La Traviata."
Barnes said that when he was in high school, he knew he would make a career of writing music, and that KU provided an excellent opportunity for him to do so.
JIM BARNES is a KU graduate who worked close to home. Barnes, a 1974 music composition graduate, is assistant director of KU bands. He writes music for the bands and directs a KU jazz band, the band that plays at basketball games.
Although the School of Fine Arts is strong academically, it is not perfect. Barnes said, because the school was overly academic and not practical enough in composition.
Barnes contrasted KU's philosophy with the teaching philosophy of music conservatories, which teach their students individually. Students who graduate from a music conservatory they don't know what's going on when they professionalize with an orchestra, he said.
“IT STRUCK ME that they were preparing me to be a music theory teacher and not a composer,” he said. “But later on it would be a different kind of teacher.” could teach me to comembece except me.
KU provides good experience for playing in ensembles, Barnes said, an essential experience for a person who plans to play professionally with an orchestra.
Drama's counterpart to the music conservatory is the academy. Tom Rea, professor of speech and drama, said KU's teaching philosophy was opposite of a
drama academy's, which primarily teaches acting.
"THE TOTAL package is geared to exposing the student to as much as possible of the total theater environment," he said. "A student who is into acting, for example, should know about the other elements of acting, including character and production methods and technique."
Rea said the theater department had a large production program in which students could practice using the production methods they learned in the classroom.
RUTH FORMAN, who spent five years doing shows in Hollywood and Los Angeles, came back to her home town, Kansas City, Mo., to attend "Solid Gold Cadillac," a theater she runs. She credits the director she worked with at KU with the success she has had in acting.
Like the music department, Rea said, there is no formal placement service for theater graduates, but students need not bead for cultural centers to find jobs.
"I gained more knowledge of theater in my two years at KU him I did in five years in Hollywood," she said. "The directors at KU are truly creative, interested people. The faculty is very diverse with some exceptions, were interested only in the commercial aspects, not in talent."
Another KU theater graduate is Charles Kephart, who is now director of the Salina Community Theater. Kephart received his master's degree in 1960 and went on to establish the Salina theater, which, he said, had its theater in Kansas with its own facilities.
KEPHART, WHO HAS directed most of the plays at the Salina theater for the last 17 years, said KU prepared him well for his directing responsibilities.
The business management program in the theater department has improved since 1978.
"There are so many opportunities for a graduate student to participate in acting and research activities," he said, and the students in his activities prepare students well for careers.
"They have good teaching in all areas of theater directing and do a good job of preparing students for jobs," he said. "Of course, whether or not a student gets a job depends on the student. They still have to have that get up and go."
The only deficiency in KU's theater department that Kephart noted was its inability to prepare him for management and public relations responsibilities.
"One of the reasons I came back was because I felt I had a good graduate experience."
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Wright said other aspects of the theater department were as good as they were when he was a child.
After teaching at the University of Texas, in Austin, Texas, and the University of Oklahoma, in Norman, Okla., Wright returned to KU this year.
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RICHARD BRANHAM, associate
SECREATIVE page 11
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The University of Kansas Alumni Association invites your membership and participation.
Write to us at 403 Kansas Union, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
10
Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Engineers' preparation touches most bases
Engineering professors at the University of Kansas seem to take the blanket approach to instructing their students: touch them, make them least lightly - but make sure they cover it.
Don Daugherty, professor of electrical engineering, said he follows that reasoning.
"We give our students the basic tools to learn all of the fields of electrical engineering. It is then their job to learn more when they get a job."
Daugherty said students received a broad education to prepare them for the working industry, where they might not necessarily know what they may want to go into management, be said.
BECAUSE THE electrical engineering school's curriculum, is always changing, he said, the school will keep up with industries' needs.
Jerry Jenks, who has a specialized job as manager of the flight research laboratory in Nichols Hall, may have some job problems in the future.
Jenkins, who was graduated in 1975 with a master's degree in aerospace engineering, will move to Washington, D.C., to become a chair of the National Committee of Science and Technology.
Jenkins said that he didn't expect many problems but that the job was going to be hard. "I don't think I'm going to do it."
MANY PROFESSORS said specializing wasn't the best way to get an engineering degree.
Don Green, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, agreed with the other professors that the engineering school didn't want to become specialized.
"There is no way we can specifically
prepare each student exactly for a job."
Green said that there would always be problems in engineering jobs but that the grads would know how to handle the problems because of their KU education.
TO ALLEVIATE some potential problems, he said, those who think they will go into management should take some business courses and those who think they will do high technical work should do research and development work at school.
Rus Sill, a 1972 civil engineering graduate who now works for Burns and McDonnell in Kansas City, Mo. said he was surprised at how the real world turned out.
"What I envisioned it to be and what it turned out to be were two different things," he said. "School was a lot more strict in the past and it was harder to do here. Here we appraise a lot of the time."
Sill said it was probably easier for him to adjust to his job because he was working on it.
He said that the engineering school should such engineers' client relations and how to work with them.
"I'm not good at writing," Sill said. "Most of the engineers who have to write reports don't know."
"THE ENGINEERING school does offer a technical writing course, but the course is concerned with grammar and such. We should have two semesters of technical writing that are concerned with engineering-related subjects."
Steve Coffman also works at Burns and McDonnell. He was graduated in 1974, when he was 32, with a degree in civil engineering.
"Even though I was a lot older than everyone else," Coffman said. "I felt a close
relationship with the other students at school, I went back to school because I felt it was worth it.
Coffman is moving from college to work was easier than going from work to college.
"My GI BILL barely made the house payments," he said.
IT WOULD BE easier for graduates to get into the world work if the courses at
By Chris Riggs
school were designed toward real world problems, Coffman said, such as a course on how to make out environmental impact assessment reports.
"I don't feel civil engineering gave us enough information about the en-
gineering," she said.
Coffman said the assessment reports were very important because "if there is an impact on the environment because of our work we can't go ahead with the project.
"The school is very solid in developing managerial skills and the basic tools of math."
He said he didn't receive enough information about topics such as affirmative language.
BLACK AND VAETCH engineering
comamutants in amassage firm, who also employ
them as engineers.
C. B. Hogan, who has worked at Black and Veach since he was graduated in 1967 with a degree in civil engineering, said students must know to think all engineering is done with numbers.
learn how to write, even as design engineers." he said.
Hogan mid graduate had a much easier job in a job if they knew what they wanted to do.
"At one time or another they'll have to
Les Lampy, another Black and Veatch employee, who was graduated in 1973 with a degree in civil engineering, said "I had no experience other than the fact that I enjoyed college."
LAMPE, WHO SAID he has worried more about money since he's been working than he did while he was in school, said courses to instill a real world attitude in students.
John Robinson, a civil engineer at Black
Watch, was who graduated from KU in
1960.
"School and work are completely different things," Robinson said. "Getting into the routine of work is exciting, but college is more fun than work."
Do Boon, a Black and Veatch employee and 1974 KU graduate in civil engineering, said he had trouble applying classroom theories to his job.
HE SAID that persons who had worked a summer adjusted much easier to their jobs and that students in engineering school are able to learn by experience as possible to theory to help them in jobs.
Jerry Stoltenberg, a 1965 graduate of KU with a degree in civil engineering who works for the Kansas State Health System, taught KU's KU's engineering, program had few gaps.
John Deems, recruiter for the Bell telephone system, said "There are several
things we look at when we interview a person's past is a good indicator of his future.
WHEN LOOKING for a research and development engineer, he said, he looks at a student's academic record and when he needs to look for he looks for leadership and good grades.
"KU engineering grads have no problems in getting jobs," Deems said. "I can't say that for some of the other engineering schools."
DON DEMICHELE, a recruiter for Procter and Gambia in Kansas City, Mo., said he looked at an engineering graduate's background, leadership potential, school activities, and technical or creative work experience.
However, he said a lack of work ex-
ception would rule out a person for job
consideration.
"I talked to a girl who was a cocktail waitress," DMeichele said. "Her job created some conflict experiences but she got through so I rated her high."
STANLEY ALEMAN, director of engineering services at Phillips Petroleum Company in Bartlesville, OK., said, "My primary responsibility is to see what the needs of KU are and how to fulfill these needs. My second responsibility is to see how I can help the engineering students at KU."
Allenman has also worked to help black engineers.
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Friday, October 15, 1978
es
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Experiments, new teaching ideas mark education school's progress
The School of Education has moved in the past 10 years to keep up with the times.
In trying to improve its job of teaching teachers, the school has encouraged greater student participation, experimented with new teaching methods and ideas, and helped prepare students for education and noneducation jobs.
"I started in insurance a year before I graduated, and have been at it now for six and a half years," Meade said. "I really enjoy it."
Julio Meade, 1019 Klasak, graduated from
Columbia in 1979 with a B.S. in Spanish.
But he left school to work as a chef.
He said that he hadn't bothered to look for any jobs teaching Spanish after graduating.
"BEING IN EDUCATION, you have access to so many other fields of study. Doing something like this is a challenge, and adapting to it wasn't that hard," he said.
Mary Lowther, who graduated from the school in 1972 with a B.S. in social studies, is teaching American history at Manhattan High School.
"I got exactly what I wanted, and it took me only four months to find a job," she said. The variety of courses required at KU was a big help in her area, she said.
"My professors were excellent teachers," she said. "The classes were well organized and they included a lot of field work for me to teach teaching. It really makes a difference."
IVAN BARRIENTOS, professor of administrations, foundations and higher education, said that the changing teaching methods were due to the increased
awareness of students over the past 10 years.
"Students have always been eager to learn," he said. "But now, some barriers to education have diminished. Students are less inhibited to express, receive and interpret new knowledge. They're more sophisticated."
He said that teachers need to be less inhibited, too, and should be ready to defend themselves.
HE SAID THAT he formerly thought students bring to learn only the subject they knew.
"They ignored the other fields that are interrelated. We try to teach them that their
By Paul Jefferson
field of expertise, whatever it may be, is related to political, economical and social phenomena.
Henry Elliott, a 1972 graduate in social sciences, is the doctorate degree in social studies at U.S. colleges.
"The professors in the school taught a lot of methodology, how to get things done in a course," he said. "In graduate school, the emphasis is on theory and research. Getting show me background and perspective can show me how back-to-school apply what I learned in the school."
Ruth Noyce, associate professor of curriculum and instruction, said that she tried to instill creativity in her students so they could turn, can motivate their future pupils.
"I TRY to integrate practicality with knowledge," she said. "I try to facilitate
student to learn on his own, which should be a lifelong skill."
She said the school had come a long way in organizing regular classroom instruction with outside resources, and in helping each student to develop his style of teaching.
"Today we have confident, sophisticated students, not 'spoon feet,' as in the past.
Richard Miller graduated from the school in 1972 and taught a course in American government in Desoto before going to work as father's furniture store here in Iowa.
"THE TEACHING and the curriculum in the school is fine," he said. "It's just that I decided that I didn't want to go into teaching full-time."
Phil McKnight, associate professor of curriculum and instruction, said that it was a challenge to both students and teachers to adapt to the changing needs of society.
HE SAID THAT it was important to give
education and evaluation to students in the schools.
"We know more about different learning and teaching styles. Our role is to help prepare other professionals who will be able to help children." he said.
"I want students to leave here as realistic optimists, with a healthy dose of curiosity to learn."
When graduates are ready to leave, they have an ample supply of job sources to choose from, according to Herold Regier, director of educational placement services.
"last year, we had about 2,700 graduates placed in jobs, and that was quite an increase over the previous year. But we had another year of placement bulletins we issue each year."
Creative, novel . . .
From page nine
professor of design, is another KU graduate who liked KU enough as a student to become a teacher here. He said the general background education that the design department provided through liberal arts classes made students well informed.
"With a broad understanding of the world, they grow faster into more and more informed persons," he said. "The students get a good basic education utilizing the resources of the University. The approach is general, but specific enough to be a lub."
Apparently the formula works. Many KU design graduates, grading in Hallmark
PETE LEMKE, manager of corporate employment at Haliark, said that the company hired design majors from 55 and 70 countries, who were among those most frequently hired.
'KU people compete favorably with students from other universities.' Lemke
said, "The quality of our work meets with our standards of imagination, creativity."
Joe Ison, a 1964 KU graduate in design worked with Hallmark for a short time before he became a free-lance designer and has done work for such companies as Sainsbury's, the Unilever Group, Purina. He said he found the general design courses at KU to be conductive to creativity.
"The general design courses were constructed in such a way that we could utilize our own ideas in design," he said. "They would equip an equipment rather than restrict creativity."
Unlike design, painting and sculpture is a more difficult area to find a job, Tom Moore, a 1970 painting and sculpture graduate, said.
THE CLASSES gave me a good understanding of fine art, he said. The only concern was how to balance it.
Moore works in a silkscreen printing shop in Kansas City, Mo. He learned silkscreen
printing while earning his graduate degree at the University of New York in Albany, he
Bob Sudlow, professor of painting and sculpture, said current graduates seemed to have a better chance for successful self-employment in painting and sculpture.
"THERE HAS been a renewal of public interest in artists' work," Sudlow said. "The situation is better than it was. A lot of them have they to teach to support themselves."
Sudlow, a 1942 graduate of KU, said one of the best aspects of the art department was its basic approach to art, which allows him to showcase their own styles of painting or sculpture.
"A lot of students come in with stereotyped ideas about what art should be," he said. "We try to shake them up to show them different ways it can be. A lot of teachers are in trying to enlarge their scope. They have to unlearn things to learn new things."
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12
Friday, October 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Joe Smith
HOT DONUTS NOW
Lines in late night worship for Joe's hot white counter light.
The man who brought Lawrence the all-night doughnut
FREDERICK M. CRAVEN
Midnight in Lawrence. Bars empty and cars cruising through the line of flashing yellow stoplights down the Ninth St. hill. A pair of large glass windows at labs are almost always lit: Joe's Bakery.
HOT DONUTS NOW glows a red neon sign in the bakery window, as if anyone needs a reminder. The cowbell clings on Joe's door as students move into line.
Outside, a jacked-up red Chevy races by on Ninth.
Forever flicked with flour. Joe savories a moment away from the board. It's there, bent over dough, that he's shaped his dream begun in baking school to run his own bakery.
"Grub up those doughnuts, ya hogs," the guys in the car shout, "Grab 'em up!"
SOON THE LINE of students, some bleary-eyed, some bellowing, most staring ahead at pastries, span the full length of a room. You can be sure you aren't forced to wait in line at Joe's; you are allowed to. You get the privilege of surviving until the instant you arrive at the display case and press your fingers lightly against the glass, pointing to your treasured
In the tidy, white-walled backroom, Joe M. Smith, the man who keeps doughnuts coming day and night, six days a week, sits among them in a six-foot shelf of pitted doughnut
"I'm busy, that's the name of my life," Joe says.
He's chubby-cheeted, has an easy smile and bears a hint resemblance to the face lift up outside on the Joe's sign above the windows.
JOE MOVES EASILY through the back room from machine to dough board, as if he could do it with his bright eyes closed. Sprinkles of dough dot the wooden floor, and the rich smell of butter and fresh-fried doughmats fill the shop.
"Cool weather's the best for sweet pastries," Joe says, bending over his three-foot high dough board. "We usually go through about 200 to 300 pounds of all kinds of sugar a day. When it gets hot, people stop grabbin' for sweets."
oees slices through the dough in long, even sets of strokes that last a breath and then snatches up the cut pieces on his thumb. When there are enough cutout centers, he waddens them into a ball and throws them back into the dough to mechanical rolling pin that fattens the dough.
In braids and jeans, Betty Wakins—who went to KU for three years and now works full-time at Joe's—takes the dough Joe has and cuts it into a deep fryer.
"WHEN I ROLL OUT of a dough, I know just about how many doughnuts I'll get out of it, give or take one maybe," he says.
"I work hard all night and can only about keep up with Joe," she says.
When the fried dough is sizzling, Betsy spears the doughnuts on a long stick, another them in Frosting and pours hot oil upon the opens to the front of the store. She gets her pick of the dripping-fresh doughnuts, usually eating two or three blueberries, doughnuts a night.
"IT TRY NOT TO eat any doughnuts any more," Joe says, looking through the window to the 1. a.m. line in the store. "I always know where to get bread. I put a few away any way during the night."
Mrs. Smith, who is working the counter, scribbles a phone-in order on a white keyboard. He opens the window to her husband. He tells his son, Ralph, that he reshaves, to frost the cupcakes. food cupcakes
“As song as I remember I've been doing something around here,” Halm said. When the vat of chocolate frosting is almost gone, you can see the layer of frosting on the cakes with his fingers.
"I used to be sweeping the floor, so I guess I not a promotion." he says.
JOE WASN'T MUCH older than his son when he began work in a Massachusetts Street bakery after serving as a cook in the Navy in World War II. He learned the recipe for biscuits, and he could at the bakery and attending the American Institute of Baking in Chicago.
"I lived on pastries and coffee for a week at baking school when I ran out of money," he says, back again at the dough board, "and I'm now learning how to bake fruit cake that we."
Joe bought a wholesale bakery down the block from the place in 1852 and moved it to their new home.
"When I was runnin' just wholesale, boys from Sigma Nu would come down and look in my window in the early morning hours and ask if they could buy up some stuff. They didn't turn him down and pretty soon they had all their friends back in with them."
SIX OR SEVEN customers came in the doughnut shop the first few days Joe opened it to the public. Now on most days the doughnut on the door dongs more than 1,000 times.
Jojex takes a rare break from his work and pushes back the paper cap on his balding
"When my night business began picking up so fast I can shoot. We open at the bar, then have a quick dinner."
So he is now open 24 hours a day except from 6 p.m. Saturday to 6 p.m. Sunday.
The rest has deed invade but you:
"For a while I dreamed of opening a room, but once you're past 40 you just concentrate on making a living," he says. "No, this店 is it now, and if my son doesn't want to take it over, someday we'll close down."
THE BOOMING BUSINESS has allowed Joe to buy a farm at west of town with 60 cattle he can hass over during Christmas vacation on the month the shop is closed in the summer.
"You get pretty well bleached out in here
in the winter," he says, giving some dough out of the long black hair on his arms. "So we like to spend plenty of time outside on the farm during the summer."
Then, back to the board he goes to nimbly
mead long rows of dough into what will soon be
pasture.
"I got to keep movin' 'cause they buy about whatever I make," he says, "if there's any left over I feed it to my cows when I get home in the morning. The cows come runnin' when they see me, so I better have something for them."
JOE ZIPS over to a massive old gas oven and fires up its burners. Every night at 2 a.m. he bakes pastries and the breads used for sandwiches in the oven.
And still there's line in the store and cars pulling up outside. The trash can by the door is stuffed with crumpled doughnut sacks, a shaved ice pitcher, and next-door gas station drive is invisible, covered by parked cars. Down the Ninth street hill streaks the jacked-up red Chevy, an old blue Cadillac car and the driver and two other guys jump, shuffle inside to wait in line.
CIPHER
Joe's arm arcs across the board and a trail of sliced dough follows. He slides them off his thumb into the frying rack.
19. 食品加工
“It’s a nice place to get away from it all, a nice place to be.” Joe savs of his rolling 120 acre spread and doughnut house used of town
Story
by Greg Bashaw
Photos
by Jay Koelzer
---
A bed with pillows and blankets covered in messy papers.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Sedaka woos young and old
Vol.87 No.40
Mondav. October 18, 1976
See story page eight
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
A
Cromwell's final exit
before the end of KU's 28-10 loss to Okhomaa Saturday. Severe right knee injury led his KU football team. See story page six.
Flanked by security guards and football team managers, KU quarterback Nolan Cromwell headed for the locker room shortly.
Debate merely an introduction
The American public received little more than an introduction to the two vice presidential candidates in Friday's debate between Kansas State. Bob Dole and Minnesota Sen. Walter Mondale, according to Penn University, Parson, University of Kansas debate coach.
Paterson was on two panels that judged the
Edwardian House associated Press and the
Heart Newspaper.
"The American public now has a clear idea of who the vice presidential candidates are." Parson said yesterday.
THE DEBATE Illustrated who was the winner of the race for Parson and panel rated Montalvo, who, giving
him 25 points compared with Dole's 21.8.
thirty points were the probable in the debate.
Parson gave 25 points to Mondale and 19 to Dole. Mondale won, he said, because he did a good job answering the questions and presented his material in an organized
Dale, on the other hand, didn't provide many detailed answers and often took off on tangents that were extraneous to the questions, he said.
"On the question of what our national priorities should be, Mondale articulated three or four ideas on priorities." Parson wrote that. "I'll tell you a statement on priorities He set a pretty
consistent pattern of not answering the question or answering with only one line."
On the question of whether he approved of President Pardon's pardon of Richard Nixon, Parson said, Dole spent most of his answer outlining the effects of World War I. World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War.
He said Mondale was effective in responding to his opponent's remarks when he pointed out that Dole's reputation as a "hatchet man" was well deserved.
IN GENERAL, Mondale was slower in responding to questions but provided more complete answers, Parson said. Dole was often the only one usually restricted his answers to one-lineers.
Enrollment surge prompts $2.3-million request rise
By JIM COBB Staff Writer
TOPEKA-Higher enrollments this year at the University of Kansas prompted the Kansas Board of Regents Friday to boost funding requests for KU by about $2.3 million for the remainder of this year and the next fiscal year.
One of the requests to be presented to the 1977 Kansas Legislature in January stemmed from the enrollment of 562 more students at KU this year than last year. The University asked that about $1.1 million in collected费 be spent.
KU can’t spend fees that were collected, budgeted, without legislative permission.
Proposed changes in the fiscal 1978 budget were made on the basis of predicted higher enrollments at KU next year. The Regents voted to amend KU's fiscal 1978 legislative request to spend $741,467 expected from additional funding for $352,270 of additional state funding because of higher enrollments.
THE ANTICIPATED enrollment increases are based upon this fall's enrollment which had 810 more students than predicted.
Funding requests for Wichita State University were cut because of declining enrollments. Budget adjustments were approved for Emporia Kansas State College and Kansas State College at Pittsburg, which also had lower-than-expected enrollments.
In other actions at the Regents' monthly meeting, the board voted to:
—recommend that KU receive more money to offset rises in utility rates.
—rase annual rates for residence hall contracts by 35% beginning in fall 1977.
—ask the legislature to rename three state colleges under Regents' control to give
approve a policy that outlines how staff positions would be dropped at Regents schools in the event of declining enrollments.
Additional funding of about $400,000 for utilities will be requested from the legislature to carry KU and the KU Med Center through the current year.
-approve minor policy adjustments and routine business requested by KU.
The Regents agreed with University fiscal officers that about $4 million to be requested from the legislature for utility costs in fiscal 1978 probably will fall short of actual costs by about $1.2 million. They voted to ask the legislature to provide extra funding in a separate "line item," which will be returned to the state if it isn't needed.
THE SUPPLEMENTAL funding would be for both the Lawrence and Med Center campus.
KU$ residence hall rates will increase from $1,215 to $1,250 for double-occupancy rooms and from $1,540 to $1,575 for private rooms due to another action taken by the Regents.
The rate increase was recommended by the Association of University Residence Halls and Chancellor's Office because it was needed because of increased costs of labor, food and utilities.
"We've endeavored to keep our increase to a minimum," he told the Regents. "But we can't afford it."
the minimum increase to keep the residence balls operating efficiently next year."
THE PROPOSAL to rename the three state colleges was recommended to the Regents by the legislative, by laws and policy committee and the academic committee. The Regents voted to propose legislation that would change the colleges' names to Emporia State University, Pittsburgh State University and Fort Hays State University.
Glee Smith, Regents chairman from Larson, questioned why "Kansas" had been the state's first openly gay Heisterstein, Shawne Mission, answered that the proposed new names couldn't be confused with the names of KU or Kansas and would conform to the style of Wichita State's name.
The Regents also selected one of three plans that outlines when, and at what rates, state funding for salaries of employees at colleges and universities can be decreased
Fire at Park-25 inflicts $50,000 worth of damage
A fire early yesterday in Park-25
A apartments resulted in $40,000 damage at
the buildings and $10,000 damage to
personal property in 12 of the apartments.
There were no injuries from the fire.
The fire was reported to the Lawrence Fire Department about 12:10 yesterday morning. Firemen fought the blaze for all hours, with three fire trucks before putting it out.
Fire department officials haven't determined the cause of the fire.
See FUND INCREASE page two
None of the displaced residents were available for comment last night.
Residents of the building said yesterday that the fire started in the basement and spread upward. Larry Stemmerman, arson investigator, said the fire would be released Wednesday.
Eight of the apartments were damaged and are now by smoke, according to fire department reports.
RESIDENTS OF THE smoke-damaged apartments were able to return to their apartments last night, but residents of the apartments damaged by fire were displeased.
The fire occurred in the wake of fire inspections by the Kansas State Fire Marshal's Office of student housing at Kansas colleges.
ANDY GALYARD, property manager of the apartments, said that the buildings were inspected annually by local fire authorities and that the buildings complied with the fire standards.
Gary Stephenson, apartment office manager, said there were no fire extinguishers in the hallways of the Park-25 buildings because they weren't required.
"We've had them in the halls and people steal them." he said.
PAUL MARKLEY, state fire protection technical adviser for the state fire marshal's office, said that apartment buildings and complexes hadn't been inspected by the state fire marshal's office, but that they soon would be.
He said that the size of the apartment buildings made a difference in the type of fire prevention equipment required, and that the absence of fire extinguishers in apartment hallways would be an infraction of the state fire code.
Campaign visits Kansas:Dole at KU,Carter in KC
ALAN MUSKOTA
Dole keeps wit at alma mater
By JERRY SEIB Staff Writer
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., came back to the University of Kansas Saturday, armed with the verbal jabs that have been his weapon in the Republican vice president nomination.
During an afternoon in Lawrence, sandwiched between campaign stops in Wichita and Kansas City, Mo., Dole watched the KU-Oklahoma football game, attended a reception in the Kansas and visited his fraternity and his wife's sorority.
Republic vice-presidential candidate Bob Dole visited KU
Saturday afternoon to toss the coin before KU-Oklahoma
He mixed homecoming activities and politics throughout the afternoon and declared victory in the previous night's debate, which many experts said he lost to Sen. Walter Mondale, D-Minn., the Democratic vice presidential nominee.
DOLE, WHO attended KU from 1941 until he joined the Army in 1943, arrived by motorcara few minutes before game time and opened his afternoon on campus by tossing a coin to start the game. KU won the toss, and Dole went to his 50-year line seat, where he watched with Gov. Robert Bennett and Chancellor Archie Dykes.
After the game, Dole shook hands in a crowd in the lobby of the Kansas Union on his way to a reception in the Kansas Room. Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., introduced
Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., introduced Dole, who stepped to the leadwoman and took an oath of swearing in as a member of the board.
The remark was probably a response to Carter's statements that America was no longer respected in the world because of Republican mistakes.
He said Republicans had been responsible for providing America with peace and strength.
"We are at peace in the world," Dole said.
"We are respected by our allies. We are
respected by ourselves."
"THE EBEEN saying around the country that it's better for you than peanut butter." Dole said. "For one thing, it doesn't stick to the roof of your mouth."
DOLE SCANNED the audience and said he saw only one or two young men in military uniforms, calling the fact a tribute to Ford's presidency.
IN REFERENCE to Carter's campaign statements that the Ford administration has acknowledged that its staff were not aware.
As Dole walked to the lectern to begin his speech, a group of KU band members who were squeezed into the corner of the room blared a Jayhawk fight song over the applause. Some audience members broke into a "Rock C峡 Jayhawk, Bob Dole" chant.
Ford was working to reduce inflation and create jobs while remaining committed to the overall goals.
"I won the toss," he said. "I don't know."
Dole began his speech by talking about the football game, which KU lost, 28-10.
what happened after that. As soon as I left the field, it fell apart.
HIS MOTORCYCLE left the union for a quick stop at the Delta Delta security server. The station will wait until you finish.
At the fraternity, house president Dave Andreas, Winfield senior, gave Dole a scrapbook filled with notes from food in the house. He also gave Dole a plaque from the local chapter
"It's sort of like Carter's campaign. It fell short in the second half," he said.
Dole and his wife quickly flipped through the scrawchook. Later, midway through his remarks, Dole again looked at the scrapbook. "Do not look at it," she asked, "Do not let it be seen if I lose?"
HIS REMARKS about about 200 Kappa Sigma members and alumni and their families were largely nompolitical and to reminiscent about his days in the house.
After stepping to the microphone, Dole
See DOLE VISITS KU page three
Carter softens campaign approach
It was a performance typical of those made in Carter's three-day campaign swing through Michigan, Kansas, Missouri and Ohio. The Democratic candidate seemed determined to soften his recent criticism of Ford.
By JERRY SEIH Staff Writer
Speaking to 3,500 people at a rally on the City Hall Plaza, Carter touched on his traditional campaign themes of tax reform, unemployment and simplification of government. He mentioned President Gerald Ford only briefly.
KANASS CITY, Kan.—Jimmy Carter's campion shifted ages last week, and its new, subdued approach was apparent in Kansas City, a little stop Friday in Kansas City, Kan.
CARTER CALLED for improvement of the craftsmanship and stressed the plight of the working men.
Carter said that America had slipped back into double-digit inflation in recent weeks and that the working man suffers when inflation increases.
"We'll never have a balanced budget, we'll never control the inflationary spiral, until we put our people back to work," he said.
Carter said he had always worked with a balanced budget—whether on his farm or as governor of Georgia—and pledged to the national budget if elected president.
"I GREW UP on a farm," he said. "I farmed all my life. I believe American people prefer work to welfare."
Carter also drew upon his experience as a
leader in speaking of the nation's unemployment.
It's possible, Carter said, to have a balanced budget and low unemployment. He mentioned the Truman, Johnson and Kennedy administrations as examples of periods when unemployment was low and the federal budget was balanced.
"Things have gone downhill in the last eight years," he said.
The crowd in downtown Kansas City comprised largely laborers, students and the elderly. Few business owners but kids with Carter-Mondale stickers dotted the crowd.
CARTER RECEIVED the loudest and longest applause when he spoke about tax
"Our income tax structure in this country is a disgrace to the human race," he said. "What income it most likely to be taken? The income of a man who does manual work for a living."
"Come January, we're going to have a complete reform of the tax structure to
Unemployment has fostered a high crime rate, Carter said, and he drew another loud cheer for his criticism of the "dual system of criminal justice."
"If we could just tap that great strength and put it back into the government, where, in my opinion, it hasn't been in the last eight years."
"The average American who commits a crime goes on." Carter said. "The big news is that I am going to prison."
There is a "bloated, confused bureaucratic mess in Washington," Carter said, referring to his record as governor of Georgia as indication that he is capable of an administrative reorganization to aim at the operation of the federal government.
In spite of its shortcoming, Carter said, the American system of government is still the strongest in the world. But, he said, it must be endured that way despite Republican mistakes.
"Richard Nixon didn't hurt our system of government," he said. "Watergate did hurt our system of government. We haven't strong desire to work, our intelligence."
CARTER REMINDED the crowd that the election was only three weeks away. In asking for votes, he repeated another familiar campaign theme.
"Three weeks is not very long, and I want you all to assess our country," he said. "We've been embarrassed and ashamed in the past few years."
Carter spoke briefly about the
matter, saying, "They're not
perfect. Nobody said that."
But, Carter said, they have given the American people a unique chance to analyze the candidates. He attempted to capitalize on Ford's blinder in the second debate, in which Ford said Eastern countries weren't under Soviet immigration.
"AFTER SIX days of thinking about it, Mr. Ford has reversed himself and decided
See CARTER page three
2
Monday, October 18, 1976
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Vaccinations increase
Health officials say they have seen greater public acceptance of the swine flu vaccine program after a sharp drop that followed reports of 35 deaths among vaccinated Americans.
Nearly all the clinics administering the shots were to be back in operation today. Officials said the number of people receiving swine flu vaccinations began to drop, but more than 100,000 had been administered so far.
increase to last week after a clinical trial, allowing the team to
Federal health officials say the vaccine had nothing to do with the deaths.
I need in unit officials say the vaccine had nothing to do with the deaths. Nine states cancelled their inoculation programs after the death of three elderly person who received the vaccine. All the states later ordered the resumption of the program, and almost all the public health centers involved planned to resume the shots today.
Mao's widow reprobated
HONG KONG—Foreign officials coming out of China said yesterday that they saw wall posters in Shanghai depicting the hanging in effigy of Mao Tse-tung's widow and other posters showing a demonstration reported in several Chinese cities since Mao's death.
Prime Minister Michael Soma of Papua New Guinea, the first foreign government chief to visit China since Mao died Sept. 9, also said, at a news conference, that Premier Hua Kuo-feng told him he would succeed Mao as chairman of the Chinese Communist party.
Members of Somare's delegation said that along with the posters of Chiang Ching, Mao's 82-year-old widow, were pictures of three other top Chinese radicals.
From page one
Fund increase
because of lower enrollments. The policy designates that no staff members would be dismissed until a ratio of 15 students for training at KU or K-State is reached.
THE RATIO is set at 18 students to one faculty member at WSU and at 20 students for each instructor at the state colleges. KILL'S is now about 17 to 1
In addition, the new policy states that funding would be decreased for employee positions based upon the most recent salary increase. In contrast, the staff, plus any salary increases given
State funding for supplies and expenses would be decreased at a rate of $240 for each full-time equivalent (FTE) student. One classified, or nontheaching, employee would be dropped from a school's staff for every three instructors dismissed.
The Regents' policy will allow individual colleges and universities to decide what employee will be dismissed. Keith Nürcher, the president of Marianne Affairs, said determination of who would be dismissed would be based upon the needs of a given school and the tenure requirements
A KU POLICY on financial exigency.
CAFE, the Campus Activities Festival Exposition, will be tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
At the festival, students can learn about at various campus organizers, including how to join them, and also about what is being done at the festival in cording to Julian Anderson, ExStu chairman.
Festival exhibits campus groups
...
QUIET
On Campus
TOMORROW: THE UNIVERSITY SENATE HUMAN RELATIONS COMMITTEE will meet at noon in Alcev B of the Union. The KRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel.
In the Oct. 14 Kansan, it was incorrectly reported that the V-6 program was a tutorial program. Instead, it is a program for new assistant instructors.
Events
😊
Corrections
Serious Service . . . No Joke!
Grants and Awards
The KU department of English has received a $1,000 grant from the Eastman Kodak Company for programs and scholarships.
TODAY: SENIOR CLASS PICTURES will be taken all day in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. NONTRADITIONAL STUDENTS will meet at 11:30 a.m. in Alcove E of the Union. WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS will meet at 11:30 a.m. in Alcove E of the Union. COMPUTER SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM will be at 3:30 p.m. in the Spencer Library Auditorium.
ENGINE TUNE-UP SPECIAL
TONIGHT: OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will meet at 7 a.m. 169th W. SEX AND RACE: AN ANALYSIS OF SOCIAL CONTROL will be the topic of a lecture by William Shaite, professor of history at Duke University, at 8 in the Kansas Room of the Union.
DOMESTIC VEHICLES ONLY
October is the time to get your car ready for winter. Avoid cold weather starting problems. Be efficient.
Standard Ignition
SERVICE HOURS:
Ignition
8 Cyl ... 39.95
6 Cyl ... 35.95
4 Cyl ... 31.95
Includes spark plugs, points and condenser.
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
7:30 m. to 5:00 p.m.
We Honor BankAmeric
Master Change, Mobil Oil.
which hasn't yet been approved by the University Senate or Dykes, will outline dismissal policies of employees if and when enrollments decrease.
dale
willey
The Automobile Man
The Automobile Man
A supplemental request of $216,443 was approved by the Regents to fund new bachelor's degree programs in the College of Allied Health at the Med Center. The new pro-
vidence services laboratory therapy, emergency medical services administration and nurse anesthesia.
--also was increased by $100,000 for this year
by the Regents. The new spending limit will be
$474,758 and the larger amount will be
gymnasium and other parking areas.
UNIVERSITY EMPLOYES who retired before a new retirement plan became effective in 1982 will be given a 15 per cent increase in benefits because of another REBEs action.
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
A spending limit on KU's parking fee fund
America's Most Popular Drive-In Menu 6th & Missouri
Something's Always Going on at HENRY'S
We have a New Series of Glasses
al
Philos. c 1976, John Frye
N
A hauntingly violent and sensual novel from "one of America's most supremely talented and important authors"*
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75c
Tues., Oct. 19
7:30 and 9:30
Woodruff Auditorium
The Regents approved a request by Dykes that KU purchase six intermediate-size sedans at a cost of $4,500 each. Dykes said the cars would be used in the University's motor pool and would replace cars that had more than 100,000 miles of use.
The Regents changed next month's meeting dates to Nov. 22 and 23, when they will have committee meetings and their monthly meeting on the KU campus. The date was changed because it conflicted with Gov. Rick Santorum's hearing, scheduled for Nov. 18 and 19.
Dykes and the Regents will be hosts to a KU dinner to honor Helen Foenner Spencen. Spence is in charge of the event.
--looked said, "thinktl wester
Vista
RESTAURANTS
THE CHEESEBOW
76¢
Reg. 85¢
MONDAY • TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY
1527 West 6th. Lawrence 842-4311
KU BACKGAMMON CLUB ANNOUNCES The First Annual Fall KU BACKGAMMON CHAMPIONSHIPS to be held Sunday, Oct. 24, in the Jayhawk Room— Kansas Union sponsored by: BRITCHES CORNER Makers of fine clothes for men and women, 9th & Mass. and the BACKGAMMON CLUB OF K.C. ADVANCED DIVISION—Elimination Knockout Tournament including consolation fight; prizes awarded to top five places. Entry fee $3.00 Begins 2 p.m. BEGINNER DIVISION—Swiss Style Tournament; 4 five point rounds. Prize awarded to top three places. Entry fee $3.00. Begins 3:30 p.m. Doubling cube will be used in both divisions (will be explained for beginners). Sign up and pay Entry Fee in SUA office, Kansas Union. For further information, call Rich Boyer at 1-432-3143 after 5:30 p.m. Open to all. Deadline, Oct. 22, 5 p.m.
Panhellenic Undergraduate Anthropology Association United Lutheran Student Center American Society of Interior Designers
Campus Vets Student Senate All Scholarship Hall Fencing Club Friends Oread Meeting Association for Computing Machinery
CAFE
76
CAMPUS ACTIVITY & FESTIVAL EXPOSITION
ADD SOME PIZZAZZ TO YOUR LIFE THIS TUESDAY COME TO CAMPUS ACTIVITIES FESTIVAL EXPOSITION.
CAFE consists of diverse campus organizations offering activities for a variety of student interests.
Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union Funded from the Student Activity Fee
TUES., OCT. 19
10 a.m.-8 p.m.
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United Ministries in Higher Education Hilltop Child Development Center Canterbury House Society of American Military Engineers
Dole visits KU
From page one
looked around the front of the house and said, "I don't really remember this room. I think this room was off-limits to those from western Kansas."
Dole is from Russell.
During his two years in the Kappa Sigma house, Dole waited tables in the dining room to earn money. He said he once spilled a tray of spaghetti and meatballs on his housemother when he tried to imitate the style of a wafter he had seen in a movie.
"Mother Griffiths, who never liked spaghetti and meatballs anyway, got five plates of them in her lap." he said. "I was always one of her favorites."
DOLE CREDITED the Kappa Sigma house with teaching him how to get along with people. He said he also got his first lessons in leadership as a Kappa Sigma
He then mentioned the debate with Mondale.
"I was grand procurator," he said. "I remember getting thrown into Potter Lake, so I know what it's like to have your leadership tested."
"I SAID FOR a month that if there was a choice between the debate and a high school football game—a good one—everybody would go to the football game, and you wouldn't. I thought the debate could have been reduced in length to 60 minutes. It went 75 minutes."
Dole evoked a loud laugh from the press
Carter ...
From page one
that Europe is free—or, rather, isn't free. I forget what his latest statement is."
Carter traced the progress of his campaign by sketching the beginnings gave a chance to meet new people.
"We walked the streets," he said. "We'd get in front of the swinging doors in department stores and see maybe 2,000 or 3,000 people a day."
Carter said that he received votes in all 30 primaries, and primarys, and the process. I emphasized "country"
CARTER'S SPEECH in Kansas preceded his appearance Friday night at a memorial dinner for the late Rep. Jerry Lifton, D-Mo., who was killed during the Senate primary election in Missouri.
A crowd began forming around the City Court, which was hour before Carter's sequestered. 33 man
Green Carter campaign signs protruded from the audience, and one person carried a green umbrella covered with Carter campaign stickers. A lone protester held up a sign of a light-lipped, middle-aged man, questioned Carter's gun control policy.
Several pennants labeled "Kansas City Royals, Western Division Champions," in honor of the home town baseball team's all-star partnership, were also raised above the crowd.
Carter noted the baseball fever in Kansas City and said he had arrived in Kansas City just hours after the game, from the American League championship series in New York.
"If I could just change my name to Whitey Herzog (Royals' manager), I wouldn't have much trouble here in the election, would I?" Carter said.
THE FREE UNIVERSITY OF IRAN
Officers of the Free University of Northampton, in Kansas campus on November 23 to interview Iranian nationals who have interned at the university in the following areas: education and health sciences, natural sciences, psychology, engineering, physical sciences, mathematics, scientifics, and computer sciences. In addition to employment opportunities are available for scholarships are available
interested candidates are
interested in the Free University
of Kansas. 224 High School for further information on The Free University of
Kansas and visit to The
University of Kansas.
corps by telling the audience that he and his wife had just come from the Delta Delta Delta sorority, "where most of the newsmen stayed."
Sigma's "goodlooking neighbors" and said many of the Kappa Sigmas were well-known in the sorority.
mrs maharaja
He said he was happy to visit the Kappa
"That's an indication that you are progressive," Dole said.
Commission on the Status of Women
A panel discussion on how the changing roles of women affect the roles of men. Walter Smith—School of Education; Clarence Dillingham—Affirmative Action; Jim Sanders—3rd yr. Law Student
presents
Tuesday, Oct. 19. 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room
Business Meeting — 6:30 p.m.
Partially funded by Student Activity Fee
SUA BRIDGE CLUB
Now Playing
WED.,7-11 p.m. Pine Room of the Kansas Union
SUN., 4-8 p.m. Pine Room of the Kansas Union
Everyone Welcome
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Spaghetti Dinner
Meat Ball or Meat Sauce
$1.95 Reg. $2.25
Offer good Monday thru Thursday. Exp. Oct. 31, 1976
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
MASSACHUSETTS OR
A MARY HARTMAN MARY HARTMAN look a like contest!!!
HALLOWEEN DISCO DANCE ★ By Gay Services of Kansas ★
Kansas Union Ballroom
8:00 p.m. $1.75
Special Notice . . .
Please do not bring alcoholic beverages to the dance. Beer will be sold with an I.D.
University Daily Kansan
Service Department Winterize Special
John Haddock Ford
- Install 2 gallons of permanent antifreeze
- Back flush radiator
- Check thermostat
- Check belts, hoses, and radiator
- Replace thermostat gasket
JOHN HADDOCK
FORD
23rd & Alabama
Phone 843-3500
Parts and Labor
KU Bahai' Club Today
7:30 Oread Room
$2390
SUA FILMS
SEXTOONS
an erotic Kartoon Karnival
Tues., Oct. 19, 17:30, 9:30, 75c
ANIMATION SERIES
CLASSICAL SERIES
AHPAVILLE (1965)
Dir. Jean-Luc Goddard with
Eddie Constanier, Anna Karna,
Rainbow
Mon., Oct 18, 7:30, 75c
SCIENCE FICTION SERIES
SUMMER INTERLUDE (1950)
Dr. Ingmar Bergman, with
Maj. Britt Wilson, Berger Masten
Woods.
Wed. Oct. 20, 7:30, 75c
FILM SOCIETY
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
FATA MORGANA (1971)
Dir. Werner Herzog (Germany)
Therus, Oct. 21, 7:30, 75c
POPULAR FILMS
HESTER STREET (1975)
Dir. Joan Micklin Silver,
WITH Carol Kane and
Steven Keats
Fri, Oct. 22 and Sat., Oct. 23
3:30; 7:00; 9:30, 51
NOON BUFFET
ALL THE PIZZA AND SALAD YOU CAN EAT For Only $1.89
In the Hillcrest Shopping Center Next to the Theatres 841-2670
11 p.m.—2 p.m. Weekdays
Pizza inn.
TOMMY COOPER
Paul Winter Consort
Sat., Oct. 23 - 8:00 p.m. - Hoch Auditorium
Gen. Adm. Tickets $4 Advance $5 Door Fool's Gold - SUA Production
PRINTING
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THE HOUSE OF USHER AND ITS QUICK COPY CENTER OFFER YOU A COMPLETE PRINTING SERVICE FROM ONE CONVENIENT LOCATION
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COMMERCIAL PRINTING HEADQUARTERS for Letterheads, Envelopes, Business Cards, Business Forms, Brochures, Newsletters, Catalogues, Invitations, Books, Posters, Booklets, Handbills, Resumes, Labels, Receipt Books and Typesetting.
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masters charge
19th August 2018
BANK OF CHINA
and LICENSING
4
Monday, October 18, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
What's in a name?
Once upon a time, the word "university" meant something. A university was more than just a college. It was an institution of higher learning, complete with a liberal arts college and several professional schools.
but nowadays, it seems, a university is any place where high school graduates are educated. The Board of Regents is seriously considering waving a legislative wand and turning Kansas State College of Pittsburg, Fort Hays State College and Emporia State College into Pittsburg State University, the university of the Great Plains and Emporia State University.
NOW ALL three schools are, in their own way, fine institutions. But they aren't universities.
You can't blame them for wanting to be called universities. It certainly does sound more prestigious. And there is precedent. Baker University, for example, is as much a university as Fort Hays State is.
And it probably would be childish and petty of KU to make a fuss about Hays and Emporia becoming universities. After all, what's in a name?
BUT, AT the same time, it would be fun for KU to change its name as well. Two can play at this game.
"The Kansas Institute of Science, Technology and the Arts" has a ring to it, as does "Oxford University—Lawrence." Or, to keep the whole thing simple, we could just change the name to Yale.
And, as all the junior colleges have changed into colleges already, everyone should be happy. Happy, that is, until the ex-juniors colleges become "community universities." Then the ex-colleges will have to become Yales and ex-KU will have to think of something else.
THE WHOLE affair may well just be a facet of traditional American boosterism and pretentiousness. This is the nation that rates things large, extra-large and super economy size and calls its little towns the whatnot capitals of the world.
"University" isn't the first word to be devalued by this American trait. "Fantastic," "terrible" and "awful" don't mean all that much any more either. It's sad, but apparently impossible to stop.
Yale will just have to come up with a new name.
Jim Bates
Editorial Editor
In the rush of political events, last week's report from a Senate subcommittee on the Bo Callaway affair received less than a few hours. This was a shameful piece of business, but the shame falls not on Callaway. It falls on the Democrats who contrivised this report and especially on the chief hit man, Sen. Floyd Haskell, D-Colo.
Callaway inquiry shabby flop
From the beginning of this shabby investigation to its exquisitely timed end, Haskell's operation was an exercise in political partnership at public expense. It would be interesting to learn how many thousands of dollars a department had how many thousands of man-hours were devoted to the preparation and printing of more than 1,500 pages of material adding up to—nothing.
HOWARD "BO" Callaway, it will be recalled, is a former Georgia congressman who served for a little more than two years, from May 1973 to July 1975, as Secretary of the Army. He resigned July of last year to become chairman of the President Ford Committee. He was also a member of March under a cloud of displease. It was supposed that he had abused his office as Secretary of the Army for purposes of private gain.
Under Haskell's direction, the
subcommittee staff labored to produce evidence to support the charge. Haskell himself huffed and puffed through pages of the report, trying to effort to get some incriminating answers. But the staff was composed of honest men, and the Senator's industry proved effective. The committee could be produced. In the end, about the committee
James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1976 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
majority could find to say was that Callaway's conduct "bespeaks an insensitivity" on his part.
THE STORY, goes back to 1970, when Callaway formed the Created Butte Development Company to operate 800 acres of land in Colorado. The area was embraced within what came to be known as the Gunnison National Unit of the Gunnison National Forest development program.
From the very outset, Callaway and his associates made it clear that they wanted to develop additional skiing facilities at Snodgrass Mountain. Service prepared a tentative plan for development of the East River Unit. The plan
SLAM!
WaP!
Fwump!
crackle!
CRUNCH!
WhAM!
CRASH!
recommended that Snodgrass be postponed for perhaps 10 years. The following December, when a more or less final plan was established, a substantive recommendation was reversed—Snodgrass was approved. Meanwhile, three members of the Forest Service who had participated in the report were reassigned.
get the Forest Service employees transferred.
March 8, 1976, in the wake of Callaway's resignation from the President Ford Committee, Senator Haskell invoked his power as chairman of the Infrastructure Committee on environment and land resources. He ordered an investigation into two charges in particular--that Callaway and corruptly put pressure on a farmer to stop the Department of Agriculture, and that Callaway had conspired to
BOTH CHARGES blew up in Haskell's face. One by one, the responsible officials were put under oath. One by one, we witness denied absolutely that Callaway had abused his office. The most critical evidence that could be adduced came voluntarily from Callaway. He openly acknowledged speaking to agriculture officials about the Crested Butte plan, but his intervention was plainly unseen.
HASKELL's hearings wound up May 14. A formal report—if a report were warranted at all—could have been prepared in a month or six weeks. By astounding coincidence, the report at last appeared under date of September 30. It was announced and then released to the press by the middle of the Ford campaign. Anyone who believes this timeing was nonpolitical will believe in elves, trolls, foot fairies and little green men.
The charge against Callaway was absolutely unfounded.
Callaway's worst offense was poor judgment. To that he himself pleads guilty. What is the offense of Hasselkilton? He manipulated his own power as a subcommittee chairman, to curry favor at home, and to smear an innocent man.
As for the transferred employees, exhaustive investigation turned up nothing sinister whatever. The men in question testified under one condition, oversee for transfer from Gunnison. The third welcomed his promotion to a higher position in Denver.
Think very hard. Go back about two years. Do you remember anyone talking about the energy crisis? That's the term people used, back then, when they spoke of heavy gas stations, new speed limits and problems with those confounded Arabs.
The term has taken a backseat lately to what some think are more important issues, like elections and American League baseball. But the energy crisis, big news or not, remains one of this nation's most pressing problems.
Energy crisis remains
GRANTED, YOU can pull into a gas station nowadays and be relatively certain there will be enough gas to get you, all by yourself in your suped-up auto, to and from the places you want to go for the better part of a week. Those days of immediate concern have vanished. Consequently, our interest in and response to the word "crisis" have vanished.
The fact remains that this country, with its fondness for frigid homes in summer and tepid homes in winter and hatred for carpools year-round, is drinking up the world's petroleum faster than any other country. If all the people of the world had consumed in 1968 the same amount of energy consumed by the average American, world consumption would have been 1,200 quadrillion British thermal units—almost six times higher than it was.
production doesn't come close to meeting our demand. Thus, we are forced to jeopardize a healthy balance of payments, good relations with the countries and the world's energy reserves by importing nearly 48 per cent of our oil.
U. S. per capita energy consumption is two times that of Russia, three times that of Western Europe and 25 times that of China.
But why? Why is it essential for the United States to use so much oil? Because we are just too ignorant to realize that we, supposedly insignificant parts of our society, are digging an early grave for this country.
SUCH CONSUMPTION would be justifiable, perhaps, if the United States had sheiks of its own to sit back and count the millions of barrels of crude oil sucked out of the ground each day. But it simply doesn't. Despite talk of offshore drilling and shale mining, our energy
THESE ARE those who try to blame industrial magnates and say "the other guy" is responsible for our grave circumstance. The truth is that only 36 per cent of our energy consumption takes place in industrial operations while 14 per cent of the nation's total energy consumption and more than 30 per cent of the nation's total petroleum supplies are used by private cars.
Energy experts put time and money into research they hope will afford some workable solution to the problem of how to please non-energy users. At best, the results are minor. We have yet to find a workable energy plan for the nation as a whole.
In the end, experts say, it's going to come down to a real culture shock for farmers. It could be by implementing strict consumption controls, fuel rationing or blackouts.
Perhaps it will take something as outlandish as legal restrictions on Sunday drives and auto races to keep the nation running. At least then everyone would know that there really is something to this thing called a "crisis" and that there's nothing wrong with a bus or a 20-minute walk.
By Mary Ann Daugherty Contributing Writer
Blood drive fouled up
To the Editor:
With regard to the recent blood drive, I can't imagine a more fouled up operation (unless it is the Computation Center). I have just logged the gallon mark in blood donation, plenty of time writing in line to observe the procedures used.
Valerie Vogt
Program Librarian Computation Center
Some people seem resigned to the long wait in line; they consider it unavoidable. However, if the Lawrence Red Cross would take a cue from other branches, it could save much pain and hassle for everyone involved.
I have given blood in four places: the Kansas Union, the Lawrence Community Center, and two places in my home town of Birmingham, Ala. In invariably, I make an appointment with the Lawrence Red Cross and I end up waiting in line for at least three hours; I must be careful not to me through in under an hour—and more politely. I have never failed to receive some rude or callous treatment from the Lawrence Red Cross.
Right affirmed To The Editor:
On Sept. 9, 1976, Max Tenant, local musician, was told by the KU Police Department to stop playing his guitar on campas. He did not received permission from University Events Committee.
On the following day, Sept. 10, the Iranian Students Association was notified by the Events Committee that they had
voted University policy by distributing literature from a table without prior approval of the committee.
The Lawrence Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Kansas wishes to express its dismay at these efforts. It is institutionally guaranteed rights of free speech and assembly.
On Thursday, Sept. 23, acting to publicly exercise these rights, a group including Max Tenant, members of the band Students Association played guitar and sang, passed out literature, and
We hope that the University administration will affirm and clarify this policy in accordance with the Constitution to amendment to the Constitution.
Jean Ireland Lawrence ACLU
We of the Lawrence ACLU chapter wish to applaud the administration in their use of discretion in avoiding a confrontation by permitting this activity to take place.
collected signatures in support of freedom of expression on campus. Although the Events Committee was informed in advance of this action, it occurred without their approval.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 1, 2023. Please visit us at kus.edu/education for updates June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday dates. Subscriptions by mail are $0 per member or $15 per year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a
Editor
Vaeel Abu哈马卿 Jim Bales
Campus Editor Stewart Br安
Associate Campus Editors Stewart Badiwat
Dartant Campus Editors Chuck Alexander
Photo Editor George Miller
Staff Photographers George Miller,
Sports Editor Steve Schoenfeld
Associate Sports Editor Grace Vie
Entertainment Sports Editor Alison Guynn
Administrator Edition Carl Young
Contributing Writers John Fuller
Copy Chefs John Fuller
Algin Guynn
Business Manager
Terry Hanson
Assistant Business Manager Carole Rosekoutert
Advertising Manager Janie Clementa
Sales Associate Manager Janie Clementa
Classified Manager Sarah McAnally
Assistant Business Manager Sarah McAnaly
Assistant Business Manager Timothy O'Brien
Howard Cosell: stick to boxing
Who would say such a thing on national television in front of millions of viewers? Maybe he doesn't have the financial trouble that New York has buried itself in. How about Bilty Martin. Probably not, he recalls having wailed through two play-offs already. It was during his last game. But he has already admitted that the Yankees could be much
By JEFF MATSON
Guest Writer
"Here we are, in the opening game of the play-offs. And what the greatest ballpark is, the greatest ballpark, in the greatest city, the financial center of the world, with a great ball team—the New York
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 underlined; UU letters must provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
improved. Then who made that outrageous statement? For all those baseball fans who tuned in to watch the game trying to discern the beautiful moon through all the New York smog, know that those words were spoken by not one other than Mr. Coxell, all-mouth Howard Cosell.
HAVING HOWARD Cosell preside over the play-off games that include the Yankees is like having Gerald Ford preside over the House Judiciary Committee's Watergate proceedings. Cosell didn't just stop at his never-impired prizes but made him throw cheap shots whenever possible at the Royals, (Oh, I forgot to mention the Royals. They were the other team in the play-offs. If it hadn't been for Reggie Jackson, who in feeling uncomfortable with Howard's below-the-belt attacks, the situation would have resembled the recent public hangings in Syria.
IT IS exuscible to mispronounce a baseball player's name who has never played in the big leagues or seldom has been on TV, but Howard committed some doosets this week. Unlike the Kansas City catcher, Buck Bryant or in Howard's case, after a Vankee victory. And unlike the Royal's rookie outfielder, Tom Poumoto, a
It was made perfectly obvious from the start that Cosell knew very little about the game of baseball. Normal, routine ground balls picked up by the New York infielders were lauded to the highest degree while outstanding plays by the Royals were rarely and briefly used. But when Cosell did bangle Billy Martin "gutsy" after having Rivers run to second base on a 3-2 pitch. Howard, you never cease to amaze me.
on a disputed call. Reggie Jackson, looking at the best possible camera view of the play, conceded that it was too tough to beat. But Cosell, with his eagle talons, could deal all bias, reassured the umpies that "no doubt about the call."
In game three, Fred Patek tried to steal two base but the throw by Yankee Catcher Thurman Munson caught Patek
"pocket" is a pouch in which Howard's verbiage is stuffed.
one examples can go on. It is hard for a team to win the pennant when not only the fans are cursing them, and the opposing team and manager are cursing them, but when the press and "unbubbled" commentators are too. It was as if the playoffs already one game down.
I DON'T deny that the Royals lost nine out of their last 11 games and had a less than average month of September. And I hope the Royals don't use pitchers and pitchers and a number of their top hitters been plagued with injuries the entire season,
but the Royals did win the most important game of the season—a 4-0 shutout of the Oakland A's in the stretch. They were able to put things together when they absolutely had to—a sign of a winning bat and all those other skeptics who say the Royals should not have been in the play-offs--shove it!
After all the hoop of the play-offs, I have only one recommendation to make to ABC and Howard Cosell: Stick to the boxing arena where the only sounds you have to make are the punch and the left," and then nobody will have to write you this letter again. (Jeff Matson is a junior majoring in biology.)
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Stages
| | Dillen's (Stk.) | Dillen's (Stk.) | Dillen's (Iowa) | Dillen's (Iowa) | Bunny's (Stk.) | Wayne's | Mergers | Slowflow | Bunny's | Average this week |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Milk - 1 per cent, 10 g, tals. S.B. | 78 | 77 | 81 | 81 | 78 | 78 | 83 | 83 | 67 | 78 | 60 |
| Coffee - 10 oz. medium | 79 | 81 | 81 | 81 | 78 | 78 | 83 | 83 | 67 | 78 | 60 |
| Colgate cheese - 1 lb. | 32 | 35 | 19 | 19 | 32 | 35 | 83 | 83 | 15 | 17 | 90 |
| Colby cheese - 1 lb. | 35 | 35 | 19 | 19 | 35 | 35 | 58 | 58 | 53 | 53 | 54 |
| Citroën oil - 30 oz. | 1.55 | 1.55 | 1.55 | *1.55 | 1.55 | 1.55 | 1.59 | 1.59 | 1.59 | 1.57 |
| Citroën oil - 30 oz. | 1.55 | 1.55 | 1.55 | *1.55 | 1.55 | 1.59 | 1.59 | 1.59 | 1.59 | 1.57 |
| Chicken - whole friver, 1 lb. | 45 | *39 | 45 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 47 | 49 | *39 | 46 | 44 |
| Tuna - 4 oz. S.B. | 45 | *39 | 45 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 47 | 49 | *39 | 46 | 44 |
| Tuna - 4 oz. S.B. | 45 | *39 | 45 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 47 | 49 | *39 | 46 | 44 |
| Sugar - grounded, 5 b.B. | 49 | 49 | 47 | 47 | 11 | X | X | X | 47 | 48 | 44 |
| Sugar - grounded, 5 b.B. | 2.15 | 2.15 | 2.15 | 2.15 | 2.15 | 2.15 | 2.49 | 2.15 | 2.19 | 2.13 |
| Peanut cheese - 10 oz. | 6.15 | 6.15 | 6.15 | 6.15 | 6.15 | 6.15 | 6.15 | 6.15 | 6.15 | 6.15 |
| Peanut butter - Peter Pan, 12 oz. | X | X | X | X | 79 | 79 | 72 | 60 | 73 | 72 |
| Peanut bean - Peter Pan, 12 oz. | 65 | X | X | 69 | 75 | 79 | 72 | 60 | 73 | 72 |
| Peanut enriched, 5 b.B. | 65 | X | X | 75 | 75 | 79 | 72 | 60 | 73 | 72 |
| Flour - whole wheat, 1 lb. | 30 | 32 | 20 | *17 | 20 | 19 | 20 | 20 | 21 | 20 |
| Peas - whole wheat, 6 oz. S.B. | 30 | 32 | 20 | *17 | 20 | 19 | 20 | 20 | 21 | 20 |
| Peas - whole wheat, 6 oz. S.B. | 30 | 32 | 20 | *17 | 20 | 19 | 20 | 20 | 21 | 20 |
| Tomatoes - 1 lb. | 79 | 79 | 79 | 79 | 59 | 59 | 69 | 69 | 71 | 72 |
| Carrots - 1 lb. | 79 | 79 | 79 | 79 | 59 | 59 | 69 | 69 | 71 | 72 |
| Carrots - 1 lb. | 79 | 79 | 79 | 59 | 59 | 59 | 69 | 69 | 71 | 72 |
| Oranges - yellow, 1 lb. | 79 | 79 | 79 | 59 | 59 | 59 | 69 | 69 | 71 | 72 |
| Oranges - yellow, 1 lb. | 2.46 | 2.46 | 2.46 | 2.51 | 2.22 | 2.46 | 1.63 | 2.32 | 2.30 | 2.37 |
| Toilet tissue - Northern, 4-pack | 2.46 | 2.46 | 2.46 | 2.51 | *2.02 | 2.46 | 1.63 | 2.32 | 2.30 | 2.37 |
| Toilet tissue - Northern, 4-pack | 2.46 | 2.46 | 2.46 | 2.51 | *2.02 | 2.46 | 1.63 | 2.32 | 2.30 | 2.37 |
| Fortran - gal. S.B. | 1.05 | 85 | 85 | *89 | 1.09 | 79.1 | 1.05 | *87 | 93 | 1.04 |
* indicates sale price
X indicates item not available S.B. indicates store brand
MISS. STREET DELI in
041 MASSACHUSETTS
University Daily Kansan
Cherry Cheesecake 75¢ Offer good the entire month of Oct.1976
IN DEPTH SURVEY: RICE
| | Dillen's Kit. 1 lb. | Dillen's Kit. 2 lb. | Hensall's Kit. 1 lb. | Hensall's Kit. 2 lb. | Wagner's Kit. 1 lb. | Kruger's Kit. 1 lb. | Saleway | Pafun's Kit. 1 lb. | Average price per pound |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| White Rice—long grain, 1 lb. | .31 | .31 | .39 | .34 | .33 | .33 | .33 | .33 | .34 | .34 |
| White Rice—medium grain, 1 lb. | .31 | .31 | .39 | .75 | .57 | .83 | .72 | .66 | .62 | .33 |
| White Rice—low or medium, 2 lb. | .67 | .63 | .75 | .75 | .57 | .83 | .72 | .66 | .62 | .33 |
| White Rice—medium, 2 lb. | 5.90 | 6.00 | 6.70 | 6.70 | 6.70 | 7.19 | 6.29 | 6.27 | 6.37 |
| Brown Rice, 2 lb. | .37 | .37 | .37 | .37 | .35 | .35 | .35 | .41 | .41 | .41 |
| Converged Rice—Uncle Ben's, 1 lb. | .53 | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Converged Rice—Uncle Ben's, 2 lb. | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Minute Rice, 2 lb. | .46 | X | X | 1.50 | 1.40 | 1.40 | 1.40 | 1.12 | 1.07 | 1.06 |
| Minute Rice—28 oz. | .46 | X | X | 1.50 | 1.40 | 1.40 | 1.40 | 1.12 | 1.07 | 1.06 |
| Instant Rice—28 oz. | .85 | X | X | 7.90 | 7.50 | 7.50 | 1.35 | 1.39 | 1.37 | 7.88 |
| Instant Rice—for mixture—6 oz. | .85 | X | X | 7.90 | 7.50 | 7.50 | 1.35 | 1.39 | 1.37 | 7.88 |
Monday, October 18, 1976
DEBATE
moved, it becomes white rice. Enriched white rice has had thiamine, niacin and iron sprayed on after milling.
MIKE NANCY GLOVER vs. HAMBLETON
Converted rice has been parboiled before milling, which forces some of the nutrients in the bran layer to permeate the rice grain. Converted rice is seldom sticky after cooked and has a good flavor. It is more expensive than regular rice.
(Candidates for State Legislature)
—and
ARDEN ARNOLD BOOTH vs. BERMAN (Candidates for State Senate)
Brown rice still has the bran layer, which contains most of the vitamins and minerals found in white rice.
NOTES ON RICE SURVEY: Long, medium and short grain rice are three distinct varieties which cook differently but have little nutritional difference. Long grain rice tends to remain separated when stored in a cooler and short grain rice tends to stick together.
7:00 P.M.
Wednesday, October 20
Forum Room of The Kansas Union
Sponsored by KU-Y & SUA
Right now, up until Oct. 1st, you can fly roundtrip from New York to Lahore for only $900
That's $106 less than the youth fare you pay on any other scheduled airline; from Chicago you pay $40 and another city pays $28.
I I
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Since its initial publication in 1973, OUR BODIES, OURSELVES by The Boston Women's Health Book Collective has sold over 1,000,000 copies. In this second edition, more than half of the contents are brand-new and the balance has been totally revised
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6
Monday, October 18, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU loses Cromwell in loss to Oklahoma
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
Sports Editor
The shock is over. Word has passed.
KU quarterback Nolan Cromwell has been lost to the game of Iugment of H臂gion to his right knee.
Cromwell underwent surgery yesterday morning at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Hospital officials said that the operation was顺利, that Crompton was resting comfortably.
Surgeon John Wertzbierger reported no complications. It is expected that Cromwell will need six months to fully recuperate and have returned from his senior season in track this spring.
The Sooners came from behind to pop the Jahayhaws, 28-10, Saturday. A sellout homecoming crowed of 55,100 was stunned to see the Sooners before their eyes at Memorial Stadium.
I've been worried about it happening for Cornwell's injury. Coach Bud Moore said of Cornwell's injury:
But that's in the past. The mourning must end. The Jayhawks have to rise up and get ready to play arch-rival Kansas State University Saturday. And despite the Wildcats' 1-5 record, you can bet they'll be ready for KU.
"THOSE OF US who've been here a little know what kind of game it is," said linebacker Terry Beeson, who had 19 tackles, 16 unassisted, against the Sooners. "Now it's more important than ever for us, the leaders on the team—to get these guys in and out, so we can have to have realize now that it is going to have to win the ballarm for us."
KU's coaches are confident the Jayhawks will come back from their first consecutive season.
"We've got good quality people on our football team, 'offensive coordinator John Dodd'."
strive and work to be better and get us back next Saturday."
Scott McMichael, who was a starter for the dayhawks two years ago, is now the No. 1 quarterback. McMichael, the greatest sophomore passer in KU history after passing for 1,044 yards, is a better passer than Cromwell, but lacks the speed Cromwell has in running KU's wishbone offense.
THE KU COACHES are faced with the decision of whether to scrap the bone and go stricty with the slot-I or keep working with both formations.
"We'll continue to do both," Leva said. "We still haven't decided fully, but as of now we plan on staying with what we've done."
KU is also faced with deciding who will be the 2. quarterback. Sophomore Mark Vicenice and Mark Lissak had been tied for first, but Michael but both were being red-shifted.
"We wanted to red-shirt them both," quarterback coach Gary Rutledge said. "Coach Moore's the boss—he'll make the final decision—but we were planning on not playing either of them because we missed a case something like what happened Saturday happened."
LEVRA SKID it wouldn't be known until later in the week who would be the backup
KU looked sharp the first half.
Bill Campfield's 24-yard touchdown run and Mike Hubach's second goal of the season gave the Jayhawks a 10-3 lead at half. But the roof caved in.
On the first play from scrimmage after intermission, KU halftail Laverne Smith, who had only 17 yards rushing, fumbled and the Sooners recovered. Four plays later, OU quarterback Lott, starting for them, lashed 13 yards to tie the game at 10-10.
With 8:52 to play in the third quarter
Cromwell carried for a four-yard gain and
that was his third. That was the end his brilliant KU cares.
ON KU'S next possession, McMichael defenses end Mike Philips. The time by defense end Mike Philips.
Uveo von Schmann kicked a 14-yard field goal to make it 20-10 as the third quarter ended.
The Jayhawks continued to falter in the fourth quarter, gaining only 15 yards and a touchdown. The Chargers beat the
"We're a much better football team than we played in the second half," he said. "We don't plan on it happening like that anymore."
★ ★ ★
SCOREING
KANAS 7 3 0 0
ORLAHOMA 7 3 0 8
OKLAHOMA 7 3 0 8
ORLAXIANA
KU-10 held 24 run (Hubach kick)
KU-09 FG von Schumann 60
KU-10 FG Hubach 60
KU-09 FG Hubach 60
KU-09 FG von Schumann kick)
KU-09 Lot 33 run (von Schumann kick)
KU-09 FG von Schumann 60
KU-09 FG von Schumann 60
Safety (punct blocked in end zone)
TEAM STATISTICS
RU 18
Bucks - yards 30
Houston - yards 28
Return yardse 9.43
Return yards 9.13
Return yards 9.42
Punts - lost 2.50
Punts - lost 1.20
Punts - lost 1.00
KU-U-Crownwell 12-8, 12-8. Campbell 62-7, 17-3.
29) UU - Lott 18-10 Ibanez 15.91 Ibanez 10.37 Watts, 0-20.
30) UU - Lott 18-10 Ibanez 15.91 Ibanez 10.37 Watts, 0-20.
31) UU - Cromwell 1-6 Ibanez 14.14 Cromwell 1-6 Ibanez Methachill 1-6.14
Pacing
K1- Crowwell 16-11 (Pasing)
2 (interceptions)
share@pbldb.
OU-List 0-4-0 (2 interceptions). Peacock 0-1-0
Receiving
KU- - W. Smith 1-11, L. Smith 1-17,
OU- none.
Punting
Punting KU—Dougherty 9-299 (33.1 average). OU—Hatcher 6-256 (42.7 average).
6 6 78 53
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Oklahoma quarterback Tom Lott scores first Sooner touchdown
Big Eight has bizarre weekend
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—When Nebraska players had to play their game Saturday morning it should have been a very difficult affair, but a very bizarre day in Big Eight football.
The Nebraskas' buses didn't show up, so in the tradition of college students everywhere, the huge squad stuck out their thumbs and gathered at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln in piecement fashion. Once there, they dismantled Kansas State, 51-0.
Missouri, trailing Iowa State, 21-17, with a little more than four minutes remaining, uncorked a spectacular 77-yard punt return by Leo Lee and appeared to have salvaged a dramatic come-from-behind victory. But a yellow flag fluttered onto the field to nullify the playter, and Iowa State's lead held up.
Oklahoma State was leading Colorado, 10-6, with 13:7 left and Colorado had the ball on the Cowboy 18 yardline on a fourth-and-11 situation. Quarterback Bashir Jerry Cramer intercepted the ball. But Cramer dropped the ball on the six-inch line, where a Colorado player drove it in and wound up with a 20-10 win.
"The league is really a wild one," said Colorado coach Bill Mallory. "Every team in the Big Eight has improved, and most have improved since last year."
The first full week of conference fratricide left the race looking like this: Nebraska is 2-0 and gathering momentum. Oklahoma also is 2-0 and showing signs of aggression as the team loses the bus of Anderson and Hill casts giant blunts the Sooners' defensive ability.
Colorado, Iowa State and Missouri are 1-1 question marks that obviously have many pluses to go with their minuses. Kansas and Kansas State are winless in two conference outings and are staring at what could be long, painful seasons.
10
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Cromwell tackles OU's Henderson after interception
Jayhawks turn to McMichael; Sooners get 'hollow victory'
By GARY VICE
Assistant Sports Editor
It appeared that the Kansas Jayhawks were on their way to handing Oklahoma only its second loss in four seasons Saturday until the Sooners broke the backbone of KU's offense—quarterback Nolan Cromwell.
Cromwell went to the sidelines with 8:31 remaining in the third quarter after his four-yard carry to the right was stopped by OU free safety Zac Henderson. The tackle tore ligatures in Cromwell's right knee and ended his athletic career at Kansas. It also, probably, was what ended KU's victory over the Sooners, who rose up to storm the daybreaks, 28-10.
Cromwell had rushed for 83 yards on 12 carries to boost his career rushing total to 1,763 yards the fifth best in school history, before the fateful tackle. And so ended the brilliant success of the "Ransom Rambler," who has ignited KU's offense since he switched to quarterback last season after two years at free safety.
CROWNWELL TOOK over the starting quarterback duties from Scott McMichael in the third game of the season last year against Oregon State, rushing for 294 yards against the Beavers to establish an NCAA record.
The loss of Cromwell returned the spotlight to McMichael, an Overland Park senior who directed the Jayhawks in his fourth season.
McMichael and KU's offense generated only one first down after their departure and were held acessible by the Boat Soccer team.
Oklahoma assistant head coach, Larry Lawcew, said after the game, "I'm not sure we would have won the game if he'd been in there, because he can single-handedly beat you. Cromwell the guy that puts up everything they've got on
"I'm going to send him a graduation present. I was glad to see him leave, but not to see him hurt."
The Sooners, who also lost two men for the season to injuries in the game, reacted to the victory feeling that the thrill of victory was much like the agony of defeat. All America candidate cornerback Jerry Anderson suffered a
separated shoulder injury, and strong safety Scott Hill suffered a dislocated knee.
"THIS IS THE MOST hollow victory I remember since I began coaching," Lacewell said. "First because we lost two of our finest athletes, and second because we beat a Kansas team without Cromwell."
After being told the extent of Cromwell's injury, Lacewell said, "What! That's sickening. He's a super youngster and a super player. Just what I said—it was a very artificial victory."
As Cromwell sat in the locker room, watery-eyed and surrounded by physicians and assistants who were wrapping his right leg, McMichael softly undressed 20 feet away. His lower lip was badly cut and blood had dried on the moustached
"It was tough," the reserved McMichael said. "They just got up when Nolan came out. It gave them some extra cash."
"It wasn't any one person's fault," he said. "They just ignored the run, and passed and they really came at us. They ignored the run."
THE SOONERS' defensive line didn't allow McMichael any room to operate. They broke through KU's line to sack him on several passing attempts.
McMichael's return to starting quarterback may mean he will be changed to a more balanced passing and rushing attack.
Quarterback coach Gary Hutledge said, "we just won't be so run-er onedation off. Scotty's just not as fast as Nolan, he's running so hard."
COMMENTING ON the players' transition to working with a new staff member, the team said, "IT'll dampen the skills right off, but they know Sean."
Lindsay Mason, offensive tackle, said. "We have a lot of confidence in Scott's ability to run the offense. It just might be the most difficult one."
Tight end Jim Michael offered another endorsement of McMichael, saying, "I don't think it'll matter a bit. Scotty's a great quarterback. We've got as much confidence in him as anybody."
Reds cut down Yanks, 4-3
CINCINNATI (AP)—Tony Perez, one of baseball's finest clutch hitters, delivered a two-out single in the bottom of the ninth inning last night, driving home Ken Griffey Jr. to give the New York Yankees, 4, to take the second game of the 1976 World Series.
Perez, who has driven in 90 or more runs for 10 consecutive seasons, drilled Daffcah Hunter's first pitch to left field, Griffey, who had reached second base on a throwing error by shortstop Fred Stanley, easily beat the throw home by left field Roy White.
The victory gave the Reds a 2-6 edge in the top-seven series, which continues best after a third game.
After two were out in the ninth, Griffey—in the Series and in the World Cup—stored Stanley. He was short-charged the ball and in his hain to catch the speedy Reds' runner, fired it into the Cincinnati
A capacity Riverfront Stadium crowd of 54,816 sat through 40-degree weather to watch the first Sunday night game in World Series history.
Joe Morgan was walked intentionally so that Huntra, a right-hander, could face the ball.
The way the Reds had started on Hunter, there seemed to be no chance that the Vankees' $3-million pitcher would be in late as the ninth inning.
aurack Billingham, who not pitched in two weeks, came out of the bullpen to cut short the Yankee率. He retired eight consecutive batters to earn the victory.
Cincinnati collected four hits and two walks to build a three-run bulge in the second inning and left the bases loaded in the third.
and seemed in complete command as the
seems to come back to tie the game against
Fred Neal.
Colorado takes KU meet
hitter Dan Driessen whacked a double to the centerfield wall. The ML has never used the substitute batter and adopted its use for the defense. He hit 53-for-21 against Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn.
Hunter got in trouble when designated
George Foster followed with a single to belt field, driving in Dritzen and giving a big jump.
A powerful Colorado cross country squad, led by the one-two finish of Kirk Pfeffer and John Hunsaker, demolished the field at Friars' Kansas invitational.
Pfeffer led virtually from the start of the race. He came close to losing his lead only at the three-mile mark, when KU's George Mason, who placed third in 24,38, made a
The Buffalo had five runners in the top 15 and ran up a total of just 36 points. Oklahoma bad 58, Kansas, 64, Kansas State, 84, and Oklahoma State, 107.
Pfeffer clocked a swift 24:14 for the hill, twin course at the Lawrence Country Club.
eligibility, ran unattached and would have finished fourth had he been an official entry. Rick Musgrave, formerly of Colorado, also ran unattached. Musgrave, who won the 100-meter events in the 797 big Eight olympic track meet, would have placed third.
"I just about caught him up the hill," Mason said. "I would have had to tell him until we were going down."
then came Ted Crank, 29th in 25:46;
Brent Swanson, 23rd in 25:56; Kendall
Smith, 27th in 26:22; and Joel Cambron, 29th in 26:36.
Bruce Goldsmith was KU's second man, placing eleven in 25.07. John Ozawa, allowed
Bill Lundberg, who had completed his
"It looks like their loaded," he said, "When you get 36 points, that's a dual meet."
KU coach Bob Timmons was impressed by Colorado's showing.
Timmons was referring to Nov. 8, when the conference met in New York to discuss the Jayhawks, and the rest of the conference, will need good luck and tremendous performances from their opponents.
What makes the Buffaloos seem even more formidable is the fact that they left three runners at home who have been on the squad's top seven. The best of the three is Brett Lundy, who won 5,000 meter run. The two others are Bruce Landy and Bobby Radotn, freshmen.
"We didn't run particularly well. I'm hooning we can iron things out by the sixth."
Weekend Sports Roundup
Bob Stanciff continues to be pleased with his volleyball team.
Stanclift and the KU volleyball team went on a three-day swing through Oklahoma and came away with first place in the Sooner Invitational in Norman.
AU finished the tournament with a 5-1 record to tie with the University of Oklahoma and East Texas State University. KU won the tournament on defensive points by obtaining 91. East Texas State had 77, and Oklahoma had 72.
The meet began Friday, when the Jayhawks played three matches. KU defeated Wichita State University, 15-4, 11-1 and 13-11, and East Texas State, 14-9, 12-14 and 15-9, before routing Oklahoma State University, 15-4 and 15-2.
KU's next match will be against the University of Missouri at Kansas City in a dual meet in Allen Field House tomorrow. The Jayhawks will open conference play against Washington State and kick team tournament against Wichita State and Kansas State University in Manhattan.
The Jayhawks didn't have any trouble with Central State College in their first match Saturday, winning 15.4, and 15-8 KU. They also beat Oklahoma 15.7, before leaving to Oklahoma, 15-8, 15-8.
MIAMI (AP) - Placekicker Jan Stenuerkicked a 34-yard field goal in a driving rain with 12 seconds remaining in overtime to give the Karsas City Chiefs a 20-17 National Football League victory over the stumbling Miami Dolphins.
Chiefs upset Miami
The Dolphins' fullback, Norm Bulach, fumbled at the Kansas City seven yard line just before the two-minute warning in the overtime, and Chiefs' cornerback Tim Collier pounced on the ball in the end zone to kill a Dolphins' bid. The Chiefs then marched 63 yards in six plays to set up the field goal.
Tennis team rolls on
The women's tennis team kept its undefated record intact by defeating Stephens College, 8-1, Friday afternoon in Columbia. Mo. KU is now 6-0.
Carrie Fotopolos started it off for the Jayhawks by downing Syla Stoster, 8-2, 6-1, in 1. singles. Astrid Delas, No. 2, 9-5, in doubles. By whipping Shapling Fiteberk 6-1, 8-1
No 3 Marla Cook cried in three sets to beat Sandy Crowson, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4. Mary Stauffer, No 4, lost to Diane Langenfeld in three sets, 6-3, 3-6, 4-6.
"They are a good team," coach Tom Kvistova says. "They are one of the strongest teams."
It was a complete sweep in doubles competition as the teams of Fotopolos and Daksa, Tracy Spellman and Cook, and Wesley Patterson all three Steenhaars in straight sets.
Stephens finished second in both Missouri Valley and regional play last year.
kansas will end its fall season when it takes on the Wichita State Shockers in Wichita this afternoon. The meet will determine the Kansas representative to the regional tournament this spring in Des Moines.
Women golfers win
Even high scores couldn't stop the KU women's golf team from outcoming its full season.
Sophomore Nancy Hone again was KU's
67 at the Alumni Winner Gold Course
(Alumni Winner Gold Course).
Hois' score, plus Charnelle Hadl's 88,
Barbara Goodlesee's 89 and Beth Boother's
92, gave the Jayhawks a score of 356-30
stroke ahead of Oldhama's 386.
KU's fifth scorer was Jackie DeLong at 79. The medallist was Oklahoma's Debbie Gibbs.
Nancy Booster, KU's golf coach, gave two explanations for the Jayhawks' showings.
"It was really cold, plus I think the girls were about ready to close out the season," she said.
However, this won't be the end of the season for all of KU's golfers. Hons, who is trying for a berta in the rational championship, could make it at least one more tournament this fall.
Soccer club rips OU
KU's soccer club ran to 3-2 with a 3-0 victory over Oklahoma Saturday. KU led 1-0 at the half on a goal by Arturo Frenesa.
In the second half, Hamid Isak-Voukari made it 2-8 when he scored from close range.
KU, which had beaten the Sooners by a combined score of 16-0 in their previous three meetings, got its final goal when an injured player accidently scored a goal for KU.
Monday, October 18, 1976
University Daily Kansan
7
中國之夜
KOELZER
Chinese banquet
BANQUET MENU
win
to the KU
out its fall
EGG ROLL
SWEET & SOUR PORK
TEPPER SHAK
KUNG-PO CHICKEN
BROCColi WITH OYSTER SAUCE
FRIED RICE
ALMOND FLAVORED JELLO WITH FRUITS
CHINESE TEA
was KU's e 87 at the
to 3-2 with urday. KU by Arturo
Hadl's 88,
Boozer's
of 356-30
BeLong at's Debbie
k-Vouskari from close
gave two showing. the girls season,"
meners by a previous when anred a goal
end of the
ars, who is
alamite in at
all.
OU
TIME: Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976 5:30 p.m.
PLACE: Kansas Union Cafeteria
TICKETS: SUA Box Office,
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battery & $173 must sell. Call 81-749-2010
10-19
71 Mustang, excellent condition. Alr. AM-FM.
71 Mustang, snuff, mug. $175. Call 814-390-109-
109 to obtain a free inspection.
72 Honda CL 350, elec. start, good condition,
under $800, 6142-723. Ask for I.D.
10-19
Must sell 1941 Audi Fork 4-door automatic, good front wheel drive. Forkable- in trade-in. 841-8538. 841-8539.
NAPA
N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
for the Do-It-Yourselfer we
need Special Duits
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
4. Machine shop service
er: 1. Special Prices
Phone 843-1211
KU Union Lobby
Thanksgiving and Christmas travelers should reserve now for best choice of flight, train and hotel. May we also assist you in planning your trip? No extra charge for our services.
Make Reservations
5. Two stores
2300 Haskell
843-6960
SUA Maupintour travel service
817 Vermon
843-9365
Keep your car healthy
MGB 'OG' 1972. Excellent condition, Overdrive, radially, FM-CAM. Must sell. B4-833-604. 10-19
73 Capt. 4 cylinder, AM-FM, mechanically
manipulated cleanly. Beam, B44-6250,
644-1455
10-20
10-20
Honda 250, 1976, good condition, $40. BICYCLE
443, 812-328, 10 speed, good condition,
914-328-10
10-21
Game Tickets: Two KU-XU tickets. Sold Individual or together. Call 821-1858 5-10-19
in the summer.
Use the student discounts
Smiley car
Dated Wheel Saw Straw-Good for parties, mule. ctrh. 841-6048. 10-21
must sell 99 MvB Bus. Auto stock runs. Runs and looks good. Make offer, 841-4337. 10-18
1976 Kawasaki KZ-750 touring motorcycle, 180-
miles. 841-718 Negotiable. 10-20
Ezekiel White Citycake 1908 '300' Full Power
Diamond Ice Cake 1908 '300' Full Power
6. No. 34. Need $00 or need for Pick-up Trucks
(2)
Girl's 3-speed bicycle. Good condition, very cheap.
Call: 845-2194, for Mary. 10-19
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
Hoover/Spin DV portable washers. Great for
washing clothes without water.
Call 841-5066 after 6 p.m.
10-22
Mercury stereo cassette tape recorder; two volume, two time controls; two VU meters; AC battery; two mics; auxiliary phone; jack adapter $80. 843-3242. 10-22
HELP WANTED
1915 Honda MT125 499
1916 Honda MZ125 510
1917 Honda XR75 398
1924 Honda C125 395
1924 Honda CL125 395
1924 Honda CT70 195
1924 Honda CY70 195
See them at Borton's Honda, 1811 W. 6th, Law-
nson, Ks. 843-3333. 10-22
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
Female mentee written for Figure photography
of the University of Texas at Austin is helpful. Write PWD. P.O. Box 3706, Lawrence
KU-KSU football ticket. Call 841-5044 for
7 p.m. Ask for Zack.
10-18
Cook. Assume responsibility for preparation work,
preparing meals for 20 students per week. Leave Labrero
approximately 30 minutes before lunch.
Found. pocket watch at Kansas Union. Call 864-
429) and identify.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost! Ladies' Watch, Gold Helixrs with chain
Call. 842-038-088
10-19
Found. Monday—silver bracelet on campus. Call and identify 811-3276. 10-18
Lost: Male black and white, long haired kitten
Lost: Male brown and white, Aps. Reward. 10-
19 | 10-19
Aps. Reward: 348 after 90 days
Loat: (Stolen) Black leather wallet on 10-9-6-7
important contents. Call Greg. 823-319-490. Reward
Found. St. Christopher's medal. Inscriptions on the sides of Robinson's Gymnall. Call 841-5805 to hold a bid on the medal.
Lost: extremely sentimental girl's silver and tur-
ban hat. Lake on 10, K. Reward: 835-9441.
Lot: ten best friend post as faxing-colored male Great Dane, Reward. Paste @ 842-823-10-19
at
- PRECAUTIONS
* DO NOT USE WITH HIGH CONDENSATION
* DO NOT USE WITH HIGH TEMPERATURE
* DO NOT USE WITH DUSTING
* COOLANTS & MIXERS
* DO NOT USE WITH DUSTING
YARN—PATTERNS—NEELEPOINT
RUGS—CANVAS—CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CHAPTER
15 East 8th #14064
10.5 Monday Saturday
Goldwater Optical
DISTING TM EVENINGS
Dae Waxunman. I have your SS card. Name the number and it yours again. Call 812-481-5298
**812-481-5298**
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Usher/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-
8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m.
Mass.
NOTICE
CASABAH CAFE-GOOD food from scratch. Lunch
10:30 - 3:30 PM. Mass. Please bring a backpack.
Thank you for your help.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Massed. use furniture, dishes, paper cups, clothes, telecommunications. Open daily 12pm-5pm.
Jin's Stake House. Delicious food at reasonable prices. 12-9, 12-9, 12-9, 4-11. Closed Tuesday, June 25th.
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND THERAPY; indi-
dicate 3023 in Leavenworth
and 3023 in Lewiston
Bluntz Branch and Bake Sale Wednesday, Oct. 20.
19th and Highland Jewish Community, 19th and Highland Jewish Community
Security if you Call 643-0024 for a barn party for November 6, please call back. 10-21
FREE TO GOOD HOME: 1 super-loving male
of 25 years old, man old had shots (863-
942-977)
Redeemer, Lutheran Church, 30th and Haskell,
invites all students and faculty to our Sunday
Study at 10:15 a.m. We have an active college
Study at 10:15 a.m. We have an active college
contact. Need contact Office, 843-811-18
226.
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND THERAPY, individual and group. Also growth workshops 10-18.
PERSONAL
Gay Counseling Service: call 821-7505 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
Have you had problems getting to sleep at night for the past year? We are looking for people to participate in an incontinence treatment program at Hutchings. 841-359-2255, Don Hutchings. 841-359-2255, 10-20
Do you want to study the Bible? Group will meet
with your lead instructor, Callah H. Mackenzie,
or write 1529 W. 19th St. B64-18 20
2023-05-27
vendo cassetto de Victor Jara, Viola, Isabel y Angel帕梅, Mercedes Seven. Paso a Paso,
How Changing Roles of Women Affect Men Pre-renovation
7:30 AM - Tue. 11, 2024 | 10:30 AM - Jeep Chrysler Boston Union.
10:30 AM - Wed. 11, 2024 | 10:30 AM - Jeep Chrysler Boston Union.
I WANT to learn an Irish jig. If you know one please teach me. 841-0817.
Hon. Happy (2) Anniversary, Seen Noah lately?
Love. Clippes
10-18
FREE PUPPY needs home, 3 months, mixed
brown and white coat. Mail actual coat #825-0291
size 10-10
SERVICES OFFERED
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERP Thieves on land
11359 Madison Ave. No. 306, Los Angeles
212-856-2700
DO'S DELUXE BOY'S MARK LAWFIRM
Math. Tutoring - competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 801, 002, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, Regular lessons or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer Bring along your bike (Olympus, Cyberdy, 4:00, M: Sant-Mon, Tillur, t:30, Sun. 1:4, 1820, W: 89, 842-6353)
TYPING
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a new bike. If so, adjust your own entire bike–ublimate and adjust your brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your hub, tires, and adjust the gearing bought at time of “tune-up.” Rates 10 speed $18.50, 5 or 3 speed $15.50, single speed $12.50, three speeds $11.50, single speeds $10.50. Complete pro
IN A MUSICAL RUT? See how lessons can learn to moving. Beginning to advanced in folk, rock, jazz; classic blues and grass music, palate guitar, mandolin; 8017 and piano. Call McKinney Music 10-29
Need an experienced typetit? IBM Selectrite LTE
(ribbon). Call Pan Am of Africa (ribbon).
(ribbon). Call Pan Am of Africa (ribbon).
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, thematics.
Experienced proofreader—proofreading, spelling,
splitting; 849-506, Mrs. WRIGHT.
Address: 213 West 46th Street, New York, NY 10017.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-29
Experienced Typist- IBM -Memory-Call 843-
1971, ask for John.
WANTED
FINE SELECTION OF WEFT TUNNEL SHIRTS,
WATER RESISTANTS, LEANS.
THEISH BINDING COPYING The House of Uther's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you with $85 Massachusetts or phone 824-388 Thank you.
帝
We now have openings for the remainder of the serenity suite and for a female roommate, fall [all] 843-859.
Typist (editor), IBM Pica vclite, Quality work.
Instructor, IBM Pica vclite, dissertations welcome.
Website: 842-691-4277
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDGE SHOP
close 30 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Open 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Open 8:30 Thursday
842-8413
Mastercharge
VISIONS
has the eyeglasses
you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 841-7421
wagon wheel
10 a.m.—12 p.m.
Everyday is
Ladies' Day
TRY
Call Ottis Vann!
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
1
For new Chevrolet's and used cars at
Ping Pong
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Foos-Ball
Home of
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
Turner Chevrolet
The Chalk Hawk
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
× Days a Week. One No. Under 18 Admitted
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEF
843-7700
Roommate needed for very nice furnished spartan
home located 750' from the airport. $750 per month rent.
Call 612-550-8243 to make reservations. Call
612-550-8243 to make reservations. Call
612-550-8243 to make reservations. Call
612-550-8243 to make reservations. Call
612-550-8243 to make reservations. Call
612-550-8243 to make reservations. Call
Male roommates wanted for large 2-bedroom apartment. See at 1011 Indiana, Apt. 5, a.
Ace needs salespersons at the game to sell the official KU hat. Earn a buck a hat $60 in commissions made at Winnigan game. Limited number of salespersons needed. Call 843-0540 or fax 843-0540.
Two need General Admission tickets to Nebraska game. Will pay a good price. Call 841-7425. 10-19
Needed 1 grad student or full time working girl to split rent and util. in a room 48-323 except bedroom Call Aquil Creek 424-8533; between 9:30 & 10:40 485-325 or 645-325 after 6:00
2 male roommates wanted to share housefor 2 male and summer; 848 month plus 10-20
10-20
Help! I call my well-mannered dog need a place to live. Call Jackie. 842-1426. 10-20
Need 3 tickets each for the following games:
U.K.-States, U.K.-Nebraska
841-3204
10-20
Roommate need immediately for nite house
Roommate need immediately for nite house
Ask for Jody 841-1866. $52.75 **10-21**
Ask for Jody 841-1866. $52.75 **10-21**
Need four tickets to Nebraska game, Call after 5-12
p. 841; m. 7128.
Male roommate should to share nice 1 bedroom
apt $80/month plus ½ utility. Phone 843-4742
www.roommates.com
Female to sub-lease an apartment to room with two other girls. Start payment in November 10-22
HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service
Use Kansan Classifieds
A
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
NAISMITH HALL
HALL
Now accepting
Applications
for Spring Semester
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE
Order Now For Christmas
Many at Special Discounts ADVENTURE a bookstore
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Phone: 843-6424
Phone: 843-6424
---
The Lounge
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Bud on Tap
- Pool
- Pinball
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
843.9812 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
Football 9th and Iowa
Open Daily to 8 a.m. Midnight Except Sundays
1
8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, October 18, 1976
When Sedaka sang, the crowd crowed
By STEWART BRANN Campus Editor
On any given night back in February of 1982, the radio would scream out Neil Sedaka's bouncy, catchy hit, "Oh Carol." My older brother would lie across his bed—ignoring his homework and dreaming about his best girl.
"This song was written about me and I yoda." he would sav.
Exactly how a song dedicated to someone named Carol had anything to do with a girl
Review
named Lynda, I'm not quite sure. But that didn't matter -Sedaka's music had a universal appeal.
And apparently it still does. The estimated 4,000 people that entered Allen Field House Saturday night for SUA's homecoming concert spanned generations. There were grade school kids, KU students, and grandparents of students.
Sedaka played to them all.
Wheeo the crowd with "Laughter in the Rain," a soft and melodic hit from 1974 that kicked off the Sedka renaissance after 10 years. It was the crowd. The crowd accepted him warmly.
Sedaka turned on his piano bench to face the audience and asked, "Are there any oldies but goodies fans?" The response of some people was indifferent, there were some fans in the house.
He so jumped into a quick succession of his '60s best: "Oh Carol," "Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen" and "Calendar Girl." With a band to take over (a saxophonist, two guitarists, a drummer and another), he headed for his piano and headed for front center stage, where he strutured and sashayed for the gallery of photographers before him.
The audience, particularly the KU students of yesteryear, clapped and stomped for more. But Sedaka returned to the present and settled back into his melancholy "Soltaire," one of his most moving and poetic pieces.
Sedaka, decked out in a blue sweater and pants outfit that made him look like a puggy little collegiate mascot, romped and bounced around as if he truly was enjoying himself. He gave the impression at times, however, that it was all a routine, that he'd gone through the same thing many times in many places.
But so what if his enthusiasm wasn't 100 per cent sincere? The crowd had come to have a good time, and Sedaka gave the people a good time.
Recreation Services
Mon., Oct. 18 VOLLEYBALL REFEREES CLINIC, 7 p.m., South Gym
Wed., Oct. 20 &
Thurs., Oct. 21 RACQUETBALL FINALS
Thurs., Oct. 21 BADMINTON ENTRY DEADLINE, Rm. 208, Robinson Gym
Fri., Oct. 22 ENTRY DEADLINE.CO-REC RACQUETBALL TOUR-
NAMENT, Rm. 208, Robinson Gym, Play Oct. 23 & Oct. 24
Sat., Oct. 23 CO-REC DOUBLESS TENNIS TOURNAMENT, 10 a.m. at Court 6
KU RUGBY & KU SOCCER at K-STATE
Sun., Oct. 24 KU SOCCER CLUB—ARKANSAS, 2 p.m. at 23rd and Iowa
"Rec-Info" Line 864-3456
Political Admisitement
Paid for by Citizens for Buzzi Committee, Steve Matthews, Treasurer
BUZZI
Your 45th District Representative
FALCO DANCE COMPANY
"The most exciting new modern dance company to emerge during the last decade."
--Clive Games, New York Times
FALCO DANCE COMPANY
SUPERMOTION
LOUIS
Photograph, Jack Mitchell
OCTOBER 27, 1976
Hoch Auditorium, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Student Union Activities, Kansas Union
Univ. of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045
'3° Admission
A DATING WORKSHOP
Would You Like to Date More Often?
has been developed and will begin next week. Come and hear details about this one month workshop.
Mon.—Wed., 4:30—6:30
Oct. 18—Oct. 20, Room 224 Frazier
Single men, KU Students over 18 only
LAST WEEK TO ATTEND!
NOTICE
The following banks of Lawrence will accept payments for water bills:
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK
LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK & TRUST CO.
UNIVERSITY STATE BANK
Payments also may be mailed to:
CITY OF LAWRENCE
4th Floor
First National Bank Building
910 Massachusetts
P.O. Box 708
The cast of the decade.
The western adventure of a lifetime.
PG 1234567890
JOHN WAYNE LAUREN BACALL
"THE SHOOTIST"
No one does it to you like
Roman Polanski
APARTMENT
FOR RENT
Quret bldg
Furnished
2 rooms.
Previous
committee
committed
suicide
The Greatest Discovery St. Martin's
In search of Noah's Ark
It is still here?
Eve. 7:30, 9:30–Sat. & 2:00
Hillcrest 7
R RETURN OF PROPERTY
Residential Park Dept.
Property & Leasing
Varsity
Mercantile Finance LLC
THE TENANT
A Roman Polenaki Film
THE
TENANT
RICHARD HARRIS
THE RETURN
OF A MAN CALLED HORSE"
An Englishman with the crew of an Indian
Every eve. 7:30 & 9:40
Sat. Sun.Mat. 2:30
Granada
PG
From the man who gave you "Blazing Saddles," "Young Frankenstein"
Zeo Mostel & Gene Wilder As
Hillcrest
SUBMARINE
OPEN LATE
happening in Lawrence
OPEN LATE
EVERY NIGHT
mon - thurs.
till 11:30
fri.,sat.
till 1:30
sun.
till 10:30
JUST WEST OF THE X.Ω FOUNTAIN
1420 Crescent
News from The Hair Suite
842-1117
We are proud to announce the return of Linda Haverkamp on Oct. 21, and the addition of two new hairstylists, Beth Cole & Diane Matthews. Also for the KU students, busy women and working men; we will be open late Mondays & Twedays till 9:00 p.m. This will help KU students get in on Mon. & Tues. haircut discount days. Call 842-8600 for appt.
THE HAIR SUITE
Katie Ainsworth - Owner - Stylist
Thelma Wright - Manager - Stylist
FORMERLY RAMADA INN
BEAUTY SALON
6th & Iowa Free Parking
Call Now for an Appt.
"Our Friendly Face"
100%
CHEF STEAK SPECIAL Steak Platter, Salad
and Drink
all for only $1.99
with coupon
Offer good Thurs., Oct. 21
SIZZLER
FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
1518 W.23rd 842-8078
--like quiking on a springy crepe sole.
The Going's Easy in OLDMAINE trotters
OLDMAINE trotters
Kick-off.
Trotters
new
slip on.
FLEXIBLE
Rosewood Brown, and Nutan Rawhide Leather.
Judy, Buttery soft leather tie, puffed and stitched like quilting on a spring.
gy crepe sole.
Rally.
Soft
Rawhide
Leather.
Wedged
crepe soles.
Navy Blue,
Rosewood B
shoe
Navy Blue, Natural and Rosewood Brown.
MC's shoes
813 Mass. St.
VI 3-2091
king
R
USE
--weeks old, caught a ride home snuggled in Bauman's coat rather than catching a cold from the wet sidewalks.
2
COOI
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Moore closes football practice
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.41
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
See story page six
Tuesday, October 19, 1976
BENEFIT MARKETING
Wet freeloader
Even the first rain in recent memory didn't stop little Rooney from following Debbie Bauman, 1612 Tennessee St., to the KU campus early morning. Rooney, 8
Faculty to help pay wagons bill
By JIM COBB Staff Writer
Some faculty members have come to the aid of University of Kansas administrators and area Bicentennial groups who have been at a standoff for much of the past six months about a bill from KU.
The bill was for a one-day visit to KU from a Bicentennial wagon train trial 10.30 Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday that several faculty members, who asked to remain unidentified, had started a fund to help pay the bill.
KU had the original bill, for about $1,300, to the Douglas County Bicentennial Commission. The bill was for the costs of materials used during the wagon train's visit, and for wages paid to campus police and buildings and grounds employees.
SHANKEL AGREED last month to waive a $123.87 charge for materials, but said KU wasn't allowed by Kansas law to pay employees. He didn't directly related to University activities.
That left a charge of $1,250.65. The Douglas County Bicentennial Commission, the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission and the KU Bicentennial Committee met two weeks ago to discuss the possibility of pooling funds to pay the bill.
This cooperative effort won't be needed now. Shankel said the faculty members would pay $779.70 of the bill, the amount of money required for buildings and grounds employees.
Clencene Hills, chairman of the county Bientennial group, said she had polled nine
of the 10 members of the group's executive committee, and they had agreed to pay the remaining $470.95, for wages of police.
SHE SAID the county commissioners would be asked to approve the expenditure before checks were sent to KU. The commissioners didn't discuss the bill at yesterday's meeting, but probably will consider it at a Wednesday meeting, a secretary to the commissioners said.
Shankel said some faculty members "who have deep roots in the community and are concerned about the University's relationship with people in the community" had put funds into a Kansas University Association account to help pay the bill.
Shankel said the KU administration supported the faculty members' efforts.
THE BILL was sent by KU last spring and became a subject of controversy this fall when Bicentennial commission members said that they shouldn't be responsible for the bill, that the charges for one day's stay seemed excessive, and that KU hadn't warned the county group about costs until it was too late to cancel the wagon train visit.
Hills said she was happy a compromise had been reached.
Shankel said KU funds, including endowment funds, probably wouldn't be used to pay the bill. It had been reported earlier that the endowment Association funds would be used.
Women's athletics disputes gyms' use
"It was a very generous and typical gesture of KU faculty members to do something like this," she said. "They're very much a part of the community."
She said she thought it unusual that a scheduling committee would rather give up the entire field house for a room in Robinson to reserve one gymnasium in Robinson.
BECAUSE WEDNESDAY nights were the only time allotted to women at athletics for volleyball in Robinson, California, schools became a problem, she said.
It was impossible for many teams to
BY COURTNEY THOMPSON
The temporary cancellation of today's women's volleyball game by the men's athletic department has raised the issue of how Allen Field House and Robinson Gymnasium should be used.
The men's department notified the women's department Friday that there was "no way" the volleyball match scheduled for today could be played in the field house. Marian Washington, an athletic collegiate athlete, said yesterday the spoken Friday to Doug Messer, assistant athletic director.
Flarup said the women's department didn't ask to play the volleyball in the house in the first place, in the gymnasium. Robinson was submitted last spring, she said, but the facilities committee in charge said some matches had to be played there.
"I told him that Jerry Waugh (assistant athletic director) had conceived the game of volleying the use of the field house for volleyball matches. I haven't heard from Messer yet, so I'm planning to have the match on the field court house."
MESSER SAID yesterday afternoon that the women's athletics department would be allowed to use the field house on a trial basis. But he expressed concern about continued multipurpose use of the basketball court.
Tamara Flarpup, women's sports information director, said the reason given for the original refusal to allow the volleyball game had been that the court would have to have been taped for volleyball, the baskets would have to be wrapped and the house would have to have been closed to student recreation during the evening.
FLARUP SAID the incident emphasized the question of the women's athletic department's ability to use gymnasium and the field house
Washington said she could appreciate Messer's concern about the additional traffic on the court and the problems involved in the retaping of court markings. But she said such concessions were not uncommon at most universities.
See ROBINSON, page two
The use of the field house as an additional place for open recreation has taken some of the pressure off Robinson as the sole evening refuge of average student athletic enthusiasts, Wilkerson said.
miss the two days of classes needed to travel to KU for a Wednesday match, she said. Because of conflicts with recreation, she said, Saturday games were discouraged because people in the physical education and recreation (HPER).
"THE STUDENTS pay to utilize Robinson, Ossess said. "The average guy with a basketball under his arm should be able to count on this building being available when it's scheduled to be so he can do his thing."
Wayne Osness, director of HPER,
said the facilities committee, of which
Washington is a member, met
regularly to determine how space could
best be provided for each group that
wants to use the gymnasium.
Flarup said a statement of priorities for use of Robinson had been set up by HPER
"That list states that women's athletics is third, followed by open recreation. Instruction and intramurals come first, but they're one-upping recreation over us, and it's a lower priority on their list."
BECAUSE MANY women's sports are based in Robinson, she said, they shouldn't be "bumped" for free play or unscheduled recreation.
Wilkerson said that although the women's athletics program had grown in the last two years, so had the recreational services department. Intramurals and open recreation are now top priorities at Robinson because they are programs funded by and designed to serve the student, he said.
Oness and Tom Wilkerson, director of intramurals and recreation services, agreed that women's athletics no longer rekindled recreation for use of Robinson.
But Ossess said the statement of priorities Flarum referred to was no longer applicable because it was made during athletics it was still a division of HPER.
"Recently, the committee had to make a value judgment about the relative importance of various aspects of KU's athletic programs. The majority of the faculty to students at the University was decided to be most important."
"WE HAVE an active student group involved in intramurals and open recreation." Osmann said. "We also have a school library building is designed it's actually used,
Study favors KU's trash burner
By JIM COBB Staff Writer
A trash-burning steam plant at the University of Kansas could keep energy costs down and prevent fuel shortages, a draft report of a feasibility study says.
a private firm—Henningson, Durham and Richardson of Omaha—last week released the report to the University. It has been approved by the Kansas Board of Regents.
The final report won't be released until November, but Max Lucas, University director of facilities planning, said the report was "very favorable" to the proposal.
THE TRASH-BURNING plant would cost from $11 million to $14 million and would comprise three parts: a storage area for trash, a furnace where trash should be removed and another appliance that would remove odors and debris particles from plant emissions.
The feasibility study compared the cost and efficiency of using natural gas, fuel oil, coal and solid waste to create energy for KU. A main conclusion of the study was that the feasible alternative to traditional energy sources may be one of the most economical and
Lawrence and Douglas County officials gave tentative approval last year to a plan to provide trash to KU free of charge. In Kalinkin counties could provide more trash.
The plant probably would pay for itself in about 10 years, but certainly in no more than 20 years.
There are 90,000 residents in the three counties, which generate 200 tons of solid
"IN GENERAL," the report will show that a solid waste fuel plant at the University is a viable alternative, if a firm agreement with the manufacturer results in a solid waste can be reached." Lucas said.
waste a day. Shawnee County also has offered to provide trash for the plant.
The steam plant in use at KU uses natural gas, but has the capability to burn fuel oil. Lucas said supplies of natural gas were needed to be cut drastically in the next few years.
FUEL OIL, he said, is four or five times as expensive as natural gas and costs are twice as much.
William Smith, dean of the School of Engineering and the first person to suggest that KU build a trash plant, said a third option. coal, also would be expensive.
The initial construction cost of a coal-burning plant would be about the same as the trash plant, Smith said, but coal supply could cost from $1 million to $2 million a year.
Trash would cost KU nothing. The only problem would be to keep enough of it, if you need it.
Luca said, "Without an adequate supply of trash we don't want to construct it."
THE PROPOSED plant's storage area, probably a large pit, would keep trash ready to be burned and under negative air pressure. That pressure would force odors and gases into the furnace, where they would be burned. The furnace would burn wood and other waste products, so would be forced through a series of cleansing chambers before being released.
"There will be no odor, no debris, no visible emissions." Lucas said. "The actual emissions will be clean and will meet very strict environmental standards."
Once steam was produced, the current system of delivering the steam through pipes to campus buildings would be used. Lucas said several sites were under consideration for the plant, but none had been selected.
See TRASH, page seven
Garbage business is picking up
By RICK PADDEN
Last week has gone. Midterm exams have gone. The weekend parties have passed. The football game is over and the Sooners have said, "so long."
Staff Writer
What did last week leave behind? Garbage. Toms of it. Everything from beer cans
Someone had to collect that garbage and transport it to a place away from the eyes and noses of those who accumulated it, and moved them to Sanitation Department garbage men.
1980
"It's about the nastiest, dirtiest, smellest job a man can have, but it's the thing I like to do." Revers Shears, a Lawrence garbageman, said yesterday. Shears has worked the University of Kansas route for seven years.
SHEARS IS A "trash-packer" on a three-man crew that starts work at 6 a.m., six days a week, and makes the rounds of academic buildings, residence halls, lunchrooms, apartment buildings and houses in the areas on and around the campus.
Harry Boyle, crew leader and driver of the truck that Shears packs trash into, said, "It's a steady job. I work every day, rain or shine, just like the mailman."
Trashy weekend Robert Lawrie, Sanitation sanitation employee, has a difficult first
Trashy weekend stop Monday mornings—the Kansas Union after a KU home football game. Robert Otis, Lawrence sanitation employee, has a difficult first
Boyle, 54, said that he'd been driving various types of trucks since he was 16 and that he'd been driving the "hill route" in a garbage truck for the last nine years.
The third member of the crew, Robert Oatis, said he'd been a Lawrence garbage man for 10 years and had been working the University route for eight months.
BOYLE SAID he knew his route so well that it had become routine, but that he would have to stay there.
Although Shears used to be a driver and had his own route, he said the routine bothered him, so he went back to loading the truck and operating the packers on the back of the truck.
Up until two years ago, the crew made pickups on the entire campus six days a week. Boyle said, but now the men stop only as the Union and the residence halls that often
He said that the rest of the campus was being reached only twice a week, and that covering that many collections in such a short time meant nonstop work for his men on those two days. He said the men seldom break coffee breaks during those shifts, he said.
up with the large amount of waste that accumulates on campus. Bovle said.
"We have to work as a team and we have to move fast, no matter what the weather is."
HE SAID the most difficult day of the week was Monday, because the crew didn't work Sundays, and the trash built up. The problem is at its worst, he said, when the Jayhawks have a home football game. He had accumulation doubled on those days.
Bovle said that working on a garbage
truck wasn't as *stinky* and messy as many people seemed to believe.
The department provides the men with clean uniforms every day, he said, and most of the items they pick up are in proper containers such as trash can, trash bags or the larger trash tanks that can be dumped hydraulically.
He said trees and shrubs must be cut to less than five feet and bundled before his planting.
THE ONLY TIME things get stinky,
> CARBAGE THINGS
See GARBAGE, page five
2
Tuesday, October 19, 1976
News Digest
From the Associated Press
U.S. takes science Nobels
STOCKHOLM—A Harvard professor won the 1768 Nobel Prize in chemistry and two American nuclear physicist shared the physics prize yesterday to complete a joint research effort on new methods for measuring the mass of atoms.
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences named William Nunn Lipscomb, 61st in the chemistry prize "for his studies of boranes, illuminating problems of chem
The physics prize went jointly to Professors Burton Richter of Stanford University and Samuel C. C. Ting of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for pioneering work in the discovery of a heavy elementary particle now called the "J- Particle."
Parties in boycott named
WASHINGTON—Acting on the orders of President Gerald Ford, the Commerce Department yesterday released the names of American companies involved in 59 transactions with Arab nations. The companies were required by Arab nations to participate in the economic boycott against Israel to keep their Arab business; they also agreed to take part in the agreements of America of San Francisco; McGraw-Edison International of Elgin, Ill.; Deer & Co. or Dabuque, Iowa; and the First Wisconsin Bank of Michigan.
Robinson use ...
From page one
Wilkerson said he thought he had accommodated the women's athletics department in scheduling a gym in Robinson for their use each Wednesday evening. Saturdays would be no problem, he said, because competition for use of the facility was minimal on weekends.
"WeVE GIVEN up good recreational time to the women's programs—Wednesday nights, the additional time in early evenings taken up by the women's basketball team practice in the field house. Both of those are prime times for our recreation program. And the average student wonders why he can't use buildings as he wants, when he wants," he said.
Tuesday and Thursday volleyball matches in the field house also infringe on scheduled recreation times. Omanes said, "You camped" in the field house is to be expected.
Poll indicates Ford gaining
A number of polls and surveys released during the weekend indicated that Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter had retained his lead over President Gerald Ford—but not by much.
In a poll released yesterday by the Louis Harris organization, Carter led Ford 44-40, a narrowing of his earlier 46-39 standing. But the poll indicated that the Democrat's edge was well within the margin of error of 15%. The difference in tree is nearly even and could go either way.
Carter, apparently recognizing that the presidential campaign could become more bitter in its waning days, expressed confidence yesterday that both he and Ford would try to keep the campaign from descending to the "gutter level."
Carter made the remark in Plains, Ga., just hours before a scheduled campaign swing through Florida, North Carolina and New York. Ford aides she would use in 2014 to prepare for Friday night's third and final debate with Carter at Williamsburg, Va.
The debate, unlike the previous two, will be open to all topics.
A MARY HARTMAN
MARY HARTMAN
look a like contest!!!
HALLOWEEN DISCO DANCE
Kansas Union Ballroom
8:00 p.m. $1.75
Saturday, Oct. 23rd
★ By Gay Services of Kansas ★
Special Notice . . .
Please do not bring alcoholic beverages to
the dance. Beer will be sold with an I.D.
Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
Elect the professional who vows to eliminate politics from law enforcement and whose goal is to provide the leadership necessary to bring our law enforcement agencies above reproach. These ideals are sincere promises and not just campaign rhetoric.
M. G. MORAN
*Experience*
Lawrence Police Dept
Douglas County
Attorney's Office
•Trainina
education K.U. with emphasis on criminology related courses
Kansas Law Enforcement Academy
Academy
Bachelor's State College
Traffic Inst. & Seminars
emphasizing an active
knowledge of criminal
*Veteran Combat service in the Republic of South Vietnam
Panhellenic Undergraduate Anthropology Association United Lutheran Student Center American Society of Interior Designers
ELECT
James (Jim) Huskey SHERIFF—DOUGLAS CO.
(Jim)
Campus Vets Student Senate All Scholarship Hall Fencing Club Friends Oread Meeting Association for Computing Machinery
CAFE
CAMPUS ACTIVITIES FESTIVAL EXPOSITION
"The athletic department has jurisdiction over the field house," he said, "so I expect to have recreation pre-emptied from time to time. If we don't designate a designated recreational building, and I don't feel we can deny students access to the gym in order to accommodate a special group."
"The facilities committee makes hard decisions, which are unpopular with some of the members of that committee. But I would hope once the decision on scheduling is completed complaints wouldn't surface six months later. I think that's unfair and unethical."
ADD SOME PIZZAZZ TO YOUR LIFE THIS TUESDAY COME TO CAMPUS ACTIVITIES FESTIVAL EXPOSITION.
CAFE consists of diverse campus organizations offering activities for a variety of student interests.
TUES.,OCT.19 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union
Funded from the Student Activity Fee
Cricket Club
Gliding Club KU-Y Hillol Interfraternity Council Alpha Phi Omega
Breakfast Special
Campus Veterans
118B
Kansas Union
864-4478
LA CAMPUS FERRARIAS
Soaring and Hang Gliding Club KU-Y Hillol Interfraternity Council Alpha Phi Omega
Do you need a tutor for any class at KU? Can you provide tutorial assistance for any classes at KU? If so, contact me or leave your phone number at this office. This service is for veterans and non-veterans.
Every morning, 6 a.m. 11 a.m., from now until the end of October you can enjoy our Breakfast Specials.
U
COUNTRY
KITCHEN
HOME OF
Country Boy
No.1 Breakfast:
Eggs, Bacon, and
Pancakes
Only 89c
Chipped Beef on Toast Only 79°
1509 W 23rd
KU Backgammon Club
ANNOUNCES
The First Annual Fall
Backgammon Championships
to be held Sunday, Oct. 24, in the Jayhawk Room—
Kansas Union sponsored by:
BRITCHES CORNER Makers of fine clothes for men and women, 9th & Mass. and the Backgammon Club of K.C.
ADVANCED DIVISION—Elimination Knockout Tournament including consolation flight; prizes awarded to top five places. Entry fee $5.00. Begins 2 p.m.
BEGINNER DIVISION—Swiss Style Tournament; 4 five point rounds. Prize awarded to top three places. Entry fee $3.00. Begins 3:30 p.m. Doubling cube will be used in both divisions (will be explained for beginners). Sign up and pay Entry Fee in SUA office, Kansas Union.
For further information, call Rich Boyer at 1-432-3143 after 5:30 p.m.
Open to all students, faculty and staff. Deadline, Oct. 22, 5 p.m.
Step out in Zodiac Boots
Arensberg's = Shoes
819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen
Tuesday. October 19. 1976
3
On Campus
Events
TONIGHT: THE KU CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 6:30 in Dundee Chapel, THE COMMISSION will meet at 6:30 in the Jawahk Room of the Union. NAVIGATORS will meet at 7 in the Union's International Room. JOAN FINNEY, Kansas state treasurer, will be the guest speaker of the KU Democratrs at 7:30 in the University Hall. KIDDER, professor of art history and archeology and director of the Archeology Research Center at International Christian University in Tokyo, will lecture and show views of the Takamatsuzuka Tomb, a recent archaeological site located at 8 in the lecture hall of Soooner Museum.
TOMORROW: THE STUDENT SENATE will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Big Room. FORMATION MEETING will be at 7 p.m. in the Union's Jiahawk Room.
Duplex plan, alterations of parking go before city
The city treasury may soon be more than $100,000 richer if the Lawrence City Commission can negotiate a compromise tonight between residents and developers of the Four Seasons Planned Unit Development (PUD).
Developers of the PUD said last week that they would pay more than $100,000 in delinquent taxes if the final plat of Four Seasons was approved.
If the plat isn't approved, the developers said they wouldn't pay the back taxes. If the taxes aren't paid, the land will be sold in a tax sale next January.
Residents of a portion of the PUD objected to the plat because plans call for the construction of many duplexes. Those duplexes would prefer single-family houses to be built.
Although a tentative agreement was worked out last week, the commission deferred final action for a week to allow more time for discussion between the opposing factions, and to allow the city to obtain flood studies relating to the PUD
The flood studies, made by the United States Geological Survey, might make a difference in how some of the PUD's land could be used.
--reg.
$7^{98}$
OPEN HOUSE COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY
Oct. 23, 1976 9:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
In other business, the commission will consider recommendations from the Traffic Safety Commission to remove parking on several streets in the city.
If the flood plain study now in use is revised and enlarged, some of the land in it may be flood-prone.
The commission recommended removal of parking south on Court from Edgehill Road, on the north side of Edgehill Road from a point 40 feet east of the east line of Crestline Drive and from the west side of Crestline Drive from 23rd Street to 214th Street Terrace.
Officers of the Free University of
Iranian nationals who have
graduated from Kazaa campus on November 23 to
interview Iranian nationals who
have graduate degrees, in the
following areas: education and
counseling, psychology, engineering, physical
sciences, natural sciences,
mathematics, computer science,
sciences, and computer sciences.
In addition to employment opport-
nities, a number of number
of degrees are available.
THE FREE UNIVERSITY OF IRAN
Interested candidates are are invited to attend a 2& for Strong Hall for further information on The Free University of Hawaii and visit to The University of Kansas.
University Daily Kansan
News from The Hair Suite
We are proud to announce the return of Linda Haverkamp on Oct. 21, and the addition of two new hairstylists, Beth Cole & Diane Matthews. Also for the KU students, busy women and working men, we will be open late Mondays & Tuesdays till 9:00 p.m. This will help KU students get in on Man, & Tues, haircut discount days. Call 842-8600 for appl.
THE HAIR SUITE
"Our Friendly Face"
Thelma Wright — Manager — Stylist
Katie Ainsworth — Owner — Stylist
FORMERLY RAMADA INN
BEAUTY SALON
6th & Iowa Free Parking Call Now for an Appt.
Commission on the Status of Women presents
A panel discussion on how the changing roles of women affect the roles of men. Walter Smith—School of Education; Clarence Dillingham—Affirmative Action; Jim Sanders—3rd yr. Law Student
Tuesday, Oct. 19, 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room
Business Meeting - 6:30 p.m.
Partially funded by Student Activity Fee
MIX
'N MATCH
KEBOBS
CHOOSE
ANY TWO FOR $3.99
Choose any two kebabs to make one scrumptious dinner. Mix & Match Kebab Dinner includes two kebabs, rice pilaf, plus your choice of soup, juice or salad. For all 3.99.
Mr. Steak is servin' up kebabs in four mix n match flavors. Teriyaki steak kebob. Buttery scallop kebob Juicy steak kebob And teriyaki shrimp kebob
920 W. 23rd
Open 7 days
11 a.m.—10 p.m.
Mr. Steak
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
$ ^{2} $1976 Mr Steak Inc.
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Vorstands
Gewinnsphiln
Kief's Discount Price
Top 100
$ 595
1-913-842-1544
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
ORCHESTRAL
130 000 STARRAS. Also appear Zachariah, Zachariah, a PSP Beatbox
(Music from "Moon...2001" - Psicopass Odyssey)
130 080 BRAMMS, B. Magnesium Dancers, DVORA, S. Skavan
138 25: DILMERS. CHEMISTRY-Based Suite, CHOPIN. Les Pinceaux.
Suite de la Routine. SUPO. AQRKAN.
138 782 MAYON : Surprise & Clock Symphonies —
BBDO Inc.
130 023 BIRMINGHAM Price of Water MONSTROYGON Night on Bed
BIRMINGHAM (MONT) Courtroom Correspondence
(BIRMINGHAM) MARKET
Gönenes - BPD Karlsruhe
139 692 LÜSST. LÜSST. Fattaria Mădeșa, Hungarian
139 692 LÜSST. LÜSST. Fattaria Mădeșa, Hungarian
- 4, 5 - Shira Chukkyakis, pisa
MOORE & LATUCKER'S
The Ballad Of Baby Doe
REVERLY
SILLS
FRANCES
BIBLE
WALTER
CASSEL
New York
City Opera
156 202 MOBZAT - Lane Arena Nashville, LISTEN PROVIDES Laptop
157 203 MOBZAT - Lane Arena Nashville, LISTEN PROVIDES Laptop
158 204 MOBZAT - Lane Arena Nashville, LISTEN PROVIDES Laptop
| 138 792 | NAYURS *Nayurus & Clock* 5 Symphonies |
| :--- | :--- |
| 138 793 | HANGEL *The Instrument Magic Complete* BPO Kadeka |
| 138 807 | REITHEMUN *Symphonies I & II* BPO Kadeka |
| 138 802 | REITHEMUN *Symphonies I & II* Ticusli BPO Kadeka |
| 138 804 | REITHEMUN *Symphonies No. 4* BPO Kadeka |
| 138 804 | REITHEMUN *Symphonies No. 5* BPO Kadeka |
| 138 805 | REITHEMUN *Symphonies No. 6* Postal BPO Kadeka |
| 138 808 | REITHEMUN *Symphonies No. 7* BPO Kadeka |
| 138 815 | REITHEMUN *Symphonies No. 10* JJ Ticusli |
1328 815 MOZBERT Lymphoma No. 30 No. 41 Superfett
128 800 SCHUCKMAN Symphony No. 1 (Le B Rat) Trombone
128 800 KRONKER BPO Organ
138 800 HANDEL Music Maker Soft Royal Fireworks Maker
138 800 STRAINWAY A尺 of Sound BPO Organ
128 801 TECHNOVAX Symphony No. 6 - Pallettone -
BPO Organ
188 927 DOKRAAN Lymphoma No. 1, Old No. 3, New
Broad BMID
188 927 DOKRAAN Lymphoma No. 1, Old No. 3, New
Broad BMID
Ballad of Baby Doe
Sills—NYC Opera
28 2709 061—3 discs
【
180 923 **BRUSSY** a la Moi, Amyes Mall, Gin Foum
587 452 BRUSSY a la Moi, Amyes Mall, Gin Foum
640 531 BRUSSY a la Moi, Amyes Mall, Gin Foum
138 925 BAKS. Samplery No. 1, E. C. Minus, BOA Bank,
Bankservant, Samplery No. 1, BoA Bank, 227 000 1230
100 975 BRANS
WARNING Laboratory No. 1 & 2 BDFA
100 976 MENGENHUI
WARNING Laboratory No. 3 & 4 BDFA
100 977 WEIGELING
WARNING Laboratory No. 5 & 6 BDFA
129 925 BRAMS: Symphony No. 2 in D, BPO keyboards
128 926 BRAMS: Symphony No. 3: Operas on a Mayen
---
1084 86A BRELLOC LSMPMNPN FACILITYN MTU ATAU
1084 86A BRELLOC LSMPMNPN FACILITYN MTU ATAU
1084 86A BRELLOC LSMPMNPN FACILITYN MTU ATAU
128 925 BRAHMS Symphony No. 2 in D. BPO Karajan
130 D16 STRAUSS The Blue Curve matte, notes, mother
board, motherboard, motherboard, motherboard, motherboard,
139 001 SCHUMER* Unlimited Access* Agreement No. B & EBTEMOVEN* Members of the Board* Bureau* BPM/Marjan
139 002 BARFOR* Concerta for Charlotte* BPM/Marjan
139 003 MOZART* Live at the Marlborough Quarterly No. 15 *B & A Fail* X, AFT* BPM/Marjan
139 004 BUSCUSGREY* Pictures at an exhibition* RAVEL*
BMI/Marjan
139 005 STRAUSS* The Most Beautiful womens garments, movies
□
130 015 BEITNUVEN. Sympongno No. B Querfurt, Fidelis,
Leonhard, Leonore III. BP, Kapsan
□
Corridor, Length 11 - BPO Marathon
130 016 CORIDULUS Vengea, Volge Triade, Tepelan Swen of Sumatra BPO Marathon
130 017 CHEMOVARIA, Symphonia No. 1, 5 Minute Bronze
130 018 CHEMOVARIA, Symphonia No. 1, 5 Minute Bronze
130 019 CHEMOVARIA, Symphonia No. 1, 5 Minute Bronze
130 020 DIMEX KORSORBAD, Schachtelbeichen Berlin
Phoenixmühlen, Germany, Length 11 - BPO Marathon
130 021 CHEMOVARIA, 1822 Corridor, Homepool Jacob
Phoenixmühlen, Germany, Length 11 - BPO Marathon
[ ]
[ ]
□
135.010 CERNARRAT Nuclear Research Center, Switzerland
Orange, BIOLOGY, BKP, MEMORIAL
□
139 037 LU27 Lite Pro Printer, Hangtag Notepad No. 2
(5mm, 6mm, 8mm, 10mm, 12mm, 14mm, 16mm, 18mm, 20mm)
Middle Window, Mute Window, Back Window, Port No. A4
(Multipack), Port No. B (Single).
139 043 SCHUBERT Symphony No. 5 in C GPO Kawaii
139 061 RECOUVENIR Welfare and charity Maternity and
Band, BKW Corps
1984 DAL BENNING www.dalbenning.com/Marketing/Media
Ben, Dan. (www.dalbenning.com)
1935 31 MANAGER SYNTAX PARAMETERS
12030 8 STRANGUE R1 JOEFM STRANGUE R1
MANAGER_SYNTAX {
JOEFM_STRANGUE R1 JOEFM_STRANGUE R1
}
2530 048 IRES Three Places in New England RUGGLES Sum
250 308 OBJECTIVE STRENGTH Motivation MATERIALS RAWEL INTERACTION A. Dixon
Cell No. 2 F. Jenkins P. Newell G. Newell England
**PLEASE READ THE INFO BELOW**
OBJECTIVES:
STRENGTH:
MOTIVATION:
RAWEL INTERACTION:
A318 125 B6C4 179 A730 179 D883 179 C263 179 E105 179 F105 179 G105 179 H105 179 I105 179 J105 179 K105 179 L105 179 M105 179 N105 179 O105 179 P105 179 Q105 179 R105 179 S105 179 T105 179 U105 179 V105 179 W105 179 X105 179 Y105 179 Z105
250301 001 SUPPIR BWK MGRAN
250301 002 RDICVINUM BWK MGRAN
250301 003 IRACENE SUBTASKIT MADE BWK MGRAN
250301 004 TECHENVORK BWK MGRAN
250301 005 TECHENVORK No. in 1% volume
2530 128 AOIET. Commercial Suite No. 1. (Ariarte Entertainment Suites No. 1).
2530 102 MOLEST The Planets DSO Sheinberg
2530 348 IINTENA 4 SIMPLEMENT DOREN PARKER III Walters
Walters's Camp Hodge Mission Jaffa Canyon CANVAS
Abbado/Rite of Spring
2530 635
Pollini/Beethoven 2530645
Joe Brewhay
Le Nore du Prideurage
Labor Sempiro Gervais Cloud 42000
Concert des Champs-Élysées
2030 128 RIUTE Caucasian Suite No. I, Artemis Survival Suite No. I
2030 129 TORNSTONE Kurskoye and Suntir SCABAIN II Point of
Luxury
2030 129 BIRKHAMON Symphony No. G, *Vienna*
Phoenix Philharmonic
2030 129 ROSSIAN Overtures, BPO Karagany
2030 145 DENSSYS Image After Effects of Paint, BSO Theresa
2030 145 DIESSYS Image After Effects of Paint, BSO Theresa
2030 145 STRAUSS Stage Speech Theater, BSO Bradenmor
Music Hall - "2004 A Space Delivery"
2030 195 TORNSTONE Seak Lake Studio, Driving Beauty Suite
2030 243 ENGCO Pearl Petr苏珊 Suite No. I, J, Square insurer,
BPO Karagany
2030 243 ENGCO Pearl Petr苏珊 Suite No. I, J, Square insurer,
BPO Karagany
2030 188 OFFREACH Ceramic Painting Exhibition, COUNTRY BLUE
2030 188 OFFREACH Ceramic Painting Exhibition, COUNTRY BLUE
2030 BUMMERMIT Mathieu, Matthieu, Der Meyer, Concert
Mat for Strings and Brass, BBO Bradenmor
2030 4 SIMERNIA 4 SIMERNIA FRENCH MIDTOWN III
1303 292 STRENGTHY, The Aile of Song, King at the Stars
1304 293 ENERGY, Lending in, in Conversion to For String
Gymnastics, Cinderella BFF, BFP Karaoke
1305 294 VIVAID, The Fourth, BFF, karaoke
1306 295 BENZIO, TCHANSKY, PROFESSOR, Rome & Judi
Lan Francisco Orchestra, Gymnastics
1306 299 ENERGY, Singing Dance from West Side
Ballet, Big League, SFSO Karaoke
1307 298 Big League, SFSO Karaoke
2530 316 JOHNNE & JOSEF STRAUES Wallzines and Pokes
Lastwig van Beethoven
Symphony No. 3 Op. 109 No. 8 (Op. 109)
MAURICE POLLINI
250 30 16 BROWNSON Symphony No. 4, "Romantic" - Chicago
Gallery Guitar Baritone
2530 307 MOBILITY: Symphony No. 21, c O Major, "Dagger"
SCHEMATIC: Symphony No. 21, c O Major, "Dagger"
250 310 BERLINE BERLINE Fashion Palette WBW Stainless Steel
250 310 BERLINE Fashion Palette WBW Stainless Steel
250 310 BERLINE Coral Compact Concealer All Around SPF 90
250 302 B2 ARGYNS ARGYNS Azalea Synchronizer BOTA Arabian
250 302 B2 ARGYNS Azalea Synchronizer BOTA Arabian
250 310 BERTUENE BERTUENE Exquisite Couture Embellishments
250 310 BERTUENE BERTUENE Exquisite Couture Embellishments
2530 415 DUVRA. Signature No. 58 J Mager. *New World*
*UK* UKLK.
2520 418 MEMORIES! Somerset No. 2 - 3 May 1968
Memorial Service 5 - 6 May 1968
Memorial Services 7 - 8 May 1968
2530 403 47 BEHRUNG Symphony No. 3 Tribute, VBO Bomber
2700 813 07 SMITHA Symphony No. 8 A Choral, BVO Bomber
2700 814 07 SMITHA Symphony No. 8B BVO Bomber
2700 704 04 SMITHA The Filmed Theater, BVO Bomber
2700 706 06 MANER Symphony No. 5 Chorus of Darien Theater
2700 707 03 SMITHA The Filmed Theater, BVO Bomber
2700 613 07 BACB Concert Hall, Concert Theater, BVO Bomber
2700 613 07 BACB Concert Hall, Concert Theater, BVO Bomber
2700 981 07 SCHWIMM THE Symphony House, Audrey Hepburn Theatre, BVO Bomber
2700 981 07 SCHWIMM THE Symphony House, Audrey Hepburn Theatre, BVO Bomber
2700 801 07 BEHRUNG The Wind Symphony, BVO Bomber
2700 801 07 BEHRUNG The Wind Symphony, BVO Bomber
198 168 PATRONIERS HOME STUDIO, SEIBERMAN WIDMANN
198 168 SCHENKIN SEIBERMAN WIDMANN
CONCERTOS
128 876 RACWARNHUNT Pointe Combo No. 2 Meridian
Barrister Gunnell Palm City Morrison Willett
128 771 BETTENHOUSE Pointe Combo No. 5 Emperor
Barrister Gunnell Palm City Morrison Willett
128 793 MOZART Pointe Combo No. 2 Garcia Adega
Virginia Marquis
128 800 BEAUMONT Pointe Combo No. 1 & 4 Emperor
Barrister Gunnell Palm City Morrison Willett
128 822 ENGRAVING Pointe Combo No. 1 Sanchez
Barrister Gunnell Palm City Morrison Willett
128 832 ENGRAPHY Pointe Combo No. 3 Marquis
Barrister Gunnell Palm City Morrison Willett
128 861 ENGLISH BOOK CENTER Fountain Christian Friese
19.08.21 BELTERWEIN Venkendra Cockery in D. Choragian Ferner,
in BUK PAKUG
190 827 RETURN TO VISUAL CONCERTS in D. Concert Fermata.
139 601 CONGRATULATIONS in D. Concert Fermata.
145 601 CONGRATULATIONS in D. Concert Fermata.
139 038 MOZART : A Horn Concertos - Gerd Seister, Horn,
BPG. Karam
139 0044 DUVOR Cells Concrete TCNMARKIV Recycle
Variables: M, Bustynightship, CBO, BIRD妒
139 182) DORFIN Pano Conteiro I. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteiro II. l em I. N. Marcelo Aragón Pano Conteiro III. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteiro IV. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteiro V. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteiro VI. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteiro VII. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteiro VIII. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteio IX. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteio X. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteio Y. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteio Z. l em Lemo 1220 LAPF Pano Conteio
199-440 8000000 Contenido de Anagena; Térmica para la
Antibiótico; Anticandidio Tóxico Gujur; Ocupación
de Agua;
2530 KO VRWASI Six Concertos - KBARWAian
(including music from Rip, "Enna Madigan")
2530 211 VWABEI: Complete Companion for Light Guitar and
Bass Ensemble. Includes a complete Chord Chart
and a complete Chromatic Guitar Chart.
.250 350 MNIMOSLIDOM Vincifer Coronato de M. Marer
TCHORVIGNAN Vincifer Coronato de M. Nathan
MILLETTI Vincifer Coronato de M. Nathan
2590 411 MOZART. Concerti Concerto, K. 622. Bassoon.
Concerto, K. 193. VP0. Bassoon.
2520 439 B STRAUSS Onix Concrete from Concrete No. 7
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7370 D70 Choir of the Church of St. James the Great, Birmingham, England
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7290 046 WEBER. Der Firmen-/Laborate-Jahr, Mathematik, Schrift-
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THE LITTLE CHILD OF THE REPUBLIC
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2020-29 | SCHINP. 34, Flats Op. 10 & Op. 25 | Magnolia
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190 384 BACH: ORGAN TOCCATAS & FUDGEES - O Minor F.
'Dardan' in D Minor B & C-Helmut Watha,
Alkemar, Organ
2520 206 **RETURNS** SetUp. Op. 42. "Spring" Mode for Win
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Win. Op. 17. "Spring" Mode for Win.
2500 400 406 RETROHUM. Parmas Sonata No. 23, Op. 57
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CHORALE/VOCAL/LIEDER
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1726 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1725 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1724 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
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1719 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1718 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1717 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1716 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1715 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1714 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1713 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1712 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
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1709 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1708 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
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1704 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1703 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
1702 AU 278 BACK CAMERA No. No. No. Furniture Pair. No. No.
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2539-400 SCENESMAN Christy Lucas Ludwig Marco Spagnoli
Legend Cage Page
2350 408 LOCATEER Visual Qualities, Eye Anterior, Superior
Correction, Vision Correction, Vision Correction, Vision Correction
Gross Measurement, Gross Measurement, Gross Measurement,
2320 BMN BVMN Campeón en el país de Fevereiro y del 'Fevereiro'
Takuma Takuma Tahawaii, Muscat, Palma, BVMN
Takuma Takuma Tasmania, Muscat, Palma, BVMN
2977 BAD BETTERTUNG Malz Solutions, Linzen, Ludwig
Munich.Berchth. Viktor Singeren. BP AG, Ampel
Wiesbaden.
Wunderkind Kram, Berry, BPG Kiran
270 705 HONG KONG - Macau - World Bank, China - Lujian, Jiangsu-
Nan - Newcheng, Nanhai - Guizhou, Shenzhen - Guangdong, SZP
2790 659 NAMELS. THE MESAH, DOUTH, REGENCY, BURNS,
MARKEE, JOHN LEE. CAGE, COLEMAN PHARMACY,
BURNS, NEW YORK.
2110 LEARNER BACKGAMB MAIN A Mason & Miner, Tucker, Marienger,
[ADMIN] Fischer, Grace-Krauss, MDicker
2711 812 F. B. KACK, Sr. Matthew Pasonius University, Loughmore,
Fitzgerald University, Leeds, Lancashire, Leeds Metropolitan,
University of Liverpool
4
Tuesday, October 19, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
Beware of the flu
Most Americans don't have to worry much about their health. Outside of an occasional headache and cold, ailments are few.
At least that used to be true. Flu season is coming, and this year it could be especially dangerous. Those who are not aware about their health should be careful.
The virus could turn up again this flu season. Officials are concerned that it could reach epidemic proportions. Are health officials being alarmists?
THEERE HAS been one outbreak of the swine flu, which is contagious. The outbreak itself, like N.J., hit several military recruits, and one 19-year-old soldier died.
They probably aren't. In 1918-19, the swine flu hit and spread rapidly because there was little way to control it. Estimates vary, but the flu apparently killed eight million to nine million people, many of them young.
TODAY, THE flu virus can be controlled. The government will offer vaccinations to almost everyone free of charge except for those allergic to eggs, who must get their shots from a private doctor who specializes in allergies.
Guidelines for giving the shots to people under 18 haven't been developed, but it is hoped that dosages will be adjusted. For everyone else, the shots are free.
So what's the big worry? Until last week, there's not any. But then the program began, starting with elderly people—thought to be the group most endangered by the flu. At least 15 of the elderly who received the shots died.
PREDICTABLY, this caused concern. Health officials began to investigate. Some clinics temporarily suspended their vaccination programs.
The investigation found no connection between the deaths and the shots. This fact isn't hard to believe, because those vaccinated first were elderly people, many of whom had serious health problems and were in nursing homes.
Nevertheless, the government can do more to allay the public's fears. For example, are 15 deaths a higher number than usually occur within a span of few days among such people as those who were seriously ill or recently ment studied the possibility that the dosage of vaccination for high-risk patients should be changed?
**ANSWERING these questions would help strengthen the government's contention that the vaccine is safe. The last thing needed is for people to avoid getting the flu she is just because some people who received them died.**
The vaccine was extensively tested before the program began. No adverse results occurred other than a slight fever for 12 to 24 hours and some soreness around the injection area. Evidence shows the vaccine should be trusted, especially when the risks of not being vaccinated are so high.
The swine flu can kill—millions. It proved that more than 50 years ago. When the vaccinations are offered in some people should take advantage of them.
By Greg Hack Contributing Writer
RADIATION CLOUDS FROM RECENT TESTS IN ARGENTINA, BELGIUM, PAKISTAN AND UPPER VOLTA STILL BLANKET MOST OF THE PACIFIC COAST WHILE THE MIDWEST AND EASTERN SECTIONS ARE UNDER ALERT TO REMAIN INDOORS FOR THE REST OF THE WEEK UNTIL FALLOUT FROM THE LUXEMBOURG, LECHTENSTEIN, TNIWNI, PERU, FUJI AND TANZANIA BLAST'S SUBSIDES...
Deck stacked against McCarthy
In the whole of this smoggy, sulfurous presidential campground, one breath of fresh air keeps you from fuming. Eugene McCarthy, philosopher,
politician and poet His independent candidacy is the victim of the kind of anticompetitive conspiracy that in
Dole shows 'em he's our funny-man
FROM: Rolph Raleigh
Executive producer WGNP/TV Prudie Ken
Bruxis, Kan.
TO: Sen. Robert Dole
Dear Rob.
Congratts on a job well done. You blew that Fritzy fella all over
the congrats and you had us here at WGNF/TV rolling in the
sales, hands up.
That quip about giving burglar the "bummy vote"—well, us folks in Frisus near bent a gut over that one surgery necessary.
And that gem: "When I think of Gov. Carter, I think of loopholes." My secretary, the associate producer, dumped her SOPA license.
You had him going, Bob, o' boy. Probably tickled the ribs of all the fine citizens of Buford County, Kan. Just great.
Which, beating-around-the-bush-wise, leads me to more matters. Suppose. and I'm just supposing now—but suppose you and the President just happen to, well, you know, lose in November. (Heaven for bidi!)
Sure, you've got a couple years left in the Senate after that, and heck, with your sense of humor, who knows? You might just grab the big one in 1980. You're young enough. You're sure funny enough.
But we're taking small potatoes now. Bob. Have you ever thought about a career in show-bite? I surreptitiously have. I mean after FFA, I had a job with the local library.
You see, Bob, we've got this weatherman (and I use the term politely) who doesn't know his you-know what from his pointer. During the six months we've had this turkey on WGNP/TV, he's poked holes in 16 weather maps. And that's not funny—he's obliterated Tula, Joplin, Wichita and Emporia a dozen times or more.
That wouldn't be so bad. But I'm telling you, Bob this guy's got a voice like a jack-hammer. You see, he stuffers. And you can just shout it out. No, he's not.
So how about it Bob? If you can handle a pointer as well as you can handle your tongue, you are a shoo-in.
the industrial world would send its perpetrators straight to jail.
And that's just for starters. You'd also get a chance to show off your comedic talents on our noontime feature movie show, "Chuckling for Change." These people call in, you see, and tell you a joke. If you guess the pachyne, they lose. But if they don't, they win. It's simple. (Frankly, Bob, we can't afford to lose much money.) If you guess the armor, wald stand a better than even chance of coming out ahead.
And the movies, Bob, the movies! We're negotiating with Hope (Bob-wise) for his "On the Road" flips. I tell you, just imagining the whole thing—Bob Hoe, Hedy Lammar and you, your jokes and your pointer on our stage—it makes my mouth water. profit-wise.
There is a small problem. As you mentioned during your thrilling debate performance, Italians are on your mind quite a lot. Well, Buford County don't have too many Italians. Lots of Catholics, but not too many Italians. We do have ninth-generation Czechs though, so maybe you could, instead of thinking about Italians all the time, think about Czeys—you know, PR-wise. There is, by the way, a super place a few blocks from our studio that has an "An the Spaghetti You Can Eat Special."
It's every Thursday night, and I'm telling you, Bob, for $2.75,
you can't beat it with a stick, value-wise.
Give it some thought, Bob, ol' boy.
But whatever you decide, we're on your side, Mr. Senator You've shown 'em - Kansas has its stock of fumy-men.
Sincerely, Rolph
(Note: Mr. Raleigh's letter was intercepted by Bill Suffen, Kansan staff writer.)
In theory, other independent candidates also are being treated unfairly. In fact, McCarthy is the only independent whose candidacy might have a significant impact Under the Election Reform Act, he finds the funds that might permit him to wage an effective campaign. Under the networks make-believe view of a "news event," he is denied access to TV.
THE POLLSTERS have demonstrated for several years that neither of the two major parties commands the allegiance of a majority of the people. The Republicans are under pressure to vote the voters, the Democrats perhaps 38 to 40 per cent. The rest are independents. Yet the Election Reform Act proceeds on the bias assumption that voters matter, so their candidates get $20 million each from public funds. McCarthy is caught in Catch 22. If he had funds, he could attract the votes that would be double for funds—if he had the funds. His campaign is broke.
Exposure on national TV, especially under the dreary circumstances that now exist, might generate a substantial sum. No contrived "news" material would be published. League of Women Voters' debates are not "news events" in the ordinary sense was
embarrassingly revealed when the audio failed in Philadelphia
SUPPOSE the audio had failed in the ninth inning of a playoff game between the
Phillies and the Reds. Would the players have stood around for 28 minutes? Humbug. The Republicans, the Democrats, the League and the networks co-conspirators in a comfy little room inside the fairness doctrine. The effect is to freeze McCarthy out.
McCarthy ought to be heard. He is a man of ideas—mostly misguided ideas, to be sure, but a man of ideas nonetheless. He is a man of ideas—honor and wit; no other candidate can make that claim.
Let me seek to avoid misunderstanding: McCarthy's views are not my views. His views are not my kind of nomenimess. His concept of a strong national defense is far removed from my own. But in McCarthy's case, he is not as strong as he is. He never going to be Chief Executive or Commander in Chief. His usefulness lies in other areas entirely. His role is to educate, to make us think
James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1976 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
McCARTHY spent much of this past summer fall landing on a farm not far from the valley. We are in Mountains. We put in some
pleasant hours drinks whisky,
quoting poetry and spinning
baseball yarns. After one such
session, he sent me a quotation
from Plutarch. He added a
covering note.
This was the quotation:
"They are wrong who think that politics is like an ocean voyage or a military campaign, sometimes a particular end in view, something which leaves off as soon as that end is reached. It is not a public chore, to be gotten rid of, but the life of a domesticated political and social creature who is born with a love for public life, with a desire for honor, with a feeling for his country, as long as need be . . .
"IT IS not simply officeholding, not just keeping your place, not just raising your voice from the floor, not just sitting on the rostrum with speeches and meditations. Politics and philosophy are alike. Socrates neither set out benches for his students, nor sat hours for his lectures. He was philosophizing all the time—while he was joking, while he was drinking, while he was soldiering. He was the first to show that all life, all the time, in everything doing, is the time for philosophy. And so also it is of politics."
Value of committees overlooked
This was the covering note:
"This is what it's all about. Best regards, Gene."
By PHIL McKNIGHT
Guest Writer
A few days ago, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Committee on the Advancement of Instruction and Advising met to discuss teaching problems at the University of Kansas. Students, 3:30 to 5 on Monday, ternoon, and its committee nature, many might question the likelihood that anything
HOWEVER, A closer look at the committee's work during the last few years shows many problems. The committee has greatly assisted in improving the Curriculum and Instruction Survey and the procedures for obtaining and using information from "Form B" on last spring's
significant would come from this group's deliberations and activities.
evaluation form was developed by the CAI4 during the 1975-76 academic year, and although I have qualms about the scale, I have no reticence about the committee's involvement.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 10th, 2004. Subscriptions to this issue June and July each except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscriptions by mail are $5 a semester or $18 for subscription. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county.
Yakubul Abukalah Rational Education
Manager Jain Bass
Campus Editor Stewart Branwyn
Associate Campus Editors Smith Barkley
Campus Editor Chuck Alexander
Photo Editor George Miller,
Staff Photographers Steve Koch
Sports Editor Steve Schenteld
Assistant Sports Editor Brent Anderson
Entertainment Editor Alison Gowan
Entertainment Editor Carl Young.
Contributing Writers Caty Young.
Chief Chefs John Fuller, Alison Gowan,
John Fuller, Alison Gowan,
Editor
Debbie Cure
Its commitment to improving the evaluation process has been supportive and much appreciated. The committee's effort in the implementation of Instruction Resources is advantageous in a more indirect but equally beneficial way. Its participation in the work of the office has lessened the need to inefficiency add to the overall effectiveness. Therefore, it can continue to act as a catalyst and coordinator.
Business Manager Terry Hanson
Also, the committee helps to stop the unfortunate attitude that "because the Office of Instructional Resources is in charge of rest of us don't need to worry about it." Instead, I feel that the CAIA's effectiveness has increased interest and involvement in the College through its reports to the College Assembly and the work members in their departments.
Aidant Business Manager Carole Roosterkoeer
Advertising Manager Jace Clements
Administrative Manager Marlene
Claudified Manager Sarah McAnahy
National Advertising Manager Kurt G. Schaff
National Advertising Manager Tamar Turner
THE WORK of the CAIA suggests two things: First, the committee can be a very effective—and, in the end, parsimonious—way of enhancing teaching at this university. Meeting 15 times a year, or about 30 hours, the CAIA has shown how
faculty members can effectively respond to different problems.
(Phil McKnight is Director of the Office of Instructional Resources.)
We should be more tolerant of the inefficiencies of committees and more understanding of their contributions to efficiency could be increased by
eliminating committees and other group activities, the result would be decreased par- ties between students University and fewer opportunities for students to influence University policy and discover the benefits of an abundant democratic institution.
THE QUANTITY and quality of these groups bely the maligned reputation of committees and the nature of the work shows students the democratic way in which a committee is a reliable institution that don't get discouraged by apparent cumbersomeness and inefficiency, they will be rewarded with a clearer understanding and enhanced appreciation of the openness and opportunity for meaningful participation provided by committees. It is fortunate that a committee has have the stigma of never accruing anything. The stigma may be appropriate for some groups but not for committees themselves.
Secondly, KU students and faculty are actively interested in and very capable of, implementing the problem of improving teaching.
The work of the CAIA shows how a committee can realize its unique potential as a group by working together. The efforts of SenEx and University Council on the financial exigency report reflect a similar group accomplishment.
Letters
Theater tour clarified
I am not normal impelled to write letters to the editor, and I wouldn't be doing so now if I were in a position of information was missing from the Oct. 13 article on the intercession theater tour to London—information necessary to be presented in the tour and the course.
enrollment in December.
Because travel arrangements must be finalized well in advance, and because at least 15 people must enroll for the class to "make" at all, those interested should contact Mary Davidson, a professor for the department of English, in 3116 Wescoe Hall, as soon as possible.
To the Editor:
The theater tour is being offered under the course heading English 590: Studies in Current
British Theatre—Drama Symposium and Criticism Workshop. Students will attend symposiums in London on varied aspects of the British theater.
For students taking the course for credit, classes will continue in Lawrence Jan. 10-14.
It should be made clearer than it was in the article that noncredit enrollment is possible for any nonsudent, whether he is actually involved in an adult education program or not. The course is open to all members of the community.
KISS
KISS
KISS
Mobil
In London, participants will see eight or nine plays, only some of which will be performed at the Royal Shakespeare Company, the National Theatre and the Royal Court Theatre. Others will be shown in commercial theatrical productions.
Finally, to be more explicit about the tour package, the $620 price includes round-trip air fare, transportation between plane and hotel, seven nights at the Tavistock Hotel with private bath and breakfast included, and the price of four of the nine flights. The enrollment fee is a separate $49 for noncredit or undergraduate credit or $66 for graduate credit.
John Bush Jones
Associate Professor of English
Tuesday, October 19. 1978
5
I
WHERE
MARKETING
CIAL FEATURES
y
Vandalism, theft unsolved in KU athletic department
whisky,
and spinning
one such
a quotation
added a
quotation:
think that man voyage can voyage away as with some in view, leave off as it is. It is be gotten from the most masticated or creature l love for desire for desire for his as long as
only office-
missing your
issuing your
, not just
currum with
ans.
Vandalism and a theft last week in athletic departments at the University of Florida.
ophy are set out
ts, nor sat hours for
hours for drinking.
while he was drink-
ing. He
t that all in every-
you are a mast of poli-
Two field hockey nets were stolen last Monday night and three gymnastics mats were stolen.
ring note: bout. Best
1
k ing the
sses will
Jan, 10-
Drama Criticism will attend London on e British
e clearer that possible whether he an adult not. The members of
ants wills
always, only
be per-
haps
the company
and the
Others
immercial
The floor exercise mat, used by both men's and women's gymnastics teams, was slit on the underside of four panels. Bob Lockwood, men's gymnastics coach said the damage was done to the "wrong" side of the mat because it was rolled up when it was cut. The outer cover used to slide the large mat around was also damaged, he said.
explicit
the $620
trip air
between
nights at
private
included,
the
session
graduate
$48
graduate
THE FLOOR EXERCISE MAT cost $80 and required repairs will be for $300. Lockdown
A large wrestling mat was slit about two-thirds of the way through, he said, and the cut is too deep to make temporary capling to fill the cut effective. Until a new wafer cover can be applied to the damaged area, the mat isn't safe for use, Lockwood said.
English
University Daily Kansan
A smaller mat belonging to the physical education department, which is used for padding underneath gymnasial equipment, to repair and will require about $120 of repairs.
Garbage . . .
From page one
Boyle said, is when the crew encounters skunks while making its rounds. He said that Lawrence was loaded with skunks and that the crew saw skunks digging in the trash outside of Gertrude Sellards Pearson residence and residence hall nearly every morning.
He said the skunks would sometimes drive the creep away, making it necessary to close them up.
In the "old days," Boyle said, the trash crew picked up many refrigerators, stoves and hot-water heaters, but they no longer encounter such items.
He said that the crew wasn't required to pick up any containers or items weighing more than 20 pounds.
By now most of the weekend's trash has been taken to the landfill, but as Boyle said, it's a steady job. There's always Wednesday, Thursday, Friday . . .
Lockwood used the gymnasies team left the mats in good condition at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. The next morning the damage was repaired and a concrete erection facilities and to the campus police.
The women's field hockey team was also the victim of vandals' activity. Two bright red socks were
Dianna Beebe, field hockey coach, said the nets were on the field at 7 p.m. last Sunday but were missing at 10 the following morning.
The theft comes half way through the field hockey season to a team that can't afford the $250 required to purchase two more nets. Beebe said the team would be by with old nets, which used to be "draped" around the basketball court in the field house.
The campus police were notified of the incident, Beebe said, and they offered a passport.
"They told me the nets might show up on a homecoming decoration because the holes were small enough to lend themselves to being stuffed," she said.
REMINDER:
The KU Backgammon Club meets every day. At 7 p.m. in the Oread Room, Kansas Union. Be there before
7:00 to play in the tournament.
BRING YOUR BOARDS
THE
TURQUOISE SHOP
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Turquoe Bracelets
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"THE SHOOTIST"
Eve, 7:20, 9:20 Sat-Sun, 2:10
Hillcrest
The Greatest Discovery of Our Time
G In search of Noah's Ark
Is it still there?
Eve, 7:30, 9:30-Sat, 2:00
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The cast of the decade.
The western adventure of a lifetime.
PG 32
JOHN WAYNE LAUREN BACALL
"The SHOOTIST"
Eve. 7:20, 9:20 Sat., Sun. 2:10
Hillcrest 2
The Greatest Discovery of Our Time
In search of Noah's Ark
Is it still there?
Eve. 7:30, 9:30 - Sat. & Sun. 2:10
Hillcrest 2
APARTMENT FOR RENT
Quater bldg.
Furnished 2 rooms.
Previous tenant committed suicide
No one does it to you like Roman Polanski
R RETREATCE
Varsity
THE TENANT
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
Sat., Sun. at 2:30
RICHARD HARRIS
"THE RETURN OF A MAN CALLED HORSE"
An Engineer with the soul of an Indian
Every eve. 7:30 & 9:40
Sat., Sun. Mat. 2:30
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Ne one does it,
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REMIVERING
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Phone: (312) 685-7400
Varsity
2017-18 September 19-30
A Remon Palenki Film
THE TENANT
RICHARD HARRISE
"THE RETURN OF A MAN CALLED HORSE"
An Englishman with the Soil of an Indian
Every eve, 7.30 & 9.40
Sat. Sun. Mar. 1:30
Granada PG
Zee Mostel & Gene Wilder As "THE PRODUCERS" Hillcrest
DEBATE
Third party in debate
MIKE NANCY GLOVER vs. HAMBLETON (Candidates for State Legislature) and
ARDEN ARNOLD BOOTH vs. BERMAN (Candidates for State Senate)
7:00 P.M.
Wednesday, October 20
When local candidates for state legislative offices debate in the Kansas Union tomorrow night, American Party lawmakers Thomas Hart of Lawrence will be among them.
yesterday that Hart would be added to the program.
Forum Room of The Kansas Union
Hart, who is running for state representative from the 44th district, will debate State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, and Nancy Hambleton, the Republican candidate, at 7 in the Forum Room.
Sponsored by KU-Y & SUA
Originally, the debate was to be between candidates from only the two major parties. But Hart complained to KU-Y and SUA, saying that it would not work in Tausch, KU-Y board member, announced
State Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, and Arnold Bermann, Democratic candidate for Booth's 2nd District senate seat, will also debate.
brausch said Hart wasn't invite originally because the sponsoring organizations weren't aware there was an American Party candidate for the seat.
"We realize an ethical duty to represent all shades of the political spectrum," she said.
The candidates will answer questions from a five-member panel, then answer questions from the audience. There will also be time for a general policy statement.
Panelists will be James Drury, professor of political science; Doug Bell, president of the College Republicans; Steve Millstone, Washburn University law student; and Sue Gump, League of Women Volunteers. Debbie Gump, editor of the Kansan, will be the moderator.
Softness Gets a Second Look This Fall.
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TUESDAY
kroger KU
THE MONROE CO. WE HAVE WHAT WE ADVERTIZE if all of possible, conditions beyond our control, we run our business on the internet or another compatible brand or a similar sourcing or give our commercials for the advertised special at the specified price. WE GUARANTEE WHAT WE SELL. If you are ever distressed with a Kruger purchase, we will replace your item or require us to refund your cost.
KU
effective Oct. 19-24
SUPER SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
FREE
Pkg. of 48 Country Oven Ice Cream Cups with the purchase of one at reg. price
FREE
16 oz. Leaf of Monks Bread with the purchase of one at reg. price
OLYMPIA BEER
12
12 oz.
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$247
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PIZZA
Quarter
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R. B. Rice SAUSAGE Whole or 1/2 stick 89c
89c
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APPLE CIDER
$1.99
gal.
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Glazed
DONUTS
99c
doz.
French
BREAD
39c
loaf
Box of Fried Chicken
From our Deli
$199
8 pcs.
Chicken Dinner 2 pcs. Chicken Potato Salad, Roll & Coke
89c
6
Tuesday. October 19, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Cromwell's loss evaluated by league head coaches
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—How will the Big Eight Conference race be affected by the loss of University of Kansas quarterback Nolan Cromwell?
That may be like wondering how the Civil War turned out if Lee had won at Gettysburg.
"For us to win against Kansas and them to 'lose Cromwell, it hurts both of us,' said Oklahoma coach Barry Snyder yesterday for Big Eight coaches' telephone briefing.
"With him they very definitely could influence the outcome of the race. I don't know of any other player who could affect the outcome of a name as he did."
Switzer was sincere and pragmatic in his sympathy for Kansas' loss of Cromwell.
The Jayhawks, with a much less explosive Scott McMichael at quarterback, still have to play contenders Nebraska, Missouri and Colorado. And their performance may well decide whether the Sooners, who have to play the same teams, can regain sole possession of the Big Eight crown.
Cromwell saw a brilliant college career come to a harsh end Saturday when he tore ligaments in his right knee during Kanas' 28-10 loss to Oklahoma. The wishbone magician underwent surgery Sunday and isn't expected to recover for six months.
"He's a super team leader and we're going to miss him," said KU head coach Bud Moore. "But it takes more than one player to make a team."
But Switzer, whose only loss since taking over the Sooners four years ago came at the hands of Cromwell and Kansas, was less conservative in his evaluation.
"I don't think any quarterback has the effect on a team as Cromwell did Kansas," he said. "We lost Dean Fleins and got a guy who can run, Tom Lott. And if I had to play in that game we come up with someone. But Cromwell's the best wishbone quarterback in the country."
Most of the remaining Big Eight coaches were hesitant to say how strongly Cromwell's absence would determine the outcome of the Big Eight scramble, but they agreed that KU's hopes of finishing on top were diminished.
"I'm sure it will have some effect on the team. Particularly with the wishbone, you can't take a guy like that out," Missouri coach Al Onofrio said.
"But how much it's hard to tell. If it's a lot, it could affect the race conference. But it's all speculation. I'm sure when Pete Woods came in for in place of Steve Pisarickson, nobody expected him to play as well against Ohio State as he did."
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne, whose team plays Kansas in two weeks, agreed that the Jayhawks faced an uphill fight the rest of the way but added, "I think they have had an uphill fight with Cromwell in there once they lost two games."
Jim Stanley, the Oklahoma State coach, said KU's chances of a second straight bowl appearance were considerably lessened by the loss of its All-America candidate.
"I'm sure the people behind him have ability but it's hard to replace a player like that. I'm pretty high on the guy," Stanley said.
Intramural programs diversifying
When Richard Marcks, intramural director at the University of Kansas, arrived in his new office about two years ago, all of the floor was covered with trophies.
Those trophies, uncollected by their owners after the past years intramural activities, resulted in what Marcles called "a psychological backlash."
This year, instead of the traditional trophies, the division clumps in each sport into four teams. The division is now
for each member of the team.
"IN 10 YEARS," Marcs said, "I feel sure that the individual will rather have a picture of his team than some trophy sitting in a fraternity or sorority lobby."
Marcks, who came to KU from the University of Wisconsin, said that he thought there was too much emphasis on awards and trophies in intramurals.
"The participation itself ought to be the award." he said.
One fact that was important in his decision, Marcks said, was the independence of the teams. He said that they came together merely to play and then soon
parted ways. It's often hard for them to decide what, it's often with a trophy in the first place.
TROPHIES WILL still be awarded, Marcets said, to the overall champions in each sport. But they won't be given to the top seven of the individual divisions, as in the past.
Along these same lines, the intramural program at KU is trying to become more responsive to the entire student body, because of the few competitive people on campus.
Reds go for three in a row
By Kansan News Service
Sparky Anderson knows his Cincinnati Reds are leading the World Series 24, but he's not ready to accept.
No sir.
"If they beat us four storm now," he said, "the most shocked man in the world."
"I'll stick with seven," Anderson said yesterday as the two teams prepared for tonight's third game at Yankee Stadium. "I'm ashamed to finish something, stick with the long way."
Does that mean Anderson has lost faith in the Reds?
Anderson is sending rookie Pat Zachy against the Yankees' Doe Ellis tonight. For Zachy it will be a boyhood dream come true, but in reverse. He had always hoped to
Part of this is being accomplished, Sports instituting more individual sports and facilities.
be in the major leagues and to play in Yankee Stadium...but not for Cincinnati.
Intramural rankings same as last week
"It will be something special for me to pitch in this ballpark," said the 24-year-old right-hander, who had a 14-7 record this year, his first major league season.
The leaders remained the same this week in the intramural football rankings announced yesterday by the Intramural Officials Association.
"The Yankees were always my favorite team when I was growing up. I'd go in the back yard with a plastic bat and make believe I was pitching and the Yankees were in position, filling all the positions, everything. And when I played, the Yankees won every game. 15-4."
Regular season play in the men's division ended last week, and play-offs will begin this week. The top two teams in each division advanced to the play-offs.
Phi Delta Theta (5-0) remained on top on the Fraternity division, Pt Beta Phi (3-0) in the sorority division, Green Machine (5-0) in the athletic division and Lewis (4-0) in Independent Women.
Anderson will send Gary Nolan to the game in motion four, scheduled to be played tomorrow. If game five is needed, the Reds will send Norman, who started the second game.
Women's division play-offs will begin next week.
This week's rankings:
**Prioritary** Independent Men
1) Phila Tua Omae (3-0) 1) Giam Tuan Omae (3-0)
2) Alpha Beta Tua (3-0) 2) Class Action (4-1)
3) Alpha Beta Tua (3-0) 3) Class Action (4-1)
4) Beta Teta Pla (3-2) 4) Mala Midgets (4-1)
5) Alpha Luke Lambda (3-3) Rhamnine Hanna (4-1)
6) Alpha Luke Lambda (3-3) Rhamnine Hanna (4-1)
7) Beta Pla (4-0) 7) Lawrs (4-0)
8) Beta Pla (4-0) 8) Lawrs (4-0)
9) Dellagamma (3-0) 9) Tractors (4-0)
10) Dellagamma (3-0) 10) Tractors (4-0)
We Write All Risks
Automobile Insurance
--out of the Associated Press top 20. The Big Eight Conference still has four teams in the poll with Nebraska No. 3, Oklahoma 5, Iowa State 16 and Missouri
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Sports such as racquetball, tennis and swimming have been ignored in intramural programs in the past, Marcks said, but officials of the intramural department are trying to encourage people to participate in those sports.
Maupintour travel service
Phone: 843-1211
RESPONSE TO these programs has been good, Marks said, with about 60 people participating in a racquetball tournament. He also noted that a team in a tennis tourney recently, he said.
KU Union/The Malls/Hillcrest/900 Mass
Laugh at the famous exotic cartoon that scandalized our nation's largest animation studio!
See the raw truth about Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs!
Learn what was behind Little Miss Muffet and her fuzzy!
SEXTIONS
Tues., Oct. 19
7:30 and 9:30
Woodruff Auditorium
1970-71
SOME OF THE WORLD'S BEST EROTIC ANIMATION!
75c
Cornerback Leroy Irvin
KU drops out of AP top 20
After two straight losses, KU dropped out of the Associated Press top 20.
1. Michigan (58) 6-0-0
2. Pittsburgh (4) 6-0-0
3. New York 6-0-0
4. UCLA 5-0-1
5. Oklahoma 5-0-1
6. Maryland 5-0-1
7. Southern California 5-0-1
8. Texas Tech 4-0-1
9. Ohio State 4-0-1
10. Georgia 4-0-1
11. Florida 4-0-1
12. Notre Dame 4-0-1
13. Texas 4-0-1
14. Houston 4-1-1
15. Arkansas 4-1-1
16. Iowa State 4-1-1
17. Missouri 4-1-0
18. Alabama 4-1-0
19. South Carolina 3-0-0
20. East Carolina 3-0-0
21. Mississippi State 6-0-0
Volleyball at home
KU's volleyball team will meet the University of Missouri at Kansas City in varsity and junior varsity matches beginning at 7 onight in Allen Field House.
SUA
SEXTOONS
FILMS
Moore closes drills; offense not changing
SEXTOONS
an erotic Kartoon Karnival
Tues., Oct. 19, 7:30, 9:30, 75c
RESTER STREET (1975)
Dr. Jon Kimclil Silver, with Carol Kane and Steven Keats
ANIMATION SERIES
Following a closed practice yesterday in Allen Field House, KU coach Bud Moore said the Jayhawks wouldn't undertake a crash course to learn a new offense designed to fit the abilities of the new starting quarterback. Scott McMichael.
FILM SOCIETY
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SUMMER INTERLUDE (1950)
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Bergman, with
Maitre, Britt Nilson, Bergmaster
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Britt 20, 7:30, 75c
FATA MORGANA (1971)
Dir. Werner Herzog (Germany)
Thurs., Oct. 21, 7:30, 75c
HESTER STREET (1975)
6th & Iowa In Ramada Inn FREE PARKING
..., Oct. 22 and Sat., Oct. 23
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THE HAIR SUITE
THE
HAIR SUITE
McMichael, who ranks ninth on KU's career passing list with 1,304 yards, moved into the starting role after Nolan Cromwell suffered torn ligaments in his right knee in Saturday's game against Oklahoma, ending his football career at KU.
Introductory offer Redken Creative Curl Wave, a low ph perm wave that is ammonia free but lasts as long as the old alkaline waves. IF you just want body or lots of curls you can get it with Creative Curl now thru Oct. 31. Reg. 35.00 Now $30.00, which includes haircut. Call for appt. 842-8600
Moore said all practices this week in preparation for Saturday's game at Kansas State University would be closed to everyone—including reporters.
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
"We felt like this week in particular we needed to have the complete concentration of our players without any distraction," Moore said. "Frankly, we wanted to do some things differently and didn't want to take a chance of it leaking out."
Moore, reluctant to reveal his plans, said, "I will say we don't have any intention of changing our (wishbone) offense. It has been good for us to a point and it is an offense our personnel know. And we have the personnel to run it.
Based on performances in Saturday's game, freshman cornerback Leroy Iroyn has been moved ahead of senior Andy Reust, and sophomore Walt lacked him the starting split end job from senior Waddell Smith.
"We may break the bone more frequently and utilize the slot-L, but it is really no different than what we have been doing." He also said the decision on the No. 2 pick would be made unlikely "but he nounced until before game time Saturday. That position will go to either Mark Vicendee, a sophomore from Berkeley Heights, N.J., or Mark Lissak, a sophomore from Flossmoor, III. Both have been red-shirted thus far.
Joining Cromwell on the injured list following KU's 28-10 loss to the Sooners are second-time fullback Dennis Wright, who pulled a leg muscle, and reserve linebacker Mark Boyer, who also has a腿 injury. No. 1 Michael Michaelis is still bothered by a sprained ankle.
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601 Missouri, Suite 3
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Telephone: 842-4708
---
SUA indoor rec 8-ball Tournament Oct.24 at 1:30 p.m.
GAMING
Prizes will be awarded to the 1st,2nd,& 3rd place winners.
—Sign up in Jay Bowl by Sat., Oct. 23
—'2 $ ^{50} $ Entry Fee
100
Taco Grande
TO: K-State Students and Manhattan Taco Grande FROM: K.U. Students and Lawrence Taco Grandes
It's K.U. K-State Football Time again and we of the Lawrence Taco Grandes, which is the Home of the Glorious "Seldom Beaten" Jayhawks, challenge the Manhattan Taco Grande and the K-State student body to our annual 1,000 Taco Bet on the outcome of the game. You will notice no insults this year, it's part of our "Be Kind to Animals Campaign".
The students of the winning school, upon showing your student I.D. will receive two Tacos free until 1,000 are given away. K.U. wins Free Tacos at Lawrence Taco Grandes. K-State wins Free Tacos at Manhattan Taco Grande.
Tuesday, October 19, 1978
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University Daily Kansan
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Trash-plant survey . . .
From page one
IF THE PLANT is built, the current steam plant south of Flint Hall would be maintained as a reserve plant. Smith said the new plant would have one burner, compared with the four burners in the plant new used.
The old plant could provide steam to supplement that generated by the trash incinerator. Steam also can be used to provide air conditioning through a complicated chemical process, Smith said. The current air conditioning system in Learned Hall and Dundalk has been tested.
Because of surplus trash during the summer, wood could be sorted from other materials, chipped and saved to burn during winter, he said.
Smith said that during summers the plant would produce more steam than needed.
SMITH SAID that he had given up a plan to burn waste oil in the plant because the plant was not running well.
There were no surprises in the draft report, Smith said. He said he was pleased with the study's findings, which supported his original predictions.
KU and the Regents had been waiting for the study report before requesting the 1977 Kansas Legislature to appropriate funds for preliminary planning of the plant. KU, the Regents and the state architect's office would cooperate in the selection of consulting engineers who would begin planning the plant.
Funds then would be sought for final planning and construction. In 1989, w184 in Waltham, MA; in 1988, w184 in Brooklyn, NY; in 1987, w184 in Boston, MA.
Lucas met Thursday with representatives of the Omana firm to discuss its findings. He said he would recommend that the final agreement so that it would be more understandable.
"WE'LL HOPE for mild winters and an
The University currently has a 20- to 30-day supply of fuel oil for heating if natural gas supplies are curtailed. Lucas said KU would have to rely on diesel that would be very, very, very expensive."
A plan for what KU would do in the event of drastic cuts in energy supplies is now written and will be presented to Lucas Archie Kruse for approval later this year.
Luisa said KU had the best record of any state college or university in energy conservation.
A report released last week by the Regents indicated that KU's Lawrence and Kansas City campuses were the only campus that had decreased electricity use during 1972.
KU's two campuses and Kansas State University were the only campuses that had decreases in natural gas use during fiscal 1974 and fiscal 1975, according to the report.
SUA BRIDGE CLUB
Now Playing
www www www
WED., 7—11 p.m. Pine Room of the Kansas Union
SUN.,4-8 p.m.Pine Room of the Kansas Union
Everyone Welcome
2.
Would You Like to Date More Often?
A DATING WORKSHOP
has been developed and will begin next week. Come and hear details about this one month workshop.
Mon.—Wed., 4:30-6:30 Oct.18-Oct.20, Room 224 Frazier
Single men, KU Students over 18 only LAST WEEK TO ATTEND!
EAST WEEK TO AFTER.
Vista RESTAURANTS
THE CHILLI CHAUSER
76¢
Reg.85¢
MONDAY • TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY
1527 West 6th, Lawrence 842-4311
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanaan are offered to all students without regard to their background. BRIING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
time tues wed s th su
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
one two three four five time times times times times
... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOR RENT
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months and can be placed in person or simply by calling the UDR business office at 864-1358.
3 bedrooms apartment at Quirk Creek available for
rent on a first floor, between 9:30 and 10:59,
at 643-3252 after 6:00
Must sublease two bedroom apt. at Gatlight Unfinished—Nov 1st lease begins. Pat #847-7822
ATTENTION STUDENT REMERTS—Drop in and
return (no phone calls please) at WEBSITE
(phone: 310-245-8790) or WEBSITE
(website: www.website.com).
Nalnath Hall contract, through May, for sale
call Debby 841-3447. 10-19
Apl-2 rooms with kitchen to single male student. Utilities with payment pass. Phone 844-9577.
1 bdm. apt. A.C. ww carpeting. electric kilch-
ter. 2000. 180 watt bus.禹禹 $160 month plus electricity. 841-0707
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties.
BELL AUSTRALIA,
ELECTRIC, 845-2690, 3000 W, 605 H.
SUNLIGHT, ELECTRIC, 845-2690, 3000 W, 605 H.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CREWEL
DRAFTER
15 East 84th 841-2664
10.5 Monday-Saturday
NAISMITH HALL
Now accepting
Applications
for Spring Semester
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on your high equipment package, the product you will pay the least and get the most benefits at the GRAHAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS
Excellent selection of new and used furniture.
Trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
8th Street, New York, NY 10026.
Western Civilization Notes - Now on Sale Make
uses them...
1. At what date would you make these uses them?
population
"New Analysis of Urban Civilization" available at Town Crier Stores. 1F
Excellent selection of used furniture, refi-
gerator and other fixtures. 6 a.m.-p.m.
line. 1-354-728-1782 or 1-354-728-1783.
CUSTOM JEWELRY Professional gold and silver jewelry, including necklaces, earrings, bracelets, rings, & more. Computerized cutting, satisfaction guaranteed. Free shipping.
Final markdowns on all 76 Magnavox console stereos and components. Beautiful $449.95 consoles cut as low as $380) powerful comp, sets with high-end speakers. Max Open 'till 12 p.m. (Thurs., 6:30). 10-22
*www.magnavox.com*
CLEARANCE! Discounted radial tires $22 each
on all models. 30/15-40 on 2" half-turn, 30/15-40
on 2" half-turn, 15/40 on 2" half-turn.
radials for Volkswagen included RX Storm,
Wolkswagen, BMW, Toyota, Honda.
Come thru Woolworth's lot for tire set
in stock.
73 Flat, good condition. Runs good. New snacks
battery, $175 must sell. Battery 84-71950-18-
10-19
71 Mustang, excellent condition. Alm.-FAFM.
60 musts, must sell. $171. Call 81-390-1200
10-19 10-19
73 Honda CL 350, elec. start, good condition.
under $800, KA24-109 for Lewis. 10.10
Must sell 1974 Audi Ford 4-door automatic good
wheel drive driver. Bought in possible (68).
Must sell 1975 Audi Ford 3-door automatic
good wheel drive driver. Bought in possible (68).
MGB "GT" 1972. Excellent condition. Overdrive, radials. FM-CAM. Must sell. 843-3944. 10-10
73 Capri: 4 cylinder; AM-FM, mechanically permeabilized. Clean by owner, 844-3945. 844-3945. 10-10
Game Tickets: Two KU-KSU tickets. Sold individu-
ally. Call 821-1538 between 10-19
Tuesday, 10-19
Honda 500, 1970, good condition; **800** BICYCLE
Girlfriend wants 10 speed, good condition. $65.
Bicycle with front brake. $250.
Excellent White Chrysler, 1968 '60° Full Power.
Excellent Red Volvo, 1968 '72° Full Power.
No. 64. 34 Need $50 or trial for Pick-up Truck.
No. 64. 34 Need $50 or trial for Pick-up Truck.
Mercury stereo cassette tape recorder; two vol-
toless speakers; rear-facing camera; battery; two auxiliary; extension headphone jack. Good tone. $60. $42-32£m. 10-22
1976 Kawasaki KX-750 touring motorcycle. 180cc.
58,000 cubic inches.
Check out www.mercedes-benz.com
1970 Honda Kawasaki 350 $825
1970 Honda MT125 $405
1970 Honda MK125 $405
1970 Honda KX75 $310
1970 Honda Kawasaki 350
1970 Honda C115 $725
1970 Honda XL250 $585
1970 Honda C870 $1065
1970 Honda CF70 $1065
1976 Kawasaki KZ-750 touring motorcycle 18:00
841-7148 Negotiable. 10:20
Check out these used bike specials;
Baked Wheat Straw-Good for parties, mulching,
etc. Call 843-8648 10-21
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th, Law-
ence. Ks. 843-3333. 10-22
Bougie guirlande. Superior quality, 150 watt
speakers. 15 in. speakers. Excellent condition,
814-6242 10-25
Tennis Bucket, Wicket T-2000. Good condition.
Make offer. 842-753-63.
10-20
Girl's 3-speed bicycle, Good condition, very cheap
Call. 842-7914 and ask for Mary. 10-19
KL104 K115 748 instrument speaker, in cabinet
120 watt RMS rating. Price negotiable. 824-
1163.
Hood/Spin/Dry portable respirator. Great for
hand wash and dishwasher appliances without
wash mitts.
Call 841-300-7967.
68 Chevrolet 2 door, good engine and life, body in
airti, B175 C94-9388, after A100, 10-21
HELP WANTED
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF PHILOSOPHY, complete set
2012, new condition $100 value for $85. 412-282-424
1972 Honda 350. Munt sell, best call. Call after
892.9697. 10-25
Female subjects wanted for figure photography
by written help. Write Fred P. O'Box 700 Lawrence
Delivery—must have own car, $3 approve
help inside help. Apply in person at Heavy's
12-14
Cook, Amount responsibility for preparation work,
Approx. 30 hours per week. Plus Lunch Club.
Approx. 30 hours per week. Plus Lunch Club.
LOST AND FOUND
1. 250-mile Quicken Loans quick-ship $30.00 m/w
2. W2dj, Landers $30.00 m/w
3. W2cd, Lower East Side $30.00 m/w
4. Monday ($24.00) Saturdays $2.00 per hour
5. W3cd, Upper West Side $30.00 m/w
COUNTER CLERK AT OVERLAND PHOTO
COURT 12:00 P.M. Daily Monday to Saturday. Apply in Person Some Experience Preferred 10-56
Ift Clerk C峡 at QuickShoe Photo Shoots™
7-14
Lout. (Stolien) Brown leather wallet on 10-9-76 in Loutine's West. Degraded Wear & Resist 10-9-76
**1584938523718759559782071710324084083529487484
STUDY BREAK
1-6 p.m.
Schooners -- 65°
Pitchers -- $1.25
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
Lost: Ladies' Watch, Good Helios with chain
Call: 642-0838
10-19
Lost: cat, large white, nudited man. In Park 25.
Givens are. If found or see please call 10-19-19
Lost: Male black and white, long hairied kitten
potential. Apts. Apts. Reward. Players. 10-19
at 2pm. 450-$.
Found. St. Christopher's Memorial. Inscriptions on the walls and field south of Robinson Gym. Call 841-753-6200.
Dael Waxman: I have your BS card. Name the number and you again. Call 841-253-9706.
[Blank line]
[Blank line]
Lost: one beet friend posting a fawn-colored
l
Last: Silver spoon ring in Wessex restroom
morning. Sentimental value. Please excuse
touch.
MISCELLANEOUS
Found key chain with initial found Fri. Oct. 15
north of campain. Call 811-2915. 10-22
NOTICE
CASSAH CAFE- Good food from scratch. Lunch menu includes grilled chicken, potato and rice with soup for low-income adults dining alone.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Massed furniture, dishes, tables, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12pm-8pm. (3) 519-749-2490.
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND THERAPY: indi-
dividual growth workshops 10-22
- 16-33 in women’s workspaces
GAY SERVICES MEETING. Oct. 19, Walnut Grove Medical Center, 280 North Walnut Blank, Executive Director for the ACU Her presentation will cover the issues of sexual harassment and stalking in women is invited. For socializing calls call (800) 563-7414.
Blitz Brunch and Make Sale Wednesday; Oct.
20, 2015
Blitz Brunch and Highland Community;
Oct. 20, 2015
Security if You call 463-402 for a barn party
for November 6th, please call back.
10-21
FREE TO GOOD HOME! 1 super-living male
or female old.汉 lad hud slot店.
843-9627 french or english
www.free-to-goood-home.com
Free-5 bitters need a good home. Please help
5 bitters call 841-3902 between 5 P.M.
10-25
GAY RAP GROUP: Thursday, Oct. 21, 7:30, 823
Kentucky.
10-21
Gay Counseling Service; call 842-7505-612 p.m.
for Referrals.
Vendo cassette de Victor Jana, Violeta, Isabel y
Josef. A partir de $100,000 se puede Puslo,
Puplo, Santa Maria de Juarez, Iquique,
Boleros y Monasco. Desis discos grabados en cada
cassette.$400. Shelly.$839. Geddes.$de la suite
Have you had problems getting to sleep at night for the past year? We are looking for people to participate in our next program, which is a Fogy Pech Dept. For more information, Dorn Hutchings, 941-335-8999, 10-20
We buy good used cars Corvettos, Camaros, Novas, Mustangs, Firebirds, and Imported Sports Cars UNIVERSITY MOTORS 26 & Iowa 843-1395
Do you want to study the Bible? Group will meet with me to discuss your book. Leader: Carl J. 10-20 or write **Klipsch W. 1938**.
I WANT to learn an Irish lɪg. If you know one
please teach me. 841.8187.
10-22
How Changing Roles of Women Affect Men Pre-
venting Sexual Abuse
7:30 P.M. - Tue, Oct 16 Jawahir Boshan Union
Hospital, Dubai, United Arab Emirates
FREE PUPPY needs home, 3 months, mixed hair, small short hair, medium size when you first move in.
ISHAAMALL will be in town to celebrate "We Celebrate the Makers of America" for my latest picture collection. The Curse of Jethro that Jehovah changes his blink before below celeb makes all of us look like a wooden stick this time. ALR GCP
Jock, Happy Birthday Raisin. No newspapers this
week; tee-bee. Love you, Chip.
10-19
Excellent instruction in guitar, band, as well as piano. Lessons include fingerboard, Keyboard and strings. Lesson worksheets. Keyboard not included.
SERVICES OFFERED
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERIES Thousands on campus
11101 Avenue Ave, No. 266, Los Angeles, CA
11101 Davis Ave, No. 266, Los Angeles, CA
Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 192, 169, 106, 110, 115, 116, 171, 122, 132, 124, 118, 109, 114, 116, 115, 116, 117
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a
Non tire自行车-bike-adapt and adapt your dumblers,
brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your
battery, inline bike-adapt and adjust your accessories
accessories bought at time of "tune-up". Rates:
10 speed $15.00, 5 or 3 speed $15.00, single speed
$15.00, triple speed $15.00, single speed $15.00, Complete pro-
formance $15.00, single speed $15.00.
Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection quality bikes. Shop from our line of Schwinn trade in! Thurra Ull 3:30, Sun 1-4 1:30, 8:43, 6:43, 8:43, 7:30
A MUSICAL RUT? See how lessons can get you moving. Beginning to advanced in folk, rock, jazz, classic, bluegrass and blues guitar, mandolin, piano and cell. Call McKinsey Maplan 10-298 0817
TYPING
Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, mice, spellers. 842-5036, Mr. Wright.
I do damned好 typing, Peggy. 842-4796. 10-29
THRESIS BINDING COPY. The House of Ubser's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for IBM in San Francisco helps you help at 83 Massachusetts or phone 83-2611. Thank you.
Need an experienced typist? IBM Solitaire LL Codes, color elements, correcting carbon (carbon), Call Paam at 842-5079.
Experienced typist—IBM-Memory-Call 842-5036, Mr. Wright.
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing
• Furniture • Antiques
• Imported Clothing
OMass. 841-7070
We now have openings for the remainder of the
facilities and for female room leaders.
Namith Hall, 843-859-10
10-20
Ace needs salpersoners at the game to sell the official KU hat. Earn a bacon a hat. $60 in commissions made at Wisconsin game. Limited number of salpersoners needed. Call 415-843-6800 or 6541.
2 male roommates wanted to share housework for
their parents and summer; $8/month plus meals
10-20
WANTED
Routinize needed for very oily, furnished apart- ment unit. **$750 per month and** **$25 call** **Cash**. 86-434-2122. www.careersource.com
Two need General Admission tickets to Nebraska game. Will pay a good price. Call 841-7421. 10-19
Roommates need immediately for nice house.
Walk to campus. Open room. $68.75 - 10
10-21
Need 3 tickets each for the following games:
UK-R-State, KU-Nebrual
841-204-9
10-20
73OMass. 841-7070
Help I.1 my well-manned dog need a place to live. Call Jackie. 842-4267. 10-20
Four need tickets to Nebraska game. Call after 5 p.m. 841-7126. 10-22
Female to sub-lease an apartment to room with
her baby. Start payment in November 10-22
184-573
Need 1 ticket, anywhere, to Nebraska game. Call 843-7204 at 5:00. Keep playing. 10-25
Wanted- Full size backpack and aluminium frame,
1845-3023 or Wayne Finch, Tonganoxie KK
Male roommate should to share one 1 bedroom
apt $200 plus ½ unit. Phone #343-4742
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
2 female roommates wanted for large 2-story
room. Call James at 1-855-426-3100 plus im
Call Caitlin at 1-855-426-3100.
NORTH AMERICA
2015
The Lounge
Armedillo Bead Co
will be moving
soon to
The 8th St. Marketplace
Watch for Grand Opening ad in UKD1
710 Mass. 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 841-7964
Bud on Tap Pinball
Pool Foosball
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa
843-9812 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
Aztec Inn
Aztec Inn
American and
Mexican Food
All Mexican Dishes served
on piping hot plates
807 Vermont 842-9455
wagon wheel
10 a.m.—12 p.m.
Everyday is
Ladies' Day
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
The Chalk Hawk
dome of
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
JULIARDS
● Pin-Ball
● Air Hockey
● Foos-Ball
Keep your car healthy in the summer.
Use the student discounts at
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
FIELDS
FIELDS COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS Mattresses - Liners Heaters - Frames Bedspreads - Fitted Sheets WATERBEDS 712Mass.St. Downtown Lawrence, 842-7187
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Smiley Face
8
Tuesday, October 19, 1976
University Daily Kansan
FALLEY'S
2525 Iowa
Next Door to Gibson's
Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days
Prices Good Tuesday Through Sunday
Oct. 19—Oct. 24
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
Falley’s Fluff Pack
Ground Beef 3 to 5 pound pkg. $59 lb.
Andy Griffith Sausage ... $1¹⁹
Andy Griffith Bacon ... $1¹⁰
Taste-O-Sea Whiting Fillets ... $99
Ohse Brand—Six Varieties
Luncheon Meats 6 oz. pkg. $45¢
Armour Star Grill Dogs ... 16 oz. $89
Swift Brown & Serve Sausage ... 8 oz. $79
Allways Good Hen Turkeys ... 10-12 lb. $59
Betty Crocker Layer Cake Mix 42¢
Falley’s 42nd Anniversary
Come help us celebrate our birthday and carry home the savings at the same time!!
Coronet Towels Jumbo Roll 42¢
Van Camp Grated Tuna 6½ oz. Can 42¢
Food King Yellow Cling Peaches 29 oz. Can 42¢
Armour Chile with Beans 15½ oz. Can 42¢
Softex Facial Tissue 200 ct. 42¢
Franco-American Spaghetti ... 15 oz. 4 for $1
Franco-American Spaghettios ... 15 oz. 4 for $1
Double-Luck Cut Green Beans ... 16 oz. 6 for $1
Argo Peas ... 17 oz. 4 for $1
Sweet May Chopped Spinach ... 16 oz. 6 for $1
Manwich Sandwich Spread ... 15½ oz. 49¢
Mild Yellow Onions ... 3 pounds 42¢
Florida Tangelos or Tangerines ... 6 for 42¢
Long Slicing Cucumbers ... 3 for 42£
Large Bell Peppers ... 3 for 42£
Bright Red Radishes ... 6 oz. pkg. 3 for 42£
Tasty Green Onions ... 3 bunches 42¢
Falley’s Homogenized Milk $1¾ gallon 42¢
Meadow Gold Half & Half Pint 42¢
U.S. No. 1 Red Potatoes 8 lbs. 42¢
California Sunkist Valencia Oranges 42¢ Dozen
Pillsbury Biscuits Buttermilk or Sweet Milk 4.5 oz. 12 for $1
Our Own Brand Ice Cream ... 1½ gallon 89¢
Kraft Grape Jelly ... 18 oz. 59¢
Peter Pan Peanut Butter ... 18 oz. 89¢
Shurfine Great Nortern Beans ... 16 oz. pkg. 4 for $1
Chiliets Chile Beans ... 15½ oz. 3 for 89¢
Nine Lives Cat Food ... 6½ oz. can 5 for $1
Husky Dog Food ... 15¼ oz. 8 for $1
Blue Bonnet Margarine 16 oz. Sticks 42¢
Falley’s Sandwich Bread 24 oz. Loaf 42¢
Falley’s Hamburger or Coney Buns Pkg. of 8 42¢
T-N-T Popcorn 2 pound Bag 42¢
Joy Liquid Detergent ... 12 oz. 3 for $1
Campbell’s Tomato Soup ... 10¾ oz. 5 for 89¢
American Beauty Spagetti Dinners¦ 2 for 37¢
Candy Chef Real Chocolate Chips ... 12 oz. 99¢
Shurfine Pure Cane Sugar ... 5 pound bag 89¢
Cigarettes ... All brands & sizes $3¥9
Falley’s Cottage Cheese 79¢ 24 oz.
Van Camp Pork & Beans 3 for $1
Maxwell House Coffee 16 oz. $179 Can
FREE COCA-COLA 16 oz. — 8 pack
Buy one Tab or Sprite at Regular Price, receive one Cola-Cola Free.
SAVE $3¥7 Over Falley’s Low Discount Prices with These Valuable Coupons
FALLEY’S
DIAL
BATH SOAP
5 oz.
Bar
4 for $1
Limit 4 with coupon good thru Oct. 24
FALLEY’S
Regular 2 for $1.38
Hamburger Helper
All Varieties 2 for 89¢
Limit 2 with coupon good thru Oct. 24
FALLEY’S
Regular 99¢
BETTY CROCKER FAMILY FUDGE BROWNIE MIX 69¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 24
FALLEY’S
Regular 99¢
EVER FRESH FROZEN GLAZED DONUTS 59¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 24
FALLEY’S
Regular 85¢
GLAD SANDWICH BAGS 59¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 24
FALLEY’S
Regular 89¢
GLAD WRAP 200 ft. Roll 59¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 24
FALLEY’S
Regular 73¢ POST TOASTIES 18 oz. 49¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 24
FALLEY’S
Regular 11.19 MR. CLEAN ALL PURPOSE CLEANER 28 oz. 99¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 24
FALLEY’S
Regular 99¢ KEEBLER DELUXE GRAHAMS 13½ oz. 79¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 24
FALLEY’S
Regular 69¢ NABISCO SALTINE CRACKERS 16 oz. 49¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 24
Betty Crocker Layer Cake Mix 42° C
Falley's 42nd Anniversary Come help us celebrate our birthday and carry home the savings at the same time!!
Coronet Towels Jumbo Roll 42° C
Van Camp Grated Tuna 6½ oz. Can 42° C
Food King Yellow Cling Peaches 29 oz. Can 42° C
Armour Chile with Beans 15½ oz. Can 42° C
Softex Facial Tissue 200 ct. 42° C
Andy Griffith Sausage ... $1¹⁹
Andy Griffith Bacon ... $1⁰⁹
Taste-O-Sea Whiting Fillets ... 16 oz. 99¢
Armour Star Grill Dogs ... 16 oz.
Swift Brown & Serve Sauce
Allways Good Hen Turkey...
Betty Crocker Layer
Cake Mix
42¢
Falley's 42nd Anniversary
Come help us celebrate our birthday and carry home the savings at the same time!!
Coronet
Towels
Jumbo Roll 42¢
Van Camp Grated
Tuna
6½ oz. Can 42¢
Food King
Yellow Cling
Peaches
29 oz. Can 42¢
Armour
Chile with Beans
15½ oz. Can 42¢
Softex
Facial Tissue
200 ct. 42¢
Franco-American Spaghetti ... 15 oz. 4 for $1
Franco-American Spaghettios ... 15 oz. 4 for $1
Double-Luck Cut Green Beans ... 16 oz. 6 for $1
Argo Peas ... 17 oz. 4 for $1
Sweet May Chopped Spinach ... 16 oz. 6 for $1
Manwich Sandwich Spread ... 15½ oz. 49¢
Mild Yellow Onions ... 3 pounds 42¢
Florida Tangelos or Tangerines ... 6 for 42¢
Long Slicing Cucumbers ... 3 for 42¢
Large Bell Peppers ... 3 for 42¢
Bright Red Radishes ... 6 oz. pkg. 3 for 42¢
Tasty Green Onions ... 3 bunches 42¢
Falley's Homogenized
Milk
$1¹⁴²
Gallon 1
Meadow Gold
Half & Half
Pint 42¢
U.S. No. 1 Red
Potatoes
8 lbs. 42¢
California Sunkist
Valencia
Oranges
42¢
Dozen
Pillsbury Biscuits Buttermilk or Sweet Milk 4.5 oz. 12 for $1
Our Own Brand Ice Cream ... ½ gallon 89¢
Kraft Grape Jelly ... 18 oz. 59£
Peter Pan Peanut Butter ... 18 oz. 89¢
Shurfine Great Nortern Beans ... 16 oz. pkg. 4 for $1
Chiliets Chile Beans ... 15½ oz. 3 for 89¢
Nine Lives Cat Food ... 6½ oz. can 5 for $1
Husky Dog Food ... 15¾ oz. 8 for $1
Blue Bonnet
Margarine
16 oz. Sticks 42¢
Falley's
Sandwich
Bread
24 oz. Loaf 42¢
Falley's
Hamburger or Coney
Buns
Pkg. of 8 42¢
T-N-T
Popcorn
2 pound Bag 42¢
Joy Liquid Detergent ... 12 oz. 3 for $1
Campbell's Tomato Soup ... 10¾ oz. 5 for 89£
American Beauty Spagetti Dinners 7 oz. 2 for 37¢
Candy Chef Real Chocolate Chips ... 12 oz. 99¢
Shurfine Pure Cane Sugar ... 5 pound bag 89¢
Cigarettes ... All brands & sizes 3¶¥£
Falley's
Cottage
Cheese
24 oz. 79¢
Van Camp
Pork &
Beans
21 oz. 3 for $1
Maxwell House
Coffee
16 oz. Can $1¹⁷⁹
FREE
COCA-COLA
16 oz.—8 pack
Buy one Tab or Sprite at Regular Price, receive one Cola-Cola Free.
Meadow Gold
Half & Half
Pint 42c
U.S. No.1 Red Potatoes 8 Ibs. $42^{c}$
California Sunkist Valencia Oranges 42c Dozen
FALLEY'S SAVE $377 Over Falloy's Low Discount Prices with Those Valuable Coupons
FALLEY'S
Regular
4 for $1.48
DIAL
BATH SOAP
5 oz.
Bar
4 for $1
Limit 4 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular
2 for $1.38
BETTY CROCKER
HAMBURGER HELPER
All Varieties 2 for 89¢
Limit 2 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
Hamburger Helper
SPECIAL EDITION
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular 99c
FALLEY'S
Regular
99c
BETTY CROCKER FAMILY
FUDGE BROWNIE MIX
22 1/2oz. 69¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
22½oz. 69c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
99c
EVER FRESH FROZEN
GLAZED DONUTS
14 oz. 59¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
85c
GLAD
SANDWICH BAGS
59¢
150 ct.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $2.39
GLAD
FAMILY PACK TRASH BAGS
$1.69
20 ct.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
89c
GLAD WRAP
200 ft.
Roll
59¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
73c
POST TOASTIES
18 oz. 49¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
$1.19
MR. CLEAN
ALL PURPOSE CLEANER
28 oz. 99¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
99c
KEEBLER
DELUXE GRAHAMS
79¢
13½ oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular
69c
NABISCO
SALTINE CRACKERS
16 oz. 49¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 24
COUPON
jazz
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
A LITTLE WARMER
KANSAN
Campus whistle a 64-year blast
Vol.87 No.42
The University of Kansas----Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, October 20, 1976
See story page eight
New flood report causes tax loss
By CAROL LUMAN
Staff Writer
A good portion of nearly $140,000 in delinquent taxes went down the drain this week when the city received revised flood warnings. The United States Geological Survey (USGS)
The survey substantially decreased the number of developable lots in the Fourth Edition.
Assembly gets by-law revision
A recommendation for the formation of a new College Assembly Committee to discuss policies and educational ideas was made by the Assembly at its monthly meeting, yesterday.
The proposal was part of a report of an ad bac committee on revision of Assemblie by梁惠英.
The new committee, the Committee on Policies and Educational Goals (CPEG), would be an "ideas" committee, Andrew a Professor of Spanish and Porterbones, spiid.
THE COMMITTEE would hold meetings in policy matters that would be open to all members.
"The committee can't pass legislation," Debiki said. "All it can really do is pick up ideas and take them along to the Assembly."
The College Assembly is the governing body of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. It comprises all faculty members who attend about 600—and 145 student representatives.
The new committee is designed to be a lesson between the Assembly and the department.
CPEG would meet with the five other committees of the College Assembly at least
THE COMMITTEE'S membership would include nine faculty members serving three-year terms, two graduate students and three undergraduates serving two-year terms, and one representative of each of the other College committees.
A motion to vote on the by-law revisions will probably be made at next month's Assembly meeting, Debicki said. He said a motion might be made for a ballot by mail.
A change in the College by-laws requires a two-thirds majority of those voting.
No recommendations for changes were made by the ad hoc committee on student voting on promotions and tenure recommendations. Now, the by-laws state that student representatives may not vote on promotion and tenure matters.
Debick said that because of a split opinion concerning the committee, the matter would be considered later as a separate item.
Before the new USS information was received, developers of Four Seasons were willing to pay all the delinquent taxes on the undeveloped lots in the PUD.
However, because the number of developable lots was reduced from 135 to 38, the developers told city commissioners last night that they couldn't promise to pay back taxes on any of the lots. They did agree to pay taxes on the choice lots of the 38 remaining, but aren't yet sure of the amount.
DICK ZINN, attorney for the Four Seasons developers, told city commissioners last night that financing was the problem inaving the back taxes.
He said that last week the developers had backers who were willing to pay the delinquent taxes. But their willingness was negative, condition that all 135 lots could be developed.
Because of the reduction in the number of developable lots, that financial backlog has been reduced.
To confuse the issue even more, the commission was told that the information provided by the USGS wasn't final, and the information provided by the geology department fluctuates by as much as 50 feet, either way.
The flood current plain was based on studies made by the USGS that show where waters from Quail Creek might flow if it floods.
A PORTION of the flood plain is considered flood danger area. No structures can be built in that area. However, extending from the flood danger area is a wider plain where flood waters might go. This condition is introduced. That area is called the flood plain.
Structures can be built on the flood plain, but they must be raised to a safe level from water spots. This would mean that land would have to be built up by an average of 10 feet. That would require a Clanathan, director of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Department, said. That would also mean that base levels could be built under houses on flood plains.
In addition, filling the land would represent a substantial investment on the part of the developer.
ANOTHER PROBLEM is that, if the land was filled, developers would have to prove to the city that the filling wouldn't endanger nearby property.
Despite all those problems, Four Seasons developers asked that the final plat be approved because it would divide the large development into smaller and more developable lots.
The smaller lots would be better for the developers and the city, Zinn said. Small lots would be easier for the developers to build upon or sell and would also be more desirable when the remaining lots go to the tax sale in January, he said. The city may
See FLOOD page five
MINDS CAFE LICE BAKERY
FUNCTION WHEN AND
OPEN
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Working his first day at the Sanctuary, Kenny Fitzgerald, 1031 Mississippi St., finds out what it's like being on the other side of the bar.
Pushin' drinks
Bartending hurts feet and tests composure
By CHRIS COTTRELL
Patience and durable feet.
Those are two of the most important attributes of any bartender, says Jennifer Bolt, 407 W. 12th St., who tends bar at Herbie's, 708 Massachusetts St.
Apparently, other Lawrence bartenders agree.
A bartender's lot is easily misunderstood; tending bar isn't all fun and games.
"At times it can be very trying," Bolt said recently.
Working in a bar provides an atmosphere different from most jobs, but that doesn't mean you're not going to love it.
"It's a lot more tedious. Bolt said, "But other that that, it's just like any other bed."
Mark Buhler, Lawrence senior and bartender at the Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th St., agrees that bartending isn't all it is cracked up to be.
"IT'S A JOB for me, and I take pride in it," bulb her. "Too many people think that working in a bar is just a great time. It's not, believe me."
"I don't think a lot of people respect the fact that it's a job."
And bartending gets tougher as the bar gets busier, Bulber said.
"Just selling beer is the easiest money in the world," he said. "But when this place gets busy, I don't get any."
It's kind of a helpless feeling when there
is 1,500 people in the bar and you've got 10
friends.
BUT BUHLER said that bartending had its advantages. He said that he liked the bar's atmosphere and that it was a good place to meet people.
Mike Seregi, Overland Park senior, bartends at the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St. He's one of the hearty souls who has to dance with the huge crowds that frequent the Hawk.
Sergeli doesn't 'cherish the experience. "I don't like crowds," Sergeli said. "I like to be around a couple of people at once. Being around 200 screaming people doesn't thrill me.
"It isn't something that turns me on, but I can put up with it. I didn't enjoy it, I'd find it uncomfortable."
Seregi, too, emphasized the word "work."
"There are times when you really work with people," he said. "It's not that much different from what we do."
Bruce Collins, Lawrence Stewart, is a bartender at the Brockins. 1401 W. 9th St.
Collins is married, has four children and works during the day as a bookkeeper. His job at the Sanctuary gives him a chance to earn some extra money, be said.
HE SAID that he wanted a part-time job that wouldn't cause him to be away from his family too much, and that weekend bartending filled the bill.
"It gives me about $60 more every two weeks to pay for incident bills and things that are not worth it."
Collins spoke of misconceptions of the typical bartender.
"I always thought it was a really romanticized job," he said. "But 'It's a lot more work than people think. If you're a teacher, you look at are glasses, booze and money."
See BARTENDERS page three
"It's like any other job. Sometimes it
fun, though I'm working harder here than
you."
Human guinea pigs paid to try out new drugs
Staff Writer
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ
The KU Medical Center recruits human volunteers for a drug study program that tests both marketed drugs and new drugs previously tested only in animals.
The drug study program, about 10 years old, advertises for healthy volunteers who are paid to take drugs as part of research program. These patients also can attend but aren't paid.
A recent advertisement in the Kansan offered $3 a day for males 18 to 45 years old who would volunteer for more than a week of drug experimentation. The drug now being tested is used in foreign countries to treat high blood pressure and heart rhythm approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the United States.
ALL THE openings in that experiment
filled in and a waiting list has been
supplied, but not yet completed.
Daniel Azarnoff, director of clinical
pharmacology and toxicology, said recently that drugs were studied to determine dosage amounts, the added effects of other drugs or the effect of a new drug on humans.
"Nearly all new experimental drugs are tested first in males," Azarnoff said. "We don't want to expose potentially fertile women to a new drug until we have more information on it because of the effect it may have on the fetus."
He said that as far as he knew the experiments didn't affect male virility.
PEOPLE SIMETIMES get sick to the stomach or develop skin rashes, he said, but so far there have been no serious drug effects on volunteers.
Healthy volunteers would never be used to test a new cancer drug, Azarinoff said.
All volunteers are examined before they are approved for the program. The drugs they are given depend on the nature of the experiment.
cancer are given to Med Center patients, be said.
Before they participate, volunteers sign informed consent forms, which explain
"ANYTIME YOU take a drug, there's some risk involved," he said. "All drugs are toxic, or they wouldn't be useful. You just have to weigh the benefits with the risks."
New drugs must be tried out before they can be approved and marketed, he said.
Some of the people volunteer because of the money, Azarnoff said.
Names of volunteers are confidential.
"But we're very determined not to make the money so big that people will do it because we want to. We hope people would do it because we think it's something important for society."
More than 200 people, all more than 18 years old because of legal requirements, participate every year. In some experiments, healthy volunteers stay in a
clinical research center at the Med Center where they can be observed.
EXPERIMENTATION with new drugs often is funded by pharmaceutical companies. Other research funding comes from the National Institutes of Health, such as the National Institutes of Health.
Results of the experiments are published in medical literature and are used by the FDA to determine whether to approve a new drug.
All experiments using nonmarketed drugs are supervised by the FDA. All human experimentation at the Med Center is approved by the Human Ethics Com-
Robert Bolinger, chairman of the committee, said the experiments were reviewed by medical doctors, priests, consumer representatives and psychologists.
"The main idea is to be sure that an experimenter doesn't get carried away with the idea of his experiment. It's just for the protection of his patients," he said.
One time holv roller, addict, now a jazz musician
By GREG BASHAW
Staff Writer
Joe Uterback's winding road through Christianity, a junk habit and a European tour with his jazz trio led to
Just after he'd moved into his small studio on the top noir, he sat wearing shorts and a T-shirt at the Baldwin winery. He laughed as he did.
When Uterback finished, he found "a formal, middle-
aged member of the music faculty" waiting outside his
"Do you really feel that you should be playing that kind of music here?" the white-haired, man asked.
"Well, I play Mozart and other things too," Utterback said in working towards my doctorate in performance, pay me.
Uttackb, a 32-year-old assistant instructor of music, whose boyish, blondish hair and innocent-looking brown eyes belie a life overflowing with experience, is more firmly entrenched in his studio these days.
He sits at the grand piano now topped with a budding plant, empty bottles of Black Tower wine and a Sarah Vaughn album, and offers fruit-flavored Certs and cold coffee from a Snoopy thermos. His knit shirt with a red heart stitched on it is open almost to his belly and a ring of keys, as big as any janitor's, dangles from his belt.
"I CAN'T HELP it if your musical ignorance gets in your way of appreciating fine music," Utterback said, and sauntered off down the hall.
"CLASSICAL MUSICIANS are opening up; they're not as closed as they used to be," he said. "And jazz players have a broader range to work from. They're getting a more sophisticated from the fusion of classical and jazz."
After jamming ice cold for a summer with Ginny Lou, who slyly shipped him beers because he was only 17, Uttback was hooked on night life and tinkered on pianos for as many as 10 hours a day.
From his first humble gigs backing a blues singer named Ginny Loo in Wichita's Gold Chance Saloon, Utterback has developed into a keyboard virtuoso whose artistry is a unique hybrid of classical and jazz styles.
"AT THE SAME time, I was playing for a holler renecked church where I would improvise these soullful songs."
to realize I had extraordinary limitations by not knowing the techniques and styles of classical music."
After he flunked out of a fundamentals of music class at Waltham State, he hitchhiked throughout the country and "whipped" into a band.
"I'm one of those people who has to try everything," he said, so spent much of my timed shedding my early conditioning.
"I went through my trip of wanting to be a star, but soon realized that being famous is completely different from being good."
THE ROAD HAS led him through a broken marriage, a religion and philosophy degree from WSU, a stay in a Zen temple in San Francisco, a stint as host of a Christian TV show, and a study in a witchcraft in a witchcraft conspiracy and an addiction to heroin.
"I kicked drugs three years ago after I dried out in a sanitarium, he said." Besides the hard drugs, I'd done
What remains with Utterback is more than 2,000 books on religion and philosophy stacked in his apartment and
"I STUDED almost every religion of the world and found religion is largely an emotional trip," he said. "You always run into strict dogs, into orthodoxy. I'm more Christian than most geek philosophy, their ideas of universal, brotherly love."
Uttberback had a radio show in Iowa City, Iowa, and a TV show in Wichita. He took his trio to Europe in '68 and '74 and played on the Mike Douglas Show, a gig he now snickers about.
"I went through my trip of wanting to be a star, but soon realized that being famous is completely different from being a philosopher."
He now teaches KU's first jazz piano class, gives private lessons, practices several hours a day, watches orchestral works regularly, and great audiobility of Raymond Bubnack and has a stifling gg Friday night at Paul Gray's Jazz Place.
AT A GIG at Gray's last month, the dark jazz club filled early for Uttacker's performance. Mary Jernigan, Little Rock junior who works at the club, tried to collect the cover choree at the door.
"Half the people who come here say they're Joe's guests," Jermigan said. "I ask everybody for the $1.50 cover and they just say, 'But dear, Joe invited me.' Quite a few of them are eccentric looking middle-aged women."
By 10 p.m., a veil of smoke hung above the full tables; Utermback asked a stout woman singer to the stage and sang her own verse.
"I'll tell you, Joe's got more pare technique than anyone else I've seen," he says. Fujione player for the Cajun City Jazz band, and
MARK PURVIS, bartender and manager of the jazz club, said, "Yeah, and Joe's the best cook in town, too. I had a pile of roast beef at his place that fell apart like a piece of cake when I cut into it with a fork."
On stage, Uttback has turned a soft, flowing solo into a dynamic burst of runs up and down the keyboard that his teacher, Sequencia Costa, classical pianist, nodding his head at a table near the bar.
"Joe has such imagination and fantasy, and such superb fingerprint in the phrasing of lines," Costa said. "Everything comes so naturally and spontaneously for him. He picked up very quickly on all the moods and changes in the woman's song too. A wonderful accompaniment."
ONE OF LAWRENCE's better known jazzmen, Dick Wright, shared Costa's enthusiasm.
Back in his studio in Murphy, Utterback sets up half a roll of Certs as he considers the jazz and classical syn-
"Joe is a very, very fine player who patterners himself a lot after Bill Evans," Wright said. "He's one of those rare individuals who can play jazz without being restricted by his classical training, without being stuff."
"Classical and jazz music are already as unified as they can be without losing their separate identities," he said. "But I do think we are headed fast toward a new musical romanticism. Formalized music is on its way out, part of the move away from technology and all its objectivity. People will hear music and feel it rather than analyze it so much. I can sense it and feel it when I get out and play."
HIS MUSCULAR arms reach down to the keyboard and his fingers roll lightly over keys to demonstrate.
See JAZZ page three
CHOPIN
CHOPPELFREY NOELS
A.
MAZURGAN
CHOPIN
CONSTANT WOELK
Joe Utterback staff photo by JAY KOEBZERR
2
News Digest From the Associated Press
U.N. vetos arms embarav
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-The U.N. Security Council vetoed a Third World embargo against South Africa to force it out of Southwest Africa.
The decision climaxed a debate that continued intermittently for more than one and a half months on how to get South Africa out of the disputed territory, also
Some of these abstaining or voting against the proposal suggested its adoption might hinder current U.S. efforts to bring black majority rule to Southwest Africa.
The vote in the 15-nation council was 10,3; with Italy and Japan abstaining. The United States, Britain and France voted against the resolution.
Slauer hanaed for crimes
NASSAU, The Bahamas. In a common gravel strewn with the bones of forgotten officers and murderers in Shakebok of Milwaukee was buried yesterday after the mass burial of 21 men.
The 22-year-old handyman was executed for the slaying of Irwin Bornstein, a New York accountant. It was 29 months ago that he confessed to the murder and to the slayings of Katie Smith, a 17-year-old Detroit tourist and Paul Howell, a Massillon, Ohio lawyer.
He said then that his victims were "angels of Lucifer" and that God told him to commit the murders.
Factions approve cease-fire
BEIRUT, Lebanon—Leaders of the warring factions in Lebanon reacted with general approval yesterday to the cease-fire plan hammered out at a weekend meeting in Beirut.
But trouble threatened over the composition of a proposed 30,000-member peacekeeping army. Sporadic fighting continued.
The conference involved Lebanese President Elias Sarkis, Palestine guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat and the leaders of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Kuwait.
Walters to run last debate
WASHINGTON-Barbara Walters, who coachors the ABC Evening News, will moderate the final presidential campaign debate between President Gerald Ford and Donald J. Trump.
The questioners will be Jack Nelson, Washington bureau chief of the Los Angeles Times; Robert Maynard, editorial writer and columnist for the Washington Post.
The third debate will begin at 8:30 p.m. Friday. It will be at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va.
Ford, Carter throw same campaign jabs
Rv The Associated Press
With only two weeks left in the presidential campaign, President Gerald Ford and Democratic challenger Jimmy Carter stuck with familiar tactics yesterday, each accusing the other of neglecting essential national needs.
Campaigning in Miami, Carter told the American Public Health Association that the Nixon and Ford administrations were involved in creating an essential health care program after another.
Ford never mentioned Carter by name during his remarks, after receiving an award from AMVETS for his "yeoman effort to maintain the peace."
Ford, in a White House Rose Garden ceremony, said, "There still remains an insistent cry that we slash billions and billions of dollars from our defense budget in order to pay for a galaxy of new social programs."
During the AMVETS ceremony, Ford said those who want to slash billions from the military budget "fail to understand that the military is an outwalt of freedom through the world."
Ford repeatedly has accused Carter of advocating cuts of up to $15 billion in the defense budget. Carter has said he can't remember using that figure and declared that $1 to $7 billion could be cut from the defense budget through better management.
Carter also scheduled appearances in
North Carolina and New York City before
departing to Philadelphia.
Ford and Carter will share the spotlight tomorrow night at the annual Al Smith Dinner in New York, an affair that features a host of exceptional candidate candidates, for both men or women.
Carter's schedule originally called for him to remain in Plains until it was time to move. The state legislature did not approve.
last of the three debates between the two candidates. But aides said that Carter was better off than Obama.
Carter told the health association meeting that he intended "to provide the aggressive leadership that needs to give our people more care, more comprehensive, effective health care program."
"Good health care ought to be a right and not a luxury."
After that speech, Carter talked at a senior citizens rally in Miami Beach. The vote of Florida's large population of retired military members could clog the race for the state's 11 electoral votes.
Carter's audience at the Miami Beach rally was predominantly Jewish, and he used the occasion to reiterate that the Ford Motor Company had approved the Arab bovett of Israel.
"For the first time in recent years, the President of the United States and his administrative officers have approved the right of foreign countries to circumvent the principles of the Bill of Rights," Carter said. "We also approve the approval of the administration in the White house, maintain against American business, the boycott..."
The Rose Garden ceremony was the only public event on Ford's schedule for the day. Most of his time was spent in conferences at the House aides and campaign strategists.
Meanwhile, the two vice presidential candidates remained on the campaign trail. Sen. Walter Mondale, D-Minn., told an urban conference in San Diego that a Carter administration would 'end the policies that have abandoned our cities.
Ford also continued going through the
margal stack of bills passed by the 94th
Congress in January.
Summer economic figures show little growth
The Commerce Department said the volume of Gross National Product (GNP) grew by 4 per cent on an annual rate from July through September, mainly because of a slower pace of investment in productive facilities and housing.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The economy's growth rate dropped in the summer quarter below the level necessary to reduce government, the government reported yesterday.
The growth was down from 4.5 per cent the previous quarter and from 9.2 per cent in the last half year.
Inflation as measured in the time was per cent at an annual rate, off 5.2 per cent for the last four years.
GNP is the total output of goods and services in the economy and represents the broadest measure of the economy's performance.
the slowest growth since the 3.3 per cent in the last three months of 1975.
In another report, the Commerce Department said the number of new houses started in September hit the highest level in three years. The number climbed 17.6 per cent to a seasonally ad-
The growth rate in the GNP was in line with administration projections of recent weeks but well below forecasts in July of growth at an average annual rate of 7 percent a quarter during the last half of the year.
Most economists say that overall growth in the 4 to 5 per cent range when the economy is pulling out of a recession is enough to take care of normal growth in the
work force without cutting into existing unemployment.
John Kendrick, chief economist for the Commerce Department, said he agreed with that theory but said he expected growth of about 6 per cent in the current quarter. That should push unemployment down, he said.
Jimmy Carter, President Gerald Ford's challenger, issued a statement contending that the latest figures proved the economy was in a downward slide.
Rabbis Menachem Herman, educational director and assistant rabbi of the Beth Shalom Religious Center in Kansas City, Mo., and Ph.D. candidate in Biblical Archaeology from N.Y.U., conducts a slide show and special lecture entitled "For Dig We Must." Thursday, October 21st, 8 p.m., Council Room, Kansas Union. Slides of several excavations as well as artifacts recovered from those sites will be presented. All welcome.
DOES BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY OFFER SUPPORT TO THE RECORD OF ANCIENT JEWISH HISTORY?
Sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish students
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--has been developed and will begin next week. Come and hear details about this one month workshop.
Would You Like to Date More Often?
A DATING WORKSHOP
Prizes will be awarded to the 1st,2nd,&3rd place winners.
—¹²⁵⁰ Entry Fee
SUA indoor rec 8-ball Tournament Oct.24 at 1:30 p.m.
Mon.—Wed., 4:30—6:30
Mon.—Wed., 4:30—6:30 Oct.18—Oct.20, Room 224 Frazier Single men, KU Students over 18 only LAST WEEK TO ATTEND!
—Sign up in Jay Bowl by 3 p.m. Friday, Oct.22
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DEBATE
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Wednesday, October 20
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 20.1976
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Bartenders
From page one
Collins compared bartending with his daytime job.
"IN MY BOOKEEPING PEP, I sit in a room and don't say anything for four hours. You might说 this job could be a release. I think you should pay the paid, I think I'd prefer bartending."
Bill Sherman, Mission Hills senior, used to tend bar at the Sanctuary, but he quit last
"One reason I quit the Sanctuary was that I was getting a little tired of seeing people get drunk all the time," Sherman said. "And where I lived even won't want to see a bar."
Sherman said that every bar had features that were unique to that bar.
--the Hawk and the Wheel, and cafe cafes. "The reason the Hawk was so popular is that they're so close to campos. Sherman said, "It's almost a tattoo on it," ITU, to go to the Hawk and the Wheel."
"Each bar has its own gimmick," he said.
"A lot of hats will have lighted dance floors, smoke machines or big TV screens. Right now, disco is a big thing. But on the coasts, disco is dying out."
"YOU HAVE TO have a good promotional gimmick to lure neoole in."
He said it was difficult for a bar to stay popular for more than about three years.
"Very few bars can form rods in one location," Sherman said. "Bars don't attract the same group of people all the time." As a result, many norms, moving from one bar to another,
The exceptions in Lawrence, he said, are the Javhawk and the Wagon, Woolf cafe.
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In Murphy's Swartwhout Hall last spring, Utterbear eased the formality of his doctoral recital by forsaking the traditional suit for a sports coat and open shirt and by playing a jazz number. "Here's That Rainy Day," for his encore.
From page one
--in my files," he said, rummaging through a cabinet in the corner. "I think musical recitals should be more relaxed affairs. All music that surrounds us surrounds only hampers creativity."
Jazzman
Selling your bike?
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"This Chipin ballad I'm working on with Mr. Costa . . . I can interpret within the composer's notes and color it with my emotions."
His chest and head sway to the piece's crescendo.
"This is very sexual," he said. "Feel the tension and the release."
--in my files," he said, rummaging through a cabinet in the corner. "I think musical recitals should be more relaxed affairs. All music that surrounds us surrounds only hampers creativity."
"Let's see. I have the music to that song
into a load blues in the key of C, left hand striding in octaves, right hand trembling red blue notes. A student in a white sweater tucked-back black hair bounds into the hall.
HE PULLS OUT a book of Chopin's music and a black and white photo of a buxom woman.
"WOULD YOU PLEASE go into a room to pay?" she shouts, waving some sheet music on the table.
"Certainly not. Especially not when I'm practicing my voice lessons," the student
"Oh, that's Sheila, who I played for on the strip circuit," he says. "She's a beauty but she really had no brains. I'm afraid I can't find that music."
"You don't like the blues?" Utterback asks, eyes wide and innocent.
Utterback takes the plant from his piano and starts down the hall to a drinking fountain to water it. Against the wall, a large hole opens in the ceiling and puts the plant on the piano's top and breaks
THE FREE UNIVERSITY OF IRAN
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Wednesday, October 20,1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
One fan's lament
Woe is me. Nolan Cromwell, Ransom Rambler, wishbone quarterback, allround athlete and KU football hero, is out for the season.
The Kansas City Royals, the World Series hopefuls of MidAmerica, lost the pennant to the New York Yankees in the last half of the ninth inning of the fifth game of the playoffs.
LAST WEEK was a depressing one for fans in this area. Everything that was hoped for, the World Series, the American League Pennant, a big bowl game, a Big Eight championship and the general good feeling that comes with rooting for winning teams vanished last week.
Was Al Cowens safe at second base? Did the Oklahoma defense take cheap shots at Cromwell? The losses just seemed too horrible to be true.
Actually, it makes no difference whether Cowens was safe or whether Oklahoma was out to get Cromwell. The Yanks have the pennant and Cromwell is in Lawrence Memorial Hospital. It's over.
BUT THE depression remains. Never has a loss like the one Oklahoma gave
KU Saturday sent me into a state of self-ify that lasted for days.
My mood was further darkened as I trudged up the hill—the campanile was playing "When Johnny Comes Marry" to him. He looked in shock and reminded me of cloak and despair.
I suppose I shouldn't get so emotionally involved in sports. After all, if losing is so depressing to me, a mere fan, what it must be like to have to play and have to play. The only thing I have to do is sit in the stand and scream.
I KNOW the KU football team won't be the same without Cromwell, but Scott McMichael has been the No. 1 quarterback here before, our defense is pretty good and Laverne Smith should be more than 17 yards a game from now on.
Maybe things don't look so bad after all. The Kansas City Chiefs have won two games in a row with the old fleaflicker, and the Kings are coming home. Maybe the Knicks will I'll live, I guess. But for a while last week, I didn't know whether I wanted to.
By Carl Young
An interesting thing occurs in the Mary Tyler Moore episode during which Ted, the anchor man, and his wife, Georgette, take a nap. The doctor Puss goes into labor while they're having dinner at Mary's. There's no time to get her to the hospital so she has the kid in Mary's bedroom, after which the doctor arrives to help the child may be shipped to the hospital.
Big institutions start early
Contributing Writer
Why? There's no medical reason that 99 out of 100 babies have to be born in a hospital. Given the free and easy way that drugs, anesthetics and overpowered parents care for their baby, bards, the most that is accomplished by having a baby in the hospital is to increase the risk of hard-to-detect brain damage. But there are economic reasons to give birth to a baby's welfare, for making it practically impossible to have a kid at home.
BESIDES providing customers for the medical industry, having a baby in a hospital underscores the idea that the supremely important unit in our society isn't the family but the big institution. Parents with children need mother, father and child are kept apart and regulated in accordance with the institution's needs. With the current slack in the baby business, some hospitals with a dearth of maternity customers are offering service specials, permitting members of the family to reunite for longer periods of time than before medecine been allowed in a hospital.
public policy, the health insurance giants combine to see that an American child's first days of life are spent in an impersonal environment among strangers. We teach them that we must include the beds we were born in, which are all identical white hospital jobsbies.
From birth on, the family is reduced,
ignored, minimized and damaged. Law.
time so they can go home to their families.
NEXT, kiddo, comes the day care center because granny has been carted
JIMMY Carter has been campaigning on the promise that he'll do something for our families. Maybe that's just more gib political talk. Certainly he has yet to have a chance to win, and the ambitions and practices of our largest and most powerful institutions
Nicholas Von Hoffman (c) 1976 King Features Syndicate
off to a senior citizen's center. The day care center is far from home, thus depriving the child of any sense of place, any feelings of stability and continuity. Early disorientation and depersonalization is useful preparation for busing to school. Whether or not this procedure sids learners or promotes involvement and engagement, it should manufacture a person without any loyalty, tradition or sense of community, a humanoid who ought to make an ideal employee.
are antagonistic. Overtime is a good example of the opposing interests.
The marvelous things is that the values and traditions of family life are still so strong that there aren't nearly as many humanoids as one would suspect. We've learned in a long time that turned the homes of America into orphan asylums and parents into domestic bureaucracies. Many of us go about paying money to jack-legged shrinks and evangelist therapists so that we may "get back in touch" with our missionaries who will have millions of people who will have a strong center and who refuse, to the irritation of their employers, overuse public money and resources to help families continue to perform these functions but to turn two-thirds of the millions of children over to professionals.
What gets top priority in our society? The use of human beings to fit organizational needs, i.e., mandatory overtime, or families? In a million ways and to build yet more large organizations staffed with more newly invented professions to perform the services families once did. That's what happened to the three-generation family. It was not only the family's other, and handed over to specialists.
WE'RE more aware of this for older people than we are with the young. Instead of having a system of family allowances we've chosen to build "housing for the elderly" and equip it with physiotherapists, social workers, recreation directors, nutrition advisers, gerontologists and thanatologists.
The same setup is rapidly being created for our children. Day care centers are obvious, but stop and think if you're working with kids in programs. The decision was made not to
By any standard of judgment the paid help does a poorer job at a higher cost. Where do you want your child to eat and drink? Do you want tendants amid the noise and slopes of the institutional setting, or at home? Which will it be when you're in trouble? A friend or a relative, or those expensive standards that the staff can't meet the duly licensed. boob psychopathian?
FORD isn't interested and Carter will find out that there is no way an HEW can be reorganized to do the job "responsible" for nursing services, a point in American civilization, we know neither how to train paid personnel to perform these services nor how to administer them through large institutions. The mixed partnership of government agencies with the recurrent hospital and nursing home scandals. Wherever government has contracted out to have any of these services performed, the agency must maintain mediocre quality and an absence of outright provable theft. That's the best.
It is far, far cheaper to have some sort of direct family grant-FHA program to build a mother-in-law apartment in the rear than to pour it away for housing for the elderly. The family is the cheapest and the best administrative unit, so let's keep Georgette's kid out of the day care center.
WESTPHAL
'SORRY, WALT, BUT TO KEEP UP WITH ABC WE DECIDED TO HIRE Δ CO-ANCHOR MAN!'
Finances plague Britain
By PAUL ADDISON
Guest Writer
The value of the pound has slipped drastically in the past 18 months, from $2.40 in American dollars in March 1975 to $1.63 this week. The rhetorical response has been great; it is now hoped that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) will request $3.9 billion in credit, will help prop up the currency that was once the financial standard of the Western world.
Britain's current financial crisis once again has shown politicians and economists the need to change the problems are far from over.
PRIME MINISTER James Callaghan and Chancellor of the Exchequer Dennis Healey have unenviable tasks convincing the public in general that Britain's economic survival is at stake.
Without IMF help, Britain could soon have three million persons unemployed and a 5 per cent increase in living standards. Hence last week Callaghan was equally depressing.
Guest Writer
But women, in their quest for total equality with men, haven't always been consistent in their demands.
The struggle of women for equal rights has brought about many changes the past few years. Women have moved into executive positions in businesses, increased their number in professional fields and even made their way into little league sports programs formerly open only to boys.
Women pros' demands illogical
A GOOD example of this is taking place among women professional tennis players. The women's pros have said they want the same amount of prize money as men receive in professional tennis tournaments. They argue that their
By GERALD O'CONNOR
brand of tennis is just as exciting as the men's game and that women' matches bring in women as captors as the men's matches.
The women tennis pros have threatened to boycott Wimbledon next year unless they receive the same prize money the men are talking about having their own tournament elsewhere.
Wimbledon tournament of-
'Hawks down, not out
In view of the injury to Nolan Cromwell, the inspirational field general of KU's football team and its star quarterback,
many fans and sports writers have written KU off for the season.
NOW THE tide has turned again. A seaman's dispute threatened the Labor government's shaky "social contract" issue, which is under Bank of England's withdrawal of its support from sterling Sept. 9.
more than 25 per cent to 13 per cent in the past year, coupled with a successful wage and prices policy.
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 21, 2016
June and July each except Saturday Sunday and Holiday Saturday. Subscriptions by mail are $3 a semester or $18 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $5 a semester.
An assumption of this kind is
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Tony Benn, have promoted import controls as a solution. At a time when British goods appear relatively inexpensive however, such a barrier would surely run export prospects.
The present lack of confidence in the pound has been interpreted by many as lack of confidence in the government. The result is its disillusionment by releasing a statement of their own aims, "the Right approach," calling for massive cuts in public expenditures, relaxation of curbs on food and housing subsidies, and lower income taxes. Left wing Labor party members led by
Britain's instability isn't solely her concern. It is a threat to the world's monetary system and puts a continuous strain on the economy. The world must consequently aid the British in their dark hour. At the same time, the British must formulate positive policies for speedy and complete economic recovery, and threat of impending financial bankruptcy be lifted from the shoulders of this proud nation.
Douglas Gilmour
Managing Editor
Bob Ovalhawk
Campsa Editorial
Bob Ovalhawk
Campsa Editorial
Anatecate Campus Editor
Bob Ovalhawk
Campsa Editorial
Photo Editor
Buff Photographers
George Millerer,
York George
Sports Editor
Associate Sports Editor
Brett Anderson
Sports Editor
Entertainment Editor
Brent Gwenn
Contributing Writers
Carl Young
John Fulcher
John Fulcher
Copy Chiefs
(Paul Addison is a graduate student from Lymn, Cheshire, in Great Britain.)
Business Manager Terry Hanson
neither fair nor true. For a chain is only as strong as it's weakest link (or so the saying goes) and right now that link isn't the quarterback but the confidence and inspiration of the team.
Antiestant Business Manager — Carole Rosenkoster
Advertising Manager — Jance Clements
Accounting Manager — Sarah McAhnay
Classified Manager — Sarah McAhnay
Administrative Manager — Timothy O'Brea
National Advertising Manager — Timothy O'Brea
The possibility that the 'Hawks can rally around Nolan's injury, and have it inspire them to attain the goal is beyond doubt. He broke broken kncc (heart) and heart) sought, isn't out of the question.
"If we fail (to solve our economic problems), I fear it would lead to totalitarianism of the right or left," he said.
ficials have rejected the equal prize money idea. To justify their reasoning, they computed the amount of time men spent on the courts in matches and compared it with the amount of time women spent in matches. There was a more time of actual "work" and therefore should be paid more money.
The man who fills Nolan's shoes will surely need big feet; and the inspiration might shift from winning one for the Glipper to netting one for Nolan. But the 'Hawks can and will continue to win. All they need is your support!
Nolan and the Hawks had their eyes focused on a trip to the Orange Bowl and the possibility of attaining a goal. "It's not a game this was a realistic goal, and believe it or not, it still is."
THE WOMEN pros, led by their president, Chris Evert, rejected this idea and are threatening to set up their own tournament circuit similar to their women in professional golf.
Randy O'Boyle
Topeka sophomore
The reason for this is numbers. The women simply don't have as many good players as the men. A match between them would be a lot tougher Goolagong Cawley would most likely sell out, but what about after that? The Navalvaitalis, Wades, Courts, etc., just don't power necessary to attract upper audiences for a whole week.
EVEN WITH an IMF loan, Britain's troubles will be far from over. Part of the loan must be used to pay back part of a $2.5 billion stand-by due in December, and the rest is desperately needed to bolster currency reserves.
The women players should have every right to do this, but they may be overlooking one small smear of women's session tennis tournament. The session tennis tournament could turn into a dismal financial failure.
So rather than cutting their own throats, or purse strings as the case may be, by playing them around with their arms decided to go their own route. Whether a women's tournament circuit can be successful remains to be seen. It works in some cases; maybe it can work in tennis.
IF THE women pros really wanted equal rights and equal prize money, they could play in the same tournament bracket as the men. But if that were the case, after Bjorn Borg wipped Chris Evert and Jimmy Connery with Goal Cawley, no women would be left in a tournament after the second round, and therefore no women would win any prize money.
Thus Britain must hope that her major trading partners will come forward with a large, long-term loan that could be used to convert $10 billion in sterling balances, held by foreigners, into an internationally funded debt.
The women pros, whether they admit it or not, know this is the case. Not even the legendary Billie Jean King could crack the top 20 on the men's circuit.
But there are more than just a few fans who will miss watching Chris Evert and Evonne Googalong Cawley play one of their typical, classic matches in the finals of Wimbledon.
Britain's economic reversal comes at an unfortunate time. The fall in gas prices from the reduction of her galloping inflation rate from
(Gerald O'Connor is a Lawrence senior.)
Campus steam whistle hurts humanist image
By JEFF LATZ
oooooooooh "
Everything stops, we get up,
pick up our lunch buckets, get
our time tickets punched and
get out because the next shift is
"Weeeeeooooh." Thirty minutes later it happens again.
minutes later it happens again.
Is the University of Kansas a truly humanist institution in using a factory steam whistle to regulate itself? Are students and professors so incompetent that they don't work or so poor that they can't afford watches?
A DISTINCT possibility could be that the steam whistle has caused hearing or emotional damage to humans passing directly by when it vomits its howl.
Some schools have used bells
Perhaps American education is mechanized factory-like, and ever-loaded with the academic material, so them as unfeeling as that whistle.
and buzzer to signal the end of classes. And some colleges, such as Kansas State College at Pittsburgh, trust the students to regulate themselves by using the own, almost silent timepieces.
Some of the conservative might scream, "The whistle is a KU tradition!" A tradition is what it is: the traditional nuisance is much another.
Times have changed. A new law school building is being built and the traditions held by old Green Hall will be modified by the new facility. The new art museum will give a new perspective to art. And, if we get rid of the whistle, we might just
F
be able to enter a new, composed. less-noisy era.
be at in th
After all, isn't that whistle a detriment to a "high academic intensity area?"
LET'S discontinue the use of this whistle. Since educational budgets are strained these days, some pennies might be saved by letting the whistle be only an adornment on top of the physical plant. Or we could put an anthropology museum to illustrate an "old" method of simulating.
Let students and professors keep their own time within a given schedule—the probably can be trusted to do it. But, until then, "Weeeeeeooooh," time for the next shift.
(Jeff Latz is a Lawrence graduate student.)
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From page one
be able to regain some of the lost tax money in the sale.
"To do this is the only way to salvage the situation." Zinn said.
Residents of the area, who last week gpopeed and appeared last night to offer their support.
BEFORE COMMISSIONERS deferred the issue last week, the residents said they opposed the plats because of intentions to evict them. They also said they preferred single-family residences.
During a break, a tentative agreement between the residents and the developers was reached and the outlook for the plan's approval last night appeared good, before the flood plain information entered the picture.
The residents said they encouraged future homeowners to be wary of it would be good for them and for the city.
RON HOLT, landowner in the PUD, said he objected to approval of the plat because he said he could foresee too many problems. He also pointed out that the issue in the past had been inconsistent.
In fact, Holt said he was withdrawing from the plat petition.
"I'm going to walk off and let the weeds grow on it and let it be sold at the tax sale,"
For a moment, city administrators said they thought that Holt's withdrawal, which
he put in writing, would nullify the plat request. But after some discussion, McClanahan said that it was too late for Holt draw and that the plat request would stand.
The commission unanimously approved the plat, but placed on it the stipulation that the new flood information would be drawn on the plat and that a warning to possible land buyers would be written on the plat. The warning would inform buyers that there was no risk for construction and that some wouldn't be usable unless fitted to an approved level.
THE COMMISSION also removed a stipulation that the developers be required to pay the back taxes before the plat was filed.
In other business the commission discussed joining the Kansas Urban Coalition, a group of four Kansas cities that are staffed as a lobbying unit in the state legislature.
That stipulation was originally placed on the plat by the planning commission.
The Kansas Urban Coalition now consists of Overland Park, Kansas City, Kan., Wichita and Topeka. Several other large cities in the state have been asked to join. **THE COMMISSION** decided to attend a coalition before deciding
The commission also approved a recommendation by the Traffic Safety
THE COMMISSION decided to attend a meeting of the coalition before deciding what strategy to take.
Commission to remove parking from the 23rd Street to 24th Street Terrace.
Request to remove parking south on court from Edgehill Road and from the north side of Edgehill Road from a point 40 feet east of the east line of Court west to Louisiana Street was deferred so that the city staff could study it.
Panhellenic picks officers
New Panhellenic Association executive officers elected Sunday are: President, Cinda Osness, Lawrence junior and member of Delta Deltadelta sorority; Member chairman, Mary Turner, University President, Omega; Campus affairs chairman, Vicki Elmhann, Winnetka, III., junior and member of Alpha Gamma Delta; Pledge affairs chairman, Wendy Manzon, Overland Park junior and member of Kappa Kappa Cressurer, Susie Kulte, Prairie Village sophomore and member of Gamma Phi Beta.
The officers, elected by the presidents of KU's 12 sororites, take office on Nov. 16.
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Wednesday. October 20,1976
University Daily Kansan
Experience McMichael's partner
Associate Sports Editor
By BRENT ANDERSON
There aren't many football teams in the country that can lose a quarterback who has started 16 games and replace him with a quarterback who has started 13.
The University of Kansas football team can.
Scott McMichael, who has been thrust into the start quarterback role because of a knee injury that ended Nolan Cromwell's football career at KU, has started 13 games for the Jayhawks and is the greatest sophomore passer in the University's
In 1974, when McMichael was KU's starting quarterback the entire season, he completed 74 of 156 passes for 1,044 yards and five touchdowns. He saw limited action last year, however, after the sudden Cromwell, who directed a running attack.
THE SPOTLIGHT has once again been turned on McMichael, which he says doesn't bother him. His only regret, he said yesterday, is that it is Cromwell's injury that has moved him to starting quarterback.
"If it would have happened any other way, 'I'd be happy,' McMichael said. "I'm happy to get a shot at the job, but I wish it would under different circumstances."
Since Cromwell became starting quarterback in the third game of last season, McMichael's appearances in KU games have occurred under extreme conditions: either they were washed out, or the dayhawks were floundering and in need of a spark to turn the game around.
Last Saturday, for example, Michael entered the game after the Sooners had tied the score and were aware that Cromwell had been injured.
"WE JUST couldn't seem to get momentum turned around," Mr McAichael said. "They came out really fired up in the second half and we couldn't get going. They knew we had to pass, and they started linebackers and changing their defenses."
McMichael, who has four stitches through his lower lip because of a cut he got in the OU game, realizes the road does not get any easier. McMichael is at risk against Big Eight Conference opponents."
"Sure, we were all down Sunday after the game and Nolan's injury," he said. "But it was a tough one."
games left and we've got to pull everything together if we're going to win them. Everyone on the team is putting out their ball, and I think we’re going to be all right."
Having lest two games in a row for the first time since Moore came to KU, the 'Hawks will have extra pressure in this Saturday's game against arch-rival Kansas State in Manhattan, but McMichael has been more than able to win 2013 win over the Wildcats two years ago.
"YOU CAN throw out the record books when KU plays K-State," he said. "It's the kind of game where anything can happen. You'll have to believe it will they. It's a big game for both teams."
McMichael said the Jayhawks would continue to use the wishbone offense rather than try to change offensive strategy. McMichael is considered a better passer than runner, but said he thought he was comfortable with the wishbone.
"We're all used to the wishbone and I don't think there's any reason to change," he said. "As a team, our timing is good and we are working well together."
"We'll run whatever plays the defense of the team we're playing dictates. If they have eight or nine guys on the line of scrimmage, we'll pass. If they're playing back, we'll run on them. It just depends on the defense."
MCMICHHAEL has seen some action this year, so he said he really didn't consider the prospect of him playing.
"I'm just going out there and do the best job can," he said. "There's really not any addition."
He was red-shirted in the 1972 season because of a shoulder injury and suffered a knee injury and a minor concussion in the 1973 season. Since then, however, he hasn't been injured.
McMichael, one of the few KU players who is married, expects to graduate in December with an education degree. He is a member of Shawnee Mission West High School.
10
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Ouarterback Scott McMichael was harassed by two Oklahoma players last week.
Women's team downs UMKC in volleyball
Sports Writer
By DAN BOWERMAN
KU didn't beat the University of Missouri at Kansas City in volleyball last night, UMK beat itself.
"I think they have a better team than what they showed," KU coach Bob Skancill said after the match, won by KU, 15-2, 15-6. "They stopped them with offense. They fired some varied offenses and weren't consistent with it."
Stancliff said that KU also was stopping itself early in the first match, but it came out of it in time to take the 15-12 game.
"We were stopping ourselves early in the first match with our serving,"
Stanifeld said, "We missed about six first serves, but once we got over that we were all right. I thought we served very offensive in the second match."
Stanc lift praised freshman Tina Wilson for her serving and said that the whole KU team played well.
The junior varsity Jayhawks also beat UMKC in straight games, 15-5, 15-10.
KU opens conference play with two matches in Manhattan tonight. KU's conference in volleyball includes Wichita State University and Kansas State University, and the winner of the tournament wins the tournaments—one tonight and one Nov. 9. The Jayhawks will battle Wichita State at 7:30 and K-State at 8:30.
Reds pummel Yanks, 6-2
NEW YORK (AP)—Dun Driessen ripped a home run and two other hits last night to lead the Cincinnati Reds to a 6-2 win over the Boston Bruins in beating a 4+ head in baseball's World Series.
Cincinnati goes for the clincher in Game 4 here tonight
Driessen got the Reds started on a three-run rally in the second innning against loser Dock Ellis when he beat out an infield single that ticked off Ellis' glove.
Driessen stole second and trotted home a moment later when George Driller drilled a hole in the fence.
Johnny Bench followed with a single, moving Foster to third. When Cesar Geronimo forced Bench, Foster scored with the Reds' second run.
Geromimo stale second and then scored to make it 3-4 when Dave Concepcion blooped
Two innings later, Driessen homered,
making it 4-0.
for a run in the fourth on hits by Chris thumbnail. Chambers wandered and bandwished walk to Grails Nettles.
In the bottom of the seventh, New York cut the Redes to lead two runs when Jimmy Johnson scored.
Pete Rose open the Reds' eight with a
top-slip when Ken Griffey also singed.
slide, when Ken Griffey also singed.
The Yankees nicked winner Pat Zachry
Joe Morgan doubled past first base, scoring Rose. An intentional walk to Driessen, who had doubled in his previous at-bat, loaded the bases. Foster then drilled his second hit to left field, scoring the final Cincinnati run.
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The students of the winning school, upon showing your student I.D. will receive two Tacos free until 1,000 are given away. K.U. wins Free Tacos at Lawrence Taco Grandes. K-State wins Free Tacos at Manhattan Taco Grande.
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中國之夜
KU Chinese Student Association presents: annual
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TIME: Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976 5:30 p.m.
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ADMISSION: Non-member $4.00, Member $3.50
TICKETS: SUA Box Office,
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Students learn from wheelchairs
By CHRIS COTTRELL
Up the stairs... helpfullu Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Staff Writer
SHEPHERD LOWELL
as part or ner project for Occupational Therapy, Susan Goddard, Des Moines, Iowa junior, spend much of Wednesday and Thursday traversing the campus by wheelchair. Goddard said that even people she knew would walk by without saying anything, while Goulder planned to help up the steps of Strong Hall, though a group of students finally came to her assistance.
The frustrations and inconveniences of wheelchair confinement become a brief reality for occupational therapy students at the University of Kansas.
Occupational Therapy 228, General Treatment Techniques of Occupational therapy, is a required course for all students in occupational therapy.
"In class, the students have learned about the various pieces and equipment that are part of the wheelchair and how to use the wheelchair." Sue Meredith, assistant professor of occupational therapy and in part of the class this semester, said recently.
"Then they are asked to spend eight hours as a 'patient' in a wheelchair."
"IT MAKES THE students aware of the problems some of their patients might be facing and how to prepare their patients for dealing with these kinds of problems."
Meredith that occupational therapy was geared toward relationships between individuals and between people within groups. She said occupational therapists worked with the physically disabled, ill children, and children who had learning disabilities
Mereidith that therapists often dealt with wheelchair patients, and that the wheelchair assistance enabled students to view the world through the patient's eyes.
"THE STUDENTS can see a little of what the patient faces," she said. "The advantage on the student's part is that the student can always get up and walk, and he knows it."
"So it's really not a true-life experience,
but it's probably as close as we can get to
Jane Underwood, assistant professor of occupational therapy, formerly taught the class and will teach it again next semester. She said the wheelchair exercise made students more aware of the problems of the handicapped.
"When the students are in the wheelchair, they're really aware of architectural barriers," Underwood said. "These are doors and windows when the student is in the wheelchair."
UNDERWOOD SAID that the KU cam-
sels its main arm for lifting and sufi-
tioned for the trucking, wheeling. But she
said architectural barriers gradually were beint corrected.
Underwood said the assignment was valuable for students who assisted as well as for those in the wheelchairs. She said many assisting students acquired an awareness of the problems of a wheelchair patient's family.
have the responsibility for seeing that another individual gets where he needs to be.
"They see just how confining it really is to
THE ASSISTING student also learns how to operate a wheelchair, she said.
Diane Doty, Shawne Mission sophomore who recently completed the wheelchair assignment, agreed that it was a learning experience.
"You can get in most of the buildings" "do said, 'but you have to go around the door.'"
"A LOT OF THE buildings need to have a restroom for the handicapped because the doors are so thin that you can't get the wheelchair in there. All the buildings need cement灌ations in and out the doors, and some of the buildings need elevators."
"There was no way they could get to the elevator because of all the construction," Meredith said. "So one of the maintenance people got up on a service elevator, which he did.
The wheelchair assignment isn't without its lighter moments. Two of Meredith's students recently visited the Kansas Union while doing the assignment.
"THE NEXT DAY, those two girls changed places. The patient became the assistant and the assistant became the patient. Then they went back to the Union for lunch and bumped into the same maintenance man.
"He couldn't quite understand how one recovered so quickly."
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WED., 7—11 p.m. Pine Room of the Kansas Union
SUN., 4—8 p.m. Pine Room of the Kansas Union
Everyone Welcome
3
CHEF STEAK SPECIAL
Steak Platter, Salad
and Drink
all for only $1.99
with coupon
Offer good thru Thurs., Oct. 21
Going to the game in Manhattan this Saturday? Dine at a World Famous Restaurant
McDonald's
McDonald's is In Manhattan (right on the way to the stadium) at 3rd and Vattler. Before and after the game be sure to stop and get your favorite McDonald's goodles.
SIZZLER
FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
1518 W. 23rd 842-8078
McDonalds of Lawrence, 901 W.23rd
K-STATE VS. K.U.
--on a springy crepe sole.
As Fall turns
into Winter
Coats with a touch of class . .
from
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, October 20, 1978
OPEN HOUSE
COLLEGE OF VETERINARY
MEDICINE
KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY
Oct. 23, 1976 9:00 a.m.—6:30 p.m.
MISS. STREET DELI
041 MASSACHUSETTS
Cherry Cheesecake
75¢
Offer good the entire month of Oct.1976
CLIP THIS AD
NOW OPEN
SATURDAY
AFTERNOON
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
BankAmerica
Judy Doyle
500-712-4000
master charge
THE WORTH IS IN $1
master charge
10% off first 250
bills at master charge
25%
OFF EVERYTHING
IN STOCK (Not included)
Go North across bridge to stoplight, turn right, go one block.
Go North across bridge to stoplight, turn right, go one block.
JAMES GANG
M - F - 8 -
304 Locust
5:30
SATURDAY
843-8080
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
8:00 - 5:00
The Going's Easy in OLDMAINE trotters
OLDMAINE trotters
Kick-off.
Trotters
new
slip on.
BROWN
Rosewood Brown, and Nutan Rawhide Leather.
Judy, Buttery soft leather tie, puffed and stitched like quilting on a spring
y crepe sole.
Rally.
Soft
Rawhide
Leather.
Wedged crepe soles.
FASHION
Navy Blue, Natural and Rosewood Brown.
mc's
shoes
813 Mass. St.
VI 3-2091
8
Wednesday, October 20.1976
University Daily Kansan
KU whistle as shrill as 1912 predecessor
Bv GERRY O'CONNOR
Staff Writer
Surely you remember your first encounter with the campus whistle. There you were walking somewhere in the vicinity of the University of Kansas power plant when suddenly a shrill and deafening blast made you jump about a foot off the ground.
There's no reason to be ashamed. There has been a whistle startling unsuspecting KU students since 1912, when it was determined that a whistle blast reduced tardiness and delay in the opening of class sessions.
The whistle was so effective that one is still used 64 years later.
A FEW YEARS after the whistle was installed atop the boiler building of the University heating plant, the casting became defective and steam pressure blew it off the roof. Another whistle was used a few months, but the plant engineers never repaired it. So she woaked the old whistle, nicknamed "Old Faithful" and put it back in place.
In 1946, a 200-pound steamboat whistle was donated to KU by Robert Haggard, a former student. Haggard salvaged the whistle from a German
Bigger weekend for homecoming in '77 suggested
After KU's homecoming weekend,
"bigger and better" plans are being made
to carry on the tradition next year, Robert
Foster, KU band director and chairman of
the homecoming committee, said yesterday.
Foster said after the committee's final meeting that, aside from the score of the football game, other college events were well received by students and alumni.
He said he thought a large cross section of students enjoyed homecoming.
“It’s something for them to do besides going to class.” Foster said.
NEXT YEAR'S HOMECOMING will be "business as usual, with everyone wearing blue," Foster said. The weekend will include the house decorations contest, a pep rally, a Saturday night concert, and an All-Attendance sponsored by the Alumni Association.
"We'll go from that point forward," Foster said.
Barney McCoy, SUA Homecoming Committee chairman, said it was suggested classes on the Friday before homecoming be dismissed at 1:30 p.m. next year. McCoy said that the official homecoming weekend kick-off would be called "T.G.I.H." or "T.A.M.E."
After a pep rally, the band would march to Potter Lake for a keg party and dance, he
MCCOY SAID that a window-painting contest downtown this year was supported by 23 merchants, who were willing to provide window space and $10 each for paints.
Student response to the context was poor because of inadequate funds for publicity,
"Next year we'll budget for additional advertising." he said.
Merchants may offer more prize money, he said, so the contest will heighten spirit and enjoyment.
Decorated houses were a popular attraction Friday night, but people found that they didn't move as long. Foster said, Because of excessive traffic, some people spent an hour just driving to the first house exhibit from the Stadium, where they picked up tour maps.
"We want to enable a lot more people to the house decorations in a lot less time," Eagerty said.
Old Faithful lasted until March 26, 1954,
when it cracked a seam. It was replaced by
the Marmor.
McCoy said exhibits that included recorded dialogue or music would have to limit the recordings to one minute next year to alleviate traffic problems.
transport ship, Orkins II, which had been scuttled in Leghorn, Italy. However, this whistle wasn't loud enough, so it was replaced three weeks later by Old Faithful.
HOLLY MILE, physical plant super-
visor, yesterday said it took 750 pounds of
water to cool the plant.
The whistle blast is controlled by a time clock, which sends an electric current through a relay to a cylinder valve. The valve operates an arm that opens the whistle valve. The length of the blast is controlled by the clock.
The whistle was changed from a motor-operated valve to a cylinder-operated valve two or three years ago, Miley said. This change may be the reason the whistle sounds as if it is coughing out its last sickly, dying tool every time it blows.
Mail deadline almost here
Deadlines for mailing Christmas letters and parcels bound for foreign countries rapidly are approaching, according to the U.S. Postal Service in Strong Hall.
In a release issued yesterday by the government, the following deadlines have been set for all letters and parcels sent to the following areas to be received before
Oct. 25 - International service parcels to the Far East (China, Japan and Korea).
Oct. 28 - All mail for armed services.
Nov. 1- All mail bound for Europe, Africa and the Middle East.
Nov. 30-All mail bound for Alaska and Hawaii.
Jack Harris, postmaster at the Lawrence Post Office, said that a domestic mailing schedule hadn't been issued, but that it probably be released in early November.
In addition, he listed some precautions for early mailers in their Christmas gift
-All items should be mailed in a strong (175 lb. test) cardboard box and be cushioned with tissue paper, woodshavings or newspapers.
- In multiple mailings, keep each item separate from one another; cartons for individual items should be reduced as much as possible to prevent rattling.
—Fragile or perishable items should be clearly marked and should have a one-inch diameter.
—Cover and firmly secure all packages with strong tape or twine.
- Books and records should be marked
"broken." Don't ship more than 25 pounds of bait.
A delay in the collection of pledges from the Cystic Fibrosis Bikeathon Sept. 19 has caused some problems for the sponsors of the event, and a chapter of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
- Print address, zip code and return address on both inside and outside of package
The postmaster also recommended that all packages be insured.
Uncollected pledges stall drive
Patsy Kempthorne, bikeshair chairman, said yesterday that because less than half of the women in her district are been collected, staff members might soon have to individually talk to the riders to find out.
She said it was the responsibility of the rulers to collect the pledges they had
**ABOUT $3,100** already has been deposited in a local bank, Kemphoure said, of the $65,000.
She said that this was the first time the organization had had so much trouble with the riders not collecting the money from their sponsors.
"I think people are extremely busy and they just put off the things that look like them."
Only 60 of the 140 riders have sent in their money, she said.
EIGHTY-TWO PER cent of the money collected for the bikefish is to be used for
SUA FILMS
CLASSICAL SERIES
SUMMER INTERLUDE (1930)
(Sommerlek)
Dir. Ingmar Bergman, with
Maj. Britt Wilsson, Mainer
Subtitles
Wed., Oct. 20, 7:30, 75c
FATA MORGANA (1971)
Dir., Werner Herzog (Germany)
Thurs., Oct. 21, 7:30, 75c
HESTER STREET (1975)
Dr. Joan Micklin Silver.
Kenny Keats.
Steven Keats.
Sidney and Sat., Oct. 23
10:30, 7:00, 3:00
7:30, 8:00, 10:30
FILM SOCIETY
Kansas Union
POPULAR FILMS
Woodruff Auditorium
Place an ad. Tell the world. Call 864-4358.
Oct. 23 and 24 Robinson Gym Deadline for signing up is Oct. 21 in the Intramural Office Room 208 Robinson Gym -- Double Elimination Open to all K.U. students, faculty and staff
V
Indoor Recreation Mixed Doubles Racquetball Tournament
SUA
Service Department Winterize Special
John Haddock Ford
- Back flush radiator
- Replace thermostat gasket
- Check thermostat
medical research and clinic funding in helping to research cystic fibrosis, a disease
- Check belts, hoses, and radiator
- Install 2 gallons of permanent antifreeze
Kempherstone said that she was pleased that so many Lawrence and especially University of Kansas students had taken interest in the bikathon, but that she wished more could have collected their pledges before the Oct. 1 deadline.
in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. For further information call Craig at 841-4704. Beginners and girls welcome.
JOHN HADDOCK
FORD
23rd & Alabama
Phone 843-3500
Wanna get high &
get down?
Sky Dive!
KU Sky Diving Club
Oct. 21 at 9:00 p.m.
"It means, as the case now, we get half as much as we hoped for and half as much research can be done to get the kids to live longer," she said.
Parts and Labor
Bikathon pledges can be sent to the Sunflower Chapter of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, in care of the University State Bank, 955 Iowa St.
$23^90
Waxman Candles
Lawrence, Kansas
The other 18 per cent of the money raised goes to the local chapter to pay for main-land roads.
1407 Mass.
843-8593
STOCKROOM DISASTER SALE
Candles at wholesale prices
Thurs., Oct. 21—Fri., Oct. 22—Sat., Oct. 23
- Veteran Combat service in the Republic of South Vietnam
Elect the professional who vows to eliminate politics from law enforcement and whose goal is to provide the leadership necessary to bring our law enforcement agencies above reproach. These ideals are sincere promises and not just campaign rhetoric.
1927
*Experience
Lawrence Police Dept,
Douglas County
Attorney's Office
- Education
K.U. with emphasis on criminology related courses
AMING
Kansas Law Enforcement Academy
Warrenburg State College
Traffic Inst. & Seminars
emphasizing an active knowledge of criminal justice
Training
ELECT
James (Jim) Huskey
SHERIFF—DOUGLAS CO.
Pd. Pol. Adv. from the Huskey for Sheriff Committee Fund, James Huskey, Treas.
KU The First Annual Fall Backgammon Championships
KU Backgammon Club
KU
to be held Sunday, Oct. 24, in the Jayhawk Room Kansas Union sponsored by:
BRITCHES CORNER Makers of fine clothes for men and
women, 9th & Mass. and the Backgammon Club of K.C.
ADVANCED DIVISION-Elimination Knockout Tournament Including consolation flight; prizes awarded to top five places. Entry fee $5.00. Begins 2 p.m.
BEGINNER DIVISION-Swiss Style Tournament; 4 five point rounds. Prize awarded to top three places. Entry fee $3.00. Begins 3:30 p.m. Doubling cube will be used in both divisions (will be explained for beginners). Sign up and pay Entry Fee in SUA office, Kansas Union.
For further information, call Rich Boyer at 1-432-3143 after 5:30 p.m.
Open to all students, faculty and staff. Deadline, Oct. 22, 5 p.m.
FOR EFFECTIVE REPRESENTATION
1976
Nancy 44th HAMBLETON
During four years as an elected official, I've learned the difference between premises and accomplishments.
It's not enough to have ideas, you have to earn the respect and support of your fellow workers to get the job done.
I want to work for you again—this time in Topeka as your representative in the 44th district.
POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
- First woman city commissioner of Lawrence
* First woman mayor
* Member, Kansas Housing Forum
* Member, Governor's Hous-
- Member, Governor's Housing Task Force
Paid for by Hambleton for State Representative, Don Motzlier and Joan Golden, co-chairmen
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday. October 29, 1976
9
m. nansas call
Viking discoveries not surprising to KU professors
The discoveries by the two Viking spacecraft on Mars may be disappointing to those who were hoping to see little green space. "We don't find green men or any other life form."
But those findings didn't surprise Edward Zeller, professor of physics and astronomy, who has closely observed information from the Viking landings.
THE MOST IMPORTANT Viking discoverer is the Marsi 'Mars' ice caps are discovered on Mars.
bringing some of the Martian soil back to Earth."
"It is possible that there is life in other areas of Mars," he said. "I would like to see them get into a warmer areas of Mars, around the equator...
"Thermal changes are crucial," he said.
The warmter the atmosphere is, the easier it is to heat.
The warmest temperatures at the locations of the two Viking landers was about 20 degrees Fahrenheit below zero. At the same time, drops dropped to about 100 degrees below zero.
"AT ONE TIME it appeared that there were substantial amounts of water on Mars," he said. "The water had evaporated surface and had frozen at the polar ice caps."
The canals on Mars that can be seen from
Although there aren't any canals, he said,
there are channels that were cut by water.
The channels have tributary streams, as
does the Kaw River.
Earth aren't on the surface of Mars, Zeller said, and aren't an astronaut.
Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, also has interpreted the nature of neutrinos.
"THEERE IS MUCH more rubble and rock
sweared around, particularly at the VIKING II
conquest."
"Before the mission landed, I gave 100 to one odds against finding life on Mars," he said.
"But most of the information that Viking has returned has been pretty much what I asked for," he said.
He said that it was unlikely that there was Mars because organi compounds buried in the atmosphere.
"It's possible that life on Mars has evolved into a strange form that isn't
detectable", "Armstrong says, "But that possibility is contrived as we receive more information."
"What we need is something to knock over rocks, dis holes and do microscopic work."
though Viking landers couldn't find life, he said the evidence isn't conclusive that humans were here.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertisement in the University Daily Kaanan are offered to all students without regard to gender. PRINT BINDING AND BUILDING BRASS ATTRIBUTION TO 111 FIRTH HALL BRUNWALK CLASSIFIED TO 111FIRTH HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
excel
equal
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00
expressional
'01 .02 .01 .02 .01
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 matter affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These six can be placed in person or on the DUX business office at 864-1358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Employment Opportunities
MUSICIANS: Part-time jobs for band members.
Contact the 511th Army Reserve Band in La-
ford, PA.
FOR RENT
Must subsitute two bedrooms, at Gatignau Unfinished—Nov. 1st lease begins. Call 842-7223
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS-Drop in and
pay your tuition. No excuses.
Includes:
* 40% off first room in suite
* 50% off $180 deposit
* 60% off 6th floor lawn, Lawn
& Garden
1. Bedroom Apt. $150 plus deposit. Manager, 1403
Tenn. No. 6, 842-5683. 10-22
1 bdmr. apt. A.C. ww carpeting. electric kiln-
charge. 250 watt. bus room. bus roof.
$160 month plus electricity. 841-9707
AI-2 room with kitchen to single male student-
room. Uplifted paid with pass.
Phone 833-757-9578
3 Bedroom apt at Quakeleerav allot for 1mm
of AVR between 854-851 at 9 & 6 per day
for 2 months. $12,000.
wagon wheel
10 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Everyday Is
Ladies' Day
Armadillo Bead Co.
will be moving soon to
BEST OF THE WEEK
WINTER 2015
The 11th St. Marketplace Watch for Grand Opening ad in UDK1 710 Mass. 10-5 Mon.-Saf. 841-7946
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
HORIZONS HONDA
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
Sales, Parts, Service
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BEL AIR ELECTRIC, 843-960-3998, W. 6108,
MASSACHUSETTS
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on popular hh equipment either than factory dumps or in-close out products. The most reliable option is the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. **tt**
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trades. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 708
9th St., New York, NY 10026.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to me.
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) for exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available at now at Town Crier Stores. tt
Excellent selection of used furniture, refi-
rigerable and new. 2022 ESS Topski, Topeka,
KS - 1000 sq ft - 6 p.m. Floor.
2023 ESS Topski, Topeka, KS - 1000 sq ft - 6 p.m. Floor.
Final markdown on all 76 Magnavox consoles and components. Beautiful #48.99 consumes cut as low as $20 per pack, sets wide open for $59 each. Bays are $39.99. Mass Open! 7:50 p.m. (Thurs. 8:30). 10:22
**CLEANANCE!** Disinfected radial tires $2 each
small CLEARANCE! 10-15KL 3-4' 21" dillard! (even AERN) 10-25KL 3-10' radials for Volkswagen included!) Rock Star豪士
Come thru Woolworth's parking lot for tree service!
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermals. Unicorn, etc. Stone cutting. Satisfaction Guarantee. 841-3832.
Must sell 1974 Audi Fox 4-door automatic, good
wheel drive wheel, trade-in possible. Call
(312) 685-5500.
73 'Capr I': 4 cylinder, AM-PM, mechanically perforated cleanly, by owner. 84-120, 84-126
86-135, 86-139
Honda 305, 1970, good condition, 486, BICYCLE
Honda 205, 1970, ten speed, good condition,
841-8128 10-21
Mercury stores cassette tape recorders, two vol-
tage batteries, an auxiliary power adapter, sten-
chone batteries, and an anti-feedback switch.
1976 Kawasaki K2-750 touring motorcycle 18-10
miles. 881-118 Negotiable.
Check out these used bike specs:
1975 Honda MT250 495
1975 Honda MTL325 495
1975 Honda MTL400 495
1975 Honda XN75 425
1975 Honda XN75 425
1975 Kawasaki 900 1895
1972 Honda CL125 375
1972 Honda XL250 375
1974 Honda C770 195
1974 Honda C770 195
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th, Lawn-
10-22
Ks. K43-3323.
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-6
JBK 14L 15" bass instrument speaker in cabinet.
160 wait RMT rating. Price negotiable. 842-145-342
Hoover/Spin Dry portable dryer. Great for backspin. Supsit Call 841-5006 after 10.25.
**Dryers:** Call 841-5006 after 10.25.
Bourez gluer amp. Superior quality, 150 watt
speakers in speakers Excellent condition
841-6424 10-25
JAMES V. OWENS
RETAIL LIQUOR STORE
Wines and Liquors NEXT TO OWEN'S FLOWERS
Tennis Backet. Wiltson T-2000. Good condition.
Make offer. 842-7053. 10-20
COLD BEER
American Microscope. Like new. Best offer. Call
Baled Wheat Straw—Good for parties, mulehling,
e. Call 841.048.048
ten.91
1972 Honda 354. Must sell, best offer. Call after
5:00. 842-9607.
HALF AS MUCH
after 5.00 842-9637 10-25
CXLCOPEDIA OF PHILOSOPH. complete set,
1982, new condition $50; value for $84-282-342.
ISBN 978-1-6280-1017-6.
HELP WANTED
66 Chevy 125, good engine and tire, body is fiat. 725. Call 842-1388 after 4:00 10-21
Maranta 1000 Series amplifier, wwp at 50 watts per channel, 200V power supply. Compatible with power channel power (must) Maint 864-6L86. Keeps voltage stable. Filters high-frequency noise.
Stereo: Garrett G, Gardner Amplifier
section 2, spotters. 22 waits. $55 Call GiG
phone. $20 for a one-hour show.
40%-75% off on warm up suits, dresses, man's
and women's swimwear. & Swim Club Bd. 4 (west on west) 842-776-106.
1969 FdI 124 Sport Coupe, body reduce, new
wet suit, new water jacket, new water pump,
new battery 841-382-106
730Mass.841-7O7O
1969 MGC, nice; must sell. 28,000 miles. 6 cylinders.
automatic transmission. 912-394-4001.
Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing
• Furniture • Antiques
• Imported Clothing
KU-KU GAME TICKETS for naut at our east
864-319 SUPERINFUR SAUCE (Union Lobby)
10-22
72 Kawasaki 350, 8,600 miles, clean, faring, new trail tranair bushings, helmet, new rings, skid plates
Cook. Assume responsibility for preparation work.
Course. 40 hours per week. Fri. Lawrence Club,
40 hours per week. Fri. Lawrence Club,
New $60 Dollars Special Hiking Boots, snow
swan, woman's size 6, must sell call 814-305-75
129
Delivery—must have own car, $4 approx.
In help also. Apply in Heavy Eddy's
shop. Call 617-392-8045.
Point: St. Christoph's m墩a. Inscripton on
field south of Robinson Gym. Call 841-1050.
On field north of Robinson Gym. Call 841-1050.
COLTERER CLERK. AT OVERLAND, PHOTO
and 2 P.M. Monday daily on Saturday at
10 A.M. Daily on Sunday at 11 A.M.
SI. Hill Clark at Quick-Ship Photo-Shop, 111
P. M. Monday first; 3:25 $6 per hour
P. M. Monday third; 5:00 $8 per hour
Dael Waxman; you have my SS card. Name the
dual and it's yours again. Call 841-2138.
I'll send you the card now.
Lost: Silver spoon ring in Wescoe restroom
of the hospital. Please值明 Price
Return. Reward. 884-121.
Found. Key chain with initial found Fri. Oct. 15
to 10, of cormyall, Cell M13-005
Loat: KU season football ticket entrac in OUI
Loat: OUI season football ticket entrac in OUI
Loat: REWARD. REWARD. BK64-182 2022
Eyedrocker Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
34 Winterset St.
FRACTIONS ON A NUMBER LINE
FRACTIONS ON AN ARROW
FRACTIONS ON A STRAIGHT LINE
FRACTIONS ON A CURVE
MULTIPLYING RATES
MULTIPLYING OR DIVIDE BY A NUMBER
MULTIPLYING MONOMIALS
MULTIPLYING PARENTHY FRACTIONS
Eyedrocker OPTIONAL
DISTINCTIVE EYEWEAR
MOTION CONTROL
RADIO CONTROL
RELAXATION & CONDUCTION
RADIO CONTROL
RELAXATION & CONDUCTION
THE GARDEN OF THE SEA
We buy good used cars Corvettes, Camaros,
Novas, Mustangs,
Firebirds, and Imported Sports Cars
UNIVERSITY MOTORS
26 & Iowa 843-1395
Aztec Inn
For new Chevrolet and used cars
American and Mexican Food
MISCELLANEOUS
Lost: Area 4b, and Florida. Small female cat.
Chest: 15 in. mousse. Litter bag. 10-26
in. mousse for litters. Bardar. 10-26
Lot One pair of glass in brown case between
Field House and Wheel, Reward: Call 3250.
2250.
Found; pair of glasses in a black case at 12th. & 12B.
Tenn. on台, Call 841-3815 or 841-9654
Loads Belgian leather purse with bits of packets
located in the handle. 864-1048 PLEASE, BEDWARD
lost please at 864-1048 PLEASE, BEDWARD
NOTICE
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Aice at the House of Ubiqui/Quick Copy Center.
It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-
friday, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday,
8 a.m. to 14 p.m. at Harley Davidson
CASSAH CAFE- Good food from scratch. Lunch
10:30 - 12:30 Mwz. Mass. Please be backup day,
if not available.
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont
Swap Shop. 620 Mars. Used furniture, dishes, pans, lamps, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-5pm. (347) 982-7891.
Call Ottis Vann!
Blitze Brunch and Bake Sale Wednesday. Get
a pop-up at Community 9th, 8th and Highland Lane.
Turner Chevrolet
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND THIERAPY; individ-
ualist also. Also grow workshops (638-
322) and conferences.
Jimmy's Steak House Delicious food at reasonable prices
Bunny's 12th, 13th, 19th Wednesdays 4-11. Closed Tuesdays
10am, 7pm
Redeemer Lutheran Church, 300 and Haskell,
involve all teachers and faculty to our Sunday
study at 10:12 a.m. We have an active college
study at 10:12 a.m. We have an active college
study at 10:12 a.m. Need contact Office 8453, 11-12
need. Contact Office 8453, 11-12
Sorority if you Call 843-702 for a barn party
for November 6th, please call back. 10-21
FREE TO GOOD HOME! 1 super-loving male
kitten, approx 3 old. Has had shoe store
loving mother.
Female singer looking for Rock Band to sing with Call: Viell 843-761-361
10-26
GAY RAP GROUP: Thursday, Oct. 21, 7:30, 823
10-21
PERSONAL
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND THERAPY: individual and group. Also grow workshops on the topic.
Do you want to study the Bible? Group will meet
4 p.m. on Wed, Excelesch leadeer. Call 841-383-102
567-992-1234.
Free- 5 kittens need a good home. Please help
out Call 811-2090 between 5 P.M.
10:20
843-7700
Have you had problems getting to sleep at night for the past year? We are looking for people to participate in an innsufficiency program at The Dutchin Hutchings, 841-305, evenings. 10-20
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIEDLE SHOP
Open 10AM - 6PM, 9AM - 11AM
BankAmericard
at
Mastercharge
842 8413
NAISMITH HALL
Now accepting
Applications
for Spring Semester
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Flatted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
SERVICES OFFERED
Gay Counseling Service; call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
Vouder cassatace de Victor Jai, Violeta, Isabel y Angela Pengar, Mercedes Sooni Jadi-Hillianti,裴娜. Victoria Bae, Thomas Cay, Nicholas Boloeros y Monicus. Das discus grabador en cada cassataire $490. Shelly. Haily $482.destes depuces on cada cassataire.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on campus at 1128 S. Main Street, Los Angeles, CA 90045. 1128 S. Main Street, Los Angeles, CA 90045.
Non-traditional, anti-chaivist man wants to
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 20, 1976
Organizations offer aid to the overweight
By DEB MILLER
Staff Writer
For those who are tired of dieting alone and running to the refrigerator when the pounds don't fall off automatically, Lawrence has two weight-watching programs: Weight Watchers International—that offer structured weight reducing programs.
Weight Watchers International, a group based in New York, meets at 9:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. each Thursday at the First United Methodist Church. 946 Vermont St.
About 30 people attend the morning session and about 70 attend in the evening,
"We have all kinds of people of all ages, from 10 to 70-year-olds." Kever said.
SHE ADDED that Weight Watchers would also members under 10 years of age.
The dues are $ at each meeting, and a $3.50 registration fee is collected at the first meeting. For the elderly and students, the dues are $2.50 and the registration fee is also $2.50.
To lose weight, members follow a food program, consisting of a balanced diet, developed by a Weight Watchers' staff doctor.
At the beginning of each meeting, members are weighed. However, it isn't necessary to lose a certain amount of weight to stay in the club. Kever said.
EVERY WEIGHT Watchers group has a lecturer who gives a one-hour talk at each meeting. The lectures are based on 18 model lectures developed by staff psychologists.
"The modules cover subjects such as
5 resolutions go to Senate
Five pieces of legislation will be presented to the Student Senate at its meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas University.
A petition to amend the Senate Code proposes to eliminate the Senate seats for the presidents of the Association of University Residence Halls, the Pannhellenc Association, the Interfraternity Council and the All Scholarship Hall.
A resolution submitted by eight senators prohibit smoking during Senate meeting.
Another resolution expresses Senate opposition to a possibility that the Kansas University Athletic Corporation would move the annual football game between KU and the University of Missouri to Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo.
This Senate also will act on two bills that would clarify procedures for the fall elec-
tion. Nunauer College senators and the appointment of replacements for vacated seats.
eating at home, special dieting challenges and how to handle eating urges. Keyers
Determining Weight Watchers' success is difficult. Kepper, said.
"For the most part, the people with the greatest amount of determination will be successful."
While Weight Watchers International takes a scientific point of view, Overeaters Anonymous takes a more spiritual attitude toward losing weight.
The format used is similar to that used in
users' own programs. The members use
okk, each other, first name.
Membership at meetings varies from two to 25 people. Virginia said.
OVEREATERS MEETS at 7 p.m. each Tuesday at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Members are hoping to start a morning session that was discontinued, Virginia, a member, said Monday.
"We find all different kinds of people at our meetings," she said. "Usually, though, there are more women than men. We know their willing to admit they have a problem."
Overeaters has no president. Every member takes turns acting as group leader,
DURING THE meetings, which are free, the members go over the same 12 steps used in Alcoholics Anonymous. The first step is admitting that a problem exists, Virginia
"We try to find out the causes of our problems, many of which are emotional," she said. "We try to be honest with ourselves."
Virginia said a big part of the program was turning the problem over to a higher being, as Alcoholics Anonymous does. However, she added, the meetings are designed to make anyone, including albedoes, feel comfortable.
Members follow eating plans, not diets,
Virginia said, because they've usually
already tried every diet there is, without
success.
THE PLANS ARE developed by each person individually, and Overers hurts urge members to learn as much as possible about nutrition.
Then members call each other to discuss their menu and to decide whether it is faltering.
Virginia said that people sometimes struggled when they stood up in front of a group for the first time to admit they had a weight problem.
"But by the time they get to Overaterns, they're usually tried everything else, and they've realized that they do have a problem," she said.
Often, as soon as people leave other structured weight watching programs, Virginia said, they go directly back to their old eating habits. They find they need more. And the physical appearance, the mental spiritual and physical aspects of living weight, she said.
On Campus
THE BAYERN ACADEMY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Events
TONIGHT: THE SUA SPECIAL EVENTS committee meets at 5:30 in the Kansas Union Governor's Room. STUDENT SENATE meets at 6:30 in the Big Eight Room. Local NORMAL (National Organization for Reform of Marjuania Law) members meet at 7 in the Union's Walnut Room. CAMPUS CHRISTIANIS meeting begins at 7 in the Union's Chatham Room. The meeting begins at 7 in the Union's Jayhawk Room. The SUA BACKGAMMON CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Oread and Regionalist rooms. COLLEGE REPUBLICANS meets at 7 in the Union's Council Room. TWO POLITICAL DEBATES, between state legislature candidates Mike Glover, Nancy Hambleton and Tom Hart, and state senate candidates Arnold Berman and Sen. Arden Booth begin at 7 in the Union's Forum Room. SUA and KU-Y are sponsoring the debates. MOUNTY meets at 8 in the Spencer Research Library Manuscripts Room. Beverly Boyd, professor of English, will speak on medieval English coins.
Announcements
TOMORROW: GARY GRAFFMAN, visiting professor in performance, will conduct piano master classes from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Swainstout Rehearsal Hall for interested faculty members and students. The UNDERGRADUATE ANTHROPOLOGY ASSOCIATION will sponsor an Indian Sign Language course in the University of New York, Haskell Indian Junior College counselor, at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Interdisciplinary Arts AIMS Subcommittee meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Oread Room. The ALL SCHOLARSHIP HALLS COUNCIL meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room. BILL RYO, Teopka physician and lawyer who ran against Republican vice presidential candidate Bob Dole for the U.S. Senate in 1974, will talk about theidential election at 7 p.m. in the Union's Ballroom. THE BLACK BUSINESS STUDIES CLUB meets at 7 p.m. in the Union's Science Fiction Club meets at 7 p.m. in the Union's Governor's Room. The PREMED CLUB meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Jayawk Room. The KU SAILING CLUB meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Parlor B Room. The SUA POETRY CLUB meets at 8 p.m. in the Union's Pine Room. KU HILL EMBLEC meets at 8 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. Rabbi Menachem Herman, educational center in Kansas City, Mo., will talk on the issue of whether archeology offers a career history. NAVIGATES CLUB meets at 8:30 p.m. in the Union's Regionalist Room. THE KU SKYDIVING CLUB meets at 9 p.m. in the Union's Pine Room.
The traveling ARMED FORCES BICENTENNIAL CARAVAN will be open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. today at 21st and Louisiana streets. Several van features walkthrough, multimedia showcases depicting the armed forces' contributions to American history.
Tomorrow is the intramural entry deadline for badminton competition.
REMINDER:
The KU Backgammon Club
meets every day, at 7 p.m.
in the Kansas State
Association Union. Be
before there
7:00 to play in the tournament
AMBULACIÓN VIVIANA
BRING YOUR BOARDS
Campus Veteran
118B
Kansas Union
864-4478
Do you need a tutor for any class at KU? If not, please assist for any classes at KU? If so, contact Mike Dixon or leave you at his home address (for students) or for veterans and non-veterans.
If there were a Pulitzer Prize for movies, "A.P.M." would be a sure winner. Gene Shalit NBC film classic — Kathleen Carol, NY Times "The best American film for years" — Kevin Sanders, ABC
Not to be missed — Jef Lyons, CBS
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, October 21, 1976
2252
Uneven path
Kansas turnipkie median. These two maintenance men were about 10 miles west of Lawrence yesterday morning, inching their way to Topeka.
By JERRY SEIB
KU acts to comply with Title IX rules
It's a long road from Lawrence to Topeka, especially for those who mow the
Staff Writer
The University of Kansas has begun to make the changes recommended this summer to bring the University into compliance with Federal Title IX regulations banning sex discrimination.
Some of the minor changes suggested in the University's self-evaluation report released in July have been made. There will no longer be requests for marital status information on applications for admission to KU programs, for example, and Delaware residents required to perform a task for sex on bias called by the report.
In most cases, however, work has only begun in making the changes the report orders to eliminate discrimination in employment, admissions and the treatment of students. Shankel said last night that he had sent letters to all vice chancellors and deans required to make changes.
THE SELF-EVALUATION report was the work of a Title IX Steering Committee that examined conditions on the Lawrence and Kansas City, Kan., campuses, KU, like all institutions that receive federal funds, was required to make such a report and eliminate them. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) funds.
Here are the major recommendations of the report and the progress that Shanker said had been made so
*Create a task force to expose traditional stereotypes in career opportunities. Shankel said he expected to finish forming the committee within two weeks. It will, he said, "examine how various operations of the University might now contribute to sexual stereotyping."
- Discount requests for marital status on admission information. Shankel said that the general admission application had already met this requirement, but that some departments' forms required it. All departments and the Division of Continuing Education have eliminated marital status questions.
Martin Dickinson, dean of the School of Law, confirmed that the law school, which was only recently not in compliance, had changed its admission forms to meet the requirement.
- Request the director of the University Counseling Center to identify and eliminate scholarship test questions that discriminate on the basis of sex and race.
- The School of Education, is the official administering group for all tests for competitive KU scholarships. Shankel did not know what changes had been made.
Richard Rundquist, director of the center, said his office was examining implications of the report but was not ready to release the findings.
*Instruct the vice chancellor for student affairs to devise a solution to correct current inequities between men's and women's scholarship halls. There is more money to operate women's than men's halls but this is not always the case, so a result in the differences in the sizes of the wills and bequests that had formed the scholarship halls.
Don Alderson, vice chancellor for student affairs,
did a committee of students and members of his study
group. They had six members who were discrepancies.
The group will make a report to him.
Alderson said, and the report will be passed on to
Mary Kunzler.
- **Instruct the Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences to review the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program to insure that it doesn't discriminate.**
- **Instruct the Dean of the College, to begin the investigation.**
- **Instruct the vice chancellor for student affairs to analyze single sex organizations, such as honorary societies, to determine whether assistance given by the university is appropriate to an organization subject to Title IX regulations.** Alderson said a committee of members of his office staff, formed earlier this month, were beginning to study single
KU-MU game in KC opposed by Senate
See TITLE IX page three
By CAROL HOCHSCHEID
The Student Senate passed a resolution last night expressing opposition to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation's (KUAC) proposal to hold the annual football game between the University of Kansas and Stadium of Missouri at Arrowhead Stadium
KUAC is looking into the possibility of holding the game in Kansas City, Mo., beginning next season, and offering students the option of buying a ticket for the MU game when student season tickets are bought.
The five home games would still be included on the regular 1977 football season ticket, and the price for that ticket wouldn't be reduced, Jill Grubaugh, chairman of the Senate Sports Committee, said last night. A single eight game replace would the MU game.
AN EXACT PRICE for the proposed MU game ticket hasn't been set. But Grubbaugh said, a $5 charge in addition to the cost of the regular season ticket was a possibility.
Grubbaub said that Clyde Walker, athletic director, had told her that a separate student ticket would double the KUAC profit for the MU game.
At this time, MU is against the proposal,
but the committee has until Dec. 1 to
give aid.
The Senate resolution cited additional costs to students and a loss of spirit for the
University athletic program as reasons for apposing the move to Arrowhead.
IN OTHER legislation, the Senate voted to
increase the number that represent
organizations living overseas.
The Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee recommended that the University be held by the presidents of the Association of University Residence Halls, the Pannellinic Association, the Interfraternity Council and the All Scholarship Hall
Steve McMurry, chairman of the committee, said it was inconsistent to have only four senators, indirectly elected, representing living groups, when the rest of the Senate was elected on the basis of academic representation.
"YOULL ARBTRARILLY wipe out the primary source of communication between the Student Senate and about one-half of the faculty," said the president of the Interfraternity Council, said.
Twenty per cent of all representatives from Nunemaker College must now be elected in the fifth week of the fall semester from the freshman class.
Two bills were passed to clarify fall election procedures and the selection of candidates.
A resolution prohibiting smoking in the Senate meeting room was passed after a meeting of the Senate.
Local debate raises issues,ire
Staff Writer
Five local political candidates waged political skirmishes against one another last night in a debate at the Kansas Union.
About 80 people attended the two-part debate. Taking part in the first part were Mike Glover, Democratic state representative from the 44th district, his Republican opponent, Nancy Hambleton, his American party opponent, Tom Horn.
The second part was a debate between State Sen. Arden Booth and his Republican opponent for the 22nd district seat, Arnold Berman.
THE KANAS budget surplus, the Equal Rights Amendment, a proposed medium security prison in Kansas, post-secondary education, nuclear power and morality were the major issues discussed by the candidates for the 44th district.
Before the first debate, Hart told the audience that he intended to make the debate lively. He seemed to live up to his promise as the antagonist throughout the debate.
He replied to a question about the surplus in the state budget by ignoring it and then saying, "I will work to take a book for every law I put on the books."
Glover and Hambleton were more specific.
GLOVER SAID that the state legislature should be held accountable for all of the money it spent to insure that people receive money to benefit the people who needed it.
Hambleton said she didn't think it would be possible to return state surplus money to taxpayers in the form of a tax relief package suggested. Instead, she said, she would support the use of the money for improvement system and the new unified court system.
When the E.R.A. issue was raised, Hart said, "I am opposed to the E.R.A. because it takes away the right of the candidate to determination and gives it a federal base.
"I AM OPPOSED to abortion on demand, but not when the mother's life is at stake. When I go to Topeka in January, I will work for recension of the E.R.A." Glover said he supported the E.R.A. credit rating to supports his arguments.
"Women have done just as much to earn that credit rating even though the husband has the job," he said.
Hambleton said she supported the E.R.A. but she thought many people didn't understand the spirit of the law. She said that even with the E.R.A., many
women still faced discrimination because the law wasn't understood.
If you're looking for a job and you're discriminated against of you you're looking for a house and you discriminated in that issue. You're up to that issue a year later," she said.
ALL THREE candidates supported, for different reasons, the building of a new medium security prison in Kansas.
They all pointed to their experience as reasons for voters to elect them.
He said, "I obey the law I respect. I have no respect for that law and it doesn't have any business on the books."
Glover received negative reaction from some members of the audience when he commented on Kansas marijuana law. He said that although he was a lawyer, that didn't mean he obeyed all of the laws.
In their debate, Booth and Berman disagreed on every issue ranging from taxes to voter apathy.
TWO ISSUES they discussed in detail were the rights of citizens vs. the rights of utility companies, and the amount of experience each had in community afairs.
A utility consumer bill of rights adopted in Missouri that prohibits security deposits and fines for late payments unless the person is a bad
credit risk isn't needed in Kansas, Booth said.
He said he wouldn't be interested in introducing a similar bill of rights because he thought the industry was regulated well now.
Berman, however, said it was time to protest against the utility companies.
"IF WE GIVE them that money why shouldn't we be getting interest on it?" be said.
Berman said that his training as a lawyer and an engineer was needed in Topena legislature. He also said he was responsible to vote needs than was his opponent.
Booth defended himself by stating what he called Berman's lack of service to the community.
Booth said that his record in community affairs was good and spoke for itself
He said, "We had not met, we had not crossed paths until we became political opponents."
THE DEBATE ended with questions from the audience. The questions were heated, as each candidate defended his or her case and made accusations about one another.
When Booth accused Glover of having talked to the same people every week about community problems, Glover had been told by a lawyer, Arden Wood, that Arden Wood, a total fabricated lie.
Meditation gives prisoners mental freedom, relief
THE SANCTUARY OF JAMES C. TAYLOR
Pententiary karma
Samuel Posenik, third from left, leads a group of Leavenworth
Photo by GAIL SMITH
Federal Penitentiary inmates in a meditation exercise. Pesnik, an inmate, has taught meditation at several prisons.
By MARILYN HAYES
Staff Writer
It was a cold and rainy day. The sky was gray and Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary looked even more austere and unapproachable than my preconceived notions -notions derived from Truman and Dagwood shots of prison rioters and grim bearsay.
After passing inspection, I was led through big white gates with signs that read "Danger. Stay clear of sliding gates." The door closed behind me and I found myself "inside."
At that moment I felt like running home with my fears and stereotypes. What assertiveness I had with me was beginning to fade, as were my desires to write a story about the Leavenworth prison meditation program.
"A jail is this immense material world. Across each room stands a stone enemy. It will fight."
But, before we could have second thoughts, we were ushered to a "reel" room and I soon found myself sitting on a wool blanket in a pseudo-Luston position. Around me sat six men, all with their eyes closed and all with thoughtful and serene expressions.
"My mind is free from every thought,
"Listen, listen, listen to my heart song. I will never forget you. I will never forsake you . . ."
Nothing in the myriad realms can move it." Han Shan
The quiet soon ended and the sounds of conga drums, a tambourine and chants
The chants were followed by the "omen" in which the men joined hands and did ill.
Isaia Prima (meaning one who seeks the supreme goal), one of the students, said he was a graduate. “I love working in this space.”
"I start with myself here, then lift myself from my immediate environment to the state of Kansas, to the United States, to the world, to the universe," he said.
The prisoners had various reasons for meditating, but the reasons all centered on escaping—putting their minds in a place other than prison.
"I'm never in prison in my mind," he
said. "My physical thing is in prison, but my
mind."
Most of the prisoners who were interviewed preferred to be identified by their spiritual names. Others are identified by their first names only.
Istha Prima also said he thought of beaches, the sounds of the ocean and how the sun felt. Imagination plays a great part in meditation. he said.
"Locked in jail, with a jail—my mind is still free." George Jackson.
Othab, another meditation student, said he learned yoga on the street from a lady in New York.
"She had a little studio in New York City called the Broadway and I used to go to
"Meditation does help me to relax just in case I do have a problem. I can sit here and meditate and relax my mind. I can control my world."
"The clear water sparkles like crystal, You can through it easily right to the bottom."
"I spent two years in solitary confinement and got into meditation then," Juj Kumar (meaning victory prince) said. He has had 24 hours to yourself and I just automatically fell into it.
"When I meditate, I think of freedom, of being completely free. I'd like to leave my body here and lift my mind into higher places, get into the subconscious."
"Stone walls do not a prison make
Nor from bars a cage." Richard Lovelace, Ravi (meaning one who bears the truth and light), another student, said he had been practically mediation for about nine years.
I don't think when I meditate," he said
See MEDITATION page three
2
Thursday, October 21, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Ferruboat crash kills 22
LULING, La.—A 644-foot Norwegian river rammed and sank a crowded ferryboat in the Mississippi River here yesterday, plunging carloads of screening passengers into the swift muddy current. Twenty-two were known dead and as many as 56 were missing.
Sheriff John St. Aniant said 22 bodies were recovered, most of them from the sunken ferry. The death toll was expected to rise to 75 or more.
Witnesses said the tanker Froste, whiplash shrieking, loomed up out of the chill early morning light and rammed the George Prince midway between the how and where.
The crash, one of the worst ever in the Mississippi's history, happened about 6:15 a.m. That's the ferry rush hour between Lelling and Destrehan, about 20 miles up.
Battle rages before truce
BEIRUT-Hard fighting in Beirut and in the Israeli-Lebanese border region raged yesterday on the eve of another cease-fire—the there have been more than 50 of
The Palestinian guerrilla command and the Lebanese left alliance on the one hand and the Christians on the other announced their forces would abide by a declaration that they would be in hot battle. The truce was arranged at a weekend summit meeting in Saudi Arabia in 2015, Egypt, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia and by Palestine guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat.
Lebanon's Christian president, Elisas Sariks, who helped draft the cease-fire, met with the top right-wing Christian leaders to discuss implementation of the plenary session at his office in Tripoli.
5th American aets Nobel
STOCKHOLM, Sweden—Novelist Saul Bellow was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in an unprecedented sweep by Americans of all five Nobel prizes.
The 61-year-old Bellow, born in Canada of Russian Jewish parents and reared in Chicago, was cited "for the human understanding and subtle analysis of conspiracy theories."
Bellow is the seventh American winner of the literature prize and the first since John Steinbeck in 1962.
Among his books are "Humboldt's Gift," "Herzog," "Mr. Sammler's Planet" and "Henderson the Rain King."
More Watergate pardons just a rumor, Ford savs
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Gerald Ford yesterday dismissed as unfounded a question about rumors of future Watergate pardons, and said that opponent Jimmy Carter "does waver, wander, wiggle and waffle" about election issues.
Nothing personal, Ford said, as he applied that tongue-twisting label to his rival with the presidential election 12 days from today.
Carter, in Plains, Ga., preparing for his final campaign debate with Ford tomorrow in Toledo. The two state statements Ford made at a White House news conference. Aides said the Democratic presidential nominee didn't broadcast but not televised, nationally.
It was Ford's second news conference in six days.
Ford and Republican vice presidential nominee Bob Dole did the campaigning despite the latter. Mondale, Democratic vice president and most took of the day off in San Francisco.
Ford defended himself against questions stemming from Watergate; he said doesn't matter what he did.
Kelley or Gen. George Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, despite statements that have embroiled both in controversies; and Jeb Bush, who on the Arab trade embargo against Israel
Watergate was the first question Ford faced in his news conference: Did he regret his role in September 1972, in helping to overthrow President Nixon? House Banking and Currency Committee?
At that time, Ford was House Republican leader. He met twice with Republican members of the committee, who voted solidly against empowering the committee to issue subpoenas essential to the investigation.
Aty. Gen, Edward Levi announced that he decided against conducting a new inquiry into allegations that Ford lied about the price of his vehicle, the vice presidential confirmation hearings.
Ford said in the news conference that he had testified he wasn't contacted by then President Richard Nixon and had no recollection of any requests from the White House, where his liaison office to coordinate Republican opposition to the projected investigation.
Sophomore Class Party at Shenanigans
Tuesday, Oct. 26, 8:00 p.m.
Free tickets available to class card holders only at Boco offices 113B in the Union.
Class cards still available.
Sophomore mugs available for '100
For more information call 864-4556
DR. BILL ROY
will speak at the KANSAS UNION BALLROOM Thurs., Oct. 21 at 7 p.m.
7 p.m.
NO CHARGE FOR ADMISSION
Paid for by the Douglas County Democratic Central Committee
WASHINGTON (AP)—The television lights switched on, the cameras focused on the door, the members of the press stood and the introduction was solemnly made:
Doorknob in White House falls prey to Ford's vank
"Ladies and gentlemen, the President o the United States."
The reporters waited, but nobody came in.
Then there was a rattling and thumping at the door of the White House Exit Room. It was shaken.
Finally, he appeared from another door leading to an adjacent hallway and took his place.
"We just had a doorrob brok off," he explained, quite adding: "You can't stand it."
There was some confusion about the doorknob incident.
Ford, describing the doorknob affair, said it occurred as he was trying to leave the Oval Office for the walk to the East Room. He added that the aim to start his news conference yesterday
He said the Oval Office doorknob came off in the hands of one of his aides, Terrence R. McCormick.
SUA
FILMS
POPULAR FILMS Upcoming Films for '76
Oct. 22-23 Hoster Street
Nov. 5-6 Farewell, My Lovely
The Green Room shares a doorway with the East Room but it is impossible to enter the East Room from the Oval Office, which is in another part of the White House.
The aide said the doorknob wasn't a knob, actually. It was a ring-type handle.
Nov. 12-13 Nashville
All Films shown in Woodruff Auditorium
Nov. 19-20 A Brief Vacation and The 10th International Tournee of Animation
But another aide later clarified the President's remarks, saying the door that lost its knob actually came from the Green Room from which the thumps had fallen at the start of the news conference and not the one leading from the Oval Office.
SUA FILMS
FILM SOCIETY
FATA MORGANA (1971)
Dir. Werner Herzog (Germany)
Thrurs, Oct. 21, 7:30, 75c
POPULAR FILMS
HESTER STREET (1975)
Dr. Joan Micklin Silver.
Steven Kearns.
Steven Keats.
Robert and Sail, Oct. 23
10:30, 9:00, 10:30
SCIENCE FICTION SERIES
THX1138(1971)
DIR. George Lucas, with
Halley Donald, Callon
Pleasure
Mon., Oct. 25, 7:30, 75
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The Arena will feature the sounds of
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 21.1976
3
Meditation helps ...
From page one
1. cut off all processes of attempting to
lift the air from my mind flow like the wind or the tides
"If I have freedom in my love.
Meditation offers Michael, a meditation student, "some peace of mind."
I'll clean up in my love,
And in my soul I am free ... Richard Lovelace
Michael said when he meditated he thought of nothing.
"I feel clean, refreshed. I can relax and all the bullshit is gone," he said.
"It's a chance to be alone and that's the most important part. It's really hard to find
"It gives me something to look forward to. Meditation is another way out. At night you sleep to escape and during the day you meditate.
"When I need strength, Mama, I reach within myself." George Jackson.
For Jim, another student, meditation has helped his attitude.
"My attitude has changed tremendously," he said. "For one thing, the guys here thought my attitude was funky. Since I was working in a more-innovate--more relaxed in different situations.
"I feel better about myself as a person. I look within myself and find the answers."
George, another meditation student, said that he was unable to get involved in "that Bible," which he thought was too complex.
"You have to sacrifice something—you have to secure your integrity to play those games," he said.
George said meditation kept his mind away from violent thought.
"I like meditating, I like it a lot. I'm a lot mellower and that's important."
"When I look back at the things I used to do and be—it was all a game." he said.
"Your coming and going takes place nowhere else but where you are." Holdin
though they seemed to enjoy meditations,
all the students said that it was difficult to
get them to focus.
"It's too confusing where I live," Michael said. "There's too many people and it's too crowded."
Isaia Prima said he meditated in the morning between 5:30 and 6, when everyone sat quietly.
"It's really hard to be alone during the day," he said.
Othax said he meditated in his cell, or in the yard when he was doing exercises.
"But I can't get into it the way I want to," he said. "Sometimes the guy in the cell next to you doesn't want to hear the chanting, and you've got to respect each other."
JAKUMAT mediate at night in his cell when things are settled and he can relax.
Unlike the other four men, Jim and George live in the prison's honorary detention center and agreed that it was necessary for him to mediate because of single room housing.
"At night I try to hang out in my room and read and meditate," George said. "I don't mind it, but I don't like the noise."
Samuel Posnizk and Paul Marotta,
meditation class instructors who aren't
CITY OF PARKSIDE
On Campus
TODAY: GARY GRRAFFMAN, visiting professor in performance, will conduct piano master classes from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Saworth Invitational Hall for piano students. THROPOLOGY ASSOCIATION will sponsor an Indian Sign Language Workshop conducted by Cheevers Fosh, Haskell Indian Junior College counselor, at 3:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. JOHN CONDON, professor of music at Wichita State University, Tokyo, will lecture on "Intercultural Communication" at 3:30 a.m. in 4075 West Lake.
TONIGHT: THE MINORITY AFFAIRS SUBCOMMITTEE meets at 6:30 in the Union's Groom Room. THE ALL SCHOOLSHIP HALLS COUNCIL meets at 6:30 in the Union's Walnut Room. BILL RYO, Topka physician and lawyer who ran against Republican vice presidential candidate Bob Dole for the U.S. Senate in 1974, will talk about the presidential election at 7 in the Union's International Room. The KU PRE-MED CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Governor's Room. The KU PRE-MED CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Pine Room. The KU SAILING CLUB meets at 7:30 in the Union's Parlor B. The SUA POETRY CLUB meets at 8 in the Union's Pine Room. Carl Leban, associate professor of Oriental languages and literatures and East Asian studies, will speak on "CHINA'S REVOLUTION IN EDUCATION" at 8 in the Union's Forum Room. KU HILELLE meets at 8 in the Union's Council Room with RABBI MENACHAM KERMAN, educational director of the Beth Shah Religious Center in Kansas City, Missouri. He will discuss the record of ancient Jewish history. NAVIGATORS meet at 8:30 in the Union's Forum Room. The KU SKYDIVING CLUB meets at 9 in the Union's Pine Room.
TOMORROW: THE KU BUREAU OF CHILD RESEARCH is sponsoring a conference on ecological issues in behavior analysis beginning at 8:30 a.m. in the
Events
KOSHER DELICATESSEN
AND FREE FLICK
roast beef, corned beef, pastrami, balogna, salami sandwiches, potato salad, soda and coffee, dessert, Sunday, October 24th, 6 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive (one block east of 9th & Iowa), $1.00 for paid members, otherwise $2.00, cost includes free admission to 7:30 p.m. screening of a movie short on the after-effects of the Yom Kippur War on one Israeli kibbutz, bring your friends.
Representative 45th District
sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish Students
BUZZI
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Political Advertisement
Paid for by
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"IM ALWAYS reminded that no matter how bad an act someone could have done, there is something beautiful in all people and their beauty comes out." he said.
Posnizk has taught meditation at several prisons, including Lorton Penitentiary, Washington Detention Center and Women's Detention Center, all in Washington, D.C. He has been teaching the Leavenworth class since January.
"They teach me more than I teach them," Posikzi said.
immates, said that their experience with the classes had been very rewarding.
Muratta, who has helped teach the course since July, said he had wanted to see what would happen if students
"WHEN I FIRST to the prison with Devananda (Posnik's name) I found out my whole model of what a prisoner was like was shot," Marotta said. "They are like everyone else—they are really beautiful people."
He said he thought rehabilitation comes from within a person.
by interacting with the prisoners. I have been learning about myself." he said.
"Without working on themselves they will never change," he said. "They need to get used."
"One of the most suppressed feelings is not being able to express love. We want to perceive it."
Poseizk said that he was trying to create an honest and open atmosphere.
Title IX...
From page one
- **Instruct the vice chancellor for student affairs and the director of the University Counseling Center to make every effort to achieve a more balanced staff in the Counseling Center. Shankel said this change was intended to be a long-term project. Changes will be made in the staff as well as in faculty, so until at least the start of the next fiscal year when a new budget for the center's staff will be composed, Shankel said.**
- Rundquist said there hadn't been any changes in the center's staff since the release of the report this summer, but he said the center had been attempting to eliminate sexual discrepancies on its counseling staff for several years.
- **Instruct all vice chancellors to review the staffs of their staffs and eliminate any discrepancies that appear to be based on errors in data provided.** He was attempting to eliminate pay inequities for several years and said that he thought most problems had been worked out. All vice chancellors have been instructed to ensure that all staff are paid the year to be sure there are no discrepancies.
Shankel said, and necessary changes will be made in next year's budget to "contain the risks associated with climate change."
**Reaffirm the University's commitment to high quality in the women's athletics program and work toward greater equity in athletics.** Shankla said that a large cash donation to the women's athletic program from the Williams Educational Fund this summer had helped eliminate inequities in athletic programs. The university is used for women's athletic scholarships.
KU, like other schools, has until July 1978 to eliminate discrimination in women's athletic programs, according to HEW regulations. Shankel said he, Chancellor Archie Dykes; Marian Washington, women's athletic director; and Clyde Ware, women's athletic director, would work together during the time remaining to try to eliminate discrimination.
Meeting HEW requirements is most difficult in this area, Sahknel said, because there is no clear definition of exactly how regulations apply to sports programs.
COME TO AUNT MARTHA'S HOUSE FOR LUNCH . . .
Aunt Martha has cooked up some delicious specials for lunch, in addition to her regular Italian cuisine . . . hearty soups, flavorful sandwiches, fluffy omelets, and crisp salads await you at the Campus Hideaway.
- PIZZA
- SANDWICHES
- SALADS
- SPAGHETTI
- SOUPS
- DINNERS
● LASAGNA ● VEAL PARMAGIANA
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"Ideally we would like to create a brotherhood—all brothers," he said.
"But though my wing is closely bound.
My heart's at liberty.
My prison walls cannot control
The flight, the freedom of my soul."
Jenne Guyon
SUA indoor rec 8-ball Tournament Oct.24 at 1:30 p.m.
TU
Prizes will be awarded to the 1st,2nd,&3rd place winners.
'250 Entry Fee
Sign up in Jay Bowl by 3 p.m. Friday, Oct. 22
--if there were a Pulitzer Prize for
film, it would be the winner — Gene Shail NBC
May well become an American film
May well become an American film
"The best American film for years"
"The best American film for years"
Not to be missed — Jef Lyons, CBS
REDFORD/HOFFMAN
"ALL THE
PRESIDENT'S MEN"
PG
ALEXANDER HAMILTON
Granaa
Eve. at 3:00 & 9:50
Sat. 2:30, Sun. 3:00
POT
THE FUNNIEST
FILM OF
1985
LAUGH OR GET OFF THE
"FROM NOON TILL THREE"
"TUNNEL VISION"
Varsity
WEST | September 27, 2013
Eve. 7:30 & 9:00
Sat., Sun. 2:30
A different kind of Bronson
A funny kind of movie
CHARLES JILL
BRONSON IRELAND
An unusual western Eve. 7:30 & 9:25, Sat.-Sun. 2:05
A Roman Polanski Film
No one does it to you like Roman Polanski
THE TENANT
DAILY 7:20, 9:14, 11:45, SAT, SUN, 1:35
Hillcrest
Hillcrest
WINNER
3 ACADEMY BOWS
PETER KATHARINE
OTOOLE HEPBURN
THE LION IN WINTER
EVR. 7/15 9:45 AM SAT, 10:15
Hillcrest PG
"AT THE EARTH'S CORE" 7:30 Written
"FOOD OF THE GODS" 9:00 PG
ENDS SUNDAY AT THE
Sunset
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* #4 Turkey 174 219
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* #8 Dalami 164 209
* #9 Combination game 179 209
* #10 Super Sub 209 254
* #11 Tuna Fish 179 254
* #12 Meatball 164 209
All Cornished with lettuce, tomato,
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Delicatessen
onwhite, rye, pumpnickel, orwheat
A Cheese .127
B Cold Guts .124
C Turkey .159
D Roast Beef .149
E Ham .149
F Pasturerami .149
G Corned Beef .149
H Salami .149
I Combination .164
J Tuna Fish .159
K Peanut Butter+Jelly .65
A warrior, possibly of the Persian dynasty.
Coffee 20 25
Iced Tea 25 25
Coke 25 35
Tire Pipe 25 35
Tint Beer 25 35
Fruit Juice 25 35
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Lemonade 25 35
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Hot Chocolate 20
when m season Hot Soup 60¢
Fountain
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Chocolate, strawberry
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Flavored cookies .30.40
Chocolate, vanilla, cherry
Soft-serve Ice Cream
nuts 15 extra
Side Orders
Cole Slaw 40
Baked beans 40
Potato Salad 40
German Potato Salad 40
Chips
Regular Frites,Bar-B-Q 20
Dessert
14:20 Crescent - west of the Chime Omega fountain
Open late every night 8:42-11:17
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Cheesecake 60
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Ice Cream Cones 25%
Mon-Thur 11:11-30 Fri-Sat. 11:1-30 Sun. 12:30 - 10:30
4
Thursday, October 21. 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
U.S. strength needed
President Ford's misstatements about Eastern Europe are fading into the background. He has clarified his views, and many people seem ready to forgive and forget that he said Eastern Europe isn't dominated by the Russians.
IT WOULD be great if the United States and Russia were getting along as well as Henry Kissinger and his friends would have us believe. Many positive steps have been made, to believe that all is well would be quite naive. Russia's desire for constantly increasing power hasn't gone away.
But before that statement is completely forgotten, along with the foreign policy debate, Americans should face some harsh facts about the world.
In addition, there are no signs that Russia has eased its restrictions on the liberty of its citizens. Aug. 21, 1968, when Russian tanks rumbled into Czechoslovakia, it seemed like a long time before the flesh was in memory of Eastern Europeans to keep them from trying to truly break away from Russian domination.
Since 1965, the Russians have added 700,000 troops, 9,500 tanks, 2,100 tactical aircraft, 1,376 nuclear missiles and 49 nuclear-armed marines. The Army once ready to defend Russia, is ready to control areas far from Russia.
DETENTE was supposed to reduce Russian influence, but this hasn't happened in Eastern Europe. Yugoslavia, the only significant Eastern European state from Russian rule, very likely will be lost when its aging chief, Tito, dies.
Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty
still are jammed. The Berlin Wall is more difficult than ever to penetrate. Concentration camps and "Psychiatric units" are still filled with Russian dissidents.
SO. WHAT is to be done?
Russian policy has been amazingly constant during the past decade. Only the United States' view of that policy has changed.
The avoidance of war is an honorable goal, and we should continue to pursue it. But we must realize that the Russians are taking us for all we are worth in our struggle against the United States realized how strong some of its bargaining tools really are.
Russia would face riots throughout its cities without U.S. grain. Russian industry would be crippled without U.S. technology in many areas, especially computers. Russia has blown its investment in the industry and it would have a hard time tapping its own energy resources without technological help from the West.
THE WORLD needs true detente. Serious negotiations to limit nuclear weapons are needed. Both sides need to avoid situations like Angola. Russian citizens deserve some liberty. The United States must have these weapons must be slowed. Russia should help the United States get a settlement of the Middle East conflict.
All of this is needed, but it won't occur until the United States asserts itself more strongly. History teaches that to ignore or misjudge a powerful adversary is to invite war, and the world can't afford that.
By Greg Hack Contributing Writer
SAYING
OF MADAME
MAQ.
When Nelson Rockefeller retires from the vice presidency, to which he wasn't elected but to which it can be fairly said he was entitled by divers and devious services to many people, if not the
Another Rockefeller on market
Republic, it won't be the end of him.
be thrown around and that attracts attention and comment like the following from the Mullens Advocate-Wyoming County's only Republican Newspaper:
Concerts in Allen mulled
"The Jay Rockefeller report on campaign spending from
Stiff policies may hurt
Once the word is out that SUA is planning to book a concert in Allen Field House, the directors of several University departments cringe.
Buildings and Grounds personnel think of empty cups, crumpled cigarette packs and ticket stubs strung throughout the building. They have to keep an eye on crowds, overzealous fans and parking problems associated with past concerts. The athletic department worries about its lack of a year-earld field house floor and the floor's vulnerability to cigarette burns and drinks.
SUA ITSELF, while trying to mitigate the concerns of those it has to work with, worries about finding adequate electrical cables, protective tarps and other equipment necessary to transform a field house into a concert hall.
As a rule, each department prepares for a concert with little guidance, support or cooperation from other departments affected by the same show.
Last week, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, realized that these worries and persistent problems had gone on long enough and called a meeting of those worried. The meeting, he said, was simply to discuss what could be done to make field house concerts a little easier to stomach from the University's point of view. As a result, those who attended the meeting decided to meet with two student representatives, to set standard operating procedures for concert preparation, slaging and clean-up.
SANKEL'S intentions are admirable.
Standard procedures should have been
deliberated long ago, and it's to Shankel's credit to try to get them down on paper now. But Mike Miller, SUA activities adviser, is justified in his concern that such policies require the few short of three become bothersome of the board directors, who would just as soon see concertes played in Hoch Auditorium. A request that concerts no longer be held in those house could be forccoming if the new policy requires too much effort from some departments.
Miller, who attended the first meeting,
said it was characterized by a cooperative
relationship with the group.
Mary Ann Daugherty
Contributing Writer
BUT JUST what will happen at the second meeting, which is to be more of a study session than the first, is unknown. Those who comprise the committee should remember that the field house doesn't belong to them. It belongs to the state for use by University students and patrons of activities held there. As for the floor, which seems to have generated the most concern, the committee allocated $180,000 of the bill for it and the field house basketball court on Dec. 5, 1973. Should the eventual policies lead to the prohibition, restriction or limitation of certain field house activities, including
The opportunity to, at last, have a set of procedures suggested by representatives of involved parties, including students, is offered. The solutions are drafted in this sort of atmosphere.
concerts, they would be irksome to KU students.
Although the number of field house concerts has declined somewhat in recent years, the quality of future shows could be jeopardized by too-resistant rules governing use of the field house. Essential for such a rule is forced on all concerts in Hoch, which can hold about 3,500 compared with the field house, which can hold at least 17,000. If, for some reason, SUA loses the right to book concerts in the field house, it would be difficult to get such bands as the Beach Boys, Chicago, Seals and Crafts and James Taylor to play here. The fact that the first meeting held to be held underscores the need for concert managers to be concerned, and perhaps dismayed, by the serious problems field house concerts have caused for them.
Charleston (W. Va.) Daily Mail editorial show;
HOPEABLY, the second meeting will be characterized by the cooperative attitude noted after the first meeting. If everyone attends realizes that every department has its own worries—worries no greater than his own—and that the appearance of big-name bands that lure big-name crowds is, to many, an appreciated aspect of university life, then the meeting should be profitable. Long-needed policies could improve opportunities for SUA, but to other departments that are necessitated into concert production
In short, the new policies that soon may govern field house concerts could be worthwhile. But if mention continues to be made of the problems, especially with regard to the expensive field house floor, how long can it be until the committee meets again to suggest that bands play under some other roof?
The Rockefeller tend to outlive their enemies, so we can expect him to be appointed to any number of high-level positions when a day when a president of either party doesn't recognize his special gifts and salute him with honors, he can use that gigantic eleemosynary political power to shape his own high-level commission.
WORDS
"IF THE issue is our economy, our governor should be Rockefeller," so read one of the most curious political advertisements of the past primary election season . . . for
He has done it more than once.
EVEN SO, Rockefellers finally die, though not of old age but of disgust with that objection of citizens who refuse to like them. When Rocky Broad Jaws does at length dismiss us to go to his reward, though it strains the muscles, we are left with Divinity to bestow on him; there could be a void in our national life. On whom will all of us so many persuasions now depend on our angle and our indignation?
Nicholas Von Hoffman (c) 1974 King Features Syndicate
That is one national crisis we won't have to face. There is a new, young member of the tribe who is grooming himself to take his uncle's place. John D. Rockefeller IV, the Democratic gubernatorial candidate in West Virginia. A Rockefeller-hater down there has sent in a stack of letters, asking for assistance as number quatro is called, and what went on in the primary there this spring. The acrimony does have a familiar ring as these excerpts from a
In Washington that kind of dough may not cover Henry Kissinger's annual Christmas present from Nelson, but in the mountain country it has caused unflattering whispers as to exactly how that money was spent.
a more accurate rendering of this claim, the billboard should read: 'Our governor should be a Rockefeller' , any one will do.
THE SAME charges that Nelson has never been able to kick are being flung at Day. The Chase Manhattan Bank, the Merrill Lynch and Rockefeller holdings in corporations whose operations directly affect the state's prosperity, all such are being used to demonstrate that day is immediately compromised man.
Why not Nelson? Or Lawrence (sic). No virtue peculiar to Jav. . . .
"He spent $1.7 million to win the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, an amount roughly equivalent, on the face of it, to one dollar for every man, woman and child in West Virginia or he vote about $8.50 for every candidate he received . . . what a numerous quadruple boost to his campaign will be." The campaigns will be. To stimulate West Virginia's economy, it is not necessary for him to govern, merely to run for governor is sufficient."
TO GET an idea of what kind of an impact expenditure of such magnitude mean its only benefit is that you spend approximately three times the combined total of his seven primary opponents. West Virginia has two large, small enough and poor enough so that people see the bucks
Logan County was interesting.
Twenty-three of his workers got $300 each. Fifteen received $400,
seven吃得 $150, four got $75, two got $40 and one got $50. In Sophia, W. Va. a member of the Raleigh County Executive work with the county's Rockefeller is telling people he received an after-the-election bonus of $4,000."
Virginia some years ago as a Va. Volunteer. There's no cause to think he meant it less than any other volunteer. He worked with the poor people, but public service, which so many of the older, nounchutah boys were trained for, with their trying to run things. They don't do their two-year stint teaching school and go home like the other people. For them public service is a career and, what with the polishing they get at the better schools, their ability to tap the best potential in the public service and commanding the public are difficult to untangle.
Jay put roots down in West
DON'T penalize someone on account of his wealth, they say, but, if you don't, people like Jay Katz apparently large chunks of that campaign money came from the Rockefeller family. Jay didn't make a dime of it, so that whether or not he's compromised by his holdings, it will lie in a fair fight.
With Jay we have another 40 years of throwing pies at rockefeller. It doesn't elevate the tone of political debate and the skill to make putting up with the noise worthwhile. If rich people want to go into public service, let 'em give their money away. Otherwise they should go on and make more money to add to the pile. They should learn how to be beautiful alcoholics.
Jayhawk fans owe Nolan thanks
An Open Letter About Nolan Cromwell
I wept as I stood by the fence near KU's locker room as a legend hobbled by on crutches
come as a legendobbled boy with a wounded, wounded, hurt, beaten. The KU-Oklahoma war was still being played. Irresistible objects just don't fall, I told myself, but one had fallen. It was unbelievable. For a moment, my thoughts pondered the game and ended to a great football year we all wanted so badly. But soon my concern centered on the hunched figure of the crippled warrior, Nolan Cromwell. It was the end of his football KU, and I knew he, too, was concerned about his team.
Sunday's paper reported this statement: "I have never been in this situation before." A former player and an athlete who never kept out of a fax in his career, but I say it's the first down and 10 to go, and Nolan Cromwell will cross again in the years to come.
We who love KU owe Nolan Cromwell so much—for putting KU's football program on the map, for being an inspiration to foes, fellow players, youngsters, and adults.
I've had a crippled youngster at home. My 15-year-old son (and I) was the first football practice this year for the first time. During the second week in practice early in the season, he would possibly ending his football
aspirations. It's something he wanted to do. He tried, and that's important. When I confronted him, his cast past his age, I learned the reason for all things, and some good had to come from his misfortune. But, for the life of me, I couldn't think of any good reason. (He's buckled in down but had the best start of his life.)
Football is a violent game—as indicated by the eight NFL quarterbacks knocked out of the league. A team will become a game of big people
and big money. Many who cheer or boo have never played the game.
Nolan Cromwell's humbleness, fair play and raw ability added a refreshing aspect to the game.
The greatest days of Nolan's life are still in front of him. Nolan Croft, a winner, an admired and never fewer, true test will be whether the rest
of us have the刀 to match him. All Kansas should say thank you to Nolan Cromwell for giving us so much. We appreciate the super efforts and stand by ready to move the knives ahead. It's first down and 10 yards to keep. Keep on rollin'.
David P. Baker President, Southcentral Kansas Jayhawk Club.
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 typed in a specific font to provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
( )
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 15th, 2013
June and July except Saturday. Sunday and Holiday.
Subscriptions by mail are $5 a semester or $14 a semester outside the county. Subscriptions by phone are $8 a semester outside the county.
Editor
Dobbie Gumu
Managing Editor
Josh Adam
Editorial Editor
John A. Boulton
Campus Editor
Strew Brown
Associate Campus Editor
Hilmi苏涛
Shoe Balzer
Chuck Alexander
Photo Editor
George Alexander
Suff Photographers
Steve Miller,
George Miller
Sports Editor
Steve Schoenfeld
Assistant Sports Editor
Gary Vie
Entertainment Editor
Albeth Gwinn
Associate Sports Editor
Emily Editorial
Contributing Writers
Anne Daugherty, John Fulker
Congress
Copy Chiefs
Albeth Gwinn
Make-up Editors
Greg Hack
Chuck Alexander
Dennis Voborl, Jay Berri
Business Manager Terry Hanson
Assistant Business Manager Carole Roosterkent
Advertising Manager Jian Clemente
Marketing Manager Janet Babcock
Classified Manager Sarah McAhann
Assistant Classified Manager Kort G. Schiff
Associate Human Resources Manager
Thursday, October 21, 1976
5
©MENIYAM
CIAL FEATURES
et
ago as a there's no it less amnese. Heer, or people, which so which naughtball or run things. two-year old and go people. For careers polishing or schools, the best are commanding to urge
onone onmen they say, they say need start, needs of them from some family. Jay it, so that they's com- willin in a fair
the another 40 pies at it elevate and educate and the noise people want let 'em le, let 'aw away, ld go off you to onethow to on their how to be
By BRYANT GRIGGS
Counterfeiters play losing game
Although the chance of being a successful counterfeiter is small, there are still those that can produce high value.
to match
sould say
Cromwell
We app-
portions and
wears to
yards ahead.
yards to
central k Club.
And for those who play the game and lose, they can receive up to 15 years in prison, a $1 million fine, and a jail sentence.
Fortunately, counterfeiters aren't numerous in the Lawrence and Kansas City areas, two law enforcement officials said yesterday.
---
The odds definitely aren't in the counterfeiter's favor, Gerald Bechtle, special agent in charge of the Kansas City U.S. Secret Service division, said.
"A SUCCESSFUL counterfeiter would have to make a thousand $10 bills and would have to make 1,000 successful attempts at fraud. You'd be said. "It's not a very profitable business."
In those 1,000 attempts, the coun-
sideration inick will eventually run out,
Bechler
"And when it does, we have our man."
Debate squad wins 14 awards in four matches
The University of Kansas debate squad returned Monday from its first weekend of competition of the year, boasting 14 awards from four tournaments.
The team of Robin Rowland and Frank Cross, Lawrence seniors, took fourth place at the University of Kentucky, where 98 teams participated. Rowland was the fourth-place speaker in the tournament, and Cross was the fifth-place speaker.
Cross and Rowland won the National Intercollegiate Debate Tournament last spring.
Six KU debaters won awards at Kansas State University, Ruth Ben仁, Norton sophomore, and Sherry Wolfe, Blue Springs, Mo., sophomore, took third place in the senior division. Chris Collosum and Chris Finch, sophomore, finished fourth in the junior division.
In individual events at K-State, Allan Bottom, Topeka freshman, took second place in persuasive speaking. Wolfe finished third in extemporaneous speaking, and Donna Carlisle, Shawnee Mission freshman, finished fourth in extemporaneous speaking.
At Texas Tech University, the team of Brian Nail, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, and Kevin Wilson, Vacaville, Calif., freshman, finished fourth among 42 teams. Nail was the first to win a game. Mark Spencer, Independence freshman, was the ninth-place speaker.
At the University of North Colorado at
Greeley, Jeff Brunton, Topeka senior,
and Steve Griffin, Lawrence sophomore, took
fifth place among 54 teams.
The KU squad will host a fall tournament Nov. 5-7. The Heart of America Tournament
"if we get 20 calls a day about counterfeiting in one area, we tell the store merchants and the banks to watch out," Bechtle said.
The counterfeiter increases his chances of getting caught every time he goes to work.
HE SAID THAT to help break up counterfeit operations and to receive lighter sentences for counterfeiting convictions, many persons arrested on charges of counterfeiting often revealed the sources of their counterfeit bills.
Last year there were $43 million in counterfeit bills in the United States, Bechtle said. Three million dollars were $49 million. Forty million dollars were seized, he said.
Most of the counterfeit bills circulated were in $10 or $20 denomination. Five dollar bills were popular once, Bechle said, but their use isn't as profitable now.
THE LAST MAJOR counterfeiting
city in Cusas City area occurred
in 1974, Repubilica.
"Since then it's been relatively quiet," he said.
Lt. Kerneth Harmon of the Lawrence Police department said the occurrence of counterfeiting in Lawrence was rare and was nothing to worry about.
Harmon said only one or two instances of counterfeiting had occurred in Lawrence in the past year.
About 80 per cent of all counterfeit fittes come through the local banks, Bechle said. He said an unknowing person could pass on bad fitts when he received change at a local bank.
"IN NEEM CASES, a counterfeiter will come into a store and pass a bad bill without the store merchant knowing. And if an ordinary citizen follows right behind the counterfeiter he must be the counterfeiter himself. But this does not happen too frequently." Bechtle said.
Two bank representatives interviewed in Lawrence said that when counterfeit bills came into the area, they contacted the local authorities and the U.S. Secret Service.
Beth Muelher, assistant cashier at the University State Bank, 99 Iowa St., said, "The Secret Service is the only agency to protect you and examine what is counterfeit and what is not.
Police destroy 350 lbs. of pot
Lawrence police officers yesterday destroyed 350 pounds of confiscated marijuana, the third burning in the last 10 days.
Assistant Chief of Police Darrell Stephens said that the marijuana had to be destroyed because it was no longer useful as evidence for prosecution.
"Some of it had been around the station for a couple of years, and the rest only a couple of days ago."
The marijuana was burned at the Lawrence city landfill.
Get Nesty with a $1.00 Lube Job
Frequent and unnecessary stops at congested discos will result in crusty build-up, which often leads to increased friction and even severe fatigue. Avoid this troublesome situation, during this special at the Nest: Squeaky Feet, a crew of very talented performers, will provide highly refined, pure, premium grade dance music to loosen and lubricate even the most neglected, cloaked and deteriorated musical sensibilities. In addition, for only $1.70 more, the Nest will help your psyche move more freely with the finest cold Coors in pitchers. So get Nesty and get lubed. Doors open at 8:30 Friday and Saturday nights. Guaranteed highest viscosity entertainment in Lawrence.
nest
Level 2 Union
图示:用镊子轻轻夹住患肢的趾关节。
"WE DON'T CALL the local police, but we do alert other banks in the area."
nest
HEAD FOR
HENRY'S
America's Most Popular Drive-In Menu 6th & Missouri
When police are asked to investigate a suspected counterfeit bill, they don't always have to compare a counterfeit bill with genuine currency. Many times they can determine whether the bill is counterfeit by phone, Bechtle said.
A counterfeit bill can be detected by checking for mistakes in the presidential portrait and the federal bank seal, poorly designed numerals, or bad paper color or texture.
The number 12 is called the check number. It will also appear in the front of the serial number, which is in the upper right and lower left hand corners of the bill.
A NUMERAL corresponding to the letter in the seal is placed inside the border at each corner of the bill. If the letter in the seal is L, the number 12 will appear in each corner of the bill, since L is the 12th letter in the alphabet.
One can also make a distinction between a counterfeit and a genuine bill from the front of the dollar. A counterfeit bill has
Something's Always Going on at HENRY'S
bil the plate number will appear to the lower right, a vertical trail between capilateral wedges. NEPIES
On the left side of the presidential portrait is a federal bank seal, which tells where the bill was distributed. In the middle of that seal is a letter.
ON THE BACK of the bill the plate number appears below the E of the centered label.
Of the two bank representatives in office, the said said was relatively easy to spot counterfeiters.
At the University State Bank, cashiers go through a general training course.
"It's the little things." Becth said, that help determine what is counterfeit.
"Normally you could tell if a bill was counterfeit just by looking, especially if you've been around money long enough." Bill Lebert, vice president of cashiers at the Lawrence National Bank and Trust Co., said.
We have a New Series of Glasses
WITH THE GROWTH of copying machines and their ability to copy almost any image, the use of color—Bechtle said the threat of the use of copy machines for counterfeiting was a problem to consider, but not a major one. "It's a good thing we have to contend with," Bechtle said.
"If copy machines do process a good bill, the best people can do is run it through coin changers. You don't have to use a good bill machine. You can change the coins. Play money works just as well."
A MARY HARTMAN
MARY HARTMAN
look a like contest!!!
HALLOWEEN DISCO DANCE
★ By Gay Services of Kansas ★
Kansas Union Ballroom
8:00 p.m. $1.75
Saturday, Oct. 23rd
Special Notice . . .
Please do not bring alcoholic beverages to the dance. Beer will be sold with an I.D.
842-4152
汽车
Larry's Auto Supply
1502 W. 23rd
Full line of foreign and domestic parts Student discount 25%-45%
LARRY WINN WANTS YOU TO KNOW WHERE HE STANDS.
ON GOVERNMENT HONEYEST. While Jimmy Carter and congressional democrats are willing to talk about cheating, lying and all sorts of corruption during the Watergate era, they quickly scuffle talk or allegations about cheating, indiscretions and lying by their members
The fact is Congress, controlled for the past 22 years by one party, has been too lax in its efforts to clean up its own record. It has become a rudderless, undered body with independent little fiefdoms and interest groups, that has lost the confidence of the American people.
It is time we cleaned out the last traces of scandal and impropriety, and applied discipline with equanimity to the abuse of powers.
That is why I have sponsored legislation which would open all congressional committee meetings to the public and eliminate practices like proxy voting. I have also sponsored the Public Law that would require the registration of special interest groups and lobbyists.
YO
HE
YOUR CONGRESSMAN,
LARRY WINN.
HE LISTENS. HE ACTS.
RE-ELECT
LARRY WINN
NOVEMBER 2ND.
Authorized by the Winn for Congress Committee, Box 411, Shawnee Mission, Kansas. Jack Brand, Chairman
KU-KSU GAME TICKETS For sale at (our cost) $8.00 Inquire at SUA (Union Lobby) or call 864-3477.
Breakfast Special
Every morning, 6 a.m. 11 a.m., from now until the end of October you can enjoy our Breakfast Specials
No.1 Breakfast: Eggs, Bacon, and Pancakes Only 89 $ ^{\circ} $
Chipped Beef on Toast Only 79c
WILLOW TOWN CITY COUNTY
Special
until you breakfast
COUNTRY KITCHEN
HOME OF Country Boy
COUNTRY KITCHEN
HOME OF
Country
Rail
1509 W 23rd
KU Chinese Student Association presents: annual
中國之夜
Chinese banquet
BANQUET MENU
EGO ROLL
SWEET & SOUR PORK
PEEKAR FRIEK
KUNG-PO CHICKEN
BROCCOLI WITH OYSTER SAUCE
FRIED RICE
FRITCH FAVORED JELLO WITH FRUTS
PHINNIE TEA
ALMOND FLAVORED JELLO WITH FRUITS
CHINESE TEA
TIME: Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976 5:30 p.m.
PLACE: Kansas Union Cafeteria
or call 864-2182, 843-5538
TICKETS: SUA Box Office,
ADMISSION: Non-member $4.00, Member $3.50
*Free entertainment at Wooldorf Auditorium after banquet. (Chinese folk songs, more music, play scenery, Kung-Fu, Prize drawing, and many many more.)*
TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA
announces:
LAWRENCE TOYOTA
THE 1977 TOYOTAS
1970 KACB-1338
NISSAN TRANSIT
Saturday, Oct. 23 and Sunday, Oct. 24 LAWRENCE TOYOTA Will be a part of the Auto Show at K-Mart (parking lot)
We invite you to come out and see the new Toyotas!
Seeing is believing
Lawrence Toyota-Douglas County's NO. 1 small car dealer
AWRENCE TOYOTA
Lawrence Auto Plaza Ph. 842-2191
TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA
6
Thursday, October 21, 1976
University Daily Kansan
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Thursday, October 21. 1976
7
1983
Satirical salute
Cast members of "Jacques Breil is Alive and Well and Living in Paris" mimick those who
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
once saluted Hilker in "Marathon," the show's first number, "Brel!" continues its run at 8 p.m. tomorrow and at Saturday, and at 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
'Brel' fresh approach to musical
By ELIZABETH GREEN
"Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris" is a first class, old fashioned musical revue. At least the University Theatre has made it so, with sure-handed and innovative directing, generally capable musical and vocal performers who act as acting and technical flexibility in meeting constantly changing dramatic needs.
University Daily Kansan
"Brel" isn't what is traditionally termed a play. Plot has given way to events and images. Roles and developing characters in organically related scenes are replaced by other roles, and sometimes the contained vignettes, each focused on one of Jacques Brel's French cabaret songs.
The gamut of these experiences is represented by two dozen musical numbers connected by bits of dialogue or changes in character. The songs are summarized in the final number, "If We Only Have Love." The idea is romantic and definitely corny, but amid the disconcerting and sobering aspects of the life Brel Punishment is welcome and almost necessary.
THE OVERALL effect of the event is that of an improvised celebration of life and especially love as Brel understands it and is—in alternating humorous and poignant.
THE VERY NATURE of the revue, however, brings its own problems. Linear movement, without strong tempo changes is often a hallmark of a predictable and therefore must be kept from becoming boring. The second act, somewhat more serious in tone than the first, needs quicker and more complete versions. To apply numbers to work against this problem.
Also, lack of a central action played in an illusoristic setting makes "Bree" an actor-centered theater requiring consumate those who can sing, dance and pantomime.
It is understandable that young performers can't always do all these. But it is highly commendable that they generally come through. The director has emphasized each performer's strengths and the cast members have overcome their minimal experience with this exacting kind of theater.
THE KU PRODUCTION uses an ensemble of six solo and seven supporting performers. All musical numbers were well-supported by the singing-en
Review
Though somewhat underpowered throughout, it is difficult to imagine KU's "Jacques Brel," especially the comic scenes, being effective without the ensemble. This use of chorus is entirely the director's and illustrates Jack Wright's musical style. It's a small musical—the score calls for only four performers—to a large theater.
semblé, a generally unheralded group of people who had to do something when not,当当时,when not when not
Although it is generally undesirable to dissect an ensemble to look for "stars," the group's performances, Roger Nolan has remarkable energy and comic timing for a young actor. Concursive numbers are generally those an audience remembers, and Nolan's own style can be seen.
His careful attention to detail and interaction with props are especially engaging. "Madelene" was an audience favorite. The story of a young man who had been a victim of sexual violence and never cones is familiar. The male quartet, women's pantomime and the circus lighting made this the most totally integrated and executed performance ofogene.
ROGER NOLAN and "Jackie," another of Nolan's characters, can both best be
described in Jackie's own words as "cute, cute, cute, in a silly ass way." One problem. Because Nolan is set up as the comic, we want his name to be a sarcastic and sarcasm of his number "Stature."
Judi Starter provided the evening's most profound moment with "Old Folks." Sterling has a beautiful, warm voice, but it is her sensitivity to the music and ideas present in the song, and the simplicity of presence. Her presence as audience unaware and moved them deeply.
IN OTHER performances, the built-in drama of the piece—key modulations, gradual crescendos and increases in tempo that characterize so much of Bric's music—wasn't fully realized. Performers start with the melody, then move to phrases leaving them and the music nowhere to so.
This playing of the effect—“instant action” of attitude—married some of the more recent anecdotes of women like ‘Fannette’ and, unfortunately, not of Brel’s finest and most familiar pieces, “If You Go Away” (Ne Me Quittes Pas). And so does articulation problems were also apparent.
BUT EACH performer brings some particular talent or asset to this performance. Vicki Stevens, despite vocal difficulties, can sell a song with startling impact. Tony Perez has a rich and powerful voice but needs more to do.
depth, Pat Pamerson is sweet of voice and image but needs to work against being too sensitive.
The setting of ladders, ropes, circuit-like raked rings and ramps for playing areas, and a huge back scrim circle for projections and silhouetted action, gave the stage a large surface area and gray atmosphere. More use of color could have brightened the set, however.
Costumes were puzzling; sweet, pink dresses with long skirts (forever keeping in the way or coming apart) and unattractive white dresses. The blues were blue-blazered men of more casual appearance. Except for turtle necks, tight, high-waisted pants, and an occasional加套 costume the statement made costumes was neither French nor interesting.
LIGHTING WAS well done, enhancing the set and mood, and smoothly executed.
“JACQUES BREL,” though lacking the polish which time didn't allow, hopefully heralds an outstanding season of theatre on the KU stage and an imaginative director can be seen again next spring in KU's production of Anton Chekwov's “Uncle Vanya.”
"Jacques Brel" continues its run tomorrow and Saturday at 8 p.m., and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale now at the Murphy Hall Box Office. All performances are free to KU students upon presentation of the student ID.
Rabbit Menachem Herman, educational director and assistant rabbi of the Beth Shalom Religious Center in Kansas City, Mo., and Ph.D. candidate in Biblical Archaeology from N.Y.U., conducts a slide show and special lecture entitled "For Dig We Must." Thursday, October 21st, 8 p.m., Council Room, Kansas Union. Slides of several excavations as well as artifacts recovered from those sites will be presented. All welcome.
DOES BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY OFFER SUPPORT TO THE RECORD OF ANCIENT JEWISH HISTORY?
Sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish students
Oct. 20-23
The Flower Shoppe
1101 Mass. 841-0800
2nd Anniversary Celebration
Kaitth Lynch has a fine, clear voice of great range but as yet has little drama.
All stock 30% off (Cash & Carry)
Roses...$2.49 doz.
Red Carnations...19' ea.
Daisies (white, pink, blue, yellow)...1.25 bunch
All stock 30% off (Cash & Carry)
70
the Billy SPEARS BAND
Ridin' High Weekend Dance
Friday & Saturday
Oct. 22, 23
$2.50
Doors Open
737 New Hampshire
the Billy SPEARS BAND
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Mr. Steak is servin up kebobs in four mix m
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Open 7 days
11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Mr. Steak
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
ISSUES & IDEAS EXPLORES APARTHEID
Monday, Oct.25, 7:30 Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union, Level 5
Film "Last Grave at Dimbazi
Responses by:
Dorthy Pennington—Asst. Prof. African Studies & Speech Comm.
As Structor of Political
Dorothy P Joseph Goldman—Asst. Instructor Studies 864-3761 KU-Y
Joseph Goldman—Assistance Studies KU-Y
864-3761
Kansas Union Rm. 110
Partially funded by Student Activity Fee
Pizza Inn serves $1.00 PITCHERS & 25c DRAWS Friday 2 p.m. 'til 12 p.m. We also make America's favorite pizza
A
Pizza inn.
Hillcrest Shopping Center--
Next to Hillcrest theatres
Dial 841-2670
OKTOBERFEST!
OKTOBERFEST!
Reg. SALE
BRATWURST $2.59 $2.29
KNACKWURST $1.79 $1.59
LIVERWURST $1.89 $1.69
SALAMI $3.29 $2.98
SUMMER SAUSAGE $3.19 $2.89
SALAMI CHEESE $3.09 $2.79
HAND-KASES $1.25(ea.) $1.05(ea.)
SAUERKRAUT .79 .69
Sale Good—Thursday-Monday
Oct. 21-Oct. 25
The Stinky Cheese Shoppe
809½ W. 23rd Next to McDonald's
842-7434 Mon.—Sat. 10:30—6:00 Thurs.'til 7:30
Sale. Good—
Thursday-Monday
Oct. 21-Oct. 25
8091/2 W. 23rd Next to McDonald's
842-7434 Mon.—Sat. 10:30—6:00 Thurs.'til 7:30
8
Thursday, October 21, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Wilson adjusting to KU volleyball
Sports Writer
By DAN BOWERMAN
The transition between high school athletics to college athletics can sometimes be tough, but Tina Wilson seems to be banding it just fine.
Wilson, a freshman from St. Louis, has been a major factor in the success of the KU volleyball team this fall, and has helped the team despite the difference between her high school competition and her competition so far at KU.
She began her volleyball career as a setter (player who sets the ball for the offensive hit or spike) at Ladue High School in St. Louis, where she changed positions when he was KU.
BOB STANCLIFT, KU volleyball coach,
transferred Wilson from a setter to a hitter,
but she then had to adjust to the varied
offenses the Jawbah uses.
Wilson said yesterday that her high school team played power volleyball, but that her team didn't try to set up the plays as often as KU did.
"We tried in high school to set up plays," she said, "but here, every play we made was a fail."
philosophy here; we set up a play with a bunch of offenses."
The competit ion n in the college ranks is also fiercer, according to Wilson. She says she came from a very successful program in high school to KU, and while the team has won two games so far this season, the competition has been tougher than it was in high school.
ONE OF THE toughest adjustments she has had to make was going to a different place.
"I knew everybody on the high school team and I knew the coach real well," she said. "I'd known that group of people for a long time.
"Up here, I had to get to know everybody, but the kids were real nice about it. They introduced themselves to me and I was really happy." I tell them what to do about it. It's like a team effort."
Wilson said her transition from high school was almost a total change, and she gave a lot of credit to coach Stancifl for helping her make that change.
STANCLIFT HAD much high praise for Wilson's talents in volleyball.
"As far as raw athletic ability, she's
Sports Scene
Steve Schoenfeld
Sports Editor
PETER HARRIS
"Nolan Cromwell has been lost for the year because of torn ligaments in his right knee."
'Hawks aren't dead yet
"The Kansas Jayhawks died with him.
Burial will be the next five Saturdays against Kansas State, Nebraska, Iowa State, Colorado and Missouri."
More than 40,000 KU fans trudged out of Memorial Stadium in despair. Their hero had fallen. And they figured the Jayhawks went down with him.
The obituary writer went to his typewriter
about 4:30 p.m. last Saturday.
The Jayhawks left the locker room slowly—one by one. Their heads were down. That Big Eight championship they sought so badly was not to cope.
The season was over. Fantasies of a trip to Miami were dashed. No more "Miami here we come."
The obtituary writer finishes his story and looks it over.
The players re-evaluate their preseason goals.
The fans try to decide whether it's worth coming to see the Jahayhaws' last two home games, against Nebraska and Iowa State. The players re-evaluate their preseason
It sounds depressing, doesn't it? And it might be.
But I don't think it will happen. Death hasn't beet the Jawhavks.
Too many players were around two years ago when KU was 4-1 and then lost the last
Give Scott McMichael, who will replace Cromwell, a chance. Remember he broke the school sophomore passing record as a starter two years ago with 1,044 yards.
six games. They know what the locker room was like after every frustrating loss. They remember having to go out and practice the following Monday after another loss.
They are going to try their hardest to not let it happen again. Two years isn't that long. The sting of six straight losses hasn't gone away.
The Jayhawks are convinced they can come back. And why not?
come back. And why not?
They still have one of the best backfields in the league with halfflacks Laverne Smith and Bill Campfield and fullback Norris Banks.
They still have an offensive line that's out-matched but seemingly finds a way to counter.
They still have the Mike Butlers, Terry Beesons, Franklin Kings and Chris Golubs on defense. They haven't given up—they'll all tell you that.
And Cromwell hasn't either. He's convinced that KU can salvage the season, and he has all the confidence in the world in McMichael. So does the rest of the offense.
Vince Semley, offensive line coach, said best before the Oklahoma game: "I don't want to lose you in the air. Our kids have too much character. They wouldn't throw their tails up in the air and go down."
blessed with quite a bit," he said. "What I
that skill and direct it into volleyball."
Wilson came to KU with a lot of talent, sanchit said, but her skills weren't of enough value.
The obituary writer takes a second look at his story, then rises it apart.
"That's the adjustment she has to make," he said. "She is improving, but she has a long way to go before she is able to contribute all the things she can to the team."
is worth seeing at least twice more this year—with or without their fallen giant. The Jahyahks can and probably will rise up and show people they're far from dead.
"we have a young team," he said, "and luckily we've had Marty here or other people that I can substitute for Tina when she's down."
WILSON SAID that she enjoyed playing on the KU team and that she thought KU
News from The Hair Suite
composee on court, so he has another freshman, Mary Metzler, sharing duties with him.
STANCLIFT SAID the leadership
STANCLIFT SAID also was helped Wilson improve her skills.
"It a klast," she said. "The kids and the coach hang together; it's real neat."
We are proud to announce the return of Linda Haverkamp on Oct. 21, and the addition of two new hairstylists, Beth Cole & Diane Matthews. Also for the KU students, busy women and working men, we will be open late Mondays & Tuesday till 9:00 p.m. This will help KU students get in on Mon. & Tues. haircut discount days. Call 842-8600.
"The other girls realize the potential that she has," he said, "and they are helping her with her problems and helping her keep her composure on the floor. Without that leadership it would take longer for her to improve her skills."
FORMERLY RAMADA INN BEAUTY SALON
"I think we're good. When we're at our best, we're really good. I hadn't heard anything about KU's volleyball team before I came here and I was real surprised."
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"Our Friendly Face"
At times, Stanclift said, Wilson loses her
Wilson decided to come to KU because some of her friends from high school came here and because she liked the campus. She had one more reason for choosing KU:
Pending the outcome of game no.4, the Arena will show coverage of the 5th game of the World Series. Come see the World Series & other events on our 7' screen.
THE ARENA
"It's just far enough away from home."
A Private Club 944 Mass.
842-2458 Lawrence, Kansas
ALSO THE ARENA WILL SHOW THE REPLAY OF THE ALI-NORTON FIGHT ON FRIDAY.
State but the first that KU won in two games.
The Jayhawks defeated Wichita State University and Kansas State University in conference matches last night. The three teams will face off in a record of the two meetings will decide who goes to the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Region Six volleyball tournament.
The Jayhawks also beat WSU in two games, 16-14, 15-6. It was the third match against UCLA in five years.
K-State beat the Jayhawks in the first game, 15-8, but KU rallied to win the next two, 15-9, 15-8. In the second game, Wilson scored four runs and served four straight points. Then Metzel served six straight to help KU win. In the last game, Frost came in to serve when KU was down, S-1, and picked up four hits. After scoring three points, the final 10 points to give KU the victory.
K-State played Wichita State in the first match last night, and the Wildcats won in
Serving helps KU team win big conference match
Special Notice . . .
Strong serving by Marty Metzler, Maelra Frost and Tina Wilson helped put KU's volleyball team well on its way to the regional tournament.
Couch Bob Stancilf said that the
hawkeye played fairly consistently and
the thunder played more consistently.
The team's next action will be next Friday in the Big Eight tournament at Auburn.
By Gay Services of Kansas Kansas Union Ballroom 8:00 p.m. $1.75
Saturday, Oct. 23rd
Please do not bring alcoholic beverages to the dance. Beer will be sold with an I.D.
Are Your Walls Dull and Lifeless? Plant Some Life.
A MARY HARTMAN
MARY HARTMAN
look a like contest!!!
ALLOWEEN DISCO DANCE
TURNER
- Cactus - Succulents
Taco Grande
- Houseplants
- Terrarium Plants
TO: K.U. Students and Lawrence Taco Grande
- Pottery
Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
FROM: K-State Students and Manhattan Taco Grande
- Baskets
The students of the winning school, upon showing your student I.D. will receive two Tacos free until 1,000 are given away. K.U. wins Free Tacos at Lawrence Taco Grandes. K-State wins Free Tacos at Manhattan Taco Grande.
We accept the 1,000 Taco bet with relish (make that Hot Sauce). The Perfect Purple should have no trouble winning over your so called Football Team. Have you ever seen what a Wildcat does to a Kansas Chicken (Jayhawk). There won't be anything left but those ugly yellow feathers. Say, by the way does that yellow have some significance or does it stand for what we think it does.
- Potting Soil
- Grow Lights
Gardenland
Mon-Sat, 8:30-5:30 p.m.
Sunday 10-5 842-1596 914 W. 23rd
Goodbye O Lord, I'm Going To America!
M "A
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TAN — Bruce
PLAYO
"THIS FILM IS A TRIUMPH." Liz Smith CSOMMPOLITAN
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—Bruce Williamson,
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MIDWEST FILM PRODUCTIONS, INC. PRESENTS STEVEN REATES
JAM MOCKINN SILVER-PRODUced BY RAPHAEL D. SILVER
Hester Street
FRIDAY, OCT. 22 and AND SATURDAY, OCT. 23
7:00 and 9:30 $1
3:30 Matinee
Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union
---
JOIN THE MILLER
PICK-EM-UP
It's Miller Time Again!
Congratulations to the winners of last semester's contest:
Grand Prize—KU Rugby, $500
Phi Kappa Psi—$500
2nd Prize—Sigma Nu
Stereo Console
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Microwave Oven
3rd Prize—Alpha Phi
Spauliding Sporting Goods
Oliver Hall
AM.FM Radio
Keep a look out for more information on this semester's contest, or call Dean Andresivie, 842-2225.
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It's Miller Time Again!
Keep a look out for more information on this semester's contest, or call Dean Andresivie, 842-2225.
ENTER
TODAY
ENTER TODAY
Thursdav. October 21.1976
9
University Daily Kansan
---
T. 23
Cochran changes colors
By STEVE CLARK
Sports Writer
The intense rivalry between Kansas and Kansas State isn't limited to football and basketball. It pervades every sport and the Wildcats battle, including soccer.
ALEXANDER
Although soccer doesn't have the tradition of other sports at KU, when it comes time to play K-State the emotion is there.
John Cochran will attest to the intensity of the matches. During the 1973 and seasons he played in several U-K-Star teams, and his margin was never more than one goal.
THIS SATURDAY COCHRAN will be on the field in Manhattan for another KU-State soccer game. But this time be in the rather awkward position of playing against former teammates on the K-State squad.
During Cochran's previous participation in the Sunflower rivalry he played for the Wildcats. Although he is quick to point out that K-State won during their first two games, nothing better than to hand undefeated K-State, 7-0, its first loss of the fall.
"It's going to be a really psyched-up situation," Cochran said yesterday. "It'll be ready. I've got a lot of friends there who're going to come out and watch the game."
ONE OF HIS acquaintances viewing the game but is his girlfriend, who is running away.
"I was up there last weekend and she
said, K-State, K-State, you know who
it is."
As if that isn't enough, Cochran will be spending the weekend with two childhood friends who are now on the K-State football team. "They are really hopeful he hopes KU wins, by a small margin,"
Photo by CORKY TREWIN
"I don't want to embarrass them," the center half-back explained. "If we'd go out there and score a lot of goals there'd love of hurt feelings and I don't want that."
Cochran, former Wildcat, looks to bounce KSU
"BESIDES, I'M going to be spending the night with those guys."
So although Cochran's social relationships might be in trouble this weekend, his soccer abilities aren't
KU coach Bernie Mullin has been impressed with the play of the 5-10, 180- pound midfielder.
"He's taken over the job of team captain and he's developing in that role," Mullin said.
"John's got the respect of the other players, he a good athlete and he got a lot of respect."
dously aggressive and always gives a total effort."
In fact, the only problem that Cochran does on the field is a typically large gap.
*BECAUSE HE doesn't have the background that the foreign players do,*
be sometimes misdirects his energy," Mullin said.
"I'm used to running up and down the field, playing an aggressive, physical play,"ochran said. "Here we're more methodical with our movements in learning to play a more control game."
STOCKROOM DISASTER SALE
Thurs., Oct. 21—Fri., Oct. 22—Sat., Oct. 23
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Candles at wholesale prices
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843-8593
Announcing . . .
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Tennis team seeks tourney berth
By ERIC MARTINCICH
The KU women's tennis team visits the Wichita State Shockers tonight to play a match that will determine who will represent the large collegiate district in the Kansas State Championship Tournament tomorrow and Saturday in Emporia.
Sports Writer
Because it beat Wichita State earlier in the year, 9-0, Wichita needs to win just one match from the Shockers to participate in the tournament.
It it was presumed that the Wichita State meet would be the last meet for the team until next spring. However, coach Tom Kivisto received a letter Monday evening.
THE LETTER informed him that if his team won they were to be in Emporia tomorrow for the state tournament, which would be on April 15th to the Region 6 tournament next spring.
This came as a quite surprise to Kivisto. "I figured that we were sent to Wichita State to assess it, determine the representative of the large school and that in the spring the AIW (Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women) would tell us when the Kansas tournament would be." Kivisto said. "Now I am calling me the tournament is this weekend."
Emphoria this weekend for the championship. If KU scores a victory over Wichita State, they will represent the large collegiate district. The two top teams in the tournament will represent Kansas in the Region 6 tournament.
KANSA IS divided into four districts and each division will send its team to team
Kivisto said that the tournament was in the fall this year because many of the smaller schools in the state don't have spring tennis programs.
The problem of selecting teams in the fall rather than in the spring, he said, was that spring and fall teams for the larger schools often varied.
KIVISTO SAID that the differences were largely due to some players deciding not to return, to the inflow of transfer students and new players, and to injuries.
Kivisto said that he did not agree with the present method of selecting representatives
"I's just a little too early to run a state tournament," he said. "I say 'like holding the conference championship in basketball before Dec. 25 and then letting that team play in the finals, which isn't until March. I can happen in those three months."
Each school can send four singles and two doubles entrants to Emporia. If KU goes, they will serve Carrie Fotopoulos (5-10), Jill Hunt (5-12), Mary Stauffer to play in singles. Fotopoulos and
Commissioner Bowie Kuh ordered the game rescheduled for tonight. The postponement set up a possible conflict for television schedules with the final presidential debate if the Series goes to a fifth game tomorrow.
Daksa will be the No. 1. doubles team and Cook and Tracy Spellman will make up the
Game 4 tonight
NEW YORK (AP) - A day-long rain force postponement of yesterday's scheduled fourth game of the World Series in the Cincinnati Reds and New York, Yankees.
"The presidential debate is certainly a concern," said a spokesman for the commissioner. "There could be variations on Friday that do not include Friday night."
The whole question of a Friday game may be academic. Cincinnati has won the first three games of the Series and needs just one to win up its second straight world championship.
That presented the possibility of either a day game or late afternoon start that wouldn't collide with the 8:30 p.m. start of the Ford-Carter debate.
FRIDAY and SATURDAY Night Oct.22 and 23
the Billy SPEARS BAND
737 New Hampshire
841-0817
$2.50 Cover Charge
Doors open
at 8:30 p.m.
Show starts
at 9:00 p.m.
Off the Wall Hall
YOU OUGHT
TO BE
IN PICTURES...
Jayhawker Senior Pictures
October 11-29
9:00-6:00 Kansas Union
Sitting Fee $1.00
fee includes photo in yearbook and
option of buying color enlargements
Final week—make your
appointment now
10
Thursday, October 21, 1976
University Daily Kansan
The man is wearing a white shirt and blue jeans. He has dark hair and a beard. The girl is wearing a black jacket and brown pants. She has blonde hair. The boy is wearing a brown jacket and blue jeans.
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Dual trashers
Mark Christoffersen, 1509 Crescent Rd., dending down, and Todd Miller, 1611 W. Eighth St., pick up frash after the KU-OU game Saturday. Christoffersen is 88 years old. Miller is
KU buys Speedgun
The KU police have acquired a new tool to help them reduce traffic problems here—the
The hand-held device is a new version of the older units, which were set in the windows of police patrol cars, Major Bob Ellison of the KU police said yesterday.
Ellison said the new device, Speedgun I, caught the attention of more drivers. It is more obvious when in use, he said, but it is just as effective as the older models.
The Speedmum I was purchased in July for about $600.
"We've had several requests from
various groups, such as the AURH (Association of University Residence Halls), to slow traffic down, especially during game days," Ellison said.
The breakdown of a previous, older radar unit and the sale of another set that the county sheriff's office had loaned to the KU system is an indication to buy the Speedgun I, Ellison said.
Before anyone has entered KU's Memorial Stadium Saturday afternoon, the stadium maintenance crew has been hard working and grounds preparing it for that week's game.
The only problem so far with the hand-held radar is that it requires special training to use, he said, though most of the officers of the KU police now know how to use it.
Stadium cleanup big production
"I's really a big production," Norm Stewart, foreman of the seven-man cleanup corps, said yesterday. "We can't afford to take this one away if there are back-to-back home games."
Stewart said the crew was even on standby during the games, just in case they had to stay.
TWO WEEKS AGO, leaking gas was detected in a women's restroom during the game. The crew found and fixed the leak before anyone was endangered, he said.
"I have to know where everyone is at any given time, so we don't caught out of it."
Preparation for the next home game begins immediately after each Saturday's game. Members of the Lawrence Boys Club pick up large debris, cups and bottles left in the stadium. Part-time help is also used on game days to make sure all gates are open before kickoff. Team members need to secure the field from fans who might try to take some of the endzone markers.
THE BULK OF the work done during the week is picking up trash in the stadium area.
"Blowing all the trash out of the stands and picking it up takes about three days, unless the wind is blowing hard. Then you have to go around and rid of all the have to go around and get rid of all the
Trash on the grounds adjacent to the stadium is picked up by a separate team.
Alon Quirin, a buildings and grounds maintenance man, said that debris from football games was strewed all the way up nest the Memorial Campanile.
liquor bottles. There are usually quite a few of those."
"We're on overtime a lot just pick it in he said. "Sometimes we have come in on overtime."
STEWART SAID the press box is usually one of the first stadium rooms cleaned and cleaned up.
"We clean the visitors," officials" and the home teams' dressing rooms Friday because the track teams are using them the rest of the time. After we've picked up all the trash on the field, we just have to vacuum it to get it ready," he said.
THE LAST THING done before the game is delivering the golf carts from the Lawrence County golf course to the press box in their use in getting to the press box from the parking lots, he said.
"Everything is usually ready at the stadium by 9:30 Saturday morning."
Most of the crew at the stadium is involved in other maintenance work on the campus during the week, so their time at the stadium must be put to good use, he said.
"Then if things still go wrong or something gets broken, we have to be there to fix it," Stewart said.
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Coral Gables, Florida 33134
INTERNATIONAL CAREER?
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A representative will be on the campus WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 27, 1976 to discuss qualifications for advanced study at AARON GRADUATE SCHOOL and job opportunities in the field of INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT
Interviews may be scheduled at
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TONIGHT: Jazz Jam Session, No Cover Charge!
FRIDAY: The Joe Utterback Trio, exciting Modern Jazz
Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations.
Opens at 8:00
Music at 9:00
SATURDAY:
1: Dutch Young, 1930's Sax player and Band Leader and Ray Ehrhart, 1930's Pianist—formerly with Jack Teagarten. Don't miss these two jazz giants who were big names 45 years ago—they'll be with a 7 piece jazz group. Cover charge $2.50.
KU
KU Backgammon Club
ANNOUNCES
The First Annual Fall
Backgammon Championships
to be held Sunday, Oct. 24, in the Jayhawk Room—
Kansas Union sponsored by:
BRITCHES CORNER Makers of fine clothes for men and women, 9th & Mass. and the Backgammon Club of K.C.
ADVANCED DIVISION—Elimination Knockout Tournament Including consolation flight; prizes awarded to top five places. Entry fee $5.00. Begins 2 p.m.
BEGINNER DIVISION—Swiss Style Tournament; 4 five point rounds. Prize awarded to top three places. Entry fee $3.00. Begins 3:30 p.m. Doubling cube will be used in both divisions (will be explained for beginners). Sign up and pay Entry Fee in SUA office, Kansas Union.
For further information, call Rich Boyer at 1-432-3143 after 5:30 p.m.
Open to all students, faculty and staff. Deadline, Oct. 22, 5 p.m.
HEAVY EDDYS
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday. October 21. 1976
11
EMENT
Student vets get more funds
OU
nd
Staff Writer
By BRYANT GRIGGS
...
Military veterans at the University of Kansas will have something to be cheerful about when they get a payment boost in preparation for this month as a result of a new G. I. Bill.
Ted Cloon, Lawrence sophomore and president of KU Campus Veterans, said the veterans were elated about the increase, a move that last Friday by President Gerald Ford.
UNDER THE NEW bill, the Veterans' Educational Assistance programs will give World War II and Vietnam veterans an increase in their monthly payments.
Originally, a single veteran in school received $72 a month for every month in college. Under the new act, married veterans will receive $321 instead of $321 and retired veterans will
receive $292 a month. Payments for a dependent child will be increased from $21 a month.
UNLIKE THE 1727 G.I. bill with which many veterans were dissatisfied, because it left out a 24-month extension of payments, this new bill will allow veterans to finish the requirements for a particular degree in 45 months instead of 36.
Under the old G.I. bill, if a veteran was short on hours or credits for a degree at the end of 38 months, he was dropped from the military and had to pay for educational expenses himself
the new act allows him to receive his educational benefits for an additional nine months.
However, because of the new paperwork resulting from the act, veterans won't receive their October payments for two to three more weeks. Cloon said.
meaning veterans will receive their bonus payments the first of October, November
There will also be an eight per cent raise in tutorial benefits, which will equal the amount of other college loan programs. The university will match for loans amounting to $1,500 a year.
THE VETERANS Administration in Kansas City and Topeka and the Veteran Services at KU's office of Admissions and Training will provide for further information on the new act.
For more information about the new veterans' education rate program adjustments, contact the Campus Veterans Office in 118B of the Kansas Union.
Origins, a Creationist newspaper distributed recently, was a follow-up to the Creationist-Evolutionist debate that took place Sept. 17.
Doug Lambert, Lawrence junior and president of the KU Creationists club, said recently that he and his wife, Jeanne, spent a lot of time working on the paper because people told him to know that there wasn't one side to the theory of creation.
It was a one-time venture, but publishing Origins, took time, work and a belief in charity.
JOHN VANDERHORST and Dotty Adams, assistant instructors of English and members of the KU Creationist Club, also helped with the paper. Creationists believe that eating and animal was created separately from the acts of a supernatural creator.
Origins distributed
Evolutionists believe that life developed
by natural selection from simple, one-celled plants and animals to more complex forms
ORIGINS ARGUES that evolution can't be proved and that the concept of evolution carries tremendous implications. "It really was a diligent effort." Adams
"It really was a diligent effort." Adams said, "and it was presented honestly."
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one two three four five six seven eight nine ten twelve
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00
Each additional
01 02 03 04 05
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 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.
ERRORS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UR business office at 864-4358.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Employment Opportunities
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
MUSICIANS Part-time jobs for band members
Contain This 10th Army Reserve Band in Law-
yers.
must substitute two bedroom apts at Gatlight furnished—Nov 1st lease begins. Call 482-991-6220
FOR RENT
1. Bedroom Apt. $150 plus deposit Manager, 1603
Tenn. No. 6, 845-5635. 10-22
1. bdmr, apt. A.C., ww carpeting. kitchen tile.
2. bdmr, apt. A.C., ww carpeting. kitchen tile.
3. bdmr, apt. A.C., ww carpeting. kitchen tile.
4. bdmr, apt. A.C., ww carpeting. kitchen tile.
5. bdmr, apt. A.C., ww carpeting. kitchen tile.
6. $160 month plus electricity. 81-970-700. ipn=
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS--Dop in up and us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WESTERN HOLMES-HOLMES, 3409 6th Street, Lawrence, KS.
3 Bedroom apt. at Quailcreek avail for immaculate condition with en suite 842-851 between 9:20 & 6:00 and 842-3720 between 9:20 & 6:00.
Apt-2 rooms with kitchen to single male studio
Room 837-693 Union. Utilities paid with parking
Phone 837-693
1. bedroom apartment, $100 per month, utilities
included. Walking to campus. #834-2114. 10-22
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS- Regardless of any price you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, the STEREO COMPONENTS for KIFFES at the GRAMPHONE SHOP AT KIFFES
JAMES V. OWENS
RETAIL LIQUOR STORE
COLD BEER
Wines and Liquors
NEXT TO OWEN'S FLOWERS
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
209 W. BU
-
BankAmericard Mastercharge
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
We buy good used cars Corvettes, Camaros, Novas, Mustangs, Firebirds, and Imported Sports Cars UNIVERSITY MOTORS 26 & Iowa 843-1395
Almerator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
ALERATOR AUDIO REVERSE BACK BEAM
ELECTRIC, 843-900-3900 W, 40 hp.
ELECTRIC, 843-900-3900 W, 40 hp.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 701,
Boston, MA 02215.
Western Civilization Notes-Now on Sale! More
sales out of Western Civilization! Makes us
happy.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. tf
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
Excellent selection of used furniture, retaining the original design and style.
1929 East Toulouse, Toulouse KK, 4m x 6m - 0.6m - 0.3m
1929 West Toulouse, Toulouse KK, 4m x 6m - 0.6m - 0.3m
Final markdown on all 76 Magnavox consonne
stereos and components. Beautiful $449.95
consoles cut as low as $500; power comp. set with
shelves; large console. Opening sizes:
Max `Open lll` 30" (p. thurs.) 3:30, 10:20
8:20
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Minimize sculpture. Mermals. Unicorns, etc. Metal stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3882. **IF**
**CLEARANCE:** Discounted radial tires $23 each. **SALES:** Save $140 on small 2.4" dill fit (even) Evan Roden 35-65-10 small 2.4" dill fit (even) Rocky Stones back's. $292. Mass. Woolworths for fire tire care. Come thru Woodworth's parking lot for fire care.
Honda 350, 1970, good condition, 480 *HCYCLE*
Honda 320, 1960, 10 speed, good condition, 10-21
811-3128
Mercury storage cassette: tape recorder; two volumes, two time controls; two VU meters; AC/ battery; two auxiliary extension, hand-phone jacks. Good tone. $60. $452.82. $102
Fahrenheit 32, Celsius 0.0. Full-Power.
Premium Water Cooler, 15 GPM. Full-Power.
No. 64. Need $20 or truck for Pick-Up Trucks.
No. 84. Need $200 or truck for Pick-Up Trucks.
in three units like bike specs:
1975 Honda MT125 495
1975 Honda MT150 485
1975 Honda XR150 310
1975 Honda XR175 119
1975 Kawasaki 900 189
1976 Honda ZT200 195
1974 Honda XL250 195
1974 Honda CT70 195
JBL K10 15# bass instrumented in cabinets,
watt RMS rating. Price negotiable. 822-1425.
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th.
Lawrence.
Ks. K43-3333.
Hoover Spin/ Dry portable dryer. Great for
winter use. Portable without window.
Call 811-400-3900 after 10:25.
Bruce guitar amp Superior quality. 150 watts
in 15 in. speaker. Excellent condition.
841-8242 10-25
841-8243 10-25
Baked Wheat Straw-Good for parties, mulchbing.
eat. Call 843-0848.
10-21
American Microscope. Like new. Best offer. Call
after 5:00. B42-8657.
1972 Holds 350. Must sell, best offer. Call after
5:30. 842-967-003
96 Chevrolet 2 door, good engine and tires, body
fairly. Call 843-1288 after 4:00. 16-21
ENCYCLOPEDIA of PHILOSOPH complete set
new condition, $100 value for $50 = 82-3242
new condition, $100 value for $50 = 82-3242
80%-75% on warmup suits, dress man-
suit, and Swim Club. RU 4 tweeted at 842-746-1766.
RU 4 tweeted at 842-746-1766.
1969 Fujifilm 124 Sport Coupe body reduce, new
lens, waterproof, new battery, new
water pump, new battery, 811-206-1086
72 Kawasaki 350 - 8,000 miles, clean, faring, new
Kawasaki arm buildup, helmets, new trim
841-2688
Stereo: Gorard turbulent. Shore cartridges, amplifier boards. Reservoirs, 22 watts. $85. Call McMahon McMahon #264.
Maraniz 1000 Steps烧结 w/30 watts per channel power amp. Must sell 84-6648, KK4-2548, channel power amp. Must sell 84-6648, KK4-2548.
1969 MGC, nie must sell. 28,000 miles. 6 cylinder-
transmission translates 915-294-6011.
DOY DELUXE
BOSTON MADE
LAWRENCE FARM
GTE Quad Monster Receiver/250 watts RMS /85
Environments /Protections enclosures
Quadmonster table USB SSR BK4 v2.0
-8-track record playback deck, Yankee-D twin
lens reflex Monkey, Monberg 2v4 vent rb, 3"
Monkey, Monberg 2v4 vent rb, 3"
KU-KSU GAME TICKETS for sale at our court
864-354 SAFETY AT USA (Union Lobby)
864-354 10:22
**64** MUSTANG. 6 qp. 3 speed, mag mugles. Good
hardness. Needs mechanic's call. Worst call.
**65** Mustang. 6 qp. 3 speed, mag mugles. Good
hardness. Needs mechanic's call. Worst call.
New $60 Durham Special Hiking Books, snow
sleamed, woman size 6, munt call, cell 814-3075.
www.durhambooks.com
HELP WANTED
Cools. Assume responsibility for preparation work.
Cooks. Assume responsibility for preparation work.
Approx. 30 hours per week. Fork-Lavender Cooks.
Assume responsibility for preparation work.
Delivery—must have own car, $3 approx. Inside help also. Apply in person at Heaven Kids'addy.com.
HIH. SCRIT A quickskill Photoshow 711,
712, 713, 714, 715, 716
Friday, MIDnight thursday at 8:00 p.m.
Monday, midthursday at 8:00 p.m.
COUNTER CLERK AT OVERLAND PHOTO
OFFICE
2 P.M. MIDNIGHT. Daily schedule on Saturday.
10 A.M.-5 P.M. Monday through Saturday.
POSITION AVAILABLE Full time research associate in Biochemistry or Chemistry required. Laboratories must be able to purify and assay enzymes that would be desirable for research purposes. Start date responsible. Contact Dr. Douglas Horton, Jr., Department of Biology, University of Kansas Lawrence, KS 66048. Position will accept a FOUNTION / AFFIRMATIVE ACTION II-26-27
OVERSEAS JOBS - summer year-round, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $100-$120 monthly, Expenses paid, sightseeing, Free
transfers, Airport transfers, Kayak A4, Box 480, Kayak CA 94704 11-11
Now taking applications for part-time cocktail waiters, cooks, dishwashers, Agents at Carriage Inn, restaurants, hotels, and the like.
LOST AND FOUND
Lotus, Silver apen sing in 'Where reveron
nomina' (1927). In 'Frauenstrom'
Reward. Turn. 168-1821. 10-212
Found, Key chain with initial found Fri, Oct. 15
north of campanile. Call 841-5955
10-22
Last Arena 4a and Florida. Small female cat.
Last Arena 1a, message for Barbara. 19-26
message for Barbara. 19-26
Lost: KU season football ticket amount to
862,000. Received REWARD: KU 861-294-780. 10-22
Lost: Two pair of glasses in brown case between
Field House and Wensley, reward. 10-26
Credit: J. M. Cohen 10-26
Found: pair of glasses in a black case at 12:20
on Tat. on Sat. 841-3151 or 843-9654
Found: glasses with case at corner of Naimih and Irving Dr. on 19-15-76. Haq 844-2632.
Last: Ladies' alberi Benvern wristwatch some-
where between O-zone and F field House
1504.
Lost. Belign leather purse with job of packs.
Lost. Belign leather purse with job of packs.
Sit snapped at Stukt in 8641. FLEAS. REWARD.
Sit snapped at Stukt in 8641. FLEAS. REWARD.
Found: algebra book in 200 Inkle Call 913-837-
2640 after € 6.00.
10:25
Lost at KU'OU game on the Hill. Brown leather
price and important contents ID initials to
match.
PUNTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
PUNCTING WHILE YOU WAIT at 10am on
Saturday, 9pm on Sunday and on
Saturday at $8.00.
MISCELLANEOUS
BANK OF NEW YORK
1934
will be moving soon to
TOTAL INGREDIENTS
PER 100g CUP
45.3g (1.5 oz)
The 8th St. Ma+ketplace
for Special Needs Services
Armadillo Bead Co.
Watch for Grand Opening ad in UDKI
710 Mass. 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 841-7946
NOTICE
Aztec Inn
Mexican Food
Aztec Inn
Sorority You Call 843-6023 for a barn party for November 6, please call back. 10-21 9:30 AM - 11:30 AM M.P.: 11:30. Dinners 5:30-9:30. Saturday Brunch 10:30-9:30 Mass Please use backup daybook. Attend all events at the sorority office.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Massed furniture, dureus,
lamps, lamps, televisions. Daily开放 12-5.
Jim's Steak House. Delicious food at coopersville
Sunday and Monday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Saturday and Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
FEMINIST COUNSLING AND THERAPY individual and group. Also grown workshops. Call (612) 847-3000.
FREE TO GOOD HOME 1 super-loving male
makeover, 3 rood old man had huts ad
stores.
Redeemer Lutheran Church, 30th and Haskell,
invite all students and faculty to our Sunny
Island campus. Registration for Study at
10:10 am will have an active college
office. For more information needed,
Contact Church Office. 843-858-11-12
Free- 5 kiteset a good home. Please help
out. Call 841-7901 between 5 P.M.
10:25 AM
GAY RAP GROUP, Kentucky. Oct. 21, 7:30, 828
10-21
Female singer, looking for Rock Band to sing
with Call Viell 815-351-6101
19-28
PERSONAL
SERVICES OFFERED
Non-traditional, anti-chauvinist man wants 10-
twelve nights 849-139.
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7655 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
Body tension is painful, Massage is simple. Massage can be performed in the room, relaxation, relaxing muscles and adding circulation. It is a natural method of improving health and relieving tension. A massage therapist is a natural method of preserving health and relieving tension. It is sexual information what-to-evice in this massage. It helps G.P. and it is beneficial to men and women who are in pain. Headdressers Hair Design 899, Vouli 842, Nerium 807, Tempus 837.
Vuces cassette de Victor Jai, Violette, Isabel y Angelo Tacchino del Museo, Infante, Pompei. El director Martín de Matía Bolesio y Mohammed Dírreis gmardón en cáncassette $4.00. Shelly H. Edelfeld de la casa.
Excellent instruction in guitar, bass as well as keyboard. Excellent range of tuning options. Fine琴技 available. Reward Keyboard Studio.
FIELDS
I WANT to learn an Irish irish. If you know one
please teach me. 841-8817.
10-22
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on the
computer, 11258 Idaho Ave., No. 368, Hlox Los Angle
address, 11258 Idaho Ave., No. 368, Hlox Los Angeles
address.
A IN MUSICAL RUT? See how lessons can get you moving. Beginning to advanced in Glock, rock, jazz, jazz, bluegrass and blues guitar, mandolin, piano and piano. McKinley McKimmy 10-29 0817
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
All Mexican Dishes served
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
807 Vermont 842-9455
All Mexican dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont
NAISMITH HALL
Now accepting
Applications
for Spring Semester
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
9th and Iowa
---
TYPING
Home of
Ping Pong
The Chalk Hawk
- Pinbal
Pool
Snooker
THRESH BINDING COPYING The House of Uther's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawnware. Let us handle $85 Massachusetts & phone 423-866-7100. Thank you.
Need a new bike! Come and see the largest bicycle lawyers. Lawrence has to offer Bring in your bike to Lawrence. Schwinn Cycle, 4-6 Mon.- Sat. Thurs. 10:30 IH, Som. 1-4. 1820 W, 8th, 842-6336.
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcress Bowl!
Open 7 Days. No Hrs. No One Hundred Admits!
Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 102, 103, 106, 109, 114, 116, 117, 118, 125, 126, 127, 128, 130, 131, 132, 133, or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a
Tum-Up—we will clean up and adjust your
bike, brakes and chain. Two both wheels adjust your
brakes and chain accessories at time of "tum-up." Rates:
accessories买 at time of "tum-up."
$5 SPECIAL. Oct and Nov. 10 speeds $13.50.
3 speeds $18.50, single speed $65.00. Complete
protection.
WANTED
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476, 10-29
- Foosball
Fees-Ball
Experimented typist—term paper, tests, mise-
press, spellings. 843-5062, Mrs. Wright.
843-5062, Mrs. Wright.
Need an experienced tpu tester? IBM Selective II platinum and tpu materials correcting tpcr carbon paper. Call Funktion.
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
Experienced Typeit-IBM-Memory-Call 83-12
9471, ask for John.
Typhlet editor. IBM Pica press. Quality work
thanks to Dennis, their disserts,欢迎来信.
Mail no. N2-0128
Experienced typist (yammanu, nurmaus) fees, etc.
weekdays 841-431, 841-780, evening
weekends 10.27-10.28
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Ace needs salesperson at the game to sell the official KU hat. Earn a buck a hat. $0 in commission made at Wisconsin game. Limited number of salespeople needed. Call 415-689-080 or 485-684-0854.
Female to sub-lease an apartment to room with two other girls. Start payment in November. Call 516-248-7390.
Roommate needed for very sheer furnished apartment located $275 per month and to take Call with the address: 843-629-8100.
The Lounge
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
BOARD
15 EAST 14TH MAIN 22ND
10-5 Monday-Saturday
STUDY BREAK
Schooners — 65°
Pitchers — $1.25
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
Don't ever need a home! Pets OK, Share a
home! Don't need a warm place. Pets OK,
10$ less.
untilers. 841-547
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Needed a 1st student or full time working girl
to help with the training. 30 hrs per week.
$600 for 2 weeks between 6 & 10, $800 for 4
weeks between 7 & 10.
Need four tickets to Nebraska game. Call after
p.m. 841-7126. 5-10
Need 2 male roommates for large, furnished
home. Applicants must be at least 26 years old.
Comes by 1011 Indiana, D. 4, alynnville,
ny.
2 female coaches warrant for large 3-25 year house doubles (last January of 19/16 month plus 10/25)
Female roommate needed to share apartment
room. Roommate must be 18+ and have:
bus note, Cell 841-8466 after 6 FPM. 10-22
Wanted- Full-size backpack and aluminium frame,
1863-2023 or Wayne Finch. Tonganoke Xe.
Xe
Delivery work on weekends. Call or come by
the Campus Hideaway for details. 845-911-102.
10-27
Need 1 need, anywhere, to Iowa basketball game. Call 843-724-300. Keep 3:59. Leave 10-25
Novede two people to share a large home with
their beloved mother, Linda. Newly married,
Navajo girl, of sixteen years' blood of Leon-
dora Navajo, and of seven children of Mount
Navajo, she is the daughter of Leon-
da Navajo and of seven children of Mount
Navajo.
Roommate wanted to share two-bedroom duplex
with me. I love the room and easy-giving. Call me:
842-703-6977.
- Bud on Tap
Pool
Wanted: female roommate for spacious 2 bed-
room on UK kau route. Call evening alerts
for updates. Send needles to RU/KU football game. Call 641
2952 after 5 p.m. **10-2**
Phone 843-1211
KU Union Lobby
Position Opening Photo/Darkroom Instructor
Position Opening Photo/Darkroom Instructor
Touch hall residents basic and advanced tech-
niques, provide training in hardware and some evening applications at Hall.
Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action
Campus reaps wanted for HI-FI laptop. Make easy money, no investment need. Sell stereo equipment on your campus for one of the Midwest's 20 largest universities. Free free f-180-247-2480. Des Moines, Iowa
Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing
• Furniture • Antiques
• Imported Clothing
730 Moss 841-7070
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
HALF AS MUCH
---
HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service
SUA Maupintour travel service
Thanksgiving and Christmas travelers should reserve now for best choice of flight, train and hotel. May we also assist you in planning your trip? No extra charge for our services.
P
Make Reservations
+
NOW'S THE TIME FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY
No extra charge
Gift Wrapping Free
HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass.
12
Thursday, October 21, 1970
---
University Daily Kansan
English standards vary for TAs
By ROB EMBERS
Staff Writer
Staff Writer
There is still no standardized procedure for determining the English speaking proficiency of teaching assistants, despite a report by the Student Senate Commission on the Quality of Classroom Teaching last year that recommended such a procedure.
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said yesterday that the hiring of teaching assistants was still a departmental decision.
THE RECOMMENDATIONS of the commission were outlined in section 12 of the report released last October and were the result of complaints raised by students who said they couldn't understand some teachers with foreign accents.
"When departments recommend employment of instructors, the presumption is they have sufficient ability to speak English to teach a class." he said.
Mike Malone, assistant Douglas County attorney and candidate for county attorney, supported the decriminalization of marijuana last night at a meeting of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML).
Michael Henderson, director of the KU Applied English Center, said that because most teaching assistants entered the University of Kansas as students, they were indirectly tested for English proficiency. He said all KU students who had come from a
Malone told the audience of about 25 people that he didn't condone the use or legalization of marijuana, but that he had agreed to government priorities needed to be changed.
Asst. attorney wants reduction of drug penalty
"It makes good law-enforcement sense to be in favor of decriminalization," he said.
"It frees us of a lot of time in court," he said.
Malone said decriminalization would give law enforcement officers more time to solve crimes.
The county attorney's office policy of deferred prosecution is a step in putting law enforcement in its proper perspective, Malone said.
Deferred prosecution is used for first-time offenders when there is no evidence of criminal intent, he said. If the defendant obwls all Kansas laws for six months and has been convicted four times drug program, he is able to escape a fine, jail sentence and record.
non-English speaking country had probably taken either a Test of English as a Foreign Language exam (TOEFL) or some other exam administered by the Applied English
THE TOEFL EXAM is usually taken by foreign students before coming to KU, he said, and if a student's score is 50 or more out of 700, he isn't required to take any additional examinations in English proficiency.
Beard said new faculty were required to lecture on a topic of their interest with faculty and students being able to ask questions during the lecture.
He said he didn't think faculty were trained for examination to prove English proficiency.
In a recent resolution, the Kansas State University Student Senate recommended that the English skills of foreign teaching assistants be evaluated by using the TOEFL exam. The resolution called for a minimum score of 600 on the TOEFL exam.
"We've obviously discussed with deans and department chairpersons that they need to be very careful with their hiring of teaching assistants and professors to make sure they are able to effectively communicate," he said.
David Beard, chairman of the physics and astronomy department, said that, unlike most departments, teaching assistants in physics and astronomy were required to take the TOEFL exam, but faculty weren't required to take the exam. He said that both new faculty and teaching assistants were required to take the faculty extensively before being hired.
Dean Gregory, assistant director of the Applied English Center, said he thought requiring teaching assistants to take the TOEFL exam might not solve the problem at K-State because the TOEFL exam didn't measure how well a person could speak. But he might have an accent that would make it difficult for students to understand.
He said there were some faculty who had difficulty with their classroom presentation, but they were motivated to improve it. His students' promotion and salary increase possibilities.
CALGARE SAID that an accent wouldn't necessarily affect the ability of a teaching assistant to teach a class, and that admission should be left to the departments.
TEACHING ASSISTANTS who come from non-English speaking countries are required to score fairly high on the TOEFL exam, he said. If they score高, then the teaching assistant will also take a 15- or 28-question examination by the department, he said.
physics and astronomy department. Stan Rolfe, chairman of the civil engineering department, said new faculty were interviewed by faculty and students and must also lecture and answer questions on various topics before they would be hired.
THE CIVIL engineering department has a selection process similar to that of the
'We ask some pointed questions so we can see how he responds.' he said.
There are no teaching assistants in the civil engineering department.
George Worth, chairman of the English department, said that as a matter of policy his department didn't employ teaching assistants from non-English speaking countries unless they had resided in this country for at least one year.
THE APPLICANT must also have good English speaking skills, he said. As a result, the English department has few teaching courses in non-English speaking countries, he said.
John Tollefson, dean of the School of Business, said the primary bases for selecting new faculty and teaching assistants were interviews and workshops. The assistant would probably indicate whether he could effectively communicate to students.
Chandra Chaterji, assistant instructor in the School of Business and a native of India, said he had spoken English for many years and then the upper five per cent on the TOEFL exam.
He said he thought, because of occasional blank stares and questions to repeat certain things, that some students had difficulty understanding his accent.
We Write All Risks Automobile Insurance
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
Sandy's
Special 99c
• Fish Sandwich
• French Fries
• Medium Soft Drink
Sunday's
Sandy's
Come on you are
Tourney
BURGER
Special good-Thurs., Oct. 21-Fri., Oct. 22-Sat., Oct. 23-Sun., Oct. 24
Stitch On needlepoint shop Super pre-Christmas offer
Would you like to make some of your gifts this year Let me help you put your own personal touch In Christmas . . .
or perhaps you need help on already started projects or some creative suggestions.
2
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
Four Week Workshop Tuesday evenings 7-8:30
Thurs. 10-8
of Weaver's
19 W. 9th
1/2 block west
842-1101
Oct.26
Nov. 2,9,16
$5.00 for all sessions For those enrolled in workshop . . .
Nov. 2, 9, 10 Let me help you put your own personal touch in Christmas
Barb Heck
10%
discount on all Christmas Items
OVERALL FOLLOWS
DOPES DOULIES
FRI. & SAT. at 8pm. OCT. 17, 2023
MAY 4, 2023
SUA
BATIK WORKSHOP!!!
6 wks. Oct. 25 - Dec. 1/25
PADAIFJO 615% Mass.
841-7429 or 842-8486
Prace an ad
Call 864-4358
Indoor Recreation Mixed Doubles Racquetball Tournament
Soccer
Oct.23 and 24 Robinson Gym Deadline for signing up is Oct.21 in the Intramural Office Room 208 Robinson Gym —Double Elimination —Open to all K.U. students, faculty and staff
TACO BELL
Sun.-Thurs. 10:30—11:00 p.m.
Fri.-Sat. 10:30—12:00 p.m.
★ Quality Mexican Food
★
Serving KU and Lawrence
Fast Friendly Service
★
★ Close to Campus
Moon
moonlight sale Thurs., Oct. 21st Door open 4 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Sweaters 6.99-9.99 Reg. values to 15.00 Just right for now
Cowl Necks
5.99
Stripes & solids
Reg. to 13.00
Shirts
7.99
Reg. to 14.00
Best value this fall
Pants 9,99 to 13,99 Poly gabs & wool blends Lots of colors and styles
Turtle Necks
5.99
Solids & stripes
Reg. values 10.00
Dresses
9.99-19.99
Reg. to 40.00
Shoes 99c to 18.99 Values to 35.00 Step into comfort
$1 Goodies!
10% off on all regular priced merchandise
CAROUSEL CHARGE
carOusel
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 23rd & Louisiana
FER
A.J. Kramer
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Local sculptor
um ratti works on finishing his latest creation, titled 'Brother can you spare a dimmie?' that creates his works of art at home in the evenings and is sold worldwide.
Shoe fixit man has sculpturing in soul
By CAROL LUMAN
Staff Writer
By day a shoe repairman and by night a soliton.
Jim Patti works with his hands in both professions, but when repairing shoes he's making money for his first love—sculuturing.
He and his brother, Charles, are partners in Patti Shoe Service, 1017 Massachusetts St.
out, after his eight-hour day there. Patti goes home, where he spending four to six hours more in his garage workshop.
Although he has been sculpturing only about four and a half or five years, its evident from a tour of his honeymoon that he had a great deal of time to his artistic talents.
PATTI WORKS more in bronze, clay and synthetic metal, but that's only because he "hasn't got around to other materials vet."
"Every material is a whole new ball of wax." Patti said recently. But somebody I would like to work with her would be able and other kinds of stone carving."
Patti's eagerness to try different artistic mediums and types of sculpture is part of his talent, or so the late Bernard "Pooz" Frazier, professor of painting and sculpture, and KU sculpture in residence, often told him. Frazier and Patti met when Patti's wife, Celia, asked the KU sculptor to
FROM THAT INITIAL contact, a warm friendship developed, the memory of which Pati treasures.
"He was a very great teacher as well as a sculptor." Patti remembers, "We became very good friends and he was very helpful when I had a problem with my work.
The friendship worked both ways. Sometimes Frazier would come to Patti if he had problems with a piece of sculpture.
bernard gave me all guidance, inspiration and knowledge of what I know about sculpture," Patti said.
Even now, when he runs into a dead end, Patti sometimes thinks about what advice his friend would have offered and often can find the solution.
"WHEN I THINK about it," Patti said, "I can often think of what Bernard have said. This is a great help."
Several of Patti's larger works are well known to many Lawrence residents.
A staute of young Langston Hughes, a famous Lawrence poet, is on display at the Elizabeth M. Wattins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St.
The lifesize statue, which weighs nearly 400 pounds, was commissioned by the Langston Hughes Memorial Committee. Patti spent almost a year working on the bronze statue. He completed it in December 1974.
A PROJECT ON which Patti collaborated with his neighbor Bob Rose also has netted Patti some local fame.
The project was the Douglas County
Bicentennial Bell. The bell, which
weights over 300 pounds, is also on
display at Watkins Museum.
Patti chuckles when he talks about the bell and says luck was on their side when he and Rose took on the project.
Neither had ever made a bell before, but the final project, which soon will be on display in the new Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, has perfect tone.
IF THE DIMENSIONS of the bell had been off only a fraction of an inch, it would have "sounded like the devil," a bellmaker once told Tatti.
Another of Patti's works is a memorial plaque dedicated to a Lawrence resident, Bee Leumerman. The plaque was written by her and was a paraplegic, riding in his specially-designed cart. The plaque is inscribed with the words "Remember me—I'm that little man gone blind. I was to sell pens on the street cor
Patti traced those words from letters written by Beuerman.
See SHOE page five
Friday, October 22, 1976
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.87 No.44
ACLU questions pamphlet policy
By JIM COBB
Staff Writer
A Kansas Board of Regents policy that bans on-campus distribution of political information in some instances will be tested in the ACLU's case. Liberties against the ACLU) its war.
Jim Lawning, an ACLU attorney from Wichita, said yesterday that he considered both the Regents' policy, and a University law interpretation of it, clearly unconstitutional.
In an Oct. 4 letter to Chancellor Archie Dykes, Lawing said that he thought the policy needed amending, because "pamphleteering on public property is an abomination." He also allowed Dykes a reasonable amount of time to rescind "obvious portions" of the policy.
IF THE POLICY isn't changed, he said, ACU members "and other people" will pass out political pamphlets at a public event in violation of the policy. He said the policeman would also provide the ACU with a court case that could test the police's constitutionality.
Lawing mentioned the KU- Iowa State football game Nov. 6 as a possible time when pamphlets might be distributed in Memorial Stadium.
The policy was approved by the Regents' Council of Presidents and the Regents in 1970. Part of the policy included in a report on the process for service chancellors of the Lawrence and Med
Center campuses, says: "Distribution of political hand bills and other advertising is banned from areas where public events are held on campus."
MIKE DAVIS, University general counsel, said that the policy was very broad and that, if literally interpreted, would require the use of pamphlets anywhere on campus.
obligation to enforce it. I don't see it as a very onerous restriction." he said.
The University Events Committee recently asked Davis' office for a new interpretation of the policy. Vickie Thomas, administrative assistant to Davis, said the new interpretation clarified one issued by the University Counsel Charles Oldfather.
OLDFATHER'S INTERPRETATION was that political handbills couldn't be distributed inside a room where a meeting was taking place.
Davis said that his office had always interpreted the question to make it as interactive a posist.
'It is a Regents regulation. We have some
The latest interpretation bans distribution "up and down the aisles of various auditoriums and meeting rooms." It would allow distribution "in areas of general interest," and it might pass on the way to an event. This would include lobbies, for example."
The interpretation further states that people handing out pamphlets can't impede the passage of other people at an event by providing them with such a wav as to cause a line to form."
See ACLU page five
More frats fail fire code
By DARYL COOK
Staff Writer
The fraternities had been inspected earlier this month, but reports weren't released until they had been revised by the fire marshal's office.
The Kansas State Fire Marshal's office yesterday released reports of its inspections of seven University of Kansas fraternities and, as had been the case with other KU fraternities and sororites, none was in full compliance with the state fire code.
Alpha Phi Alpha, 104 Mississippi St., is the only remaining KU fraternity to be
inspected. Members are remodeling the house, according to the reports.
Four fraternities-Alpha Tau Omega, 1537 Tennessee St., Delta Upsilon, 1025 Emery St., Delta Chi, 1245 W. Campus, and Acacia, 1100 Indiana St.-didn't have fire alarm systems that met the approval of the fire marshal's office.
THE FRATERNITIES must have their plans to update alarm systems and install approved smoke detection systems at the fire marshal's office within 30 days after the inspection, Paul Markley, state fire protection technical adviser, said.
Omega, said that his house already had a smoke detection system, but that it wasn't wired into the fire alarm system as required by the state fire code.
Green said that Greek Management, Inc., a fraternity food service cooperative, which is expanding to include other services for its members, has set up a stallion of fire alarm and smoke detection systems for several houses, and that the installations would begin as soon as a building is closed.
Publicity jeopardizes football game in KC
Lee Green, president of Alpha Tau
NOW THAT inspections of KU fraternities and sororites have been completed,
See FIRE page five
Staff Writer
By STEVE LEBEN Staff Writer
A possible move of the annual University of Kansas—University of Missouri football game to Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., has been jeopardized by a pledge, say two officials who have been involved in preliminary discussions about the idea.
Rov attacks GOP stands
The two officials, J Hammond McNish, a member of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board (KUAC), and Mel Sheehan, athletic director at Missouri, both have been appointed to the position because a completed proposal for the move hadn't been made.
SHEEHAN, TOO, said the discussions were supposed to have been confidential and that he hadn't yet begun discussion with him. MU officials would need to be involved.
McNish said the discussion within the KUAC Board was supposed to have been kept confidential by the board members to discuss between KU and MU officials.
THE STUDENT SENATE passed a resolution Wednesday stating its opposition to such a proposal. The resolution said the university should offer parking and parking, a decrease in visits to the campus by alumni and potential students, and deterimental effects to "the spirit of the University's amateur, collegiate athletic teams" were reasons behind the resolution.
"I think our people at those levels where
HE SAID HE thought the publicity had seriously jeopardized the proposal because it would hamper discussions with MU officials and cause a "premature making up of minds" before the possible advantages were fully presented.
"It was an attempt to do something very positive, but I don't think there any real sense in arguing for it now because it looks like it'll be killed," Mneh said. "It is my belief that they should have Texas game. I definitely feel it shouldn't have been made public yet."
Emotional issues such as abortion, amnesy, gun control and busing are growing daily and are cartoonfacing the more imminent loss of unemployment and infation. he said.
"I think the major issues in this campaign are jobs and a stable dollar," he said. "Jobs are closely associated with inflation. We are doing that," he said. "We can't we can don't do anything about inflation."
The presidential campaign has reached a critical stage where emotional issues are superseding more important issues. Bill Clinton, the president, a congressman from Kansas, said last night.
Staff Writer
By BETH SPRINGGATE
ROY SAID the Democratic presidents of
the 1980s seemed to have little trouble in
defeating the Republican candidates.
"The record is when Kennedy and Johnson were presidents of the United States, the unemployment rate was 2.2 per cent on the average," he said.
Roy was the unsuccessful challenger of Bob Dale, now Republican vice presidential nominee.
ROY WARNED about 80 people at the speech in the Kansas Union Ballroom to be skeptical of Ford supporters because many are outfanned in conformed to Ford's stands on the issues.
He said one solution to inflation was to cut unemployment compensation and welfare
Since then, he said, the average unemployment rate has been 6.8 per cent.
"If we're to have a stable dollar in this country, we've got to people in this country off the government payroll, off unemployment compensation, off welfare.
We can have a stable dollar and we can have jobs." he said.
Related story page two
He said he wanted to correct those people who might have been misinformed by disclosing the Republicans' real purpose in supporting certain issues.
He said, "I think Republicans care about abortion because it gets votes."
As a physician, he said, he has witnessed the death of an 18-year-old girl who had
been "butchered" during an illegal abortion.
they should be involved still should be contacted, but I think this will jeopardize it." he said. "I'll have some negative effect because it takes it out of the context of my life." The judge already made up our minds because it's public, but that's certainly not true here."
THE SENATE RESOLUTION was passed by the Senate on Thursday, Board—Jill Grubaugh, Senate Sports Committee chairman, and Tedda Tasheff, student body president—and by Steve Browne.
Grubbaud said the three cosponsors had decided that the matter needed to be made public before they decided to write the resolution.
IF FORD REMAINS in office, Roy said,
"The most liberal abortion in the country was"
"when Dr. Browder served."
"I felt the first time the public would've known about it would've been the announcement that the game would be held in Kansas City," she said.
GRUBAUG SAID Clyde Walker, KU
atlantic direction ,had bad the KIAC
He questioned Ford's stand on amnesty, noting his pardon of former President Richard Nixon. He said it was a contradiction that Ford would pardon Nixon for making a mistake but wouldn't pardon young men for also making a mistake.
He said the government lacked money for health and education aid because it spent excessive amounts in other areas. The swine flu vaccine looks good for the Ford administration, he said, but in reality it is at the expense of other health care needs.
See GAME page nine
The fraternity members, guided by ropes, slid down the hill and used five gallons of water to wet the middle and middle parts of the S. After the brush was cleared on the sides of the S, five gallons of white paint was sprayed on the ground to join the two sides of the S to the top.
Roy then criticized Dole, whom he called "Soiro Amnew Jr."
The entire operation took 25 minutes. The fraternity members asked not to be identified.
A third car, carrying the fire extinguishers loaded with paint, drove to the top of the hill after the security men save the all clear signal.
HE SAID, "I have not seen any evidence of distinction in Bob Dole. He hasn't accomplished anything. He's a remarkable man. He campaigned the way I expected him to campaign. He said things that were funny."
The first car arrived in Manhattan and went directly to the top of the hill. Two men stood on the steps away from the sides of the S and a third manned one of the walkie talks.
Two members equipped with the other two walkie talkies were stationed on each side of the drive leading to the top of the hill. The driver might try to stop the project. The driver of the second car patrolled the roads near the hill and kept in contact with the rest of the team.
the fraternity members, armed with
four fire extinguishers filled with paint,
three waltke tikes, three rakes and 200
sheets of paper towel, laid out and arrived here at 1:45 am. today.
It was the first time since 1972 that the annual KIL-KState football game, the annual KIL-KState football game
A second car followed close behind.
By CARL YOUNG Contributing Writer
Jayhawk raiders turn KSU's symbol into 'KU'
MANHATTAN—Twelve members of a University of Kansas fraternity slipped into the home of the Kansas State University Wildcats here early this morning and changed a 100-foot high fence to overlooking Manhattan into a huge "KU."
wiegandberg
Roureetings
Bill Roe former congressman from Kansas, with members of the audience after his speech last night in the Kansas Union.
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Democratic presidential nominee, and Carter's running mate,
was the most critical of Boe Dole. Republican
w-presidential nominee
University Daily Kansas
News Digest From the Associated Press
Retail prices rise again
WASHINGTON — Inflation eased slightly in September, but the average wage formerly to lose ground as purchasing power declined for the second quarter.
Yesterday's reports by the Labor Department were the final major economic statistics to be released before the Nov. 2 presidential election.
Grocery prices declined. 1 per cent, the first drop since March. Nonfood component of grocery spending fell by 3.5 per cent, cost of services increased. The rate slightly smaller during the summer months.
Another report, on purchasing power, was less favorable. It showed the buying power of the average workers' paycheck declined .5 percent.
Retail prices rose .4 per cent last month, compared with increases of .5 in each of the preceding three months.
In September, price increases were generally smaller across the board than in recent months.
Hua's position confirmed
TOKYO—Pekin's official radio confirmed today that Hua Kuo-feng is the new minister committee chairman, replacing the Mao Tse-tse. It also said Pekin will accept the role of the chief executive.
The confirmation was made by the official Hainhua news agency in a Chinese-language broadcast monitored in Tokyo.
Haitian said the party central committee headed by Hua "adopted resolute and mobilized the counter-revolutionary conspiratorial clique and liquidated the base inside the party."
There was no indication of what exactly had happened to Mao's widow and the other three leftist leaders.
The agency referred to Hua as party chairman for the first time in a broadcast that also reported demonstrations by one and a half million people in the Chinese countryside.
Trial reset in Bolles case
PHOENIX, Ariz.—A mistrial was declared yesterday in the trial of John Harvey Adamson, charged with murdering reporter Don Bolles, after both sides blamed the county attorney for ruining the chances of a fair trial with prejudicial publicity. Shortly after the mistrial was announced, Ariz. Gov. Raul Castro placed the case
Superior Court Judge Frederic Heineman, said publicity surrounding Bolles' laying had made it difficult to find an impartial jury. He said he didn't hold Mollison liable.
He said Adamson's trial would be rescheduled before Dec. 20. He refused a defense motion to move the trial to another county.
Adamson, a 32-year-old dog breeder, is charged with the bombing of Bolles, 47, the Arizona Republic's top investigator.
Ferry crash unexplained
LULING, LA - Misunderstanding, poor communication or equipment failure could have led to the grinding crash of a tanker and a Mississippi River ferry that may have killed up to 75 early Wednesday morning commuters, a Coast Guard official said yesterday.
Most of the victims were still hidden in the river's muddy waters as 10 Coast Guard investigators surveyed the scene. They want to know why the Norwegian man hid them.
Nobody knows for sure how many were aboard the 128-foot ferry when itCAPSED. State police said 22 bodies were recovered and a list of 53 missing was compiled from family inquiries, unclaimed cars in parking lots and personal effects found in the debris.
Truce has some success
BEIHUT—War-battled nation yesterday settled into its 57th ceasefire attempt in 18 months, successfully in some places but with skilful results in others.
Hospitals and militia officers reported seven killed and eight wounded after the 11 p.m. CDT Wednesday cease-fire. Between six and 12 others were reported killed by a roadside bomb near Hoboken.
The low toll provided the best measure for the relative success of the truce despite the continued spurred shelling along the rubble-strewn front line that cuts across the city.
Roy advises Carter
By JERRY SEIB
It's no secret that one of Jimmy Carter's strongest supporters in Kansas is Bill Roy. His wife, Gloria, was a supporter.
What isn't so well known is that Roy also has been a frequent adviser to the national government.
"I've provided some advice in the area of health care policies," Roy said in an interview before his speech at the Kansas Union last night. "I don't think I'm in a position to know how much of that advice has been accepted and how much hasn't been accepted."
Most of Roy's advice has been given through correspondence from Topeka. He has traveled to Plains, Ga., Carter's camp, and Montana's campaign, but Roy terred that a "social visit."
One of the primary areas on which Carter has consulted Roy is a national health program. Roy said that, although Carter was not fully realized the problems of such a program.
"I would think this would be something we'd have to wait on," Roy said. "He's said nationally that we'd have to wait until we could afford it.
"It's my best judgment that it would be '81 or 82 until we could implement it. The legislation for the insurance, of course, could be implemented before then."
ROY HAS voluntarily crisscrossed the
state speaking on behalf of Carter. And Roy said his talks with Carter sometimes involve a lot of arguing.
Carter's chances aren't great, Roy admits.
Roy has made one out-of-state speech for the Carter campaign—at a medical meeting in Dallas. He has made his own business trips to many Midwestern states during the campaign, however, and he said Carter's chances were good in most of those states:
"He's certainly got some chance in the state," Roy said. "Certainly he couldn't be confused."
"We've discussed Kannas in a sentence or two," he said. "You know, how things in Kenya are."
"First of all, I don't think Mr. Carter is making any Cabinette selections before the election," he said. "The list of candidates in office is long enough, I'm sure I'll be on it."
One topic of discussion in state political circles in past weeks has been the possibility that Roy might be named secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare if Carter is elected. It would be curious when discussing the possibility.
Jimmy Carter and President Gerald Ford poked fun at each other and at themselves as they spoke to the same group in New York, but they didn't hear each other's jokes.
AND WOULD Roy accept the job?
"I would go back to Washington. If I
thought I had a job I could I would
make some kind of money." And did
"Otherwise, I'd rather live in Kansas."
Ford spoke first at the annual Al Smith Dinner in New York City, and he left the flower-strew ballroom about 20 minutes before Carter arrived.
CARTER IS LEADING in Iowa, Missouri,
Oklahoma and Arkansas. Rahard S.
Hayes is a graduate of Indiana.
Candidates speak in N.Y.; 3rd debate at 8:30 tonight
AND WOULD Roy accept the job?
By The Associated Press
Both candidates flew to New York especially for the dinner. Ford returned immediately to Washington and Carter was heading for Williamsburg, Va., where the
third and final presidential debate is scheduled at 8:30 tonight.
Earlier in the day, Carter has complained that his mornals were impugned in adversity.
Ford courted senior citizens and East Europeans.
Both candidates made light speeches with political overtones in their appearances at the Al Smith Dinner, which honors the 1928 presidential nominee who lost to Herbert B. Hoover and won $100 each to attend the dinner; funds were ear-marked for Catholic charities.
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By Gay Services of Kansas Kansas Union Ballroom 8:00 p.m. $1.75
Saturday, Oct. 23rd
Special Notice . . .
Please do not bring alcoholic beverages to the dance. Beer will be sold with an I.D.
HALLOWEEN DISCO DANCE
Special Notice . . .
A MARY HARTMAN MARY HARTMAN look a like contest!!!
JIMMIE ROBINSON
No one who has a friend is ever alone.
No one who has a friend is ever alone.
You can share your love, your gifts, yourself with rural people and those in the South and North. You can be a Brother, Sister, sister again, you will receive again, and again, and again.
Write for free information—without obligation.
Glenmary Missioners, Room S-12
Box 46404, Cincinnati, OH 45246
Name Age
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APARTHEID
Monday, Oct. 25, 7:30 Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union, Level 5 Grave at Dimbazi"
Responses by:
Dorthy Pennington-Asst. Prof. African Studies & Speech Comm.
Joseph Goldman—Assi Studies
864-3761 KU-Y
Kansas Union Rm.110 Partially funded by Student Activity Fee
ROCK'S at its BEST:
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Elect the professional who vows to eliminate politics from law enforcement and whose goal is to provide the leadership necessary to bring our law enforcement agencies above reproach. These ideals are sincere promises and not just campaign rhetoric.
*Expertise Lawrence Police Dept. Douglas County Attorney's Office
- Education
K.U. with emphasis on criminology related courses
Training Kansas Law Enforcement Academy
Training
Kansas Law Enforcement Academy
Warrensburg State College
Institut & Seminars
emphasizing an active knowledge of criminal justice
*Veteran Combat service in the Republic of South Vietnam
ELECT James (Jim) Huskey SHERIFF—DOUGLAS CO.
Pd. Pol, Adv. from the Huskey for Sheriff Committee Fund. James Huskey, Treas.
Friday, October 22.1976
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KU considers enrollment studv
By DEB MILLER
Staff Writer
University officials are considering the formation of a group to discuss ways to stabilize KU's enrollment, Del Shankel, an adjunct counselor, told SenEx members yesterday.
Although KU's Lawrence campus enrollment increased by 831 this year, Shankel said, college enrollments nationwide dropped one to two per cent and are expected to decline steadily for the next few years.
A study of Big Eight schools indicated that the universities of Missouri, Nebraska, Colorado and Oklahoma had enrollment drops of 199 to 1.306 students.
Shankel said that competition for students
would become intense if enrollment continued to decline.
"IT IS VERY important for us to do all the things we can legitimately do to make sure that enrollment at KU doesn't suffer," he said.
Chancellor Archie Dykes met with Shankel Wednesday to discuss the possibility of forming a small group of administrators, faculty members and consider the actions that KU could take to offset an enrollment decline, Shankel said.
Both Shankle and Dykes were out of town and unavailable for treatment immediately.
Shankel said that KU had often been the first to use promotional ideas, such as
student handbook with color pictures, to attract prospective students. He also said that KU had high school visitation and college college nights to attract students.
THE CHRONICLE OF Higher Education said recently that the number of military veterans attending universities across the country declined this year by 375,000. The magazine also said that in the next four weeks the decline was expected to reach 500,000.
The number of veterans at KU decreased by about 20 percent year, Shankel said. He expects that the program will use the veterans' program than are using it this year, the Chronicle reported.
was a partial compensation, but never a replacement, for an enrollment decrease.
Joel Gold, professor of English and presiding officer of the University Council and University Senate, suggested that Dykes and Shankel appear before the commission. The commission will involve more people, because an enrollment decline would affect the entire University.
Shankel said that off-campus enrollment
134 Assembly student reps elected
Although the election was Oct. 78,
complete results weren't known until
yesterday because of a large number of
write-in votes.
A total of 134 students were selected as representatives to the College Assembly in this year.
All those selected by write-in votes had to be contacted to see whether they wished to serve on the Assembly. The process of contacting each student was a lengthy one and wasn't completed until yesterday, Eleanor Turk, assistant to the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said yesterday.
seats were filled. There were 29 graduate
seats available, but no seats written in
great detail. Turku was a turk.
All 29 undergraduate Assembly seats were filled for each class, and 18 graduate
The students elected to serve on the College Assembly were:
Graduate students from the category of math natural sciences will be offered a variety of courses. Hamilton Steven Hamilton Sieben Kimble Sand Petty Hampton Steven Hampton Sieben Kimble Sand Petty social behavior studies. Dennis Ehring and Lynn Hoeffler Mathematics and Statistics Katherine Theresa Caters Rag Wheeler, Jovian Van Zandt, Karen Zweedt Theoretical Enquiry
**SEMIBEK:** Craig Adair, Tom Armour, Rik Baldick Harper, Danny Williams, R. Dodd This Downing, Greg Marker, David William
JIMIORS: Richard Jeffery Ayesh, Carl Beder, Audrey Jackson, Robert DeKalb, Robert S. Dukes, Edmond Kramer, Earl G. Garner, Mike Hewson, Manuel Lafontaine, Jerry O'Neill, Joe Larson, Lawrence, Jo R. Hearlman,贝里·C. Heyman,洪孝民,Mary C. Hosnell, Peter I. Nielsen, Sandy Dowkey, Brian Shaw, R. Siddilier, Kevin R. Smith
**NOPROHOMES** Joyce Bursey, Tom Ryaners, William Schreiber, Dennis M. Kroger, Jeffrey C. Duff, Jefford Eckel, John M. Kevin, Steven A. Kewhert, Duff Dart, Mike Bauer, Tim Higgins, Harold J. Harkey, Sam Hawley, Tyler Tighe, Thomas G. Knight, Robert A. Mulligan, Robert F. Ringer, Roger Riddick, Diane Scheuhsch, Brian F. King, Michael R. Nagel.
**FRESHMEN:** Mark Brentus, Jade Chapelle), Mark Koehler, Kelsey Sturm, Jeffrey Foster), Dejan Dogan Day (Javier Daei; Javier Gerrard); Geneva Littleton (Mary McLennan); Leigh Limbaugh; Leah Limbaugh; Rikh Lindley; Marcia Larke; Nystrom Neumann; Rob Patterson; Laura Stewart; M. Robinson; Jodi Seibshoe; Larry Smith; Stephen Stewart; Drew Coburn; Kyle Roberts.
GOLD ALSO ASKED that Shankel attend the Dec. 2 University Senate meeting, during which the financial exigency plan will be discussed, and the plan outlines the procedures to be used at KU to dismiss tenured faculty members in the absence of a vacancy, and resulting decrease in State funding.
Vote for McCarthy might aid liberals
A vote for Eugene McCarthy is a vote for a stronger liberal movement, Hal Wert, state coordinator of the McCarthy for President campaign, said yesterday.
Wert concedes that McCarthy won't win in the primary but that voting for him would have positive effects.
If McCarthy gets five percent of the vote on election day, the liberal movement will get $4 million in federal funds for the 1980 campaign. Wert said.
"We want to build a new movement and then capture the presidency," Wert said. Wert said there was no chance that McCain would "remarry" the Democratic party.
"We want to force the other two parties to us seriously." Wert said.
He said the best thing that could happen Nov. 2 is a snow storm,
---
"If we had a snow storm McCarthy would do better because the McCarthy supporters would be the ones at the polls. It would be too much of an obligation of God into the campaign," he said.
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Despite the expected nationwide decrease
of KU's enrollment, he is optimistic
about KU's enrollment.
Part of KU's enrollment is from professional schools, he said, and they often have to turn down people for admission. For example, this year the School of Law had 800 applicants for about 140 positions, he said.
Also, KU is in the middle of an area with good population growth, Shankel said. Many people move to Johnson County from New York to move, and then commute to work, he said.
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Botany 500 first name to look for in a suit.
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University Daily Kansan
Arts & Leisure
AFTER A FURRY EXTENSION
Bob Clark and his 350-pound pet snake, Sadie
Unusual campus pets include python, piranha
By RICK THAEMERT
Sadie, a somewhat unusual pet, didn't get to come to the University of Kansas in her master's car like other pets, because it takes six people to carry her.
Sadie is a Burmese python, 10 pounds, senior, and she weighs 390 pounds and measures 18 feet. "It's the biggest one on my back," Sadie said.
Pets like Sadie, although not as large, are common to students studying for animal friends besides dogs and cats, but pets like Sadie, although not as large, are common to students studying for animal friends besides dogs and cats, but pets are as vested as the animals themselves.
"I breed pythons and sell them to people like myself," I said. "I have more than 100 eggs which, at 50 a baby, he has had no problem."
CLARK SAID he is interested in reptiles because they make a fascinating hobby and are money makers.
Because Clark can get inexpensive sterile chickens and rabbits from farmers, he has a device he'd haven't been too calm.
THE ONLY problem Clark has with his pets is finding places where they can stay, he said.
He had tried to save Sadie at his apartment because he thought puzzles weren't included in the apartment's pet kit, which mainly covers damage done by dogs and cats.
Clark said that 11-year-old Sadie doesn't move much except when she eats, and that game, is not too affectionate.
White said Fisher found Rufus, a 5-foot black rat snake, on K10 highway.
But Clark was mistaken,
and must keep Sade in the basement of a friend's
room. The other reptiles back home.
Other snake-loving
students, like Frank Fisher,
and Dan Wain, both Overland
and chosen, have chosen smaller snakes.
"It had been run over, so Frank brought it back and we nursed it back to health," White said.
FISHER IS interested in pediatology, the study of young children. Ruf just because he enjoys having an easy-goin gipe toy.
"It culls all over you and wraps around your neck," he said, with his hands irritated when people want to play with him when he wants
for about two years, said:
"People always want to see it kill something. It's a good conversation piece."
Stingley said the six-inch piranha, Buddy, eats about two minnows a day, which cet about 50 cents a dozen.
For the two University of Kansas students performing with the Kansas City Lyric Opera, it is well worth driving them to the auditorium where Lawrence nearly every day. Long rehearsals, sometimes bad props, nonexistent social lives, strained academic lives and the possibility of being interrupted for the professional experience.
"She's hyper, and I tend to be hyper, too," she said. "And she's really mean because I tease her a lot."
Cleaning up after pets is a problem for Leslie Weinrich, Shawnee Mission senior, who came a nominee named Babe
UNUSUAL PETS aren't often found in Lawrence pet stores, so they must be bought from people like Clark.
"I've had to drop five hours, some of them my graduate courses. It's a big sacrifice but the rewards are great. It is so much fun to put a price tag on experience," he said.
GILNSKY, a baritone who will be singing in the "Barber's" chorus, said that performing with a professional opera company such as the Lyric could be the best thing that could happen to a voice student.
Sacrifices made for opera
Bill Gilmick, Omaha graduate student, and Carl Packard, Lawrence graduate student, will be performing in Rosin's "The Barber of Seville" here Monday through Friday at the Lyric's other operas during the five week season in Kansas City.
By LIZ LEECH Assistant Entertainment Editor
"This is the loudest business in Kansas," he said. "I just don't think Lawrence is as far as pet animals are concerned."
Weinrich said pets assume the personalities and attitudes of their owners.
Bill Brinkerhoff, owner of Petstep, said he didn't carry unusual pets because they were hard to sell.
He said that professional standards were higher than those in college.
But somehow, students find the pets they want, and when they do, companionship and loyalty frequently develops.
"A week to two weeks before the season starts is when we start rehearsing, and by the first rehearsal you have to
THE MUSIC is given to the singers the previous spring, Gillisky said, so they can memorize their parts during the summer.
"If you don't have it memorized they get pretty upset, but everyone is responsible enough to learn their parts," he said.
have everything memorized," Gilinsky said.
In addition to night rehearsals or performances in the Lyric, Gilmick is a graduate assistant and gives private vocal lessons to 16 students, as well as taking part in choir concerts for area churches every weekend too, and recently has been learning his part for the KU Opera Workshop's production of *Cinderella*. He was been in several KU musicals and opera
"The only time I actually became nervous was this season when a woman had to jump into my arms and I had to carry her around the stage and then up to the door where she could do it because she was 5'-9" and we have a very heavy cane," Gilsink said.
HE SAID that opera was about 50 per cent singing ability and 50 per cent acting ability, and that opera singers had to be singing actors rather than acting singers.
Gilkinson has performed professionally since 1970, when he performed in Omaha. As a result of his varied experiences, he no longer has stare freak.
During one performance, Gilinsky
GILNSKY has performed two roles in Lyric performances, as well as serving in the chorus, and has had some interesting experiences.
He said that food sometimes presented problems on stage, such as actors throwing fruit peels on the floor.
said, he came close to dropping her as he began to climb the stairs and his feet became entangled in the actress' case.
And in the Lyric's performance of "La Traviata," Ginsky has to eat chicken as part of a scene. He said that sometimes it is difficult on the floor, or was several days old.
Gilrish said his social life suffered during the opera season. He cleans his apartment and does laundry during his birthday, "My biggest enjoyment is sleeping."
PACKARD, a bartonne who plays a servant in "Barber," is the first person on stage in the opera. He served in the play of the other lyrical opera this season.
He said he liked the fast-paced, professional opera more than the college productions he's been in.
"Since I do plan on trying to make a career in opera, it's a marvelous opportunity to work with professionals," Packard said.
He said he liked to talk with his cisengers, people he used to watch from his seat in the audience, not only about opera but also about life in general.
Packard has performed in several KU productions—musicals and operas—and also in the 1974 Tanglewood Music Festival.
Packard agreed with Gilinsky on some of the problems with food on stage but said that an experience he had had was good.
IT IS Difficult to balance school with his professional work, he said, because he is enrolled in six hours of courses. Packard also works as an announcer at KANU and is a soloist at Atopica church.
"I do get nerves of some kind before I go on stage, but it's the positive kind, adrenaline," he said.
Packard said he didn't have stage fright any more because he had been an actor since junior high school.
Real champagne was used one night during the performance of "The Ballad of Baby Dole" instead of the usual glass of Parkard said it didn't affect his vocals.
"BUT IT was quite a psychological lift and I rather enloved it," he said.
"it's easier to cover up mistakes with spoken lines than in opera, where you sing your part. The must keeps going loudly, the must waves his arms, the "Packard said."
Packard said he had never really bungled his lines, although he had dropped a few.
'Hester Street'delightful,moving
By CHUCK SACK
Reviewer
"A pox on Columbus," cries the heroine of "Hester Street," a newly immigrated Russian Jew. This comic but tender moment is characteristic of his work, and Silver's finely etched look at life on the Lower East Side of New York, circa 1896.
Gill (Carole Kane) has good reason to hate Columbus. Her husband has lived in America three years without her, and has worked with the students because it sounds like a Yankee name. When she arrives at Ellis Island with their son, she funds an endowment that she does not recognize him.
JAKE (STEVEN KEATS) is trying to eradicate all outward traces of his old country home. He has accepted as an American, and he
is proud of his $12-week job running a sewing machine in a sweat shop. He is not proud of Gtl, who clings to her customs and traditional values with the help of her husband, whose husband throws them away
The question of values is brought to a head when Gilt discovers that Jake has been pursuing not only the American dream, but also another woman. Mamie (Dorie Kavanaugh) doesn't know that Jake is married when she calls on him to inspect the furniture in her room and discovers that Jake intends to marry her, Mamie is stunned when Gilt answers the door.
GFTL IS innocently unaware of the two lovers discuss in English, but she is intrigued with Mamie's "liberated" dress. "I thought she was nobility," she tells the boarder,
Ms. Silver, working from a script she based on the novel *Hell by Abraham Cahan*, tells her that the author illuminate from the intangible pressures that work on her characters. Her comic touch is deft—and considering that this film—that ability is miraculous.
BUT "HESSTER STREET" as owed to much its excellent cast as to its director. All the actors convey the proper, the character, the despair that accompanies people in an alien environment.
imitated. When these attitudes collide with old world sensibilities in the same person, the resulting statements are touchingly funny. "You can't pee up my back and make me eat your food," says Jake. And Mamie tells him, "Don't like it. lump it."
THE ACTRESS who best illustrates these complex abilities is Carol Kane. Nominated for an award in the Award for Best performance in this movie, Kane appears birdlike as the vulnerable Gitt. Her sharp features and luminous eyes make her stand out. Giancarlo Giannini and Marty Feldman, but her subdued, confident acting style doesn't depend on physical over-confidence. The Gitt begins to make her way, Kane unfolds layer after layer
of her character's personality She is terrific.
SO "ISHER Street," which examines American values with the same expertise that Kane uses to lay bare her character. "We live in an educated society of people of saying, but the follies of immigrants are indicative of current American values."
The realignments between the lives of Jake, Mamie, Gitt and the scholarly Mr. Bernstein are wryly hilarious, and the black-and-white photography and the black-and-white attitude added to gentle style of comedy. But all too often the laughs are tempered by the character's insights, such as when Mr. Bernstein asked on the boat you should say: 'Goodbye, O Lord. I'm going to America.'"
By TIM BRADLEY
'Songs in the Key' lacks feeling
Stevie Wonder's long-awaited song, "Bands in The Key of Life," is finally available at your local diaryk. I don't like
It'd be so easy to cop a cicle or two about the album's Vesuvian bursts of incendiary fire. You can also don't need eyes 'cause he can write so good. And it is a fact that amid the skunk bait that passes for new releases, the album is quite the Pearl.
But hey, they're the deal. The record is a real yawner. It's a superly crafted excerpt in which he dazzles finesse, and Stevie's voice can't be faulted. They are fingerpoppers and thigh-thumpers with thick hands. Their craftsmanship rarely approaches the art that a $13-million contract with Motown would lead us to expect.
sentiments are felt on any more than an academic humanist level.
THE DOUBLE-PLUS album is too long, and it's a nuisance to get up to change the spindle for the small disk that's included. Throughout, Wonder wallows in a self-righteous morass of socio-political-cosmic musc about things as illogical as this (his soliloquy is move to Saturn), ghettoes and innocent children. The idea is very commendable, but there's no clue in the music that the
Steve is a magician in the studio, and all the music is ably produced and performed, but it's done so spassionately that before long we should be able to buy supermarkets. And there's something inherently wrong with using a string quartet
(synthesized) for a song about the getto. The letter with a less taste than I might say, "Small Wonder."
A LITTLE discretion and a careful pruning, could we make "Songs in The Key Of Life" a album of much more punch.
Try instead the new Tom Waits release on Asylum, called "Small Change." Here is
emotional veracity that goes straight for the giblets.
Waits' writing is the musical equivalent of Hunter Thompson's *jonzo* journalism, a sonic voice like the result of an odd experiment involving Osterizers and gravel. Once past the voice boundaries, he rewarded with excruciatingly vivid pictures of the deprived
and deprived life of a big-city down-and-out. The album may as well be a late bus passengers being given a dimly lit—but safe—look at the sad world of junkies, alkies, burglaris, ambulance drivers and all the other nighthawks, who also play this because it's just too over real, too good.
Paul Winter Consort fuses styles
Music reflecting Latin American folk music, modern jazz and even classical styles can be heard tomorrow night when the Paul Winter Consort plays in laux Auditorium.
Winter, who plays soprano and alto saxophone, has recorded everything from Bach to Joni Mitchell to Jerry Jeff Hare. He organized his first group while attending Northwestern University. The group, later called the Paul Winter Sextet, took top honors at a collegiate jazz festival in 1981. The secret then tore 25 countries in America and Latin America.
During the tour Winter was influenced by the folk music of
The consort played to 1,000 people last year in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Some of the original consort's members left and formed the group Oregon. Instruments played by the present consort, which has four members besides Jesse, include *Lute*, *organs*, *xylophone*, *bengos*, classical guitar and marimba (a type of xylophone from South Africa or Central America).
Published at the University of Karsa daily August 12, 2017 http://www.uakarsa.edu/about/college/education/junebook/ and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holidays. Subscriptions by mail are $3 a semester or $15 a year outside the county. County student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county.
Winter's first consort was formed in 1967, and it included a cello, a classical guitar, an alto flute, and English horn, a saxophone, a bass and percussion.
Debbie Gump
Managing Editor
Yael Aboulalkah
Business Manager
Terry Hamm
Editor
Latin America, while he continued to perform his own modern jazz.
By the mid-1960s, Winter had developed an idea for a consort, which he hoped would reflect the voices and idioms he had heard in the music of African and ethnic music of the countries he had toured. The term
consort was first used in 1580, when it was applied to a specific combination of instruments for a small ensemble.
This Week's
Highlights
Exhibits
"ST. PETERSBURG — PEТROGRAD — LENINGRAD"
a pictorial and book biography
displayed at Watson Library.
THE MAX KADE COLLEE
temporary oil paintings and prints by James Whistler and Anders Zorn is at the Kansas State University.
"PHOTOGRAPHS," a
series of three art and white photographs by four area photographers, is displayed at the 2E Gallery. It features
Theater
Nightclubs
A
"JACQUES BREL IS ALIVE AND WELL AND LIVING IN PARIS" is performed tonight and tomorrow night at 8 in the
"THE BARBER OF SEVILLE" is performed by the Kansas City Lyric Opera in B in the University Theatre.
"EVERYBODY IS
SOMEBODY, MORE!
DORIS Young,
is performed Thursday
night at 8 in the Inge Theatre.
SQUEAKY FEET plays danceable music tonight and tomorrow night from 9 to 12 in
the Nest, in the Kansas Union
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nighttime.
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FIRCO BARNE COMPANY, performs Wednesday company, performs Wednesday night at 8 in Hoch Audium. VICK I BIRKHARD performs a recital on the flute Wednesday at 8 in Rwatha Southeast Hall recital
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ACLU questions
BOTH THOMAS AND Davis said they didn't know what types of information would be considered "political." Davis said he would prefer to interpret whether information was political on a case-to-case basis.
--professor of social welfare and adviser to the Iranian Student Association.
Lawing said the political activity policy should be interpreted to be still less restrictive. Political activity shouldn't be restricted, but it would right, said, because of First Amendment rights.
"Dykes doesn't have to read the Regents' policy the way he's reading it," he said. Dykes has competent legal counsel. He's charged with stealing and defrauding or Davis isn't telling him what it is."
DYKES COULDN'T BE reached for comment.
Lawing cited a federal case, Wolin vs. New York Port Authority (1968), as precedent. A ruling in that case broadly rejected the principle of political information in a public place.
"It's not just arguing over the first amendment he said. There is a very serious issue."
The KU Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct states that students are guaranteed to all students," and another section states that "A student, group or organization may distribute materials on paper without prior approval."
QUESTIONS ABOUT the distribution of literature first were raised this year when Caryl Smith, acting dean of women and men at the University of Alabama, sent a letter to Norman Forer, associate
Smith's letter stated that the committee had received complaints from several students about harassment by Iranians distributing literature Aug. 31 near the Kansas Union. The letter also stated that the manner in which this event took place is unknown, and the circumstances of the University and administered by the University Events Committee.
"ANY EVENT MUST be scheduled and
approved at least by the Wednesday
deadline."
Forer responded with a letter to Smith that cited the University Code of guarantees of the organization, KU-Y, also requested a clarification of policies concerning pari-
Kathy Hoggard, director of the Information Center and a member of the Events Committee, said there had been a misunderstanding about why Smith had written the first letter. She said that any group, including the Iranian students, had any experience with the nature or petitions, but couldn't try to raise money without committee approval.
Smith said the letter was sent to Forder because it was reported that the Iranians also were soliciting contributions. She said permission had to be obtained from the Events Committee if an activity included such solicitation on campus.
THE INTERPRETATION of Regents policy was sought from Thomas, she said, because of confusion about how groups distribute information along sidewalks.
"Because of what's happened, some students think they don't have the right to hand out leaflets," Hoggard said. "They do have that right."
Forer said that the Iranian student group had been under frequent attack for distributing its leaflets because it was the only radical group on campus.
He said that harassment charges were made several times by students to the Events Committee, but that witnesses to such 'harassment' never came forward.
SMITH SAID SHE don't think it was the Committee to investigate such complaints.
The committee, Forer said, hadn't studied the Regents policy on political information until it was challenged about some of its actions this semester. Forer said the committee should not have to deal with the administration to deal with it.
Davis said he thought his office's interpretation of the policy was fair. A the stadium, he said, pamphleteers wouldn't be allowed to walk up and down nails in saffaids; but they could outside the stadium, on streets or along sidewalks.
HE SAID THAT if ACLU members attempted to distribute pamphlets inside the stadium, they might be asked to go elsewhere by KU Police.
Although admitting that KU has an obligation to enforce a Regents policy, both Davis and Oldfather said they had misnivisions about the policy.
"If I were to write a policy restricting
From page one
Shoe fixit man has . . .
The plaque recently was placed in the sidewalk at 8th and Massachusetts streets,
A SMALL STATUE of Beuerman in his
Fire...
From page one
with the exception of the Alpha Phi Alpha
majezure—intersections of apartment buildings in
the Bronx and Nassau counties.
But those inspections might be delayed as long as three months until three new fire marshal's office inspectors are trained, Markley said.
Stephenson Hall was the only scholarship hall included in the inspections by the state fire manshall's office. All scholarship and residence hills, along with other University buildings, were inspected last summer during an annual inspection.
These are the infractions found in the least round of inspections by the Kansas State Fire Marshal's office.
INSHA MPU. First station should be properly identified and
connected to the second station using a cable.
Insha MPU will be connected and interconnected into the fire
engine.
SIGMA CHI - Exit lights should be installed at cells on the front side of the cell. The spread of the fire for 25 to 30 seconds should be prevented by installing an air hose installed on every floor and a smoke detection system installed on every floor. A smoke detection system, self-learning devices should be installed on the front side of the cell.
KAPPA SIGMA- Ekit doors should be proper design and emergency lighting installed as well. The doors may also be made through a closed halfway. A smoke detection alarm system and fire extinguishers should be tested and inspected.
DELTA UPSLON-A approved fire escape should be installed on every room door added to it make an approved fire escape. An approved fire alarm system with manual and automatic alarm systems must be tested and maintained regularly. Emergency lighting must be tested and maintained regularly.
DELAY TECH - Approved fire escapes should be installed where flammable materials are located. The enclosure can be enclosed to make them into approved fire escapes. An emergency smoke detection system. Emergency lighting should be installed in all entrances, outside a twenty-minute doors should be installed in the outdoor. Twenty-minute doors should be installed in the outdoor.
ALPHA TAU AMGEPA-4 approved fire escape should be installed with a smoke detection system. Emergency lights will be occupied until adequate escape are installed. The standard standards and exit lights should be provided where needed.
ACACTA - Twenty-multiple doors should be installed on the ACCTA and in the furniture room, where security lights are installed. Identified and emergency lighting should be installed at the exit. An smoke detection system and clothes dryers should be installed.
cart is also on display at Watkins Museum,
and there is another, in Pearson College.
Students and faculty members of the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program took a special interest in Beaupren, and through their work the memorial plaque
A multitude of other statues by Patti adorns every book and cranny of his home.
Statues of every size in between are also on display in the artist's home.
A small bronze fisherman sits on the coffee table, and a large abstract statue holds an ice bucket.
The inspiration for his work comes from many sources, he said.
Sometimes his wife or daughter suggests a subject, as will friends, or sometimes Patti just sees something that he would like to do.
*LIKE TO DO everything from folky pieces to abstract, from large to small.* *Piece is often the answer.*
But all Patti's works are original,
obtained from her own imitation of a picture in a book.
HE SMILES BROADLY, surveying his workroom
Patti doesn't have an expensive studio in which to work–he finds that his garage is too small.
"You see, you've got to realize that not all sculptures are created in fancy studios," he wrote.
Space for his materials is shared with a
Old milk cartons are piled on top of a cabbage in which he stores some of his cabbage.
box of laundry detergent and the family washing machine and driver.
The mold of Langton Hughes stands off
to the right and to the left to make another
gap, before he destroys it.
Tenderly he removes one of his latest projects from the cabinet. It will be entitled "Brother can you spare a dime?" The clay model has the vague shapes of two men, one brown and one black. Patti builds a word picture to describe what the finished piece will look like.
Patti then explains how the initial sketches turn into clay or wax models and how to use them.
A BUM, COLD and hungry, reaches out to a well-dressed man who is buried in the ground.
one technical details sound complicated.
But obviously he knows what he's talking about, although he admits that that wasn't always the case.
When Patti first decided to develop his business, she wasn't sure he had everything worked.
"IN ANY OTHER community I may not have advanced as quickly as I have," Patti said, "sid so because I did not know Professor Elden Tefft (professor of painting and sculpture)."
"The availability of knowledge up there is fantastic."
A. M. SMITH
Join the Ford Bandwagon!
Templin Rm. 721
Hashinger Rm. 617
Nasimin Rm. 421
Corbin Rm. 3045
President Ford Dormitory Headquarters Now OPEN!
Lewis Rm. 220
Ellsworth Rm. 324
Oliver Rm. 1039
GSP Rm. 119
JRP Rm. 223
PETER BENTLEY
SUA
political activity, I would not have written this one." Davis said.
President Ford - He's
making us PROUD again.
SUA FORUMS
SUA FORUMS presents:
ELECTION '76
with
NICHOLAS
VON HOFFMAN
Oldfather said that if literally interpreted, the policy clearly would be unconservative.
7:30 p.m.
Thurs., October 28
Kansas Union Ballroom
50° Admission
Tickets now available at the SUA office
"There were some long and elaborate policies that came from the Regents at that time. I expect somebody made a motion but we didn't, so this one to see how it was drawn," he said.
Davis said he didn't know how the policy and been interpreted at other colleges and universities.
"It probably just doesn't come up," he said. "We get all the heat."
BATIK WORKSHOP!!!
6 wks. Oct. 25—Dec. 1/25
PADAIJFJO 615½ Mass.
841-7429 or 842-8486
THE ARENA AGENDA
THE
ARENA
AGENDA
- Happy Hour 4-7 Drinks 1/2 price
-Frl., Oct. 22-
- Replay of All-Norton Fight
-Sat., Oct. 23-
- If World Series is still in progress the Arena will show coverage starting at 11:45
- Live entertainment
featuring Max Tenant
- -Sun., Oct. 24-
- NFL Football at 3:00 Dallas Cowboys meet the Chicago Bears
- -Mon., Oct. 25-
- Monday Night Football St. Louis Cardinals meet the Washington Redskins.
- Pizza & Sandwiches available
"Barber of Seville" here
In its effort to take opera out to the public, the Kansas City Lyric Theater will present Rossini's comic opera, The Barber of Saint Lucie p. 8.m. Monday in the University Theatre.
A touring company from the Lyric will present the opera in English.
The story concerns Dr. Bartolo, an obte-
use, jealous guard who wants to *arry*
his rich, scherling ward, Rosina. She dupe-
s him by stealing his mail. Seville,
Seville, to get her man, Count Almaviva.
Although student tickets are sold out, public tickets are available for $4, $5 and $6.
Get Nesty with a $1.00 Lube Job
Frequent and unnecessary stops at congested discos will result in crusty build-up, which often leads to increased friction and even severe fatigue. Avoid this, troublesome situation, during this special at the Nest Squeaky Feet a crew of very talented performers, will provide highly refined, pure, premium grade dance music to loosen and lubricate even the most neglected, abused and deteriorated musical sensibilities. In addition, for only $1.70 more, the Nest will help your psyche move more freely with the timesold good coors in pitchers. So get Nesty and gel lubed. Doors open at 8:30 Friday and Saturday nights. Guaranteed highest viscosity entertainment in Lawrence.
the nest
Level 2 Union
nest
The University of Kansas Theatre and The School of Fine Arts present
Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris
A Musical Experience Oct. 22 and 23 at 8:00 p.m MATINEE Oct. 24 at 2:30 p.m University Theatre
University Theatre Murphy Hall
Ticket Reservations 864-3702 K.U. students receive seat tickets without charge upon presentation of current I.D. card.
This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fund.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
We quote excerpts from a letter received from a young lady — AND I MEAN LADY — from over in Alabama:
"I am a 16th year old girl who reads your column every week in our local newspaper. It does me good to see someone who is strong and sure in his Christian faith to write such straight-forward articles in it," she wrote. "I will always have a letter to you, my dad. I'd like to show my reverence, fear and love in God and His laws."
"I hardly know where to start. I guess the best way to start is to state the topic of my letter. sex." That isn't surprising when you consider that that's all that anyone takes about these days. First, I say me, I say him. Then, I'm not going to tell him he up and literally engaged at the events taking place in our world.
The young lady then comments a bit on the "movies." Have to say it has been so many years since I have been one, not in am I.
"Today, sex seems to be some kind of idol that demands worship. No longer is sex a private, personal gift from God. It is displayed and exhibited everywhere a person turns. Today, the young people say they love sex." The same is true for "this freedom" is really the enshrined bonds of the devil.
"You young people no longer respect, fear, or obey God's rules concerning sex. They install that as long as they are sincere, pre-marital sex is a beautiful experience. And society is beginning to condone it. Today, people say that marriage is a terrible thing which destroys that relationship. You have to protect your marriage if you live together before, their marriage will be better. Sure, marriage is rough sometimes. But God will help if们 obey Him and ask Him. If I remember correctly, God gave us marriage for the purpose that a couple could avoid fornication. Today the true, sacred meaning of marriage has been disregarded, because it is irrelevant. To someone marriage is in sin, and no beautiful gentle word that fact.
"And today, homosexuals are being treated like 'heroes.' I heard a man on the television claim that just because a person is a homosexual, that doesn't mean that he can be a Christian; in fact, many homosexuals are professed Christians. Where does this man get his scripture to support his view? I get mine from Leviticus 20:13. I am also lie with mankind as he leaft with a woman, both of them are born and put to death, their blood shall be upon them. With these words, I will dog lead in my traks before I'll respect one of those people."
"I'm my impression that all this sexual 'freedom,' "honest" movies, and "beautiful" rock festivals is part of a plan to ruin our country. By making these films available online, we are putting them, and then calling themselves the children of God, Communists are persuading others to fall into the devil's hands. I only hope that my views will not be misunderstood."
"Thank you for taking time to consider my views. Sincerely, Name
Sinned."
"WHERE THERE IS NO VISION, THE PEOPLE PERISH!" it appears that God has touched the heart of this young girl and given her a True Vision of the Curse of Sex Corruption that has destroyed in the past multitudes of nations and civilizations; and now has been brought to light by the suffering of those who are inflicted, educational life, political life, business life, and all life the vision granted this young lady! Where is that verse of Scripture — have forgotten where it is and will not stop to look it up now — that says: "AND A LITTLE CHILD SHALL LEAD THEM!" This is the tenth month of the year, so let's look at what God has done to Deuteronomy 17:18-26: "Get yourself a Bible, keep with you. Read it all the days of your life that you may learn to fear the Lord Your God and keep pride out of your heart causing you to think you are better than your brethren; to keep you from turning to the right hand or the left from His Commandments and Statutes, to the end you and your brother might live a long life and a blessed life in the land God gives us."
The young lady's letter inspires the writer to call attention to many, many Scriptures that support her position. Permit one further comment: In spite of the corruption every way one looks, she hears God says in *Leviticus 20:13*: "If a man lie with mankind, as he lieth with a woman, both have committed an abomination; they shall surely be put to death; their blood shall surely be used." In *Girl's RIGHT* WITH BEES: THE WORDS I WILL DROP DEAD IN MY TRACKS BEFORE I WILL RESPECT ONE OF THESE PEOPLE"
Don't forget that The Gentile Jesus Christ made a whip of cords and lashed some folks out of his Father's House; and in Matthew 23rd chapter He called some others fools and blind. "Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers. How can ye escape the damnation of Hell!"
P, O, BOX 405, DECATUR, GA
---
Friday, October 22, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Intrastate rivalry heightens contest
By BRENT ANDERSON
Associate Sports Editor
85
OU linebacker Daryl Hunt tries to exchange helmets with Bill Campfield
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Few could accuse the Kansas Jayhawks of looking past their football game tomorrow with the Kansas State Wildcats. The KU players know that there is nothing their arch-rival would like to do more than to nip a loss on the "Snoop Hill" gang.
The 'Hawks (4-2) are favored by most to win, but as any KU fan probably knows, that is not the team's mood for the opening kickoff at 1:30 in KSU Stadium. Because of the loss of quarterback Nolan Cromwell, K-State's hopes for an upset will be even
"I'm sure we'll be more than ready for the game," Gary Spani, K-State's highly touted senior linebacker, said yesterday. "We're going to win, and I look for our outwits to all out win."
Sports
suffered in the Wildcats' 51-0 loss last week and would be able to heal he was healthy and would be able to play.
KU quarterback Scott McMichael, who has the thankless task of taking over KU's offense for Cromwell, said the KU players knew K-State would be out to win.
K-State defensive backfield coach Dave Dunkelberger said Spani had been performing well in practice, though he had been a bit slow because of the injury.
"I don't think there's anything that could keep him out of the game," Dunberger blegered. "I'd play."
"YOU CAN just throw out all the records and all the statistics for this one," McMichael said. "When KU and K-State get together, anything can happen."
"That game proves my point," Me-
cawler said. "I just a different
knew when they lay."
Although KU has dominated its series with the Wildcats in recent years, back-to-back losses to Oklahoma State and Oklahoma are putting added pressure on the winning track. KU has a 50-14-9 lead in the series, and has won five of the last six games.
Having lost five games in a row, however, KState is hungry for a win. The 'Cats won all but one game of the season, Young, 183, since they have fallen to Texas A&M, Wake Forest, Florida State; Missouri and Nebraska. And their remaining five games, all against opponents, opposements, and lice, alike, to try to prove
KANASS and K-State do share the Big Eight conference cellar. Both have 2-d records, possibly another reason that the game requires hard-hard功夫 as must have in the series.
"I wish we had two or three more days to practice before the game," KU coach Bud Moore said after his team's practice on Friday. "We have to be ready for offense aren't the way they should be."
game time, but there is little doubt that McMichael will be top quarterback.
Moore has said he wouldn't announce who KU's starting quarterback would be until
MOORE ALSO HAS refused to say which of the Jayhawks' sophomore quarterbacks would back up McMichael. The quarterbacks, Mark Vincendice and Mark Lissak, had been kept out of action so far this season in hopes that both could be redshirted, making them eligible to play an extra year.
Monday, Moore said that one of the two would back up McMichael, but that his decision wouldn't be announced until game time.
Second-team fullback Dennis Wright, who pulled a thigh muscle in the Oklahoma game, might not be ready to play. Moore said. In that case, freshman Dave Dansdill
K-STATE HAS been powerless offensively but is reputed to have a strong defense, especially against the run. Linebackers Spani and Carl Pennington have combined for 133 tackles in K-State's first six games.
would back up starting fullback Norris Banks. Moore said tight end Jim Michaels, who missed last Saturday's game because of a sprained ankle, would probably be able to return.
chance to make so many tackles, however,
is that the defense hasn't been able to
maintain control of the football. So far, the
defense has been largely ineffective
offense, compared with KU's 2.365 yards
Part of the reason the Wildcats have had a
An injury that might prove costly to KState involves its punt and place-kicking specialist, Bill Sinovic, who missed three practices this week because of a recurring ankle sprain. The chronic might not be able to play, according to KState coach Ellis Rainberger.
Sports Shorts
GOLF-KU's top woman golfer, Nancy Hoins, will be competing in an invitational tournament at the University of Iowa today and tomorrow. Hoins is competing in an international golf tournament at Intercollegiate Athletics for Women national golf tournament next spring.
**FIELD HOCKY—After laying off for nearly two weeks, KU's field hockey team will be back in action this weekend at the Big Eight Tournament in Stillwater, Oklahoma.** University of Missouri universities today and Oklahoma and Oklahoma State universities tomorrow.
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Kansan Predictions
| GAME | SCHOENFELD | ANDERSON | VICE | ABOUBALKAH |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas at Oklahoma State | Kansas 21-0 | Kansas 29-6 | Kansas 29-4 | Kansas 15-1 |
| Missouri at Nebraska | Nebraska 21-20 | Nebraska 24-10 | Nebraska 27-21 | Nebraska 23-20 |
| Iowa State at Colorado | Colorado 17-7 | Colorado 10-7 | Colorado 17-7 | Iowa State 31-14 |
| Oklahoma at Oklahoma State | Oklahoma 28-14 | Oklahoma 21-7 | Oklahoma 17-16 | Oklahoma 21-16 |
| Arizona at Texas Tech | Texas Tech 28-0 | Texas Tech 20-7 | Texas Tech 17-14 | Texas Tech 35-28 |
| Georgia at Kentucky | Georgia 28-24 | Georgia 21-14 | Georgia 21-17 | Georgia 20-17 |
| UCLA at California | UCLA 35-18 | UCLA 34-14 | UCLA 31-17 | UCLA 30-17 |
| Alabama vs. Florida State | Auburn 20-17 | Auburn 14-0 | Auburn 16-7 | Auburn 16-10 |
| Predictions Records | 32-14 896 | 31-15 074 | 35-11 760 | 35-11 760 |
Making the Kranen football prediction this fall are Steve Schoolwell, sport editor; Brent Anderson, assoc. sports editor; Gary Fuey, assistant sports editor; and Yael Abounkhak, managing editor and Fall draft picks.
Sophomore Class Party at Shenanigans
Free tickets available to class card holders only at Boco offices 113B in the Union.
Tuesday, Oct. 26, 8:00 p.m.
Class cards still available.
The Cyclones appear to have the edge on the Jayhawks, particularly now that John Rosseo, KU's second man for most of the season, will miss the race.
Men runners to chase I-State
Roscoe has been hampered by tendonitis in his right ankle and is by-passing the meet to prepare for the Big Eight Conference meet Nov. 6 in Lawrence.
For more information call 864-4556
The KU men's cross-country team has its work cut out for it tomorrow when it travels to Ames, Iowa, to face a strong Iowa State squad in a five-mile dual meet.
George Mason, Clarksville, Ark., senior, has been KU's top runner this fall and will have to continue in that spot if KU is to have any chance of winning.
Bruce Coldsmith, Alexandria, Va., sophomore; Ted Crank, Chmidt hinson junior; Brent Swanson, Topeka freshman; Kendall Smith, Topeka freshman; Joel Cambron, Joyville, junior; and Bill Rubford, Wichita freshman, round out the Jayawkshv
Class cards still available. Sophomore mugs available for '1$^{\infty}$
The Cyclones, picked second in a preseason coaches' poll, seem to be the only team with a chance to keep Colorado from romping to the conference crown.
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GUEST SPEAKERS
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Mr. Walter Gehlbach ... Registrar UMKC
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Non-Members $1.00
Partially funded by the Student Sonato
Friday, October 22, 1976
驶 off for
nockey team
skend at the
water, Okla.
braska and
d Oklahoma
is tomorrow.
st
ion
A
the
7
2:30
ing lead
www
Reds complete sweep of Yankees
NEW YORK (AP) — Johnny Bench, erasing the disappointment of his worst firing since 2013.
"I feel like I've given something back to my teammates. A lot of people stuck with me through the year," said the Cincinnati Reds' catcher.
Bench had just hammered two home runs and driven in five runs to crown his team's four-game World Series sweep of American League in New York with a 72 decision last night.
Drenched with champagne, Bench savored his biggest moment in baseball after he was named the Most Valuable Player in the Series for his 8-for-15 hitting performance and a club-high six runs batted in.
THE NINE-TIME All-Star credited his success to a revitalized swing.
"I found something in the playoff that worked. I wasn't getting my hands started fast enough, but it all came together," said Lloyd. "I got to score seven games ranked fourth in the 72冠赛playoffs."
Only the legendary Babe Ruth, Beacon's Glowy and Lou Gehrig had higher rates.
Bench, troubled by personal and physical problems, staggered through a career-law job in the federal government.
"There were a lot of ups and downs. But I wasn't physically sound for the last month."
runs during the regular season.
MEANWHILE, YANEKS owner George Steinbrenner, wearing a pin-striped suit for old times' sake, acted like a politician in the silent. sullen New York locker room.
The Yankees, who made pipistipes and World Series victories famous in their heyday, were trying to hide the embarrassment of the four-game swee
"There were 550 other players watching this game on television. Our guys were proud of it."
The Yankees, entering the Series with 99 victories in their history, are still waiting for No. 100. They had waited 12 years to get into the classic,
"It was their first taste. They were a little nervous, but we'll get them next year."
NEW YORK JUST didn't hit like the
toussous offensive teams that preceded them
"The Reds are an excellent club ball." said Roy White, the Yankees' elder statesman. "They can do everything. This would have like to make a better showing."
The Yankees totaled eight runs and 30 hits in the four losses with tenacious catcher
"I'm a belluva offensive ball player," said Munson, whose six straight hits tied a World Series record set by Goose Goslin of the Washington Senators in 1924.
Thurman Munon picking up eight hits, including a single in each of his last six at-
"I played in the Astro-Trost in the other league. I'd be the best offensive player in the league."
The Yankees had jumped in front in the first inning when Munson looped a single to right field. He circled the bases when Chris Stern sliced a double up the left-center feld alloy.
MUNSON BATTED 529 for the Series and
the first run and knocked in the other last night.
The run he scored in the first timing gave the Rangers a 1-0 lead, their first and only advantage.
JOE MORGAN led off the fourth inning with a walk. After Toney Perez filed out, Morgan stole second base without a throw from Munson. Dan Driessen fouled out, but George Foster drilled a single to left, scoring Morgan with the tying run.
left field line and stood at the plate, watching the home run.
The Yankees got a run back in the fifth. Mickey Rivers opened with a single and, one out later, he stole second. It was the first successful stolen base gain Bench leaders in 27 pot-season games dating back to the 1972 World Series against Oakland.
That brought up Bench, and the Reds' husky catty walloped a 1-1 pitch down the
Munson then singled up the middle, scoring Rivers and making it 3-2.
MARTIN LEFT just in time to miss seeing the big Red Machine break the game
Dick Tidwalt, relieving Ed Figueroa,
retired Foster on a fly ball.
next came Bench, and this time the Reds' catcher unloaded a shot that sailed over the left-center field fence for three more Red runs.
The Reds became the first National League team in 54 years to win consecutive world championships. The last NL team to win a World Series was the New York Giants of 1921-22.
Soccer club opposes K-State, Arkansas
It was the first sweep in 10 years. The last team to accomplish that feat was the Baltimore Orioles, who took four straight from the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1966.
Undefeated Kansas State and unknown
oppositions. Soccer Club's opposi-
tions this weekend.
KU travel to Manhattan tomorrow for a match with K-State, 7.0. Starting time is 10:30 a.m. in Memorial Stadium, across from the student union.
"K-State is always very physical to make up for its lack of skill," coach Bernie Mullin said yesterday. "We are going to be in a physical game and we have to get our players mentally prepared to take a list of punishment and still concentrate on playing soccer.
The Jayhawks, 3-2, will field what Mullin wears as "about the best 11 players we've got."
'TT'S TIME to start settling people into
Doug Gunn, Lawrence captain, is optimistic about this year's game, but he said that he hadn't heard much about K-State this year.
Last year's game started the Kansas rugby rivalry and the Governor's wife presented the cup to Lawrence after its 17-7 victory.
"I know they have a lot of support over there," he said. "They have a good team, but I've heard that they're not as good as last year."
Rugby fan Mrs. Robert Bennett is expected to be in Manhattan Sunday to present the Kansas First Lady's Cup to the Lawrence-Kansas State rugby match.
Rugby squad seeking cup
Women face uphill race
IS THIS YOUR DATE?
position. We're not far from where we should be." Mullin said.
The KU women's cross country team could win the Big Eight championship in Boulder, Colo., but only if Iowa State and Kansas State don't show up.
S THIS YOUR UNITE
At the Nest, Level 2, Union. We don't even allow dogs in the place. (Unless the dog comes with a band-aid or that really brought the dogs with us to the Nest.) Our proud to feature "Saucey Feet," a real dynamic dance band. Please, bring purebreds only, or no dogs at
The Jayhawks have a good young team, with the emphasis on young. But Iowa State, which pummed K-State earlier in the season, and K-State, which has whomped KU a couple of times this fall, appear to have first and second place cinched.
MICHELLE BROWN, Oklahoma City freshman, has been the squad's top runner this fall and seems to be the only jayhawk at chance to place among the top 10 runners.
The game will start at 1:30 p.m.
This leaves KU with a best possible showing of third place in the three-mile race. The Jayhawks have already defeated Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Missouri this season, but have yet to face Nebraska or host Colorado.
Lawrence may have some problems because two of its starters are hurt. Mike Forth has a dislaced elbow and definitely won't play. Jonn Melon, starting backwell
He's also switching strategy for the Wildcat game. Instead of the 3-3-4 alignment that he's used this fall, Mullin will revert to a 4-3-setup.
nest
"We're going back to the formation that won us the Big Eight championship last spring," he said. "And since the field at K-State is narrow we can afford to take the man off the line and put him on the back defensive wall."
The Jayhawks are hosts to Arkansas
State at 5 p.m. for a game at 2:30d
lowlights
"They're an unknown quantity," he said, but it'll be another good opportunity for us to get involved.
Fern Sale
Now $4.88
Boston Ferns 6" pots
Now $2.77
Reg. $7.50
Assorted Pots 4" pots
Reg. $4.00
The Garden Center & Greenhouse
University Daily Kansan
Ferns
Philodendron
Dracenas
Croton
Sheffler etc.
4 Blocks east of Mass. on 15th Offer good thru Sunday
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roast beef, corned beef, pastrami, balogna, salami sandwiches, potato salad, soda and coffee, dessert, Sunday, October 24th, 6 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive (one block east of 9th & Iowa). $1.00 for paid members, otherwise $2.00, cost includes free admission to 7:30 p.m. screening of a movie short on the after-effects of the Yom Kippur War on one Israeli kibbutz, bring your friends.
sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish Students
a nice place happening in Lawrence
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An absolute delight, Rossini's internationally popular comic opera is a joy not only for the seasoned opera-goers but also to those who are trying it for the first time! Pick your tickets up in Murphy Hall now before they're completely gone. Tickets free with Student Activity Card.
Monday, Oct. 25, University Theatre, 8:00 p.m.
8
Friday, October 22, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Beans cheap, nourishing CAA weekly check says
Shoppers will find that they can provide themselves with a cheap source of protein when using beans in meal preparation, according to this week's survey conducted by the Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) and Judy Kroger, CAA director.
This survey compares prices of various types of beans, both canned and dried.
Although food preparation is longer for dry beans, Kreoger said, shoppers generally can save more money by using them instead of canned.
Comparisons between canned and dry beans by price a pound are inadequate
shopper's guides because the weight of camel beans includes the water they're taking.
When either type is combined with a grain, such as rice, the combination provides an excellent source of protein, Kroeger said. The combination supplies all of the eight essential amino acids for a well-balanced diet.
The survey, part of the weekly survey of seven Lawrence supermarkets, will focus during the next four weeks on various types of meat. The survey will study different cuts of meat.
ITEM# Dillen's (Whole, S. lb.) Dillen's (St. lbs.) Dillen's (Lewis, S. lb.) Raisley (2nd St.) Kraeger's Salway Fallow's Average daily work Average last week
Milk - 3 per cent, 15 gal., S.B. 78 76 77 76 81 80 76 78 78 76 78 78 78 78
Eggs - Grade A medium 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90
Grape-fruit juice 1.69 kg or 1.04 oz. 1.69 kg or 1.69 kg 1.79 kg 1.79 kg 1.74 kg 1.74 kg 1.71 kg 1.71 kg 1.71 kg 1.71 kg
Colby cheese - 1 lb. 1.55 kg or 1.04 oz. 1.55 kg or 1.59 kg 1.58 kg 1.58 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg
Mango pie - 1 lb. 1.55 kg or 1.04 oz. 1.55 kg or 1.59 kg 1.58 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg
Coconut - 30 oz. 1.55 kg or 1.04 oz. 1.55 kg or 1.59 kg 1.58 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg 1.55 kg
Ground beef - regular, 1 lb. 45 45 45 45 45 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 44
Ground beef - regular, 1 lb. 45 45 45 45 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 44
Tuna - 40 oz. 45 45 45 45 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 44
Tuna - 40 oz. 45 45 45 45 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 44
Ugly canned - 47 47 47 47 47 47 47 * # 47 47 47 47 47 47 47
Sugar - granulated, 1 lb. 2.13 kg or 1.15 kg 2.13 kg or 1.15 kg 2.15 kg 2.49 kg 2.15 kg 2.20 kg 2.19 kg
Coffee - 10 oz. 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85
Ratamun - sun-Made, dark, 10 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X
Rice - 11 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X
Fruit - grape-shaped, 100 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80
Flour - whole wheat, 10 B 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80 80
Orange juice, 10 B 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29
Corn - frozen, 10 B 69 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79
Corn - frozen, 10 B 69 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79
Carrot - 15 B 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79
Carrot - 15 B 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79 79
Onions - yellow, 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19
Peppers - 10 inch, in depth with deep pit 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85
Paper towels - Vine, 2 pack 1.05 1.05 1.05 1.05 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09
example, one label lists comparative information to allow visitors to compare one work of art with another. This information can be placed on an i-ink card and placed beside the artwork.
average
average
price pound
Brooking encouraged students to visit the art museum, especially those who hadn't been in the museum before. The museum is located in Spooner Hall and is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. on weekends.
labels were a factor in attracting visitors to the museum.
The University of Kansas Museum of Art is conducting a survey in an attempt to improve the quality of the exhibitions before moving into the new Helen Foreman Spencer Museum of Art next fall. Dolo Brooking, curator of museum exhibitions at the KU Museum de dealt primarily with different types of labels used to identify the works of art. For
Brooking said she thought the survey was the first time anyone had researched the impact of labels on museum visitors. She said she hoped to determine whether the
Plato beans - dry, 1 lb. X 26 X 26 X 26 X 27 X 27 X 27
Plato beans - dry, 1 lb. 1.05 X 1.05 X 1.13 X 17 X 17 X 17
Plato beans - dry, 1 lb. 4.14 X 4.14 X 4.14 X 41 X 41 X 41
Lettuce - dry, 1 lb. 37 X 38 X 41 X 37 X 39 X 38 X 36
Great Northern - dry, 1 lb. 21 X 21 X 29 X 37 X 39 X 38 X 34
Great Northern - dry, 1 lb. 29 X 21 X 39 X 37 X 39 X 38 X 34
Kidney beans - canned X 29 X 29 X 31 X 31 X 31 X 31
Kidney beans - canned X 29 X 29 X 31 X 31 X 31 X 31
Baked beans - Morning Star S.B. X 25 X 24 X 27 X 30 X 25 X 27
Baked beans - Morning Star S.B. X 25 X 24 X 27 X 30 X 25 X 27
Baked beans - Morning Star S.B. X 47 X 43 X 43 X 37 X 41 X 44
Baked beans - Morning Star S.B. X 47 X 43 X 43 X 37 X 41 X 44
IN DEPTH SURVEY: BEANS
Art museum conducts study
For sale at (our cost) $8.00
call 864-3477.
Inquire at SUA (Union Lobby) or
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GSC
KU materials are insufficient for atom bomb
An atomic bomb, similar to one designed an Princeton University student, couldn't be detonated because of its heavy Nuclear Reactor Center, Benjamin Friesen, professor of radiation biophysics, said last week.
K-STATE VS.K.U.
Supplemental Budget Requests Due November 1
However, Johnson said, none of the students expressed an interest in making an attempt.
Forms available in GSC office, Kansas Union. For more information call 864-4914, Funded by Student Activities Fee
The Princeton student, John Phillips, claims to have built a workable model of an atomic bomb by using information gathered from the surface of the Earth. Associated Press reported two weeks ago.
"No one would be able to make a bomb from anything we have here on campus."
There isn't an arms control class at KU, but Ron Johnson, professor of radiation biophysics, said some students had asked to be called Radiation, Environment and Man.
---
The plutonium used in atomic bombs is reprocessed, and no reprocessing is done at this time.
The bomb, which would have one-third the power of the bomb dropped in 1945 on Hiroshima, was a project for an arms control class.
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Through long association with the University of Kansas, Nancy Hambleton has developed a thorough open-minded understanding of student affairs. She demonstrated her concern early in the campaign by contacting officers of the K.U. student body about issues particularly pressing to the students this fall. Her representation would be most effective in promoting legislation favorable to our student body.
*Member, Governor's Housing Task Force
Owens Flower Shop
Steve Owens K.U. student
Nancy 44th HAMBLETON
A. B.
FOR EFFECTIVE REPRESENTATION
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*First woman city commissioner of Lawrence
*First woman mayor
*Member, Kansas Housing Forum
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McDonald's is in Manhattan (right on the way to the stadium) at 3rd and Vattier. Before and after the game be sure to stop and get your favorite McDonald's goodies. McDonalds of Lawrence.901 W.23rd
McDonalds of Lawrence, 901 W.23rd
"The most exciting new modern dance company to emerge during the last decade. Louis Falco is simply one of the most exciting male dancers in the world."
1
—Deborah Jowitt, New York Times
"Not all unix choreography is sexless, but the many beautiful dances in Company, the dances are vibrant, high powered, beautiful to look at in cheerful dances, they celebrate their own prowess and creativity."
"Falco choreographs from his id. Little Rock liked it."
"Falco and company—pure visual joy held in place with wiw and now..." — Tampa Times
Jean Battey Lewis, Washington Post
"'... totally contemporary in its themes and
tactics... it is committed to grandly ex-
travagant dance movement and a strong
sense of the theatre. It made for a rich and
fabulous program."
"Louis Falco Dance Company is one of the few small performing ensembles in the world."
Bryon Belt, Newhouse Newspapers
"Falco is an extraoradiolian dancer. He has a total physical, mental, and emotional involvement in every role. He also has that skill to the very edge of danger, combined with a supreme confidence in his own process and ability." — two of the greatest Russian classicists "
—P. W. Manchester, Dance News
Wednesday—October 27 8:00 p.m.
LOUIS FALCO DANCE COMPANY
Hoch Auditorium $3.00 General Admission
Tickets at the SUA office and at the door
Friday, October 22, 1976
ing visitors to
is to visit the who hadn't the museum is open from 10 Friday and ends.
s sexless,
o Dance
istant, high
cheerful
prowess
options.
9
joy held
Staff Writer
apa Times
Professor details Chinese educational system
id. Little
one of the embles In
By BILLCALVERT
s Gazette
"On one hand, study—on the other hand,
produce."
is themes
ant garde
and ex-
a strong
a rich and
ington Post
wspapers
nce News
ur. He has emotional b has that technique with w prowess or two of "
ter presente
That slogan, which appeared on a sign at a student work farm in the People's Republic of China, illustrates the theory of that country's educational system, Carl J. Anderson, director of Oriental languages and literatures and East Asian studies, said last night.
Leban spoke to about 60 people in the Kansas Union's Forum Room on what he learned from his trip, a system during his trip to China last May. Since the cultural revolution in 1966, he said, an emphasis shifted to an education in practical matters from that on matters of
"THE PARADOX OF the situation is that educational policy in China today is anti-intellectual. It seems that it's working against their own interests." Leban said.
Leban said the students from secondary schools through the universities spent half their time in class and the other half in shops or on farms learning practical skills. The secondary students, he said, spent their time repairing motors and绣衣 in ad-hoc workshops. He also taught geography and mathematics. He said university students often attained "peasant status" by working two years on farms before entering universities.
LEBAN SPENT the first part of his lecture giving a brief history of the evolution of the Chinese educational system, from the early 20th century, he said, American educators were a major influence in Chinese education. The Chinese adopted the structure of using primary and secondary schools for instruction of American teaching, according to Leban.
After the conquest of mainland China by the Communists in 1949, the educational system was influenced by the Russians, who sent educational advisers to China by the late Soviet era. The Russian philosophy, the teachers were expected to promagazine the new Communist ideology.
THE LAST MAJOR step in the educational evolution came with Chairman Mao's cultural revolution, Lebanad said. He began the project in 1974 and helped their educational control to all schools.
"There was a conflict; if technicians and specialists should be put to work by virtue of talent to build China, or if people should be forced to accept the status of proletariat intellectual was needed. The
Game...
From page one
Board to keep the matter confidential during the Oct. 13 board meeting.
But no agreement was made to keep it secret, she said, and she had told the other members that she could not on behalf of believe without some knowledge of student opinion.
Grabaugh is one of four student members on the 21-member KUAC Board.
Grubbaunch disagreed with the idea that publicity had killed the plan. Even now that the issue is public, she said, the proposal to move the games might succeed.
"T'M AFRAID THAT they'll come up with a decision, not a proposal, and that there'll be no public discussion of it," Grubbaugh said. "But at least now they know that the students—at least the Student Senate—are against it.
"It's all in the hands of Missouri right now. If you approve it, I think we were ready."
Schean said he doubted that MU would go along with the idea, particularly after the debate.
"I don't think it had a whole lot of chance to start with, because I think probably our students, faculty and alumni would've had the chance as the KU students do," he said.
One of the reasons MU might not go along with the plan, Sheehan said, is that a proposal is under consideration to enlarge Missouri's football stadium.
"That makes it a critical issue, too, because you can't enlarge the stadium and then play your games elsewhere," he said. "The situation that would not be looked on favorably."
GRUBAUGH TOLD the Student Senate Wednesday that the plan under consideration would move the KU-MU game to Arrowhead Stadium each year.
Students would be given the option of purchasing a ticket to the game, but their student season ticket wouldn't be valid for the game, she said. She said that an ad game, with a non-big Eight opponent, would be added to the home schedule.
"As far as the resolution goes," Walker said. "I always glare to have the students' attention."
Walker declined to comment on the discussions with MU because he said they
The KU-Missouri football game is the oldest annual football contest west of the Mississippi. The winner earns a $2,500 gift card.
TWENTY ONE OF the 84 games between the two schools have been played in Kansas City, including the first 16 KU-MU games. The last game was played in Kansas City was in 1945.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
THE
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Mon.-Sat.—10:00 to 5:30 p.m.
methodology used to achieve this is mind dulling. It is an indoctrination of ideology and slogans that produces stereotyped thinking," he said.
Leban said the indoctrination of ideology took place as early as nursery school and later at primary school.
and students he visited. He went to China as an adviser to the Pure and Applied Mathematics Delegation of the National Academy of Sciences.
AFTER HIS OPENING speech, Leban presented a slide show of the white places
The slide show included pictures of cases in the various schools and classwork by the teacher.
Leban said during the slide presentation that the universities in China were different
in concept from those in the United States. In China no degrees are offered, he said, but the universities are often farm factories that have converted into "worker's universities".
"The universities taught practical matters to the students. The students didn't seem to be learning anything to prepare them for leadership," he said.
PARTY TIME
Ice Pop Cig. Chips Cold Beer to go
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Open 'til 11 p.m. Drive-up window 1209 W. 4th
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F. B. S. KRISHNAN
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Political Advertisement
zzzz Committee, Charles and Sue Bratton, Chairpersons
Comucopia
Restaurant
Enjoy eating good home cooked food at the Cornucopia Restaurant. Our recipes, dressings and breads are made from scratch. We use the best basic natural ingredients possible. Featuring this state's finest salad and fruit bar, plus a large selection of omelets, crepes, and sandwiches for the discriminating appetite.
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842-9637 10-10 daily
University Daily Kansan
SUA
FILMS
POPULAR FILMS
HESTER STREET (1975)
Dr. Joon Kimilen Silver.
Dr. Kean Kwon.
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Mon., Oct. 25, 7:30, 76
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THE CONFORMIST (1970)
THE CONFORMIST, Dr. Bernardo
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Trintignant, Dominique Sanda
(Italian subtitles)
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STEREO WAREHOUSE
JOHN W. BEAVER AVE, STATE COLLEGE, PA. 16001
JAZZ
JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ only at Paul Gray's Jazz Place
926 Mass.—Upstairs
FRIDAY: The Joe Utterback Trio, exciting Modern Jazz
SATURDAY: Dutch Young, 1930's Sax player and Band Leader and Ray Ehrhart. 1930's Pianist—formerly with Jack Teagarten. Don't miss these two jazz giants who were big names 45 years ago—they'll be with a 7 piece jazz group. Cover charge $2.50.
Opens at 8:00 Music at 9:00
Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations.
QUANTRILL'S
FLEA MARKET
ANTIQUES
IN NEW HAMPSHIRE
TELEPHONE 9426-615
The Dealers of Quantrill's Flea Market invite you to our 5th Anniversary Sale, Saturday, October 23.
★ Free Refreshments
★ Drawing for Free Oak Rocking Chair
★ Sale Prices on many Items throughout the Market
OPEN EVERY SAT. & SUN.
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
842-6616
Friday, October 22, 1976
University Daily Kansan
OnCampus
CITY OF AMERICA
Events
TODAY: The KU BUREAU OF CHILD RESEARCH is sponsoring a conference on ecological issues in behavior analysis beginning at 8:30 a.m. in the Kansas Union's Big Eight Room. GARY GRAFFMAN, visiting professor in performance, will conduct piano master classes from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., and from 2:45 a.m. in SWarthworth Hall for interested faculty members and students. THE HARSON TRUST COMMITTEE meets at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Governors Room.
`TONIGHT: AEROSPACE ENGINEERS meets at 5:30 in the Union's English`
`DANCE CLUB and a joyhawk workshop. The KU`
`POLL DANCE CLUB meets at 7:30 in 173 Ribbon Hall`.
SATURDAY: GARY GRAFFMAN will continue to conduct piano master classes on combo keyboard, and from 2 to 5 p.m. in Sawtooth Hall, Icahn Hall, and STUDENT HOUSES at 11 a.m.
SUNDAY: The SUA BACKGAMMON TOURNAMENT at 2 p.m. in the Union's Jayhawk Room. SUA CHESS CLUB meets at 2 p.m. in the Union's Porter B and C rooms. SIGMA GAMMA RHO meets at 2:30 p.m. in the Union's Navigators Room. APSH LAB meets at 2:45 p.m. in the Navigators Room. NAVIGATORS meets at 5:30 p.m. in the Union's Governors Room. ALPHA PHI OMEGA meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. THE STUDENT SENATE SERVICES COMMITTEE meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room. A CHINESE CULTURAL PROGRAM, including songs, scenery and a play, will be held Auditorium, KAPPA ALPHA PSI meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Orehead Room.
Grants and awards
The National Science Foundation has given KEVIN McQUIGG, Tonganoxie graduate student, and DALE ARAND, Overland Park graduate student, funds for full time research training related to energy. They were selected from 35 candidates nationwide.
unmatched nationally.
Three KU Medical School students have received Bohan Scholarships for study during the 1976-77 school year. The recipients are DAVID FISHER of Lawrence, BRADFORD MARTIN of Junction City and ALAN McLEOD of Wichita.
Corrections
It was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Kaman that ARNOLD BERMAN is a Republican candidate for the seat. Berman is a Democrat from the 2nd district, from the 1st district.
VETERAN STUDENT GRADUATE$A$, affected by Senate Bill 969, who have used only 36 months of C. I. benefits, will now be eligible for a nine month extension
Veterans also will be eligible for an increase in Veteran Administration loans, amounting from $900 to $1,500.
A black arts festival, which will open an exhibit of black American art, will be Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Elizabeth M. Museum, 11th and quadrathletes streets.
Brooking said that a day of cultural art activity should help make people aware of black culture in America and also should encourage participation in exhibitions. The exhibition will last until Nov. 5.
One festival goal is to highlight the contributions that black Americans have made to American culture. Dedicated to the University of Kansas Museum of Art, said yesterday.
-a Performance by George Jackson,
guitarist, at 2 p.m. in Watkins
Musee, music hall
—The film "Sounder" to be shown free at i.p.m. at the Granada Theatre 1028
—a demonstration of charcoal sketching by the artist Crawford from 2 to 5 p.m. at Beauregard High School.
THE FESTIVAL events include:
The festival will also include programs in the park next to the museum. The programs include: an exhibit of jazz, religious and modern dance by the Exodus Dance Theatre; an art exhibit of works by young black students from the Lawrence area; and McClelland's presentation of art of black women in America from 2:30 p.m. 5 p.M.
Festival features culture arts of black Americans
If it rains, the programs will be in the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th
Vista
RESTAURANTS
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THE "AMSTADT IIP" exhibit, which opens at 2 p.m., includes documents of the Amstadt incident and more than 75 paints and sculptures.
Amustad II is derived from an incident involving the Spanish slave ship "La Amistada," which brought a ship of African slaves to the United States in 1800. The crew of the ship that the Africans were illegally enslaved and the were returned to Africa.
MIAMI FERRARI
Campus Veteran
118B
Kansas Union
864-4478
Do you need a tutor for any class at KU? Can you provide tutorial assistance for any classes at KU, soComputerLab can help you your computer and phone number at this office. This service is for veterans and non-veterans.
CIGARETTES
$3.50 PER CARTON
This incipient inspired the creation of a film drama focusing on the problem of slippery, slipping.
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The artwork, assembled from private and public collections, will have traveled through 20 states by the time the tour ends in 1977. Brooking said.
THE EXHIBIT was designed as a traveling Bicentennial show by the department of art at Fisk University in North Carolina, then shown across the country since 1975.
nest
IS THIS YOUR DATE?
You can do better. Much better, at the Nest. Level 2, Union. We don't even go to gymnasium with the dog; we do the band; and believe me, we've had a band or two that really brought the dogs with us. We also proud to feature "Squeaky Feet;" a real dynamic dance band. Please, bring purebreds or, no dogs at all.
Do you have any news tips?
Call the KANSAN
864-4810
Taco Grande
4
TO: K.U. Students and Lawrence Taco Grande
FROM: K-State Students and Manhattan Taco Grande
We accept the 1,000 Taco bet with relish (make that Hot Sauce). The Perfect Purple should have no trouble winning over your so called Football Team. Have you ever seen what a Wildcat does to a Kansas Chicken (Jayhawk). There won't be anything left but those ugly yellow feathers. Say, by the way does that yellow have some significance or does it stand for what we think it does.
The students of the winning school, upon showing your student I.D. will receive two Tacos free until 1,000 are given away. K.U. wins Free Tacos at Lawrence Taco Grandes. K-State wins Free Tacos at Manhattan Taco Grande.
John Haddock Ford
Service Department Winterize Special
- Back flush radiator
- Replace thermostat gasket
- Check thermostat
- Install 2 gallons of permanent antifreeze
- Check belts, hoses, and radiator
JOHN HADDOCK
FORD
23rd & Alabama
Phone 843-3500
Parts and Labor
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PHILIPS
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IL VERDI CORSARO
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MARTIN WALTER BURRAN
NEW PHILIPSON ORCHESTRA
VERDN: IL CORSARO
José Carreras, Difford Grant, Jessie Noir,
man, Monteverdi Capetti, Giuseppe Marin
tome, John Noble, Alexander Oliver,
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Orchestra Karlen to Gerhardt.
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PHILIPS
IL VERDI
CORSARO
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PHILIPS
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Der
Schauspieldirector
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Lo Sposo Deluso
BILDHÄUSEN
COLIN DAVIS
PHILIPS
GRAMOPHONE
Friday, October 22, 1976
11
By DARYL COOK
Sheriff says gratuities stopped
Staff Writer
PHILIPS
Gifts and cut-rate charges for services given to Douglas County Sheriff Department's officers have been stopped, Sheriff Rex Johnson said Monday.
LDIREK/
Davis
Johnson was responding to charges made last week by James Huskey, Democratic candidate for sheriff against Johnson. Johnson said officers in his department, had been ordered the years ago to stop acquiring gratitude under threat of disciplinary action.
Gene Doane, a Lawrence insurance agent and the only professional bondman in Lawrence, openly acknowledged giving gifts to sheriff's officers but denied any attempt to influence the officers through the gifts.
HUSKEY ALSO charged that sheiff's officers often didn't tell prisoners of alternatives to surety bonds, bonds paid by the agency, for a percentage of the amount of the bond.
Huskey said that Doane had tried to influence the officers through the gifts.
The other three types of bonds—cash bonds paid by the prisoner, property bonds, in which a property owner may sign for the prisoner, and personal recognition bonds, in which the prisoner is released with his wife. The judge in court —weren't always explained fully to prisoners, enabling Doane to get the surety bond business, Huskey charged.
DOANE SAID that he usually sent turkeys and fruit baskets to members of the
"It's not uncommon to give persons gifts at Christmas time," Doane said. "I don't think anyone of them (the police officers) has ever done anything illegal for the gifts."
police and sheriff's departments at Christmas.
He said that he had given gifts to almost everyone in the police and sheriff's departments, including Huskey, because they were his friends and had been giving inactive gift to him information about whether a person was eligible for a surety bond.
"I DON'T KNOW what he's mad about:
he gotten his share." Daoud said of
his friend.
Johnson said each prisoner filled out a form to determine whether he was eligible for parole.
The forms are given to the district court judge, who determines the amount of the bond and whether the prisoner is eligible for a personal reconciliance bond.
The sheriff's department began giving the forms to the prisoners within the past year and a half, Johnson said, almost two years after Huskey left the police force.
"AS FAR AS my officers are concerned,
I'm sick of accusations," Johnson said.
Huskey also had said that the weak administrations of the sheriff's and Lawrence police departments had allowed the officers to walk into your home, for things you and I would be put in jail.**
Huskey said he had witnessed several such actions while he was a policemen in the Bronx. "I was very shocked," he
A MARY HARTMAN MARY HARTMAN look a like contest!!! HALLOWEEN DISCO DANCE
★ By Gay Services of Kansas ★
Kansas Union Ballroom
8:00 p.m. $1.75
Saturday, Oct. 23rd
Special Notice . . .
Please do not bring alcoholic beverages to the dance. Beer will be sold with an I.D.
"(The administration) made the rest of the men bear the scrufity of the public. It reflects on the whole department," Huskey said.
QUALITY + PRICE = VALUE
MADRID
MADRID
VISTOR
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ALEX CELLO
JUAREZ
TEQUILA
SIN ESTADO
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DONACIÓN NEGRA
He said that on one occasion, two police officers were found guilty of taking a shotgun and a leather coat—a misappropriation—and had received no disciplinary action.
GOLD IMPORTED FROM MEXICO SILVER
JUAREZ
80 PROOF
TEQUILA
RICHARD STANWIX, chief of police,
Tuesday refused to comment on Huskey's allegations.
She said that she didn't know why the practice was started and that she had never expected anything in return from the officers.
BY TEUJA JAMES SA MASSOVER
ago she had stopped giving cut-rate rates for lodging or meals to officers.
Rits Kags, manager of the Holiday Inn,
2309 Iowa St., said that about three years
If there were a Pulitzer Prize for movies, "A.P.M." would be a sure win. If the movie "May well become an American film classic" - Katherine Caroline, NY Times "The best American film for years" - Vincent Sanders, ABA. Not the worst. CBS
"At the time we were doing it, so was everyone else. Once it got started, it was hard to figure out."
She said the gratuities were stopped by Stanwick about three years ago.
Several businessmen who Huskey said gave gratuities to police and anoffit's officers either denied the allegations or said the practice had been discontinued.
REDFORD/HOFFMAN
"ALL THE
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MARC ANGELIC STUDIO
Eve. at 7:30 & 9:55
Sat. 2:30, Sun. 3:00
LAUGH OR GET OFF THE
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THE FUNNIEST
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Eve, 7:30 & 9:00
Sat.-Sun. 2:30
University Daily Kansan
"I've tried giving them free meals or coffee, but they always say 'no,' he said.
BOB KAU7ZMAN, regional supervisor for Country MACHEN restaurants, said that he had never given gratuities to officers, but would like to.
A different kind of Bronson
a funny kind of movie
CHARLES BRONSON JILL IRELAND
"FROM NOON
TILL THREE"
An unusual western
ve. 7:30 & 8:25, Sat. Sun. 2:05
Hillcrest
PG
No one does it to you
like Roman Polanski
A Roman Polanski Film
THE TENANT
Daily 7:30, 9:45, Sat. Sun. 1:55
Hillcrest
PG
WINNER!
ACADEMY AWARDS
PETER KATHARINE OTOOLE HEPBURN
THE LION IN WINTER
Eve. 7:15, 9:40, Sat. Sun. 1:45
Hillcrest
PG
A Raman Polanski Film
TRE
TENANT
Daily 2:30, 9:30, M-F, Sat-Sun, 1:35
Hillcrest
"They're regular customers and keep the place settled down, but they pay right down the nose."
"AT THE EARTH'S CORE"
7:30
"FOOD OF THE GODS"
9:10
PG
ENDS SUNDAY AT THE Sunset
Go Big Blue Stomp K-State
HECK &
HARDTARFER
Reality, Inc.
- GENE HARDTARFER EXEC. VICE PRESIDENT
Residence: 843-0215
601 Missouri / Lawrence, Kansas 66044 / Office: 843-5522
1970
BEVERLY BRADLEY
3rd District County Commissioner
Bev believes in . . .
-evaluating the issues responsibly
-qualified people committing themselves
-cooperation between city and rural interests
Paid for by Bradley for County Commissioner,
Pol. Adv. Gilbert Gilges and Jack Landrinet, Co-Chairmen
—planned growth for Douglas County
DO YOU?
D
HILLCREST
9th and Iowa
Bowl 842-1234
RED PIN BONUS: (When the red pin comes up as a head pin and you strike, then you win a free game.)
Fri. midnight till Sat. 5 a.m.
Sat. midnight till Sun. 5 a.m.
Wed. midnight till Thurs. 4 a.m.
Sat. noon till 5 p.m.
Sun. 1 p.m. till 5 p.m.
PRACTICE TIME: 2 games for $1
Mon. 9-12 a.m.
Sun. 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
RAZZLE DAZZLE: $50 jackpot for series of strikes
Strikes on colored head pin wins
cash Converted splits win prizes
Sat. 6:30 and 9 p.m.—$4/3 games
Phone for information and reservations
OPEN BOWLING:
Mon—9 a.m.-6 p.m. and 9 p.m.-midnight
Tues—noon-6 p.m. and 9 p.m.-midnight
Wed—9 a.m.-6 p.m. and 9 p.m.-4 a.m. Thurs-
Hurs—a.m.-11 p.m.-midnight
Fri—11 a.m. 5 a.m.-10 a.m.
Sat—noon till 5 a.m. Sun.
Sun—9 a.m. till 6:30 a.m. and 9 p.m.-midnight
NOW RENT
At SERVI-TRONICS
A NEW, PORTABLE, COLOR TV
- ONLY '16° per month/Plus '2.00 returnable deposit
- CALL 842-6626
- Or visit at 1401 West 6th Street
TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA
LAWRENCE TOYOTA
announces:
THE
1977
TOYOTAS
TM KAC5-1328
10
Saturday, Oct. 23 and Sunday, Oct. 24 LAWRENCE TOYOTA Will be a part of the Auto Show at K-Mart (parking lot)
We invite you to come out and see the new Toyotas!
AWRENCE TOYOTA
Lawrence Toyota-Douglas County's NO. 1 small car dealer
Lawrence Auto Plaza Ph. 842-2191
TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA
SUNDAY
A CHANCE TO TRY
SOMETHING DIFFERENT
SO
TRY US
Pizza inn
Hillcrest Plaza (Next to the Theaters) 841-2670
OPEN SUNDAY 4 p.m., 'til 9 p.m.
12
Friday, October 22,1976
G21 - 7691
University Daily Kansan
TEAM ELECTRONICS
is having a
Garage Sale
to make room for new products
Stereo Components
Dokorder 7100
7" Reel to Reel Tape Deck
List '499** Now only '300°
YAC
MICROSCOPE
Dokorder 7140
4 Channel Reel to Reel Tape Deck
List '699** Now only '400**
Dokorder MK-50 Cassette Deck List '249" Now only '125°
Sankyo STD—1510 Deluxe Cassette Deck List '249$ Now only '169$
Sankyo STD—1410 Cassette Deck
List '199$ Now only '149$
Akai GXC—39P Cassette Deck
List *279°$ Now only *189°$
Portable Cassette & Radio
010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101
Superscope C—101A Portable Cassette Deck List '69 $ Now only '39 $
Superscope C102A
Deluxe Portable Cassette Deck
List '79" Now only '49$
Superscope CR—1000A
AM-FM Portable Cassette Deck
List '139" Now only '79"
"
Sony TC—67 Portable Cassette Deck List '79 $ Now only '49 $
Sony TC----55
Pocket Cassette Deck
List '169" Now only '99"
AUDIO
SPEAKERS
ALL Ultralinear Speakers 50% off
all Parrallax Speakers 50% off
VENTURI
Phillips GA—212 Deluxe Turntable
all Namco Speakers 50% off
all Pioneer Speakers 50% off
Dual Turntables 50% off
List '179' Now only '99'
Mon. — Fri. 10:00—8:00
Saturday 10:00-6:00
STORE HOURS
Sunday 12:00-5:00
Sale applies only to in stock products and ends Sunday, Oct.24.
100%
Car Stereo
P
Craig 3141
Craig 3143
Deluxe 8 track
List *79*$ Now only *39*$
Power Play Floor Mount 8 track List '119* Now only '69*
Craig 3138
Power Play 8 track
List '119 $ Now only '69 $
Craig 3139
Power Play FM 8 track
List *1795 Now only *995
Craig 3515
Craig 3515
Cassette Deck
List '59$ Now only '39$
Car Stereo Speakers 50% off
CUSTOM INSTALLATION AVAILABLE FOR CAR STEREO.
TEAM
2319 La.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 22,1976
13
Teri's energy flows for kids and coaching
Teri's energy She sets her sights on helping others
The sun wouldn't rise for another 30 minutes. And even then the rain clouds would hide it from view. The streetlights' reflections glistened on the slick pavement.
While most of Lawrence was still asleep, unaware of the grey day ahead, Tert Anderson was not only awake, but outside and running.
She moved effortlessly down the sidewalk
along Iowa street. As she splashed through puddles, she seemed unaffected by the 46 degree weather and oblivious to the silent stains from passing cars.
ANDERSON STARTS every day with a four or five mile run. It's a pattern that's hard to break—a pattern formed during the Olympics—but it also marks America's top female distance runners.
During that span she went on European AUu tour. She competed in the USA-USSR dual track meet. And she was a non-commissioned member of the 1976 U.S. Olympic team.
She runs more than 70 miles a week, but not because she's training for any races.
"I guess its become so much a part of my life that I enjoy being physically fit," she said.
FOR THAT REASON, and that reason alone, Anderson still runs. At the ripe age of 23—about five years before most distance racing she has retired from competitive racing.
"The competitive drive isn't gone," she explained. "It revives every day. I've just kind of redirected that into helping other people find out what they can attain."
Anderson is carrying out her plan as a graduate student by working toward a masters degree in adaptive physical education and by serving as an assistant coach for the women's cross country and track teams.
A large part of her graduate work deals with children who have perceptual motor
d dysfunctions. The kids aren't handicapped per se, but their development is behind that of others.
SHE HAS THREE students who meet with the surgeon to unnausea in the Percentile Club Clin.
"We work on certain reflex type activities, such as balance and hand-to-eye coordination," she said. "Some of the kids have special muscles like protecting yourself or falling."
The 30-minute sessions might seem more like recess to the kids, considering that the clinic resembles a playground with jungle ropes and high walls. The walk apparatus and even a traniline.
"they don't consider it work," Anderson said, "because we devise games that we play with them. And I love jumping on the tramoline as much as they do."
"JUST FOR THEM to be able to learn how to skip or do something like that is really a neat accomplishment," she said. "I think it does give them a great deal of self-confidence."
She indicated that she's received the same results by coaching the women's track and cross country teams, whether it is long-distance runners or dozing weight training.
The athletes agreed.
"They find out what they can do and that improves their self-confidence in the track realm, which carries over into all other parts of their lives."
"SHE MAKEES every person seem really
like themselves," said "like
everyone is a winner in her profession."
There were recurring remarks about Anderson's dedication and willingness to do "that little bit extra" that separates great from good.
Jerome Howe, Kansas State's cross
member of the 1972
Olympic team, gladiator
"She's the most dedicated, hardest working individual I know," said Howe, who ran with Anderson when the two were married. He stated, "And I'm including men and wives."
Anderson admits that she worked hard to
that she had some help, and she emphasizes
that she had some help.
"She has an incredible capacity to push herself."
"This probably sounds freaky if you don't understand what I'm talking about," she explained, "but I really turned my life over to God this summer.
The ability to push herself—she's run up to 140 miles in a week—paid off last spring. She placed second in the 3,000 meter trial for the USA-USSR dual meet in College Park, Md, the week following the Olympics.
HER FINISH also gained her a spot, although a non-competing one, on the U.S.
"I was ready to fail if that's what was planned for me, and if not, I was just open." She didn't fail. In a race that saw the world record in the 3,000 meters shattered by Michael Phelan and the American record betrayed by France Larsen Lutz, Anderson was fourth.
BUT SHE SEEMS most proud of her work while in Montreal with the Olympiad team.
"Not so much about running, because God's really given me a peace about quitting. But that He can give us so much more. I want to help to help as many people as I can find out."
Her retirement means that the American track scene has lost an outstanding competitor, but it also means that the children she tutors and the women she coaches have gained a compassionate friend and an enthusiastic teacher.
"It was a Christian outreach program and I got to talk with people from different nations and share with others what my life has become because of God.
THE DANCE OF THE GARDEN
---
AAU
USA
On the left, Anderson supervises some weightlifting by the KU women's track team. She is an assistant coach. On the right, a pillow fight is used as an exercise for DiCapo to develop strength and coordination.
Story by Steve Clark
Photos by Dave Regier
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 22, 1976
Skunks rank among area's pests
Staff Writer
By RICK PADDEN
Almost every nose in the area has at one time or another been startled by the pungent ool emission by a cute (from a skunk) little black and white creature—the skunk
Wherever he goes his presence is noticed, though not always welcomed. Many skunks live in this area, and although only a few are seen, one knows they're here.
In March 1976, the abundance of skunks around the Jayhawker Towers apartment building were spotted.
THERE HAVE BEEN reports of people being sprayed by the skunks, and one skunk was reported to have gotten into the dryer of one of the laundry rooms at the complex.
Pest control companies have been called in to handle the problem, and private "skunk trappers" have been asked to help remove the numerous air pollutants.
The skunks are still around, says George Korch, Boston graduate student, who is doing his master's thesis on the occurrence of rabies in skunks.
KORCH SAID yesterday that skunks often moved from wooded areas to residential areas when the weather became hot and food for the skunks became scarce.
He said that although they were present, the skunks actually weren't being sighted often, or at least he hadn't heard of many sights this semester.
Korch said that the late evening and the early morning hours were the most common times for skunks to come out of hiding, and that they seldom moved through open areas. He said skunks made great additions to kiddie lots. He said skunks usually stray close to hedges, garbage cars and trash piles.
HARRY BOYLE, Lawrence sanitation worker, said that his crew often skunks
Lawrence pest control companies haven't received any skunk calls this semester.
digging in trash for food scraps early in the morning.
The campus housing office hasn't received any complaints this semester either, J. J. Wilson, director of housing management, said.
One person at the main desk of Joseph R. Pearson Scholarship hall said that about a week ago a resident entered the building sprayed by a skunk in the parking lot.
But the person at the desk didn't talk to the smelly victim long enough to get his
Carter interview spurring Playboy's November sales
COMPUTER PORTRAITS
Made from any size B/W or color photo.
10-29-74
THIS NEW ART FORM uses a modern computer to analyze your picture and print an 18 x 10 portrait using over 13,000 alphabet letters and symbols. Makes a terrific conversation piece. Your photo returned.
$3.00/Photo
$1.50/Copies
By CHRIS COTTRELL
If you're planning to buy the November issue of Playboy magazine—the one with the controversial Jimmy Carter interview—you'd better hurry.
(Tax Included)
Send check, money order, or cash to:
COMPUTER IMAGES
2130 W. 715 St.
Shawnee Mission,
Kansas 66208
There is a big demand for the magazine in Lawrence and the supply is rapidly dwindling, according to several local businesses that sell the magazine.
Staff Writer
Employees at all eight stores contacted said last week that sales of Playboy magazine had increased markedly this month.
Oct. 22-23 Hester Street
Oct. 29-30 The Exorcist
Nov. 5-6 Farewell, My Lovely
SUA FILMS
Higher than usual sales were reported in two other Lawrence Seven Eleven stores, both Town Cler jerks, Raney Plaza Drug Store, 1800 Massachusetts St., Super-X Drugs, 1015 W. 23rd, and St. Union.
Goodbye O Lord. I'm Going To America!
Advance news of the Carter interview, in which he is quoted as saying he has looked on women with hust and committed adultery in his heart many times, came out four
POPULAR FILMS Upcoming Films for '76
Nov. 12-13 Nashville
All Films shown in Woodruff Auditorium
"THIS FILM
IS A
TRIUMPH."
Liz Smith,
CSOMPOLITAN
MIDWEST FILM PRODUCTIONS. INC. PRESENTS STEVEN KEATS
JOAN MCHINN SILVER PRODUced BY RAPHNE D. SILVER
Hester Street PG
CEL
—Br
PL
"PEOPLE WERE asking for the magazine about a month before it came out." Linda Nelson, sales manager at the Keven Elena Food Store at 2500 Iowa St.," said. "I think part of the reason people were asking to come in was the interview was in the October issue."
The program, sponsored by SUA, will be at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. General admission tickets are $3 and are on sale at the SUA box office.
The company, based in New York, has been touring the United States this year and is planning to expand its operations.
FRIDAY, OCT. 22 and AND SATURDAY, OCT. 23
7:00 and 9:30 $1
3:30 Matlnee
Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union
The Louis Falco Dance Company, Inc., a contemporary ballet troupe, will be at KU next Wednesday to perform a three-part ballet
Nelson said that Seven Eleven received the November issue of Playboy boy last Thursday. She said that because the national election is Nov. 2, many people probably didn't think the article would be in the November issue.
"A WARM,
LYRICAL
CELEBRATION."
—Bruce Williamson,
PLAYBOY
The Town Crier, 711 W. 23rd St., usually doesn't sell all of its库存 of supply about 100 copies of Playboy, Lissa McQuin, sales manager. Because this month because of the Cartier article.
"IN FACT, the month before, people were
still not saying for Elston, "and they're'
still asking for 'm'."
Linda Elsten, sales clerk at the Kansas Union, said the magazine went on sale three two weeks ago. She said the Union's supply of Playboy magazines usually lasted the entire month, but that this month they were sold out in less than a week.
"Everybody was buying it, not just the regular readers." McQuain said.
Nov. 19-20 A Brief Vacation and The 10th International Tournee of Animation
Art Hallenbeck of the Seven Eleven Food Store at 3025 W. 6th St., said he was impressed by the Carter interview's effect on the magazine's sales.
"It's had quite an effect," McQuain said. "The magazine came out two weeks before it was supposed to because there were so many requests."
NELSON, TOO, that people who didn't usually play Boyboy were asking for them.
"A lot of women have been asking for it," Nelson said. "They're all embarrassed. They say, 'I've never read Playboy before, I don't understand.' A lot of people are really eager to get it."
She also said she had noticed a different one of customer playing Playboy this night.
FIRST WORK IN THE LAB
Nowcomes Miller time.
milch
© 1976 The Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis.
F
University Dally Kansan
Friday, October 22,1976
15
KU study to focus on tribes' health problems
By DEB MILLER
Staff Writer
CT.23
Three tribes of the United Tribes of Kansas and Southeast Nebraska—the Potawatomi, the Iowa and the Sac and Fox—will be the subjects of a questionnaire to the departments of anthropology and linguistics at the University of Kansas.
The questionnaire will be given to the tribes in five counties of northeastern Kansas and southeastern Nebraska in about 450 villages. The participants will receive an anthropology, last week the census will include questions about three major Indian health problems - hypertension, diabetes and otitis media, a middle ear infection, and other health issues that still speak their native Indian language.
STULL, WHO did a similar study in Arizona, developed the questionnaire. The interviewers will be area Indians chosen by the tribes.
Ken Miner, assistant professor of linguistics, and Akira Yamamoto, assistant
will work on the questionnaire with Stull. One of the major purposes of the questionnaire, Stull said, is to locate the people in the various tribes.
professor of anthropology and linguistics,
philosophy or the anthropology with Stall.
"Most of the tribes have more people than the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) gives them credit for." Stull said. "For example, the BIA says that the Kansas Sac and Fox tribe has eight members, but they say they have closer to 150."
Stull said that determining the exact number of tribe members was important because the BIA allocated money based on the number of people in a tribe.
POPULATION estimates vary widely because the U.S. census doesn't count Indians on reservations, and the BIA census indicates that Indians living off reservations. Stuhl said.
Stull said that reservations in Kansas were small and scattered. Most Kansas residents did not own a car.
Stull estimated that there are 10,000 Indians in Kansas. About 5,000 live in northeastern Kansas counties, and most of the rest live in the Wichita area.
Plans for the census, partially funded by a grant from the University, have been in the making since June. The United Tribes will need assistance for help with some of its programs.
IN MAY, Stull said, four KU students worked with the tribes in northeast Kansas. KU students also will be involved with the interviews of some tribes and possibly with some of the interviewing.
Most of the questions on the census will deal with Indian health problems. Stull said the United Tribes once had mobile health units, but funding for them ran out.
"To get the units going again, the tribes must be able to show a need for the units and to show the extent of health problems in their tribe." Stull said.
The rest of the census, which Miner and Yamamoto will work with, deals with how many tribe members speak their native language.
"MANY OF THE Indian languages are
For the past three years, Miner worked on a program in Wisconsin that taught Potawatomi speakers how to teach their children the language.
dying. The children don't learn them at home any more." Miner said.
"Native language speakers have been teaching children on their own for many years, but they usually make them learn only single words," M. yer said. "We teach them how to teach grammar and sentence structure."
Bilingual education programs are often confused with language maintenance programs, but the two aren't the same, Miner said.
"Bilingual programs teach the children who don't know English at all in their native languages, and then gradually introduce them to English." he said.
The census, which should be finished by Christmas, is only the first step in a series of studies of Indians and their problems that were conducted in departments hope to carry out, Stull said.
Main Lodge & Heated Cabins wine with meals
From National Forest Roadhead Into Colorado Flattops Ski Ranch for 6 days & 5 nights WILDERNESS XC SKIING
Instructions & Tours with former Chamonix Gulde
Jan. 3-8,1977
$208 from Glenwood Springs, Colo.
Bring sleeping bag and XC skis.
Reservations ($50 Deposit) Deadline Oct. 27, 1976
Hard Traveling,
4503 W. 66th Terr.
Prairie Village, Kansas 66208
913-362-1915
CROSS SKI
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to students without regard to race or national origin. BIRLING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FRIALL HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
times times times times
15 words or
fewer
$1.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.75 $3.00
Each additional
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
AD DEADLINES
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ad can be placed in person or taken to the UDE business office at 864-4358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ENTERTAINMENT
Employment Opportunities
BOKONON Parphernalia for the commissary
841-3600 and in Wednesday's Kavan
841-3600 13-10
3 bdm. apt, A.C. ww carpeting, electric kilchuck
460 km/h bus route, bus route 1600 mm plus electricity, 84-0700
1 Bedroom Apt. $150 plus deposit. Manager, 1402
Twng. No. 6, 842-5683. 10-22
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS--Drop in and pick up your materials (no phone, call email) at WEISTERHALL or drop them off at STUDENT RENTERS.
Need to sublet Jayhacker Towers Apt. $313/mi
*w/utilitys paid* Call 943-107-09 (or) 9135
(www.yayhackers.com)
1 bedroom apartment, $100 per month, utilities
Walked to campus, 435-323, 10-22
Luxurious Two-bedroom apt. to subtle inmedi-
tely; $290 per unit; utilities: $415-$835 or $478-$776
3 Bedroom at, Qualcomm avail. for immu-
nated. Room 802-8511 between 9 & 306 & 480-7325
at, Qualcomm. Room 802-8511 between 9 & 306 & 480-7325
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BELL AUDIO,
ELECTRIC, 845-300-9980, 845-300-9980.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Redressage of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dampers or close out products, so you can afford the best at the GAMPHONE SHOP at KIEPS. If
Excellent solution of new and used furniture trade, the Furniture and Appliance Center, 704 W. Main St., Miami, FL 33136.
For new Chevrolets and used cars
Call Ottis Vann!
Turner Chevrolet
Western Education Note—Now on Sale! Make
Western Education Civilization! Makes sense to
use them.
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. tt
Excellent selection of used furniture, refi-
rigerable rooms, Kitchen, Pikeka, Kyoto, Japan,
m.p. 10-30 yrs, m.p. 6-12 m.p. Free delivery.
VAT included.
843-7700
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermalda. Uniforms, etc. 941-3832. Stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. tf
Final markdown on all 76 Magnavox console stereos and components. Beautiful $49.83售价 cut as low as $50 per power set,套装 sets, or $29.99 for $30.00 Max. Open 4' up 30" ply. (Thurs., 8:30 a.m. 10:22 mw.)
CLEARANCE! Discounted interior tires $2 each
18" x 6.5" rubber tire, $39.99 for a 2-1/4"
2" 14" inch leaf. (Even AT87R1 35-60-15
radial for Volkswagen included!) Rocky St.
Trucks have a 2" x 6.5" tire; come thru Worthwall's parking lot for fire evenshots.
Mercury sterile cassette tape recorder, two vol-
bilities, batter for an additional auxiliary, detach-
able battery, 80 mm², external hard drive.
Excellent White Chrysler 1988 "300" Full Power
Seat in Wooden Aero Cabriolet
Seat in Wooden Aero Cabriolet for Pricing. Truck
Check out these used bike specs:
1953 Honda MT250 495
1956 Honda MT125 495
1973 Builton 355 625
1981 Kawasaki KX125 1985
1974 Kawasaki kawaii 1985
1975 Honda CLI125 375
1976 Honda CX125 375
1978 Honda CT70 195
1980 Honda CT70 195
See them at Horton's Honda, 1811 W. 6th, Hall.
Ks. K41.23331 10-22
BJL K140 15" bass instrument speaker in cabinet
150 watt RMS rating. Price negotiation. 824-137-6000
Hover/Spin/Dry portable waterless, Great for outdoor use. Dry portable waterless, with勿水过滤. Call 841-5000 after 6.
Bruce guitar amp. Superior quality 150 watts
in speaker. Excellent condition. 10-25
841-6842
American Microscope. Like new. Best offer. Call
after 5.00. 824-9637. 10-25
CLOXCLIFOPE of PHILOSOPH. complete set.
1972, new condition. $100 value for $62.
82-22
1972 Honda 350, Must sell, best offer. Call after
5:28. 842-9657
**PLEASE DO NOT CHANGE THE OCCUPATION OF THIS VEHICLE.**
40%, 75% off on warm-up suits, dress men's
clothing, and Swim Club Rm. 4 (west on 23rd) 842-766-796
1969 Bafl 124 Sport Compact body redies, new water pump, new battery, new water pump, new battery, BAI-812-3568
BAE-812-3568
Sierro. Garrett wurden. Shur cartridge, ampli-
mplifiers, batteries, 22 watts. $69. Call Greg
McMahon. #423-754-1038.
Mamarats 1000 Stereo cameras - so watt, per channel, power amps. Must will well -64-681. Mamarats channel power amp. Must will well -64-681.
1969 MGC, size: must sell. 26,000 miles, 6 cylinder.
automatic transmission 913-294-4001
KU-KSU GAME TICKETS: for sale at our cost
at SUA or in SUA (Union Lobby) or call
848-3177
GTEQ Quad Monster Monitor 250w watts HMS/4
GTEQ Quad Monster Monitor 250w watts HMS/4
Pioneer lab table, SBRI G10AWX changer/Pioneer
8-track record/payload deck. Yashica-D twin
let refer reference. Monberg MONGBR 300w
let refer reference. Monberg MONGBR 300w
10-27
New $60 Durham Special Hiking Boots, snow
sealed, woman's size 6, must call sell 841-3075.
www.durhamspecialhikingboot.com
PORCHSE, 1981, 911-T; Targa, 5 speed. condition. Evenness after 6, 000. 843-649-10-26
A great guitar -GIBSON SG-approx. **98 in mint condition.** A truly rare find. 841-7135. 10-28
66 MUSTANG 6.2 cyl. 3 speed, mg maps, Good
machinery. Needs mechanic's Call. 10-252
87 MUSTANG 6.2 cyl. 3 speed, mg maps, Good
machinery. Needs mechanic's Call. 10-252
95 Ford Galaxie 500 auto, power steering, 74-
in and in good condition. **10-27**
**10-28**
NAISMITH HALL
Now accepting
Applications
for Spring Semester
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
Bicycle 10 speed, with lock 1 year old. $86-94
$94-102 receives in the morning or leave you
the evening.
HELP WANTED
Cooks, Amuse, responsibility for preparation work,
Meals, and supervision. 30 hour shift per week. Finsmary College
Lounge. 30 hour shift per week. Finsmary College Lounge.
For the lowest prices on top quality steel equipment, call CVA; call B214-841-5848 or 863-1347. 11-18
For Sale-1175 Honda CL, 450, $500. Teac 450
卡座 deck kit. Rede $450, sell for $253. Dual 100
card deck kit. Rede $450, sell for $253. Dual 100
Must-Sell 170. Opel Galileo Rallye. Gate 20 mg
also parachute Gc Call any date. 642-802. 10-28
Delivery—must have own car, $ approx. Inc购置—must apply in person at Heavy Eddy Center.
COUNTER CLERK AT OVERLAND PHOTO
CENTER & 2:30 PM Daily Monday to Saturday, 10am-4pm
OVENSKA JOBS—summer year-round. Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. all fields. $200-
$120 monthly. Expenses paid. sightseeing. Free
transfers. Box 440, Buryton. CA, 97407. 11-11
IM SMITH at Quicksilver Photo-Shop, 719
IM SMITH at Quicksilver Photo-Shop, 719
P M MONDAY thru Saturday $2.60 per hour. Ap-
ternoon.
POSITION AVAILABLE Full time research assistant in Bi-Chemistry or Chemistry required. Laborals will work independently and may enjoy rewarding flexible positions. Starting date is December 18th, 2017 at the University of Bic-chemistry, Univ. Utrecht 82427 by November 1, AEQUAL OPPORTUNITY / AFFIRMATIVE ACTION 10-27
LOST AND FOUND
Now taking applications for part-time cocktail waitress, cost is $250. Dispatch: Apply at Carriage House, 173 W. 9th St., NW, Seattle, WA 98104.
Opening for research assistant to research. cooperate with faculty in human service administration. Part time temporary position in development of institutional disability or public health, research and curriculum development experience. Application deadline 02.18. Completion of a Bachelor's degree in health experience. Qualified man and woman of all race background. Qualified man and women of all race background.
Bus Boy Bus Girl Need next, well groomed. Bus Bus Boy Bus Girl Need next, well groomed. Bus
muniello will meet with others to work 11:30 A.M. and
muniello will meet with others to work 11:30 A.M.
Personal Office of Karen Dunn University Employer
Affirmative Action Employee Men and
Women.
Lost. One pair of glasses in brown case between
Field House and Wesley. Reward. Daytime.
10:26
10:26
KUV season football ticket enroute to OU game, vicinity of Crescent College Brother who was killed in the shooting at OU.
Found: key chain with initial found Fri, Oct. 15,
north of campain. Call 841-5915. 10-22
has the eyeglasses
you want!
806 Massachusetts
phone 841-7421
VISIONS
Loost: Brige leather, purse with lots of pocket
sheets. Call Sheer at 817-6451. PLEASE RENEW
Sheer at 817-6451. PLEASE RENEW
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we offer: 1. Special Prices
Lost: Ladies' alter berber writetach someone
to the camera. 16. Oct. 16 Callen, Giulius 6147-86. 10-22
16. Oct. 16 Callen, Giulius 6147-86.
Found: pair of glasses in a black atch at 12th
& ten on. T台: 841-7195 or 843-6964. 10-22
NAPA
Found: glasses with case at corner of Nathmiln and Irving Hill Dr. on 10-15-76. Hack 864-2033.
Found: Algebra book in 209 Blake. Call 913-837-
2640 after 6:00.
***
10-25
. Special Prices Open 7 days and
Kt at KU/OU game on the Hill. Brown leather
Lost call: KU-814-5577. content IDs: HB 10-25
Call: KU-814-5577.
MISCELLANEOUS
NOTICE
N.A.P.A.
- Free 5-kiliter need a good home. Please help
P.M.
Call 614-8190 between 5:45
P.M.
10:25
Auto Parts
4. Machine shop service
Female singer looking for Rock Band to sing with, Call Nicki 843-361-361
10-26
- Shop Set, 620 Mass. Ussr furniture, daines,
daines, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-
843-377-311.
Junior Stack House. Delicious food at reasonable prices.
Sunday 12pm - Wednesdays 10am - Closed Tuesdays
10am - Thursdays
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND THERAPY; indi-
dicate specific needs of women in govern-
ment work 102-633 in government.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center.
Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-
Friday, 3 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, 9 a.m. to
CABASH GAFE- Good food from arizan. Lamb
30:25:30 30:30:30 Mass. Please be a bedside
boy or a guest.
FREE TO GOOD HOME: one-loving male
male kitten, approx. 3 old; has had shots
and is well cared for.
FEMINIST COUNSELING AND THERAPY; indi-
dividualized growth worked 10-22
361-383 in Leavantwood
in Lewantwood, NY
Redeserve Lutheran School, 30th and Haskell,
invites all students and faculty to our Sunday
Study at 10.15 a.m. We have an active college
group. Transport for students. Office:
843-729-6111. House: 843-729-6112
PERSONAL
I WANT to learn an trish jug. If you know 10-12
please teach me. 841-0817.
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
non-traditional, anti-chauvinist man wants to
befriend women with similar views. 10-26
evenings. 884-1900
Having trouble scheduling morning worship and
having trouble attending evening worship, you
invite me to worship at 8:30 a.m. on the
19th floor of The Church of Jesus Christ of
Church.
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
JAMES V. OWENS
RETAIL LIQUOR STORE
COLD BEER
Wines and Liquors
NEXT TO OWEN'S FLOWERS
T
Sales, Parts, Service
HORIZONS HONDA
9th and Iowa
1811 w. 0m
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
- Foosball
- Pinball
SERVICES OFFERED
TYPING
Home of The Chalk Hawk
Missing? For sure on your birthday. Have a happy
19th. 10-22
NO TRICKS! Treat a special someone this Pumpkin Day!
The Grosse Pointe Lady's Podge Class. Orange-frosted white carnation. Only $25.00. Order today & Monday in the Union, 10:30am. Sponsored by A-FRISCH.
www.grossepointe.com
Rin, Have a hell of a birthday, Love Twink,
Splash, Mama Coco and Kinky 10-22
The Lounge
T. Walters-Black's longs for your coverage in your Birthday Suit, Happy 21st K. 10-22
Body tension is painful. Massage is simple. Muscle relaxation, relaxing muscles and adding circulation, relaxation of the muscles is a natural method of preserving health and body function what soever in this message. It sexual intention what so ever in this massage. It G.P. and it is beneficial to men and women. Headmasters Hair Designers. 590 Vermont. Urgent.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on each cover
1125 alphabetic slide address. No 266 Ft Los Angeles
University, 1125 Alphabetic Slide Address. No 266 Ft Los
Angeles University.
TRY
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
A IN MUSICAL RUT? See how lessons can get you moving. Beginning to advanced in folk, rock, jazz, classic, bluegrass and blues guitar, mandolin, banjo, saxophone. Call me NIKKO Maiden 10-29817.
Ping Pong
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Grooming all breeds. Professional care for your
dogs. Grooming all breeds. Professional care for your
Paradise Dogs. 843-709. 10-28
- Pool
- Snooker
Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycle Lawrences has to offer. 9:00-12:30. Schwimm Schirm Cycley, 4:00-Mon-Sat. Thurs. till 8:30, Sun. 1-4, 18:20 W. 8th, 62-832G.
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a
motorcycle - clean up and adjust your
entire bike - hurricane brakes and chain, two both wheels, adjust your
brakes and chain, true wheel drive, accessories bought at time of "tune-up". Rates:
10 speed bike $25.00 ALTA- Oct and Nov, 10 speeds $13.50.
2 speeds $15.00 single speed, $6.50 Complete protection.
4 speeds $25.00 single speed, $6.50 Complete protection.
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockoy
- Foos-Ball
main Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 012, 023, 034, 045, 056, 116, 172, 173, 183, 209, 238, 358, 568, 627, 646, 676, or one-time text preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7841.
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-29
**THESIS BINDING COPYING.** The House of Udher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you at 858 Manhasset Avenue phone 846-321-7020.
ELECTION OF BEER
Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, mike,
copying. 843-5954, Mrs. Wright.
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selectle TC (1280) phone at 442-7297. Call Pam At call 442-7297.
843-9812 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
Experienced typist, manpowerless, tesees, call; Karen Kamer 641-831-7215, 841-180-7980
10-24T
www.karenkamer.com
- Bud on Tap
Experienced TIPLM-IBM-Memory-Call 843-
941I, ask for John. 102-
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted >
- Pool
Eyeblean Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
AL MERRITT HOSPITAL
DO'S DELUXE
BCL 14 M-995
LAWRENCE PARK
941-723-4
WANTED
Female to sub-less a apartment to room with
baby girl. Start payment in November 10-22
+ 62328.
Ace needs salesperson at the game to sell the official KU hat. Earn a bac a hat. $5 in commissions made at Winnereau. Limited number of salesperson needed. Cledt 495-8208. @ 0541.
Need four tickets to Nebraska game. Call after
10:21
841.7126.1738
Roommate needed for very tiny furnished apartment in Oakland. $250 per month and also make $750 per month. Also accept $100 per month or more. Send resumes to RoommateServices@hotmail.com.
Need 1 tool, anywhere, to Nashville Game. Call 843-724-900, after 5:30. Keep trying.
Wanted - Full size backpack and aluminum frame,
1-453-802-393 or Wayne Finch. Tonganoxie 1-453-802-393.
2 female roommates want for large 2-story house stealing January's $99.16 month plus unanticipated fees. Doesn't anybody need a home? Pets OK. Share a smuggle fireplace with warm people. $99 plus tip.
Female roommate needs to share apartment with roommate. Call 841-8461 for a bus route. Call 841-8461 for a P.M. route. Need 1 KU-KSD football ticket desperately. Name your price (in dollars). Call 841-8461 for a student or full-time work girl to split rent andUtil, in a 3 bedroom apt. at Quail Creek Room. Expect bedroom bills: 841-8461 between 8:30 and 6:00 and 843-3725 after 6:00. Need 2 female rooms. Call 841-8461.
Need $ 3. money roommates for a furnished humboldt home. Room must be furnished included. Come by 1011 Indiana, Apt. 5, anytime.
Need two people to share a large house with another student? No problem. Nov. 1 to mid-September, 90 course of Louisiana $60-$100 plus utilities $43-647. Consult now at Campus House for details. www.campus.house.com Position Opening Photo/Darkroom Instructor teach high school residence hall applications teach high school residence hall applications may be available on Saturday and some evenings. Applications to teach high school residence hall applications may be available on Saturday and some evenings. September 27, Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action
Wanted: female roommate for spacious 2 bed
room. RU bus route. Call eavens call 843-705-8984.
843-705-8984
Restaurants wanted to share two-bedroom duplex rooms. One room was a twin bedroom and calm edm and saying-call Guilty. 843-756-1091.
Need tickets to NUKU football game Call 841
9:30am, first a.m. 10:00
2005 after 8 a.m.
2006 after 9 a.m.
Campaign investment for Hi-Fi pilots. Make easy
campaign on investment needled. Sell stereo equipment on the车载市场 by 2006. Distribute campaign indicators to Campaigns.
fire 1-800-424-2480. Carcine, Des Moles, Iowa.
Extravagant apartment needs one or two persons
46-82, 84-85, 84-136, 84-156, 10-28
46-82, 84-85, 84-136, 84-156, 10-28
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents 7th & Arkansas 843-3328
GRAY SPORT
Order Now For Christmas
MAGAZINE
SUBSCRIPTION
SERVICE
Many at Special Discounts
ADVENTURE a bookstore
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Phone: 843-6424
SANTA
Use Kansan Classifieds
NOW'S THE TIME FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY
No extra charge
Gift Wrapping Free
HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass.
16
Friday, October 22,1976
University Daily Kansan
ANGELIQUE
MASSAGE
DONT MISS OUR
$50 DISCOUNT
Photo by JOHN HARRINGTON
This sign advertises for one of three massage parlors on the Topeka outskirts
Law officials still unable to close 3 massage parlors near Topeka
By DARYL COOK
Staff Writer
By DARYL C
Staff Writer
To the uninitiated, they're barely noticeable driving south from Topeka.
In fact, the entire stretch of highway looks much like any piece of road in Kansas. Farm implement stores and mobs tend to buy the most expensive sex for sale on the outskirts of Topeka.
But it is there, all the same.
Massage parliers, in the words of one Topeka policeman who wished not to be identified, "rub people the wrong way." And they have flourished just outside the capital of Kansas in spite of recent attempts this year to close them.
THEY SURVIVE because Kansas law doesn't acknowledge the sex for hire from the parlers as prostitution, say law enforcement officials.
Three parlor can be found on Highway
1 Country Club Massage A-1 Health
Club; and
2
Another, the French Health Spa, is farther south in Pauline. Three Wichita massage parlor advertise in the Topeka phone book as well.
The appearances of the massage parlors are barely reminiscent of stereotypes of old Europe.
the three on Highway 75 are housed in mobile homes, possibly indicative of their uncertain future, and the one in Pauline is located in buildings next to a local insurance business.
CUSTOMERS ARE greeted at the doors either by a burly doorman or by a masseuse, invariably a woman dressed in a short nighttown.
With a businesslike and sometimes tired
air, the women explain the types of massages available and the prices.
The prices usually range from $20 to more than $100, depending on the duration of the massages and the massseuse's state of undress.
Whether for manual sex (intercourse is strictly forbidden, said one masseur) or just someone to tell one's troubles to, travelers and a group of regular customers, mostly in their 40s and 50s, keep the parlors thriving.
BUT HOW LONG they will remain open will depend on the Shawnee county commissioners who are still trying to write a letter to Mayor Topeka area of the parlors permanently.
The parlers were forced to the outskirts of Topeka by a city ordinance passed in June that prohibited massages involving contact between members of the obese sex.
However, Shawne county authorities have been unable to close the parlers because there aren't any county statutes specifically forbid the parlers to operate.
JIM CHAFFEE, Shawnee county sheriff,
said Monday that although the Kansas
legislature had empowered county
governments to act against the pardons,
the state attorney general did not
written any statutes that would stop
the parlers from operating.
Chaffee said that the parliers allegedly had employed runaway juvenile girls, but there was no evidence to close the parlers on charges of moral corruption of minors.
THE KANSAS attorney general's office tried unsuccessfully this summer to close
one parters by attempting to define them as cosmetology or beauty salons.
Under Kansas law, cosmetologists are the building and a $100 license fee for the building, and a $100 license fee for the building.
But District Court Judge E. Newton Vickers ruled against the attorney general's case because cosmetologists weren't aware of the risks to the waist as the masseuses in question do.
"When someone is required to get a license from the state, that person must be trained for what they will be doing." Vickers added.
BECAUSE THE massage parlor don't perform the same types of massages that cosmologist do, they aren't eligible for a massage therapist's license. The prosecuted for not having one, Vickers said.
Only a few massage parlors have been closed in Kansas in the past decade, Detective Kenneth Harmon of the Lawrence police department said.
one, in Lawrence, was closed about 10
years, but the case is no longer in the
city record.
SINCE THEN, state morality statutes governing parlor parlors have changed enough so that the case couldn't act as a precedent, Harmon said.
The problems of closing the parlors were recently summed up in a statement by Shawnee County District Attity. Gene Olander, who has been working with the county commissioners for the past year on a way to close the parlors:
"I don't know of any movement to close the parlor and I see nothing under the present statutes of the law that could close them."
Let us BOOT you
right out of our store!!!
by Frye
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
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Famous for his "Last Tango In Paris" soundtrack. Gato on "Caliente!" connects your body to some of the most exciting music ever put on record. "Caliente!" is a world of dancing to hot rhythms until the cold light of dawn. "Caliente!" is a new expression of Third World consciousness.
But above all it is one of the most creative and exciting musicians in the world helping us to feel the celebration of life.
"CALIENTE!" Including the Single"I Want You"
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MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-913-842-1544
AUTUMNY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.45
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, October 25, 1976
HOPE finalists present views
See stories page 10
Elks face liquor charges
Bv.JIM CORR
Staff Writer
The Kansas Alcoholic Beverage Control Division (ABC) will议请仪式 early this week to the Lawrence Elks Club, location of a homecoming weekend alumni banquet and ranking state officials, including Gov. Robert Bennett and Chancellor Archie Dykes.
The ABC's chief enforcement officer, William Strukel, Tropea, said yesterday that the club would be charged with improper pooling procedures and of-
The alleged violations took place at a gathering of law school alumni after the University of Kansas-University of Oklahoma football game Oct. 16.
OTHERS WHO reportedly attended the gathering were U.S. P. Rep. Larry Winn, RKan., U. S. District Court Judge Richard Chamman, G. T. Van Beber; and administrators and faculty members of the School of Law.
The gathering was sponsored by the third- year law school class.
The controversy started when Curt Schneider, Kansas attorney general, said last week that Bennett had attended the court and denied his said, had included an illegal, "cash her."
In a recent opinion, Schneider said that bar arrangements at which alcoholic drinks may be purchased by the general public are illegal in Kansas. Members of private clubs may purchase drinks if they have liquor pool arrangements with the clubs.
A PARTISAN squabble developed last week after Schneider sent a memo to Bennett, requesting the governor to remind heads of state agencies that sports gambling pools were illiquid in Kansas. The Topeka Daily Capital reported that Bennett responded by sending out a memo that Schneider said was sarcastic.
In the memo, Bennett asked state officials
The last KU College Bowl was in February 1986. At that time, a KU College Bowl Committee organized its competition between living groups.
THE REGISTRATION deadline is
Wednesday. To register, call 841-4565.
College Bowl quiz makes return to KU
University of Kansas students will have a chance to demonstrate just how quick-witted and well-versed they really are in college at the College Bowl Nov. 1-8 in the Kansas Union.
The Bowl is sponsored by SIL Society, a sophomore honor organization, and the University of Wisconsin.
A $2 entry fee is required for each
tender. The members must be under-
graduate students.
Each living group may register one four-member team, which will compete against teams from other living groups by answering questions gathered from KU professors in various academic areas.
not to bet on athletic events "so that the fate of the attorney general may be quiet, and so that his efforts and his attestations will not pressure matters," the Capital reported.
On Nov. 1-2 each team will compete once. The winners will advance to the semifinals Nov. 3-4. Final competition between the top two teams will be Nov. 5.
Scheineder then reportedly asked Bennett in a memo if he had attended the reception at the Elks Club. Leroy Towns, Bennett's mother, said that Bennett probably was at the affair.
TOWNS REPORTEDLY W was ill and in a Toeaek hospital last night.
Bennett couldn't be reached for comment. Dykes confirmed last night that he had been there.
"I don't know anything about it, except what I've seen in the news media" he said.
The winning team will receive a traveling trophy.
Two competing teams will play one game of two rounds, each round lasting
Each round will consist of a 20-point toss-up question and a four-part bonus question for the first team that correctly answers the toss-up.
The teams will be allowed 10 seconds to answer a tease-up question and 20 seconds to answer the final question.
IF A TEAM answers a toss-up question incorrectly, it loses 10 points and the other team will have the chance to answer it.
where Martin Dickinson, dew of the school of Law, was reported Friday as疑问 the reception was conducted in strict accordance with state law and a 1975 attorney general's ruling that set guidelines for receptions at which alcohol was served.
If the scores of the two competing teams are within 50 points at the end of the game, a gamble question will be asked.
Living groups that have registered a team for the Bowl-to-date are the Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha Delta FI pratergies. Basket Field, Stephenson and Pearson scholarship halls; and an independent team. Rieger said she expected about 30 teams to register.
The opinion was signed by William Schutte, assistant attorney general. It stated that alcoholic drinks could be served at private gatherings in private clubs if the participants were guests of a club member, if liquor consumed was charged to a member's liquor pool and if money was used to purchase set-ups and not liquor.
STRUKEL SAID two agents had interviewed the club manager and determined that the attorney general's office had been followed at the law school reception.
Strukel said that he hadn't read a report by the agents, but that they reported there had been violations at the Elks Club reception. He said the club apparently had no records of accounts of individual members, but used copyright owned in a pool by all club members.
Four cases of liquor were set out with signs that gave the prices of set-ups, he said, and after the reception ended, the club was reimbursed $165 for lips from money apparently collected as cover charges or charges for drinks.
"It WAS DETERMINED that the club deviated from legal pooling procedures," he said. "It is my opinion that they had improper pooling procedures on that day and they didn't."
Dickinson couldn't be reached last night for clarification of his earlier comments. John Murphy, associate dean of the law at Brown University, would comment about the reception
A hearing will be set in Topeka within about a month. Strukel said, and the Elks
See LIQUOR page nine
16
A judge for the Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman look-alike contest congratulates Nancy Norris, Nevada, Mae., senior, for winning.
Gaula climax
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
The contest was a highlight of the dance, sponsored by the Gay Services of Kansas, which was in the Kansas Union Ballroom
Gay disco turns to fantasy
By GREG BASHAW
Staff Writer
In the cool blue light of the Kansas Union Ballroom Saturday night Zorro, Captain Hook, about a hundred drag queens and a crowd of 20 disco and cruised the crowded floor.
From the balcony, a movie camera caught floodlit glimpses of Bob Dylan, a beaked, feathered six-foot bird and Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman.
The Gay Services of Kansas Halloween dance was in full flower and would blossom
into a festival of about 1,500 men, women and animals before the metal disc music carnival.
At 8, it looked like a long night for Tom Franey, the disc jockey, who peered down on an empty dance floor from the balcony while some students set up a movie camera nearby. In the balcony corner, Todd Van Lanningham, director of Gay Services, met Ms. Zubatov on a red cellophane gown sprinkled with silver segments which would help win the Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman look-alike contest.
Nolan turns heads—even KSU's
Associate Sports Editor
By BRENT ANDERSON
MANHATTAN—There's something magic about Nolan Cromwell—something that brings out behavior in people that no one would expect. Even fans of KU's arch-rival Kansas State talk of Nolan as if he were their best friend.
"Nolan's a great guy," K-State alumnus Jerry Graph of McPherson said at Saturday's football game. "We were sick when we found out he had been injured in the Oklahoma game. He's a great player and a great person."
Cromwell was released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital Friday after knee surgery last Sunday. When he entered KSU stadium in a wheelchair to watch the KU-K throwbacks on the sidelines, hundreds turned their heads to see him.
SITEN, THOUSANDS of fans, most of whom were in the on the west side of the stadium supporting K-Sate, witnessed a game from the sidelines.
They did the same thing when he left, shortly before the game was over, although KU had virtually wrapped up a 24-14 victory. This time, however, Cromwell was on top. The KU equipment, wheelchair being pushed by a KU equipment manager.
"It was really a surprise to me," Cromwell said yesterday. "I certainly didn't expect them to do that."
Although Cromwell said he enjoyed the game, he also found it to be a new experience.
CROMWELL'S APARTMENT is filled with gifts, getwell cards and flowers, many from people he has never before seen but who have apparently been captured by Cromwell's magic.
"I've never watched a game from the sidelines before," he said. "From one standpoint it was fun, because our players were playing well and we were moving the ball. But, of course, I would have rather been out there."
Some people cried when he left KU's Memorial Stadium after being injured in a tackle by Oklahoma. And many people were happy when they saw him able to cheer for his teammates in Manhattan Saturday.
"We sent him a card with a hundred signatures",
beamed a member of a RU fraternity. "It was a shame"
to see him in this room.
What if Wertzberger had said Cromwell couldn't go?
"I have a feeling I probably would have gone anyhow.
No, I guess if the doctor said no, and Coach Moore said no,
I probably wouldn't have gone. Dad said, "Listen to the doctor."
I guess I would have listened to the game on the radio, but I would have been sick."
Cromwell said that he was told as late as Thursday by KU team surgeon John Wertzbert that he wouldn't be able to go to the game, but that he convinced the doctor to let him go.
"I would have hated it if people wouldn't have come. Time would have gone so slow. I would have never made it through the day. I was pretty started in for two or three days. When people started coming in and talking to me—players, coaches and some of my business professors—well, I knew I couldn't feel sorry for myself forever."
Cromwell said it was visits by coaches, teachers and other friends that helped him get through a difficult time.
4
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Nolan Cromwell enjoyed cheering for KU during Saturday's game
"GET A LOAD of these yellow streamers on Mary's gown—they're straight from the '30s," Mark said. "They're designed to trip over."
Soon a bearded man in a cheerleader uniform who called himself Polly Pom-Ponte, bounded across the dance floor, madly waving read and blue pompons. Polly kicked high his shapely legs and bounced the entire floor with his spastic pyriformes.
AS THE TABLES lining the floor began to fill, three high school kids sneaked up the back stairs to watch the goings-on from a window. The girls wearing glasses were early arrivals.
"And of course a bouquet of dead flowers"
"Mary· Van Lanningham said, tossing a bird"
"in her pocket."
"We came up from Winfield for this," one said. "And not too many people from Winfield knew we came up for this," the other concluded.
In the corner opposite the high schoolers, three brawny beer drinkers hudded near the draught beer line. One with a belly bulging out of his gray flannel shirt said, "Never been to a gay lib dance, none of us. Never."
WHILE THE DANCE floor grew crowded and the red glow of lit cigarettes flickered, outside in the brightly lighted hallway the line waiting to get in grew longer. David Jacobson, Lawrence graduate student, took a picture of the hallway, where purges of all sizes were checked.
"This is the most many gays will do, is show themselves at this dance," Jacobson said. "The ones that won't come out on the streets will come out here because the dance is a safe place and the people don't feel that safety outside."
On the stairs overlooking the admission table a couple held hands and watched the dance floor through the door while waiting for the SUA movie to start. When a pair of bearded men kissed in front of the doorway, the guy grabbed his state's hand and pulled out the purse from his pocket of policemen, Ron Lewis and George Schumock, watched the couple pass.
DYLAN BLEW a sour note from his harmonica and looked disgusted. "Don't follow leaders, watch your parkin' meters," he bellowed.
"WE ALL DREW straws" for this assignment and I guess we two got the bracelet.
Frany dimmed the dose of disco and asked the three Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman contestants and five judges to come to the balcony. The crowd hushed and faced forward, necks cranning for a look at the nictalled women.
By 10 a snake dance twisted through the full floor and a circle of people and animals formed a ring around the dancers. A slender, black-krown woman unraveled a mummy man's bandages and Bob Dylan the Christopher Columbus and the beaked bird.
When Franny awarded Nancy Norris, Nevada, M.o. senior, the red gown and $10 first prize, she squinted in the movie lights and proclaimed, "I just want to say that when this is over, we we're gonna all go to work with Pancakes. David Saikusha here!"
Just the three buxom drag queens with
nour-white faces passed on to their way to
the ballroom.
"Well, maybe they're part of the Munster family then," Schumck said.
The crowd roared and bumped back into dance when Franny crumped up the disco
See DISCO page eight
K-State fraternity repairs KU alteration of hillside
Twelve members of a KU ftrendly drove to Manhattan Friday morning and altered a large "KS" hillside sign to read "KU." The initials were altered in the same manner four years ago before the annual KU-K State football game.
A crew of fraternity members at Kansas
State University worked yesterday to undo
what a crew of University of Kansas
members had done Friday morning.
Fifteen members of the Tau Beta Pi fraternity at K-Site worked to return the 4,000-square-foot letters to their former owners and to charge of maintenance on the K-Site sign.
Philip Harden, Tau Beta Pi president,
said that the initials were whitewashed
every year by fraternity members and that
they had already planned to touch-up the
sign soon. He said he didn't know yet how
much the repair job would cost.
"It's just going to take a lot more whitewash to make it white," he said.
The top and middle sections of the "S" were painted black by the KU fraternity members, and the grass was covered with white paint to form part of the "U."
Except for one reported incident of vandalism, the KU campus was quiet during the weekend of the football game between the intrastate rivals.
our K-State students were arrested early Friday morning for allegedly spray-painting parts of Bailley, Stong and Wesco halls with purple paint. They were charged with criminal property to property and were released on $1,500 bond each.
Those arrested were Alvin Allen, 18,
Lawrence; Robert Hecht, 19, Seneca;
Kenneth Knox, 20, South Haven; and Clark
Wilson. 19. Prairie Village.
The four will be arraigned tomorrow in Douglas County Court.
2
University Daily Kansan
News Digest From the Associated Press
Korean gifts reported
WASHINGTON—U.S. government spokesman had no comment yesterday on a published report saying that during the 1970s, cash, gifts and campaign contributions totaling between $500,000 and $1 million a year were funneled to congressmen and other government officials by the South Korean government.
The report which appeared in yesterday's editions of The Washington Post, cited "sources close to a major Justice Department investigation of these activities." The Post said more than 20 present and former congressmen were under investigation.
According to the report, the money and gifts were given to "create a favorable legislative climate." The group of South Korean agents dispenses the item was sent by Mr. Lee to representatives in North Korea.
Mao's successor cheered
TOKYO-Hua Kudeng received thunderous applause yesterday from a reported 1 million Chinese in his first public appearance as the successor to Mao Tse-tung
The crowd in front of Tien An Men—the Gate of Heavenly Peace—also cheered a report that the nation had escaped "real danger" from a coup involving involvement.
Peking Mayor Wu Teh told the audience of soldiers and civilians that Mao, before his death at age 82 September 9, had selected Hua to succeed him as Communist party chairman, and that four top officials had tried to thwart the move, hoping to name Mao's widow, Chiang Ching, to the top party post.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Vietnam has accepted a U.S. proposal to open a military base in Phnom Penh but was the two countries, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said yesterday.
Vietnam, U.S. plan talks
25 die in club fire; survivor questioned
A total of 24 others were injured, many leaping from windows to avoid the flames.
NEW YORK (AP)—An arsonist started a fire in the only skiway leading to a second story Puerto Rican social club in the South Bronx during a party early yesterday, and 25 persons died in a panicky surge for safety.
The high number of deaths was the ww... to occur under similar circumstances in the city in a decade. A fire escape from the building was reportedly blocked by a locked gate.
A fire department source said much of the questioning to determine the identity of the arsonist centered on an injured survivor of the blaze, a man suspected of having been thrown out of the party some time before the fire.
New polls say Ford still trails Carter slightly
By The Associated Press
New polls indicated Jimmy Carter holding the edge over President Gerald Ford, and the two candidates headed yessir. They were one of their campaign for the White House.
Ford's windup barnstorming tour of the country put him in California—one of a handful of populous states that campaign for its governor. The pegged as goval in the Nov. 2 election.
Ford spent part of the day making a television campaign ad.
The ad was one of five special pitches aimed at voters in key states with large numbers of electoral votes-California, Ohio, Illinois, New York and Pennsylvania.
Carter spent yesterday and today at home in Plains, Ga. He will set out tomorrow on a final push that will take him to the West Coast and back before election day.
Newly released surveys and polls
guested by the President or show-
ed by the Harbor narrowed a Presiden-
tial lead.
The Detroit News reported that its poll, conducted by Market Opinion Research, indicated that Carter had closed the gap in college enrollment Michigan from five to three percentage points.
The Times gave no overall breakdown, but said Carter was a 55-26 winner in the city. Ford led 42-35 upstate and 43-55 in the suburbs.
On Saturday, the New York news gave Carter a $34-44 per cent edge in New York state, with New York City going 67-37 for the Democrat. The New York Times reported a nine-word news sweeps with 1,853 registered voters gave Carter the nod by "comfortable" margin.
More newspapers disclosed their preferences for one candidate or the other, seemingly about as evenly divided in their opinion as appeared to be in public opinion surveys.
In New York, the Times and the News split-for Carter and Ford, respectively.
Elsewhere, papers endorsing the President included the Miami Herald; the Boston Herald American; the Cleveland Market and the Chicago Dispatch; the Hartford Courant; Philadelphia Inquirer; the Sunday Oklahoma of Oklahoma City; Dallas Morning News; Dallas Times Herald; Fort Worth Telegram, and the Oakland Tribune.
Carter won the support of the Akron, Ohio, Beacon Journal; the Des Moines, Iowa, Register; the Long Island, N.Y., Press; Minneapolis Tribune; Miami News; St. Petersburg, Fla., Times, and Staten Island, N.Y., Advance.
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- GSP for GSP residents
- Oliver for Oliver & Naismith residents
- Lewis for Daisy Hill residents
- Corbin for Corbin residents
Kissinger confirmed the Vietnamese acceptance to reporters after appearing on CBS "Face the Nation." He gave no further details.
- Walnut Room-Union for off campus
In Paris, Vietnamese officials said they have agreed to meet to discuss subjects of interest to either side. They didn't indicate when or where the meeting would be.
& Scholarship Hall residents
The United States and Vietnam have exchanged messages through their emissaries.
(Il Con Formista) Dir. Bernardo Bertolouci, with Jean-Louis Trintignant, Dominique Sanda. (Il Con Formista) Dir. Bernardo Bertolouci, with Jean-Louis Trintignant, Dominique Sanda. Wed., Oct. 27, 7:30, 75c
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, October 25,1976
Consort a superb dialogue in jazz
By STEVE FRAZIER
Staff Writer
You'll find Paul Winter Consort records under "jazz" in the record store, but Saturday night in Hoch Auditorium the Consort, with its impressive arsenal of musical instruments, proved again that the jazz is often more convenient than descriptive.
Contemporary groups like the consort and its offshoot, Oregon, are roughly comparable to jazz 'Third Stream of the late 50s,' a movement that attempted to mold jazz around forms borrowed from European classical music.
All but the best of the Third Stream were a sterile mixture of apolytic jazz and self-conscious European trappings. Saturday, in the studio at the Shorewood Theater, unashed and exciting blend of African,
THE CITY CENTER
European, Eastern, rock and even 'whale'
European, eastern had an accent of jazz improvisation.
Review
Perhaps a big part of the consort's suture is Winter is another winter but a donnering leader.
Winter, an able and clear-toned performed on soprano and alto saxophones, consistently attracts brilliant young stedmen who are given free rein to show talents
David Darling, on acoustic and electric eight-string cellos, wasted no time in getting his point across. His searing solo on the guitar is one of his best pieces, made the piece a highlight of the concert.
"Conversations," another highlight, was also performed early in the show. Although it apparently was a more structured improvisation than Winter's spoken introduction, it did serve, as he said, as an improvised definition of consort, a musical conversation."
Consorting with jazz
Darling opened "Conversations," accompanied soily by Ben Carrel on electric bass. As Darling glissandoed into the upper fretboard, the bass drum slid over and around the cello and bass.
*buying amid a heavily inden stage of percussive, acoustical and electrical instruments, Paul Winter, (upper right) and his Consort a Hoch Audiotifr crown through an acoustic amplifier.*
Tigger Benford and Robert Chappell joined the conversation, picking up the established rhythmic patterns with a large rack and table on the right side of the stage, bristling with gongs, chimes, bells and cymbals from around the world.
One of the consort's more interesting innovations was its development of two musical compositions around taped animal sounds.
Winter, Darling and Carrier dropped out,
leaving Bendon to lead Chappell in an increasingly and incredibly complex percussion duet.
The first such piece, "Ocean Dream," tempts to evoke the fantasy of what it might be.
be a whale." The composition blended smoothly and naturally into the taped introduction of whale "songs," but after a good start the steps stopped flowing.
"In Wilderness There Is the Preservation of the World," based on the howl of the gray wolf, was a more satisfying musically. There were, however, two interruptions that, depending on one's point of view, were either annoying or inspirational.
The first interruption was a didactic little speech by Winter on the plight of endangered animal species, and the second was two minutes of howling from the
Aside from some lackluster vocals, the consort concert was mostly a superb performance which deserved the crowd's standing ovation.
audience after Wear asked, "How long has it been since you had a good how?"
A final tribute must go to the consort's sound man, one of a special breed of usually unsonging burdens. Burdened with the sonically barn-like Hoch Auditorium, he nevertheless gave the audience the consort's varied texture of sounds, textures with a minimum of muddiness.
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Research, information director named
Richard Mann, an official at the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, has been appointed director of institutional research and information systems at KU.
Mann will take over the new position by Nov. 15, according to an announcement released Saturday by Chancellor Archie Dykes.
The KU director's position was created this past summer. Selection of the new administrator was delayed several weeks last month after SenEx requested that the search be extended to allow local candidates more time to apply for the job.
Mann's job will be to develop administrative computing systems and a University-wide information system. He will also provide data about the University for outside agencies, including the state legislature.
Mann, 35, is now director of the University Office of Management Information Systems for the University of Illinois and is acting director of the Office of Information Systems and Services at the university's medical center in Chicago.
At the time, some SenEx members also questioned the need for the position. Dykes said the director was needed to improve the
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4
Monday, October 25,1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Onions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
Federal faucet faulty
The prices of food, clothing and shelter, the essential triad, are almost unbearable high. So what else is new?
By now, most of us just grunt at each new price hike and try to make sense of lopsided budgets as best as we can. We'd like to boycott, but we know we can't live without the triad, regardless of how much it costs us.
BUT WATER always has been thought of as one vital substance we still can get fairly cheaply. A few dollars a month for sewer and water charges don't break us. We take advantage of our supposed good fortune hundreds of times daily, never giving thought to just how much water we have, where it comes from, how it's purified or how it's disposed of.
proably few people care that, to maintain adequate supplies of pure water, the city has had to build a new secondary sewage plant on East Eighth street and soon will build a second water plant on Dragstrip Road. It's no big deal, as long as the customers' monthly bills don't jump significantly.
UNFORTUNATELY, it now looks as if Lawrence residents can put water on that list of costly essentials and circle it in the. The city must come up with $8.9 million to pay for the new water plant as well as unexpected costs incurred in building the sewage plant. The average charge by more than 50 per cent and the average water charge by about 25 per cent in the next few months.
The unwelcome predictions were made last week by members of a Kansas City, Mo., engineering firm, who appeared at a city commission study session to recommend ways to pay for the new water plant.
According to the engineers, the
average customer's total monthly water and sewer charges will rise from about $11 to about $14.70.
THESE WHO knew the city was planning to build the expensive plant probably expected the federal government to pick up at least a portion of the tab. But Buford Watson, city manager, has explained that government funds are given for only small projects and for projects in towns with considerably higher unemployment rates than that of Lawrence. The city will have to pay its own expenses, either by general-obligation bonds or revenue bonds.
Both would be accompanied by the bike in monthly charges.
It's curious that the federal government would, in effect, punish a town for maintaining a low unemployment rate. Certainly, whether or not people are employed, the monthly increases are going to be hardships for some people.
IT'S EVEN MORE curious that the government puts stipulations on the size of projects it will help finance. The size of a project has nothing to do with whether if some project is necessary, regardless of its excuse, it should be built.
The idiosyncrasies of the federal funding ideology have been debated at length in editorials on everything from why it costs so much to keep a congressman on Capitol Hill to why we should have more natural parks. They apparently isn't going to prompt an increase in conscientiousity finding.
The only thing that is going to increase is the amount of money we put out monthly to maintain a standard of living we've long been accustomed to.
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This year's presidential
The great game of politics often flexes its muscles in what appears to be an exercise in futility. This is the "protest vote" or the "throwaway conviction or grumpy disenchment to a candidate with no hopes of winning.
Though nuts, others offer spice
election offers abundant opportunity for ideological pole vaults and broad jumps. At least seven minor party candidates have qualified in 18 states or more. One of them, Eugene McCarthy, may yet have a significant impact on the outcome. Another, Lester Maddox, could have nuisance
Walker wants KU-MU game at Arrowhead
By Carl Young Contributing Writer
Clyde Walker wants the Jayhawks and the Missouri Tigers to have their annual football game in Arrowhead Stadium, not in Lawrence or in Columbia. Mo.
Wouldn't that be nice. Instead of driving all the way to Columbia to see the game this year, we could hop on 170 and east head and get off at the Blue Bell stadium. We would have a lot of time on the road—at least this year.
BUT NEXT year, when the game is supposed to take place in Philadelphia, Ms. O'Donnell will be in Independence, Mo. I suppose the athletic corporation thinks that the fans who drive in from western, southern and northern Kansas wouldn't be able to get through.
The idea of having the KU-MU game in Arrowhead has some advantages. Laws lure more reasonable in Missouri than in Kansas, and a high percentage advantage if the game were played in cold weather.
ANOTHER advantage would be that Kansas City alumni wouldn't have to go very far to see the game. I suppose Walker thinks that what would be needed to win would be picked up by pleased Kansas City ones.
A Missouri-Kansas football game in Arrowhead Stadium also might draw fans who have no connection with either school. It looks as if it's going to be a few years before the Chiefs are going to fill the stadium regularly, and some Chiefs fans would like to see a good game every now and then.
THE IDEA of a college football team playing home games in places other than home isn't new, Tennessee plays home games in Memphis and Knoxville, for example.
The Arrowhead game has another advantage. It would make a great commercial. I can hear it
"the quarterback is back to pass," he has a man open. "its long enough now." **BLOWN** the quarterback is back to pass, and yells for him.
press box. Play music. "We're coming back, KU,
come along."
STUDENTS also would get to see a nonconference game at home to take the place of Missouri, may be. I can see the fans pouring out of the gymnasium for Forest, Wichita State and Baker University.
Of course KUAC has been keeping students in mind all along. Besides getting a nonconference game to take MU's place, students would get a chance to play against the home game in Artohead for $5, maybe.
It would also be nice to see how the Rock Chalk chant sounds in a professional stadium. The novelty of it probably would make up for the loss of the ability on by playing the game in Missouri, every year.
OH, AND parking. Students wouldn't have to pay Lawrenceences $2 to park near the stadium anymore. It would cost them just $1.50 to park near a sign that says "A-72" in the sport's complex lot, although some of this advantage might be lost if you walk to the football games here.
Another nice thing about the Arrowhead game would be that no students, faculty, or alumni would have to worry about making a decision on whether they wanted the game in Kansas City.
value—though it is hard to say for whom—in a few of the Southern states. The five others are interesting all the same.
Walker and KUAC were going to take that little worry upon themselves, but some of the student members of KUAC ratted on Walker. Publicity may have killed the idea.
NOW PEOPLE are going to add to the worry of whether it's right for the Jawhawks to play in Kansas City, Mo. to the troubles of whom to vote in November.
Thanks for trying to take the decision upon yourself, Clyde. I'm sure that if you'd gone ahead with your plans and just announced that the game would be played in Kansas City, no one would have cared.
Both parties eve House control
BY LEW FERGUSON Associated Press Writer
Kansas Republicans snicker at such suggestions, but Democrats remain hopeful that they can gain control in the state. They are not as confident in the Nov. 2 general election.
—It has been 64 years since Democrats won a majority in either Kansas house. The Democrats have won the Senate in 1912, the year Woodrow Wilson captured the state for the Democrats over Theodore Roosevelt and his Bull Dogs in 1920, and the House in 1914 and of the Senate in 1916.
TO UNDERSTAND the significance of that goal, consider these facts:
FOUR YEARS ago, the Democrats increased their Senate membership from eight seats to 14, and two years ago boosted their House membership from 44 seats to 53. Those gains stripped the Senate of their previous two-thirds majorities.
—In 1944, the Democrats slumped to their lowest ebb as the state's minority party, electing just one state senator and five House members. The other 97 percent of the 165-seat legislature was Republican for the 1945 session.
Now, Democrats see control of the Kansas House as a realistic possibility. They also believe they have a chance of increasing their Senate membership
Republicans watching the legislative races disagree, but concede that further support for a vote may be possible. They believe they may have a net gain in the house, but see the Senate remaining basically the same—although the Democrats seat swapping between the two parties.
"We will have a minimum of 58 seats in the house after this election, a minimum gain of five seats. And we have a chance to gain as many as a dozen."
"THINK we have a realistic chance to win a majority in the House," Gordon Garrett, legislative director of the State Committee State Committee, said recently.
from 14 seats to 18, perhaps even to 21 if
everything goes their way.
"We also assume we're going to lose some of our 33 seats," he said. "But if we can keep our losses under four, I think we are in good shape."
Of the 18 seats House Republican incumbents chose not to defend, Garrett said. Democrats should claim seven to nine.
GARBETT predicted that Democrats won at least 10 seats previously before him.
MIKE Friessen, legislative director for the Republican State Committee, disagreed sharply with some of the Democratic analysis.
"We're going to win a bunch of seats
That means the GOP plans to pad its House majority from the present 72-53 margin to at least 74-51 and probably considerably more.
Frieden said he believed the GOP even had a good chance of beating House Minority Leader John Carlin of Smolano. Mr. Grett replied, "That's an oopendream."
back") Friesen said. "I think we're looking at a net gain of two seats in the House even if we give all the marginal gains." He didn't they aren't going to win all of them."
FRIESEN also predicted that Republicans could gain three Senate seats if everything went right, for a 29-11 majority as many as five seats for a 21-13 edge.
"We don't think he has. If that kid gets 45 per cent against Carlin, it'll surprise me very much. People are not going to vote for somebody they don't know."
"THAT'S ASSUMING Rathburn has gotten his mess across," Garrett
Friesen said Randy Ratbun, a Washburn University law student from Ellsworth, had a chance of beating Carlin because Carlin was perceived by voters in his central Kansas district as having interests and played too much politic."
Republicans. But Garrett said only about 30 percent of them close and winables by Republicans.
Garrett also said Democrats bidding for the seats vacated by Marian Reynolds of Cimarron, Paul Feltian of Dallas and John McCarthy of Dallas also were involved in "dead beds."
Friesen listed about 20 House Democrats he thought could be beaten by
Friesen said Republicans in close races included Fred Harris of Chanute, Ken Althaus of Atchison, holder of Kern County jail and maquia of Junction City and John Sites of Manhattan.
HE also said that seats vacated by House Speaker Duane McGill of Winfield, Speaker Pro Tem Jim MAG of Dodge City and Ted Templar of Arkansas City were "marginal" for the Republicans. Garrett said Democrats also had "at least a 50-60 share" in the district, by Republicans. Ben Sellers and Bok Stark of Salina and John Masovero of Arma and Randall Palmer of Pittsburg.
Friessen said the "most likely" outcome of the Senate race would be a gain of one seat for the Republicans, making it a more attractive option in restoring the GOP's two-thirds majority.
HE ALSO said Democrats could have sleepers running against GOP Sen. Neil Arasmith of Phillipsburg, Wint Winter of Iowa and Teresa Topeka and Arden, Booth of Lawrence.
READING from left to right, one finds Gus Hall for the Communists, Lyndon H. LaRouche for the Labor Party, and Peter Camejo for the Socialist Workers. In this spectrum, McCarthy stands respectfully, while the murder of Tom Anderson for the American Party, Maddux for the American Independence Party and Roger MacBride for the Libertarians.
It may be unfair to MacBride to position him on the far right, for the Libertarians are in a class by themselves. Let me come back to MacBride in a moment.
Of Conrade Hall, little need be said; the Communists have a nice totalitarian purity 98–92 year-old Marxist economist; he dreams of “an absolutely transformed socialist world,” and for starters would put a private public and some private debt.
liberal, turned by Jimmy Carter, I would throw my vote to McCarthy. If were a coach in discontent with Gerald Ford, I would make my pitch to MacBride. Because futility.
CAMEJO is a young firebrand who would "completely eliminate" the Army, Navy and Marines, whose fellow purpose is to reduce federal spending drastically. Maddox is out in right field somewhere, twirling around while riding his bicycle backwards.
(c) 1976 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
James J. Kilpatrick
holds small attraction, I recommend neither course. But for sheer exhilaration appeal—for a whoop and a holler—and the old six-boom-bah—the Liber fills those folks have something omin.
THEY are nuts, of course. Off their rockers. But the nuttiness has a nice, fresh flavor. On some issues, such as gun control, the Libertarians are to the far right of the far right; if I read MacBride correctly, beware of them with guns, clear down to the ownership of bazokas, hand grenades and sawed-off shotguns. On some issues, such as victimless crime, the Liberarians wind up in the bulpen out beyond left field. MacBride would do away with laws having to give birth to pornography, gambling and the sale or possession of narcotics.
Somehow this all makes sense. At least it makes sense in theory. MacRidge has written a small paperback book, "A New Dawn for America," in which he plumps boldly for pure
capitalism, pure liberty and,
alas, pure baloney. Something close to anarchy is the gentleman's cup of tea.
HE DENOUNCES the public monopoly; in education, he would let every family do its own thing. He would turn mail delivery over to the private sector. He would end every foreign entanglement and allow U.S. citizens (the few that would remain under his administration) to安bvbody else's war.
IN THE Liberarian view, taxes are robbery. Bureaucrats constitute a worse plague than those who abolish minimum wages, the Federal Reserve Board and compulsory school attendance. Liberty! His old-fashioned stance in the word throughout the land.
MacBride believes this stuff.
He is a 100 per cent free trader.
No tariffs. No import quotas. If such a policy wavers have no impact on your business, depend on textiles, steel, shoes or beef production, sorry about that. Such displeased workers couldn't go on welfare, for there are many churches and private charities would take up the slack.
The political process benefits from loomies left and right. Beneath their own gaudy gonfalons, they charge with paper lances. But they provoke thought, and it would be an even drearier campaign without them.
Letters
To the Editor:
Swim laps not taken
with the depressing news that recreation swimming is allowed only between the unfortunate 3:0 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. on weekdays.
I may have this all wrong, but I've always thought that one of the main reasons why KU唑 out buckets of money to its students is to promote the joy and importance of physical fitness.
I can't imagine more discourages hours in which to encourage physical fitness. A normal lust for a good swim sure gets cut away by the interruption of prime study hours and the vision of going home on cold winter nights with wet hair.
Great! I agree most enthusiastically with that concept. So, a couple of weeks ago, I hauled out my swim suit and goggles, rehung my Mark Spitz poster and daddied up to swim a few laps at the pool. There, I was sadly confronted
I'm not proposing that we disband the swimming teams or classes. But it sure would be nice, and more consistent with their own teachings, if the Physical Education people figured out a way to slide those students on the water and give us stubby little academic majors a daylight hour or two to splash around in.
Charles Forrest Jones Los Angeles junior
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. Must have proofread by KU students must provide their academic standing and home town; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Editor
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 14, 2015 Subscribers are welcome. June and July are except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscriptions by mail are $9 a semester or $18 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county.
Debbie Gump
Managing Editor
Yael Aboulouhbali
Jim Bates
Yael Abdulukhabi Jim Bates
Campus Editor Stuart Baker
Assistant Campus Editors Bill Snellen
Assistant Campus Editors Claire Dickson
Photo Editor Dave Reger
Staff Photographers Geoffrey Gillen
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Sports Editor Stacey Brent Anderson
Assistant Sports Editor Alison Glenon
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Contributing Writers John Fuller, Greg Hack
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Advertising Manager Janie Clementes
Account Manager James Fitzpatrick
Classified Manager Sarah McAnany
Assistant Classified Manager Sarah McAnany
Assistant Classified Manager Timothy O'Shea
Monday, October 25, 1976
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If past seasons are any indication, a record number of students will soon begin parading into Watkins Student Health campus—the effects of cold weather colds and flu.
Flu season hits Watkins
Byron Walters, general practitioner at atkins, said yesterday that many factors contributed to his sudden weight loss.
"There seems to be a little epidemic going on right now," he said. "We're seeing a lot more patients a day, but all with more serious than colds. We have graduate students who attend to all the minor cases. "We're operating like a quick medical service center."
"There's always a little upsurge of sickness during finals when students start to eat and sleep irregularly." Walters said. "And the stress factor of studying also contributes to an already weakened condition, helping a virus to develop. That combination of factors can really get to you."
University Daily Kansan
Students are especially susceptible to illness now, because of the fluctuating weather, he said, which deprives the body of a chance to either develop immunity through constant exposure or build resistance.
"With more students coming in every day, there probably isn't a time when the waiting room isn't crowded." Wallers said. "You're going to need someone some of the purses handle rugrum cases."
Walkins usually treat about 400 people a day, outpatient care, but that amount only happens in the first few weeks.
The thing that everyone should try to do is not to get sick at all, he said.
"And you can do that by following the basic rules of good health all year round: Get plenty of rest, eat a proper diet and stress appropriately for the weather."
UN WEEK FORUM United Ministries Building - 12th & Oread
Tues., Oct. 26th Speaker
UNA-USA
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
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12:30—John F. Murphy - KU Law Professor
"Major Issues Facing the United Nations"
QUESTION PERIOD
MODERATOR-CLIFFORD KETZEL. KU POLITICAL SCIENCE PROFESSOR
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Political Advertisement
Paid for by Citizens for Buzzi Committee, Charles and Sue Bratton, Chairpersons
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MONDAY: KU-ID Night. No cover with your ID. 25+ Beer
TUESDAY: No Cover Charge 25+ Beer
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THURSDAY: Ladies Night. Passion Passes get the guys in free. 25+ Beer
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Используйте своё значение иностраенного языка!
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6
Mondav. October 25,1976
University Daily Kansan
Jayhawks topple lowly Wildcats, 24-14
19
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Await wrath of Big Red
Noseguara Jim Emerson works to snorien K-State quarterback Wendell Henrikson
By BRENT ANDERSON ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR
associate Sports Editor
MANHATTAN—The University of Nebraska hasn't lost two regular season football games in a row since 1961, the year before Bob Devaney went to Nebraska and made Cornhushner football a legend. That's just one reason the University of Kansas team didn't spend much time雕像 on Saturday over archival Kenegas State
"They have a fine football team," Moore said. "I'm sure they'll be ready to play."
"We always happy to win," KU coach
said. "We're in a better day, but we've got
of work on us."
Nebraska was the victim of the giant-killer Missouri, who handed the Huskers their first loss of the season, 34-24, in Lincoln. Nebraska comes here Saturday to play KU, and there is every reason to think they'll bring all their guns.
NEBRASKA has beaten the Jayhawks 66 on the last two games the teams have played in Lawrence, and the 'Huskers will most likely be favored to win again.
"Last year we played them a good game, but they embarrassed us at home two years ago," said Lavene Smith, KU halfback, who played against KA in a back-and-forth against KS-Station, including a 41-yard touchdown run that enabled him to break Bud French's career touchdown and scoring records (23 touchdowns, 136 points). "They did it all time. The defense is playing too well."
KU'S defense did play well Saturday, allowing K-State only 190 yards in total offense, 59 of which came in a fourth-quarter 94-yard scoring drive. Thirty-five KU runs in that game, sixteen KU rides, each on third-down plays that probably would have ended the drive.
THE JAYHAWK$^3$ victory ended their two-game collapse and upped their season record to 5-2 and their conference record to 1-2. The Wildcats are 6 on the season and 0-3 in the Big Eight. KU now leads the NBA in points per game, but it was not won or fed only three of the last 21 contests.
The points KU scored as a result of the hurdles - a touchdown and a field goal - were 41.2, 36.7, and 30.6.
Cromwell's replacements keep offense rolling along
The Jayhawks had surged to a 24-10 lead early in the third-quarter after two costly Wildcat fumbles, one on a punt and the other on a missed handoff.
With 14 left in the third quarter, K-State defensive back Marvin Svirin intercepted a pass by KU's new No. 2 quarterback, Jeff Burke, for 65 yards for K-State's first touchdown.
*Very few of the 43,900 who saw the game;*
*I knew how much time was left in the third quarter; and the main fmctionalized. The clock was fixed by the fourth quartet, however, in time for the fans to join.*
Sports Editor
MANHATTAN—Nolan Cromwell sat in a wheelchair and the aidles intently engaged.
By STEVE SHOENFELD
Suddenly, he let out a warwoo and a big smile
He had reason to be happy—the KU quarterbacks were doing the job. Senior Scott McMichael and sophomore Mark Lissak were moving the Jahawks' offense, leading Kansas to a 24-14 victory over K-State Saturday.
MCMICHAEL WAS the more effective of the two quarterbacks against K-State, rushing for one touchdown and leading the offense to two more scores.
Cromwell's season ended in a loss to Oklahoma Oct. 16, when he suffered torn left shoulder.
"Oyeh, they did a good job," Cromwell said. "They are both very capable. They
"These were different circumstances today for the whole team," McMichael said. "Losing Nolan, we just started out today knowing we had to get on the right track."
"I thought he had good execution of intensively," he said. "I overthrew a couple times—wish I would've hit on a couple of passes—but overall I was pleased."
"We had to move the ball early. And we knew we could execute offensively against them from looking at last year's and this year's films."
MCMICHAL WAS replaced by Lissak in the third quarter. On his first play of varsity ball, Lissak, a diminutive 5-11, 16-pounder, scannered 12 vards for a first down.
McMichael was pleased with his performance.
"I tried to stay as calm as I could," Lissak said. "Scott played real well and gave us a lead and that took a little pressure off.
Lissak, who ran the wishbone in high school, scored the Jayhawks only touchdown.
"When I went out there, I just tried to get my head together and move the ball. After the first play when I gained those yards, I was relaxed. You're always nervous on the first play because you don't have your adrenaline flowing."
"Coach Moore said to me before the game that he thought Scott and I could move the ball and that there was a pretty good chance I'd play some."
LISSAK SAID he wasn't surprised when coach Bud Moore sent him in.
"No, I'm not a good passer," Lisiak said with a big smile. "That's one of my weak parts."
burst. But he didn't do as well passing, going none for two with an interruption.
BEFORE CROMWELL'S illusion, the Jaywahys' had planned on red-shirting both Lissak and Mark Vicendese. Lissak didn't know whether he was glad he used up his sophomore year of eligibility by playing Saturday.
"We've got four more games," he said. "If I play then, I'll be satisfied."
"But if would be better to have expedition trips to the Wilderness today. I still have to work on a lot of stuff." Some of the players thought it could have been better, but Jay hawks had the need to beat the Wildcat.
"WE HAD to win this," running back Laverne Smith said. "They picked us to lose. I knew we couldn't lose to them. We had to win. Running. We had to get that feeling again."
Lissak was blase about the whole thing,
"I was excited, but I didn't show it. I just
tugged at her. It hurts."
McMichael said, "The game had a lot to do with the way we play to the rest of the year. There was a question mark in a lot of people's minds about whether we'd win another game after Nolan was hurt. Not only from my standpoint, but it was important for the whole team to show we could come back and win again."
Lissak didn't have to get too excited. Cromwell did it for him.
CROMWELL, who was released from
punishment on Friday after binge-
ing with friends in a Friday after-
care program at The Children's
Inspired model school.
KU was in control most of the way, allowing Moore to see quarterback Lissak in varsity action for the first time. Moore had planned to red-shirt Lissak and another player from Indiana Vincentes, but no injury to Nolan Cromwell forced Moore to abandon that plan.
SCOURING
KANANS 7 7 10 0-24
KANASSTATE 7 10 7 -14
KU-SUNS 41 pm (Hobuch kick)
KU-SUMS 41 pm (Hobuch kick)
KU-FG 50 hr (Hobuch kick)
KU-FG 32 hr (Hobuch kick)
KR-state Switezer 62 interception return (Snivok kick)
KR-state Siebe-Liee pass from Hissenkroft (Snivok kick)
TEAMS AT MASTER
R-STATE
First downs
Number yards
Rubber yardse
Number yards
Passer
Passer
Number yards
1.8
1.8
1.8
9.13
5.0
4.2
flum-lows
Lumber yardse
3.2
3.2
3.2
9.3
4.2
INDIVIDUAL
KU - L. Smith, 847; Campedell 94; Lissak 128, Banks
KU - L. Smith, 847; Campbell 94; Lissak 128, Banks
KU - L. Smith, 847; Wiltz 77; KJ-14; Johnson
Kilmer 14; Kelly 14
K State- Sobey 14, Duncan 13, Howard 14, Brown 7, Whately 11, Wherrell 9, Herkenway 5, Minus 30, 30
KU-McMichiel 4, 1-7, Link 0-3 (1 interception),
KU-Heard-Heward 1-8 (2 interception), Heuerkian 1-8
"It was a good game," Cromwell said. "I thought our players played well."
K-State-Lobe 39, Chamblis 1-20, Darland 1-20, Duncan 1-22, Lehman 1-21, Kinei 1-18, Whitely 1-4.
Moore said he was happy with the performance of both KU quarterbacks, though he had to put Scott McMichael back into the game after the Cats had cut KU's lead to 10.
'Scoot's got much more experience at controlling the ball, which is what we were taught in football.', he said.
KU- Hubach 10-380 (38 avg.)
K-State - Sinovic 8-276 (34.5 avg.)
pleased with the way both quarterbacks performed. They made some mistakes, but overall they did an excellent job. I washoing to play them both."
MOORE SAID McMichael ran the ball as well as he had seen him do since he came to KU last year. McMichael rushed for 24 yards on eight carriers. The Hawks rushed for 286 yards in all, but their passing game continued to be poor. Only one of eight scored for 57 yards. Fourteen yards, K-State, however, passed for 122 yards on nine completions.
KU apparently came out of the game without any serious injuries, Moore said.
11
Broncos repel Chiefs'attack
Newly appointed No. 2 quarterback Mark Lissak gets 12 yards on first carry
KANSAS CITY (AP) -- Quarterback Steve Ramsey fired a pair of touchdown passes, but it was the Denver Broncos' defense with its reputation on the line that made the difference yesterday against the Kansas City Chiefs.
"We played good short-yardage all day. The Chiefs are one of the better offenses we have played this year." Denver linebacker Randy Gradishar said after the Broncos held off the Chiefs for a wild 35-26 National Football League victory.
Ramsey, helped by Otis Armstrong, Jon
Weekend Sports Roundup
But the Broncos, 4-3, dismissed any thought of a third Kansas City ambush when they stalled two Chiefs' scoring drives at the end of the game, 2-3, to try in vain for a distant field goal.
Kansas City, fresh from upsets of Miami and Washington, rolled up 463 yards total offense against the Broncos, one of the best defensive teams in the NFL.
twice and Jan Stenner missed two field goals ... it could have been a 49-48 ballgame. "Denver Coach Coach John Ralston that of a wild one. It looked like a track meet."
Keyworth and Rick Uphurch, sparked the Bronze to their best offerings showing in
Kansas City Coach Paul Wiggin was disheardment that his Chiefs consistently hit the big play against the stingy Denver bull, but came up short at the end zone.
"Stopping the Chiefs on the one-yard line
Hockey team second
Coming off three straight defeats, KU's field hockey team played well enough this weekend to take second in the Big Eight tournament.
“你 certainly got to say that their defence played well in those situations,” he added.
The Jayhawks won three games and lost one.
Five Big Eight schools have competitive field hockey teams.
The Jawahars meet Oklahoma University in their first game Saturday and won, 5-0. In the final match, KU defeated host school Oklahoma State University, 2-1.
KU opened the tourney with a shutout victory over Nebraska University, 2-0. In its second game Friday, KU lost to Missouri University, 1-4, in overtime.
The Jayhawks take on Emporia Kansas State College in their next game at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow on the fields east of Robinson Gymnasium.
Two KU players were selected to the Big Eight All-Star squad. Beth Liewliyn, Lawrence senior, was named to the team at Wichita State. N.Y., freshman, was named at left win
Golfer finishes third
Hoins, Leavenworth sophomore, shot 81 Friday and 86 Saturday for 167- six strokes back of the leader, Diane Daugherty. Stephens College, who shot 80-81 for 161. Second place medalist was Julie Gumila, University of Minnesota, with 165.
Huns was the only KU golfer to participate in the tournament. She competed to help her chances of qualifying for the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women national tournament this spring in Honolulu.
Braving cold and rainy weather, KU golfer Nancy Hols took third in an invitational tournament at the University of Iowa Friday and Saturday.
TO QUALIFY for the national tournament, the lowest 10 scores of the spring and fall seasons are averaged. The lowest 20 teams qualify for nationals along with about 68 individual golfers. About 170 golfer will compete in the national tournament.
KU women’s golf coach Nancy Boozer said yesterday that Hols 18 should help players get into the tournament.
Hons' competition in the meet closes the fall season for KU's women golfers.
Runners in fourth
The KU women's cross country team ran into stiff competition and thin air in Boulder, Colo., but still managed a fourth place finish in the Big Eight Championship.
8
Paced by Michelle Brown's 11th place showing, KU totaled 120 points to trail low 14.
State with 18, Colorado with 59 and Kansas
state with 70.
Then came Missouri with 141. Oklahoma and Nebraska did not run complete teams, so they went to Louisiana.
Brown's time for the 5,000-meter course was 20:27. She was followed by Kim Glasgow, 22nd, Nancy Bissell, 23rd, Lauri Mordvth, 27th, and Connie Lane, 37th.
TWO OTHER runners, Hedi Wallace and Sena Frame, didn't finish the race. Wallace stumbled and fell on the rugged terrain near the start of the race. Frame, who has run well in recent meets, dropped out at the mile mark.
Cyclones outrun KU
Coach Tom Lionvale said yesterday that he was impressed with Iowa State and Oklahoma State.
Rosace, who has been hampered by tendonitis in his right foot, sat out the meet on a bench.
The KU men's cross country squad, minus cocepte John Cohosco, dropped a dual meet to Iowa State in Ames Saturday, 21:36
Next for the Jayhawks were Bruce Coldsmith, fifth in 25:17; Ted Crank, eighth in 25:38; Brent Swanson, ninth 24:41; Bill Rutherford, 12 in 20:66; Joel Cambron, 13 in 26:07; and Kendall Smith, 14 in 26:10.
Iowa State's runners, led by individual winner Jeff Myers, placed third, third, and fourth in the conference.
"It was kind of tough without John," coach Bid Tommons said yesterday, "but I had to have a really good team."
Myers locked a 24:36.2 for the five-mile bay, just in front of George Mason's "The Riverside."
"We've got two weeks to get ready for the conference meet and I'm still optimistic."
Soccer squad wins
Saturday KU players dropped Kansas State from the unbeaten ranks by taking a 0 decision in Manhattan, and yesterday they downed Arkansas, 4-1.
The KU Soccer Club played some of its
first games this fall weekend, and the
result was two wins.
Against the Wildcats, KU struggled through a scoreless first half, but came on in the second period to take control of the match.
Mohammad Alt-Aimeur scored the Jayhawk's first goal on a penalty kick six minutes into the half. Ten minutes later the K-State basketball hesitated before after a ball and KU's Fat Callahan booted it into the back of the net for the second goal.
Ahead 2-0 with 30 minutes remaining, KU
Or
Yesterday KU exploded for three goals in the first 15 minutes to rout the Razbacks.
slowed the pace and played keep-away from the Wildcats.
Juan Damasio and Arturo Fregosa each scored during that period.
In the second half Arkansas scored on a penalty kick to narrow the gap. But coach Berne Mullin retaliated with a goal, putting kowls out in front by three to seal the win.
The Lawrence Rugby Club, fighting to retain the first Lady's Cup they won last year, lost to Kansas State yesterday by two goals. The team that close up of U-State's goal as time ran out.
"It was a good, tough game." University team captain Doug Gunn said. "It had 15 wins last season."
Wildcats take cup
Rich Millard opened the scoring with a try that put Lawrence ahead, 40. After K-State tied the game, Brian Wells scored to give Lawrence an 84 lead at the half.
But K-State scored a try in the second half to tie the score and then went ahead, 11/8, with a three-point penalty kick late in the game.
In a second game, the Lawrence city team beat the K-State "B" team, 144. Brian Hunter, city team captain, scored ten points with two trys and a conversion, and teammate Billy Prory scored four with a try in the second half.
KU tennis team wins tournament
The women's tennis team dominated the Kansas State Championship tournament over the weekend in Emporia after whip-ing the State Thursday to advance to the tourney.
Kansas scored the maximum points attainable in the tournament, 36, to finish far ahead of second-place Pittsburgh with six and one-half points. McPherson was third with five and one-half and Benedictine was last with four.
ku'S 7-0 trouning of WSU in Wilhita boosted the Jayhawks into the tournament and concluded their regular season with an unblemished 7-0 mark.
All four of KU's singles players reached the semi-finals in the tournament. KU's No. 1 Carrie Fopotouphos defeated No. 2 Astrid Daksa 3-6, 4-6, 6-4 in the finals.
And KU's No. 1 doubles team of Fotopotoulos and Daksa defeated the No. 2 team of Tracy Spellman and Marlane Cook in an All-KU finals.
By winning the tournament, KU will represent the state of Kansas in the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women tournament next summer.
Monday, October 25, 1976
CAMERON HOTEL
On Campus
TODAY: NONTRADITIONAL STUDENTS will meet at 11:30 a.m. in Aloe Gve of
Masonton. The UNIVERSITY SENATE FOREIGN REALISATION COMMITTEE will meet at 9:30 a.m. in
Aloe Gve of Masonton.
TONIGHT: THE SUA CHESS CLUB will meet at 7 in Parlors B and C of the Union. OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will meet at 7 at 1629 W. 19th ST. THE TEA TAU will meet at 7:30 in the Pine Room of the Union. KU-Y'S ISSUES AND IDEAS will present a film about the apartheid entitled "Last Grave At Dimbai" at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. There is no admission charge. The UNDERGRADUATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will meet at 8 in the International Room of the Union. THE STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS COMMITTEE will meet at 8 in the Governor's Room of the Union.
TOMORROW, KUY'S ISSUES and IDEAS will discuss at 11:30 a.m. in the KUY office, 110 B in the Union, PHIL RHOADES, Democrat runners against Rep. Larry Winn in the 3rd District, will speak at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green Hall. VICTOR CHRIST-JANER, professor of architecture at Columbia University, will speak at 7:30 p.m. in the Jahwah School, will speak at 8:30 p.m. in the Fairmont Hall fall concert at 8 p.m. in the University Theater in Murphy Hall, ROSEMARY PARK, of the University of California at Los Angeles, will speak about higher education at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
GRAD STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS:
GSC
Supplemental Budget Requests
Due November 1
Forms available in GSC office, Kansas
Union. For more information call
864-4914. Funded by Student Activities Fee
people. In fact, I’ll be surprised if it doesn't."
MASS. STREET DELI in
941 MASSACHUSETTS
Pie
Cherry Cheesecake 75c Offer good the entire month of Oct.1976
The play is set in a basement in New York City, Lim said, and the past, present and future of the basement and the people who live there. The plots are based on real-life plots, each of which could be a play by itself.
University Daily Kansan
The cast for the play "Homerica: a Trilogy of Sexual Liberation," is almost complete, Paul Lim, Lawrence graduate student, said yesterday.
The play, written by Lim, was selected last September for production in next semester's "Accent the Arts," a 25-day program focusing on the arts, which is
Play casting near finish
sponsored by SUA. The arts program, March 2016, includes March, replaces SUA's "Festival of the Arts" on June 17.
"It's a very contemporary, topical play," Lam said of "Homeric," which will be played by the show's Balletroom. "It's unlike anything ever written before. I think it will outrage a lot of
25 INTRAMURAL BADMINTON Single
Elimination Tournament
7-20 p.m. South Robinson Gym
Wed., Oct. 27 INTRAMURAL RACQUETBALL FINALS
Thurs., Oct. 28 at Robinson Gym Racquetballs Courts
Sat., Oct. 30 KU SOCCER CLUB - Rockhurst at 2 p.m.
KU FCENCING CLUB - Penn Valley KC
Sun., Oct. 31 INTRAMURAL K-HILL FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
For daily drop-in recreation hours, call 'Rec-Info' 864-3456
Women's - 1:00 Men's - 2:30 Memorial Stadium
WATER BASKETBALL - KU pools 7-9:00
p.m.
p.m.
Bring a team or form a team at the pools!
KU RUGBY CLUB - K.C. Blues, there
KUROCER CLUB
JUCKER CLUB - Nebraska, 2 p.m., 23rd
& Iowa
79 ku
79 ku
APARTHEID
Sophomores
Class Party 7:30 p.m. Tuesday—Oct.26th at
Monday, Oct.25, 7:30 Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union, Level 5
"SHENANIGANS"
Film "Last Grave at Dimbazi
Responses by:
Dorthy Pennington—Asst. Prof. African Studies
& Speech Comm.
Arts Instructor of Political
Joseph Goldman-Asst. Inst Studies
864-3761 KU-Y
Kansas Union Rm. 110
Partially funded by Student Activity Fee
Joseph Goldman-Asst. Instructor of Political Studies
Free admission tickets can be picked up now in class office, Room 113B Kansas Union, along with CLASS MUGS $ ^{100}. $
RE-ELECT
REX D. JOHNSON REPUBLICAN SHERIFF DOUGLAS COUNTY
M. P. BELLO
Present Sheriff of Douglas County Experienced in law enforcement Outstanding record as Sheriff Lifelong resident of Douglas County
Your vote and continued support will be greatly appreciated. (Pol. Adv.)
Pd. by Citizens for Johnson, Frank Case and Joe Kelly, Co-Chairmen
YOU OUGHT TO BE IN PICTURES...
Jayhawker Senior Pictures
October 11-29
9:00-6:00 Kansas Union
Sitting Fee $1.00
fee includes photo in yearbook and option of buying color enlargements
Final week—make your appointment now
"Oh boy! Change for a change."
If you don't know what this is,you're not eating at McDonald's.
It's change. And you can still get it at McDonald's.
Our prices are still terrificly reasonable. And you can still get terrific things to eat for under a dollar.
So,why not eat at McDonald's soon? The change will do you good.
1975 McDonald's Corporation
We do it all for you™
McDonald's
901 West 23rd Street
8
Monday, October 25,1976
University Daily Kansan
Programs, displays open arts festival
The cold forced part of the festival inside, but it didn't dampen the enthusiasm of the more than 100 people who were on hand yesterday afternoon for the black arts festival at the Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum, 11th and Massachusetts streets, and the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th St.
The festival was part of the opening of the "Amistad II" exhibition of Black American art.
In the downstairs lobby were exhibits of art done by black children from Lawrence
The first black culture program was a
theater from the Kansas Dance
Theatre in Kansas.
The four dancers, three men and a woman, presented their interpretations of the song.
the audience saw Tim McClendon's presentation about black women, when he began speaking.
McClendon's dramatic presentation was
Disco . . .
From page one
leader than ever. Van Laming greeted friends with open arms at the door.
"LAST YEAR we had people drive in from Omaha and a few carloads from Chicago for the dance," he said. "It's a good thing the dances are so big—they're our chief means of support to fund our education and counseling programs."
Near 1 a.m. the festival was finishing and Franny readied his final fanfare, a corny country tune in honor of Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. On the floor a frail man wearing a telephone number strenched on his arm, his mouth hook, Hook, who held a Coors can in his hand.
"CAN I STROKE your plume, good sir?" a puggy woman with a painted face asked the captain, fingering the white feather atop his pirate hat.
But the fantasy wasn't to be. The bright ceiling lights flashed on, the music ground down and the crowd scattered and stumbed to the door. Zoro dressed his black mask, Dylan sung his scarf and a dragon played a phone dial he'd been using as a false out of his bra.
Later, on the Union jantors remained—and Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman's gown lay in pieces, the silver sequins scattered about the floor.
Crab lice infest even the nicest people
RID KILLS CRAB LICE ON CONTACT
- Special comb included
- Without a prescription at Drug Stores
RID
broken into four parts: the slavery era; the "straightening condu" amb"; when blacks are in any way but black; the "I'm black and I am not black" and the era of the modern-day black woman.
Earlier in the afternoon the film "Sounder" was shown at the Granada Theatre, and George Jackson, blues guitarist, performed in the museum.
henrys 20¢ off
henrys
henrys 20¢ off
Bring this coupon in
worth 20¢ off on
¼ Pound Henry's All American
with or without cheese—thousand
island, lettuce, tomato & onion
6th & Missouri 843-2139
WESTERN
PENDLETON, USA
The maker of the finest woolen shirtings tailors this beautiful western style shirt in crisp plaids and soft plain colors. Brings you the flavor of the old northwest. $31.00
THE Town Shop
839 Mass.
PENDLETON, USA
The maker of the finest woolen shirtings tailors this beautiful western style shirt in crisp plaids and soft plain colors. Brings you the flavor of the old northwest. $31.00
THE
Town Shop
839 Mass.
PETER R. HARVEY
SUA FORUMS
presents:
ELECTION '76
with
NICHOLAS
VON HOFFMAN
Thurs., October 28
7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
50° Admission
Tickets now available at the SUA office
Barber of
Seville
An absolute delight, Rossini's internationally popular comic opera is a joy not only for the seasoned opera-goers but also to those who are trying it for the first time! Pick your tickets up in Murphy Hall now before they're completely gone. Tickets free with Student Activity Card.
Monday, Oct. 25, University Theatre, 8:00 p.m.
HEAVY
EDDYS
PIZZA
MONDAY MADNESS
FAST FREE DELIVERY
841-3100 Below "the Wheel" 507 W.14th
Order Any Large Pizza With 2 Toppings And Get 2 Additional Toppings Free!!
Save $1.20
Reg. $6.80 Monday $5.60
W
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Accom
ment a
are of
sex, co
BRING
---
BOKC
See o
841-36
Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads. Call 864-4358.
---
STER of an
of an
you v
at the
CUST
work
Minia
Comp
841-38
University Daily Kansan
Mondav. October 25.1976
9
West Germany's foreign ties, Schmidt praised
By BRYANTGRIGGS
No matter which candidate is elected president of the United States, West Germany and the United States will continue to remain close allies, Friedrich Prinz, author and professor in history at the University of Munich, said Friday.
"It makes little difference whether President Ford or Carter wins," Prinz, who specializes in national problems and medieval and social history, said. "West Germany and the United States will continue to have success now, with the Ford administration."
DURING HIS VISIT, he discussed the recent West German elections and current world problems, particularly Soviet domination of Eastern Europe.
struggle between Germany and
Germanyia. He left return to
to Germany.
"East Europe has been dominated through Communist parties for years," he said. "The Czechs tried to revolt against it and the Germans, but it turned out to be a terrible result."
Prin said that "East Europe countries think they're becoming democratic. They still believe in the image of democracy, but it isn't." The British—almost-well-organized and restricted.
He said difficulty in establishing freedom in Eastern European countries resulted
FOR FREEDOM of Soviet domination, Prinz said. "We must first make efforts to bring down intervention tensions between the East and the West. Freedom in Eastern Europe is only possible we get away from the war. It will be a long, difficult process."
from the Warsaw Pact, signed in August 1975, which has brought about the build-up of 1,125 million Soviet troops in the 12 Warsaw nations.
In the Oct. 3 elections in West Germany, Almut Schmidt, Social Democracy Party leader, ran for the Federal Republic of Germany by a narrow 51 per cent of the vote over Helmut Kohl,
Since Schmidt became chancellor, Prinz said, West Germany has improved greatly.
in seeking full employment (the current jobless rate is 3.9 per cent), maintaining and expanding social services, cracking down on terrorism, pursuing detente with East Germany, continuing close ties with the United States and lobbying in other Western European countries for a stronger NATO.
"SCHMIDT HAS a reputation of being reliable, especially with the United States, Prinz said. "President Ford and Schmidt have been on good terms for quite a while."
Prinze called the idea "pure nonsense" that Germany would change its way of government, even though many Germans had accused former Chancellor Willy Brandt of being soft on communist activity in the West German political system.
Club's liquor license could be suspended for from three to 45 days if it is found guilty.
Liquor reception . . .
From page one
STRUKEL SAID there would have been no violations if a club member had been at the entire reception, if all those attending had been bonafide guests of the member, if the member had had enough money -$150 to $200 - in his pool, and if all people at the event had drawn from the member's liquor card for each drink dispensed.
It appeared after investigation, he said, that individual's liquor pools hadn't been by those at the law school reception. Rather, the club used liquored owner by a pool
HE COMPARED the procedures used that day to a citizen bringing 5 people into a
The attorney general's office, Strukel said, first indicated that there had been an infraction in Lawrence that the ABC should investigate. The investigation hadn't been politically motivated.
bar, letting them drink without membership quarantine and then having them pay for it.
"The personalities and politics of it are insignificant to us," he said. "Our main role, in fact our only role, was to determine if there was a liquor violation by the club."
Strukel also indicated he wanted to stay clear of any politic that might be involved in the debate.
KANSAN WANT ADS
"There was a Watergate a while back," he said. "I'm not going to get involved in it."
accumulations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan an ad campaign on social media. CREATE, color, creed, or national origin. PLEASE BREAK ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HLAST
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times
15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.75 $3.00
Each additional
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.75 $3.00
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months. All sites can be placed in person or simply calling the DKB business office at 864-1538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
BOKONOK Paraphernalia for the commissioner,
and in Wednesdays' Kansan, 18:40
841-780. 12:10
Need to submit Jayhaker Towers Apt. $313.00
w/utilities call Call 843-107 or (913) 826-388
www.jayhaker.com
3 Bedroom gat at Quailcreek swell, for limited use. 855-625-9811 or 855-625-9810; 855-625-9812; 855-625-9813; 855-625-9814; 855-625-9815; 855-625-9816; 855-625-9817; 855-625-9818; 855-625-9819; 855-625-9820; 855-625-9821; 855-625-9822; 855-625-9823; 855-625-9824; 855-625-9825; 855-625-9826; 855-625-9827; 855-625-9828; 855-625-9829; 855-625-9830; 855-625-9831; 855-625-9832; 855-625-9833; 855-625-9834; 855-625-9835; 855-625-9836; 855-625-9837; 855-625-9838; 855-625-9839; 855-625-9840; 855-625-9841; 855-625-9842; 855-625-9843; 855-625-9844; 855-625-9845; 855-625-9846; 855-625-9847; 855-625-9848; 855-625-9849; 855-625-9850; 855-625-9851; 855-625-9852; 855-625-9853; 855-625-9854; 855-625-9855; 855-625-9856; 855-625-9857; 855-625-9858; 855-625-9859; 855-625-9860; 855-625-9861; 855-625-9862; 855-625-9863; 855-625-9864; 855-625-9865; 855-625-9866; 855-625-9867; 855-625-9868; 855-625-9869; 855-625-9870; 855-625-9871; 855-625-9872; 855-625-9873; 855-625-9874; 855-625-9875; 855-625-9876; 855-625-9877; 855-625-9878; 855-625-9879; 855-625-9880; 855-625-9881; 855-625-9882; 855-625-9883; 855-625-9884; 855-625-9885; 855-625-9886; 855-625-9887; 855-625-9888; 855-625-9889; 855-625-9890; 855-625-9891; 855-625-9892; 855-625-9893; 855-625-9894; 855-625-9895; 855-625-9896; 855-625-9897; 855-625-9898; 855-625-9899; 855-625-9900; 855-625-9901; 855-625-9902; 855-625-9903; 855-625-9904; 855-625-9905; 855-625-9906; 855-625-9907; 855-625-9908; 855-625-9909; 855-625-9910; 855-625-9911; 855-625-9912; 855-625-9913; 855-625-9914; 855-625-9915; 855-625-9916; 855-625-9917; 855-625-9918; 855-625-9919; 855-625-9920; 855-625-9921; 855-625-9922; 855-625-9923; 855-625-9924; 855-625-9925; 855-625-9926; 855-625-9927; 855-625-9928; 855-625-9929; 855-625-9930; 855-625-9931; 855-625-9932; 855-625-9933; 855-625-9934; 855-625-9935; 855-625-9936; 855-625-9937; 855-625-9938; 855-625-9939; 855-625-9940; 855-625-9941; 855-625-9942; 855-625-9943; 855-625-9944; 855-625-9945; 855-625-9946; 855-625-9947; 855-625-9948; 855-625-9949; 855-625-9950; 855-625-9951; 855-625-9952; 855-625-9953; 855-625-9954; 855-625-9955; 855-625-9956; 855-625-9957; 855-625-9958; 855-625-9959; 855-625-9960; 855-625-9961; 855-625-9962; 855-625-9963; 855-625-9964; 855-625-9965; 855-625-9966; 855-625-9967; 855-625-9968; 855-625-9969; 855-625-9970; 855-625-9971; 855-625-9972; 855-625-9973; 855-625-9974; 855-625-9975; 855-625-9976; 855-625-9977; 855-625-9978; 855-625-9979; 855-625-9980; 855-625-9981; 855-625-9982; 855-625-9983; 855-625-9984; 855-625-9985; 855-625-9986; 855-625-9987; 855-625-9988; 855-625-9989; 855-625-9990; 855-625-9991; 855-625-9992; 855-625-9993; 855-625-9994; 855-625-9995; 855-625-9996; 855-625-9997; 855-625-9998; 855-625-9999
*ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS- Drop in and
take the keypad. (Do not use card)
(no phone, cell phone) at WESTERN
SCHOOL for any questions.
(do not call) at WESTERN SCHOOL
Luxurious Two-bedroom apt. to subtel immediately. $290 per room; utilizes #488 or #487-376
2 bedroom trailer: 8'74" partially furnished, pet
friendly, no utilities not included. Call
10-287 10-287
Spiacia 1 bedroom apt. available anytime after
6:30 on bus route, laundry indoor
5330 10-29
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any price you see on popular hff equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-produce products, the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFEF is the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFEF.
FOR SALE
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermida. Uniform, etc. Stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3853.
Order Now For Christmas
MAGAZINE
SUBSCRIPTION
SERVICE
Many at Special Discounts
ADVENTURE a bookstore
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Phone: 843-6424
Call Ottis Vann!
For new Chevrolets and used cars at
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BELC AUTOLINE, BELC 8435-9695, W 4th, W 6h.
ELECTRIC, BELC 8435-9695, W 4th, W 6h.
Turner Chevrolet
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
West 36th Street, New York, NY 10026.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make
use them! Western Civilization Notes makes use to
use them!
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. tf
Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerator,
freezer, dishwasher, microwave, oven and more.
1-5454-A - 1:27-30am
2-5454-B - 1:27-30am
3-5454-C - 1:27-30am
JBL K410 15" bass instrument in cabinet,
watt rms Rating. price negotiable. 842-1425.
Bruce guze arm. Superior quality. 150 watt
amps. 15 in speakers. Excellent condition.
841-6242. 10-25
**american microsope.** Like new. Best offer. Call
after 5:00. 824-9657.
1972 Honda 350, Must sell, best offer. Call after
5.00. 942-9677
10-25
40%-7% off on warm-up suits, dresses, man's
wear and swimsuits, i.e. Alvarac Navarro or
Swim Club Suits.
843-7700
1069 Fiat 124 Sport Coupe body redoes, new
body blacks, new rear wheels, new battery,
new pump, new battery, 841-288-1068
72 Kawasaki 350, 8,000 miles, clean, faring, new
trail arm bussels, helmet, new, New Rings,
341-3586
Sleeves. Garrard curtains. Shoulder cartridge, amplifi-
cated. Garrard curtains. 22 waist. $59 Call McMahon.
McMahon #4-3855
McMahon #4-3855
1969 MGC, nice, must sell. 26,000 miles. 6 cylindrical transmission. 913-294-4001
Maranta 1965 Sterile amphel amphibol watt per chamber power. Must be 84-88 µW for channel power amp. Must sell 844-888; kbps
PORSCHI, 1980, 911-T, Terga: 5 speed. Excellent condition. Evenness after 6, 300 g. 10-26
A great guitar - GIBSON SG-aprax® @ 10m condition. A truly rare find 841-7135 10-28
GTEQ. Quid Monster Receiver/250 watts RMS/85
GTEQ. Quid Monster Receiver/250 watts RMS/85
Pioneer lab site, table/BER 149XW CHANGE pin,
8-pray record/payload deck. Daisy-D twin
CD changer. ESCA 86GAve pump. magnum pump. 842-600 eyes. 10-27
66 MUSTANG, 6 cly. 3 speed, mg wheels. Good
maneuverage. Needs mechanics. Call: 192-545-8700.
MUSTANG
Bicycle 10 speed, with lock 1 year old, $84-$64
or the morning or leave you number other
number.
For Sale - 1714 Honda CL, $50. $500, Test 500
For Sale - 1714 Honda CL, $50. $500, Test 500
For Sale - 1714 Honda CL, $50. $500, Test 500
For record changer, Coul $841 for Brad. $100
For record changer, Coul $841 for Brad. $100
Must Sell 1790 Opel Raley kadet. Gt2. 26 mpg.
Also parachute gear. Call anytime. 10-258.
10-358.
For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call TWB at 841-5488 or 841-1347.
71 FOR CAPH 4-cylinder stick shift; gear
Question Asking $1250; Call 842-9682 or
10-29
71 FOR CAPH 4-cylinder stick shift; gear
Question Asking $1250; Call 842-9682 or
10-29
1975 Dodge Van, carpet and panel interior. Loaded with extras. Call 594-3562. Best offer.
RCA Color TV, needs repair. Call 814-7063. B&W TV, needs repair. Call 877-1513. HDTV, needs repair. Call 849-8584 after 5 p.m.
All Sophomores (*paying class dues*)—get your class mugs for $10 for $13.8 of the UUlfr
HELP WANTED
Delivery—must have own car, $35 approx. Inspection—Apply in person at Heavy Industries.
COUNTER CLERK. AT OVERLAND PHOTO
CENTER CLERK. AT OVERLAND PHOTO
COUNTER CLERK. AT OVERLAND PHOTO
2 P.M. M-F Daily Monday through Saturday.
8:30 A.M.-10:00 A.M.
Int. Slip Clerk at Quick-Bib Photo-Shoot, 111
M., Monday first Saturday, 2:00 p.m.
M., Monday first Saturday, 2:40 p.m.
OVERSEAS JOBS - summer-year/year 1. Europe,
S. America, Australia, Ata, etc. All fields, $500-
$1200 monthly. Expenses paid. sightseeing Free
information - Write a message. CA # 9740. 11-11
wagon wheel
10 p.m. - 12 p.m.
Everyday Is
Ladies' Days.
POSITION AVAILABLE. Full time research assistant to isolate, purify, and assay enzymes. B.S. in chemistry or Chemistry or related field used to isolate, purify and assay enzymes would be desirable. Prior experience. Starting date negotiable. Contact Dr. Jerry Chesapeake, Ph.D., Department of University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS (913) 864-3472 by November 1. AN EQUAL PLAYER IN COUNCIL/AFFIRMATIVE ACTION 10-27
Opening for research assistant to research on human service administration. Part time temporary position in background in developmental disabilities or public health, research and curriculum development, management experience. Application deadline Oct. 26. Career open to men and women. Employed man and women of all 10-26
LOST. AND FOUND
Now taking applications for part-time cocktail waiter, caterer, dishwashers. Apply at Carrington Brewing Company, 212-539-7600.
Bus Boy, Bax Bay, Need neat. well promised. Bus
Manager, well organized. Business majors
music well with ability to work 12:00 a.m.
Missouri State University, JFK Jr. Apply to
Personal Identification Job. Apply Email
Affirmative Action Enrollment Box.
Missouri State University, JFK Jr. Apply
has the eyeglasses you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 841-7421
Vulleyball Internaturm (officials needed) Games
635-834 or 635-834 to come to 298. Robinson $12.90
834-834 or 834-834 to come to 298. Robinson $12.90
Lost: One pair of glasses in brown case between
Field House and Wheelhouse. Reward Call
19:26
Lost: Beige leather purse with 10 pockets of
locks. Inspection at B&M at 684-1638. REWARD
at B&M at 684-1638. REWARD
VISIONS
Found: Algebra book in 209 Blake. Call 913-837-
2640 after 6.00.
Found, glasses with case at corner of Nahimish and Irving Dr. on 10-15-76. Call 844-263-853.
Lost: at KU OK game on the Hill. Brown leather
pursue and important items ID: 101
10-25
Found: Male Pointer with chain clutch, Victimry
of 10th & Tenn. Call 843-4773. 10-26
MISCELLANEOUS
Lust: brown welt between Hoch and Warten
Hust: brown welt between Hoch and Warten
Reward: Howard B63-815 aik for 10-10
Reward: Howard B63-815 aik for 10-10
Found: white kite near 4th and Alabama. Call Steve 864-4570 (day), 842-9933 (night). 10-27
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 83F Mass.
All Sophomores (who paid or will pay class
all)—pick up free tickets for Sophomore party.
Tues. night anytime during the day in class for
$10.00. In the Union and purchase tickets for
10-26
Redeemer Lutheran Church, 300th and Haskell,
invites all students and faculty to our Sunday
break from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Bruno is at 10:15 a.m. we have an active college
age group: Transportation will be provided if
you are not in the building.
NOTICE
CASSAH CAFE—Good food from sizzle, Lunch
10:30-12:30. MPa. Mass. Please backdoor, even if
10:30-12:30. MPa. Mass. Please backdoor, even if
Shamp Shop, 620 mass. Mass. used furniture, dishes.
hairdryers, clock televisions. Daily use 12 hr.
baths 18-24 hr.
sPORT
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents 7th & Arkansas 843-3328
SAODLE & BRIDLE SHOP
RAASCH
Jin's Steak House Delicious food at reasonable prices. 212-654-3000, jin.ssteakhouse.com, 4-11, Closed Tuesday, 8:49-7:59, 849-793-0100.
Free- 5 kits needed a good home. Please help
out. Call 841-300-200 between 5 P.M. &
P.M.
Free-
Female singer looking for Rock Band to sing
with, Call Kill 843-361-361
10-26
Become a Gift, World distributor—merchandise from 1/2 to 1/3 of retail-free into $2 for product catalog—refundable on first order. Hurry up! BTO, PT.O Box 302, Box 138, City, Mt.哥拉贝尔。
Everything from housewives to jewelry - 40% off
furniture, HKS. 185 W. Poisonstown, Kansas KS
BROLLER & BRIDLE BROOM
Lim = 0.20 x = tv & pz
Slipshod Engineering & Acoustical Products wished to introduce 'Toggles' to the speaker system. The Toggles allow the speaker to breathe清晰 and depth that you would expect them to cost up to four times the actual cost of a conventional speaker or just to discuss our folded cone horn design, ear 842-6392 and talk to us on 10-29
PERSONAL
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
non-traditional, anti-chauvinist man wants meet a liberated woman with similar views. 10-28
Having trouble scheduling Morning worship and
invite you to watch at 8:30 a.m. at 1985 Church
from 10:45 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Body tension is painful. Massage is simple. Muscle massaging is painless, relaxing muscles and adding circulation. Massage is a natural method of preserving health, and it stimulates the body to respond with acute intuition what so-even in this massage. It requires G.P. and it is beautiful to men and women in Hairdressers' Hair Design. 899, Vermont; 893, Maine; 892, New York.
**NG TRICKS** Treat a special someone this Pumpkin Day with a Halloween Crown from KU Angel Flight's *Pledge Club*. Orange-frosted white cake is included. 10.09 p.m. UNIT 10.09-50. Sponsored by A.R.O.T.C.
If you have problems with a runny nose, Call 812-547-6000 Center. Fare 10-26 upon request 812-547-6000
A MAN OBSESSED by classical music and especially interested in GERMAN, Literature, Plato, philology, camping and canoeing wishes to meet the mann of like interests. "Robert Mann," 843-1273. 10-29
Summaid raisin* -Great year since Benny in Hoch. Lv. Nick.
10-25
REAL ESTATE
Martin Real Estate Inc. ATTENTION: very seldom does a house on or near the campus become available, so we are located in a quiet secured area at No. 9 Westwood. A 3-bdr. rancher, this home offers nearly 150 square feet of living space is priced at $5,000. Call 842-707-ew,宝年 842-705, or Bill Brewner 822-855. 10-29
SERVICES OFFERED
842 8413
1234567890
ACADEMIC RESHACH FAPEPS Thanandas on
Chilings, NJ. 462-7159 to 306 H. Los Ang-
les 471-6814 or 471-6814.
IN A MUSICAL RUT? See how lessons can help you moving. Beginning to advanced in folk, rock, jazz, classic, bluegrass and blues guitar, mandolin and piano, and piano. McAlmy McKinney 10-29
DOS DELUXE
BOSS'S AGREES
LAWFRIEND FORM
BankAmericard
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a "Turnie" clean up and add your bike. A turnie is a rubberized hub, a lubricated brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your hubs, crank and head and fork. Don't forget the "turnup" rate: 10 speed $15.00, 5 or 3 speed $15.00, single speed $25.00, triple speed $15.00, single speed $6.50. Complete pro-grade tires.
Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer! Bring along you used Schwinn to trade in your old bike. Rates are $150. Tues, thru 8:30, Sun, 10:3-14, Worth, 8:30, 8:42-636.
TYPING
Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 009, 010, 011, 012, 013, 014, 015, 016, 017, 018, 019, 020, 021, 022, 023, 024, 025, 026, 027, 028, 029, 030, 031, 032, 033, 034, 035, 036, 037, 038, 039, 040, 041, 042, 043, 044, 045, 046, 047, 048, 049, 050, 051, 052, 053, 054, 055, 056, 057, 058, 059, 060, 061, 062, 063, 064, 065, 066, 067, 068, 069, 070, 071, 072, 073, 074, 075, 076, 077, 078, 079, 080, 081, 082, 083, 084, 085, 086, 087, 088, 089, 090, 091, 092, 093, 094, 095, 096, 097, 098, 099, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 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385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2901, 2902, 2903, 2904, 2905, 2906, 2907, 2908, 2909, 2910, 2911, 2912, 2913, 2914, 2915, 2916, 2917, 2918, 2919, 2920, 2921, 2922, 2923, 2924, 2925, 2926, 2927, 2928, 2929, 2930, 2931, 2932, 2933, 2934, 2935, 2936, 2937, 2938, 2939, 2940, 2941, 2942, 2943, 2944, 2945, 2946, 2947, 2948, 2949, 2950, 2951, 2952, 2953, 2954, 2955, 2956, 2957, 2958, 2959, 2960, 2961, 2962, 2963, 2964, 2965, 2966, 2967, 2968, 2969, 2970, 2971, 2972, 2973, 2974, 2975, 2976, 2977, 2978, 2979, 2980, 2981, 2982, 2983, 2984, 2985, 2986, 2987, 2988, 2989, 2990, 2991, 2992, 2993, 2994, 2995, 2996, 2997, 2998, 2999, 3000, 3001, 3002, 3003, 3004, 3005, 3006, 3007, 3008, 3009, 3010, 3011, 3012, 3013, 3014, 3015, 3016, 3017, 3018, 3019, 3020, 3021, 3022, 3023, 3024, 3025, 3026, 3027, 3028, 3029, 3030, 3031, 3032, 3033, 3034, 3035, 3036, 3037, 3038, 3039, 3040, 3041, 3042, 3043, 3044, 3045, 3046, 3047, 3048, 3049, 3050, 3051, 3052, 3053, 3054, 3055, 3056, 3057, 3058, 3059, 3060, 3061, 3062, 3063, 3064, 3065, 3066, 3067, 3068, 3069, 3070, 3071, 3072, 3073, 3074, 3075, 3076, 3077, 3078, 3079, 3080, 3081, 3082, 3083, 3084, 3085, 3086, 3087, 3088, 3089, 3090, 3091, 3092, 3093, 3094, 3095, 3096, 3097, 3098, 3099, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 5040, 5041, 5042, 5043, 5044, 5045, 5046, 5047, 5048, 5049, 5050, 5051, 5052, 5053, 5054, 5055, 5056, 5057, 5058, 5059, 5060, 5061, 5062, 5063, 5064, 5065, 5066, 5067, 5068, 5069, 5070, 5071, 5072, 5073, 5074, 5075, 5076, 5077, 5078, 5079, 5080, 5081, 5082, 5083, 5084, 5085, 5086, 5087, 5088, 5089, 5090, 5091, 5092, 5093, 5094, 5095, 5096, 5097, 5098, 5099, 6000, 6001, 6002, 6003, 6004, 6005, 6006, 6007, 6008, 6009, 6010, 6011, 6012, 6013, 6014, 6015, 6016, 6017, 6018, 6019, 6020, 6021, 6022, 6023, 6024, 6025, 6026, 6027, 6028, 6029, 6030, 6031, 6032, 6033, 6034, 6035, 6036, 6037, 6038, 6039, 6040, 6041, 6042, 6043, 6044, 6045, 6046, 6047, 6048, 6049, 6050, 6051, 6052, 6053, 6054, 6055, 6056, 6057, 6058, 6059, 6060, 6061, 6062, 6063, 6064, 6065, 6066, 6067, 6068, 6069, 6070, 6071, 6072, 6073, 6074, 6075, 6076, 6077, 6078, 6079, 6080, 6081, 6082, 6083, 6084, 6085, 6086, 6087, 6088, 6089, 6090, 6091, 6092, 6093, 6094, 6095, 6096, 6097, 6098, 6099, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 5040, 5041, 5042, 5043, 5044, 5045, 5046, 5047, 5048, 5049, 5050, 5051, 5052, 5053, 5054, 5055, 5056, 5057, 5058, 5059, 5060, 5061, 5062, 5063, 5064, 5065, 5066, 5067, 5068, 5069, 5070, 5071, 5072, 5073, 5074, 5075, 5076, 5077, 5078, 5079, 5080, 5081, 5082, 5083, 5084, 5085, 5086, 5087, 5088, 5089, 5090, 5091, 5092, 5093, 5094, 5095, 5096, 5097, 5098, 5099, 6000, 6001, 6002, 6003, 6004, 6005, 6006, 6007, 6008, 6009, 6010, 6011, 6012, 6013, 6014, 6015, 6016, 6017, 6018, 6019, 6020, 6021, 6022, 6023, 6024, 6025, 6026, 6027, 6028, 6029, 6030, 6031, 6032, 6033, 6034, 6035, 6036, 6037, 6038, 6039, 6040, 6041, 6042, 6043, 6044, 6045, 6046, 6047, 6048, 6049, 6050, 6051, 6052, 6053, 6054, 6055, 6056, 6057, 6058, 6059, 6060, 6061, 6062, 6063, 6064, 6065, 6066, 6067, 6068, 6069, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 5040, 5041, 5042, 5043, 5044, 5045, 5046, 5047, 5048, 5049, 5050, 5051, 5052, 5053, 5054, 5055, 5056, 5057, 5058, 5059, 5060, 5061, 5062, 5063, 5064, 5065, 5066, 5067, 5068, 5069, 5070, 5071, 5072, 5073, 5074, 5075, 5076, 5077, 5078, 5079, 5080, 5081, 5082, 5083, 5084, 5085, 5086, 5087, 5088, 5089, 5090, 5091, 5092, 5093, 5094, 5095, 5096, 5097, 5098, 5099, 6000, 6001, 6002, 6003, 6004, 6005, 6006, 6007, 6008, 6009, 6010, 6011, 6012, 6013, 6014, 6015, 6016, 6017, 6018, 6019, 6020, 6021, 6022, 6023, 6024, 6025, 6026, 6027, 6028, 6029, 6030, 6031, 6032, 6033, 6034, 6035, 6036, 6037, 6038, 6039, 6040, 6041, 6042, 6043, 6044, 6045, 6046, 6047, 6048, 6049, 6050, 6051, 6052, 6053, 6054, 6055, 6056, 6057, 6058, 6059, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 5040, 5041, 5042, 5043, 5044, 5045, 5046, 5047, 5048, 5049, 5050, 5051, 5052, 5053, 5054, 5055, 5056, 5057, 5058, 5059, 5060, 5061, 5062, 5063, 5064, 5065, 5066, 5067, 5068, 5069, 5070, 5071, 5072, 5073, 5074, 5075, 5076, 5077, 5078, 5079, 5080, 5081, 5082, 5083, 5084, 5085, 5086, 5087, 5089, 5090, 5091, 5092,
WANTED
Grooming all breeds Professional care for you
3008-417-3709
Paradise Grooming 843-3709 10-28
Need 1 ticket, anywhere, to Nebraska game. Call 843-724-930. Keep 5:39 playing. 10-25
Giftkoffer Option
DISTINCT TM EVEWARE
New Zealand Market
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selectle IT
can assist you with tasks such as
taping, carting, and Palm call at Camel.
PERMISSIVE AUCTION
10 LISTED APPLICATIONS
FOR SALE
2 WORKSHOPS NOW AVAILABLE
FOR SALING
WOUNDHOUSE OPEN TO PUBLIC
WOUNDHOUSE GARDEN
WOUNDHOUSE HOME
WOUNDHOUSE MEMORIAL
WOUNDHOUSE TERRACE
Gloocher Optical
DISTINCT TMV EYEWARE
MLK AVE. NASHVILLE, TN 37210
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CREWEL HOME
15 East 8th 844-2696
10.5 Monday, Saturday
MAINING
Experienced Typist-IBM-Memory-Call 843-
129, ask for John. 106
--in the summer Use the student discounts
Experienced typist; manuscriptists, thesas, etc.
Karen, kapec 6541-3217; date: 841-1790 evening and
afternoon
NATIVE
CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-20
THEISM BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us talk about $85 Massachusetts or phone 428-738-Thank you.
HORIZONS HONDA
Sales, Parts, Service
●DURYMOUNTING ●STITCHERY
●METAL FRAMES ●RESTORATION
Typist editor, IBM PCA villeville. Quality work. Reasonable rates. Thema, distractions welcome.
Cross Reference Bookstore
425-1651 Mallis Shopping Center
BK2 1553 Malis Shopping Centre
SUNCOY PARKLAND CIVIL CLUB
1811 W. 6th
Tues..Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Wanted--Full size backpack and aluminium frame,
2003-0128 or Wayne Fitch. Tongue十号, 10-25
mm.
Need 2 men roommates for large, furnished kitchen. Need 3 men roommates for large, furnished kitchen. Need 4 men roommates for large, furnished kitchen. Included: Come by 1011 Indiana, Apt. S, any amenities needed.
Roommates wanted to share two-bedroom duplexes in a quiet, private, sunny location with calm and easy-going. Call 843-7257-8077 or visit www.rentals.com.
Needed 1 grad student or full time working girl at to split rent and util. in a 8 room apartment except bedrooms. Stephanie at 642-883, between 9:30 & 10:00 or 642-372 after 12:35.
Delivery work on weekends. Call or come by the Campus Hideaway for details. 845-911-102.
Need two people to share a large house with
people in need. Now I will be 10 to end of course 900 houses London.
Please call me 212-543-8700.
For the offer:1
Position Offering, Photo/Darkroom instructor
teaching high school residents and advanced
teach him residents' skills and advanced
skills to residents in his daytime Saturday
and some evening meetings. Applications
Sept. 27. Equal Opportunity/Affirmative
Sept. 27. Equal Opportunity/Affirmative
10-25
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10-27
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e.g. 82-976, 841-356, 841-356 anyone.
82-976, 841-356 anyone.
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Wanted: A talented and versatile music writer and singer interested in combining some creative skills with a love of music.
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843-9365 843-6960
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Phone 843-1211
KU Union Lobby
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18.
10
University Daily Kansan
Mondav. October 25,1976
McNish seeks newest knowledge
Bv COURTNEY THOMPSON
RUSSIA
A name like J. Hammond McNish conjures up visions of propriety and formality—certainly more so than, say, Bill Jones.
J. Hammond McNish
And there's the theory that cautions against deviation from the revered principle that says it's advisable to avoid professors with long names and mandatory to avoid those using a first initial and middle name.
The combination of these two considerations suggests that a business law course taught by McNish would be worthy of careful circumvention.
Not so. McNish is a person who puts you to ease as you first walk in his office—even if you admit to knowing almost nothing about business, and definitely nothing about business law.
The "visits" are five-minute discussions at the beginning of class and cover any topics relevant to the class.
HE SAYS HE LIKES to put his students at ease, too, and likes to "visit with them before class to help break the ice before jumping into course material."
"I wouldn't take time to talk about frivolous stuff," McNish said recently, "but I think students should know about what's going on around them today." I don't think a time with trivia, but I continue to do it anyway because I think the things I mention are relevant."
TEACHING WAS the farthest thing from his mind, he says, when he got a letter in 1946 asking him to consider a position at the University of Kansas.
"I thought it was a joke," he said. "I was a research assistant at the University of Nebraska law school and teaching was the last thing I expected to do. I hadn't the
Vagues later taught at KU from 1946 to 1948. He McNish taught at KU from 1946 to 1948. He
says that during that time he "fell in love with" the student, and with the type of student at the University.
Because he wanted to experience the "real world of a lawyer," McNish returned to his native Nebraska to practice law as partner in a two-man firm. After 22 years in law practice, he says the routine became repetitions and his enthusiasm "guilt."
"NO LONGER was it a great thrill to
stand there, and feel that I had
yourself as an implementation of justice.
all," he said. "Instead we began to wish each client hadn't come in.
"This is hard to express properly because I enjoyed law practice, yet I became a prisoner to the commitments it entailed. I spent most of my time explaining why we weren't through with a particular case and knew that the legal process' could be short-cutted."
McNish says he realized he would like to return to teaching at KU if the opportunity were presented, so he made the suggestion
to the University in 1970 and they accepted his offer.
AS AN ADJUNCT professor (one who has had work experience in a specific field), he isn't required to do research or writing, and therefore is not required to present essential elements of teachings, however.
knowledge is a continually expanding process, he says, and the ability of a professor to inject new knowledge into this knowledge with reference to his experiences make college different from high school. He says students shouldn't be satisfied with the rehash-of the textbook method common to high school courses, but instead from an instructor's individual expertise.
McNish enjoys classical music and is a member of the Lawrence Chamber Music Society. But his avid avocation in connection with KU is intercollegiate athletics.
McNish says he finds teaching relaxing and doesn't find it tiresome or boring to teach the same course repeatedly. Student reaction is always different, he says, and the students themselves are interesting in their varity.
THE ONLY THING he dislikes about "academia", McNish says, is correcting papers. He says his tests are essay, and by the end of this semester he students are learning and what they're not.
He is KU's faculty representative to the Big Eight and NCAA and an ex-officio member of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board.
whether you as an individual are a sports enthusiast or not I think it's important to realize the tremendous morale boosting and cohesiveness factor that collegiate athletics carries with it. You may prefer reading a novel instead of watching sports, and I think it's a mistake to oppose anything that has such value to the University."
Teaching remains fresh for Pyfer
WHERE IT HAPPENED
By BILL CALVERT
Staff Writer
Pyfer teaches adaptive physical education, which deals with the treatment of perception and movement problems of the handicapped.
A concern about the attitudes of students and a desire to be open and honest with them characterize the teaching of Jean Pfer. associate professor of education.
Because of the nature of the courses she teaches, Ppy find her classes rarely dull.
Jean Pyfer
THE FLOW OF fresh material in her classes and the emphasis on its application provide a firm base for Pyfer's teaching philosophy. She said she tried to encourage open-mindedness and originality toward her class' subject matter in her students.
"It would be difficult to keep the class interesting if you were deceived by her at first, but after year, but that's not the case," Pyter said recently. "The case is that we are always dealing with people who have been taught the wrong thing."
It's the students that keep it interesting because they come up with new ideas in terms of 'Okay, here's the stuff—what do you do with it?"
"You can either teach to open people's minds, or teach them to be followers who are dedicated to what a few people have said, and literally close them to knowledge," she said. "I think it's important that every teacher discipline they're in and an open attitude in using that information."
Pyfer has taught at the University of Kansas for the past seven years. During
that time she has been involved with the Perceptual-Motor Clinic in the department of health and physical education, in which perceptual and movement problems of handicapped children are diagnosed and treated.
PYFER SAID THAT when she arrived at KU, a professor in the department wanted to start a clinic and asked whether she had degrees in physical education, educational psychology and special education, she said, she felt qualified and accepted the position. Two years later, the KU leaf, leaving her in charge of the clinic.
The clinic is an important educational tool for students in observed tried and true treatments of perceptual-motor disorders, Pyter said. She said it supplemented her three-pronged classroom approach: using current theoretical positions, and critiquing the information to find better ways to apply it.
"I COULDN'T have planned it better even if I had known what I would be doing today," Pyler said of her present position. "I just don't want to see them than they have ever learned, from me."
Pyfer said she first became motivated to teach after she graduated from high school when she saw the attitudes of high school graduates who applied for jobs at the office where she worked. The people she worked with there and the job seekers were often more concerned with job benefits than with job demands, she said.
"Quite frankly, I didn't like the quality of
Gilbert desires informality
Staff Writer
If high quality teaching were measured by the desire to teach, Edwyna Gilbert, associate professor of curriculum and education, said she wants students to hear. She says she wants to teach "forever."
"I don't think just anyone can be a
woman who she said recently." You have to
want to do.
By BETH SPRINGGATE
"I think teaching is caring. It's not enough to know statistics and facts. I think you have to be able to say, 'Hey, that means something to me.'"
If a teacher tells his students to read a book and learn the facts, he won't be as successful as a teacher who adds to the reading by relating the facts to life, she
Life outside the University of Karsas isn't the limit to experience, Gilbert said. The world within the University can be just as challenging. she said.
"I TRY TO make my classes informal," she said. "We try to have a lot of discussion. I try to relate things that we discuss in class to things in life."
GLIBERT SAID teaching at KU could be frustrating at times.
"I hope that my students, after they've been in that real world, will take the opportunities."
She said, "I don't like German chocolate
that's not come to your house, I make
an attempt to it."
Edwyna Gilbert
She said she wanted her students to try University teaching to find out whether they
She said that last year, when she was nominated for the HOPE award but didn't win it, she felt as if she had gone unrewarded for her efforts.
interested in the school and the community.
Those teachers who take advantage of research grants and leave Lawrence to study aren't doing justice to their students. They're teachers who remain in Lawrence and work within the school who deserve praise, she said.
"I THINK ALL teachers can be more effective," she said. "Even if you teach the same course semester after semester, you never teach it the same way."
"There just aren't enough awards to recognize all of the people here," she said. "I think teaching should be more important because there is more attention should be paid to teachers."
A teacher must teach the same course semester after semester, Gilbert said. She said it was her responsibility to keep her classes refreshing for her students.
"If you're a teacher, it's a 24-hour thing," she said. "It's always on your mind, I'm ready to go."
She added that most teachers at KU were good, conscientious teachers who were
When she meets a new group of students in that class at the start of each semester, she said, "It's like going to a party for the teachers and the children; who they are and what they want."
better?' I ask it every semester and every day."
With each new group she faces two challenges. She said she wanted to teach her students how to be successful teachers and to introduce them to existing problems so they could be aware of them and correct them if the opportunity arose.
Each semester she pursues that philosophy, especially in a class she teaches called, "Teaching Language Arts in the Classroom," a methods class for student teachers.
youngsters I saw coming out of high school," she said. "Their questions were usually 'What's my salary?', How much sick leave do I get?, When my vacancy start?'. There was no attention paid to know. There was no attention paid to questions like 'What do I do in my job?'
AT KU SIEH earned her doctorate and met her husband, William Gilbert, professor of history, who she said had had a great influence on her teaching philosophy.
She said she attempted to meet the challenge of teaching her students by criticizing their work and understanding their problems.
SHE SAID, "You're preparing them for something immediate and for something long-range. But I don't think you ever know their goals, and that what's knew you going."
Gilbert may have found a solution to the students' problem of finding enough time to study.
She said, "The idea in teaching would be to sit in your office from 4 to 8 and all around you. You'd need a floor."
"Better yet, the ideal in teaching would be you could teach like Socrates and go around teaching."
The ideas she presents to her classes are the ideas she has incorporated into her classwork.
AFTER WORKING six years as a clerk-typist and a private secretary, Pyter went back to school and graduated from Indiana with a doctorate in physical education.
Gilbert was born in Maryville, Mo. but has lived in Lawrence since 1862 when she came here with a friend, Oscar Howe, a former HOPE award winner.
The system of giving grades to percentages of students sets up a competitive situation in which the students work against each other instead of cooperating, she said. This stiff creativity, she said, and the students' active skills, which she considers important.
"If they all end up with perfect scores, it's fine with me," she said. "When they have a say-so as to what these things are going to count, they have made a personal commitment." She is going to make. I don't think teachers should run ground clubbing to do their things.
Political love affair absorbing to Cigler
It's ironic that Allan Cigler, a finalist for the highest award that University of Kansas students give an instructor, readily admits that he has no teaching philosophy.
wan Cugier, assistant professor of politics who does have is a love for the beaches he teaches.
By JERRY SEIB
Staff Writer
Both teaching and research are vital in most academic departments, he said. To do research, some sacrifices must be made in order to teach, he said, priorities must be set.
RESEARCH STILL take up much of Cigler's time. He said teaching in his field would be nearly impossible without research outside the classroom.
"Very frankly, I'm fascinated with American politics," Cigler said recently. "The University community is the one community where I can pursue that."
"Over time, the teaching part of my role has taken more and more of my time, and I've gotten more and more of my rewards there," he said.
CIGLER TEACHES undergraduate classes in American and English political behavior, and the electoral process. One of
"The semester after an election is tough, both for them, for me," he said. "I don't think the students can do it."
Cigler said that, in this election year, the general interest in politics had heightened student interest in his classes. That will be different this spring.
HOPE voting set
Seniors may vote for one of the five HOPE award finalists Wednesday and Thursday. The winner will be announced during the game of the KU-Iowa State football game Nov. 6.
his favorites is his class on American political parties.
"I'm teaching stuff that's intrinsically interesting," he said. "All I have to do is not interest it."
G caller said he didn't grow up hoping to be a degradaeer and graduate degrees at Thel College in Greenville, Pa., and the university in Maryville, Va. This is his interest in political research.
Seated in his Blake Hall office, Clergius looks as much like a graduate student as a professor. His light brown hair is slightly longer, just above his glasses. He speaks in quick, sharp words.
(p4) Teaching is a very personal kind of
service profession with strong personal reward
with stront personal reward.
Cigler's office. They are the accumulation of years of teaching and research, and the books' titles reflect the diverse interests of the man at the desk nearby.
"One really satisfying thing is working with upperclassmen doing research projects," he said. "It's just sort of exciting and stimulating intellectually turn on for the first time."
"My major aim in class is to give people a set of tools to make sense of what seems so confusing."
CIGLER HAS published articles on public opinion changes, government popularity in Britain, political ineffectiveness, aftermath of the citizenship and politics in the Philippines.
Books and journals line the walls of
American politics is his speciality, however. He has taught courses at virtually all levels, but he prefers teaching courses at the junior and senior levels. He doesn't enjoy teaching graduate students, who, he increasingly have slipped into coproduction.
CIGLER HAS been on college campuses long enough to remember the student unrest of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Those days, when there was little involvement on today's campuses.
Boy reading a book. Dog resting on his lap.
Allan Cigler
The political climate of the past few years hasn't helped the situation, he said.
"People got burned. People are reluctant to get burned again. It's sort of a love like that."
BEGIN TO
CHANGE THE
GIGARS
Peter Turk
Turk shuns selling for teaching
Bv CAROL LUMAN
Staff Writer
Peter Turk, acting assistant professor of journalism, says he's a retread.
"This is my second career," he said recently. "I started out in advertising and spent 10 years in advertising work agency work." He added that it was time for a change, so I am a retread.
The impetus for that change came on a Sunday morning during a church sermon. The preacher asked the congregation what it was doing for the country, Turk rememberes, and he said he thought the question was directed at him.
"I taker low and lower in my pew," Turk says with a grin. "I kept thinking, Well, I'm ready."
DECIDING HE had more than selling soup to contribute to the country, Turk
Now, he teaches others how to sell soap. Turk teaches advertising courses and a course in law of communications in the School of Journalism.
When he left advertising, Turk went to the University of Illinois where he earned his masters degree. From there he went to Pennsylvania State University for a year and to the University of Wisconsin, Madison, before coming to KU in 1974.
He's now completing work on his Ph.D.
and is scheduled to finish in June. That's
what he was thinking.
The change from working in advertising
to teaching it was the right one for him, Turk said. So he said his experience in India, and was invaluable.
"I HEAR THIS often from my students, " that what they enjoy most is the way I make a point and then follow it up with an illustration." he said.
that's a hard thing to do without practical experience. You can do it, but you have to learn it.
"I don't know whether I could teach if I hadn't had the working experience before I
"Now it's different in law. I had a mad passion for law, but it's so tangible you can grab hold of it. You don't need to fall back and rule it, there's all there in cases and rules' rulers."
Practical experience is a valuable tool for teachers also because they can teach students about the material.
'One is the fact that I like to see how
"AND I DON'T think it'beltimg for a teacher. You can show the students the error, the consequences of that error and how to recover from it."
Although Turk said he wasn't "conscious of practicing a philosophy," he said he could see certain characteristics that ran through his teaching practices.
"Students are so fearful of making errors," he said. "In fact, they're so concerned about it that I sometimes think they fail to see the perspective of learning from their mistakes."
A lot of students have questions and comments that wouldn't come up without a question.
students feel about things," he said. "It is probably patent foolishness to have a discussion in a class of 150 people, but I do it."
Through that interchange of ideas, Turk said, he can help prepare his students for their careers in a way that no book, outline or job description can.
"ITS VERY TOUGH to leave school," he says, "and I feel need to help prepare my students emotionally. I know there are a lot of seniors who have very funny feelings in the pits of their stomachs when they think about their futures."
01
Part of that is because students lack confidence in their professional ability, he
"I feel like Id like to reach out to them, but there's not a whole lot I can do," he said. "I wish we could work more on that, to convince students that they will be prepared—well prepared—when they leave this school."
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"I enjoy what I'm doing and occasionally it just sort of bubbles over. But I think that's good, I think that it's all right to show my enthusiasm.
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Vol.87 No.46
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Staff Writer
Citizens criticize Loop statement
By JOHN MUELLER
A citizens' group opposed to the proposed Haskell Loop project yesterday released a report that called the project's environmental impact statement a whitewash.
BUFORD WATSON, city manager, yesterday defended Oblinger Smith and he said he didn't hear of the East Lawrence Citizens for Housing Preservation.
The group, the East Lawrence Citizens for Housing Preservation, said the environmental impact statement released in August suggested that possible negative effects that the Haskell Loop might have on East Lawrence neighborhoods. The consultants who prepared the statement, Oblinger Smith Corp. of Wichita, was the first to be audited by the city of Lawrence. The group said
The environmental impact statement says that Lawrence needs the Haskell Loop to help move traffic efficiently through East Lawrence; prevent automobile-pedestrian conflicts; ease traffic congestion; and enable the to Kaw River Industrial District.
The Oblinger Smith statement is a draft that will be followed by a final report.
THE HASKELL Loop would run through East Lawrence, between 11th and 23rd streets, connecting route K-10 and downtown Lawrence at Massachusetts Street.
The citizens' group specifically objected to the statement's failure to mention the increased tractor and trailer traffic that would temporarily bring to Haskell Avenue.
The Haskell Loop would take traffic pressure off residential streets in East Lawrence, he said, and would renovate the Haskell area neighborhoods.
The statement had also relied upon outdated and inaccurate data, the group
WATSON SAID no conflict existed in Oblinger Smith's relationship with the city. A spokesman for the firm last night accused the group's critics of the statement.
"I think that East Lawrence has had a long period of decline in living units. It's going to take something drastic to turn it around," Watson said.
The statement said the road "will necessitate the dislocation of 18 residences and five businesses," as well as requiring the city to take over two acres of recreation land including Municipal Stadium and a lighted baseball diamond.
The citizen's group criticized the statement's lack of substantiation for its claims about the effect that both sides of the loop would buffer industry and residences. The statement said that improved access for industrial users"may encourage development in industrial District."
The group said Olbinger Smith didn't consider how the city could stabilize the neighborhood and encourage redevelopment and reinvestment in it,
The only other negative effect of the loop, according to Obinger Smith's environmental impact report, would be the increased number of aerosol particles and a slight increase in area noise levels.
ALSO, THE group said, the Haskell Loop would remove 27 houses in its path, most of which were adequate houses or ones that could be rained.
Although the book also contains information about registration requirements and voting rules, it usually isn't available because registration books are closed, Laa'a said.
Garcia, a senior research assistant for ISSE, acknowledged the problem but said that most primary results were not official until September. He said that it took him a couple of months to compile the information about the winners in the primary elections and have it printed.
A member of the citizens' group charter committee, Barbara Waillis, 1253 Delaware Park, would be making a mark in parking in East Lawnworks and would be effective way to use 1974 Community Development Act funds, which would be used to demolish homes in the path of the proposed new development.
The Kansas Voter's Guide, containing information on national and state elections, is now available to the public, Herman Lajan, director of KU's Institute for Social and Environmental Studies (ISES), said yesterday.
The pamphlet, published by ISES, contains biographical sketches of all candidates and the complete state party platforms, as well as a list of the officers of the state political parties, Stephen Garcia, editor of the guide, said.
Heart surgery halted again at Med Center
See LOOP page three
According to Garcia, the pamphlet is sent to local governments, civic groups and individuals throughout the state who have been photographed 400 copies of the guide have been printed.
Malcolm, the Med Center's only surgeon for the past six months, accepted a job at the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne, Australia.
Heart surgery at the KU Medical Center has been halted for the second time this year with the departure last week of the Med Center's only heart surgeon.
Robert Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said last night he didn't think the temporary break would cause any major problems.
The latest halt was expected by Med Center officials with surgeon Malcolm Arnold's departure last week for another job and the delayed arrival of Donald Barnhorst, new chief of cardiothoracic surgery.
The Med Center will be without a heart surgeon for at least five weeks until the arrival of the new heart surgeon about Dec. 1. Heart surgery was bailed earlier this month for four months when two surgeons resigned in favor of training of poor operating room conditions.
Barnhorst, last month to serve as both cardiothoracic administrator and surgeon, is currently an associate professor of surgery at Clinic Medical Rochester, Muppe.
The few emergency heart surgery operations will be referred to other doctors
Guide offers voters data
in the area, Kugel said. St. Lukes's Hospital
was unoccupied, and probably handle
game of the case, he said.
Frank Masters, acting chairman of the surgery department, said, "Those who are waiting for surgery will just have to wait a little bit longer. There's no problem."
The majority of the heart surgery operations can wait until Barnhorst arrives, he said. There are usually four to six heart surgery operations a week.
Heart surgery was halted at the Med Center for four months earlier this year after surgeons Robert Reis and Hammer Hannah complained of substandard operating room conditions and resigned in February.
A group of three investigators declared the Center safe for heart surgery later that month.
Barnhorst has said that he approved of the conditions in the Med Center heart surgeon's office.
Surgery resumed in April after Arnold came to the Med Center.
PROJECT SANTA 1976
ACACIA
CONTINUATION
BUN CENTER
Despite cold and darkness Acacias Rick Hartman, Birmingham, Mich., senior, and Russ Fowrief. Prairie Villarha freshman, plained their two-hour shift of spades with Delta
Chillu but dedicated
Gammas Jan Troupe, Pririe Village, and Cindy Cook, Independence, Kan., sophomore (mst). Members of the fraternity and sorority will play spades continuously with their classmates during the week.
Bus drivers calm while riders fume
By RICK THAEMERT
Students grumble, then shuffle inch in by inch toward the back of the bus to make way for new passengers. The driver checks his mirrors to make sure none of the students getting off are pinched in the doors, then pulls a leaver, shutting the doors with a hiss.
The bus jerks as it starts its journey to campus, and students standing lurch from side to side with each movement of the big diesel.
University of Kansas students need only a day, but for the driver it is a way of life.
Four drivers for Lawrence Bus Co. B41 Pennsylvania St., agree that they like the job.
"I'S TARD WORK," John Connors,
Overland Park park senior said last week, "but
it's the type of job where you can get out.
It's not like working behind the candy
counter at the Union; you don't have
someone looking over you.
"You get to see a cross section of the University and a lot of different kinds of poisoning."
Helen Bowen, 2112 Tennessee St., said, "I
meeted people, and I like the
student atmosphere."
But she said students sometimes gripped and were uncooperative about moving back to class.
DAVID NEELY, 2200 W. 39th St., said,
"We are hoping for a common
season when iPhone comes in."
He said students were inconsiderate when they pulled the stop buzzer more than once, didn't move back, or didn't bother reading the destination sign on the front of the bus.
"They'll ask other people 'What time is it?' and they don't even realize that the buses keep a timed schedule," he said, "and people even ask, 'What are we waiting for?'"
Needy said these were minor problems and he tried not to become angry or correct them.
THEY'RE THE ones going somewhere,
so if they don't get it together, I just sit
in there and chat.
Bowen, too, said she seldom reprimanded passengers.
"Big kids tend to take care of themselves," she said. "Sure I hear grump, but I don't."
Conners said his problems were minimal, especially with regular riders.
"The people that ride the bus every day know when the bad times are and when the good times are."
Cormans said he could recognize regular patrons and would spell them at a distance for running from him.
Driving the same route more than 20
days a day might seem monotonous, but
it's often quite pleasant.
"IF YOU DRIVE the same route, you see a lot of the same people, so it eases the monotony," said Rex Cox, Erie, Kan., senior.
Neeley, who graduated from KU last year, said, "I like to watch the change of seasons and just kind of space out looking in the window, in school, and now I'm doing it full time."
Connors said, "I couldn't make it without a radio."
Nelyly, however, said, "I tried a radio, but the signal goes in and out. I just as soon listen to a good set of speakers when I get home. I usually have some tunes running thru it, so that I'm singing them. It's kind of fun, and it doesn't bother anybody, either."
DESPITE THE responsibility of transporting up to 75 students at once, the four drivers agreed that the pressures weren't too great.
"The only time there's pressure is when your bus is full or you're behind schedule,"
But, he added, the buses usually stay on schedule. The important thing is to not leave early. Cox said, because people can be left behind.
"Driving can be really dangerous if the people are jam-packed." Connors said.
"With that many people, it's hard to draw that fine line between staying on time and getting ready."
Bowen said that crowded buses were difficult to steer, but that the buses were kept in good condition by the maintenance man at Lawrence Bus Co.
THAT'S ONE reason why the four drivers haven't had any accidents.
Coe said students and bicycles that dart around campus could cause accidents if the bike's brakes fail.
Corners said, "Students come out of Strong Hill and make a beeline for Wescowee."
Neeley said he watched for different hazards because he drove the night route.
"It's a totally different kind of driving because you're dealing with fast moving traffic rather than students walking," he said.
Swine flu shots to start at health center Thursday
Swine flu vaccinations for high-risk people will be administered from 2 to 7 p.m. Thursday at Watkins Memorial Hospital as well as the Douglas County Immunization Program.
High-risk people are those more than 45 years old and those suffering from chronic illnesses. People less than 45 will need statements from their doctors confirming that they have a chronic illness to be vaccinated at this time.
Martin Wollmann, director of health services at Watkins, said yesterday that only a limited amount of vaccine was needed to treat the people who would be conducted in November.
Wollmann said that people allergic to eggs or chicken feathers shouldn't have the vaccination. People with colds should postone the shots.
The U.S. Public Health Service requires
a sign to sign a correct form before
being vaccine.
'Barber' reaches enjoyable operatic peak
ALEXANDER SCHWARZENBERG
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Figaro, left, details a plan to Count Almaviva in 'The Barber of Seville,' which played before about 1,200 people in the University Theatre last night.
By TIM PURCELL
Review
Have you ever gone to a movie or a play that left you laden with heavy afterthoughts? The message, often esoteric social comment, may escape you. When asked "How did you enjoy it?" a sickly smile is all you can muster. Of course,
you never let them know that the heavy aesthetics escaped you and you wished to be alone.
Last night an audience of 1,200 left University Theatre after an opera they had seen. Many were whistling tunes and theirs only afterthought was nice delight.
The good old comedy was Rossini's masterpiece, "The Barber of Seville," presented by the Kansas City Lyric Theatre. The Barber, not weighted down with deeper feelings or problems, is照亮—light, capricious fun and ponsure.
Music director Russell Patterson captured the brilliance of the music in a
FROM THE overture's dashing beginning, an exhilarating mood is set, and the character must persevere.
device known as the Rossini crescendo. The music increased dizzyly in tempo and volume like a dog chasing its tail, yet the song's rhythmic consistency in tempo to accommodate the singers.
Although none of the performers were particularly outstanding, the ensemble was well-balanced in strength.
Despite the innate excitement of the Rossini crescendo, the singers sometimes didn't rise above it. It peaks were often inadvertent, even in ensembles.
Karen Yarnatt, as Rosina, buoyed an
mat that all too easily can degrade
into nothing more than an exercise in
vocal peduchnics when sung in recital
JUST AS Figaro boasted of his skills,
Rosina too, reflected on her qualities.
Hervor timbre and inflection changed as she sang each of her thoughts. All runs, skips and ornaments were meant to mirror her emotions. Yarmat was brazen, self-confident, sly, amused and triumphant.
Rosina's foil is the old codier, Dr. Bartolo, played by Eugene Green. His convincing, Bartolo is duped by Count Almaviva, who is in love with Rosina. The Court was played by George Livinga. He was in his furious and formidable aisle in his furious and formidable aisle.
See BARBER page three
2
Tuesday, October 26, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Guerrilla threat called weak
errited threat called weak
GENEVA -Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith insisted yesterday that the country's whites can hold out against black guerrillas and world sanctions for
"You know we are having great success against the terrorist guerrillas," he told a news conference. "A '12 or 13-1 kill ratio."
By that, he meant up to 13 blacks were being killed for every white, in a land where 8.4 million blacks make up 95 per cent of the population.
Kissinger, in the presence of South African Prime Minister John Vorster, also said Smith his regime shouldn't expect from Western powers if such a policy were adopted.
The Rhodesian leader's assertion conflicted with Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's warning in Pretoria last month that continued black-white fighting could draw Cuban troops and Soviet advisers into the struggle as happened in Angola last year.
'Veteran' fugitive pardoned
MONOGRAMMY, Alm. — "Scottsboro Boy" Clarence Norris was pardoned yesterday, ending years as a fictive from a crime he says he didn't commit.
All nine were sentenced to death but were pardoned or paroled.
Norris, 64, was one of nine black men accused of raping two white women aboard a freight train near Scottsboro, Ala., in 1931.
Norris served five years on death row before his sentence was commited to Life imprisonment. He was later paroled, but was still wanted in Alabama for parole
Pound falls to record low
LONDON—The British pound nosedive to record lows against the U.S. dollar and other major currencies yesterday, posing a new threat to Britain's crippled
The pound plunged $7^{1/2}$ cents to $1.5730—an all-time low.
The pound plunged 7 cents to $1,707.80 an all-time low.
The slump was triggered by a report that the International Monetary Fund wants the pound to fall to $1.50 to prompt extension of a $3.9-billion loan to Britain to relieve its gravest economic crisis since the Great Depression.
Arabs endorse peace plan
CAIRO-Arab leaders endorsed a peace plan for war-battled Lebanon yesterday despite objections from Iraq over the competition of the 30,000-man
An Arab League spokesman said the opening session of an Arab summit meeting approved the plan reached by six Arab leaders last week.
Iraq, which has troops fighting with Palestinians and Moslem leftists in Lebanon, objected to the inclusion of Syrian troops in the peace-keeping contingent. Syrian troops have sided with Christians against the Moslem-leftist alliance.
Ford, Carter go for swing states
By The Associated Press
President Gerald Ford, stressing economic themes in his last preface visit to crucial California and other western states, promised yesterday to hold down federal spending because it contributed to the nation, which was "just another high tax."
In Plains, Ga., Jimmy Carter made preparations for his own coast-to-coup that will keep him moving in search of votes in the election showdown with Ford next Tuesday.
Carter will visit 10 states, including seven of the more populous states where he meets campaign campaigns before the election may be held. He indicted Carter slightly ahead, slightly behind or
Carter's aides said he would focus on economic issues and appeals for voters to exercise their right to vote. The latter subject is being emphasized by the party and its concern about voter apathy and believe a large vote will enhance their prospects.
running neck-and-neck with Ford in these areas, which include California, New York, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Texas. Liquiquesta will visit New Jersey and Luigiquesta to his schedule.
Ford is covering much of the same ground on a late barnstorming campaign tour that--like Carter's--is accompanied by a media blitz of radio and television.
Emphasizing a theme that his administration has the record and the experience to merit voter approval, Ford says he will push for an impeachment imperial United States security by slashing $5 billion to $7 billion from the defense budget—a measure that Carter insists can be done without compromising.
Ford said, "I don't challenge Mr. Carter's intentions but I do challenge his profficiency."
Ford cited Department of Labor consumer price index figures indicating that during his administration, the annual rate dropped from 12 per cent to less than 6 per cent.
BUZZI
a man who listens
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Buzzi has proven his commitment to:
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.represent YOU with the enthusiasm.
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YOUR REPRESENTATIVE
IN THE 45th DISTRICT
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Join the Ford Bandwagon!
He asked for your prayers In one our darkest hours.
He asks for your support in one of our brightest hours.
PETER JOHN HANCOCK
October 27
Meeting: Wed.,
7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room
Pd. for by KU College Republicans
Alpha Epsilon PI is the largest predominantly Jewish fraternity in the country.
Affiliate chapters include Missouri, Indiana, and Texas.
MARY MARY MARY
TOMMY AND MARY
For information CALL
Karen's Bridal Shop
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Bridal Apparel and Formals."
128 Minnesota
Call 842-0056
AETT FRATERNITY is back at KU
Yet the programs he introduced in 1976 alone would have cost us $25.4 million. Nancy Hambleton wants to know how you and I are going to pay for this.
Just results.
Room to rent?
Advertise it in the Kansan.
864-4358.
No more pretty promises.
Mike Glover promises
Just ONE of his "tax reform" proposals would cost the people of Kansas over $41 million in lost revenues.
As your state representative, Nancy Hambleton would weigh the benefits and costs of each proposal before making any rash promises to you.
more than he can deliver.
841-7476 or 841-7455
Nancy 44th HAMBLETON
79 ku
Paid for by KU College Republicans
Sophomores
79 ku
Class Party 7:30 p.m. Tuesday—Oct.26th at
"SHENANIGANS"
Free admission tickets can be picked up now in class office, Room 113B Kansas Union, along with CLASS MUGS $ \cdot 1^{100}. $
824 Mass.
We Write All Risks Automobile Insurance
Agency
Doane
Tuesday, Oct. 26 at 7:30 p.m. in
Panhellenic Association Announces: Floor Informational Meetings
- GSP for GSP residents
Gene
For more information contact Panhellenic Association
- Corbin for Corbin residents
220 Strong Hall
- Oliver for Oliver & Naismith residents
- Lewis for Daisy Hill residents
& Scholarship Hall residents
864-3552
- Walnut Room—Union for off campus
SUA
1
SUA Indoor Recreation QUARTERBACK CLUB
- Complete game film of the KU-K-STATE game
- Coaches will attend and will answer questions.
TUES., OCT. 26
6:00 p.m. Forum Room Kansas Union
Everyone Welcome!
We're moving to a NEW location
Our New Store will offer a wide variety of BEADS and JEWELRY SUPPLIES, a selection of finished JEWELRY and, as always, a work area for YOU to MAKE YOUR OWN.
THE 8th Street MARKET PLACE
1 Nov. '76
AT THE CORNER OF 8th AND NEW HAMPSHIRE
ARMADILLO BEAD CO.
841-7946
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Vista
RESTAURANTS
THE CHEESE CHASER
76 c
Reg.85¢
MONDAY • TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY
]
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U
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Par Wome 706 Fr
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Tuesday, October 26,1976
3
EX
on
GLOBAL STUDIOS
---
'Barber' delights
"MANY 'BARBER' performances tend to unably the antics of the greedy, hard-core fanatics. William Dansby, the scheming Basilio, achieved easily applauded comic effects through a manneered performance. He played a stalagm in black priest's ardb with red socks.
From page one
The gusty Figaro was played by Thomas Palmer. In Figaro's whirlwind musical swagger he proclaims himself a jack-of-trades. In this bright, joyful aria Palmer reflected Figaro's spirit of independence. When this sprightly aria is sung in Italian, the words and the musical notes seem inseparable.
UCLA prof talks tonight
Rosemary Park, professor emeritus at the University of California at Los Angeles, will speak on higher education at 8 o'clock in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
She will discuss the economics of higher education, the issue of political autonomy for universities and how to deal with it, specialization in higher education today.
Park will also discuss "Careers for Women in Education" at 4 this afternoon at 10am.
The Phi Beta Kappa visit scholar program is sponsoring Park's visit. The phi bta kappa degratifies meet and talk with established scholars of various disciplines. The visiting scholar spends two days at a university taking part in classroom activities.
Park, the Los Angeles Times Woman of the Year in 1968, was president of Connecticut College from 1947 to 1962 and Barnard College, New York, from 1962 to 1967. She has been a member of the board of directors of the Carnegie Foundation for the Humanities and the Endeavor for the Humanities and the National Board of Graduate Education.
Park, who was national president of Phi Beta Kappa from 1970 to 1973, has also been a member of the board of directors of the Association of American Colleges, the American Council on Education and the Danforth Foundation.
City to take up three proposals
Commissioners will consider issuing $670,000 in temporary bonds to pay for improvements in several housing additions at Wright's Lawn City Commission meeting.
The bonds, if approved, will pay for street and sidewalk paving and sanitary and storm sewers in parts of Deerfield Park, Heatherwood and Country Club West.
The commission will also consider authorizing Watson to develop a plan for a new software product.
carol francis for the 45th
...
SUA
FILMS
THE CONFORMIST (1970)
Bordeaux, Jean-Louis Bordeau,
with Jean-Louis Trintignant,
Dominique Sanda
Italian subtitles)
70, 75c
CLASSICAL SERIES
FILM SOCIETY
Surrealist Films of Hans Richter
1896 / 1997
(A chess Sonata for film)
Produced, designed, and directed by Jean Cocueau, Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, Jose Wasse, Jacqueine Mathesat and Bowie, Jacqueline Patterson PAIS 11 (1984) Dr. Hans Richter plus
GHOSTS BEFORE BREAKFAST 1928
Dr. Hans Richter
The score is rarely done as Rossini intended and this performance was no exception. The shrewly cut version the Lyric score has, however, has more rearranged some scenes with recitative.
POPULAR FILMS
BUT THE performance was done in English. It's no sobnibms that the Italian libretto is preferred—it is more beautiful. But the English libretto, although strained at times, perhaps drew people to the Barber who otherwise might not have come. The singers managed to easily convey emotion through words, despite the English libretto.
The Barber's rapid-fire action stops only at the opera's conclusion. The audience wasn't cheated—even though they walked away whistling, wishing there were more.
However, the performance didn't lack humor. Even members of the orchestra looked as if they enjoyed themselves as much as the audience.
THE EXORCIST (1974)
Dr. William Freickin, with Ellen
Dir. William Freickin, with Blaire
Blaire, Oct. 29; 7:00; 9:30
Sat., Oct. 29; 7:30; 9:30; 10:00
Woodruff Auditorium
--and Blue Grass Festival Tonight.
No cover, open stage preceding show.
John, Paul, and Thomas
14. Find the area of the rectangle.
737 New Hampshire
Off the Well Hall
Loop statement . . .
Watson wouldn't respond to the group's final objection to the loop, that the Obinger Smith statement implied business and control would be property to be acquired by condensation.
From page one
The environmental impact statement will be used by the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Federal Highway Administration to determine whether the loop should be built. A negative decision by the two departments would mean Lawrence couldn't use federal money for the project.
possible sources of federal aid for the East Lawrence area, Willis said.
University Daily Kansan
THE BEST FOR LESS
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WE HAVE WHAT WE ADVERTISE at all possible, if it conditions beyond our control, we run out of an advertised space and we give you a BANNER CIRCLE for the advertised special at the store. We GUARRANT what WE Sell. If you are ever dissatisfied with a large purchase, we will replace your item or refund the cost.
SUPER SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
Effective Oct. 26-31
Wilson All Meat
Wieners
12 oz. 59c Pkg.
Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef
lb. 68 $ ^{c} $
Oldham's Chili
Ib. Roll
79c
Wilson Chicken Livers
Old Milwaukee
Beer
6-
12 oz.
Bottles
99c
2 $ ^{lb.} $ 78 $ ^{c} $ Box
99c
FREE
Green Cabbage
One dozen C.O. Donuts with the purchase of one dozen at regular price.
lb. 9c
9c
Valencia Oranges
20 for 100
From our Bakery
Glazed Donuts
doz. 99c
Bakery
Cookies
oa. 10c
From our Deli
1 lb.
Potato Salad
& Whole
B.B.Q. Chicken
$249
Potato Salad
lb. $ 5 9^{c} $
4
Tuesday, October 26, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
For once, a real hero
The media are constantly and energetically striving to fulfill the insatiable hunger society has for the latest news concerning its heroes—both real and counterfeit. There are a few persons that truly deserve their elevated status and a few more that hold so much power over them. And the fact that whenever they make a move, even if it's just bumping one's head or thinking about lusty women.
HOWEVER, most of the VIPs we hear so much about fit only the modern definition of heroism—that you become a hero or heroine when large numbers of people start fantasizing about being in your shoes. Today's heroism usually doesn't mean having courage, ideology or virtue. We want to help the people want: wealth, power, sex appeal, artistic or athletic talent or just plain luck.
Yet, that doesn't mean that the true definition of heroism is dead. It's just that true examples of it generally receive less attention in print or on the air, unless, of course, some sort of catastrophe or derring-in is involved. The occasional glimpse we get of the "quiet" heroes and heroines in the news, however, is (or should be) much more heartening and constructive than things such as speculation on Liz Taylor's latest engagement.
A GOOD example of the kind of person I'm talking of was written about in the Oct. 23 Kansas City Times, in a story headlined "Dorothy Crabtree Understands Minority Role—She's White." The article, written by a fellow student, describes what it's like for Dorothy in Paseo High School in Kansas City. She's been the only white student out of 1,650 students for three years.
She has been ridiculed by many of the students because they see her as a representative of the white students who
every year move away from schools like Passaic better suburban schools that offer tutoring.
Some are puzzled by her desire to remain, even though she is active in school activities and is accepted by many other students.
DOROTHY SAYS simply that she chose Paseo because her family moved into that district and, after a year, she decided she wouldn't like to go to any other school—black or white. She withstood the original pressure and worked hard to impress her "her family within the church and on God," she said.
Most of us have probably never faced that kind of alienation, especially we whites. For instance, I asked a friend to go to the Staples and Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes concert in Kansas City last week. He declined because he knew there would be only a few dozen whites in the arena. He isn't a bigot, but he said he wouldn't enjoy the concert because he just wouldn't feel at ease there; he would rather play without being intimidated. It had happened to him before. Some youths poked fun at his cowboy boots the last time he went to a black concert.
NO MATTER how many people believe in equality, vote for it and speak up for it among their circles of friends, it still takes people like Dorothy Crabtret to break down the barriers of fear. For our fears can make us traitors to our consciences. She is a true heroine because she shows strength and courage. As the author of the article said, "The strongest quality seen in Dorothy is faith. Faith in herself, her family, in God and in mankind."
The world could use more of that kind of heroic faith.
By John Fuller Contributing Writer
Editor lets staff eat cake
Once a night, usually,
someone in the newsroom
makes a trip to Joe's Bakery;
not, however, that Joe's
came to us.
Some of you may remember a picture page on Joe Smith and the University Press edition of the Kansan, Joe certainly remembered, and he thanked us with a three-tiered, white, one layer chocolate white, one layer chocolate white.
AS WE began to gratefully slice it, a few of us asked ourselves a question that two years ago, I had. It was a bad joke. Should we eat it?
Hanging on the wall of the newsroom is a code of ethics, similar to codes going up in newrooms all over the country, and a code of values, things of value. We put it up almost a year ago in the belief that journalists have a special position of trust, and to keep that trust they must owe their trust to no one except the reader.
"Gifts, favors, free travel, special treatment or privileges can compromise the integrity of journalists and their emeritus. The code reads: "Nothing of value should be accepted."
TECHNICALLY, then, we should have said thanks, but no thanks, to code, Joe. Inherent in the code, however, is the use of judgment. How valuable is the gift and does the giver expect something in return? Was the gift solicited before the story was told? Was it the giver's gift? Will it compromise us as objective journalists or will it help us cover the news fairly and fully?
Journalists may run a close second to politicians as the most pampered class of workers. Reporters can get free lunches, cafeteria dinners, tickets, vacations and a wide range of other goods not
Kansan reporters aren't in the free vacation category yet, but we are offered several of the assumed prerequisites of the trade. Some of them, despite our code, we take.
available to the nonpaying public.
OUR SPORTSWRIETERS take free tickets to football and basketball games that cost the average student $20. Our reviewers attend University and SUA concerts and plays
can drive it or sleep with it,
forget it."
Finally, there's the school of journalism dropouts who will take anything they can get their way. The virtue is intact. Some of them will defend their avarice by asserting they have earned their freebies, which naturally provided part of their salaries.
EVEN TO us, who earn, at most, about 70 cents an hour,
A third school says 'If you can eat it or drink it, take it; if you
Editor's Note Debbie Gump
free of charge, but everyone else must pay the admission price. And on rare occasions an editor or reporter will dine with an administrator while the rest of you eat a sack lunch.
that argument sounds silly. But it didn't sound so silly to one of the four students who free tickets, travel and gifts from news sources constituted wages and that any ban on them would be to bargain with unauthorized fans.
THOMAS BROWN
There are several schools of thought about accepting freebies, those things of value like cookies or a solute school says "Take nothing." Even if the gift is a thank-you-like Joe's cake—a or a ticket to cover a news event—that might help a reporter better understand the situation behind a story, don't take it. Our impartiality might be affected to receive something for nothing.
ANOTHER school of thought says, "Yes, we must preserve our integrity, but let's not get carried away with ethical considerations." For example, one journalism organization in the United States has ethics that puts Christmas gifts in a special state of grace "because of the tradition of holiday gift-giving."
The judge's ruling was challenged to the National Labor Relations Board by one newspaper that wanted to adopt a new code, including freeebies. The newspaper won and it now has a code.
We do turn down some freebies without hesitation. We
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
The Kansan's policy toward freebies is still in the infant stages. When we accepted Joe's tickets to the Chinese banquet, the difference was that the banquet tickets could be considered an encouragement to dinner favorable b eatment.
WE ATTEND University productions without paying, but until this semester, our reviewers were attending commercial movie courtesy of a pass. That practice stopped when the theater owners disliked our reviews. We gladly learned their reasons; the owners probably still think we could write better reviews.
Yael Aboahalakab, managing editor, was on the staff members who risked a little intention for a large number of calls.
give all books and records for review that we receive from publishers and record companies to the Lawrence Public Library. Somebody should enjoy them, and we don't have any special right of ownership in our house we work in a newsroom.
We declined an offer to ride with the football team to the Oregon State game so that our sportwriters wouldn't be obliged to kowtow to Bud Moore when he gets upset. We weren't
able to cover the game in person, and we were recently barred with the rest of the press from football practice, but at least we weren't hesitant to print Moore's run-in with two photography students two weeks ago.
So, if we aren't consistent,
we're at least well-intentioned.
And, Joe, we know you also
meant well, but you really
shouldn't have. Perhaps
you shouldn't have either.
GANDHI
A right to freedom
At midnight yesterday, a new
wilder was born: the Republic of
Transki. But if the Third
Republic is built on the same
Nations have their way, sup-
ported by the liberal fuzzy-
wuzzies of our own country, the
infant will be slain in its cradle.
It must be supported of both
hope and hypocrisy.
independence will provide a pattern for a tolerable solution to South Africa's problems. The hypocrisy lies in the wilness minds of the all-or-nothing fees of "colonialism" in any form and in any country, or hope. The Transkei covers 17,000 square miles on the east coast of South Africa, just south of Durban and just north of East London. It is a land of wild, brooding beauty, inhabited by thousands of animals the Xhosa tribes. Transkei is about the size of Denmark and Switzerland. It is more than twice the size of Swaziland, and is larger than 22 member states of the United Nations. In contrast, the Xhosa such mini-nations as Babun, Bhutan, Gambia and Gabon.
I have flown over the Transkei, traveled its dusty roads.
Greg Hack Contributing Writer
Level of care for the elderly must improve
THE SENATE Subcommittee on Long-Term Care investigated nursing homes for five years. It then reported it had found countless cases of "crutality, negligence, dangers from fires, food poisoning, virulent infection, lack of human dignity, displacement and maternal regimenation, and kickbacks to nursing-home operators from suppliers."
One lost issue this election year is care for the elderly. Candidates for national, state and local offices occasionally drop a word or phrase — "unpaid," but nothing very specific has been said.
WORKING ON A Wichita paper this summer, I became aware of the state and local government's problems in policing nursing homes. The woman in charge of licensing care homes for young and old women is not a nurse to check more than 70 one- and two-bed homes and more than 25 large nursing homes.
Care for the elderly is, for the most part, a
scandal, even though some good care homes
THE GROUP sued for health department inspection reports and won, and it has exposed extensive patient mistreatment in the Detroit area. It found that 44 of the 80 homes in the district were abused by allegations of the state health code and that 19 of the 84 homes had more than 20 violations each.
More than 1.2 million Americans live in nursing homes nationally, and the subcommittee's evidence "indicates that a majority of those fall to meet standards of acceptability."
Things don't appear to be much better in Kansas either.
One story I report was about a 70-year-old patient at a small care home. She had
In 1974, Citizens for Better Care investigated 612 complaints, and said two officers were fired.
In response, Michigan health authorities have doubled the number of intent-to-deny license orders, revoked some licenses, and stepped up their own monitoring of homes.
Many of them were taken care of without bringing in health officials.
badly injured herself in a fall, but the care badly injured owner didn't get a doctor for her. If the women in charge of licensing hadn't happened to make a visit to that home, the injured woman might never have received medical attention.
SUCH ONE- and two-bed homes didn't even have to be licensed in Kansas a few years ago. And for every case that just happens to be noticed, how many more in it will happen and the rest of the state and the nation are missed because officials are short-handed?
IN SEATTLE, Citizens for Improvement of Nursing Homes is doing similar work and lobbying in the Washington Legislature. The group has won passage of a law that requires a $500 fine for every health regulation violation by a nursing home.
The operator's license was revoked.
In addition, the group prompted an investigation of charges of homes' missing patient's money. The investigation resulted in charges being charged with misuse of these funds.
Citizens for Better Care began in Detroit in 1969 with seven volunteers. The group now has more than 1,300 dues-paying members and a paid staff of 10 persons.
A fairly new group, Kansas for Improvement of Nursing Homes, hasn't had much success with the state legislature. But it isn't giving up.
Certainly, much needs to be done. In some cities, private citizens are taking action.
SO, THE nursing home situation is terrible, but it is improving in some places. It is a large problem that won't be easy to solve. But for starters, Kansas can pass penalties for violations and provide the people needed to enforce the laws.
So far, Citizens for Better Care is the only such group to receive federal grants. The government in Washington, D.C., should give money to help other groups doing similar work in more than 15 cities in America.
"Old people are more afraid of going into maring homes than they are of death itself."
visited the capital at Umtata and interviewed the incoming prime minister, Kaiser Prinz Ferdinand. He ourf affluent standards, is poor. Only about a fifth of the land is arable. Industries are few. Ancient cities, Xhosa people are illiterate. But by Third World standards,
It doesn't have to be that way.
FIL team Colle begin east Jayh Septe
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James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1978 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
IN' straij same anno Office
which rationally should apply, Transkei is doing remarkably well. Other newborn African nations are poorer still, less industrialized and far less literate.
ITS charged that Transkis's independence is phony—that Transkis will remain under the political and economic dominance of South Africa, that independence is a trick, a sham, an abuse of power. The Xhosa people did not ask for independence, and that the 1.7 million Xhosans who live and work outside the new territorial boundaries will become aliens in their own land. The Washington Post, in an interview described the newborn state as a "monstrosity" whose survival is "indefensible."
Well, it is a curious thing. Independence comes to Transkei not through revolution, but through evolution. The transition is marked not by terrorism, guerrilla savagery and bollwerk training of a native civil service and by the peaceful processes of ordered change. Our doctrinaire procedure find any such rational procedure intolerable.
THE INDEPENDENCE is real. As of midnight yesterday, Transkei has its own flag, its
own legislature, its own sovereignty. The day of independence has been coming since at least 1863, the time of the Civil War, when running elections were in 1868 and 1973. They were not exercises in perfect democracy, in the fashion of, say, Cook County. The Xhosa have to learn that they have come a long way.
Industrialization is growing. The South African government has contributed heavily to developmental programs. Public education steadily expands. Health services improve. The future -if the future is a quietly-promises great rewards in agriculture, forestry, mining and industry.
THE TRANSKETS trouble, perhaps, is that it has been so lacking in trouble. Mou Mau Man. No Cuban mercenaries. Norture, no burning, no strutting Communist tyrann. As it is truly to be supposed that independence was the model of Madagascar, better? Is the bloody chaos of Angola a better model for a simple and ill-educated people struggling toward the 20th century?
Surely, objections can be raised to the circumstances of independence in the Transkei. This is an experiment, but in a sense, it is an irreversible experiment. As of midnight, when we begin our work with its clayed, white and green isohed, the old flag of South Africa comes down. A new constitution, a new parliament, an able prime minister—all these carry a meaning worthy of our friendly support and understanding. It is undergoing a new birth freedom. That phrase once counted for something in America. How can we reit it now?
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 27, 2013 Subscription price $4.95; June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. 66044 Subscriptions by mail are $9 a semester or $18 a year. A yearly subscription is a year outside the county. State subscriptions are a year outside the county.
Editor
Debbie Gump
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
Yael Aboulkah Jim Bates
Business Manager
Terms Hours
Assistant Business Manager
Cardee Rousseau
News Advisor
Pollitzer
Business Advisor
Tuesday, October 26, 1976
1.
E MILLENER
ansan staff
take.
game in
recently
of the press
but, at
resident to
with two
events two
consistent.
intentioned.
you also
you really
irhaps we
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m
its own way of in-coming the time of his death he were in 1986 not extercracy, in cooking. Cook hava have they have
growing.
government
easily to
programs.
images in the
future develop
great
industry.
industry.
t trouble,
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Mau Mau.
stries. No
stries.
independence
embiqui is
chaos of
dile for
ad people
the 20th
Sport Shorts
can be attances of Trunkel
Trunkel
an excreable ex-
light, when
stripses of green is
green of South
River flanked by
riffle, allure—
aller w g worthy
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birth of
birth of
once use once
thing in
reject it
VOLLEYBALL™ THE KU junior varsity volleyball team will compete tonight and tomorrow. Tonight, two U.S. Volleyball Association teams from Topeka will play the Jayhawks at 7:30 and 8:30 in Allen Field House. Tomorrow, the Kansas City, Kan., Community Junior College will take on KU at 7 p.m. in Robinson Gymnasium.
FIELD HOCKEY-KU's field hockey team will take on Emporia Kansas State College in varsity and junior varsity games beginning at 3:30 p.m. today on the fields east of Robinson Gymnasium. The team will host the Emporia State Europe September 6-10.
INTRAMURALS-For the second straight week the leaders remained the same in the intramural football rankings, and they are by the Intramural Officials Association.
Regular season play ended last week, and the division games are this week.
Finals in the Fraternity A division will be today at 4:00. Delta Theta will play Delta Upsilon for the title. Sorority finals will follow that game, and dependent Women's title game will follow at
5:00. All games will be played at the recreation fields, 23rd and Iowa streets.
The Independent Men's championship game against the rival team after the rankings were made.
The Hill Championships matching the fraternity and sorority winners against the independent teams will be Sunday afternoon in Memorial Stadium. The women's game will begin at 1:00, the men's game at 2:30.
This week's rankings:
This week's rankings
Federer
1) Phi Blaise Ptia (3-1)
2) Delta Upsilon Platino (5-1)
3) Delta Upsilon Platino (5-1)
4) Beta Teila Platino (3-1)
5) Phi Blaise Ptia (3-1)
6) Delta Gamma (3-0)
7) Delta Gamma (3-0)
8) Alpha Phi (3-1)
9) Green Machine (6-0)
10) Green Machine (6-0)
11) Eagles (5-1)
12) Hamin Rhinos (4-2)
13) Wonder Women
14) Lews (4-0)
15) Oliverettes (3-1)
16) Oberstdorf (3-1)
Acacia, DGs play cards nonstop in charity drive
Despite cold fingers and dim street lights,
members of Acacia fraternity and Delta
Gamma sorority didn't seem to mind
their surroundings outside in chilly
temperatures last night.
They were doing their part for Project Santa 1976, the fraternity's sixth annual holiday party.
Play began yesterday at noon, and by 3 p.m. Saturday, 123 consecutive hours of spades will have been played. Members of the table will take two hour shifts at the card table.
Four people play at one time, seated around a card table in front of the First National Bank, 9th and Massachusetts streets.
The fund-raisers had earlier solicited contributions from businesses and in-
formation centers.
Some money was given in lump sums and some was pledged for each hour of play, Dave Edge, the sophomore, said last year. He said he had played in a jersey beside the card players, he said.
SHEPHERD WEBB
SUA
SUA FORUMS
SUA FORUMS presents:
ELECTION '76
with
NICHOLAS
VON HOFFMAN
University Daily Kansan
Thurs., October 28
7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
50' Admission
Tickets now available at the SUA office
The groups have received pledges totaling $1,500 toward their goal of $2,000, which will be given to the Lawrence Christmas Bureau, the Gene and Barbara Burnet Burn Center at the KU Medical Center and the Heart Fund.
Place an ad Tell the world Call 864-4358.
$\textcircled{1}$ $\textcircled{2}$
$\textcircled{3}$
$\textcircled{6}$
VASQUE HIKER
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5) VIBRAM LUE LOCK AND REIL for
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This medium weight backpacking boot
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843-3328
Tickets at the SUA office and at the door
SPORT
100
She'll get things done. She's done it before.
Nancy has proven ability.
Nancy will represent you. You as an individual are important to Nancy.She will continue to listen to your ideas and problems,work with you for a solution,and support what she feels is best for all.
Her leadership in city government proves her true desire to serve you with complete dedication.
Nancy 44th HAMBLETON
Nancy will serve responsibly. She won't promise more programs than we can pay for.
100 YEARS AGO IN JOHANNESBURG
Hoch Auditorium $3.00 General Admission
"The most exciting new modern dance company to emerge during the last decade. Louis Failre is simply one of the most exciting new dancers in New York." —Clive Barnes, New York Times
- First woman city commissioner of Lawrence
* Mayor commissioner
* Member, Kansas Housing Forum
* Member, Governor's Housing Task
"Not all unix choreography is sexless, however. In the Louis Faix Dance Company, the dances are vibrant, high powered, beautiful to look at. In cheerful dances, they celebrate their own prowess with almost voluptuous movement." - New York Times
—Deborah Jowitt, New York Times
Political Advertisement
Paid for by Hambleton for State Representative, Don Metter and Joan Golden, co-chairmen
"Falco choreography from his id. Little Rock liked it."
*Arkansas Gazelle*
*Falco and company—pure visual joy (held in place, Robert Martin, The Tampa Times)
"Louis Falcio Dance Company is one of the great small performing ensembles in Europe."
-Bryon Belt, Newhouse Newspapers
" totally contemporary in its themes and its styling, and its garden garde that is committed to great travagant dance movement and a strong sense of the theatre, it made for a rich and complex performance."
—P. W. Manchester, Dance News
"Falco is an extra oarboardian dancer. He has a total physical, mental, and emotional involvement in every role. He also has that ability to communicate with others to the very edge of danger, combined with a supreme confidence in his own process which is usually found only in one or two of his many roles."
Jean Baffey Lewis, Washington Post
Wednesday-October 27 8:00 p.m.
LOUIS FALCO DANCE COMPANY
"Oh boy! Change
for a change."
If you don't know what this is,you're not eating at McDonald's.
It's change. And you can still get it at McDonald's.
Our prices are still terrifically reasonable. And you can still get terrific things to eat for under a dollar.
So,why not eat at McDonald's soon? The change will do you good.
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McDonald's
001 West 23rd Street
901 West 23rd Street
6
Tuesday, October 26,1976
University Daily Kansan
KU cagers to try
By BRENT ANDERSON
Associate Sports Editor
Although the core of the University of Kansas basketball team is the same as last year, some changes in offensive strategy might make the Jaiyahws a bit difficult to
KU has worked with the familiar pattern
Sports
offenses in their first two full weeks of practice, but they have also practiced a looser offense where individual players move more freely.
This type of offense, KU basketball coach
KU prepares for Nebraska
Preparations began in earnest yesterday for the Nebraska Cornhill football team. Bahrain But three KU starters, halfback Bill Campfield, guard John Mascarell and center Mike Wellman missed practice because all three had been ill.
All three are expected to be back in practice today.
KU coach Bud Moore said he was hopeful the three would be ready to play in the Nebraska game, but said he wasn't certain they would be.
Defensive end Harry Murphy, who has missed the last five games because of a broken forearm, will not play the rest of this year.
Moore said he hoped Murphy, a junior, could be classified a hardship case and not lose a year of eligibility.
Red Owens said yesterday, tends to put more pressure on a team's defense, but only if the offensive team is able to sustain its movement.
"Every coach has to try to fit his offense to his personnel," Owens said. "We think we can take best advantage of our players if we are able to move a little more."
Though KU lost All-Big Eight forward Norm Cook, who decided to give up his last year of eligibility to play professionally, four starters from last year return. Also, 64-forward Van Moore, who missed Dionne House, because of a respiratory illness, is back.
"I've been generally pleased with the way we progressed so far," Owens said. "We have a lot of work to do."
pleased with the effort that has been put out so far."
'moving' offense
Owens said he thought KU's depth was one improvement over last year's team, which had a 13-1 record and finished fourth. The difference KU won the Big Eight in 1973 and 74.
"I think we have a realistic chance to win the conference," Owens said. "The teams will be very evenly matched, and I don't expect our team will be strong enough to dominate."
Owens said another encouraging aspect of the team this season was the great amount of competition for starting positions on the team.
Singled out by Owens for his performance
so far was junior college transfer John
Midgets get 27-7 intramural win
The Mad Dog Midgets took a commanding half-time lead and went on to post a 27-9 victory over the Green Machine in the final game of the Men intramural football division last night.
The Green Machine, which was ranked first in the weekly ratings of the Intramural Officials Association, couldn't muster an answer to a question half and saw the Midgets轨到 2-10 lead.
The Midgets, raising their record to 6-1,
will play the winner of the Fraternity
division for the Hill Championship Sunday
in Memorial Stadium.
The Midgets, who have former KU football standouts Bruce Adams and Ken Saathoff, among others, on their squad, scored the first time they had the ball.
The Midget defense stopped the Green Machine repeatedly in the first half, limiting them to five downs in the second and stopping two drives with interception.
The Green Machine scored their only touchdown two plays into the third period, but that was all they could do against the Giants in a sense of touchdown late in the third quarter.
The Green Machine, which ended its season with a 6-1 record, advanced to the Midget two-yard line midway through the game. She scored a score. The Midgets then ran out the clock.
Michigan held on to the No. 1 spot in the Associated Press press of 61 writers and broadcasters, but Pittsburgh moved closer to the top ranking. The rankings
Michigan still No.1
"Right now competition is very close".
Owen said. "This is very important and
important."
I'll use a hyphen.
Right now competition is very close.
Owen said. "This is very important and
important."
1. Michigan (537-0-0) 1,184
2. Pittsburgh (618-7-0) 1,068
3. California (618-7-0) 1,068
4. Southern California 5-1-0 707
5. Texas (516-7-0) 707
6. Texas Tech (11-5-0) 618
7. Georgia (516-7-0) 618
8. Ohio St. 5-1-1 475
9. Nevada St. 4-1-1 388
10. Missouri St. 4-1-1 388
11. Notre Dame St. 5-1-0 362
12. Florida St. 5-1-0 362
13. Oklahoma St. 5-1-1 362
14. Texas St. 3-1-1 81
15. Alabama St. 4-2-0 61
16. Mississippi State 5-1-0 29
17. Mississippi State 6-1-0 25
18. Cleveland St. 5-1-0 12
19. Cincinnati St. 9-1-0 10
20. Iowa St. 5-1-0 to Southwestern Louisiana.
Douglas, who played for John C. Calhoun Community College in Decatur, Ala., last year. Douglas and freshman Hasan Houston, from University City High School in St. Louis, have provided competition for the U.S. national guards, Milgil Gibson and Clint Johnson.
with the return of Von Moore, KU's front line is big and experienced. Forwards Herb Nobles (6-7) and Ken Koenigs (6-10) and center Paul Mokesi (7-5) all scored in the first half. KU's Mokesi had a severely hamstring that kept him out the first half of the season.
"I'm satisfied he has recovered from his injury," Owens said of Mokeski. "But it is up to him as to how badly he wants to improve."
Oenings said the practices had been fairly tough, partly because of his working against 6-7, 230-form forward Scott Anderson, a freshman from Addison, Ill.
"I think the competition is to help us uss more than anything," Keenigs said. "People are fighting pretty hard for positions."
Sophomore Brad Sanders, who has been working at guard and foward so far, also thought the high level of competition would help the team.
"We're not there yet but we're getting there," he said. "We'll be ready to play."
- Ignore defeats. A 7-3 loss to Southwestern Louisiana, was later denied to Clemson.
REMINDER:
The KU Backgammon Club meets every day, at 7 p.m. in the Oreard Room, Kansas to play in the tournament 7:00, to play in the tournament
BRING YOUR BOARDS
If there were a Pulitzer Prize for movies, "A.P.M." would be a sure winner — Gale Shield NILH classic. The National film classic — Kathleen Garol, NY Times "The best American film for years" — Kevin Sanders, ABC
Kevin Sanders, ABC Not to be missed - Jef Lyons, CBS
REDFORD/HOFFMAN
"ALL THE
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A Roman Polanski Film
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THE TENAN
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Hillcrest!
THE HAIR SUITE
Introductory offer Redken Creative Curl Wave, a low ph perm wave that is ammonia free but lasts as long as the old alkaline waves. IF you just want body or lots of curls you can get it with Creative Curl now thru Oct. 31. Reg. 35.00 Now $30.00, which includes haircut. Call for appt. 842-8600
THE HAIR SUITE
6th & Iowa in Ramada Inn FREE PARKING
HOPE
Attention Seniors:
FINAL BALLOTING
Vote HOPE Award
Wed., Oct. 27
and
Thurs., Oct. 28
9 a.m.—4 p.m.
Information Booth
Jayhawk Blvd.
FINAL BALLOTING!
LARRY WINN WANTS YOU TO KNOW WHERE HE STANDS.
ON GOVENMENT HONEYEST. While Jimmy Carter and congressional democrats are willing to talk about cheating, lying and all sorts of corruption during the Watergate era, they quickly sink tork or hide under cheating, indiscretions and lying by their members of Congress.
The fact is Congress, controlled for the past 22 years by one party, has been too lax in its efforts to clean up its own record. It has become a rudderless, underlined body with independent little fiefdoms catering to special interest groups, that has lost the confidence of the
That is why I have sponsored legislation which would open all congressional committee meetings to the public and eliminate practices like proxy voting. I have also sponsored the Public Law that would require the registration of special interest groups and lobbyists.
It's time we cleaned out the last traces of scandal and impropriety, and applied discipline with equanimity to stop the abuses of power. It's time to restore faith and credibility to the Congress.
YO
HE
YOUR CONGRESSMAN,
LARRY WINN.
HE LISTENS. HE ACTS.
RE-ELECT
LARRY WINN
NOVEMBER 2ND.
Authorized by the Winn for Congress Committee, Box 411, Shawnee Mission, Kansas. Jack Brand, Chairman.
Hanna new golf coach
John Hanna just can't stay away from the KU golf program.
Cycle Walker, director of men's athletics, announced that Hanna would replace Jerry Waugh as the KU golf coach, but it isn't the first time around for Hanna.
He was the KU coach from 1965 to 1967. He was a three-year golf letterman at KU, but he never played on the field.
Waugh gave up his coaching position after he was appointed in August as executive director of the Williams Educational Foundation, where he scholarship fund-raising organization.
Walker said Max Kennedy, pro at Alvaram Hills, the home course of the KU golf team, would serve as an assistant coach, as he has the past two years.
GRAD STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS:
GSC
Supplemental Budget Requests
Due November 1
Forms available in GSC office, Kansas
Union. For more information call
864-4914. Funded by Student Activities Fee
The Performing Arts Program of the Asia Society presents
THE
MARTIAL ARTS OF KABUKI
FROM THE NATIONAL THEATER INSTITUTE OF JAPAN
Saturday, Oct. 30, 8:00 p.m. PERFORMANCE at Nelson Art
Gallery, K.C. Mo. Student; $5; General Public; $10.
Friday, Oct. 29, 8:00 p.m. WORKSHOP at Dance Studio, Robinson Gym. Free. Registration required at Theatre Box Office, Murphy Hall.
Sunday, Oct. 31, 8:00 p.m. DEMONSTRATION at KU Linwood Center, 990 Mission Rd., K.C., Ks. $2.50 admission.
All tickets are on sale at the Box Office, Murphy Hall.
TUESDAY NITE PIZZA BUFF BUFFET
All the Salad & Pizza
A Pizza Lover Can Eat
For Only
$2.20
Pizzainn.
Pizza inn.
Share a pizza today...
Next to Hillcrest Theatres Hillcrest Shopping Center
TUESDAY
O1
Cor
Watch the want ads in the Kansan.
CLASSI
Accommodation adv are offer sex, color BRING A
15 word
fewer
Each as
word
AD DE
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Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
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BOKONG See our 841-3600.
ATTENT ask us a person MOBILE
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ELECTRIC
YA
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Tuesday, October 26, 1971
7
University Daily Kansan
pro at the KU assistant s.
HOTEL PARKS
Events
On Campus
TODAY: PHIL RHOADES, Democrat running against Rep. Larry Winn in the 3rd District, will speak at 2:30 pm, in 104 Green Hall.
TONIGHT: The KU CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 6:30 in Danforth Chapel. The SUA QUARTERBACK FILM will be shown at 7 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The NAVIGATORS will meet at 7 in the Union's International Room. The KU SADDLE CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Union's Oread Room. Phil Rhoades is the speaker at the KU YOUNG DEMOCRATS meeting at 7:30 in the Union's Council Room. VICTOR CHRIST-JANER, professor of Psychology and Business Studies, will speak at the Oread Room. The UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS CONCERT CHOIR will present its fall concert at 8 in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall, ROSEMARY PARK, of the University of California at Los Angeles, will speak about higher education at 8 in the Union's Forum Room.
TOMORROW: MARTIN GREEN, professor of English at Tufts University, will speak on "The Challenge of Gandhi and Tolstoy" at 4 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. The SUA BACKGAMMING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Union's Parlor B. The EAST ASIAN STUDIES LECTURE AND FILM will be at 7 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. The KU BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS will meet at 8 p.m. in the Union's Oread Room.
Corrections
It was incorrectly reported in the Oct. 20 Kansan that the registration fee for WWWCHERS was $3.50. Registration fees are $5 and the cost of each meeting is $5.50.
The Kansas incorrectly reported yesterday that the Nebraska football team badn't lost two consecutive regular season games since 1961. In 1968, Nebraska lost to KU, 23-13, then lost to Missouri the next week, 16-14. Both games were played at Lincoln.
Every morning, 6 a.m. 11 a.m., from now until the end of October you can enjoy our Breakfast Specials.
Breakfast Special
No. 1 Breakfast:
Eggs, Bacon, and
Pancakes
Only 89°
also
COUGHING RAT
Chipped Beef on Toast Only 79°
m.—
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eakfast
COUNTRY
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HOME OF
Country
Rail
1509 W 23rd
Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358.
AIRLINES
Christmas &
Thanksgiving
FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST Make reservations now! No extra cost for our services.
Maupintour travel service
Phone: 843-1211
KU Union/The Malls/Hillcrest/900 Mass
KANSAN WANT ADS
Associnations, good, services and employ-
ment opportunities. Responsible for pro-
gram management, location and sys-
tems. Req's Bachelor's degree in Busi-
ness Administration or IT Management,
or equivalent in the U.S. or foreign
country. EOE in IT Support or a rela-
tion to IT. Fully charged with
assessing needs of clients. Req's
CLASSIFIED RATES
--in words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
one two three four five
time times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
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.
DK BUSINESS OFFICE
11 Flint Hall
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the UOK business office.
864-4358
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
BIKONOK Paranatharma for the comusundra,
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Need to submit Jayhawk Towers Apt. $313.00/
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3 Bedroom at Quailwood await for bundled
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ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS - Drop in at Westerfield University (phone call phone) at WESTERFIELD UNIVERSITY.
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10-28
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NAISMITH HALL
Now accepting
Applications
for Spring Semester
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS - Negligence
of the use of stereo equipment can result in
worse sound. You will have to bring a good browm
box, with proper filters and get the best possible
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CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermaids. Unicorns. Guitars made of stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-383-8887.
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Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
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Excellent selection of row and used furniture.
Trade the Furniture and Appliance Center, 704-219-8351.
Western Civilization Note—Now on Sale! Make
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2) For class preparation
Excelent selection of used furniture, refi-
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monitor color monitor 100 watts RMS /85
table liner table for SBS GLAW X4W changer/Planner
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monitor color monitor 250 watts RMS /85
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65 Ford Galaxie 500 auto, power steering,reliance and in good condition. $500. Phone #825-394-7611.
Bicycle 10 speed, with lock 1 year old. #84. $86-4
number another number. the morning or late,
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For Sale-1715 Honda CL, 450, $500, Tiger 450
For Sale-1683 Honda CL, 450, $500, Tiger 450
for record change, $291, Cail 804 (bror for Bird
record change, $291, Cail 804 (bror for Bird
Must Sell. 1700 Opal Balye Kadadt. Gte 20 mg
also parachute胶. Call anytime 842-398-1028.
For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment,
Call TV Brouse at 841-548-1028 or
864-1347. 11-18
71 FORD CAPRI A+cylinder; stick shift; good
condition; Asking 1250 $Call 842-563-950
www.fordcapri.com
1975 Dodge Van, caret and paneled interior.
Loaded with extras. Call 594-3842. Best offer.
Discontinue radial tires $25 each plus $1.90 to
buy 36" tires (6250mm). (Even ATR15-8 5.6-15 diperforated for Vickers-
wager included!) Ray Stonebanks, 929 Mass Tire
depart open all days. Come in Rome Italy 10-28
BCA Color TV, needs repair. Call 841-7633. BRW TV, needs some repair, snow tires from 783-1059. All Signatures (royal class dure) = get your class mags now for $1.00 in 113-B of the Union.
Delivery—must have own car, $3 approx. In-
charge. 50 W. 10th below the Wheel. B-1.1
W. 14th below the Wheel.
HELP WANTED
STUDY BREAK
1—6 p.m.
Schooners — 65°
Pitchers — $1.25
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
COUNTER CLERK. AT OVERLAND PROT
SAT 3 & 5 M/T Daily Monday to Saturday A
8:30 AM - 12:30 PM
His shift. Clark at 4ick-Shop Photo. Bill- 12:59pm,
M. Monday first thursday. $2.60 per hour. Appt.
12:45am.
POSITION AVAILABLE Full time research assistant in Biochemistry or Chemistry required. Laboratory purify and assay enzyme would be desirable position, starting date reqitable. Contact Dr. Warren McCormick, Director of Operations, Started date reqitable. Contact Dr. Warren McCormick, Director of Operations, University of Kansas, Kansas X-60045, Opportunity/AFFINIMATIVE ACTION IBM OPPORTUNITY/AFFINIMATIVE ACTION IBM
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer/year-round, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $100-
$120 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free
shipping. Box 440, Kaukawai, CA 97407. 11-11
Now taking applications for part-time cocktail
waiter course at Carriage House,
Bahrain, will be applied at Carriage
House, Bahrain.
LOST AND FOUND
MUSIC CENTER
Youthball Intramural officials provided Gameday
and recruiting materials. Robinson is salary $25-
836 or $346 or to 208 Robinson. Salaries are $25
or $346 per game.
Lost: Last pair of glues in brown case between
Inn Field House and Wreese. Reward. Call 618-295-7250.
Found: Male Pointer with collar visibility. Civillage of 10th & Tenn. Call 843-4472. 10-26
Found: white kitten near 40 and Alabama. Call Steve 864-5470 (day), 842-9093 (night), 10-27.
Lost: brown wallet between Heeh and Watson
Reward: 841-6153, for Rick at 20-16
author: Reward Call
Found. `^Anglicle` Cakey/Casio *Anglie*; dyde
Given. `^Anglicle` Cakey/Casio *Anglie*; dyde
Given. Give it a name is in name, identity,
identity. Give it a name is in name, identity,
Lost: $B REWARD for return to rite肝 on 15th
March in Tennessee and Texas
849-8913
849-8913
Aust.: my grandfather's pocket watch in Wienoe
Lau: B富贵. 844-3605 or 842-2781.
10-28
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
keyboard shortcuts. It is available in a new
version at n.sciencemag.org.
Printing from the web to the printer
at n.sciencemag.org
Found: small white and brown female dog; brown collar with yellow stitching, freezing coat.
MISCELLANEOUS
Lost: black billfold—KU bus pass, ID and Haskell
LO: 842-6454
11-1
American and Mexican Food
Aztec Inn
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedsoreads • Fitted Sheets
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
807 Vermont
All Sophomores (who paid or will pay class dress)-dick pick up free tickets for Sophomore party. Tues. night anytime during the day in class office, #1 of the Union and purchase class number 10-28
NOTICE
842-9455
WATERBEDS
CABAHIF AGB-Good food from scratch. Lunch
10:30-16:30. 920 Mass. Please take back doorbell,
phone number.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Massed furniture, tables, lamps, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12 hrs. 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Redeemer Lutheran Church, 20th and Haskell,
inviles all students and faculty to our Sunday
study. We offer a one-hour Study at
10:15 a.m. We have an active college
agge group. Transportation will be provided
11 a.m.
FIELDS
fortune meet House. Delicious food at reasonable
prices. 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th. Closed Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday. 11-9, 10-9.
Female singer looking for Rock Band to sing
with Call Viick 843-781-381
10-26
Become a Gift World distributor—merchandise from 1/2 to 1/3 of retail-free info or $2 for production—refundable for order. Hurry. Buy now at BT, P.O. Box 328, Moila, Mt. Ceil, Ga. 64141. **10-28**
Everything from hostworship to jewelry - 40% off your BKS, BKS 100, W. Poenahata Nkuru State University BKS, 100
Slipshod Engineering and Acoustical Products wishes to introduce "Todies": A speaker system designed to breathe clearly and depth that you would expect them to cost in four times that actual cost. You can buy speakers or just to discuss our folded cone horn design, horn & 42-390 call us and talk about 10-29
GAY RAP GROUP: Thursday, Oct. 28, 7:30, 823
Kentucky,
10-28
PERSONAL
Gay Counseling Service; call 842-7505 6-12 p.m.
For Referrals.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
non-traditional, anti-chaumvist man wants to meet a woman with similar views. 862-1000 862-1000
Having trouble scheduling worship and
having to leave for a meeting? Invite us
out to worship at 8:30 a.m. at 19th &
Square, 275 W. 47th St.
712Mass.St.
Body tension is painful. Message is simple. Body tension causes muscles to relax and aiding circulation; body tension causes muscles to contract. It is a natural method of preserving health and reducing sexual interception what-o-sec in this message. It is sexual intention what-o-sec in this message. It regulates G.P. it is beneficial to men and women. Headmasters Hair Design 899 Vermont St. Headmasters Hair Design 899 Vermont St.
If you have problems with a runny nose, Call
the Emergency Center. Flower delivery
upon request will be $149.00.
10-26
A MAN OBSESSED by classical music and especially interested in German, literature, Plato, philology, camping and camming wishes to meet a XII guest like interest. **'Robert's** 10-29 832-1273
POY'S
INTIVE
MING
CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE
Keep your car healthy
- DRY MOUNTING
• METAL FRAMES
• RESTORATION
*DRYMOUNTING
in the summer.
BOOKSTORE
● DRYMOUNTING ● STITCHERY
- BARN BOARD FRAMING
Use the
CROSS REFERENCE BOOKHOUSE
841 152 3530 Mails Shopping Center
student discounts
--at
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
Women's art collective forming in Womanaspace.
Need ideas. Potential for drawing classes and photography. Interested in what you are interested in? Interested in meeting Oct. 31, 2018.
Rhode Island: 842-6000. 10-29
BACISM: small group discussion over lunch
KC OFFICE: 11-30-10, Kansas Union.
09-28
10-28
Smiley Face
GCP—that idiot Johannes forgets your birthday.
He said he was sorry before he fell off a cliff.
Personally, it's been a month since the doctors
had one last 2 days to live and the
fine. I have 1 only 2 weeks to live.
10-26
Excellent instruction in guitar, baritone, as well as vocal, piano and brass. 100 times available. Rex Keyboard Studio.
REAL ESTATE
Former Mayor and City Commissioner wants to
help him raise $400,000 for a kid in need. Paid for by KU College Republicans.
Martin Real Estate fine. ATTENTION: very seldom do a home on or near the campus become located in a quiet excluded area at No. 9 Westfield, A.3rd damn. rancher, this home offers nearly 18 acres of land. The property is priced at $5,000. Call 822-7400; ever berry, 822-7401; or Bill Brewner, 822-7402. 10-29
SERVICES OFFERED
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on campus
cataloging, 1150 Alamea Drive, No. 268 Los Angeles
county
IN A MUSICAL RUT? See how lessons can help you moving. Beginning to advance in folk, rock, jazz, classic blues and blues guitar, mandolin, harp and piano. Call McKenny Maumei 10-29
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a bicycle lift. The most appropriate option is an entire bike-hatrate and your defibrillator, brakes and chain, true both when any parts or accessories are bought at time of turn-up or buses or accessories bought at time of turn-up. Bicycles cost $50-$170/cal. Oct and Nov. 26 speeds $150-$300. Family services for all makes of bicycles, travel insurance, bike helmet and
We have received a number of quality证书 Lawrence has to
Larvainship certification. Oxygen is required for Larvainship.
Larvainship certification is not mandatory.
Math. Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 105, 109, 100, 111, 115, 116, 117, 121, 123, 124, 125, test preparation, Reasonable rate. Call 842-7831. test preparation. Reasonable rate. Call 842-7831.
Grooming all breeds. Professional care for your
puppies. Small puppies provide puppies in
Paradise Groves. 843-653-2010 10-28
wagon wheel
10 a.m.—12 p.m.
Everyday Is
Ladies' Day
TYPING
Experienced typist—term papers, sheets, mkts.
Bachmann's 843-7546, Mrs. Wright,
843-7543, Mrs. Wright
Experienced Typist-IBM-Memory-Call 843-10
9471, ask for. John.
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-29
THEISIS BINDING COPYING The House of Uher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you are in Massachusetts or phone 854-382-1884. Thank you.
Typist editor, IBM Piece/eilee. Quality work.
Technical support, dissertations welcome.
Mail: 842-9317-8212
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selectle TC
inventory card. Log in and tap card (alibron).
Pam Call at 482-709-3878.
Experienced typist; manuscripts,theses, etc. Call
weekends: 8-431-1511, 8-431-1780 Call weekends:
8-431-1692
WANTED
Routine measures for very tired furniture apart-
ments cost $750 per month and 10s. dollar each.
For heavy furniture costs up to $2,000 per month.
Needed 1 grad student or full time working girl to split rent and util. in a 3 bedroom apt. at Quail Creek. Apt. furnished only between 9:30 and 6:00 or 8:43-725 besides between 9:30 and 6:00
Roommates wanted to share two-bedroom duplex
furniture and large windows. 843-762-3931,
and easy-going. Call 843-762-3931.
Delivery work on weekends. Call or come to the Campus Hideaway for details. 845-911-101-27
Need tickets to NU/KU football game. Call 841-
2052 after 5 p.m. 10-27
Extravagant armourment need one or two persons
10-28 863-874, 841-545 alliage 10-28
863-874, 841-545 alliage
Wanted: A talented and versatile music writer and singer incarnate. Send resume to:
Bryce Larkin, music director,
822-853-3260. 10-29
Need: 3 KU-Neb. football tickets. Call 1-273-3107.
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing
• Furniture • Antiques
• Imported Clothing
730Mass.841-707O
The Chalk Hawk
Home of
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Foos-Ball
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
The Small Hawk Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
9th and Iowa - West of Hickress Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week. No One Under 18 Admitted
The Lounge
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Bud on Tap
- Pool
Football
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
9th and Iowa
812 Open Daily Truth Marketing
8
Tuesday, October 26, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Rodeo All Meat Bologna 89¢ lb.
Rodeo Sliced Bacon 2 pound pkg. $2³⁹
Swift Premium Sizzlean 12 oz. $1²⁹
Oscar Mayer All Meat Wieners 1lb. $1⁰⁹
Ohse Luncheon Meats Five Varieties 12 oz. 79£
Rodeo All Meat Wieners 12 oz. 59¢
Danola Chopped Ham 4 oz. pkg. 69¢
Gordon's Batter Fish Fillets 12 oz. $1²⁹
Gordon's Batter Fish Fillets 8 oz. 89¢
Falley's Own Potato Salad 15 oz. 45¢ 30 oz. 89£
Shurfine Pure Cane Sugar 5 pound Bag 59£ Limit 1 with $10⁹ Purchase
Shurfine Whole Kernel or Cream Corn 4 16 oz. Cans $1
Shurfine Cut Green Beans 4 16 oz. Cans $1
Shurfine Early Harvest Peas 3 17 oz. Cans $1
Shurfine Whole Tomatoes 3 16 oz. Cans $1
Shurfine Tomato Sauce 8 oz. 6 for $1
Shurfine Catsup 32 oz. 79£
Shurfine Fruit Cocktail 16 oz. 39£
Shurfine Pear Halves 16 oz. 39£
Shurfine Mandarin Oranges 11 oz. 3 for $1
Shurfine Unsweetened Grapefruit Juice 49£
Shurfine Chicken-Noodle Soup 5 10³¼ oz. Cans $1
Shurfresh Saltine Crackers 16 oz. Box 39£
Michigan Jonathan Apples 3 pound Bag 69£
Golden Sweet Potatoes 5 lbs. $1
Shurfine Bleach Gallon 59£
Shurfine Coffee Creamer 11 oz. 59£
Shurfine Pinto Beans 4 pound bag 79£
Shurfine Aluminum Foil 25 ft. roll 3 for $1
Shurfresh Frozen Orange Juice 6 6 oz. Cans $1
Totino's Pizza 4 flavors 13 oz. 69£
Large Florida Tangelos 15 for 99£
New Crop Zipper Skin Tangerines 15 for 99£
Shurfine Frozen Strawberry Haives 16 oz. 69£
Morton Frozen Pot Pies 8 oz. 4 for $1
Always Good Whipped Topping 9 oz. 49£
Shurfine Mac & Cheese Dinners 5 7 oz. Boxes
Lyndon Farms Frozen Shoestring Potatoes 5 20 oz. Pkgs. $1
Shurfresh Margarine 3 16 oz. Pkgs. Quarters
Shurfine Colby Longhorn Cheese 99£ 10 oz.
SAVE $545 Over Falley's Low Discount Prices with These Valuable Coupons
FALLEY'S Regular $8.19
BOW WOW DOG FOOD
50 pound Bag $659
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
FALLEY'S Regular 95c
NATURE VALLEY GRANOLA
14 oz. $69
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
FALLEY'S Regular 93c
VLASIC KOSHER OR POLISH DILL PICKLES
32 oz. $59
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
FALLEY'S Regular $1.57
LIQUID WOOLITE $1¹⁰
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
FALLEY'S Regular $1.61
BISQUICK $1¹⁰
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
FALLEY'S Regular 97c
KEEBLER FUDGE STRIPE COOKIES
12½ oz. $79£
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
FALLEY'S Regular 93c
NABISCO OREO COOKIES
15 oz. $79£
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
FALLEY'S Regular $1.25
GLAD TRASH BAGS
10 count $99£
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
FALLEY'S Regular $1.44
GLEEM II DENTAL CREAM
7 oz. $97£
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
FALLEY'S Regular $1.85
VICKS FORMULA 44 COUGH SYRUP
3 oz. $129
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
FALLEY'S Regular $1.63
CEPACOL MOUTH WASH
14 oz. $99£
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31
Shurfine Pure Cane
Sugar
5 pound Bag 59c
Limit 1 with '10th Purchase
Falley's Semi-Annual Shurfine Sale
Just in time to stock up before the long, cold winter. Additional savings on most items by buying by the case.
Shop Now and Save at Falley's —
Shurfine
Flour
5 pound Bag 59c
Shurfine
Whole Kernel or Cream
Corn
4 16 oz. $1
Cans
Shurfine Cut
Green Beans
4 16 oz. $1
Cans
Shurfine Early Harvest
Peas
3 17 oz. $1
Cans
Shurfine Whole
Tomatoes
3 16 oz. $1
Cans
Ohse Luncheon Meats... 12 oz. 79¢ Falley's Own Purchase
Shurfine Pure Cane
Sugar
5 pound Bag
Limit 1 with $10⁰ Purchase
Falley’s Semi-Annual Shurfine Sale
Just in time to stock up before the long, cold winter. Additional savings on most items by buying by the case.
— Shop Now and Save at Falley’s —
Shurfine
Flour
5 pound Bag
59¢
Shurfine
Whole Kernel or Cream Corn
4 16 oz. Cans
$1
Shurfine Cut
Green Beans
4 16 oz. Cans
$1
Shurfine Early Harvest
Peas
3 17 oz. Cans
$1
Shurfine Whole Tomatoes
3 16 oz. Cans
$1
Shurfine Tomato Sauce... 8 oz. 6 for $1
Shurfine Catsup... 32 oz. 79¢
Shurfine Fruit Cocktail... 16 oz. 39¢
Shurfine Pear Halves... 16 oz. 39¢
Shurfine Mandarin Oranges... 11 oz. 3 for $1
Shurfine Unsweetened Grapefruit Juice... 49¢
Shurfine Mushrooms... Pieces and Stems 4 oz. 49¢
Shurfine Cranberry Sauce... 16 oz. 3 for $1
Shurfine Pumpkin... 16 oz. 3 for 89¢
Shurfine Mixed Vegetables... 16 oz. 3 for 89¢
Shurfine Golden or White Hominy... 14½ oz. 5 for $1
Shurfine Whole or Sliced Potatoes... 16 oz. 4 for $1
Shurfine Chicken-Noodle Soup
5 10³⁴ oz. Cans
$1
Shurfresh Saltine Crackers
16 oz. Box
39¢
Michigan Jonathan
Apples
3 pound Bag
69¢
Golden
Sweet Potatoes
5 lbs. $1
Shurfine Bleach... Gallon 59¢
Shurfine Coffee Creamer... 11 oz. 59¢
Shurfine Pinto Beans... 4 pound bag 79¢
Shurfine Aluminum Foil... 25 ft. roll 3 for $1
Fresh Apple Cider... Gallon $1⁹⁹
Candy Coated Caramel Apples... pkg. of 4 89¢
Large California Pascal Celery... 16 oz. pkg. 3 for $1
Tender Snappy Carrots... 16 oz. 4 for $1
Shurfresh Frozen Orange Juice
6 6 oz. Cans
$1
Totino’s Pizza
4 flavors
13 oz. 69¢
Large Florida
Tangelos
15 for 99¢
New Crop
Zipper Skin
Tangerines
15 for 99¢
Shurfine Frozen Strawberry Haives 16 oz. 69¢
Morton Frozen Pot Pies... 8 oz. 4 for $1
Always Good Whipped Topping... 9 oz. 49¢
Shurfine Frozen Peas—Cut Corn—Mixed Vegetables... 10 oz. 4 for $1
Shurfresh Buttermilk or Sweet Milk Biscuits... 8 oz. 10¨
Shurfine Individual Sliced American Cheese... 12 oz. 99¢
Shurfine Mac & Cheese Dinners
5 7 oz. Boxes
$1
Lyndon Farms Frozen Shoestring Potatoes
5 20 oz. Pkgs.
$1
Shurfresh Margarine
3 16 oz. Pkgs. Quarters
Shurfine Colby Longhorn Cheese
10 oz. 99¢
Shurfresh Frozen
Orange Juice
6 oz. $1
4 flavors
13 oz.
69c
Large Florida
Tangelos
15 for 99c
New Crop
Zipper Skin
Tangerines
15 for 99c
FALLEY'S SAVE $545
Over Falley's Low Discount
Prices with These
Valuable Coupons
FALLEY'S Regular
$8.19
BOW WOW
DOG FOOD
50 pound Bag
$659
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S SAVE $545
Over Falley's Low Discount Prices with Those Valuable Coupons
FALLEY'S Regular $8.19
BOW WOW
DOG FOOD
50 pound Bag
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular 95c
NATURE VALLEY
GRANOLA
14 oz. 69¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular 93c
VLASIC
KOSHER OR POLISH
DILL PICKLES
32 oz. 59¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.57
LIQUID
WOOLITE
16 oz. 109
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.61
BISQUICK
60 oz. 109
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular 97c
KEEBLER
FUDGE STRIPE COOKIES
12½ oz. 79¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular 93c
NABISCO
OREO COOKIES
15 oz. 79¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.25
GLAD
TRASH BAGS
10 count 99¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.44
GLEEM II
DENTAL CREAM
7 oz. 97¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.85
VICKS FORMULA 44
COUGH SYRUP
3 oz. 129
Limit 1 with coupon good thru Oct. 31 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.63
CEPACOL
MOUTH WASH
FALLEY'S Regular
95c
NATURE VALLEY
GRANOLA
14 oz. 69¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular
93c
KLASIC
KOSHER OR POLISH
DILL PICKLES
32 oz. 59¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
93c
VLASIC
KOSHER OR POLISH
DILL PICKLES
32 oz. 59¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
$1,57
LIQUID
WOOLITE
$1.09
16 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
$1.57
LIQUID
WOOLITE
$1.09
16 OZ.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular $1.61
BISQUICK
$ 7.09
60 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular
97c
KEEBLER
FUDGE STRIPE COOKIES
12 1/2 oz. 79¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular
93c
NABISCO
OREO COOKIES
79¢
15 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
$1.25
GLAD
TRASH BAGS
99¢
10 count
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.44
GLEEM II
DENTAL CREAM
97¢
7 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
$1.85
VICKS FORMULA 44
COUGH SYRUP
3 oz.
$1.29
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Regular
$1.63
CE PACOL
MOUTH WASH
99¢
14 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Oct. 31
COUPON
-
5
S
regular
19
PON
regular
3c
PON
regular
3c
PON
quick
SAKING MIX
PON
regular
7c
PON
regular
3c
PON
regular
.25
PON
FREEZE
PON
regular
.85
PON
regular
1.63
PON
Massage parlor rubs people right
COLD
See story page three
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, October 27.1976
Vol.87 No.47
Elks citation not political official says
The issuance of a citation for alleged liquor pool violations at the Elks Lodge, 3705 W. 23rd St., wasn't politically motivated, a state Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) official said yesterday.
The official, E. V. D. Murphy, director of the ABC, said he wasn't told to begin an investigation into an alleged cash bar at a reception for alumni of the University of Kansas School of Law Oct. 16. He said he acted on his own after reading about the reception in newspapers.
"I didn't even know anything about it until I saw it in the papers," Murphy said.
HE WAS REFERRING to the publicized exchange of memos between Kansas Atty. Gen. Curt Schneider and Gov. Robert Bennett last week concerning gambling in state agencies and Bennett's attendance at the law school function.
"I've never spoken on the phone or anywhere else with the attorney general or the governor about this, before or since," Murphy said.
"The fact is that an alleged violation took place in our office of like I would have any rumor or conspiracy."
A hearing on the citation is scheduled for Nov. 17, Murphy said. He will then decide whether the citation was justified and will determine disciplinary action.
DISCIPLINARY ACTION could range from a temporary suspension to a revocation of the club's license, Murphy said.
Martin Dickinson, dean of the KU law school, said he had checked with the officers that Mr. Hunt was a potential victim of the reception and was convinced that they weren't responsible for any violations.
However, the incident probably will "cost them (the Elks Club) a lot of money." Murphy said, because of lost revenue during any time the club be missed.
"But it probably won't be a revocation," he said. "but that big a debate. This is just a misunderstanding."
IF THERE WERE any violations,
Dellaodon said, "it obviously arists with the Elks Cake."
"Last year, the third-year class in the law school requested and obtained from the office of Atyn. Genu. Schneider guidelines on how an affair of this kind could be properly held in compliance with Kansas law," said Jillian Frost, a professor of officers and people involved from the third-year law class and they did everything they could to comply with those guidelines."
"It's their responsibility and it isn't something that the law school senior class or anyone else but the Elks Club would be involved with."
Chris Kirkwood, Lodge Lodge manager,
the citation and would have no complaint.
The citation was sent yesterday by registered mail and probably will arrive in time.
PAMELA MIRZONI
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Red-hot breath
Vern Breechia makes a glass goblet to demonstrate glass blowing to his students. The glass-blowing studio is on 18th Street, just west of the KU Printing Service.
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ
Staff Writer
Starting date to be moved
Spring enrollment will be moved up a week starting in 1978 when the University of Kansas complies with a Kansas Board of Regents policy of common starting and ending semester dates among Regents' schools.
However, this spring's enrollment, to begin Jan. 19, wouldn't be affected.
KU has violated a Regents' policy for a common calendar of starting and ending dates and holidays, which was adopted in 1973.
It wasn't until last month that the Regents pointed out to KU administrators that KU's spring classes started three days later than the other Regents' schools. While students from other schools attended their first three weeks of classes, KU students have been enrolling.
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said yesterday that, "In future years we need to adjust our calendar it's. It's Regent policy, and we will comply."
ROBERT HMOLTZ, chairman of the University Senate calendar committee, said that a misunderstanding had caused the KU system to fall line with the common Regents' calendar.
There will be no attempt to change KU's spring 1977 calendar, he said, because the discrepancy was just recently cited by the university and the calendar has already been published.
"When enrollment was Wednesday through Friday, we worked over the weekend to get the roster together for Monday (the first day of class). If we have to enroll on Monday and Tuesday, there is no time to process the enrollment," he said.
KU's classes usually start on a Monday with enrollment the last three days of the preceding work week. The Regents' calendar calls for classes to begin on a Monday in the fall but on a Wednesday in the spring.
A SWITCH TO A Wednesday as the first classes would cause problems, Urbizto. Urbizto.
Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, said that the obvious way to handle the problem was to enroll during the previous week before the Regents say classes should begin.
Therefore, students might enroll Wednesday through Friday, and then have the following week off.
The committee will have to discuss ways to adjust to the calendar in the spring season.
because classes wouldn't begin until the following Wednesday.
Finishing dates and holidays at KU are in compliance with the Regens' calendar.
JOE MCFARLAND, academic officer for the Board of Regents, said a common requirement is that Regents' schools more convenient, unified the student-teaching schedules among schools, made classroom time more efficient, and conern that the schools' schedules coincide.
He said he didn't know any particular reason why the spring semester was scheduled to begin on a Wednesday. The fall ending and spring starting dates are scheduled around the Christmas holidays, he said.
ALTHOUGH THE COMMON calendar restricts the length of the semester, McFarland said, there is also some flexibility in selecting the length of the finals period isn't dictated.
Calgaard said that although pre-enrolment could be a solution, no definite plans had been made about schoolwide enrolment at KU. Freshman and some Regents already pre-enrol at KU. All other Regents' schools have pre-enrolment.
City relocates parking for 2 frats
By JOHN MUELLER
Staff Writer
Members of two University of Kansas fraternities must park their cars in new locations as a result of action last night by city commissioners.
Commissioners voted to remove 24 parking spaces from the 1600 block of Edgehill Road adjacent to the Phil Delta Theta and Kipappa Sigma fraternities. The removal came at the urging of firemen, who said they wouldn't be able to fit one of their large trucks into the space by the Edgehill curb if a fire broke out.
The fraternity members, however, will be able to park on the east side of Louisiana Street for at least 90 days. The commissioners decided to have police issue a temporary permit to allow parking on the west side of Louisiana Street for parking, and to decide during a trial 90-day period whether traffic would be affected by the extra parking.
GEORGE WILLIAMS, director of public works, said that allowing parking on the east side of Louisiana Street would create 30 new parking spaces and fraternize a net gain in parking.
west of the KU Printing Service. But behind the barn's large white doors is the roar and energy of the workshop. Inside, Vernon Brejcha, assistant professor of design, and one of his students pace the concrete floor between work benches and furnaces filled with molten steel.
Commissioner Marinie Argeringer said that the city would vigorously enforce the new regulations because "those kids should realize that safety is more important than parking. If we don't enforce, it'll be parked solid."
The commissioners also authorized Buford Watson, city manager, to investigate the possibility of a city contract with Baldwin City for Clinton Reservoir. The state has last summer and has purchased water from Lawrence on an emergency basis.
BALDWIN'S CONSULTING engineers have already informally proposed that once the project is complete, they will be
"Most people, then they think of glass blowers, immediately think of the guys
sitting around the carnivals and shopping malls making little swans," Brejcha said recently. "We're working here from a liquid over 2,000 degrees hot and thin as honey."
Staff Writer
KU students change molten mass into glass
Brejcha looks as if he's fencing as he carries balls of molten glass at the end of a long hollow blow pipe to and from the furnaces. To keep gravity from pulling the glass out of shape, he must constantly twirl his pipe.
Blowing glass into beautiful shapes in an old stone barn would be a charming occupation if it weren't also hard and frustrating work.
By MERLE GOLDMAN
ment plant and the reservoir are finished,
Lawrence might sell treated water to Baldwin. The commission action will allow the reservoirs to be treated. Baldwin representatives and Wayne.
Watson, commissioners said, also should look into getting a temporary roof and a heating device for the city swimming pool. But in some cases, it might be by applying for a federal public works grant, but the city isn't eligible for the money now because doesn't have enough funds.
COMMISSIONERS VOTED TO HAVE Watson study the possibility of having the city build a tennis center at the high school. He would also want to construct the center but would get the free
The glass blower also must keep his glass heated or it will cool too fast and explode.
use of the land through the local school district.
"IF IT IS cooled too quickly the outside moves slower than the inside, which is still hot and flowing, and to it tears itself apart," he said.
The old Chamney Dairy barn, which houses the University of Kansas' glass blower studio, looks quiet and pastoral as one drives near it along 15th Street, just
To keep his final glasswork from breaking, the glass blower put it into an
In other action, commissioners increased the sanitary sewer "hook-on" fee from $400 to $1,000. The fee applies to people who live in districts that hook onto the district's lines.
The commissioners also approved appraisal reports on several street improvements financed through benefit districts, and they gave permission to Chutes, a fast food restaurant, to build a drive-in at 23rd and Oudahl streets.
See MOLTEN MASS page eight
Williams said that the fee increase was long overdue because it wasn't fair for residents in the district to pay more than $19,000 per month and who use the hook-on paid only $400.
Parking lot construction resumes at Linwood Center
Max Lucas, University director of facilities planning, said yesterday the decision was made because the University had gone through all proper legal procedures to buy the land and to start construction.
Construction resumed Monday on expansion of a parking lot at KU's Limwood Center, Overland Park, after the Johnson fire. The fire was to allow the continuation of construction.
Three weeks ago, about 50 Overland Park citizens obtained a temporary restraining order that stopped construction. The citizens said that the construction would make the area less attractive and that their children wouldn't be able to play there anymore.
Linwood Center, a former public school building, was opened last year as a satellite classroom building for KU classes. The building and the land surrounding it were purchased about one year ago by the University Endowment Association.
The construction or rebuilding of about 180 parking spaces is included in the expansion plans. The parking lot will be divided into four sections by landscaped hedges, and a large, open, earth-scape program will include the planting of between 60 and 70 trees.
Construction was to have been completed by the end of October. Lucas said.
Lucas said he expected no further problems with Overland Park citizens.
"hope when they see that the parking lot will be attractive, they'll be pleased with it."
HOPE vote starts today
Seniors may vote for one of five finalists in this year's HOOPE Award competition from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today and tomorrow at the Information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard.
The finalists are Allan Cigler, associate professor of political science; Edwyna Gilbert, associate professor of curriculum and instruction; J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business; Jean Mulligan, associate professor of education; and Peter Turk, acting assistant professor of journalism.
The HOPE Award winner will be announced Nov. 6 at halftime of the KU-Iowa State football game.
Javhawks invited to discuss major football division
By STEVE LEBEN
Staff Writer
The CFA would be a forum for the major schools to discuss proposed National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rule changes and to solidify the positions of the big schools, Walker said.
There may be a new football power later this year. It won't be an individual school that will rival the likes of Oklahoma and Nebraska, rather an association of the nation's major football schools.
The University of Kansas is one of the schools planning to attend, Clyde Walker, athletic director at the university.
Seventy-eight of the nation's biggest football schools have been invited to gather in mid-December to discuss forming the College Football Association (CFA).
"BASICALLY, WHAT the problem stems from is that any institution without a similar program should be unable to teach."
Now, about 70 schools that don't meet criteria set by a CFA steering committee for naming schools as major college football institutions" are classified by the NCAA Division I, or large schools, according to Walker.
Division I schools have an equal vote on NCAA rules governing all sports, including football.
A steering committee of conference commissioners and representatives of selected schools has been meeting for about a year to consider ways schools could maintain and improve competition.
THE COMMITTEE assigned the CTA$^A$ a group of the 78 Division I schools that meet the CTA's requirements.
Have a stadium seating capacity of at least 30,000.
-Have an average attendance of at least 20,000 for a five-year period.
Under these criteria, all members of the Big 8 would be eligible for CFA membership. But schools like Wichita State University, currently a member of the Big 8 institution, I wouldn't be eligible for CFA membership.
—Play Division I schools in 70 per cent of their games.
- Have at least an average of 86 grants-in-aid to football players over a five-year period.
Walker said that as far as he knew there were no written criteria determining what schools could be
members of NCAA's Division I. NCAA schools were divided into three divisions two years ago, Walker said, and each school generally decided for itself which division it would join.
Each NCAA division has its own set of rules on such matters as the number of scholarships and coaches within an athletic program. Walker said the choice of division membership depended primarily upon how much a school wanted to invest in its athletic program.
THE SMALLER ERIVER DIVISION I schools have fought reclassification proposals brought before the NCAA in the past, often clinging bad psychological effects in recruiting should they lose jibbi Division I status.
Some rule changes have been made in recent years by Division I schools—sometimes by a close vote that pitted the larger schools against the smaller ones.
One such change was a reduction in the number of assistant football and basketball coaches a school
"I feel strongly that many of these things were an effort by the small schools to knock the big schools down."
BUT AN NCAA steering committee has made a
new reclassification proposal in a memorandum sent Friday to the athletic directors of Division I
Because of that commitment, he said, movement to a lower classification would be unacceptable.
Walker said he had expected such a move by the NCAA as an attempt to stop organization of the CFA. The NCAA wouldn't want an organization to throw one sport, as the CFA would do around football.
Walker said he hadn't read to study the new proposal, which read that him yesterday, but said his father was sick.
"I think it's a good proposal, especially if a particular school aspires to have a major college football program," he said. "We have made a firm commitment to the Division I-type program."
TED BREDEENHOF, athletic director at Wichita State, said he favored the new NCAA proposal, which would allow Wichita State to remain in Division I.
"FROM WHAT I'VE seen of it, I'm not sure it addresses itself to the problems that necessitate the CFA." Walker said. "The point is reorganization and this isn't really an effort to reorganize. People around the country want reclassification and I think that this proposal doesn't seem to meet the need."
If the NCAA meeting in November didn't result in agreement, Walker said he expected that the December organizational meeting of the CFA would be as planned.
"We certainly will be represented at the (CFA) organizational meeting," he said. "We support its motives and we feel strongly the necessity for this type of action."
WALKER DOESN'T expect to be alone at the,
meeting.
Charles Neimas, Big Right commissioner,
couldn't be reached for comment.
Walker is be expected considerable discussion on the proposals between athletic directors and players.
2
Wednesday, October 27, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest From the Associated Press
Arabs endorse peace plan
CAIRO—Arab leaders endorsed a peace plan for Lebanon at the end of a two-day summit conference last night but failed to agree on the key issue of the makeup of the map.
The dispute centers on Syria's demand that the 21,000 Syrian soldiers already in Lebanon form the bulk of the Pan-Arab peace force.
This was rejected by Iraq, which has been feasting with Syria, and opposed by the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO). Iraq has demanded that all Syrian troops be withdrawn from Lebanon, while the PLO fears that Syria is trying to gain control over the Palestinian guerrilla units.
Resolutions approved at the summit meeting rejected the partition of Lebanon into Christian and Moslem states, vowed to respect Lebanon's sovereignty and protect the Palestinian guerrilla movement, and called on each Arab state to contribute to the reconstruction of Lebanon.
Korean records probed
The South Korean embassy's bank records are probably being subpoenaed in an investigation of that country's alleged attempts to influence Congress with gifts, a source said.
The source said the investigation by a federal grand jury was "in the very early stages."
A subpoena for the records would be a normal part of such an investigation, but the source couldn't confirm whether the document had actually been issued yet. Officials at Riggs National Bank in Washington, D.C. declined to comment on the matter.
The probe was disclosed Sunday by The Washington Post.
Soviet leaders retain posts
MOSCOW—The likelihood of a Kremlin shake-up faded yesterday after a two-meeting of the Communist Party and Central Committee ended with the nation's agonizing war.
Before the meeting, rumors had circulated that Premier Alexei Koysyn, 72, might be near the end of his career. Koysyn has been reported to be ill and had been in intensive care since September. The team's goal is to
A Moscow radio communicate at the end of the committee session announced no changes in the Palitubour, whose members, averaging close to 66 years in age, were involved.
Nixon tapes released
WASHINGTON (AP)—The U.S. Court of Appeals cleared the way yesterday for broadcast of the Richard Nixon White House plays played at the Watergate cover-trial up.
But lawyers for the former President promptly announced they would appeal further because "the effect . . . is to permit the commercial exploitation of the recordings of presidential conversations subpoenaed for use in a criminal trial."
The appeals court ruled that that the "tapes played at trial are no longer confidential." The 2-1 decision returned the case to U.S. law enforcement, who must develop a plan for release of the tapes.
"Distribution should be prompt, and on an equal basis to all persons desiring copies,"
The ruling also permits the sale of the tapes as recordings.
The opinion, written by Chief Judge David
Bazelon, said that by definition the tapes no longer are confidential and that Nixon, who opposes their release, "is left to argue that it somehow be 'unseeable' to allow tapes of White House conversations to be marketed and publicly distributed."
But, Bazelon said, “this is essentially a question of taste and provides a singularly weak basis for a court to interfere with the construction of a long-established common law right.”
"In any event, in light of the strong interests underlying the common law right to inspect judicial records—in interests especially important here given the national concern over Watergate, we cannot judge Gussell abused his discretion."
The case was sent back to Sirica with instructions that a plan be formulated for the project.
Included in the tapes is the so-called "smoking gun" tape of June 12, 1972, when Nixon ordered that the FBI's investigation break-in six days earlier be derailed.
Britain supports demands to free jailed Rhodesians
GENEVA (AP) —Great Britain backed the demands of black nationalists yesterday to force Khodesia's white-minority government 600 political prisoners immediately.
British Ambassador Ivor Richard, chairman of the conference called to arrange big majority rule in Rhodesia, told staff talks would open as scheduled tomorrow.
The demand for the release of political prisoners, came from Rhodage. Black
leaders Joshua Nkmo and Robert Mugabe, who insisted the want:
Immediate freedom for an estimated 600 political prisoners and detainees held for their opposition to the white rulers of the breakaway British colony.
—an end of what they called “genocide and massacre” of Zimbabweans, the black
-Richard's replacement as conference chairman by a British cabinet minister. Richard is Britain's ambassador to the United Nations.
FALCO DANCE COMPANY
"The most exciting new modern dance company to emerge during the last decade."
—Clive Barnes, New York Times
Suburban Chicago voters got a massive dose of presidential campaigning yesterday when President Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter flew into the area seeking the support that could tip closely contested Illinois in their favor.
With 26 electoral votes, Illinois is one of the most states in the last-week campaign.
Foreign policy and defense issues were the principal themes for both candidates as the prime minister.
Carter talked of how he would cut waste from the Pentagon budget. And he sought to counter Ford's criticism of Carter's statement that he wouldn't send American troops into Yugoslavia in the event of a Soviet invasion of that country.
By The Associated Press
"I THINK THE world is tired of bluff and blustering where you innumerate you're going to send troops to some country when you learn that no people won't let you do it," Carter said.
During his campaign stops, Ford said, "American presidents have always known they should never say in advance precisely what they think will happen to take in the event of an international crisis."
Ford said his foreign and defense policies had "kept us strong and defense peace," while Carter would represent a venture "into the unknown with a doctrine that is untested, untried, in my view, potentially dangerous."
OCTOBER 27, 1976
Hoch Auditorium, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Student Union Activities, Kansas Union
Univ. of Kansas, Lawrence Kansas 66043
$^{13}$o Admission
Discussing the defense budget, Carter said, "We need to have a tough, competent, well-organized, muscular fighting force, going to have it when I become president."
in Columbia, S.C., Carter said the $2 billion to $7 billion in defense budget cuts he had proposed would be confined to the Army and Marine forces' weaponry. Carter said $3 billion could be saved by increasing the time that servicemen stayed at one post, by raising the ratio of military students to instructors and by reducing the weapons used by various NATO countries.
Senate committee to define International Club budget
LOUIS
Candidates scramble for kev Illinois votes
An International Club budget of $8,249 that was given preliminary approval by the Senate Cultural Affairs Committee last night could be cut a great deal at a meeting Sunday of the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee.
The Ford administration already has
mature internal transfers and to try to
standardize DNA.
The President repeatedly described the campaign as a choice between a known and an unknown.
The club's budget must be sent to Finance and Auditing for further consideration and acceptance before it is presented to the full Senate for final approval.
Upon arriving in Illinois, Carter told reporters it was obvious the state "is very corrupt."
"I would expect that when the budget comes to F&A, it will be changed quite a bit," Randy McKernan, chairman of finance and auditing, said yesterday.
"Judging from last year's allocation, at least half will be cut."
McKernan said that he objected to the budget's approval because of the philosophy used by the Cultural Affairs Committee.
He said that the committee should have used last year's club budget of about $2,400 as a guideline instead of approving the budget simply because there was a large amount of excess funds from which the allocations could be made.
Because of excess student activity fees.
MOSQUITO N FOLIES
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FILM REPERTORY
there is about $40,000 to $50,000 that can be used for supplemental funding, according to the survey.
Jbi RJ KETAI AT 8PH
After hearing a budget request of $4,141 from Hai Huang, International Club treasurer, the Cultural Affairs Committee ordered that the budget be approved and then accepted the amended budget.
Beisner disagreed with McKenna about the Cultural Affairs Committee decision. He said that the committee had approved the request to move the International Club's requests were legitimate.
Earlier this fall, the International Club's budget request of $8,400 had been rejected by the Financing and Auditing Committee because it lacked sufficient justify such a large amount.
Mkernan said that the club's budget was then sent to the Cultural Affairs Committee for further study and recommendation to Financing and Auditing.
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EXPLAINING THAT language, Nessen told reporters, "We always find a polite way to turn down requests for interviews we do not want."
—A spokesman for Playboy magazine said the White House never flatly rejected the idea of a Ford interview with the magazine. The spokesman said that, contrary to recent statements by the President, White House was cordial and cooperative with the magazine, but the project was dropped because of deadline and scheduling conflicts.
Citing schedule conflicts, Nessen wrote Playboy on July 15, 1975: "I am sorry we are not able to arrange the interview. We will have to look the future if we can help you in any way."
Later, White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen denied the Playboy account.
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Nessen said there was no other correspondence with the magazine.
Nessen released two letters, one from a Playboy editor seeking to arrange an interview.
"I can't find a scrap of evidence in our files to back it up. I can'r find anyone in the White House who contacted Playboy about a possible Ford interview," he said.
At a news conference a week ago, Ford said, "I reiterate what I said once before. I turned down an invitation by Playboy and have an interview such as Carter did."
Ford also said he thought it would be improper for a president to submit an answer to the questions asked.
Forms available in GSC office, Kansas Union. For more information call 864-4914. Funded by Student Activities Fee
GRAD STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS:
GSC
Supplemental Budget Requests
Due November 1
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Local massage parlor rubs people the right way
By STEVE FRAZIER Staff Writer
The only people disturbed by Lawrence's new massage parlor are potential customers who seek "a sexual thing", a local massore said yesterday.
Cazzie Loth, masseur at the new parlor,
Headmasters, 809 Vermont St., said those
who "know the value of a good body
that is really excited when we
opened Oct. 1.
"Some people are disappointed that we
Vandals get continuance
Four Kansas State University students who were to be arraigned yesterday on charges of criminal damage to KU students would appear in Douglas County Court.
The students, Alvin Allen, 18, Leawed; Robert Hecht, 19, Seneca; Kenneth Knox, 20, South Haven, and Clark Wilson, 19, Prairie Village, were arrested last Friday for spray painting three KU buildings with purple paint.
They were released on $1,500 bail each. The incident, which caused between $150 to $250 damage, took place the night before the annual KU-KState football game.
Failure to appear in court results in the issuance of a bench warrant unless an agreement is made to continue the case. If the warrant is allowed, then a bench warranty is issued.
don't give sexual massage, and others are probably scared away because they think that's all any massage parlor offers," Loth said.
The trial, postponed until Nov. 30, is the first commencement for the four students.
Paula Oldohede, co-owner of Headmasters, said that problems had been resolved.
"WE'VE JUST had a few prank phone calls from people who wanted illegal massage—like 17 Arabian girls dancing on their bodies," she said.
What Loth and Maro, his wife and business partner, do offer is "a totally stimulating and relaxing experience ... a people in touch with their bodies." Loth sai.
He said that in his massages he tried to connect the seven centers of body energy he believed to be involved.
"I can feel the heat on my hands as I go over one of the energy centers," he said.
"I'm like a mirror for them. I use my energy to channel their energy. And that gives people a chance to explore them, and they feel like they can feel obvious effects for one or two days."
it is too hot or not hot enough, I know that area of the body needs more work.
OLDEHOEFT SAID that "people love it"
it gives them a nice warm giv'."
One customer, a female University of Kansas student who asked not to be identified, said yesterday after her first job that she's I am'dnied. It's really worth the money.
"I was nervous before I went in, but by
1" I was nervous after I went in, but by
the time I was finished, I felt like I was
on top of the world.
$7.50 for a half-hour massage, which covers the back, neck, head, shoulders and face, or $15 for a full-body massage, which takes about an hour." Loth said.
Loth and his wife aren't licensed to give massacres, he said.
"YOU DON'T have to be licensed
Kansas to give body massages. That's why
they can't close down the sexual massage
parlors." Loth said.
That "nice warm glow" costs customers
Tari Ridder, instructor at the Lawrence School of Hair Styling, a licensed cosmetologist was trained to give only scalp, arm, hand and foot massages.
The Alvamar Racquet and Swim Club will begin offering massage services to members Nov. 1, Dave Billings, manager, said.
"Club members have shown an awful lot of interest," Billings said. "We aren't worried that people will misunderstand the services. They know the integrity of the club and they recognize the fact that we won't have any hanky-panky."
LOTH SAID that besides Headmasters
their "regitate," massage percussion in
other
"Before we opened, we wanted to get an idea of what prices to charge, so we called several massage parlors in Topeka," Loth said.
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SUA
SUA FORUMS presents:
ELECTION '76
with
NICHOLAS
VON HOFFMAN
Thurs., October 28
7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
50' Admission
Tickets now available at the SUA office
She'll get things done.
She's done it before.
Nancy has proven ability.
Her leadership in city government proves her true desire to serve you with complete dedication.
Nancy will serve responsibly.
She won't promise more programs than we can pay for.
Nancy will represent you.
You as an individual are important to Nancy. She will continue to listen to your ideas and problems, work with you for a solution, and support what she feels is best for all.
Nancy
HAMBLETON
• First woman city commissioner of Lawrence
• First woman mayor
• Member, Kansas Housing Forum
• Member, Governor's Housing Task
R. W. H. M. A. S. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P. R. S. P.
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Open Letter from McCarthy Supporters
Dear Student:
Eight years ago we were working against a cruel, illegal war and an unresponsive government. We called for a candidate to lead us in the Democratic primaries. When those we first met in Chicago, Mr. Maguire answered. Our leaflets said, "He gave America new hope."
We continued to follow him when others entered the campaign. We believed that his courage would not serve as an example if we shunted him aside once the task of defeating an incumbent President had been accomplished. We followed him to Chicago and beyond; few of us transferred our energies to the nominee our party, and others who had been with the question did not wag a fair shot at the nomination in 1968, but in 1976 we had the most open nominating process ever. So it is with sadness we reflect the call from the man now.
The people voted in primary after primary and in local caucuses all over the country. MCCARTHY DID NOT COMPETE. In 1968 we called McCarthy "The People's Choice." THIS YEAR THE PEOPLE CHOSE JIMMY CARTER.
In the past eight years our ideas have become welcome in the Democratic party. Jimmy Carter is running on a platform some of us helped write. He is intelligent and a talented leader with a strong vision to improve nuclear power, to indiscriminate strip-mining and dam building, to American support for dictatorships abroad, to the B-1 bomber, and to America's becoming the arms merchant of the world, as well as his stance on the issues of jobs and tax reform make him a candidate we can support. The question, then, is who will be elected.
MOCARTHY SAYS HE DOESN'T CARE IP HIS VOTES HELP RE-ELECT PORB. WE DO!
After eight years of Nixon-Ford, it would be tragic to let this chance slip away. The effect of voting for Gene McCarthy this year is to make it more likely that Ford will again be our President.
WE, FORMER 1968 CAMPAIGN WORKERS AND SUPPORTERS OF EUGENE McCARYTHY, URGE OTHERS WHO WERE WITH US IN 1968 AND IN OTHER STRUGGLES OVER THE YEARS TO JOIN US IN VOTING FOR CARTER-MONDALE.
Sincerely,
Sam Brown
Michael Harrington
Don Green
Anne Wexler
Gene Pokorny
Mark Siegel
PAID FOR AND AUTHORIZED BY THE 1976 DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL GAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC.
---
4
Wednesday, October 27,1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
Booze smelled out
During the last week one of the more commendable cases of investigation has been conducted by the attorney general, James A. Alcoholic Beverage Control Division.
The investigation started when Atty Gn. Curt Schneider sent a memo to remind state Benning that betting on sporting events is illegal in Kansas.
Bennett responded by sending a memo to state officials asking them not to wager on such events as the World Series "so that the fears of the attorney general may be quieted, and so that his efforts and his attention may be directed toward other pressing matters."
Schneider called Bennett's reminder "sarcastic" and ordered an investigation of state officials' activities during and after sporting events.
His reactive snoping led the attorney general to ask the governor where he had been on the afternoon of the KU-Oklahoma game.
Now there would have been no way for Schneider to have found out about the illegal cash bar in the Lawrence Elks Club if Bennett hadn't been foolish
enough to fall for the old "remind them about the betting law" trick.
The funny thing is that the KU law school fell for another attorney general
Martin Dickinson, dean of the law school, had assumed that a 1975 assistant attorney general's decision that stated that booze could be served at private gatherings in clubs if the liquor company was in the club member was still lawful.
SORRY, Schneider said. I've decided
it's illegal.
What could Dickinson say? He thought that a 1975 opinion was good enough. Apparently he didn't know that Kansas liquor laws change from attorney general ruling to attorney general ruling.
Fortunately, Bennett, Dickinson and Chancellor Archie Dykes (who was also at the reception) won't be fined for breaking a liquor law.
The blame will fall where it should— on those deceptive Elks who were trying to corrupt the governor, the chancellor and law school alumni.
You deserve a Pulitzer Prize for your investigation, Curt.
Contributing Writer
Administrators at the University of Kansas should take the cue from service organizations and social clubs across the nation who, this week, are operating spook houses to raise money for their worthwhile projects.
Halloween in Strong Hall
Surely, experience has taught administrators that it's like trick-or-treating with a wet paper sack to try to get money out of the state legislature for long-range KU projects. So why not try their own little fund raiser? What better way to get money from a small KU publicity and, at the same time, take in a little cash? If every KU student attended and paid $1, administrates could count their profits in the neighborhood of $23,000.
I can see it now. Clyde Walker, athletic director, would readily volunteer to coach the spook house staff. The remainder of the week, he could administrators to meet on the intramural fields to go through practice drills.
REALLY, the University, can ill afford to bypass its made-to-order spook house we, in daylight hours, call strong Hall. Why, a few quick hours of work each evening this week could save you time and house of horrors could really appreciate by the weekend.
Because he would be such a
Carter questions remain
One week to go, and the time has come in this presidential campaign to lift the fog, and to take a slow, sober look at the road ahead. Do we know what kind of person would the gentleman take us?
It isn't so necessary to ask these questions about Gerald Ford. The past two years have given us time to size up his faults and his virtues. We know the set of his mind. On specific issues he has faced. We have his state papers, we have his veto messages. If Ford wins, we know exactly what to expect.
It adds up to fog. Carter declared his candidacy Dec. 12, 1974. Nearly two years have passed. The gentleman remains an enigma. If he has any consistent political philosophy, it
IT IS entirely different with Carter. True, we have a stack of his position papers; we have books by and about him; we have a thick file of speeches, interviews, transcripts, and the like. We have his record for four years as governor of Georgia, but he has not been president of the United States, and it isn't the same thing at all.
hasn't emerged. If My own conviction is that he has none. On every substantive political issue of our time, he has plopped on the liberal side but this is computerized politician. I caretaily calculated, Carter is a careful, calculating man.
James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1976 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Entirely too much of this campaign has been pursued in a
misty. It is all very well to talk of decency, compassion and love, but it is humbug to assert that Carter has more of these qualities than Ford. One recalls Carter's instant reaction in the 1950s when she knew he of the FBI director's impropriety was what he read in the papers, he had a hair-trigger answer: Fire him! The gentleman has the instincts of a charmant in him.
WHEN WE get away from decency, compassion and love, we plunge into a deeper fog. It is hard to imagine being more interested in the most general way, what his
ideas are on tax reform. About all Carter tells us that the present tax code—a tax code contrived largely by his own party—is a disgrace to the human race. On specific tax proposals, he has wandered all over the map.
It is the same story in matters affecting the economy. We know he wants certain standby powers to impose price and revenue on everything else, nothing. He wants to politicize the Federal Reserve Board through a "cooperative" chairman amenable to his wishes. Carter dwells upon the unemployment by creating a system that doesn't seem so concerned about the risk of inflation. But in his position paper, he is yes and no, hot and cold; he says all the ritual things about private property everywhere every street. We don't know.
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 should include a KJ student's name provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
TO BE sure, the gentleman's campaign has its clear and lucid patches. On his first afternoon in office, he would pardon the draft evaders. He would sign a bill abolishing state right-to-work laws. He would create a new of a consumer Advocacy Agency—this being the same gentleman who on other occasions would reduce the federal bureaucracy. Last week he was hot for immediate action on his plan for comprehensive, mandatory national health insurance. The plan is to increase the social security increase in Social Security taxes—this from a gentleman who wouldn't increase taxes on working families.
With the exception of national defense, where he seems to have settled on a 85- to 74-billion cut, Carter supports the expansion of every significant area of federal spending:
education, health, welfare,
consumerism, business
regulation. His promises in
these fields are general,
unspecify, yet unmistakable.
He wants you to submit a balanced budget by 1980. We can depend on that; he
wouldn't lie to us. Trust me.
IF FORD had done a truly wretched job—if our country were bogged down in war or crippled by terrible depression, we might have a sinister figure—perhaps a would readily agree to travel Carter's misty road. But a week bounce, when the meaning of this election must be settled finally, my guess is that the voters will want the family, famous nexicing path they know. My guess is: Ford.
executive vice chancellor and part-time microbiology buff, would play the part of a mad scientist intent upon cloning a fly intelligent enough to monitor classroom cheating.
good sport, the administrators would reward him by letting him choose the position he wished to play in the spook house. He would. no doubt, be a little nervous with the pipe organ, hoping to get better reviews than his counterpart at Royals Stadium.
Promptly at midnight, students would begin arriving
The crowd would instantly be distracted by the mournful groans of Kala Stroup, dean of the University. Smith, acting dean of women,
Mary Ann Daugherty
Contributing Writer
FROM THERE, patrons would visit Frankenstein's chamber, where Max Lucas, University energy car, would electromagnetic-trash - burning microwave- lightening rod.
Breathless, but feeling a good deal more energetic, the tour would move to the cloning chamber, where Del Shankel,
The two would have volunteered to play the roles of the chained women held behind bars. Mild-mannered Donald Alderson, dean of men, would be their evil captor, fendiishly chuckling as he pretended to whip the helpless madens.
NO SPOOK house would be complete without a witch, and Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union, might eagerly oblige. Dutifully, Burge would haul his popcorn wagon from the front yard to Strong. As thick-seekers passed him, he would fill their hands with traditional spook house goodies, such as peeled grapes,
Of course, the administrators would have to ascertain that all patrons were treated fairly, none getting more goodies than the next. Bonnie Ritter, director of the Office of Affirmative Action would provide the needed service Dressed in a black suit, she would imitate the antics of the shrieking madwoman while constantly keeping an eye on the concession area.
wet noodles and chicken livers kept cool in his wagon.
GL. DYCK, dean of admissions and records, might want to operate the torture chamber. Gullillows, spiked beds, quartering tables and Chinese water torture simulating enrollment would be among the concocted displays. Students could request to be housed in the classrooms did well, Dyck could note their performance in their university records.
Dracula would be played by none other than Rick von Ende, executive secretary, who knows that Dracula will be a dangerous time, must keep a lid on them.
Somewhere nearby, Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, would entertain guests as the central figure in a scene depicting the horrors of modern education. Calgaard would allow himself to be placed between two gigantic machines, and him with red tape and fling old computer discs as the crowds filed by.
NO DOUBT, the administrators would want an assessment of how they'd pleased their audience. Maynard Shelley, professor of psychology, would probably be asked to do some sort of survey at the spook house exit to it, the jewel in which patrons were satisfied, the results were a representative of the division of continuing education would suggest that they go through again.
To be a guaranteed success, the administrators would have to do some thinking about recruiting a recruitment of patrons to their church one would expect, Chancellor Archie Dykes, the University's chief recruiter, would dress up as the headless horsenand an adorned man in a tuxedo, Lawrence inviting all to come partake in the good clean fun.
BEEP!
BEEP!
BEEP!
BEEP!
EMERGENCY!
EMERGENCY!
This is a
RED Alert!!
ALL PERSONNEL
REPORT TO
STATIONS!
BEEP!
BEEP
BEEP!
OH, GAWD!
NO! NO!
YOU DON'T
MEAN!
YES,
DAMMIT!
GENERAL
BROWN IS
LOOSE
AGAIN!
© 1976 WWT SPECIAL FEATURES
1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES
Political nomenclature controlled
By our standards, putting Chiang Miao, Chao Tse-tung's old lady, in the slammer would be like locking up Martha Washington. If you speak Chinese, what's happening there probably makes perfectly good sense. It makes none to occidentals of the American stripe, but while the reporting on the affair shes no problems with what is occurring in Peking it reveals the unconscious biases of our mass media.
THERE CAN be no other way to explain the description of Chiang Ching and her crow as "leftist leaders." What is a leftist leader in a nation where everything down to the last safety pin is nationalized and is the property of the state? You
EUROPE RELEASE
POLICY DISCLOSURES
The New York Times makes an effort at defining some of this
the Times who are labeled radicals are those who favor reforms in education, the economy. . . . . . . Radicals originally got their alarming reputations because they were
can also bear Chang Ching's people called "ideologically motivated" and "radicals" on the radio and television here.
Nicbolas Von Hoffman
(c) 1974 King Features Syndicate
nomenclature. Thus Fox Butterfield, writing from Hong Kong, tells us: "The radicals, a generally young group, came to Mao's revolution because of their backing for Mao's attacks on entrenched power-makers in the party and their support for reforms in education, the use of other things, the reforms bonuses and wage raises for workers, required party officials to spend more time at manual labor and made them work overtime in the countryside after finishing school."
At the same time, many other news dispatchs refer to the government or the people that Chiang-Ching is apparently fighting as "moderates," "middle of the roaders," or "pragmatists." Undoubtedly, the American writers新闻记者 are descriptive, and they are descriptive; they describe the unconscious political maps inside our journalists' heads.
THE PEOPLE write these dispatches aren't in China; they know so little about the country they couldn't even name the Chinese government or job when the Chairman packed it in a few weeks ago. Therefore the adjectives they use in describing various Chinese political factions are but a small part of our own domestic politics.
Thus the moderates are
the ones who occupy official
positions—those whose opinions
are sanctioned by prestigious
people and institutions.
The rest will all suggest
people who are non-
dynamic, quiet, stationary,
and not given to change. People in
people who went to the root of matters, and therefore advocated upheavals. The word still has that connotation, but notice how it is applied to persons advocating far less drastic actions than are accorded up in the word "reform." In the news columns of the Times, radicals and reformers are the same people.
THIS KIND of thing isn't deliberate. It probably passes through the hands of the editors and the copy readers untouched because that's how they think. Although they're 'too hard to read', they reformers are radicals, they'll print that very assertion if the words radical and reformer are separated by a clause or two.
Along the same lines the people who oppose doing such things as making "party officials . . . spend more time at manual labor" are regarded as pragmatists. Even if this totally Communist, activist society staff, of individually staff of any American news gathering agency could stand living, the Chinese, whom the journalists conceive of as defending a hierarchical social structure, are the ones on whom the favorable word "pragmatics is used." Are the names what we speak in language or the Times," put economic growth and orderly administration above ideological campaigns and revolutionary purity."
The practical, moderate and hard-headed folks get results against the wild, impractical, fanatics who would rather spout dreams than grow bread. Whether or not such divisions exist in China they are a perfect paradigm of how our own
politics is described to us by our news people.
AS A consequence, a premium is given to the politician most able to extrude an unbroken paste of insipid sincerity. The stance for winning the highest approval is immobile, quiet and cotton candy-like. The other night, it was the Wise Seer wrapped in clouds, rebuked Jiminy Peanut for revealing "an instinct for the deliberate insult, the loaded phrase and the broad innuendo." To conduct a campaign without so much as a loaded phrase or an innuendo of broad or narrow words, it was moderate, a middle of the roader suitable for CBS, a perfectly controlled functionary.
From Demosthenes through Pitt and Burke all the way down to Harry Truman, the language
of democratic debate has been passionate, insulting, inspiring, heavy with disgraceful innoendo, ferociously unfair and majestic. Severeiard—and he but reflects the tastes of millions like him who are terrified of the smell of their own armpits and the voice of their souls—must have been without forensics, without the possibility of expressing a fair bone or freshening vision.
At the time the Sevaradic types of this world complain that the debates are dull. The price of being lively is to have a fogged-out Eric or news mopplet like NBC's Jane Paulet call you an ideologue and a radical. Stand pat, stay calm, listen to what happens, and when the voters form circles and dance in the dust, calling for issues like Indians praying for rain, let all leaders evacuate their brains and assume the position of moderation.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Debbie Gorman
Published at the University of Kansas date August 15, 2016. Subscribes to *University of Kansas* June and July except Saturday - Sunday and Holiday. Subscribes by mail are $2 a semester or $3 a year outside the county. State student subscriptions are a year outside the county.
Debbie Gump
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
Yael Abouhalak Jim Bates
Managing Editor
Yat Abadahakhui
Canv Editor
Jamie Broun
Associate Campus Editor
Bilal Bidan
Sue Blair
Chuck Alexander
Photo Editor
Stef Photographers
George Miller,
Jeff Koehler
Sports Editor
Steve Schenfeld
Associate Sports Editor
Gary Vice
Entertainment Editor
Alismon Qwien
Contributing Editor
John Fulker
Copy Chiefs
Alison Gwien
Make-up Editors
Greg Hacken
Chuck Alexander
Chuck Denvorib, Joy Behnk
Kevin
Business Manager
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Classified Manager Sarah McAnnany
Assistant Classified Manager Sarah McAnnany
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News Advisor Publisher Business Advisor Bob Giles David Dary Mel Adams
University Daily Kansan
Wednesdav. October 27,1976
all
5
the central
depicting the
education.
him himself to
two gigantic
with him
old crowds
ed success,
would have
brought about
nutrition of
ktt. house.
As Chancellor
will dress up
dress up
sesman and
streets of
all to come
clean fun.
the ad-
want i want
our they'd
audience.
professor of
probably be
curt of survey
se exit to
a which
is courageous
louisizing
division of
ion would
go through
GAIN!
DINA NAVENO
CINEMA FEATURES
ed
has been inspiring,
fairnair and
and he but
of millions
fried of the
pampits and
mils—must
passion,
passion, passion,
a fair
song.
the this world
bates are
gibly lively
e is Eric or
Eric or
ideologue
pat, stay
atic, and
circles
at, calling
praying
evacuate
insume the
n.
---
Art work of Orient in Spooner
Japanese paintings of Buddhist deities and meticulously painted snuff bottles form the centerpieces of two exhibitions on display at the Spooner Museum of Art.
The exhibitions, "The Art of Buddhism" and a collection of Chinese snuff bottles, will be held in New York.
mayer Memorial collection donated by Sallie Cille Thayer. Chinese rubbings from the sixth to the eight centuries have been housed in the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mp.
Highlights from the exhibition include a Japanese mandala from the Edo period of the 17th and 18th centuries; a 14th century Japanese painting of a Buddhist deity and a gilt bronze Buddha from the Ming dynasty of the 14th through 17th centuries.
The collection, organized by Marllyn
Curtley, *Le*renzce graduate student, in-
clining studies in linguistics.
More than 100 snuff bottles are on display from the University's Thayer collection, most of which were purchased in Chicago from 1999 to 1911.
A collection from the McPheron Museum in western Kansas, assembled in China by Emma Horning, a Mennonite missionary, also is on display until Nov. 7. Both displays were arranged by Robert Osborne, San Diego, Calif., graduate student.
JOHN HADDOCK FORD
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JOHN HARDOCK FORD
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
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BERMAN SPEAKS FOR YOU!
These votes show why Booth doesn't:
HE: Voted for a $2,200,000 tax break giveaway to major oil companies—HB2651
Voted against increasing rates utilities pay on customer deposits—SB545
Voted against establishing a $1.60 an hour minimum wage in Kansas—SB272
Voted to expand corporate farming—SB227
Voted against removing the sales tax on prescription drugs SB927
Voted to increase allowable interest rates on consumers' loans to 21% a year SB300
Voted to reduce the intangible tax paid by one corporation in Johnson County----SB581
These votes and many others show a clear policy to benefit special interest groups. Arnold Berman wants to serve you.
"The true test of any government is not how popular it is with the powerful few, but how honestly and fairly it deals with the many who must depend on it.
ISN'T IT TIME SOMEBODY SPOKE FOR YOU!
ARNOLD BERMAN SENATOR For The 70's
The poet and writer of "Purple Sage" and "The Wife," he was born in 1930 in New York City. He grew up in a family that valued art and literature, and he became an artist after graduation from the University of Pennsylvania. He lived in New York City for most of his life, and he worked as a writer and artist before retiring in 2005.
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Wednesday. October 27.1976
University Daily Kansan
Being red-shirted suits Vicendese
By GARY VICE Assistant Sports Editor
Although Mark Vicendese has practiced long hours with the KU football team for nearly two years, he'd rather not play in a game this year.
Vicendee, a sophomore quarterback from Berkeley Heights, N.J., would prefer to be red-shirted and stand along the sidelines, watching Scott McMichael and Mark Lissak command the Jayhawks' wishbone offense.
But there are times Vicendese would burn at the chance to play.
"T KILLED ME to see Mark out there," Vicendee said of Lissak's first varsity game action last Saturday at Kansas State. "I wished for a moment it could have been me, but I realized what I wanted most was to be red-shirted."
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Mark Lissak
Next year, when quarterbacks Nolan Cromwell and McMichael have graduated, Vicendee wants to return to battle for the startin' quarterback spot—but as a
BULLS
WILLIAMS
That means Vicendee, who celebrated his 20th birthday yesterday, will have to sit out the rest of this year to maintain his red shirt status and save his sophomore year of high school.
WHEN FALL football drills began, Vicedente was competing with Laskis, also a sophomore, for the No. 3 quarterback position. Neither was expected to be needed this year and coach Bud Moore had hopes of red-shirting both.
"Mark wanted to be de-shrifted, too. I'm sorry he couldn't, but coach Moore had to."
But Cromwell's knee injury scrapped those plans and the Jahyaves needed to find a backup for McMichael. Lissak was moved up to No. 2 and Vicenandes remained redhirt, shading that another quarterback injury doesn't force him to play this season.
SO LISSAK won't be able to retain his sophomore year of eligibility after playing last weekend against Kansas State. Entering next season, Lissak presumably will have gained an edge in playing experience over Vicedescente.
"I guess be taken out of red-shirt status if something happened now," Vicencede said. "Well, I like to save this one." He had to have to play if Coach Moore wanted me.
"YEAH, MARK'S going to get a lot of experience this year and I'll be starting out cold—with just the little experience I got last year." Vicencede said.
As a freshman, Vicendese averaged 5.2 yards a carried and had his best game against KState when he picked up 69 yards on only six attempts.
"Next year will be tough," he said. "I know they'll want someone who can stay cool under any situation. I'll just have to work hard and show them I'm ready to handle it."
Vicerdene, who is 6-1 and 180 pounds, also hopes to put on some weight and work on his knees. He said he would come back in the same condition of his roommate, who wore No. 9 for the
Before Cromwell's injury, Vicentess helped KU's defense prepare for games by executing the opponent's offense in practice.
"I SURE I wish I could run like Nolan," Vicendese said, shaking his head. "He's got such long strides, taking only two where I take three. That's one thing I've to go to work on is my speed. Nolan and I have already discussed running together this winter."
Mark Vicendese
But now he spends a lot of time in practice just watching McMichael and Lissak run the offense so he'll know the plays if he's needed.
But watching is all he wants to do—this season, anyway.
Lissak loses year, accepts role
By BRENT ANDERSON
Associate Sports Editor
Mark Lassik, KU's new No. 2 quarterback, was looking forward to having an extra year of eligibility after it appeared that he would be red-shirted this season.
But when Nolan Cromwell suffered torn ligaments in his right knee in the KU-Oklahoma game, KU coach Bud Moore called on Lissak to back up quarterback Scott McMichael, who had taken Cromwell's place.
"I would have liked to have had that extra year," Lissak said yesterday, "but Nolan got injured and it happened that this was the best thing I could do for the team.
"COACH MOORE told me the Monday after the Oklahoma game that I had better start getting ready to play. Then before the game I told me I probably would be playbox."
Lissak did play Saturday against Kansas State and showed that he could direct the team effectively. He gained 38 yards on 12 carries, scored a touchdown and led on three rushing attempts in State's own yard line. His fumble, however, kept KU from scoring on that drive.
Lissak said K-State's defense had the play well contained, and that allowed K-State's linebacker Gary Spani to make the tackle and cause the fumble.
Lissak, 5-11, 185 – is one of the smaller quarterbacks in the Big Eight Conference. He said he had worked on building is size and skill, which helped those things more during the off-season.
"SPANI GAVE ME a很好地 good show," she said. "a little sore all over after that."
"One of my main strengths," he said, "is my quickness. In a wishbone offense, the quarterback has to make split-second decisions. Size isn't that important."
Lissak, a sophomore from Homewood, Ill., is more familiar with the wishbone offense than one might suspect. He quarrelled with a high school team that ran the wishbone.
"THINK THAT really helped me," he said. "When I came here I didn't have to learn a new system, so I could concentrate on execution. That's the key to running the computer."
Lissak admitted that his passing wasn't as strong as his running, and that that was another area he hoped to work on after the season was over.
"I've been working on my passing a lot,
and I think it will improve as my strength
grows."
"I JUST TRY to look at it as a regular practice," Lissak said. "Last year I was the scout team quarterback. In a way it's a relief not to have to go against our own defense all the time. I just try to go out there and execute properly."
Although Lissak had never played in a KU varsity game before last Saturday, he did play in two junior varsity games last year. Still, he said, that wasn't exactly the same as a varsity game in front of 40,000 people. The crowd didn't bother him, he indicated.
Lisak said having a strong offensive rackfield, as KU做了,made the quarterback.
"they sure can make the quarterback look good," he said, "but it's a situation that requires a lot of skill."
Even out-of-state players like him gain a
KU-K state rivalry. Lanskak is the KU-
Football takes a lot of his time, but getting a degree is something he plans to do, Lissak said. Attending law school might also be down the road.
"What would really be nice would be to have a little more time to relax," he said, laughing. "I don't think I should."
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Eugene McCarthy asks:
"WHAT KIND OF COUNTRY DO YOU WANT?"
1776-1976 YEAR OF THE INDEPENDENT
Curtis K. Martin
EUGENE McCARTHY FOR PRESIDENT
INDEPENDENT
FILM FESTIVAL
RETURN OF CHANDU—(1934, 64m) with Bela Lugosi as Chandu the Magician—Master of the occult.
"UNGLE BOOK—(1942) The famous adaptation of Rudyard Kipling's beloved "The Jungle Books" brought to the screen by the director of exotic adventurers, Zoltan Korda.
in the Room Forum of the Kansas Union.
Members $1—Non-Members
Paid for by McCarthy—'76
---
Tonight! First Annual Worm Burn Ball. With the WORM WRANCH WRANGLERS and ROPE BURN.
Off the Wall Hall
842-0817
737 New Hampshire
FABIANO HIKING
S
A
L
10-30% Off
B
All styles of Fabiano Hiking Boots are included, from the lightweight walking boot, to the heavier backpacking and insulated hunting boots.
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812 Massachusetts
PRIMARILY LEATHER
Need a car, a stereo, a job? Look in Kansan classified.
FOR SENATOR —
BOOTH'S BEST
Your feet can be well padded even if your wallet isn't ...
The Puff from Bass
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
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ARTHY
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studyard by the
Union. members
hire
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op Street
op
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Field hockey, volleyball games canceled by facilities' problems
By DAN BOWERMAN
Sports Writer
Finding adequate fields and courts to play on is becoming a problem for the women's athletic department. A field hockey game was played yesterday, when the games were canceled yesterday as a result.
Two junior varsity volleyball matches also were canceled yesterday when the team was denied the use of Allen Field House.
The field hockey team was to have played Emporia Kansas State College yesterday on the field just east of Robinson Gymnastium. The game wasn't played after the Emporia State coach, Debbie Jones, refused to have played play because of the condition of the field.
Wednesday, October 27,1976
A meeting has been scheduled for today between Marian Washington, director of women's athletics, and Del Shankel, a professor at the school's scheduling problems in the field house.
KU field hockey coach Diana Beebe said the problem with the field hockey field was that there are holes in the field and the team has to find a way to reach the field to the field recently had clumps in it.
"I thought the field was playable but not good," Beebe said. "A field like that shouldn't be used in a sport where you're not supposed to shoot. Our team wouldn't practice on a field like that."
"If I was an opposing coach and it was this close to regions, I wouldn't play on a field like that either. I feel bad about it and it looks bad for KU, but I think she had justification in not wanting to play on that field."
The Emporia State coach said she was worried about playing on the field because she had already lost three players as a squad in injuries in games on Friday and Saturday.
Tom Wilkerson, director of recreation services and a member of the Robinson
Gymnasium Facilities Committee, said that the committee was as concerned about the condition of the field as the women's athletic department but that the maintenance of the field is the responsibility of the Buildings and Grounds department.
Rodger Oreke, director of facilities operator, was unavailable for comment last week.
Because the Emporia State game is a conference match for KU, it will have to be played, but a date hasn't been set. The game will be on Friday or next Wednesday in Emporia.
The volleyball squad was scheduled to meet two United States Volleyball Association teams from Topeka last night. Washington was notified yesterday by Doug Messler, assistant men's athletics director, who said the team would be able to use the field house.
Stancliff said that the varsity team played in the field house last week, and that the down line was out-of-bounds lines tied up the window on the floor when the tape was removed.
KU volleyball coach Bob Stancil said that he was able to notify the Topeka teams of the cancellation, but that his team was disappointed because it wasn't able to play.
Kings win first game of season
"I knew when we put tape down it would create problems," Stanciflack said, "but I knew before today. If he was going to change the schedule, he should have told me before today. That's the only resentment I have. And expect that it won't cause problems."
According to women's sports information director Tamara Flarup, Washington said that the volleyball match had been on the master schedule for the field house since it was not allowed to not allow the volleyball team to use the field house could have been made earlier.
The junior varsity volleyball team will
Phi Delts win Frat A title
By ROB RAINS Sports Writer
Delta Upsilon stayed even with Phi Delta
Upsilon in a national football competition yesterday.
intramural football competition yesterday.
The Phil Deltaes two quick touchdowns in the second period and coasted to a 27-13 victory, winning the Fraternity A division title.
Hi Delta Thea, raising its season record to 6-1, will meet the Mad Dog Midgets, the Independent League winners, for the men's tournament at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in Memorial Stadium.
It was the passing of quarterback Dake Fuchs and quick feet and good bands of Jim Henson to the field.
Phi Dhi to the win. Fuchs was constantly on target with his passes, and Fender was on the receiving end of a good share of them.
With the score tie 7-all after one quarter, Fuchs and Fender went to work. Fender hauled in a short pass from Fuchs for the third quarter. Dell's first possession of the second period.
After an interception is stopped a DU drive, the DU delta scored in seven plays to see the contiued play.
The Phi Delta added an insurance touchdown midway through the third period, but DU got that score back with a touchdown of its own in the fourth quarter.
DU ended the season with a 6-1 record.
AMERICAN UNION
AETT FRATERNITY IS BACK AT KU
Alpha Epsilon Pi is the largest predominantly Jewish fraternity in the country. Affiliate chapters include Missouri, Indiana and Texas.
Charter Flights As low as $316^{50}$ Dec. 22-Jan. 15.
Call
CARACAS
841-7476 or 841-7455
Reserve today. New deadline is November 10.
Phone 843-1211.
Maupintour
travel service
KU Union/900 Mass.
Hillcrest/The Malls.
play a match against Kansas City (Kan) =
Robinson Gymnastics at 7 p.m. tonight in
Robinson Gymnastics
World Airways, Inc.
Operator; Universal
Travel Agency, Inc.
714 Mass.
presents
The Brewery
Friday Night 9 'til 12
$1^{00} Cover Charge
Coming to The Brewery
November 3 On Tap
Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan, 864-4358.
Bob Wire and the Open Rangers
Will have an organizational meeting 8:30 p.m. tonight in the Level 5 SUA office.
KU Climbing Club
B.
K!
wil
n
If you like to climb or know anyone who does, tell them about it.
University Daily Kansan
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Guard Ron Kane game back a high 33 points, including two free throws with five seconds to play in overtime, to give the Kansas City team a victory over the Los Angeles Lakers in a National Basketball Association game last night.
The win was the Kings' first of the season. They have two losses.
Booe, who was acquired in the first round of the ABA draftal draft, scored six
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points in the overtime and 24 in the second half. He saved the game for Kansas City when he stole the ball from Lucus Allen eight seconds remaining in regulation time.
Kansas City led the Lakers by eight points with four minutes left, only to be outscored 12-4 in the closing minutes. Kareem Abdul-Qurra scored the final quarter to lead the Lakers' comeback.
ALL THE ICE CREAM YOU CAN EAT!!
Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. (One Block East of 9th and Iowa).
920 W. 23rd
Open 7 days
11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Sunday, October 31st, 7 p.m., Jewish
Yes, all the ice cream you can stuff down your gullet, Clyde, and some heavy vibes from the juke box.
Free for Members, $1.00 for Guests.
PRIZES FOR THE MOST ORIGINAL COSTUME.
Sponsored by Hillei, K.U. Jewish students.
1/2 block west of Weaver's 842-1101
---
9 would like to invite you to see my shop, Sunday, October 31 from 1-4 p.m. 9 will be featuring the work of Nana Owens, whose
REX D. JOHNSON
REPUBLICAN
SHERIFF
DOUGLAS COUNTY
RE-ELECT
F. G. K.
original handpainted canvases will be an exclusive at Stitch-On. She will be with me to discuss her many designs and answer any questions. I'm looking forward to seeing you. 19 W. 9k 1/2 inch width of Woman's Bark Heck
needlepoint shop Dear Friends.
Present Sheriff of Douglas County Experienced in law enforcement Outstanding record as Sheriff Lifelong resident of Douglas County Married with 4 children Your vote and continued support
Stitch On
Your vote and continued support will be greatly appreciated. (Pot. Adv.)
Pd. by Citizens for Johnson, Frank Case and Joe Kelly, Co-Chairmen
Order Any Large Whole Wheat Pizza and Save $1.00. For Vegetarians Try Our Whole Wheat Vegi Special with Double Cheese
PIZZA
507 W. 14th at "The Wheel"
FILMS
SUA
HEAVY EDDYS
Dir. Hans Richter
CLASSICAL SERIES
841-3100
THE CONFORMIST (1970)
Formulae formatae Benardo
Bertolotto Berbetti
Trintignant, Dominique Sanda
(Italian subtitles)
75c, 75c
FILM SOCIETY
Films or Hans Richter.
18x(97)
(A chess Sonata for film)
Produced, designed, and directed
by Jean with Joan Coutcue
Joe Sarte, Jacqueline
Nrost, Jean Paul Wilson,
Julia Kusuma (453) 453
Dir. Hans Richter plus
GHOSTS BEFORE BREAKFAST
(1928)
Woodruff Auditorium
THE EXORCIST (1974)
Dr. William Friedkin, in
Dir. William Friedkin,
Linda Blair, in
Fat. Oct. 29; 7:00; 9:30
Sat., Oct. 29; 7:00; 9:30; $1
FAST FREE DELIVERY
Surrealist Films of Hans Richter:
see (2057)
POPULAR FILMS
SENIOR T.G.I.F.
77
WHAT: FREE BEER for Seniors wearing their Big Blue Senior Jerseys
WHERE: The Brewery, 714 Mass. (Formerly Edith's)
WHEN: Friday, Oct. 29, 3:30-6:00 p.m.
8
Wednesday, October 27, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Scholar wants education changed
By DAYNA HEIDRICK
Staff Writer
Roeremary Park, Phi Beta Kappa visiting scholar, said last night that a possible illiterate society of the future could be created by reorganization of the educational system.
Park, speaking in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union to about 25 people, pointed to the decline in scholastic aptitude test (SAT) scores among high school graduates during the past few years as the first symptom of a student's dependence on literacy for political and economical action and that felt no need to understand human history.
Park said an illiterate society could be avoided if studies were conducted to discover when the human mind easily grasped certain types of learning, such as mathematics, language, philosophy, and history, and if the educational system were reorganized to correspond to those research findings.
Without this reorganization, Park said, it is possible that the world could soon experience a new Dark Ages.
Park said the course of higher education in the future also depended on understanding the history of higher education and present social policies.
Park outlined the development of
autonomy accountability and specialization.
Park said autonomy, the right of scholars
to teach and engage in research without external constraints, is sometimes compromised by funding from outside the university. The internal pressures into university decisions.
Park said the concept of autonomy encouraged the development of private or independent schools, which were not dependent on governmental funding. But as these schools face financial crises today, they must be able to function state or federal government and, consequently, their autonomy is potentially threatened.
Park cautioned against excessive educational specialization, pointing out that the jobs students train for today may not exist in 10 years. She said she feared the potential for new skills to outweigh any concern for developing energies that might direct these skills.
annealing oven, where's it's slowly cooled to room temperature.
From page one
Molten mass ...
Students must melt about 350 pounds of glass each evening so there will be enough glass for eight students to work with the next day. Brecha said. Now, he said, they melt glass from a pile of broken soda bottles, which were shaken after that used. Brecha said, they'll have to get another donation or make it themselves from pure silica and potash.
Breecha said glass blowing was gaining popularity because it was a new art. The first collegiate glass blowing course was offered at Wisconsin at Madison in 1962, he said.
Brejcha said he became interested in the art of glass blowing when he studied with Harvey Littleton at the University of Wisconsin. Brejcha received a Master of
Fine Arts degree from that university in 1972.
According to Steve Kinker, Abille, Tex. senior, the students study with Ivette Friesen and the teacher.
THE NUMBER of students taking a course in glass blowing at KU has grown from four in 1972 to 18 this fall. Brewja schlai. Although there's a great demand for instruction, he said, the numbness of two students can work at the barn's two furnaces at one time, he said, because he doesn't want them bumping into each other or getting burned.
"YOU HAVE to have that attitude to be in glass." Kinker said. "You have to be dedicated to it. Most of the students fight to get time slots."
Brewja said there had been an increase in the demand for pieces of hard-blown glass.
WHEN MACHINE-MADE glass was introduced at the beginning of this century, he said, people bought it because it was inexpensive. It became a new aesthetic, and people thought it was as nice or nicer than the glass that was made by hand, he said.
"But society finally realized that it can't live off of the machine dictates as per Brechner."
He said there was high demand for glass art objects that range in price from $2 to a million dollars.
People have grown weary of objects that are mass produced, he said, but there's always something more to see in a hand-blow work of art.
"I've had pieces of glass by other artists in my home for years that I still have to pick up and touch," Brejcha said.
Infection spurs study
A doctor from the National Center for Disease Control, Atlanta, is in Lawrence exploring why three children from the Little Indian Center, a day care center at Haskell Indian Junior College, contracted a bacterial infection.
Ward urged that people not be alarmed by the infection can't cause an endemic.
Joel Ward, a physician from the National Center, said last night that he was investigating the infection contracted by the vaccine and other antibiotics could be used to help stop it.
The infection is Haemophilus influenzae,
an infection caused by an influenza virus.
However, Ward said, the infection isn't a flu
that causes the illness with swine oil or any other type of flu.
children at the day care center with antibiotics to try to prevent the infection.
He said that the three children contracted the disease before Oct. 16 and that no new cases had been reported since then. He said Haskell health officials asked him to investigate why the three children contracted the disease. He has also treated the healthy
"We don't know if the antibiotics will prevent the infection, but if they prevent one child from getting the infection, then it'll be worth it." Ward said.
Ward conducted throat culture surveys at the day care center and will also conduct them at the University of Kansas Hilltop Child Care Center today.
A culture survey determines which a body is growing in the area of the body studied.
Ward said that the infection wasn't a rare disease among children but that it seldom occurred in adults. He said that the infection occasionally could become serious in youth and could also be found in throat cultures of healthy children and adults.
The purpose of the threat culture surveys at both day care centers, Ward said, is to determine the number of normal children who carry the bacteria.
The Little Indian Center won't be closed because of the three cases, Ward said.
MUSEUM OF ART & CIVIL DEVELOPMENT
VANCOUVER, BC
TODAY: MARTIN GREEN, professor of English at Tufts University, will speak on "The Challenge of Gandhi and Tolstoy" at 4 p.m. in the Kansas Union's Council Room. HE DEPARTMENT COLLEQUIM will present Sashee Prete, the classics by James Joyce, Latin Text of Marco Folei's *Hiliene*, at 4 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room.
OnCampus
1 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. JOHN BOOKER, assistant professor of French and Italian, will lecture on a Trevan Todov art article, "La lecture comme construction," at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room. VOLUNTEER CLEARING HOUSE meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room. The EAST ASIAN STUDIES department will present a lecture at 7 in the Union's Forum Room. The ISRAELI FOLK DANCE CLUB meets at 7 at Oliver Hall. A reception for NICHILASON HOFFMAN, Washington Post Columnist and SUA Forum Series speaker, begins at 9 p.m. in the Union's Centennial Room.
TONIGHT: The STUDENT SERVICES COMMITTEE meets at 6:30 in the Union's Big Eight Room. INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL will present a public relations seminar featuring Joe Lillis, public relations director for Midwest Coca-Cola operations, at 6:30 in the Union's Big Eight Room. PHI CHI THETA meet at 7 in the International Room. THE SUA BACKGAMMON CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Parliors Room. THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION BOARD meets at 7 in the Union's Governors Room. THE EAST ASIAN STUDIES department will present a lecture on historical aspects of China; the SIGMA X1 presents John Brandt, associate professor of speech and drama, who will speak on "Middle Ear Muscles and You" at 7:30 in the Union's Council Room. LLOYD BUZZI, state representative for the 4th district, will speak at a KU CollegeRepublic meeting at 7:30 in the Union's Big Eight Room. THE CONSERVATIVE BOARD meets at 8 in the Union's Walnut Room.
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
DATBUN
DATBUN
4
Antique Afghani Jewelry
Bengals
from
GANG
JAMES GANG
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
In the Casbak.
803 Mass.
304 Locust
843-8080
Events
JAMES
NOW OPEN
SATURDAY
AFTERNOONS
M-F, 8 to 5:30
SATURDAY
8:00-5:00
843-7091
BUZZI
a man who listens
. . . and understands!
Buzzi has proven his commitment to:
...quality education
...a clean environment
...equal opportunity
...agriculture
...represent YOU with the enthusiasm;
common sense and hard work YOU deserve.
YOUR REPRESENTATIVE IN THE DISTRICT
We're moving to a NEW location
ARMADILLO BEAD CO.
841-7946
100
1 Nov. '76
Our New Store will offer a wide variety of BEADS and JEWELRY SUPPLIES, a selection of finished JEWELRY and, as always, a work area for YOU to MAKE YOUR OWN.
THE 8th Street MARKET PLACE
AT THE CORN OF 8th AND NEW HAMPIRES
Political Advertisement
Paid for by Citizens for Buzzit Committee, Charles and Sue Bratton, Chairpersons
Political Advertisement
SUA
KU
K.U. CHESS CLUB TOURNAMENT
Oct. 31 and Nov. 7 in Parlor B and C, Kansas Union Begins at 3:00 p.m. Entry Fee $2.00 Prizes: Trophies to top 4 places. All expenses paid trip to Region XI, Cape Girardeau, Mo. for top 4 students
Everyone encouraged to participate. Sign up in S.U.A. office Oct.27-29 or at tournament (2:00-2:30)
Owl
Cat face
Jack-o'-lantern
Skull and crossbones
Wizard in a cauldron
★
FREE BEER at the Halloween Ball
Free Beer till 10 p.m. when you wear a costume
★
★ A Spooky Halloween Bash
★
★ Get a Date Now
★
Sunday Night, Oct. 31st
SHERIFF SAM JONES 7th and Mass. Downstairs at Eldridge Club
Wednesday, October 27,1976
y
University Daily Kansan
lass was century,
it was etic, and nor nicer hand, he
it can't states as
Mary
for glass $20 to a
MICROSCOPE
ects that t there's a hand-
artists to pick
The
Transcendental
Meditation
Program
Free Public Lecture Tonight, Oct. 27 7:30
Kansas Union—Regionalist Rm.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
TURQUOISE SHOP
$5.00 and up
Turquoise Bracelets
THE
Turquoise & Coral Rings
1953
$6.00 and up
Mon.-Sat.—10:00 to 5:30 p.m.
All airlines—use your card credit
RESERVE NOW FOR HOLIDAY
FLIGHTS. Also winter vacations
to call Brenda or Dr.
Arthur Sappen.
Call ARC inc! Travel Pros (614) 251-0100
AIRLINE TICKETS NOME
LINE STUDENT FARES
ALLEN BELL CHARTERS
(816) 221-0100(24 hrs.)
Free Parking—So Hella Expanso
Use your direct Kansas City Campus Phone
The KU Backgammon Club meets every day, at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room, on campus 7:00 to play in the tournament 7:00
REMINDER:
BRING YOUR BOARDS
BUZZI Your 45th District Representative
Political Advertisement
Paid for by Alfonsa for Buri Committee, Steve
Paid for by David for Buri Committee, Steve
Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansain. Call 864-4358.
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to gender. Please visit www.usy.edu/bringAllClassifiedTo11.flixtank. BIRNG ALL CLASSIFIED TO 11. FLINT HANK
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
EACH additional word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
time times times times times
15 words or
fewer ...$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
... 8 9 10 11 12
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 ads can be placed in person or on the DLR website at the UDR business office at 643-858.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ENTERTAINMENT
864-4358
BOKONOM Paraphernina for the commissorial
in wednesday of the Kansan 11-10
841-369-200
841-369-200
11-10
FOR RENT
Need to inubet Ajayhower Towers Acnt $132/m\
w/utilless pay call 843-1107 or 326-8920.
ATTENTION STUDENT BENEFITS - Drop in and
receive phone calls, cell phones) at WEISTER
phone (visa card) or student ID card.
2 bedroom trailer; 8'/45" partially furnished, petten
included. Wheelchair not included. Call 849-127
at 6:09 p.m.
Luxurious two-bedroom apt. to submit under:
Luxury apartment + utilities: 843-883 or 10-
285. In a hurry.
五 bedroom house for rent. $200. Call 5:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M. AL. 843-7815. M-1-2
2-bedroom, furnished. AC, close to campus. $175/month plus taxes. Call 482-483. Rent $380/month.
Spaceac 1 bedroom app. available anytime after
1-21, on bus route, laundry, indoor room
10-29
VISIONS
has the eyeglasser you want.
806 Mauschusachtz
Phone 814-7421
Order Now For Christmas
MAGAZINE
SUBSCRIPTION
SERVICE
Many at Special Discount:
ADVEMTURE a bookstore
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Phone: 843-6424
Auto Parts
For the Do-it-Yourself we offer: 1. Special Prices.
NAPA
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
2. Open 7 days and nights.
3. We have it or can get it overnight
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS - Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-production items, you can buy them from the GAMPHONO SHOP at KIFES.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermaids. Uniforms. Artwork on stone cutting. Satisfaction guaranteed. 841-3833.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Superfilters.
BEL TAU ALTERNATOR BEL TAU ALECITRIC,
ELECTRIC, 843-960-309, W. 601-616-205.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
furniture, including high-end cabinets,
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 7015
Westchester Avenue, 8th Flr., New York, NY 10026.
Western Civilization Note-Now on Sale! Make
use out of Western Civilization makes sense to
him.
3) for exam preparation
"New Anatomy of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier; "Science at Town Crier".
Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerator,
freezer, oven, microwave and toaster. 1922nd Bed
Tower, Toucher 35. Room-m. p.Free. Floor-
mounted, table-top sink.
40% - 75% off on warmups aides, dresses, man's
& swimwear
& Sport Club Ru. 4 (west) on 2736-8176-7766.
GTE Quad Monster Resceiver/250 watts RMS/8
Battery charger table ILS BASE monster Changer/Pioneer 8-track record/lakeboard deck Yashica-D twin lens reflex camera. Monsong.Robber vg10 vent rb 37.
Solar panel BACKUP
A great guitar-GUSBON Sg-approx. 9 in wint condition. A truly rare find 841-713-10-28
45 Ford Galaxie $100; auto, power steering, 18-inch in and in goal position. Phone: 267-239-8226
Bicycle 10 speed, with lock 1 year old, $84-64
the morning or leave a number other than
Must sell. 1709. Oqal Ralley Kadeke. Get 20 mg.
Also parachute它. 1649. Oqal Ralley Kadeke. Get 42,38-105.
128. Oqal Ralley Kadeke. Get 128.
71 FORD CAPRI 4x-cylinder stick shift; good
condition. Asking 1250 $212 or 8250 $362 or
1815 $495.
1972 Dodge Van, carpet and paneled interior.
Loaded with载具. Call 543-5648. Best offer.
For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call TVs buys at 841-848-377 or 841-848-387. 10-18
RCA Color TV needs repair. Call 841-0763 BAW
Color LED TV needs repair. Save snow from 12%-
TV Call 841-0763 BAW
Call 841-0763 BAW
All Sophomores (paying class dues)—get your
new money now for $50 to the Union of the
Union.
4-FT Diamond Spoke Mags 13X6 Universal Fit,
4 where Air 255, Phone 811-6911, 11-2
Mustangs II - Killen excellent condition. Air, AM/FM,
air shock. Must sell $150. Call 841-7294.
www.mustangsforsale.com
JVC Turntable. Semi-sautomatic with ADC-VLCTM.
This turntable has a 30" drive, 614-891-3880, 61-12-891-
a like new, $499. Call 81-691-3880, 61-12-891-a like
new.
Dual 128, base and dust cover with MDLED $35.
Dial 128, base and FM-AM DTE with MDLED $35.
B48-304-301 or B48-304-301
10-29
Craig 3512 undisher cassette, FM, new, full warranty.
Crats 75, Call 841-9699.
10-27
Flat~72 - Good condition very economical, new
hooks. Must sell. $1350 $843-4218 or
$1199-6650.
NAISMITH HALL
国家税务总局监制
Now accepting Applications for Spring Semester Call 843-8559 or stop by our office.
UNBELIEVABLE SAVINGS. New 1975 HONDA'T:
C28 IBG 125. Sale Price 59.00 MT 125
IBG 125. Sale Price 49.80 MT 200
Sale Price 695.00 At Horizon Hunting. 18
W-12
843-3333-833
1 channel receiver and 4 Coral 1201 speaker.
Turntable included. Call 82-486-2001 after 5:00.
Skies. 18km HeaR HSP Pro W/maker Bindings,
Pyrorswars w/ Salammon. 550mm L 12-1
84-03066
84-03066
HELP WANTED
Check out these used like specials:
1972 Honda BAC500 355.00
1972 Buffalo CB750 355.00
1972 Honda XN750 375.00
1972 Honda C1850 375.00
1972 Honda CL175 375.00
1972 Honda CL175 375.00
114 Honda Cars,
see them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th, 843-
333³
115 Honda Cars,
see them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th, 843-
Aztec Inn
Deliveries—must have own car. $3 approx. in
delivery. Delivery to or from Heavy Duty
50W. W 7th above the Wheel. **15-11**
POSITION AVAILABLE. Full time research associate in Biochemistry or Chemistry required. Laboratory purity and assay enzymes will be desirable, purification and assay enzymes will be desirable, purification and assay enzymes will be desirable, Starting date responsible. Contact Dr. University of Kansas, Lawrence, Ks 66040. Applicant to position in OpportunITY/AFRIKMIA ACTION 10-27
Volleyball International offensible needless: Games from the World Cup and the Olympics ($15-$30) or Medal-more come to 208 Robinson. Salary is $2.20 per game.
LOST AND FOUND
Now taking applications for part-time cocktail waiter, cooker, dishwasher. Apply at Carriage Inn. Call (212) 790-6308.
OVEREASE JOBS—summer/year-round, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Ada, all etc. Fields, $90-$120 monthly, Expenses paid, sightseeing, Free
Tourism, Food Service, Box Office, KA, Box 449, Berkeley, CA 94704, 11-11
Sunday Drive-in is now taking applications for the d. bibs' D. West 9th. 11-3
Found: old gdp pocket watch, alternately ticks and focks. Call Zahid 861-409 or Iqalai 841-2572.
Wait, the word "focks" is at the end of line 3.
The word "ticks" is at the end of line 2.
The word "gdp" is at the end of line 1.
So:
Found: old gdp pocket watch, alternately ticks and focks. Call Zahid 861-409 or Iqalai 841-2572.
Ticks: 861-409
Focks: 841-2572
partly gifted person for evenings and week-
days. Partly gifted person in person wint-152W 9.6h.
in person wint-152W 9.6h.
Mexican Food
Found: white kitten near 4th and Alabama. Call
Stone, 864-620 (day), 843-989 (night). 10-27
Lost: my grandfather's pocket watch in Wescoe
Aud. Resid: 864-360 and 842-2781.
10-28
Lost: $REW reward for return of lion lost on 12b1
Ticket returned to Tennessee and Kentucky
885-881-312
885-881-312
Lot: black bilfoilid—KU bus pass, ID and Haskell
ID: 842-63434
11-1
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont
American and
Lost-Male Red Irish Setter, 65 lbs. Well-developed with long neck. "Lady," 32 yrs., old. Call 644-8570. 10-27
*PLEASE READ FIRST LISTING*
Lost-Washington High School 109th; ribs 24.5
Washington-Wedton from lawn; leaves 10.8
Richard B. 10-27
Found: "Angliches/Ckey/Coskey Angliey" died.
Half Give me a call a name is in front. Identify
name.
Half Give me a call a name is in front. Identify
name.
CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE
Cross Reference Bookstore
- ODRYMOUNTING
* METAL FRAEMAS
* RESTORATION
807 Vermont
842-9455
--at
For new Chevrolet and used cars
MISCELLANEOUS
Turner Chevrolet
NOTICE
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uteh/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday; at 8 p.m.
CASHR CAFE—Great food from serratch, Lumbat
10:30-3:30 Mt. Mass. Please take backpack, linen,
10:30-3:30 Mt. Mass. Please take backpack, linen,
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
switches, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-18.
9:30 a.m.-5 p.m.
Call Ottis Vann!
Redeemer Lutheran Church, 20th and Haskell,
invites all students and faculty to our Sunday
school. Students will be enrolled at St.
Atkinson at 10.15 a.m. We have an active college
age group. Transportation will be provided if
you are a student.
Jim's Slank House. Delicious food at reasonable prices.
Jim's 12th Wednesday, 4-11; Closed Tuesday,
3-10; Open Friday, 5-8; Admission $6.
Become a Gift World distributor—merchandise from 1/2 to 1/3 of retail-free info or $2 for product catalog—refundable for order. Hurry up! Contact BT, P.O. Box 302, Moorcross, MI. Moorcraft MG, 64143. 10-29
Everything from housewarming to jewelry- 40% off
INSTANT SALE! HK$ 186, W $ 100. Postcard/ Rates
until Wednesday.
Slippish Engineering and Acoustical Products wishes to introduce "Tadies." A speaker system that mimics the human breathing clarity and depth that you would expect them to cost up to four times their actual cost. The speakers are designed for speakers or just to discuss our folded conical horn design, call 842-6928 or talk to our design team.
GAY RAP GROUP: Thursday, Oct. 28, 7:30, 8:32
Kentucky.
www www www www
PERSONAL
A few openings in Men's & Women's Scholarship Halls for spring occupancy.
Call 864-3552 or stop by 228 Strong
RACMIS, small group discussion over lunch,
office 11-300-1-50, Kunis Union, Oct. 26,
10:30am
Vote yes on November 2 for the Prophetoion to replace the Board of Directors. The Toddler Center has openings for children 15-30 months, your child will have two to run and turn the wheel. For information call 842-323-1202 or booklet 1202-842-323-1202 or email info@toddlercentre.org
843-7700
Cyflochier Optics
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
RUSKING HOME
801-530-4922
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods • Vintage Clothing
- furniture - Antiques
- Imported Clothing
730 Mass. 841-7070
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Flitted Sheets
SERVICES OFFERED
FIELDS
Former Mayor and City Commissioner wants to
bring up a new school for by KU College Republican
Hampton, Pa. for by KU College Republican
Women's art collective forming in Womanspace,
Need ideas. Potential for drawing clauses and
photography. Interested in what you are interested
in. Visiting Gct 31, May 2015.
Rhode Island. 842-6000. 10-29
P. M. If you deny yourself tomorrow night he'll be in charge of the kitchen, and when you show up the rides never make it to me.
REAL ESTATE
Have trouble scheduling morning worship and
night worship? Invite you to a meeting at 300 a.m. in 1915
and 2015 at worship at 10 a.m.
A MAN OBSESSED by classical music and especially interested in German, literature, Plato, philophony, capping and causing wretches to meet man marm." mum. 835-1273. *10-29*
Body tension is painful. Message is simple, simple, simple.
Relaxation increases blood flow, relaxes muscles and aids circulation,
relaxing muscles and aiding circulation.
It is a natural method of preserving health and well-being and is a key element in sexual intention what-is-every in this message. It requires G.P. and it is biochemical to men and women (and handshakes Hair Designer 899, Vermont, 898-271-6500).
Have you had problems getting to sleep at night for the past year? We are looking for people to participate in an innsale program at program 105, 841-359-2860, Dn Hutchings, 841-359-2865, 11-2
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
The A.T.O. who drives a silver 2022, and was the last one to win, thanked Thank you for a held of a ride! The little yellow bag,
Martin Real Estate Inc. ATTENTION: very seldom does a home on or near the campus become known to potential buyers. Located in a third secured area at No. 9 Westwood A. 31rd district, this home offers nearly 2,500 square feet of space and is priced at $53,000. Call 842-707-001 e-mail: berry.Harvard@ucla.edu or Bill Brewer 842-7355, or Bill Brewer 842-7355, 14-10 109-29
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-705-6-12 p.m.
for Referral.
Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 012, 012, 100, 100, 110, 111, 115, 116, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 180, 185, 190, 195, 200, 205, 210, 215, 220, one-time test preparation, Reasonable rates. Call 843-7681.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on paper from various sources including 30% in Los Angeles, Calif., 20% in Houston, Tex., and 50% in New York.
Grooming all breeds. Professional care for your pet. The Supplies. Tug toy pacifier for sale. Groomer. Pet groomer.
1
Scafametts-seding general mending and complete repair. Reassemble or harte. Call Colby, Cobb, Merrill, 811-528-3900, bkkc@scafametts.org
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
RAASCH
SADDLE A BRIDLE SNOP
Class 8 4 BRIDLE SNOP
842-8413
Mastercharge
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
军
- Foosball
- Foos-Ball
COMPLETE
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a new bicycle. You'll probably want your denver bike-incubate with your denver brakes, and chain, true both wheels, adjust your tires to the right size, and accessories bought at time of "tune-up." Rates: 10 speed $15.00, 5 or 3 speed $15.00, single speed $25.00, double speed $25.00, 3 speeds $15.00, single speeds $15.00. Complete repairs $49.00.
IN A MUSICAL RUT? See how lessons can get you moving. Beginning to advance inolk, rock, jazz, classical, bluegrass and guitar, bando music, and piano. Call McKinney MA-10-28187.
Pool
lawyers to select, develop and implement quality business law solutions has to
be combined with the principles of law.
lawyers to develop, implement and maintain quality business law solutions have to
be combined with the principles of law.
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week - No One Under 18 Admitted
TYPING
I do damned good typing Pegasus, 842-647. 10-29
THESIS BINDING COPYING THE House of
Commons and the Senate's binding
binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us
help you at 834 Massachusetts or phone 842-647.
2012 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
Experienced Typtist-IBM-Memory-Call 842-
10:20
971: ask for IIBM
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
LECTION OF BEER
Need an experienced tpci-link IBM Selectle III
tap card with tpci-enabled tcpicards tape card
(ribbon). Call Pam at 842-7570.
The Chalk Hawk
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
Experienced typist, manicurists, these, call Ect.
weekends, 641-831 days, 841-789 days
10-27
WANTED
Experienced typist - term papers, thesis, mice,
painters. Send resume to:
834-858-3044. Mrs. Wright.
The Lounge
Typist/editor. IBM Pica/eite. Quality work.
Technical support. dissertations welcome.
Website: 842-918-8271
**DON'T SEE THIS**
A
Delivery work on weekends. Call or come by the Campus Hideaway for details. 843-911-107.
Need tickets to NU/KU football game. 841-1025 after 5 p.m.
Recommends wanted to stay two-bedroom duplexes in Boca Raton, Florida. Calm and easy-going. Call, D43, 545, 821.
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Roommates needed for very nice furnished apart-
ment. Roommate $250 per person, roommate $750
departure $95 per person. Call Alexa at 1-800-
355-6422 or visit www.roommates.com.
Wanted-Tickets for NU Game, anywhere. Call
845-2687
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Extravagant apartment needs one or two persons, preferably female. Fireplace, dishwasher, quesstion pad, large kitchen.
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
Need: 3 KU-Neb. football calls. Call 1-272-3107.
10:26
- Bud on Tap
SPORT
Pool
No extra charge
Gift Wrapping Free
HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass.
NOW'S THE TIME FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY
Thanksgiving and Christmas travelers should reserve now for best choice of flight, train and hotel. May we also assist you in planning your trip? No extra charge for our services.
Phone 843-1211 KU Union Lobby
-
Make Reservations
SUA Maupintour travel service
in the summer.
Use the student discounts
at
Keep your car healthy
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
Happy Car
10
Wednesday, October 27, 1976
---
University Daily Kansan
1
Fossil digging is his 'real thrill'
By CHRIS COTTRELL
Staff Writer
The possibility of discovering an animal species unknown to man is, for most, a remote prospect. But for Orville Bonner, it's all in a day's work.
Bonner, a paeleontologist at the University of Kansas, collects and prepares fossils for study and exhibit. He spends most of his time coordinating field trips to look for fossils.
His trips, always in the western half of the country, are frequently to western Kansas, Wyoming and Utah. Larry Martin, assistant professor of ecology and ecology, often accompanies him.
MARTIN HAD nothing but praise for Ronnie's work
"ORVILE AND I go out every summer," Martin said recently. "We usually take some graduate students with us and other interested parties."
"He runs a good field trip." Martin said. "Orville is very good. He's probably as good as anybody in the country at what he does—fastening and preparing vertebrate fossils."
Bonner has been at it a long time. He said he was not a student for psychology for decades, but could remember. If he did as he could remember.
The 40-year-old native of Leoti was introduced to fossil collecting by his father, who is a semiprofessional paleontologist himself.
"MY DAD WAS interested in it and he got interested," itBonner explained. "I grew up in western Kansas where there was a lot of opportunity to look for fossils. As we grew from rank amateurs to more advanced amateurs, we developed better techniques."
BONNER RECEIVED his masters
Senate audit OKs budget
An audit of the 1976 Student Senate budget showed no irregularities, Brad Sterrett, chairman of the Student Senate Auditing Committee, said yesterday.
BIRD SKIN LAND
Sorrrett said the audit was conducted on $340.581 or nearly 78 per cent of the $473,942 allocated by the Senate in fiscal 1976. Of the $466.897 in student activity fees received by the Senate in 1976, $9,502.58 remained unallocated.
All groups that were allocated more than $7,000 were audited, he said, and a random sample of groups that received less than $7,000 were audited. It is 3 percent of all groups that were audited.
According to the Senate Rules and Regulations, a complete audit must be performed by the Auditing subcommittee constituted by the Senate by Oct. 31 of each year.
Fossil expert
Paleontologist Orville Bonner stores fossil specimens on row after row of shelves in a raum, off his work area in Dycho Hall.
degree in paleontology at Fort Hays State College. He has been at KU for eight and a half years. He said the possibility of finding a new species made the work exciting.
"I's like anything else, I guess," he said.
"It kind of gets in your blood. There's always the chance of finding something that is found before, and that's always a thrill.
"Most all of the big dinosaur-types have been found, and we are one lot of them. All are new, great examples."
ROBERT PATTERSON, vertebrate zoologist at the Museum of Natural History, often accompanies Boner on field trips. They used to travel to western Kansas each
"It's become a legend that whenever Orville and I would go to western Kansas, you could count on either snow or a rain storm," Patterson said. "We've gone out in past years where we've had a two- or three-inch downour."
"HE HAS THE UNIQUE krack of getting into a fossil bed and finding things", Patterson said. "He has an immense enthusiasm for doing his work.
Patterson spoke of Bonner's ability to discover fossils.
work with. He's not competing with anyone.
He's a team'le them. it's a pleasant situation.
"HE'S A KIND of fellow who's unique in this day and age. He believes in the concept of people helping people. I think this is a beautiful kind of rural America that we're loading today."
Patterson said that Bonner was good at working with graduate students in patient training.
"I BELIEVE ORVILLE is one of the most enthusiastic preparators in North America."
Bonner said that one thing he liked about wore was that it was neither totally an outfit nor a jacket.
"I've seen him be rather crusty with students, but there's a purpose for it," Patterson said. "He teaches students a lot of preparation lab. It's an informal situation."
“WE'RE ALL doing research,” Whestone said, “and anytime you have a problem with a technique or something that needs to be renamed, he's the guy to go to.”
Ken Whetstone, Lawrence graduate student, attested to Boner's expertise.
He's an individual you go to the field and
"I really like all of it because of the variety." Bonner said. "It's not like an assembly-line where you have to do a certain job all the time.
"And occasionally we discover things that nobody's ever seen before, and it's a real thrill to do something like this. Just the moment you step out of the keep keeps you digging away at the rocks."
Falco to perform tonight
Falco, who formed his company in 1967, toured for 10 years with the Jose Limon
Dance Company. He has performed with the Boston Ballet and the Netherlands Dans Theatre. He also has performed in "The Puppets" with Rudolf Nurgey and Merle Park.
Hoch Auditorium will become a ballet
theater tonight for the performance of the
Jazz Band.
Critics have described Falcon's style as precise and flexible, one that demands the user to be a bit of a joker.
The performance will begin at 8 p.m.
Tickets are $3.
precise and flexible, one that demands the inner's total involvement in his dances. Falco and his troupe will tour France in December after completing their United States trip.
Falco's seven-member troupe will perform three numbers, "B-Mine," choreographed by Juan Antonio, the company's principal dancer. The company has three relationships; and "Caviar," a dance that features large white sturgeons as props.
HOPE
Attention Seniors:
FINAL BALLOTING
Vote HOPE Award
Wed., Oct. 27
and
Thurs., Oct. 28
9 a.m.—4 p.m.
Information Booth
Jayhawk Blvd.
FINAL BALLOTING!
"WARNING ON THE FIRE"
"DRUM!" BY THE EXAMINERS
For the first time in 42 years,
ONE film sweeps ALL the MAJOR ACADEMY AWARDS
DRUM
WARREN OATES
KENHORT
PAM GRIER
Eve. 7:15 & 9:30 Sat., Sun. 2:00
Hillcrest 2
BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTOR
BEST ACTRESS
BEST DIRECTOR
BEST SCREENPLAY
JACK NICHOLSON
ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST
Evenings at 7:15 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun. Matinee 1:50
Hillcrest 2
Ends Thursday
HOFFMAN/REDFORD
"ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN"
Tonight at 7:30 & 9:55 only
PG
Starts Friday
"CAR WASH"
PG
Anything can happen and will
They were the girls of our dreams ...
"THE POM-POM GIRLS"
Eve. 7:30 & 9:15
Sat., Sun. 1:30
Varsity
PETER OTOOLE
KATHARINE HEPBURN
WINNER!
3 ACADEMY AWARDS
INCLUDING BEST ACTRESS KATHARINE HEPBURN
THE LION IN WINTER
Eve. 7:15 & 9:45
Sat., Sun. 1:45
Hillcrest 3
—FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY—
The Reason
"YELLOW SUBMARINE"
"LET IT BE"
Plus Frank Zappa's
"200 MOTELS"
—SATURDAY NIGHT ONLY—
The They CAME FROM WITHIN
"The Devil Within Me"
"REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD"
"SPIRITS OF THE DEAD"
Sunset
Jay
SHOPPE
Downtown
Variety in Sportswear
Sue selects Corduroy Knickers (14.00; sizes 3-13) worn with a Collage Cowl-neck Sweater (12.90; sizes Sm., Med., Lg.) accented with an all leather belt (6.00).
Jackie chooses to wear a "Supersuede" lampshade by Campus Casuals (62.00) Misses and Jr. sizes) layerd over a Jantzen Cowl-neck Sweater (16.00; sizes Sm., Med., Lg.).
835 MASS. * 843-4833 * LAWRENCE, KANS. 66044
FIRE PARKING PROJECT 800
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
Rear Window
Defroster Kits
Fits All Cars
Lucas Square Eight Driving Lites
$750
$2450
each
Retail Value '33'
Retail Value $14^{95}$
Go North across bridge to stoplight, turn right, go one block.
JAMES GANG
M - F - B -
304 Locust 5:30
843-8080 SATURDAY
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS 8:00 - 5:00
Sunday, Oct. 31, 8:00 p.m. DEMONSTRATION at KU Linwood Center, 9900 Mission Rd., K.C. Ks. $2.50 admission.
All tickets are on sale at the Box Office, Murphy Hall.
Saturday, Oct. 30, 8:00 p.m. PERFORMANCE at Nelson Art
Gallery, K.C., Mo. Student; $5; General Public; $10.
The Performing Arts Program of the Asia Society presents
THE MARTIAL ARTS OF KABUKI
FROM THE NATIONAL THEATER INSTITUTE OF JAPAN
Friday, Oct. 29, 8:00 p.m. WORKSHOP at Dance Studio, Robinson Gym. Free. Registration required at Theatre Box Office, Murphy Hall.
---
FROM THE NATIONAL THEATER INSTITUTE OF JAPAN
JOIN THE Miller
PICK-EM-UP
It's Miller Time Again!
JOIN THE Miller
PICK-EM-UP
It's Miller Time Again!
$500 Cash can go to the 1st place winner of this semester's Miller Pick-Em-Up Contest. Any campus organization can enter. All you have to do is save Miller and Lite cans and bottles, and we'll give you 30 points per lb of cans and 1 point per lb. of bottles. Whoever has the most points on Dec. 8 wins $500 in cash or their choice of six great prizes including a 25% Console Color TV, 2 man Sauna Bath, Regulation size Pool Table, a Quadraphonic Component Sound System and much more. Watch for more information or call Dean Andresovic, your Campus Miller Representative at 842-2225.
ENTER TODAY
Z
AUTUMNY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Falco dancers show free form
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.87 No.48
See story page five
Athletic slates still unresolved
Staff Writer
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Marian Washington, director of women's intercollegiate athletics, met yesterday with Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, to discuss problems involving scheduling of facilities for use by the women's athletics department.
Shankel told Washington he would meet with Doug Messer, assistant athletic director, and Wayne Osnes, director of the department of health, physical education and recreation, and then would meet with her again.
"He told me he would try to arrange a meeting between all of us to work out a mutually acceptable solution to the problem," Washington said.
two volleyball matches were canceled Tuesday night because the team was denied use of Allen Field House and Washington thought options offered (a 3 p.m. or 9 p.m. time in Robinson Gymnasium were unacceptable.
EARLIER VOLLEYBALL matches were played on the basketball court on a trial basis but it was then decided that damage to the court surface from tape used for boundary lines was sufficient to rule against use of the fieldhouse for matches.
Washington said the field hockey match
with Emporia State College, which was also scheduled for Tuesday and cancelled, would
The Emporia State coach refused to have
the team return to the poor condition of
the playing field.
The forced rescheduled will cause the KU team to lose the advantage of playing at home, which is always an advantage in a conference game. Washington said the decision was made after the scheduled to be played here tomorrow, will also have to be moved, she said.
"THEY'LL HAVE to play a doubleheader. We'll have to be at Emporia at about 2:30 p.m., then try to get the ball out for us, as we use there for a later game that afternoon."
Washington said arrangements were needed to insure better maintenance of the fields designated for use by the field hockey team. The softball team has been able to use the fields at Holcom Complex and Broken Ice Field, in order to make agreement with the city is subject to change.
KU activities to highlight Higher Education Week
"The Emporia coach was sympathetic to our problem and said she realized I had no control over the upkeep of playing fields," Washington said. "But she was amazed that we have to cope with this kind of conditions for our teams."
The Jayhawk College Quiz Ball conten-
t, the presentation of the HOPE Award and a speech by former Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will highlight Higher Education Week activities next week at the University of Kansas.
Activities planned for Higher Education Week are:
Gav. Robert Bennett signed a 17-0 Higher Education Week in Kansas. Higher Education Week in Kansas.
The Chancery Club, a group of prelai-
students, will present the program "Legal
Law for Business," on Tuesday, p.m.
Monday, Nov. 1, in the Big Eight Room
of the Kansas Union. Representatives from
law schools at KU, Villanova University,
Washburn University and the University of
Kansas.
The 1976 HOPE Award finalists will be featured in a panel discussion on higher education at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 3, in the Kansas Room of the Union.
HOPE vote ends today
Today is the last day seniors may vote for one of five finalists in this year's HOPE Award competition. The information booth will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. for balloting at 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
The finalists are Allan Giger, associate professor of political science; Edwynna Pfeiffer, associate professor of business and instruction; J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business; Jean Pyffer, associate professor of physical education; and Peter Turk, acting assistant professor.
The HOPE Award winner will be announced Nov. 6 at halftime of the KU-Iowa game on November 9.
The Jayhawk College Quiz Bowl, a battle of wits between KU living groups, will be at 7 each night from Nov. 1 to 5. Elimination games on Wednesday and the final round will be Friday.
A person seated in a wheelchair is inside a car. The wheelchair has large wheels and a seat. The person appears to be wearing a sleeveless top with a plaid pattern.
The HOPE Award and Higher Education Service Awards will be presented during halftime of the KU-Iowa State game Saturday, Nov. 6. A reception honoring the winners and finalists will be the game in the Kansas Room of the Union.
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Wescoe will speak at the Higher Education Week banquet at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 7, in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Wheelchair lift
Ed Chalk, Topeka graduate student, pulls his wheelchair into his car for the trip back to Topeka Chalk drives a car, with special controls, to KU every Monday and Wednesday for classes.
Cripple's life pace slow but persistent
By BETH GREENWALD
Staff Writer
Chalk, a graduate student in social welfare. is a quadripliegic.
Getting dressed in the morning, making the bed and driving to school—the seemingly mundane items of a daily routine—aren't mandate as far as Ed
Chalk's wheelchair is made especially for him; he didn't want a replacement. He also refuses to use an electric wheelchair, would deny him much-needed exercise.
"I DON'T WANT to get fat and lazy," Chalk said yesterday.
Although Chalk is medically termed a quadriplegic, he does have some use of his hands. His motor muscles can be completely paralyzed and holders aren't completely paralyzed.
This allows Chalk to write, drive a car and feed himself.
Chalk rarely asks his professors to make allowances for him. Although he may ask a teacher to speak slower so that he can take notes, Chalk prefers to copy another student's notes on his own time.
Chalk commutes from Topeka in a car especially designed for him. Hand controls, in place of foot pedals, enable him to drive. However, it takes him an extra 20 minutes to get in and out of the car.
CHALK BECAME a quadriplegic at age 17, after diving into a wading pool. He spent the next seven months in a hospital undergoing a comprehensive program involved eight hours of occupational and physical therapy each day.
"It was sort of like a prison term," Chark said.
Chalk, now 30, says he has adjusted to life in *n* wheelchair.
His body flexibility has improved,he said,and most importantly,so has his mental state.
Chalk said he never wanted to spend
his life in bed watching television and doing crossword puzzles.
AFTER GETTING a degree in sociology at Emporia Kansas State College, Chalk went to work as a social worker at the University of Tennessee Neurological Institute in Topeka.
Getting a job wasn't easy, he said.
Several times he would go to apply for a job only to find that the building had no elevator
Chalk said his being hired at the Neurological Institute was more luck that anything—the Institute needed a worker and it also had an elevator.
Chalk said he thought that in the last few years KU had become more aware of the problems of the handicapped. Curb cuts, ramps and specially designed bathrooms have been added to KU in the past two years, he said.
HOWEVER, CHALK doesn't attribute this new-found concern for the handicapped to the good intentions of some veterans, or to veterans, those who returned in wheelchairs, created a new awareness of the problems of the handicapped,
"If left on their own, KU wouldn't do anything. The handicapped must accept the unwillingness of people to change the environment to make things easier, because it's too expensive," he said.
Often the handicapped don't know their rights, Chalk said.
CHALK'S DESIRE to be a social worker springs in part from his own experience. The social worker responsible for his case after the accident that paralyzed him was 'off the beam.' Chalk said. That made him realize that more competent people were needed.
Chalk's day-to-day routine is completely different from a person not in a wheelchair. Everything he does takes longer and he must be in a correct position to do it. Even washing his bends becomes a chore.
Chalk gets up at 5:30 every morning—extra early—just to prepare for his day. By 9 p.m. he is ready for bed.
Uncertain future seen for malpractice laws
Staff Writer
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ
The effect of 1978 medical malpractice insurance laws in Kansas will be decided with time and court decisions. Meanwhile, physicians and doctors at the KU Medical Center seem to be tolerating malpractice insurance rates.
One law, in effect since July, made it mandatory to have basic malpractice liability coverage to practice medicine in Kansas. It also established a health care stabilization fund to pay damages exceeding a doctor's basic coverage.
The basic coverage insures a doctor up to $100,000 for each incident or $300,000 annually in malpractice suits. The fund will pay for medical damages exceeding the doctor's coverage.
THE FUND IS financed by a 45 per cent surcharge of a doctor's annual premium. Health care providers will pay at least a 40 per cent surcharge until $5 million accumulates in the account. In 10 years, the account is to level off at $10 million.
The law's success in controlling malpractice rates is uncertain. A legislative committee will study the effects over the next two years.
But the law's effect is also hazy because of questions of its constitutionality.
LEE DUNN, legal counsel to the Med
Counsel, told me week that the law was
unconstitutional.
"There's a big difference between making insurance available to everyone and telling them, 'You must buy it.'" he said. "I don't think the state can require that a physician or anybody else buy an insurance policy to practice medicine in the state."
"I insurance has nothing to do with professional competence. The state has no right to say you have to spend your money some place."
A case testing the law's constitutionality is now before the courts. Byron Laggett, a Great Bend general, refused to purchase a courtroom at the federal courthouse ago. The attorney general's office has filed
ACCORDING TO John Martin, first assistant attorney general, the doctor has said he resented paying insurance and a surrcharge because he felt he was just financing insurance for less competent doctors. Liggett has been without malpractice insurance for about the last six years, he said.
The constitutionality of mandatory insurance in Kansas is just one of several similar cases across the country, Martin said. A Kentucky state court recently ruled that mandatory malpractice insurance and not all state were unconstitutional, he said.
a lawsuit against him. The doctor hasn't been sued from practicing whilst his is spending.
Other parties, including the Kansas Medical Society, may be intervening in the Laggget case. Martin said the intervening groups were interested in getting answers to additional questions raised in the case so questions could be decided in one lawsuit.
Kansas doesn't want to lose its doctors, he said. In some cases, doctors have moved to states with lower insurance rates or have retired early.
The legislation was meant to prevent conditions such as those in California and on the East Coast where doctors were closing their offices. But it's not likely to pay the insurance premiums, Ward said.
MORE THAN HALF of the states have higher premiums than Kansas does, according to David McDonell, a representative for St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company, St. Paul, Minn. Paul's insures the Med Center doctors.
Med Center doctors are charged according to their fields of specialization. There are seven categories of specialization, which range from class one, general practitioners who do no surgery, to neurosurgeons and orthopedic surgeons.
The insurance company also charges according to the number of years a policy is in force.
pay gradually increasing premiums for five years. After five years, premium costs would change only with the number and size of malpractice claims in the state each year.
MCDONELL SAID that after five years the majority of malpractice claims would have surfaced, and the company would have a better idea of which premium to charge each year. In the first five years, there are lower premiums and fewer claims it often takes years to illicit problems with alleged malpractice incidents.
If the company seems to be overcharging after a certain year, McDonell said, the rates can be lowered. He said premiums and rates lowered in North Carolina and Virginia.
Doctors are classified by the degree of risk in their speciality, McDonnell said. Those that involve surgery are generally considered to involve more risk, he said.
Georgia always has something new cooking
By DOUG LAMBORN
Tuesday it was rice florentine.
In the past it has been Russian chow-
chow, knickerbocker, and Rockwood
cream-of-vegetable.
"She has a way of combining unusual ingredients so that it tastes really good," Nikki DeCancia, a cashier at the cafeteria, said yesterday.
Those names were conjured up by Margarete Georgia for the homemade soups she began creating about a year ago and used in the cook for the Kansas Union cafeteria.
"ONE DAY, I started making homemade soup and they fell in love with it," Georgia, a Union employee since 1944, said.
"I start out with the book," she said about her rec.'nes, "and I wind up on my own."
Georgia said she had always enjoyed cooking.
"It just comes natural to me. I'm from a big family and I had to do the cooking. I love it."
Georgia's homemade soups are made for the cafeteria, the delicatessen, the salad bar and the restaurant-style Prairie Room.
"Spinch, rice and onions," the server said, pointing her big spoon toward a tray. "If you don't like spinach, you'll learn to like it."
A student going through the cafeteria line Tuesday asked what was in that day's soup.
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"THERE'S A LOT of things you can add to this canned stuff. You've got to add more stuff to it to make it taste like anything."
On football game days, when soup is made for alumni donors to the athletic corporation, she makes it in a 60-gallon not.
But her homemade soups draw the most comments. A Union jankor used the term "supercolossal." A server leaned toward the counter as if confiding and
Georgia's homemade touch also extends to the canned foods she uses—mostly vegetables.
whispered, "I haven't tasted one that isn't really good."
GEORGIA ENT the only one in her family who is familiar with cooking. Her husband, Archie, ran the Michigan Street Barbecue for years, but retired a few years ago because of a poor heart condition. Georgia said that when she started her studio in 32 years ago to 1,000 people come through during the lunch hour.
"we came in at four o'clock in the morning then," she said.
Now, she said, with several more eating places in the Union and in Wescoe Hall, fewer people come by.
Georgia said she didn't think students had changed over the years.
Georgia said she enjoyed serving behind the counter when the cooking didn't keep her in the kitchen, because she got to see the students.
"They'll hollar at me when they come through the line. I was always easy to get over," she said.
THEY'RE JUST as friendly and they'll speak like they used to."
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
American Institute of Women's Health
Margarete Georgia runs the Union cafeteria kitchen
Nicholas Leo Hoffman, author and syndicated columnist for the Washington Post, will speak at 7:30 tonight in the University of Texas at Austin's SUA Forum's Electrons '78 program.
News columnist Von Hoffman to speak tonight
Before going to the Post in 1966, Von Hoffman worked for the Chicago Daily News. He has also been on the CBS television program "80 Minutes" in the "Point/Counterpoint" segment of the program.
He has written five books, including "We Are the People Our Parents Warned Us Against," "Leaf at the Post," and two books that make up the series, creator of the comic strip, "Dooebees."
Von Hoffman is known by his readers for his casual and liberal criticism of the Nazi regime.
Admission to the lecture is so cents.
There will be a press conference for Von Hoffman at 2 p.m. in the International Room of the Union.
A reception, sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi, the Society of Professional Journalists, will follow the program in the Centennial Room of the Union.
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Ferry captain near drunk
NEW ORLEANS--The captain of a Mississippi River ferry packed with early morning commuters was "almost legally drunk" when his craft collided with a boat in the city.
New Orleans coroner Frank Minyard said the drinking coupled with fatigue, impaired the captain's judgment and ability to handle his vessel.
The ferry George Prince and the Norwegian tanker Frosta collided at dawn last Wednesday as the smaller craft made the 10-minute crossing from Dreshtan to Tromsø.
Uncertainty clouds talks
GENEVA—The Rhodesian drama enters a new and maybe final phase today when black nationalist leaders meet Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith on an equal basis for the first time. They will carry the assurance that white mastersy is on its way out in their homeland.
But on the eve of a laboriously organized settlement conference, Smith's white minority government betrayed no readiness to swiftly or easily yield the control it has exercised for 11 years. The basic black-white disagreement over the conference's purpose remained unresolved.
F15s added in Europe
WASHINGTON — Reacting to a Soviet airpower buildup, the Pentagon yesterday announced a major increase in U.S. fighter plane strength in Western Europe, where Russia has been struggling.
Starting early next year, the air Force will boost its strength in the NATO area by a net of 43 fighters when it adds Fils in West Germany and additional swinger
This will be the first significant increase in U.S. airpower in Europe in about nine years. The Air Force withdrew four squadrons to totalize 94 F-4 Phantom jets back to headquarters.
Sen. Gurney acquitted
ORLANDO, Fla. — A federal jury yesterday found former Sen. Edward Gurney, foul, not guilty of a charge of 18 years to a 1974 jury about a mass political problem.
The verdict ended three years of investigation and prosecution for Gurney, 62,
the first senator indicted in office in 50 years.
Gurney had been charged with lying to the grand jury about his knowledge of a crime in which his subpoena was issued. Gurney's name by permission, he was sworn in with the Federal Housing Administration.
Ford, Carter continue east
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ford administration spokesmen said yesterday that the government underspent its budget by $7.6 billion in the last three months. That amount contributed of whether the administration has contributed to the recent economic slowdown.
The total staffing in government spending was 1.4 billion for the nine-month period, up from 1.2 million.
U.S. underspends by $7.6 billion
A major share of the underspending in the past nine months occurred in the Defense Department, which spent $3.8 billion less than it had spent the previous remainder of the spending shortfall was
Although at first glance a reduction in government spending may seem like good news, it can hurt the private economy and make workers less than it said it would. This may mean lower output, profits and employment throughout the economy.
Upon his arrival, Ford told reporters he has "significantly reduced the power and energy" of the station.
He repeated the contention, expressed in a campaign speech broadcast the night before in Illinois, that his administration was significantly different from Nixon's because "there's no pomp, there's no ceremony, there's no dictatorial authority."
distributed throughout government agencies.
By the Associated Press
Administration budget agency officials were unable to say why the spending slowdown was so important, they said it was not surprised and cerned about it because it wasn't expected.
Carter rode in an open-top limoisun down Fifth Avenue in New York City, smiling and waving at the large noon-hour crowd as he arrived. Drifted down from skyscraper windows.
While Jimmy Carter and President Gerald Ford may disagree about many things, they apparently agree during this final campaign week on where the crucial votes are. For the second day, they campaigned yesterday within a few miles of each other, Ford in New Jersey and Carter in New York.
Buoyed by the size of the crowds, estimated by Secret Service agents at more than 50,000, Carter told a rally in the city's Garment District, "this is an absolutely incredible confidence in confidence in New York City, confidence in the future and confidence in one another."
Ford flew to Atlantic City, N.J., and appeared to be campaigning as much against Richard Nixon, his Republican predecessor, as against Carter.
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As they flew east after campaigning Tuesday in Chicago suburbs, Carter's Peanut one jet passed Air Force One, the presidential plane, over Cleveland.
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Ford told reporters in New Jersey that he had transferred much of the authority held by the White House staff under Nixon to Clinton. The president now White House now performs its function as set up by the Constitution. An imperial presidency is not my idea of the office."
It was one of the hardest references Ford has made to the presidency of the man who named Ford vice president and whom Ford pardoned for any Watergate crimes.
COOKE
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Paid for by the Douglas County Democratic Central Committee Hal Keltz, Chairman
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Speaker: Dr. Bill Roy
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L
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 28, 197b
3
Malpractice laws
From page one
their risk class and initial and mature premiums a year ago.
vice
$ 218
357
576
753
930
1,107
1,462
Fifth-year
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810
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THAT'S WHY neurosurgical, orthopedic surgeons and cardiovascular surgeons are named after the first person to work there.
He said it was hard to tell whether rates in Kansas had increased or decreased because the system of figuring rates changed in time period. The rates previously were an estimate of future claims instead of a charge based on claims in the current year.
The state insurance department is gathering new information, but its most recent report finds that the number of
It isn't known how many malpractice suits are pending against doctors at the Med
--the fund, he said, but it is hoped that insurance rates eventually will level off.
Center. All the data haven't been compiled by the attorney general's office.
AN INSURANCE policy examiner said that one out of every 18 licensed doctors in Kansas had a claim filed against him in the case of a misapplication of the frequency of claims, he said.
A motorcade carrying local Democratic candidates and digitallists will roll into downtown Pittsburgh.
After runs through downtown Lawrence
and past the residence halls on Daisy Hill,
the caravan will drive campus on
March 8. It starts at 11:20 a.m. in front of the Kansas Union.
Democratic caravan to visit KU campus
Hal Kelz, chairman of the Douglas County Democratic Central Committee, said yesterday that Bill Roy, the 1974 democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, organia Docking, mother of former governor Robert Docking, would spouse at the rally.
Keltz said the caravan would also include local Democratic candidates Mike Glover, state representative from the 44th district; Arnold Berman, candidate for state senator from the 2nd district; Carol Francis, state representative from the 45th district; I. J. Stoneback, county commissioner from the 3rd district; Ruth Vervynn, county commissioner; Huske, candidate for Douglas County sheriff; Sue Neusftier, register of deeds for Douglas County; and Mike Malone, candidate for Douglas County attorney.
KEITH SCHMEDEMANN, administrator in the department of surgery, said he thought insurance premiums had increased from last year by 25 to 40 per cent. Doctors pay the 45 per cent fund surcharge in addition to the rate increase.
George Burket, Med Center family practice physician, said he was surprised that the insurance provider had paid $17.50 for malpractice insurance in 1954. The coverage was only for $5,000 an incident and $7,500 annually, he added. "That all was the coverage they needed them."
Keltz said that if the weather was bad, the rally would be under the canopy west of the
Although there are 5,400 licensed doctors in Kansas, it is estimated that only 2,400 actively practice. The difference in number of doctors who have returned or moved.
Doctors should be forced to have malpractice insurance just as people are required to have insurance for workers. Barket said. Doctors are paying more now, especially because they are contributing to
TWO PHYSICIANS in the top risk classes, who asked not to be identified, and a plastic surgeon, all agreed that malpractice inhibited their ability to rate the rates they paid were reasonable.
Burket said he didn't know whether the malpractice laws were successful or even constitutional, but that something had to be done about the malpractice problem.
The cost of malpractice insurance in some places reached $15,000 a year, he said. A doctor just starting a practice can’t afford the minute he opens his door, he said.
Also, a lot of insurance companies were refusing to write new policies, leaving doctors in some states with no insurance at all. The other state had problems, doctors had to go to other states.
KANSAS DOEEN'T have insurance rates as high as some states, Burket said, because it is largely a rural area where physicians have better communication with their patients and patients are less frustrated.
When people are frustrated, he said, they might sue whether the action is warranted
But he said that Kansans really weren't the type to look around for people to sue. In California, he said, there are a lot of suits over everything.
KU provides holiday fun
As visions of the Great Pumpkin dance in their heads, several Lawrence children will be entertained by KU students at Halloween parties today through Sunday.
The Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and the Delta Delta Sigma sorority have planned a charity Halloween party from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday at Broken Arrow Park. The students will entertain children from Cordley School.
The Phi Kappa Theta fraternity and the Chi Omega security are having a Halloween party for about 20 Ballard Center children at 7 onight in Phi Kappa Theta's basement.
The St. Lawrence Catholic Center is also sponsoring a Halloween party for Ballard Center children from 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday at the center.
The Omega Fa Pi fraternity is sponsoring a party from 5 to 7 p.m., tomorrow at the Ballard Community Center. The Omega Fa Pi planning plan children's activities at the center.
McCollum Hall students have planned a carnival to raise money for the United Way Fund from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday in their cafeteria. Each floor and wing is sponsoring booths such as fortune-telling, palm-reading and a slave auction.
Art display closes soon
Local patrons of American art have the opportunity today and tomorrow to view original art works by some well-known American artists.
A traveling art exhibit, "American Artists" View of America," is on display through tomorrow at the Lawrence Art Center, Ninth and Vermont streets.
Art works, dating from 1817 to 1974, include watercolors, lithographs, woodcuts and painting by such artists as John Hancock, John Marsh, Grant Rockwell and Wockert King.
The Lawrence Art Center is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Friday.
The exhibit was organized by Dolo KU Division of Continuing Education and Spooner Art Museum, opened March 6 in Lawrence and has since toured Kansas for seven months before it returned to Lawrence yesterday.
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University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer.
No time for politics
Gov. Robert Bennett began budget hearings this week for fiscal 1978. The governor was his usual cautious self, which is good and bad.
State agencies are requesting $1.9 billion from state funds, a 9.8 per cent increase over the fiscal 1977 budget. The requests would require that $125 million be spent from the state general funds, a 15 per cent increase from this fund.
THE GOOD statement the governor made was that he would cut the requests until they could be financed without an increase in general state taxes. Bennett said that the increase in spending from the general fund would be held to 5 per cent.
There are some areas that need help, such as prisons and the enforcement of health standards in nursing homes, but overall the state's needs aren't great. Also, the people have made it clear that they don't want to leave Bennett, is responding to their wishes.
The governor's statement seems reasonable and responsive. Kansas doesn't have great problems. Pollution and crime don't threaten the state much, and unemployment is still quite low. The state already has increased aid to poorer school districts to help insure an adequate education.
UNFORTUNATELY, Bennett used the occasion to attack Democrats and their proposals, which he would add $70 million to the state budget if apportioned; the remarks are unfortunate because they are partisan and misleading.
The budget hearings should be a time to put politics aside and truly try to
The governor was misleading by saying that the Democrats' proposals would increase spending $70 million. He also presumably taxed actual tax reforms, not new programs.
THE PROPOSALS Bennett referred to were raising the personal exemption on state income taxes, removing the sales tax on food and drugs, and increasing the homestead property tax exemption. Bennett estimated these proposals would reduce state revenue $68.5 million.
It is unfair for Democrats to make such proposals without saying where the money to replace this revenue would come from. But it is also unfair for Bennett to dismiss such proposals without even considering them.
These proposals aren't harmful tax loopholes. Rather, they would greatly help the poor and those on fixed incomes by increasing their buying power. And the revenue lost could be made up by raising the rates for some taxes. This wouldn't really be a tax increase—the people of the state would pay the same amount of money. It would just make the poor pay less of that total.
Bennett's conservatism is good in that he thinks twice before spending the state's money. It is bad in that he doesn't even think once about making taxes more equitable just because the proposals come from his opponents.
By Greg Hack
Contributing Writer
Whenever I read of world food shortages, rising food prices or the plight of American farmers plagued by faulty government policies and price-cost squeezes, I remember a terse reminder that several years ago on our ranch in western Kansas.
One day I took a cold beer to one of our middle-aged adults, and they were large, dusty wheat field. While he paused to drink his beer, I told him about the race rids in which Martin Luther King's death
Farmers deserve a break
"THEM CITY people have never cared about us and how well we get along and they never will," he said. "Let 'ern knock themselves out. I don't care."
That may have been an especially dim appraisal $ ^{c} $ the relationship of our country's population, but that farmhand has even more right to feel that way today. The United States' agricultural policies and attitudes have forced thousands of farmers to work in the last 20 years. Those that remain face an uncertain future.
Look at Douglas County's 870 farmers. Only 178 of them have been successful or lucky enough to work in the county time. According to Earl Van Meter, Douglas County extension agent, three-fourths of the farmers have either full- or part-time farm incomes. They work as janitors, factory workers and University employees. Their vacations, weekends and much of their time go to their small farms.
WHY DO they do it? It certainly isn't because they're getting a fair return on their investment of time and money.
Van Meter says county farmers need to get $3.06 a bushel for corn or wheat with a yield of at least 35 bushels an acre. This year's drought caused average yields to drop to 18 bushels to accept the weather as part of the age-old gamble of farming.
What is most frustrating to them is that the cost of running
John Fuller Contributing Writer
a farm has risen inoxerably while returns have diminished. Fuel and fertilizer prices have doubled or triple since 1972. Yet, if a farmer took his crop to the Douglas County Co-op to sell it he would get about $2.46 a bushel for his wheat or $2.46 for his corn.
Can you believe that in 1961 the price for wheat on Nov. 27 was $2.33 a "bushel"? It's true! Except for the landmark years of the big Russian wheat deal in 1973/74, when prices rose over the mark, the price of wheat had remained in the $1.90 to $3.00 range in the last quarter century.
LIVESTOCK breeders and dairymen are in similar straits. The annual $145 average maintenance cost of a beef cow is about $90, but about $140 today. It costs 45 cents to add a pound of beef to a feeder calf that will bring 37 cents a pound. Ten years ago the average cost for the Mid-America Dairy Producers Coop, a regional organization that represents dairymen and distributes their products, was about the cost-price squeeze of low milk prices and high operating costs.
To add insult to injury, the farmers and cattlemen and their families go to the same market. They swell their dwellers do and pay the same high prices for the products that they are paid so miserably for. Only in 1973 was the farmer's share equal to his urban counterpart.
there are 11,000 members. The rest were forced to quit.
The only way farmers have survived is by becoming more efficient and by tightening their belts. Each U.S. farmer feeds 400 acres of farmland, or about a per cent of the population to feed our country compared with 40 per cent or more in the developing countries. Yet, if given the proper price incentives, our farmers could reach 50 per cent without clearing additional lands.
SET ASIDE the problems of the American farmer for a moment and look at how his plight fits into the world view. A man cane, illogical and grossly insensitive the world's governments are in dealing with food policies and problems. Nearly half of the world's population is under the allowance to some degree.
There are seventy-six million extra mouths to feed each year, which require 28 million metric tons of additional grain to feed these mouths. As consumers fret about high prices (even though they spend
only 14 per cent of their income on food, compared with 20 to 70 per cent in the rest of the world) die every day of gyration
A hungry world will never have peace, and the situation can only get more potentially explosive as the population increases. We can be marked by the year 2000. Obviously there is a limit to how many people the earth can feed and support. But there could be enough food for all if the population began to stagnate in the mid-1980s. We certainly the capability to feed everyone now.
WHAT MUST be done? To begin with, the urban masses who carry such clout at the polls and in the media must be made aware of what they are carrying the cities on their backs any longer. Wry should they be asked to sacrifice when every time a city worker gets disassured he goes on strike? Or would he happen if farmers went on strike?
Other countries, such as Japan, ensure that farmers' incomes match those of city dwellers who realize they require a lot of agriculture. America should be able to do the same. If food prices go up, we'll just be joining the rest of the world. We must be sure that we don't have to wait in lines for meat or cheese.
Secondly, governmental economic polices should be
designed to ensure that farmers aren't at the mercy of a wildly fluctuating market situations and are better prepared, according to James A. McCain, Kansas secretary of labor, this might require some system of price supports or target prices and even direct subsidies for farmers developing countries. If America's farmers are to contribute to the solution of the world food problem, they must produce more and more. To do so they must be rewarded better.
OTHER COUNTRIES could help also. Even though grain is very cheap now, many nations that have complained bitterly for years about high prices and grain scarcity and that have lost a lot of their grain reserves, haven't taken advantage of the opportunity to buy. With the world crop situation looking fairly good this year, the have-not nations are content to let America and its farmers get the bill for storing it. This lack of storage space by the way, is now depressing prices even more.)
There is so much to be done.
It's sickening and absurd for people to be hungry when it's cold. That's what makes the start that shouldn't be too hard for the public to accept would be to give the farmer an even consider what's happening now, so it will得 worse if we don't.
WHITE HOUSE
1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES
Stock campaign story might save reporters
By JERRY SEIB Staff Writer
Campaign 76 has dragged on for what seems to be an eternity. This is distressing for the average American, who heve
But consider the poor political reporter. He has been filing stories on the presidential campaign since the first primary in New Hampshire—if not before.
By now, he's looking for a break. There's little new he can say, anyway. The two candidates give the same answers to questions, and a reporter's stories are rather predictable by now.
To make the reporter's job easier in these last days, it might be helpful for him to write a multiple choice campaign story. By circling the catch-all phrase that typifies a day's events, the reporter can tell us easily and pessibly听 us about the same as we've been hearing in recent weeks.
For example, the multiple choice campaign story might read:
President Gerald Ford yesterday:
a. lashed out at his Democratic opponent.
c. make absolutely no difference.
b. lose Ford the votes of the Poles, Czechs, blacks and Donny Osmond fans.
Observers think this development will:
b. called on Americans to unite behind him and Tony Orlando.
a. assure Ford of victory in November.
Ford sounded his traditional campaign themes and called Jimmy Carter: a. *a. ruthless, no-government* attitude, which will probably make George Meany secretary of defense.
b. "one of the worst singers I've ever seen . . . er, heard." c. "a guy who I've heard people talk about but who I haven't really thought much about."
Newsmen accompanying Ford;
a. said the day represented a new, tough stand for the President and probably meant Donny Osmond Poles and Donny Osmond fans.
c. fell asleep on the bus and missed the whole thing.
Meanwhile, Jimmy Carter:
a. lashed out at his opponent.
b. softened his criticism.
c. granted an exclusive interview to Mad magazine.
It was a move designed to:
a. show he wouldn't back down
b. the verbal abuse that Tony Orlando has been dishing out.
c. "a lot like Mr.Klutz."
b. win the votes of Michigan football fans.
c. please Alfred E. Neumann.
Carter said Ford was;
b. "a nice guy with a sweet family."
a. "sinking to the lowes levels of lowness that have been suck in to quite some time, even if the water is a billion of sinking to low levels."
c. a lot like Mr. Klutz.
Newsmen accompanying
Carter:
a. made fun of Carter's smile.
b. played softball with some Secret Service agents while Carter spoke.
c. fell asleep and missed the whole thing.
Independent candidate Eugene McCarthy meanwhile said he;
a. hoped he could debate Ford, Carter and some former POWs.
b. wanted to visit some more college campuses.
c. demanded that his name be put on the Afghanistan ballot. Observers said voters:
a. shouldn't take the day's developments seriously.
b. would react by electing Pat Paulsen.
c. probably wouldn't really care.
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 must not be signed; KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
Networks squeezing local stations into pipelines
When the government raised the antitrust question vis-a-vis the television networks during the Nixon years, there was so much feeling the motive was political that the Federal Communications Commission couldn't nurture the matter.
Now it has been raised again by the Westinghouse Broadcasting Co., which is saying, "The networks dominate the
television industry. They exercise effective control over most of the time on affiliated stations; they influence overall advertising rates and practices; they absorb a disproportionate share of revenue and profit, and they have a major impact on economic conditions in the industry.
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 12, 2016. Subscriptions for June and July and at杰克星期六, Saturday and Holiday Monday, August 12, 2016. Subscrip-
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"The total effect of the action
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Johan Gung
Managing Editor
Edward J. Editor
Managing Editor
Stephen W.
Cameron Editor
Stephen W.
Cameron Editor
Business Manager Team Manager
Assistant Business Manager Carole Roosterkoehler
Associate Advertising Manager Jannelle Jaramey
Associate Marketing Manager
WITH FIVE major market TV stations (Philadelphia, Boston, Pittsburgh, San Francisco and Baltimore), the three most important of the chains not owned by networks.
News Adviser Publisher Bob Giles David Dary
The company has a reputation in the industry as a schlock outfit of no distinction, but it does not interfere with the networks—one or another of its stations are affiliated with all three of them don't arise out of anguish over the poor quality of our products and services and of a healthy desire for profit.
and practices is inconsistent with the spirit of the antitrust laws."
The Westinghouse complaint, recently lodged with the Federal Communications Commission, explains why it is so difficult for a local station to connect with some of some kind of reasonable limits.
That doesn't make what Westinghouse is charging less valid, merely less heroic.
The company says that local stations are given previews of the shows the networks are presenting before they are to be aired that
a station manager doesn't have the time to find a substitute and promote it sufficiently to hope to get an audience.
The complaint also alleges that local stations are finding it
The argument also can be made that, when the agencies instead of any three network offices controlled program production, the simple multiplicity of sources en-
Nicbolas Von Hoffman
(c) 1974 King Features Syndicate
DURING THE heyday of radio and through the 1950s, the networks in effect sold blocks of the time to advertising agencies that produced the shows, hired the stars and had responsibility for much that went on the air.
more and more difficult to buy substitute material that isn't directly or indirectly controlled by the networks.
The complaints about this system were many and varied. The ad agencies cranked out an ineffable amount of dull junk, less than less violent, old脱 re-ons from the graa of Perry Mason.
But credit may not belong with the agencies, only with the courts. But you don't have tolerated the sort of programs routinely aired now.
couraged variety and the possibility of quality.
WITHOUT buying the argument that letting the ad agencies control program content would improve it, the problem of power to the three networks consolidates the dissemination of identical monochromatic material and reduces the possibility of local stations having any unique or different contribution.
Whatever the reasons, drama and entertainment on TV 20 years ago was sometimes extraordinarily good.
“If this is allowed to continue, local affiliated stations will ultimately perform functions not derived from cable TV outlets.”
"The networks are trying to change local stations into more extensions of the national network program pipeline," the Westinghouse petition to the FCC alleges.
"Each year local affiliated stations have less involvement in and responsibility for the totality of the programming offered to the public IN THE FACILITIES TO THEIR COMMUNITIES.
The immediate shape of this quarrel concerns the probability that the networks to be opened to users evening news programs soon.
What Westinghouse fears is that the extra half-hour won't come out of prime time but out of our own local stations for their own news.
According to Westinghouse, such a change would increase network profits by $75 million a year and respond loss to local stations.
This, coupled with the revenues the networks get from the stations they own, would give ABC, CBS and NBC more than half the revenues of the entire industry to go along with their control of over two-birds of the air time.
LOCAL station owners have been so bad, so cheap, so vulgarly reactionary they have worked our works look like the good guys.
Nevertheless, you don't even have to be as smart as Spiro Agnew to realize that, whether they're good guys or rotten eggs, having three networks and at most a few hundred people to tell you news and entertainment is inherently to dangerous.
It's not easy to defend these characters, but no one ever said that the advantages and safeguarded attached to digital control are decentralized control are either obvious or instantly apparent.
Westinghouse wants the Congress or the FCC to give local stations help to balance between them and the networks.
This might protect Westinghouse's profits against network encoachment. It might also decrease the amount of police drama violence, but it wouldn't open up the industry much and it certainly wouldn't encourage that diversity of
voices that the theory says a democracy ought to have.
THERE are many ways that could be done in this industry, where government power has been used to create the three network informational oligodvy.
Networks could be forbidden to own television stations. No station could be allowed to broadcast more than three hours of material a day from the office, or making the commercial base for two or three new competing networks.
The present structure could be left intact, but all the legal barriers to pay-TV, most of which have been fostered by outfits like Westinghouse working in cabbies with the company. Now is the time to reduce and decentralize network power.
We're in a full, a quiet period. If it isn't done now, the next Agnew may do it in a manner we might not like. or the next moment, we could vanage vantages of centralized broadcast control for extrasociational government, may just tell them what to say.
Thursday, October 28, 1976
5
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Reviewer
Dance troupe energetic, sensual
By GIFFORD BOOTH
Energy: impulse, bounce, fall, swing,
pause, movement and Louis Falcon.
The University of Kansas was treated to a full and dynamic evening last night when Lous Falco and his company of five dancers performed in Hoch Auditorium. The three pieces performed by this innovative troupe were inspired by the dance dances provided not only stimulating visual and physical sensations, but also an intimate look at each of the performers.
"We're people, not dancers," Falco said in his master class Tuesday night. And thAt was apparent in the dancers' work. Although they were technically very young, deadpan puppets. There were breathing, no human beings moving in and around space.
The first piece, "B-Mine," choreographed by Juan Antonio, a member of the company, was a perfect warmup for the dancers and for the audience. It was performed one of
Keith Jarret's improvised piano solos. When you listen to Jarret's music, you are allowed to enter his lines of thought, and then ask what Antonia did with his movements.
Each dancer ambiled onto the stage and eventually began a series of movements. Patterns emerged as dancers came together in twos and threes and then danced in pairs until they created when polished movements retreated into casual walking or standing.
Review
It was terrific to see the dancers loosen up, their breathing growing heavier and more powerful. They became more and more excited and involved with the dance. That sensuality has always been the most exciting difference between modern dance and very proper ballet.
"The Sleepers," the second piece, choreographed by Falco, continued with the idea of stream of consciousness dancing. The group was led by Falco and their own voices talking or barking. The company entered the stage in a soft blue light as Falco laced the stage with pillow
Parts of this dance occasionally seemed too long, but the rhythms were true to life. For a moment one of the dancers "lost his image" and the movement on stage, along with the audiences' minds, went fuzzy until the image was retained.
From a sleeping heap, the six members talked, sang and danced through dreamlike
childhood fantasies into psycho-sexual adult fantasies.
game of "what-if." What if the stage were full of foam rubber sharks? What if one dancer bounced several others as if they were balls? What if your arms started rotating uncontrollably? Where would that energy take you?
The last dance, "Caviar," was Falco's
was danced with such exuberance and endurance that a standing ovation was
That is how the dance appeared to be put together. As each new idea popped in and out, new patterns and shapes and variations of each were played with. This piece was
It was an important event for this University—to see these dances dance their hearts out, to see choreography so carefully executed that it appeared to be spontaneous and improvised, and to see that dancing can be a whole lot of fun.
'Somebody's Mother' is at Inge
By MERLE GOLDMAN
Staff Writer
A play about the residents of a nursing home might reinforce stereotypes about old people, but the comedy that will premiere in the William Inge Theatre tonight evokes a thoughtful mirth that counters any preconceived notions about the aged.
"Everyone is somebody's Mother (Someetime)," written by Donna Young, Dallas, Tex., graduate student, will be part of the William Ingle Theatre Series.
THE RESIDENTS of the nursing home take on old-age characteristics because the staff treat them like婴孩婴儿, but the students are older. The student, said. They are fed banana mash instead of solid food and threatened with sedation when they don't behave, he said.
Abe, played by Jerry Smith, Topeka special student, always quotes Abe Lincoln; Madieuolaise, played by Valerie Meyers, Overland Park senior, thinks she's speaking with the teacher; Tamarra and Marina, played by Tamara Zook, Wichita sophomore, shells imaginary peas.
BUT WHEN Baby Doll, played by Lambrinry Helen Hedge, Brooklyn, N.Y., graduate student, comes to the home to visit her husband, Abe, and is mistakenly locked in for the night by an aide, she shows that they are still free to be themselves.
According to Connors, "Everyone is Somebody's Mother (Sometime)" really means "we are all responsible for someone." The play is about the individual's responsibility to be himself and to help other people, he said.
One of the challenges of this play, Comensal said, is to portray old people with actors who were young.
characterized by a deep feeling for the enduring humanity of old people. He said that he never told the actors to "play old" and that he would let age develop out of a sense of character.
Connors' approach to this problem is
The production of "Somebody's Mother" is an entry in the American College Theatre Festival playwriting awards category. Another original play by Young, "Tinkerbell is Dead," was performed in Hassinger Hall in spring 1974.
unsold adult tickets on the day of the performances at the University Box Office in Murphy Hall. There are student tickets to the performances from Oct. 31 to Nov. 6.
Student tickets for the performances Oct.
29 and 30 are all taken who can学生 get
designed by Lambrihy Helen Hedge, Brooklyn, N.Y., graduate student, for all three acts. With only a few alterations, she said, this single set suggests the Garden of Eden, a medieval kingdom and the New York City skyline.
INOSKALDOSANTHONY'S
FOOLS N FOLLIES
DORESDOTHERS
FILM REPERTORY
Curtain time for the show is 8 p.m. Oct. 28,
29 and Nov. 6 and 2; 30 and nov. 7, MOV.
Hashinger Hall's musical 'The Apple Tree' to be
FILM REPERTORY
JH:PR:SM:AL:SPH
Residents of Hashinger Hall will cast an affectionate look at human ravishment when they perform a musical comedy, "The Weekend," the weekends of October 28-29 and Nov. 5-7.
Tickets are 50 cents and may be purchased at the door.
The comedy is a collection of three one-act musicals with a script and music by Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick, the authors of "Fiddler on the Roof."
HOPE
Attention Seniors:
FINAL BALLOTING
Vote HOPE Award
Wed., Oct. 27
and
Thurs., Oct. 28
9 a.m.—4 p.m.
Information Booth
Jayhawk Blvd.
FINAL BALLOTING!
Ane Abrams, New York City graduate student and director of "The Apple Trees," a program of the Cooper Union.
The first musical, based on Mark Twain's "Adam and Eve," is an updated look at man's first sin. The second is a spoon on grand opera, based on Frank Stockton's story, "Lady or the Tiger." The story is about a defament in a medieval kingdom who must choose between two doors to establish his inheritance. One hides a tiger, the third, "Passionella," is built around a Jules Feiffer cartoon and portrays the plight of a female chimney sweep who wishes she were a movie star.
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Enjoy eating good home cooked food at the Cornucopia Restaurant. Our recipes, dressings and breads are made from scratch. We use the best basic natural ingredients possible. Featuring this state's finest salad and fruit bar, plus a large selection of meats, crepes, and sandwiches for the discriminating appetite.
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Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358
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6
Thursday, October 28, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports Scene
Steve Schoenfeld
Sports Editor
1970
Nonstop Gloria will likely keep turning in her grave
First you must find Gloria Graves.
you must clear Gloria Graves,
"Try to leave room in Alicen Field
House," I was told.
No Gloria.
"Try her little cubbyhole where she keeps the equipment."
"Try the track. Maybe she's running around getting in shape for football."
FINALLY, I TRACKED her down. She was sitting at a desk in the woman's athletic room. "And then she broke
PETER HARRIS
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER Gloria Graves
whirlwind of energy has to wash the smelly volleyball uniforms, fold the field hockey skirts and ring out the towels the cross country team used as umbrellas.
Then she does her work on the track. Three 4095, two 2235, a couple sprints. Then she does some throwing. She must keep his pitching arm in shape for football. Finally, I gave him the ball and he played football player turned softball pitcher putted equipment manager must get tired.
"SURE, ALL THE time," she said. "But I have to keep on going."
But Gloria, couldn't you participate in only one activity?
"Not again," she said. "When I came here after going to John F. Kennedy College in Wahoo, Neb., for a year and a ball, I was 14, and then I went to Tampa. Im- 3d, 140, and then I was 185-190.
"I had previously had a desk job and I just sat around. I trained and Irained weight."
Graves went on a crush diet, but not one you can buy from Weight Watchers.
"TO GET DOWN where I was at a reasonable weight, it took six months," she said. "But it wasn't from a crash diet. It was from training."
Graves was training for softball. That was her sport. She was through with basketball—at least on the intercollegiate level.
"I gave up basketball because the seasons overlap and I'm on scholarship for softball."
Graves has been a highly successful pitcher for the KU softball team. In fact, last year she fired 21½ consecutive innings of no-hit ball. She also hurled several other home runs and hit two jaunkys to a 21-2 regular season record and a berth in the College World Series.
SHE HAS A wicked fastball. When she winds up and swirls the ball underhand, she KO's more batters than Betty Crocker. But she can attribute her success to her natching speed.
“At first a lot of people are afraid or overwhelmed with my speed,” she said, “but they get used to it. I have to use my change-up and curve or I'm not effective. The main thing is the ball moves. If the ball comes in straight with a lot of speed, people can hit it. If it's coming in fast, it's going to out go faster. The pitches have to move.”
GRAVES DECIDED she wanted to do more than just play softball, especially if she could find *w something that paid. She asked about the possibility of being the women's equipment manager, even though I knew it wouldn't be the most enjoyable job.
"Somebody's go to do it," she said. "I don't even think about all the dirt and grime I have to deal with. I don't even look at it that way.
"But there are bad days, especially when it’s really nice out. It’s really hard for me to wear a shirt."
Graves doesn't have any aspirations of being an equipment manager.
"IDON'T have any desire of spending my time in the equipment room," the senior from Topeka said. "I started it because of these reasons and that's still why I'm doing it."
She also unim planning to try out for one of her professional softball teams when she joined the team.
"I have to get through this year," she said, applying the cliche about taking it one day at a time. "I am glad it's become clear that I don't know whether I'd be interested."
If she ever gets the time, she's discovered that being equipment manager can ever better help.
It's easier to throw a whole bunch of wrenches than the softball," she said, "but I'd do it better. I'm not a good swimmer."
Motion—nonstop—sums up Glorie Graves.
Top gymnast quits team
The KU men's gymnastics team lost its No. 1 all-around man Tuesday when Les Kerr quit the team.
Kerr is a junior from Lawrence and ranks fourth on the all-time KU all-around chart.
Kerr said he quit because of a difference of philosophies between him and coach Bob Lockwood.
THAT PROTEST, Marcks said, is necessary before his office can check to see if a particular player is ineligible. There are too many teams and too many players to pay closer attention to who is or isn't eligible, Marcks said.
Richard Marcs, intramural director at the University of Kansas, said yesterday that he wants to stop ineligible players from participating. The only way that the department is made aware of an eligible player, said, is when another team files a protest.
"We would have to require that people bring their ID's to all the games," Marcxs said. "Then we would have to have a picture and name check before each game. We believe that would take about a half-hour for each game.
The main reason that the intramural department doesn't check out the team members more thoroughly, he said, is an economic one.
WE ESSIMILLY don't have the money
WE SIMPLY should help the kid of
money
Marcks said that to carry out a photo-credit, he would have to cost his department about $4,500 a year.
"I can't see it right now as a proper expenditure of our money," he said.
"They" are the people in the intramural department. "It" is the people who are playing intramural sports when they are negligible or otherwise illegal participants.
"I have goals that I don't feel I can accomplish here," Kerr said. "I feel that I not getting what I need out of this program to become the kind of gymnast that I want to be."
SUA
FILMS
They know it's going on. They know it's probably湿滑顽硬. Yet they do little to worry.
KANSA CITY (AP)—Even without Nolan Cromwell, Kansas's winkle offense still leads the Big Eight Conference in team rush statistics.
He also said he would look for another school that could provide what he wants in gymnastics and academics.
KU leading in rushing
Running Scott McMichael and Mark Lissak in place of the injured Cromwell, the Jayhawks saw their average a game下 five yards last week, but their average of 315.7 is still better than runnerup Oklahoma's 267.9.
The most common form of ineligibility,
Iowa state leads in total offense, with a game average of 448.6 yards, trailed by Missouri with 413.9. By a slim margin, the Cyclones are top in scoring offense, with 33.6 points a game, six-tenths of a point better than Nebraska.
Iowa State, despite losing last week to Colorado, still leads the league in the three other offensive categories. In team passing the Cyclones raised their average from 178.8 yards to 185.6, with Nebraska second with 179.0.
But the Cornhuskers are still the dominant defensive team, holding the lead in rushing, total and scoring defense. Nebraska has been giving up an average of 95.3 yards on the ground while runnerup Oklahoma has yielded 150 a contest.
Surrealist Films of Hans Richter:
Richter, d. (1927)
(A chus Sonata for film)
Produced, designed, and directed by Hans Richter with Jean Riese Duchamp, Max Ernst, Jose Sarte, Jacqueline Matisse, Paul Bowles plus RHYTHMUS 21 (1928)
Richter, d. (1926)
GHOSTS BEFORE "BREAKFAST"
(1928)
FILM SOCIETY
With a 232.9 yard average Nebraska leads in total offense with Oklahoma again second best. In scoring defense, Nebraska's 12 points each game is trailed by Oklahoma's 12.
The Sooners lead in pass defense, allowing only 96 yards through the air each pick.
THE EXORCIST (197)
Dr. William Friedkin, with Elen
Burstyn, Jason Miller, Linda Blair
Miller, and Tom Duffield.
Sat, Oct 30, 7:00; Mar 7, 000;
Oct 30, 7:00; Mar 7, 000;
HALLOWEEN 3-D
POPULAR FILMS
By ROB RAINS
Sports Writer
Cheating flourishes in intramurals
EYES OF HELL plus shorts
BETTY BOOP'S RISE TO FAME
and Ub lwerks'
THE HEADLESS HORSEMAN
Friday Oct. 29 and 30
12:00 Midnight $1.00
Woodruff Auditorium
Woodruff Auditorium
SPECIAL
BEVERLY BRADLEY
1970
3rd District County Commissioner
Bov believes in . . .
—qualified people committing themselves
-cooperation between city and rural interests
—evaluating the issues responsibly
-planned growth for Douglas County
DO YOU?
Paid for hy Bradley for County Commissioner,
Pol. Adv. Gilbert Gillegs and Landkretch, Co-Chairmen
Marcks said, occurs when a player is playing for more than one team.
When a protest is filed, the intramural department checks the rosters of the teams involved and the scorecards for the games in question to see if a player did participate illegally. The offending team is then required to forfeit the game in which the
One infraction involved a fraternity that had two teams playing in the "B" league. One team made the play-offs, the other didn't. The team that made the play-offs added someone to their squad who had played for the other team during the regular season. Another team recognized the player, they protested the game and won the decision.
Sports
ineligible player was used, but there is usually no disdain secondary action taken against them.
If the rosters and score cards are in order, however, phone calls are made to the team managers involved. That usually is as far as need to go to clear up the situation, he said.
two protesters have been filed during the current football season and both have been upheld.
FOOTBALL ISN'T the only intramural sport in which questions of eligibility come up, Marcks said. He added that the question was far more relevant than the other sports in football than in the other sports.
Last spring, he said, a softball team was forced to foresee a play-off game because it had two members on its squad who had two players for another team during the regular season.
Hen Jendel, Olathe senior and a member of that team, said that he thought the use of ineligible players was widespread because the department had trying to enforce its rules.
Marcks said some of his concerns about eligibility would be included in recommendations he was making to the Recreation Advisory Board.
"TM ASKING them to come up with a
manual for a standard eligibility policy that
provides the information needed."
The last manual at KU that he was aware of, be said, was published in 1982, be said.
suf, he said, was published in 1882, he said. Another question that Marcks hopes the board will consider at its next meeting, scheduled for Nov. 11, is whether former KU athletes should be allowed to participate in intramurals.
There currently is no rule that prohibits them from playing, Marcks said, although there used to be a rule that excluded varsity letter winners in a particular sport from participating in that sport in the intramural program. That rule was abandoned, he said, because it was too hard to enforce and too impractical.
"If David Jaynes or Bobby Doughlas come to back from school it might be a different case."
SENIOR T.G.I.F.
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WHEN: Friday, Oct. 29, 3:30-6:00 p.m.
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1976
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Children's sizes $2.95 and up
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RED and BLUE UMBRELLAS—$8.35
STOCKING CAPS- $3.25
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6-FOOTER SCARF—£3.75
For all your Jayhawk Souvenirs
Come to the kansas union BOOKSTORE
als
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 28.
95
95
up
75
Listen here GENERAL MOTORS!
- if you can put a man on the moon why can't you clean up air pollution?
·or build a SINGERE car like a VW?
·or cure the "BLUE COLLAR BLUES?
THE GM TOWN HALL PANELISTS:
MICHAEL K. MILLER
Thomas Fisher (Mechanical Engineering, 1951), now Director, Emission Control, GM Environmental Activities Staff.
Four University of Kansas alumni now with General Motors representing a wide range of disciplines and prepared to answer any questions of general interest about GM or the automobile industry. Left to right:
R. T. Kingman (Journalism, 1947), now assistant Director of Corporate Communications, GM Public Relations Staff.
Robert Eaton (Mechanical Engineering, 1963), now Chief Engineer and project Manager for the 1979 Model General Motors car program.
Dr. George G. Dodd (Electrical Engineering, 1960), now assistant Department Head, Computer Science, GM Research Laboratories.
The car is a prototype experimental urban passenger car. An electric-powered version will be one of the vehicles on display at a major General Motors exhibit, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Monday, November 1, at Learned Hall.
Do you have questions like these? Speak up at the GM
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8
Thursdav. October 28.1976
University Daily Kansan
Ruggers to bloody ol' England
By JOERADCLIFFE
Lawrence ruggers practice for upcoming competition against Englanders
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
88
Rugby came to the United States by way of England and when Englander Allen Chapman came to the University of Kansas, he brought some big ideas to the Lawrence
The players listed to Chapman's ideas, and now they plan to be one of the few remaining players in this league.
Chapman, who is here on a two-year grant to teach architecture, is a lifelong rugby enthusiast and he had some inspiring ideas for the Lawrence team.
GOING ON the trip will be about 30 minutes to a couple of equipment painters and a couple of equipment cleaners.
Calling themselves the Kansas Jayhawks, the team will leave on January 2 for a 16-day trip, and will be back in time for spring semester enrollment.
"A lot of the clubs have songs," Chapman said, "so we're going to play our songs over the public address system while we warm up, so we feel at home."
The team plans to play about nine games during its tour in a country where rugby is a major sport. Chapman said that the tough competition they would face from the English teams had forced them to take part in strong alumni from other clubs in the area.
"As a club on campus, we're not strong enough," but the alumni will strengthen the side.
CHAPMAN SAID that 25 starters would go on the trip and that about half of them were KU students. The tour will cost $20,000, and all of the money will come out of the pockets of the players. Chapman said that any of the club's members could go on the trip, even if they weren't one of the 25 starters.
Chapman said that part of the reason the club was touring was to gain experience.
"We've been thinking about doing it for a long time," he said. "It will do the players an enormous amount of good to play with more experienced teams."
Another reason for the tour stems from the players' long-range goals for the club. This year, the club is trying to raise $100,000 for charity and to those that English rugby clubs have.
CHAPMAN SAID that the typical club in England had a clubhouse next to their field,
in which there were locker rooms and a bar. Players and spectators frequent the bar, which help support the club financially.
"In England, a club will give the other team a very good meal after the game," Chapman said. "The players here have been doing so for many years like that. That is what we want for ourselves."
The team plans to buy enough land for two rugby fields, a clubhouse and grandstands. Varsity coach Doug Gunn said that they wanted a clubhouse because camaraderie
between teams was an important part of the game.
"FOR 80 minutes you knock the hell out of each other and cuss each other out and when it's all over you all go out and party at a bar. That's almost as important as the game itself."
Gunn said that owning their own fields and clubhouse would help the club grow.
"We're trying to build a strong city team and a strong University team," he said. "We have to take a big step. We don't want to take a lot of little ones and be in the same
position 10 years from now. If it doesn't work out, then we'll just try something
GUNN SAID that going on the tour and seeing the English clubs would help the team in building their own club. He also said that in England would generate a lot of interest.
Chapman agreed, saying, "In England, a touring American side is quite a novelty."
Women's tennis team successful
When the women's tennis season started earlier this month, coach Kirkus knew she had to give it her best.
Sports Writer
And why not? He had four girls returning from the team who won the Mountain Valley and Regional Six tournaments last spring. He also had a new No. 1 player to replace Cecilia Lopez, who had played out her eligibility last semester.
KU opened its season by shutting out Wichita State. 9-0.
By ERIC MARTINCICH
Carrie Fotofolos, who transferred from Southern Methodist University, played in the NCAA Division I basketball tournament.
THE TEAM, as a whole, lost four matches in singles and one in doubles comebacks during the 2016 season, while being the third.
Chapman said that rugby games in England usually drew several thousand spectators and that it would be the first time that the defence team had played before a goal.
The Jayhawks shut out four opponents (WSU twice) on their way to a 7-4 regular-season final. The Eagles State Championship last weekend in Emporia, enabling them to represent the state in a regional tournament.
Potopoulos bettir Astdir Kadra for the No. 1 position. Dukas also finished the year in first place.
playing intermittently in the third and fourth spots, Mary Stauffer, topeka freshman.
MARLANE COOK, who started the season in the No. 6 position, ended the year with a triple.
Ly^4th Hill, who played at Nass. 5,
o. and 1 omitted at 82 while Tracel Speman
Kivisto worked throughout the season to develop the effectiveness of the doubles
Fotopoulos and Dakas, The 1.0 doubles team this fall, finished undefeated at 7-0.
The No. 2 team of Spellman and Cook also
has a player, 5, Staferu and Hill,
at the No. 4 position.
**NOW THAT the fall season has concluded,**
Kivito's thoughts have turned to the spring so-
mber.
"I'm looking forward especially to the Austin Invitational where we'll play the top-tranked teams in the country," Kivisto said. "We're confident we good we are compared with the best."
Skip DoVol
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World's Greatest Banjo Player
Friday & Saturday
Paul Guzzai's Jazz Place
842-0817
Pitchers $1.25 for people in costumes
Off the Wall Hall
For all of you K.U. students, busy women and working men, we will be open late Mondays and Tuesdays till 9:00 p.m. This will help K.U. students get in on Monday and Tuesday calls. Call 842-8600 for appointment.
Gunn explained why they changed their name from the Lawrence Rugby Club to the Kansas Jayhawks for the tour: "In England, nobody will know where Lawrence is," he said. "For that matter, I told Allen that they won't even know Kansas is and he said, 'the hell they won't t.'"
737 New Hampshire
Tonight! First Annual Worm Burn Ball. With the WORM WRANCH WRANGLERS and ROPE BURN.
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THE 8th Street MARKET PLACE
AT THE CORNER OF 8th AND NEW HAMPSHIRE
KU's junior varsity volleyball team had an easy time in easy defense the Kansas City, Kan., Community Junior College last night. The team won five of five match in three games, 19-2, 15-4, 15-10
Coach Bob Stankill was pleased with KU's performance and credited Brenda Wood, Karen Louden and Rhonda Dorel for good play.
SUA POPULAR FILMS Upcoming Films for Fall '76
Education
Oct. 29-30 The Exorcist Nov. 5-6 Farewell, My Lovely
JV squad wins volleyball match
- Experience
We're moving to a NEW location
1 Nov. '76
THE 8th Street MARKET PLACE
Dec. 3-4 The Passenger
Huskey
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Nov. 12-13 Nashville
Nov. 19-20 A Brief Vacation and The 10th International Tournee of Animation
Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union
Pd. Pol. Adv. from the Huskey for Sheriff Committee Fund. James Huskey, Treas.
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Thursday, October 28, 1976
University Daily Kansan
9
Camping equipment lacks storage
Wilderness Discovery, SUA's camping equipment rental service, is looking for a place to store its canoes, Hal Eden, adviser for outdoor recreation and travel, said yesterday.
The canoes had been stored in a concession area in theooth stable station, and then they were brought because the
space was needed for concessions during the football season.
Eden said that storage racks might be built in the ceiling of the concession area so that the canoes could stay in the area all year.
"We are also looking for other areas that aren't being used in the stadium where we live."
Eden said that Wilderness Discovery also didn't have enough room for its other equipment, but it wasn't planning to move into a larger facility.
The canoes are being stored in the Kansas Union.
being used by food services. We can't move until they do."
Wilderness Discovery rents sleeping
stores and backpacks in addition to canoes
Eden said that more equipment had been ordered so that more people could be ser-
“It’s kind of a domination thing,” he said.
“The room we would like to have is now
"We've had a waiting list all fall," he said.
Ford is seen gaining
Bv MARTIN ZIMMERMAN
Staff Writer
A growing lack of confidence in the economic policies of Jimmy Carter may be causing young voters to desert his cause in favor of Gerald Ford, John Eden, assistant secretary of commerce for economic development, said yesterday.
Eden, who was in Lawrence as part of his campaign swing through the Midwest on behalf of President Ford, referred to Carter's campaign proposals for providing housing and care. "Ask sky promises," said and that young people were becoming disenchanted with them.
Eden said that a Roper poll released yesterday indicated that a large number of voters opposed Carter to Ford in the waning days of the campaign, and that he had detected a
Figures released Monday by the Douglas County Clerk's office indicate that 2,843 more persons registered to vote this year than last year.
Dibelert Mathia, county clerk, said 36,918 voters registered this year compared with 34,052 in 2013.
Mathia didn't have figures on the number of registered Republicans or Democrats, or the number of University of Kansas students who registered.
Mathia said he thought, however, there were more students registered this year than last and more than in the national election in 1972.
"When a person registers to vote, his occupation isn't asked, so we have no idea how many students are registered," Mathia said.
Voters who registered in Lawrence were asked whether they wanted to declare a party affiliation. However, a voter doesn't have to declare a party until voting Election Day, in their barrriers. Aug. 3, there were .219 registered legislators compared with .562 Democrats.
Matua urged anyone voting in Lawrence
Math 2, to vote during the day and avoid the
vote of her side.
The last day of registration was Oct. 12, but students wanting to obtain absentee tickets must present proof from the county clerk's office. The deadline for getting an absentee ballot is noon Monday. Ballots must reach the county clerk's office by noon on Friday, Oct. 2. Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
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The reversing trend in the youth vote has largely been caused by Carter's vagueness about how he will pay for his full employment program and the growing realization that it will be only a short-term solution. Eden said.
"Nothing is more frustrating to a young person," Eden said referring to Carter's federal jobs program, "than to give him something that will disappear in a short while and then have him begin all over again."
Eden said that Ford's answer to what he called Carter's "quick fix" solution to the recession was a slow process, but would be more productive in the long run. He said Ford recommended tax cuts to give consumers more spending power and in return, it would hire more workers as ways to put the country on the road to economic recovery.
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NANCY HAMBLETON can and will get things done. She's done it before as Lawrence's first woman mayor and first city councilman. The 44th district deserves effective representation—it's up to you.
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Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan. 864-4358
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10
Thursday, October 28, 1976
University Daily Kansan
★
Announcing
TACO TICO'S THIRD ANNUAL BURRITO EATING CONTEST
Today at 5 p.m.
Entries in Men's & Women's Divisions from City & Campus Non-Profit Organizations will compete for $300 in Cash Prizes.
Record now held by Paul Brenner of JRP Hall-11 3/4 Burritos [approximately 51/2 lbs.]
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 28.1976
11
Lawrence handgun sales steady; buyers seek variety, dealers say
By ROBERT MACKEY
Staff Writer
100
Gun dealers in Lawrence agree that sales of handguns have remained stable over the past two years and that students, though not much larger than their peers, can buy to buy many different kinds of handguns.
Pistols like this .357 magnum are powerful threats
Salesmen in three local stores where handguns are sold said Tuesday that the more expensive brands, Colt and Smith and Wesson, were the most popular.
Only one store, Gilman Discount Center,
225 Ish St., report selling less exp-
tended products.
Duane Morris, manager of Morris Sports,
1016 Massachusetts St., said he sold very few handguns and had never sold them to students.
John Gyllenburg, an employee at Gibson's, said most of his customers were in their mid-20s and bought mostly larger caliber handguns.
HOWEVER, GREGG Anderson, an employee at Ernst and Son Hardware, 828 Massachusetts St., said most of his customers who were students preferred the use of plastic type bundles, usually long-barreled, 22 caliber revolvers used for target shooting.
The most popular handguns at Gibson's are the 22 caliber and the .357 Magnum.
ANDERSON SAID that although many students bought hammers at 43rd and Son, and 67th Street, they were not able to buy them.
"Instead," he said, "they buy the western style as opposed to the police or detective style. They are most expensive toys."
Handgun prices at Ernst and Son range from $80 to $230.
At Gibson's, price range from $3 to $300. Anderson said the process for buying a car is straightforward.
**IF YOU'RE 21 and have a Kansas license, you can walk out of the door with your license.**
When a handgun purchase is made, the maker must complete a form with eight blank fields.
questions include whether the buyer has ever been convicted of a felony or uses dangerous drugs. The forms then are sent to the attorney's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
FEDERAL LAW prohibits the sale of a handgun to anyone convicted of a felony, who is dishonorably discharged from his military service or has citizenship or who is an illegal alien.
Anderson said he thought the questions were a "joke."
"If a man came in here obviously drunk, with fire in his eyes, I'd refuse to sell him a gun. However, if there's nothing suspicious, there's nothing we can learn do." be said.
Lt. Vernon Harrell of the Lawrence Police department said handgun sales weren't too low and that the law enforcement officials
Some people come in and give us the name of their guns, in case they are stolens.
He said that the number of assaults in Lawrence in which handguns were used was down from a year ago, but that he hadn't reached the exact amount of the decrease.
ASSAULTS ARE being committed more and more with "sharp instruments and other deadly weapons", Harrell said, because knives, steel bars and other are easier to conceal and also more likely to be available during a crime of passion.
He added that fewer people carried handguns than in the past.
"back in the '76s we had the riots, when they hired their houses without them," Harrell said.
City to seek federal funds for airport improvements
With the encouragement of the Federal Aviation Administration, city officials are preparing a preliminary application for expanding Lawrence Municipal Airport.
"But we are hopeful the application will be approved."
"After 'e' submit it, we should hear back from them in about 30 days or so," Wildgen said.
The application, being prepared by Bucher and Willis, consulting engineers from Kansas City, Mo., should be ready to submit to the FAA sometime next week, Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said yesterday.
If the grant is approved, the city could receive up to 90 per cent of the funds necessary to expand and improve the library. Another factor to determine the amount the city will ask for
J.J. Walker here Nov.13
J. W. Walker, star of the CBS television
series "The Inventor," perform Nov.
15 in the Kansas University Ballroom.
Thornton Mason, SUA concert committee chairman, said yesterday that Walker would do a monologue and might answer questions from the audience. Tickets will be
Mason said that Chris Fitz and Company, a promotion agent, had offered to bring Jimmi Spheris to campus Nov. 12, but that a contract hadn't been signed.
SUA had considered booking Frank Zappa, Dave Mason, and Asleep at the Bat.
The committee couldn't fit Asleep at the wheel because SUA had too many other candidates.
Hoch Auditorium would be too small for a Dave Mason and Frank Zappa concert, he said, but they couldn't draw enough people to Allen Field House to make a profit.
The city has debated the airport issue for 10 years. Although the majority of those involved seem to agree that improvements are necessary, funding has been the problem.
Two bond elections to finance improvements have been defeated by Lawrence voters, and it was the possibility of getting federal funds that brought the issue back to life earlier this month. City missioners authorized the application Oct. 5.
Tentative plans call for the present runways to be lengthened and widened for the construction of additional hangars. If the city receives the money, officials will have to negotiate with the Kansas University campus at the land on which the present airlines. The Endowment Association owns the land but leases it to the city for $1 a year.
However, the Endowment Association has indicated that it might be willing to sell the land to the city if funding becomes available.
If the grant is approved, the city will have to decide how to finance the match 10 per cent of the budget.
AETT FRATERNITY IS BACK AT KU
SEAL OF WALES
PERMITTANCE
WATERMARK
Alpha Epsilon Pi is the largest predominantly Jewish fraternity in the country. Affiliate chapters include Missouri, Indiana and Texas.
Meeting Tonight at 7:15 Council Room at the Union
Call
841-7476 or 841-7455
ALL THE ICE CREAM YOU CAN EAT!!
Yes, all the ice cream you can stuff down your gullet, Clyde, and some heavy vibes from the juke box.^
Sunday, October 31st, 7 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive, (One Block East of 9th and Iowa).
(One Block East of 9th and Iowa).
Free for Members, $1.00 for Guests.
PRIZES FOR THE MOST ORIGINAL COSTUME.
Sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish students.
INDEPENDENTS
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Yearly panel on insurance is tomorrow
Horold Krogh, professor of business and
forum coordinator, said that this year's
form would center on a panel discussion on
product liability.
The School of Business will sponsor its annual insurance forum at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union
“It’s something that should be of interest to you,” he said, “since all of us have had experiences with products that worked disappointingly.”
The panelist for the forum include Ron
assistant Kansas Insurance Commission
Heinemann, vice chairman of the House Judiciary Committee.
The forum has been an annual event since its Insurance Development Fund was started in 1984. The group of insurance executives in 1987.
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For all your Health and Beauty Aids shop the convenient kansas union BOOKSTORE
12
Thursday, October 28, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Officials fear and doubt effects of copyright statute
Bv MICHAEL KING
Staff Writer
Reactions are mixed among university of Kansas professors and officials about the effects on teaching that might result from a new copyright law.
The new law, which will take effect Jan. 1,
1978, was signed Oct. 6 by President Ford and replaces a 1909 copyright law. It restricts the number of times that teachers within a university can photocopy copyrighted materials. It states a maximum number of words that can be photocopied and prohibits the photocopying of more than two pages of a poem for classroom distribution.
It also restricts the ability of libraries to make copies of convived works.
Stephen Goldman, associate professor of English, called the new law "extremely narrow-minded" and said it would affect all departments of the University.
"I PREDICT WHOLESALE ignoring of
existents in grounded that no alternative
exists," he said.
Goldman said short poems and essays often were unavailable at reasonable prices. Because the new law restricts the amount of photocopying that can be done, instructors won't be able to reproduce these works for classes.
Two of the law's greatest effects, Goldman said, could be an increase in the cost of students' textbooks and a reduction in the amount of material that can be used in the classroom.
He said instructors might be forced to ask students to buy additional books because materials can't be photocopied as freely as before.
DEL BRINKMAN, dean of the School of Journalism, said he didn't expect the law would cause any changes in the way that journalism classes were taught.
"There's still some leeway in the law," Brinkman, said.
"Since the individual whose work is copyrighted can grant waivers, I expect to
see increased correspondence and more red tape, but it probably won't affect the way classes are taught."
Brinkman said his first reaction to the law was that it might decrease the number of new markets for the works for some authors.
HE SAID THAT in many cases the photocopying of sections of copyrighted works introduced students to works that they later bought. Now that teachers may be unable to provide this exposure to students, market possibilities might be closed, he said.
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, wouldn't comment about
Ken Dodds an assistant to Mike Davis, University general counsel, said that KU hadn't received a copy of the law yet. He said he expected the effects until he had read it.
Francis Heller, professor of law, sald the guidelines would be followed for a university law professor.
THERE ISN'T any way, Heller said, to predict accurately the law's consequences until the U.S. Copyright Office issues its enforcement guidelines.
Anita Head, associate professor of law and law school librarian, agreed with
"Our approach to law," she said, "is that I don't know what the law is, until it has been interpreted."
In the absence of a court decision, congressional guidelines and guidelines of the copyright office must be used to determine the law's possible implications, Head said.
JAMES RANZ, dean of libraries wasn't available for comment.
John Glinka, associate director of libraries, said that he had read the law on his way to work with John. In 1978, any discussion of its consequences would be premature.
MONTREAL
On Campus
TODAY: JOHN BOOKER, assistant professor of French and Italian, will lecture on a Tzvetan Todovari article, "la lecture comme construction," at 3:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. KU German Club meets at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Sunflower Room.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER CLEARING HOUSE meets at 6:30 in the Union's Walnut Room. ANGEL FLIGHT meets at 6:30 in the Military Science building. THE EAST ASIAN STUDIES department will present a lecture by Tetrago Nakamura, Tokyo theater critic, on Japanese novelist and playwright Mishima, at 7 in the Union's Forum Room. The INTERNATIONAL CLUB will meet at 7 in the Union's Cork Room 2. The KU SCIENCE CENTER FROM OCTOBER will meet at 7 in the Union's FOLK DANCE CLUB meets at 7 in Oliver Hall. The KU SAILING CLUB meets in the Union's parthers at 7:30. NavIGATORS meet at 8:30 in the Union's Regional厅家. A reception for NICOLAS VON HOFFMAN, Washington Post columnist and SUA Forum Series speaker, begins at 9 in the Union's Centennial Room.
Grants and awards
Three KU students in the engineering school and two students in the business school have been awarded Boeing Company Scholarships for the 1976-77 academic year. The technical scholarship recipients are: CHARLES NANCE, Prairie Village junior; MIKE WEMPE, Seneca senior; and MARY CHILDLS, Winnebago junior. The technical scholarship recipients are: MARY CHILDLS, Lawrence senior, and KENNETH JONES, Overland Park junior. The scholarships were provided by Boeing's Wichita division.
About 100 people attended the speech Tuesday night of Rosemary Park, Phi Beta Kappa visiting scholar, and not 25 people, as reported in yesterday's Kansan.
Events
Corrections
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The new law, signed by President Ford
Oct. 6, states that an instructor can't:
—Make multiple copies of a work for classroom use if the work already had been copied for another class in the same institution.
—Make multiple copies of a short poem, article, story or essay by the same author more than once in a class term, or make multiple copies from the same collective work or periodical issue more than three times a term.
- Make multiple copies of works more than nine times in the same class term.
- Make copies of "consumable" materials, such as workbooks.
—Make copies of works to take the place of an, anthology.
An instructor can make a single copy of:
A chapter from a book.
— A short story, short essay or short
work — An essay not from a collected work.
-An article from a periodical or
poem, mother or father of a child.
—A chart, graph, diagram, drawing,
cartoon or picture from a book, periodical
or newspaper.
A teacher can make multiple copies, not to exceed one student, of.
— An excerpt from a longer poem, if the excerpt has fewer than 250 words.
in complete poem, if it has fewer than 250 words and printed on not more than two pages.
— A complete article, story, or essay, if it contains fewer than 2,500 words.
— An excerpt from a prose work, if it has (more than 1,000 words) 10 per cent of the works.
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— one chart, graph, diagram, drawing,
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BUZZI
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*Introduced bill to create a student seat on Kansas Board of Regents
*Consistent supporter of faculty pay increases
*Member, Institute for Social and Environmental Studies Housing Team. University of Kansas
*4 YEARS OF RESPONSIBLE, RESPONSIVE SERVICE FOR KU AND DOUGLAS COUNTY IN THE KANSAS LEGISLATURE
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—Make up to six copies a year of short excerpts from longer works.
For purposes of interlibrary-loans,
libraries can:
—Make up to six copies a year of a periodical published within the last five years.
—Make copies of unpublished works for the purpose of preservation and security.
Make copies of published works for purposes of replacement of damaged
—Make copies of out-of-print works that can't be obtained at fair prices.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 28, 1976
13
Couple finds U.S. ways exotic
Josee Kamoun, visiting assistant professor of French, said recently that she didn't know what to expect beyond wheat, corn and beef in Kansas when she and her husband, Patrick, left Paris to come to the "so ever so different" city of Lawrence.
Josee had decided to take advantage of a Fulbright Scholarship to come to the University of Kansas shortly after the birth of couple a four-month-old son, Yael, said he
They arrived in New York City in August shortly after hurricane Belle, and because of their child and limited time, they weren't able to see much of the city, Josee said.
"FOR US, IT'S all very exotic," she said. Josese is for one here for a replace J. Theodore Johnson Jr., professor of French, who is in France on a sabbatical.
Lawrence then was the first American city that the couple had ever seen.
Josee said she and her husband were surprised to find an apartment, or flat as she calls it, on their second day in Lawrence.
Their two-bedroom unit at Meadowbrook Apartments doesn't have major furnishings, although the walls are decorated with color prints by Josee's husband, who is a photographer. Some of the photographs are of Josee, and some are of an area surrounding their summer home in central France.
Joze obtained her masters degree in English, but she is now teaching her native language.
She said it was difficult to teach French when the students were advanced, but it could be when she worked with students who were starting from the beginning.
"I don't know what will be difficult for them or what will be easy," she said.
ONE OF THE courses she is teaching is called French for Travelers, and she said she had to explain everything in English to the students. She said that she didn't think the arrangement was adequate and that an American should teach the course.
She said that French universities were funded by the government and were free to any student who applied, after passing his high-school graduating exams.
Josee was reluctant to make comparisons between French and American educational systems because, she said, they are so different.
This system, she said, means that the university students would come from a wide variety of social classes, rather than middle and upper-middle classes.
SHE SAID THAT the educational system
many students and that many
man who enrolled never left.
Bachelor of Arts degrees aren't worth much in France because she said, and they don't know what the exam tests.
Photo by RICK PADDEN
Jane S.
This causes many French students to get depressed, she said, and it may have a great effect on their lives.
Josee Kamoun
also a primary cause for the near-revolution in France in 1968, she said.
Josee said French people were more politically married than Americans, and she even said that her husband was a Republican.
"We are shocked to see commercials during the news broadcasts," she said.
Shrugging her shoulders in frustration over American television news-broadcasting, Josese said, "It's hard to take something seriously when right in the middle they tell you to use that washing powder, or whatever."
SHE SAID SHE thought that Americans weren't really interested in the coming presidential elections in the United States and that few Americans that they asked were able to describe for her and her husband the system used to elect the president.
Josee was enthusiastic when describing the French people's interest in elections.
She said that because of such extreme
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separation between left and right factions in France, their presidential candidates were quite different from each other.
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"This is why people in France get so excited about politics," she said. "There is a lot of pressure to change."
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Josee doesn't think people are very satisfied in France.
"We have an economic crisis and educational problems," she said.
Jones said she also noticed some physical differences in appearances between children with and without ADHD.
"THEY LOOK VERY bored and dull in France. American girls are much healthier and nicer looking students. They look fit," she said.
Josee guessed the reason for this wholesome appearance was what she called an "almost hygienic" conception of sex in the United States.
Josee said she had a hard time convincing her husband that he wouldn't be served a drink in town unless he joined a club. She said he thought it was a toke.
She said that, in France, Americans have had the reputation of using sex to keep women safe.
Josee and Patrick said that they had been told Kansas was the "Bible Bell," and that the meaning of the term had been made known to them, so they found out about Kansas liquor laws.
Laughing, she said, "I think it's crazy." She said that there were no such regulations.
in France and that bars and liquor stores were open all night.
That is probably one of the less "exotic" aspects of Josee's trip to the United States that she will have to endure until her return to France.
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14
Thursday, October 28, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sculptors' activity pervades hut
By LEROY JOHNSTON
The rusty Quonst but behind Bailey Hall may look like a relic from World War II, but it is actually Bailey Annex, home of KU's sculpture department.
An atmosphere of intense activity is contained inside the building, which is filled with students, all working away at large plaster blocks. Plaster chips are flying and, from somewhere, a chainsaw adds to the din.
SCULPTURE IS taken seriously here. A janitor comes in to complain about the condition of the floor to Richard Gillespie, assistant professor of sculture.
Gillespie agrees to do something about the floor, but says, "I'm not concerned about how the floor is. I'm concerned about making sculpture."
The chronic problem, Gillespie says, is lack of space. He said he was looking forward to moving into the new Visual Arts building when it was completed. The department of art is the department of art and the department of design, is to be completed in two years.
GILLESPIE SAID he had no complaints about the equipment available because it
"In a studio," he said, "space is first choice, equipment is secondary."
Equipment of all sorts crowds the studio, ranging from furnaces for bronze casting to a vacuum-forming machine for handling plastic. But there are only 10 students majoring in sculpture this semester. Most of the students in the crowded studio are majoring in ceramics or jewelry and silversmithing.
MIKE GLEASON, St. Louis, Mo., junior,
said he was taking sculpture to gain more
experience in three-dimensional work.
Gleason is a jewelry and silversmithing
major. He said he liked the easy-going
teaching style used in his class.
“This isn't high school any more,” he said. “The studio is here and the teacher is here. If you're interested, it's up to you to do work and get as much out of if you can.”
Because KU doesn't offer graduate degrees through the department of art, students who want to earn graduate degrees design or do through the department of design.
ONE STUDENT following such a course is Akrom Vorajnina, Bangkok, Thailand, graduate student. Vorajnina said he was the first Thai artist ever to study bronze casting abroad. His work consists of lyrical bronze sculptures by the Italian futurist, Umberto Boccioni.
Voraindha said that being from Thailand
has a unique and objective view of
Western art.
"One characteristic of American art is that it is more mechanistic," he said. "I am now seeking an artistic synthesis of East and West."
ELDEN TEFFT, professor of sculpture and director of the National Sculpture Center at KU, said he encouraged all sorts of approaches andques in his students.
Telft, who specializes in bronze casting, is working on a 10-foot statue of Moses for Smith Hall, which houses the School of Religion.
Tefft said there were many problems with
Vandalism decreasing for vending machines
Vending machines at the University of Kansas are 'nudalized at nearly the rate that they were a few years ago. Forrest McGraw, a spokesman for Union Vending service, said last week.
"It seems that about five years age it was a "it seems and, we'd be fixing machines every day. Not too much vandalism goes on in the dorms anymore," he said.
But last week some vending machines in the basement of the military science building and in Stouffer Place were broken early that month. $30 in merchandise were lost, he said.
Repair costs for damaged machines vary according to the type of machine.
"1 think most of the vandalism is committed by people from off-campus in the area."
JOLLY SAY IT UTILly costs about $30 to fix a cigarette machine, but a refrigerated machine such as a soft drink or sandwich machine will cost $13 to repair, including parts and labor.
"It's never less than the amount of merchandise taken," Darold Hutton, a vending machine repairman, said. Repair expenses are "way down" from what they were five years ago, he said, even with price increases on spare parts and labor.
"Costs for repair were about triplied from what they are now. We use to spend about $100 to $300 a month on repair work alone." Hutton said. "Over the last two years, vandalism has been on a dramatic decline on campus, and that's a good thing to see."
Dennis Tyril, warehouse manager for Coca-Cola Bottling Co., 646 Connecticut St. agreed that the amount of burglarized machines on campus had decreased.
"THERE'S VERY little vandalism going on up on the hill now, but there used to be quite a bit," he said. "It's very sporadic."
However, two soft drink machines were recently vandalized at the Ramada Inn, Sixth and Iowa streets, he said, and about $50 in cash and merchandise were taken.
"Some machines we try to bend back into shape if we can, but the ones at Ramada we'll have to replace. They'll cost about $450 each." Tyrll said.
Jolly said that the majority of vending
machines had slug rejectors in them, and that the machines also wouldn't accept bent
"That's probably the best protection because that it just ensures the machine doesn't break." It will
He said that he had experimented with protecting vending machines by putting sirens on some of them, but the sirens had too sensitive and went off inadvertent.
"WE TRIED BELLS too, but they sounded just like the ones on elevators and stairs."
Tyrl said that it would be a "wasted effort" to try to catch vandals, because of the many other people who use the machines legitimately.
"We put steel-hardened padlocks on the machines, but they just cut right through them. If someone really wants to break into them, it's pretty hard to stop," he said.
When vandalism does occur in residence balls, the loss is charged to the balls' library funds, which pay for all concessions, Jolly said.
"We never remove the machines completely," he said.
The majority of soft drink machines are emptied of currency as often as possible, because they are so expensive.
Both men said they hoped that the trend awards less vandalism would be a per-100K award.
"You're talking about an awful lot of money to be made for vandals, and at a loss to us," Tyrl said.
the public's acceptance of large outdoor public sculpture.
Do you have any news tips?
"Later on, when they get used to the piece, often defend it."
"PEOPLE, when they're put on the spot, think they have to make some kind of comment about a public piece, and what they say is usually derogator." he said.
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The public isn't educated in the appreciation of modern sculpture aesthetics, Teft said, and more public sculpture is needed to prevent this attitude.
Do you have any news tips?
Call the KANSAN
864-4810
was through the technical aspects of art work. He said his sculpture of Moses was an example of this.
"The public is always behind in what's happening in art," he said.
-Allowing the technique to become a part of the creative process makes sculpture more accessible.
TEFFT SAID one way to reach the public
Phil Blackhurst, assistant professor of sculpture, said he expected much more activity from the sculpture program in the future.
"WHEN THEY approved the new building, it was the first time I felt really optimistic about the potential of sculpture in UU," he said. "I'm looking forward to it."
SUA
SUA K.U. CHESS CLUB TOURNAMENT
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Oct. 31 and Nov. 7 in Parlor B and C, Kansas Union
Begins at 3:00 p.m.
Entry Fee $2.00
Prizes: Trophies to top
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Everyone encouraged to participate. Sign up in S.U.A. office Oct.27-29 or at tournament (2:00-2:30)
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Fri., Oct. 29 at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Presented by Students for McCarthy. Members $1—Non-Members
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Watch McCarthy on NBC—Fri., Oct. 29 at 9:55 p.m. Paid for by McCarthy—76, 150 Rhode Island, 842-6832.
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Thursday, October 28.1976
15
Music men perform for money, fun
By RICK THAEMERT
Staff Writer
One reason Robert Shelley, Lawrence sophomore and keyboard player for Squeaky Feet, a local band, says he plays in a band is that, "it beats fryingurgers."
yard y the
According to members of four Lawrence bands, money and enjoyment are the main reasons they
"It heats frying burgers."
nion. bers
Rick Henderson, Humboldt senior and keyboard player for Foxtrot, agrees he'd rather play than fry. "That's a real depressing thought—working at
"That's a real depressing thought—working at McDonald's for $2 an hour," he said recently.
Brian Norwood, Lawrence senior and guitarist for On Tap, said, "You just can't beat play in bands. It's a good chance to spend your time at something else on money at, but also something you can really enjoy."
AND THE MONEY is good, said Jeff Mohr, Mahwah, N.J. junior and guitarist for Squeaky Feet. He said a band could make between $175 and $500 for an average one-night job.
A Berman, Prairie Village senior and bass player for Cargo, said that although his monetary rewards
"When you're carrying a lot of hours, you need a release from the tension and pressures," he said. "The band is a social situation, and we have a lot of fun."
But bands aren't all fun.
hadn't been tremendous, he enjoyed playing in the band because played him get away from it
HENDERSON SAID, "I'll get a late Friday afternoon class that I miss about every week."
All the members agreed that their schoolwork was of primary importance but that it sometimes suffered.
"But," he added, "school is more flexible than the band."
No wood said his schoolwork would be hurt more if the band played weeks at a time in a club.
"it's really hard, especially when you get done playing at 2 a.m. and have early classes," he said.
All the band members contacted said that they played only on weekends and usually had only one practice during the week. However, they said practice often stretched late into the night.
University Daily Kansan
*You have to strive for some kind of perfection, so if it warrants a couple extra hours, then it's the worth
HENDERSON SAID that student members often were pressured by others to practice and play more than schoolwork allowed and that conflicts sometimes arose.
But playing in bands is worth the sacrifices, the band members said.
sacrifice," Berman said. "Bands are a lesson in scheduling your time."
Henderson said, "All considered, it's fun, despite your van breaking 40 miles from nowhere, or when you hit a stop light."
Moir said, "The only strenuous parts are playing and driving. All the packing is mechanical. I don't worry."
Berman said Cargo solved its packing problem by hiring people to help the band set up equipment.
"All the people I hold on pedestals had to go through it, too. he said. I get a sort of vicious person when I walk with you."
Moir said that, after setting up, bands were often disappointed to find no dressing rooms or dressing rooms with no sinks in some clubs, causing musicians to play while feeling dirty and unclean.
Mohr said he also liked the adventures of traveling.
"It's fun meeting all the weirdes and characters of life in towns like Buzzard's Breast Orla." be said.
Mho recalled that a man once offered him several one-hundred dollar bills to play another set of songs. Mohr said he decided to remain calm. And wisely so; he later found out that the man had a fetish for
DESPITE the adventures, Mohr said, he will continue playing only if his vocation would permit him.
Robert Ward, Great Bend junior and guitarist for Foxtrol, is a music major who considers his playing a "step toward something better" in his musical career.
KANSAN WANT ADS
But playing in a band, whether full or part-time, is a stab at stardom, an attempt to gain recognition for
Henderson said students who enjoyed playing music were faced with the choice of quitting school and moving to a job that was trying to be successful, or getting an, education to become a profession and making music a hobby. He said that becoming a professional musician sometimes took longer than it was difficult for a musician to predict how best it could be.
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered online or by phone, or national origin. FLEASE HRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
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ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Fund items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These aid can be placed in person or by calling the UD business office at 864-1535.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
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STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on popular hh equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, use the GRAMPHONE 6090 at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFFS .
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Western Civilize Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilize Makes sense to
A great guitar-GIBSON SG-approx. **90** in mint condition. A truly rare find. 841-7153. 10-28
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Excellent selection of used furniture, refi-
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For Sale-1714 Honda CL, 450, $500, Tereo 450
For Sale-1714 Honda CL, 650, $800, Tereo 650
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one season. Call 841-695-4689 after 5 p.m.
one season. Call 841-695-4689 after 5 p.m.
All Sophomores (paying class dues)—get your midswars for $10 now in 113-8 of the Union.
Discontinuent drive radial 185 plus $19 to wheel (even if EVA-RT45 5.60-125 radials for Volkwagen included!) Jay Stonebankes 925 Mast Fire (even if come thru Woolworth 100-25) parking lot for the car service
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N8tx 204cm Fynastars w/Salmon 555 (l2) 412 (r2)
N8tx 216cm Fynastars w/Salmon 755 (l2) 412 (r2)
UNEBLEVABLE SAVINGS. NOW 1975 HONDA* CB 125 Reg. 725.00 Sale Price. 486.00 MT. 125 Reg. 725.00 Sale Price. 495.00 CB. 200 Reg. 952.00 Reg. 725.00 Sale Price. 410 A Horizon, 800 Horizon, 11-2 84.333-3333 18-12
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th. 843-
3333.
173 Vega station wagon. Runs well. 28 mpg
blowdown $1,000 or best offer. 841-217-765
closing business, must sell all milling drill press,
milling drills, milling tools, welding tools and welders=welders TIG torch, are stabilizer, are welding air nail guns, many air tools parts Cabinet with
The Lounge
**6** Javaint automatic, low mileage>-1,000 km
**7** Must sell 19L, WV Super Bike, Like new. 55,000
**8** Javaint automatic, low mileage>-1,000 km
Mobelcare Grand Jubilee in excellent condition.
Mobilcare Grand Jubilee in excellent condition.
Mobilcare Grand Jubilee in excellent condition.
Ballina main tube and weight 25 lb. Ballina main tube and weight 20 lb. Ballina main tube and weight 18 lb.
71_VW Super Beetle, AM-FM, radials, 46,000 km
843-729.9
11-2
Pontiac Catalina 1965 4-dr auto. AC. Powered Catalina 1965 2-dr auto, cheap, must sell. 13-17 LS. 18-21 SX.
HELP WANTED
Two white Latin Percussion conga, Excellent. 6
months old. $300. Call Rick. 842-6317. 11-3
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer/year-round, Europe.
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. all fields. Europe,
USA, Switzerland. International job position.
info-write, International Job Center, Dept.
KA, Box 489, Berkeley, CA, 94704. 11-11
--what happens when DY-NO-MITE lights up. J.
J. Walker is coming to KU Nov. 13. 10-28
Now taking applications for part-time cocktail
workers, cooks, dishwashers. Apply at Carriage
Hill, 128 East 56th Street, New York, NY 10036.
- Pinball
POY'S
CREATIVE
FRAMING
AT
CROSS REFERENCE
BOOKSTORE
• DRY MOUNTING
• METAL FRAMES
• RESTORATION
• BARN BOARD FRAMING
Cross Reference Bookstore
842 1553 Matt's Shopping Center
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet.
- Foosball
Bachelor level degree with coursework in composition, literature and communication experience in applicable areas will be considered.
Voltballball Intramural officials贿赂 $400.
Volleyballball Intramural officials贿赂 $1,250.
Volleyballball Intramural officials贿赂 $375.
Volleyballball Intramural officials贿赂 $875.
Volleyballball Intramural officials贿赂 $1,625.
Volleyballball Intramural officials贿赂 $3,500.
Volleyballball Intramural officials贿赂 $6,250.
Sandys Drive-in is now taking applications for
a position. Apply in person at 5120 West 9th st.
11-3
LOST AND FOUND
Required qualifications ability to communicate effectively with students of all levels knowledge of and experience with large systems
SYSTEMS TESTING ASSISTANT-PRODUCTION SERVICES. Responsibilities include software qualification, acting as test manager for production management. Grade A Assistant Director of Production Services with special projects/administering.
Delivery—must have own car. $3 approx.
Delivery must be at Heavy Armor 507 W 17th below the Wheel. I-11
Job opening for Research Assistant. 50% time, full-time position. Requires Bachelor's degree and assisting in research. Social science based job with emphasis on understanding of human McRoberts' DDAHs of Human Development. Prior experience in a 3rd or 4th year at 3m. Art are excellent Opportunity Kuwait, q.v. to a 3m. Art E
Part time grill personnel for events and week-
days. Contact Jill at 212-757-8970, price food Appl.
in person Vita. $127 W. 6th Floor, City Hall.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER-
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER-
AL HACES ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY
Found: 'Antiquities Curb/Cosmo Anglicae' yied.
Found: 'Antiquities Curb/Cosmo Anglicae'
Hive Give me a name in front of identity.
Identify: Antiquities Curb/Cosmo Anglicae
Lost: $ REWARD for return of ring worn on 15th
date between Kentucky and Tennessee. D[1]
842-883-913
D[1]
Resume to John K. Selt, University of Kansas at Lawrence, KS, on or before December 20, 1976.
Lost: black bilfoil-061 KU bus pass, ID and Haskell
842-6454 11-11
Bud on Tap
Lost: Military Dependents D. Need urgency. If found call Richard Underwood, 818-8521. Rewilds
MISCELLANEOUS
Found: small white and brown female dog;
brown collar with yellow stitching; freckles
Found Silver ink pen with initials, corner of
cover of book. Continued Education Bill. Bigs & Brothers. Office 804-712-3600.
Found: small St. Bernard puppy wearing
collar. Found on campus: Call Hill.
843-725-7355
Lost-Male Red Irish Sitter. 65 lbs. Well-developed chest and趴 feetarnesss to the range of the sport.
Pound: cat, small Siamese-like, last Friday near 17th and Kentucky; 842-486 after 5. 11-11
Set of key sets, leather key chain
Rejoice you are happy, you are happy. SENTIMENTAL VALUE
13-11
Found: long-hair white cat. One year old, hazel.
Weight: 60 pounds.
Kennel: Calgary 849-148 after five. 11-11
Found: tennis rackets on fieldhouse courts. Call and identify 864-3015 during day, 841-583 at 9 a.m.
Hampton Roads, NY.
Pool
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uhler/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m on Saturday at 10 a.m.
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
CASABAN CAFE-Good food from scratch. Lunch
10:30-3:30 MB. Mass. 9:30. Mass. Take backdoor end.
8:30-10:30 MB. Mass. Take backdoor end.
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight. Except Sundays,
NOTICE
NAISMITH HALL Now accepting Applications for Spring Semester Call 843-8559 or stop by our office.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, hamps, clams, televisions. Open daily 12pm-5pm.
Redeeme Lutheran Church, 300th and Haskell,
invites all students and faculty to our Sunday
Study at 10.15 a.m. We have an active college
age group. Transportation will be provided if
you are not attending the study.
Jim's Steak House. Delicious food at reasonable prices.
510-643-2920. 4-11, Closed Tuesday
Sunday, 8:30 AM - 11:30 AM.
Become a World World distribute—merchandise from 1/2 to 1/3 of retail-free info or $2 for catalog code—refundable for order busy inventory before publication, BT O-P Box 328, Mt. Covell, MI, 60414. 10-29
Everything from hawaiiware to jewelry - 40% off
at all hawaiian shops. HK$ 105, W. Poachstones, Kauai Coast
Hawaii, Waikiki.
Sliphid Engineering and Acoustical Products wishes to establish a modern system with a reproduce capability of making us breathe clarity and depth that you would expect them to cost up to four times their actual lifespan. We will provide speakers or just to discuss our folded conical born design; call 842-6398 to talk to our design team.
GAY JAP GROUP: Thursday, Oct. 28, 7:30, 8:32
Kentucky,
10-28
Vote yes on November 2 for the Proposition to fund service programs for the elderly. 11-2
Toddler center has openings for children 12-30 months, your child will have fun and learn in a warm living atmosphere located call 842-5244 between 12:30 & 2:00 P.M.
PERSONAL
RACHM small group discussion over lunch.
KUY offer 11:30-13:00, Kansas University, Oct. 27
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7565 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
Having trouble scheduling Morning worship and
dinner tonight? Invite us to worship at 8:30 a.m. at 10:30
a.m.
A MAN OBSSESSED by classical music and especially interested in German, literature, Plato, philosophy, camping and canoeing wishes to meet manm," 843-1273. *Interests* 10-29
Women's art collective forming in Womanspaase.
Need ideas Potential for drawing classes and photography. Interest in what you are interested in. Meet at Oct 31, 2018.
Rhode Island: B42-6000. 10-29
Former Mayor and City Commissioner wants to
move the City Council from Hampstead for
bailout for by KY College Republic.
Have you had problems getting to sleep at night for the past year? We are looking for people to participate in an inomnia treatment program at the Mammary Cancer Center, 841-739-5000, Dun Hutchings, 841-739-5000, evenings. 11-2
P.M. If you deny yourself I tomorrow night RBI-
moves on the opposing team. You ride wheels never make
wheel
To the A.T.O. who drives silver 128 and was
their driver on Saturday, he would be
named for a bail of a rule! The little yellow bag.
There aren't no mighty to DY-NA-MITE. Kid DY-NMITE is to come to KU. 10-25
华
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS
JEANS, TATE, JEANS
RAASCH
SADDLE 6 BRIDLE SHOP
Mastercharge
Aztec Inn
Aztec Inn
American and Mexican Food
All Mexican Dishes served on pining hot plates
on piping hot plates
---
Home of
842-9455
Home of The Chalk Hawk
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping P
- Pin-Ball
* Air Hockey
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEEP
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
REAL ESTATE
Martin Real Estate Inc. ATTENTION: very salo-
dom does a house on or near the campus become
located in an alquiler secured at No. 9 West-
Wood. A 3-bdrm rancher, this home offers nearly
1,000 square feet of space and is priced at $55,000. Call 842-707-001. e宝牛
Nail -842-155-001, or Bill Brewner 842-707-101
16-29
SERVICES OFFERED
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on
issue
Citizen Science Committee No. 366, Los Angles
Arizona
Citizen Science Committee No. 366, Los Angeles,
California
Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 012, 104, 105, 113, 115, 116, 117, 122, 123, 124, 168, 169, 168, 167
Grooming all breeds. Professional care for your Kitten. Shipy doggie puppies for sale at www.groomingkitten.com.
Seamstress-general mending and complete
outline. Rentals or barter. Cabinet.
10-288 811-5288 811-5288
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a motorcycle helmet. But no, there's a nice bike–lubricate and adjust your deterators, brakes and chain, trust both wheels, adjust your tires, and handlebars at times of "time-hurry." Rates on accessories bought at time of "time-hurry" are $8.50, $12.50, $15.00, $19.50, $24.50, $29.50, $34.50, $39.50, $45.50, $52.50, $59.50, $66.50, $73.50, $81.50, $89.50, $97.50, $105.50, Oct., and Nov. 10; speeds $13.50, 3 speedes $15.50, single speedes $6.50. Complete protection, safety, and comfort.
Need a new bible? Come, and see the Israelite
books of Jeremiah. Read the book of Joshua.
Lawrence: bachmann; Cypher 9: 78-90; bachmann;
Cypher 10: 256-263.
A MUSICAL RUT? See how lessons can be moving. Beginning to advanced in folk, rock, jazz; classic bluegrass and blues guitar, mandolin, 8017; and piano. Call McMKINLEY 10-298. 0817
TYPING
Experienced typist—term papers, tests, mike,
presentation, letter writing, spelling, apocalyptic
483-854-534, Mr. Wright
Experienced T typist-IBM-Memory-Call 843-
9471, ask for John. 10-28
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-29
DO'S DELUXE
Bob's Mass
Lawrence, Pike
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Flated Sheets
FIELDS
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
THEISM BINDING COPYING The House of Uther's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence, 124 ue in New Hampshire or phone 865-302-3544. Thank you.
WANTED
Typist editor, IBM PCalee editor. Quality work.
Interview opportunities, dissertations welcome.
Email: 843-912-571
***
Need an experienced tp-link IBM Selectic LTE
card (ribbon). Call Pam at 842-7988
(ribbon). Call Pam at 842-7988
Recommissioned for very nice furnished apart-
ment on 10th floor, $350 per month and 1.22. Call
directions at
Extravagant apartment need one or two persons, preferable for foreign people, dishwasher, queen-berth, telephone, place of residence, quarries.
Rommant wanted to share two-bedroom duplex homes for rent. He said he estimated an east and easy-goal. Baird, 843-729-6700.
Wanted. A talented and versatile music writer and singer interested in combining some creative techniques with music.
Need: 3 KU-Neb. football tickets. Call 1-273-2107-307.
Need roommates to share apartment with
two other girls. Own room. $72 / 1/8 utilities. 841-456-446
Foreign student wished to live with American
parents and attend college. Interested family
call All Prep (842) - 643-7950. 11-2
Wanted-9087 for NU Game, anywhere. Call 442-9087.
10-29
Tutor for Math 102 student who is anxious to
math. 842-601-4300 after 3.30. *10-29*
1 roommate (male or female) to share beautifully furnished and country home with a best-fit, complete kitchen and in-room storage. Complete kitchen and in-room storage of storage space/ $85 per month, plus 1/3 utility. Call Mike after 5:45.
Person to babysit in our home Non-smoker. Your Paternity to baby from birth Non-smoker. WTH-Pr. Must be able to sit at during KU breaks except for USD 49.79 holidays. Should have 2 weekends. Call 861-2421. 11-31-13
STUDY BREAK
1340 Ohio
STUDY BREAK
1—6 p.m.
Schoonors — 65°
Pitchers — $1.25
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing
• Furniture • Antiques
• Imported Clothing
730Mass. 841-7070
Phone 843-1211 KU Union Lobby
A
Make Reservations
Thanksgiving and Christmas travelers should observe now for best choice of flight, train and hotel. May we also assist you in planning your trip? No extra charge for our services.
SUA Maupintour travel service
Jolly Santa
NOW'S THE TIME FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY
No extra charge
Gift Wrapping Free
HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass.
16
Thursday, October 28,1976
University Daily Kansan
Enrollment in history up at KU
By CHRIS COTTRELL
Staff Writer
Enrollment in college history classes is decreasing nationally, but the University of Kansas department of history has bucked the national trend.
Figures indicate KU's history enrollment has risen 15 per cent over the past four years.
"Nationally, the study of history is declining," Lymn Nelson, professor of history, said recently. "It has declined from about 30 per cent to peak a peak in the academic year 1969-70.
"There have been some studies done that indicate the study of college history in many parts of the country has decreased by almost one-third. Students are not taking history, instead, many of them are apparently turning to the hard social sciences."
NELSON SAID many students thought that the study of social sciences could provide better pre-professional training. He was one of the chairman and chairman of the department, agreed.
"History enrollments have been caught up in the drive toward professional school training," Stidman said. "I think many more students are getting jobs and careers with much greater assurance in the
University than they have in the past. They're concerned about jobs.
"And as a result, earlier on as undergraduates, they're getting themselves ready to enter professional schools, and they would have to be prepared, they would have under ordinary circumstances."
"I think that in the last five years, people who teach subjects in the colleges of liberal arts and sciences around the country have had a greater difficulty where their subjects could not be related to immediate job possibilities."
NELSON SAID that because history fell into the humanities division at KU, increased enrollment in social science and other courses in history as much as it did in other schools.
"As a consequence, enrollments in the history department have not declined as they have in the rest of the country," Nelson said. "The history department at KU noticed that its enrollments were declining four years ago because students themselves those questions, we asked students those questions and we developed some answers.
"It amounted to a re-evaluation of the role of history within a liberal arts education and the role of the history department within the University."
Tire dealers jammed when cold snap nips
With predictions of snow, car owners are searching for the best buy in snow tires, snow chains, and winter gear.
Most local tire dealers reported a rush in snow tire sales as the weather suddenly
"People were jammed in here last year when we got the first snow," said Henry Licktie of Gregg Tire Co. 814 W. 23rd St. "Last Monday when we got the first couple of snowflakes we got a lot of people in here buying tires."
Lawrence differs from other major cities in that it has no emergency snow routes, where snow tires or chains are required during heavy snowstorms.
THOUGH SNOW tires aren't required on Lawrence city streets or on county and state highways, Mike Garcia, Lawrence police sergeant in charge of the traffic division, said that the vehicle could be reduced by one-half if car owners used snow tires and chains when necessary.
Lawrence was "snowed under" by accidents occurring all over town during the few snow periods last year, Garcia said. As many as 100 minor accidents occurred during one rush-hour period from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Studded snow tires, those tires with metallic spikes for greater traction, can't legally be used in Kansas until November 1, and must be taken off by April 1 on county and state roads and by April 15 on city roads. You should also legislate during the last session to outlaw studded tires because of the damage they do to roads, but the measure was killed.
Forrest Bookout of Tire Co. 720, E9th St., said his stock of snow tires was plentiful. He said he sold three brands of tires and only one millette, had been affected by the strike.
Bookout said fewer customers were buying retreated tires because the price of retreads increased in proportion to the price of new tires.
DESPIITE A strike by rubber workers earlier this year that temporarily affected the supply of tires, the fire dealers don't notice the serious shortage of snow tires in Lawrence.
Lückig said customers were buying more recaptured tires than usual, but because of the strike old tires used for recaps were scarce. People unable to buy new tires were forced to recaptain longer and completely them out, he said, so they couldn't be recapted.
LICKTEE, WHOSE store sells Goodyear
licensed, said he was short of a few sizes,
and his prices are very low.
"A lot of tires are on order," he said, "and are just starting to come in."
Workshop's aim is to improve studying skills
Whether for the senior hardened by mid-terms or the freshman new to term papers, studying can be a difficult skill to acquire and retain.
An opportunity for traditional and nontraditional students to brush up their study skills will be provided by the Adult Life Resource Center, a department of the Division of Continuing Education at the University of Kansas.
The Center will conduct a study skills workshop from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Nov. 6 in Annex A, 13th and Oread Streets. The workshop costs $10.
Workshop leader, Julie Gordon, assistant dean of women, said yesterday that the workshop would concentrate on basic study skills as listening and note-taking, reading efficiently, scheduling time and reviewing for exams. She said that participants with specific concerns also would receive help in the sessions.
The Adult Life Resource Center, which attempts to help adults cope with their changing roles in society, also will direct a workshop Nov. 20 on career and lifestyle choices for single women. Anyone interested in registering may contact Sara Schappli at Annex A, northwest of the Kansas Union.
Tire companies make thousands of tires of one size, he said, using one mold. Then the mold is changed and the company makes thousands of another size.
"That's why we'll be out of one tire size and have plenty of another," Lücktig said. "We anticipated the strike and bought extra tires ahead of time, so we had some in front."
THIS RE-EVALUATION is embodied in a pamphlet written by Sidman called the Kansas Plan.
Daryl Dwyer of D and D Tires, 1000 Vermont St., said customers anticipating a shortage caused by the strike began to buy snow tires this summer. He said that he was short on radial sizes, particularly "L" and added that he would soon get some more.
"Our enrollments, which were in severe decline by 1972-73, reversed that decline in 1973-74." Nelson said. "And they have continued to increase."
Nelson said the increase in students had come without a corresponding increase in teachers.
Sidman offered a few reasons why KU
went to college while enrolment nationally was low.
"We've worked very hard at a number of things," Sidman said. "First of all, we're going to keep full-time faculty members teaching in the freshman classes." We have experienced people, to teach freshman classes. I absolutely believe in it."
"But you add to that other major program responsibilities that I've tried very hard to encourage," Sidman said. "One thing we do is to offer general interest topical courses for the casual course who would like to take a course now and then in history."
One example is a course taught by Siderman called Inside Hitler's Germany.
"This is not a specialist course for people who want to be historians," he said. "It's a general course for those people who are interested in a certain aspect of the past. I teach teaching it; the students enjoy taking courses trying to make them into historians."
Sidman added that history courses shouldn't be required in college.
"I WOULD NEVER want that," he said. "I 'tink freshmen should take history courses because I think they're very good for students no matter what kind of academic program the student wants to study, and I don't worry not having a resumed history course."
He said the history department tried to offer pre-professional programs for students who were interested in going on to some kind of professional training.
Courses of study are designed in such areas as social problems in education, law and public affairs, science and medicine, and business and economics, he said.
"We give students a pre-professional
Stitch On
needlepoint shop Dear Friends.
9 would like to invite you to see my shop, Sunday, October 31 from 1-4 p.m. 9 will be featuring the work of Nana Owens, whose
original handpainted canvases will be an exclusive at Stitch-On. She will be with me to discuss her many designs and answer any questions. I'm looking forward to seeing you.
19 W. 9th
1/2 block west of Weaver's 842-1101 Barb Heck
Pizza Inn serves $1.00 PITCHERS & 25c DRAWS Friday 2 p.m. 'til 12 p.m. (We also make America's favorite pizza.)
Pizza inn.
Hillcrest Shopping Center Next to Hillcrest theatres Dial 841-2670
THE HISTORY department is also active in the Outreach teaching program.
"We've done more Outreach teaching in
the college, and other department in
the college," Siddharth said.
training by directing a sequence of courses toward the special interest." Sidman said.
He said that advising for students was taken very seriously.
"I've enlisted a tremendous amount of the human resources of the department to give students time in advising," Sidman said. He said students were directed to advisors who were versed in the student's special area of interest.
"We like to do the special interest topical courses, the pre-professional courses of study, and Outreach teaching," he said. "And that's what has made the difference—plus the commitment of the faculty to teach it, plus the time to course development. And you can't stand still. Every day you stand still you lose ground."
SEMESTER BREAK SKI TRIP
WD
WINTER PARK COLORADO
Trip includes
Round-trip transportation
Beer & soft drinks on the bus
4 Nights lodging in condominium
4 Days skiing
4 Days of lift tickets
4 Days of ski rental
SKI TRI
Cost: $135, Jan. 9-Jan. 15, 1977
5th Day of skiing
Ski lessons at special rates
Sign up now in the SUA office.
Exciting
European
Fashions
at
Britches
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Contemporary Clothes for Men & Women 843 Mass.
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place
Give yourselves a treat this weekend! Best Place in Town to Bring Your Parents and Friends.
Our motto is and has always been . . .
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1 and 1/2 MILES NORTH OF KAW RIVER BRIDGE
Phone 843-1431 for Information
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
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Homestyle
DINING
9F
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87 No.49
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday. October 29.1976
Election section studies issues
See stories pages 13-20
Polling results
In politics as of today, do you consider yourself a Republican, Democrat or Independent (in percentages)?
Sent 25.29
October 22-27 Democrat ... 26.1 Democrat ... 26.7
Republican ... 30.1 Republican ... 28.2
Independent ... 43.7 Independent ... 45.2
If the election for president were today, which candidate would you vote for (in percentages)?
Oct. 22-27
Sept. 25-29
48.4 Ford 43.4
28.5 Carter 35.2
2.7 McCarthy 9.1
1.9 Others 1.2
17.1 Don't know 11.1
Ford 48.4
Carter 28.5
McCarthy 2.7
Others 1.9
Don't know 17.1
In the debates, did you watch (in percentages):
| | First | Second | Third |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| All | 46.0 | 31.7 | 28.6 |
| Part | 25.2 | 29.0 | 22.9 |
| Glanced | 9.7 | 7.3 | 6.7 |
| None | 19.1 | 32.0 | 41.9 |
The second Kranan poll was conducted by reporting II and advanced reporting unit student telephone interviews of 2,500 students enrolled in the University of Minnesota's System Department of the University Computation Center. Statistics indicate that a survey of 341 persons would have a
Kansan poll says Ford still leads
By YAEL ABOUHALKAH
JIM BATES Editorial Editor
Gerald Ford still holds a commanding lead over Jimmy Carter in the Kansan's final poll of registered KU students before Tuesday's presidential election.
However, Carter and independent candidate Eugene McCarthy have made sizable cuts into Ford's previous lead, reported in the first Kansas poll taken September 25-29.
In the latest poll, taken Oct. 22-27, Ford leads Caterr. 43.4 per cent to 35.3 per cent. In the earlier poll, Ford had led Carter 48.4 per cent to 28.5 per cent.
McCarthy, meanwhile, has increased his share of the vote from 2.7 per cent in the first poll to 9.1 per cent. That like comes from a number of supported support among independent voters.
CARTER'S GAIN comes from a combination of increased support among DANIELS.
In the first poll, Carter captured 63.6 per
cent of the Democratic party's vote. In the latest poll, that figure jumped to 82.4 per cent. Carter's share of the independent vote went from 23.3 per cent to 26.0 per cent.
Ford, the Republican incumbent,
captured 68.5 per cent of his party's vote in
the first poll and 82.7 per cent in the latest
poll. He also carried the district
dipped from 40.7 per cent to 35.7 per cent.
In the first poll, 421 students were asked questions in personal interviews about their preferences of presidential candidates and their views on the state of the televised Ford-Carter debates.
IN THE LATEST poll, 341 students were asked questions during telephone interviews, once again about the candidates and once about the polls the poll didn't include the same students.
However, a comparison of the two polls shows that the share of Republican, Democratic and independent voters in them were about the same.
In the latest poll, 28.2 per cent of those interviewed said they were Republican,
If the election for President were today, which candidate would you vote for (in percentages)?
| | Ford | Carter | McCarthy | Others | Don't know |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Republican | 92.7 | 5.2 | 0 | 0 | 2.1 |
| Democrat | 4.4 | 82.4 | 7.6 | 0 | 5.5 |
| Independent | 35.7 | 26.0 | 15.6 | 2.6 | 20.1 |
| TOTAL | 43.4 | 35.2 | 9.1 | 1.2 | 11.1 |
The comparable figures for the first poll
Republicans, 45.2%, Democrats, 43.8%
Democrats, 43.8%.
26.7 per cent said they were Democrats and
45.2 per cent said they were independents
The two Kansan polls also attempted to discern how much effect the three televised debates had on KU students' choice for President.
Of the 330 persons who at least glanced at a part of any of the three debates, 46.0 per cent saw all of the first debate. The number dropped to 31.7 per cent for the second debate and dipped even lower, to 28.6 per cent, for the third confrontation.
THE MOST OBVIOUS statistic was the distance in the viewing audience for the debater.
An independent agreed.
"I didn't think they really discussed issue at all," a Democratic Carter vote affirms.
Most students who commented on the debates criticized them.
"ITHOUGH TREBATE debates were unfair," he said. "They made it seem that the only people running were Carter and Ford and that wasn't true."
KANSAS
UNIVERSITY
SENIOR
The poll also indicated two other things about the debates' effects: 15.2 per cent of the 330 respondents their votes had been changed by the debates, and 41.9 per cent of the student voters said watching the debates made them more sure about their vote.
A Republican voter noted, "The debates just made both of them look kind of intense."
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Swine flu stinger
Being a grown KU senior doesn't always mean flu shots won't hurt as Rick Brack,
Kansas City, Mo., senior, discovered yesterday when he got his shot at Watkins Hospital. Yesterday was the first day swine flu shots were given at Watkins.
Meanwhile, the number of students who didn't watch any of a debate climbed from 19.1 per cent to 32.0 per cent and, finally, to 41.9 per cent in the final debate.
Flu shots don't worry recipients
By PAUL ADDISON
OF THE THREE large groups of voters,
the Republican leaders are populous
screens. See FORD, pages 396.
Staff Writer
"It didn't even stink," she said. "I didn't
have to done it to me until they said
it could be."
Jane Kleinberg rolled down her sleeve and smiled.
Kleinberg, wife of Jack Kleinberg,
professor of chemistry, was one of 100
people who received flu shots in the
first hour westerday at Walkins Memorial
Hospital as part of Douglas County's public
flu swine immunization program.
The reaction of other Lawrence residents to the $13-million national campaign was subdued.
"If an epidemic does start, it is important to me to know that I've had one and that
WINONA DINGMAN, 323 Dakota St., said she had come for the shots because her husband had a chest disease and she didn't want him to get the flu.
they were necessary." Craig Edmston, who got the shot because his doctor advised him to stop
The shots given at Watkins were part of Douglas County's campaign to immunize all its citizens. President Ford started the nationwide program after an outbreak in February of a new strain of flu, type A New Jersey 76 (swine flu), caused the death of one soldier and the infection of several hundred others in Ft. Dix, N.J.
"I got the shots to protect him, to protect my family's health and to protect my work."
"Everything's going smoothly and we're pacing it well," Wollmann said. "The County Health Department staff and our own staff are all giving a helping hand."
Martin Wollmann, director of health services at Watkins Hospital, said that the immunization program was working effortlessly but not interfering with the hospital's routing.
ON OTHER occasions when a change in the virus structure has occurred, a pandemic (worldwide outbreak) has followed. In 1957-58, the United States suffered an estimated 62,000 deaths when a new Asian flu strain first appeared. In 1968, a Hong Kong virus killed an estimated 33,800 people.
"Sare, for a while I had doubts, but if Sare's ready for me to go, then I'm ready," she said.
WOLLMANN SAID a few people had
Milton Weaver, 1938 Maine St. agreed, "I've been having flu shots since 1946 and that's something I think everybody should you have, there's just no real evidence of it."
doubles about receiving the shots because of the recent deaths of about 40 people across the United States within 48 hours of their receiving the vaccine.
"They shouldn't be worried," he said. "I'm convinced there's no association between the two."
Mildred Hodge, 529 Tennessee St., said the reported deaths didn't worry her.
Von Hoffman finds little election choice
By JANET FERREE
Syndicated columnist Nicholas Von Hoffman last night asked a crowd of about 400 in the Kansas Union Ballroom why "such a good-looking girl like America can't find a decent date" in this year's presidential election.
Voff H汗腾 blamed the selection of "two donkeys," such as Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, on a new era of campaigning created by sophistication of the media.
He said this new era had exposed the candidates to the extent that they had become repetitive and that this familiarity had bred contempt.
THE REPEETITIVENESS also came from the lack of "nun" in the canamax, he said.
"They don't say something all the time; it would scare the bell out of us."
Von Hoffman said that apathy had developed as a result of this campaign but that it was nothing for the American people to worry about.
"In general, presidential campaigns don't have much to do with decision making in the office."
"We are brought up thinking that the presidential office is so powerful, but you can quite accurately say that no major governmental leader have taken place in the past 50 years."
VON HOFFMAN said also that there had no changes in foreign policy in the past 30 years.
"Richard Nixon was the only president who attempted any change in foreign policy and you see what happened to him," he said.
Von Hoffman said that we had elections because people lived a symbolic life and elections were one of America's favorite symbols.
"Elections are traditional. They are something other than caddies." But that means democracy.
"Every now and then something comes up where we need an election. It is in a good place."
IN A PRESS conference yesterday
in ANO. Von Hoffman said he didn't want
Nicholas Von Hoffman
either Ford or Carter to win the election, but that he was placing his bets on Ford.
"I Carter wins it will be because of Bob Dole. The public's reaction to him ranges from "I like it."
"The best thing Dole could do from now until election day is to go to the supermarket, find a large paper bag, and put his head in it."
Von Hoffman said that Dole could cost Ford the election except that people were sick of being told what to do.
Official asserts death unrelated to flu vaccine
State medical experts said yesterday that the death of a 45-year-old Lawrence man was unrelated to his having received a swine flu shot Wednesday.
Laurance Price, pathologist at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said that the man, Miguel Ramos, 1508 Powers St., died of a severe coronary disease.
Den Wilcox, director of the department of epidemiology at the Topeka State Health Department, said that Ramos would probably have died had he not been to the clinic. The death was "simply a coincidence." Wilcox said.
'I'd do it again.' savs pumpkin slaver
Martin Wollmann, director of health services at Watkins Hospital, said that there was no reason to halt the Lawrence swine flu shot program and that further clinics would continue throughout November for high-risk people (those older than 45 and those who are chronically ill) and all others who want to receive shots.
By BILL SNIFFEN
Associate Campus Editor
All right! I've had enough! I confess—I killed it, or
be-whatever.
I turned around quickly—no one there. My radio was *off*, so we were the TV.
It started innocently enough, I guess. I mean, here I was out to buy a pumpkin--you know, to carve for Halloween. I searched carefully—I went to a couple of places in DeSoto, Eudora, all the supermarkets in Lawrence to look for the perfect pumpkin. And finally, I found it--hater- whatever: exquisitely well-proportioned, in coloration, small yet amply endowed. The perfect pumpkin. At least, that's what I thought at time.
So I brought my pumpkin home, laid it on some newspapers, raised my knife.
But you don't know the whole story.
"What do you think you're doing?"
AN AUDITORY hallucination, I thought. I raised my knife again. . . .
the pumpkin? Sure, I did it. And I'm proud of it, too. I bet none of you guys would have the nerve. Slashed her foot.
It was the pumpkin. No doubt about it this time.
"Hold off. buster."
"You're not supposed to talk," I said. "You're supposed to let me carve you up."
"Well nobody ever told me that."
I laid my knife aside, and listened to the orange thing that lay before me.
"You're supposed to be doing this to turnips, nurd."
"Turnips?"
The pumpkin sighed (I think) and explained:
More Halloween treats on pages four and five
that is the way it was done in the early century—want turnips, to ward off the ghosts who visited homes on
Halloween. It's a bit barbaric, if you want my opinion, but then most Scottish-Irish customs are.
I COULDN't move. I'd never talked to a pumpkin before.
"But you're so much more attractive than a turnip," I said.
"Listen, buster," the pumpkin snapped. "I don't come clean, and I'm not easy."
"Oh I know that you weren't cheap—$2.75, I think."
“Can you think of nothing but money?” she asked, her tender stem trembling. “I guess you've never had your relatives guts ripped on and thrown away, or baked in the oven,” she said. “If by iters you'd prefer to be watching a football game,
CARTER HADN'T said "less government" in convincing terms, making him a better leader.
"BUT YOU provide entertainment for children all over "world," I said. I pleaded. "You call that world."
You've never known the degradation of being left outside for weeks, rotting away, until you become part of the garbage. Or worse, becoming a basketball for not-tossed balls and funny the sound you make when a car rides over you."
"Times have changed, big fella. Used to be that we were carved into fancy stuff--you know, elaborate. Really attractive. Or at least scary. Now, everything's political."
"One of my cousins up north had his carved so thin, that after they took the inards out of him, his head was so flat."
Sure. I did it. Look me up—I don't care.
"No!" she screamed. "No! No! Arrghh..
"Another had her smile cut so wide, the top half of her belt fell over backwards. They had to stick nails in her."
I had more than I could stand. My hand moved so-slowly toward the knife, almost without thought. I walked into the room.
But you'll see. When I get out, I'm going to do the same thing to a turnip. Just wait and see. And then, you guys will never catch me. Never. You haven't heard the last of me... "
"I don't know how the political process was stuck us with two turkeys this far before the Iraq war."
Von Hoffman offered a solution to a dull campaign; Voters should write their congressmen and ask that Secret Service protection be removed from the candidates and put on Walter Cronkite and Barbara Walters.
Hour gained this weekend
There is really a Halloween trick, and treat, this year.
Dedylight Saving Time officially ends at 2 a.m. Sunday, meaning clocks should be set back one hour to conform with the time change.
So much for the trick
The treat is that there will be an extra Sunday, to sleep in perhaps, or goblin about.
Since 2 a.m., April 25, most of the nation has been on DST. Only residents of Arizona, Hawaii and parts of Indiana ignore DST. They remain on standard time all year.
2
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
IRA leader killed in hospital
OAKLAND, NORTHERN IREland—The youths assassinated IRA political organizer Maire Drumm as they lay in a hospital bed last night, police reported.
They said the youths burst into the Mater Hospital in Belfast, pulled out revolvers and shot Drumm.
The youths disappeared after the shootings.
Drumm, 56, resigned several weeks ago her post as vice president and principal organizer for the Provisional Sixti Fein, the legal political arm of the lawmaker.
The Provisional IRA is a mainly Roman Catholic movement fighting to drive the British from Northern Ireland and unite the province with the Republic of Ireland. Drummed was in the hospital, which caters to Catholic patients, for a cataract operation on her eyes.
Ehrlichman aoes to iail
SAFFORD, Ariz.—John Ehrlichman suddenly became a federal prisoner yesterday by walking into the Swift Trail federal work camp as soon as he learned that two judges in Washington had granted his request to begin serving his Watergate sentences.
By not waiting for Supreme Court review of his convictions, Ehrlichman became the first of the three convicted men closest to Richard Nixon—and the highest one among them.
His lawyer said he would continue to fight for reversal of Ehrlichman's two Watergate convictions in the high court. Unless the prison time is reduced through application to the sentencing judges, Ehrlichman must serve a minimum of two and a half years before he becomes eligible for parole.
Flu shots up despite deaths
ATLANTA—More than five million Americans have received swine flu shots, and the national immunization program "is picking up steam" despite lingering fever outbreaks.
Immunization clinics are open to the general public in most states after three weeks of concentrating shots on the elderly and the chronically ill–persons concerned.
Reports of about 40 deaths—mostly among the elderly or ill—"probably scared a lot of people off," said Stafford Smith, public information for the Federal Council.
But, he said, "a lot of that fear, we hope, has been allayed by the fact that the vaccine was not implicated in the deaths."
Talks begin amid pessimism
GENEVA—Leaders of Rhodesia's blacks and whites began their conference today on the African country's future in an atmosphere of pessimism, bitten by hope.
The historic meeting at the Palais des Nations brought Ian Smith, prime minister of Rhodesia's white minority government, face to face with four African presidents.
As the talks began, fighting in Rhodesia and on its frontiers escalated sharply, with 19 black guerrillas, one white Rhodesian soldier and three civilians killed.
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Carter told a rally in Cleveland he couldn't promise a substantial tax reduction that a day earlier he had declared would be the "almost inevitable" result of his economic policies after four year in the House. The Democratic candidate said that he has raised GDP growth and lowered inflation and unemployment there might be tax reductions.
Campaigning in key industrial states yesterday Jimmy Carter attempted to persuade, but not promise, that taxes would be lower if he were elected.
Carter no longer promising tax reductions
Bv The Associated Press
PRIMARILY LEATHER
TS
"I am very careful not to promise that for sure," he said.
President Ford, meanwhile, sought to demonstrate his leadership in nuclear power.
with a promise that construction of uranium enrichment facilities in Portsmouth, Ohio, would begin early next year and would mean 6,000 new jobs.
Ford unveiled plans in Cincinnati for an international effort to prevent the spread of *Ebola* to the United States.
Carter after trailing by 20 points two months ago.
Ohio, with 25 electoral votes, is believed to be leaning slightly toward Carter,伯尔森。
AT A STOP in Indianapolis, Ford told an overflow crowd at the Scottish Rite Cathedral that his Democratic opponent had suffered "a precipitous decline in popularity" because his campaign depends on a "discredited old formula of more promises, more programs and more spending."
Aboard Air Force One, White House chief of staff Richard Cheney contended that Ford's campaign had made such inroads in the Deep South that the President may need to carry only four of the eight most populous states.
CHENEY SAID The President and his strategists originally thought he would have to carry at least five of the "big eight": Texas, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Texas and California. But Cheney said Republican polls indicated Ford's prospects in the South looked promising in Louisiana, Mississippi, North and South Carolina and Texas.
Ford has made strong gains in voter preference polls in California, whose 45 percent hold more than any state. The latest California poll shows the President one percentage point ahead of
BUT DEMOCRAT leaders there are saying, "it's all coming together" now in the Carter campaign in California. Democrats outnumber Republicans by 2.1 million in the race and a registration in the campaign up three new Democrats for every new Republican.
GM will present an exhibition from 8 a.m. to p.m. Monday in the civil engineering lab.
The meeting is part of an industry-campus communications project sponsored by KU and GM today and Monday. The project is an experiment designed to help develop similar projects at other major universities across the nation.
Many University of Kansas students understand how an automobile works, but few may understand how the automobile industry works.
KU students will have a chance to ask questions concerning the General Motors Corp, and the automobile industry at the University. Students will receive 2 p.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium.
GM execs to hold forum
The "Town Hall" meeting will be an open discussion between the audience and four Guests.
perimental urban passenger car will be one of the vehicles on display.
THE EXHIBITION will show the possible future of urban transportation, and an exploration of what the future may look like.
After these events, GM will evaluate the project to determine which of the four communication techniques—the "Town Hall" meeting, the classroom appearances, the invitation luncheon or the exhibition was the most effective.
The four GM executives who have returned to KU for the program are R. T. Kingman, Jr., assistant director of corporate communications at GM headquarters in Detroit and a 1947 graduate from Michigan State University. The Fisher, director of automotive emission control for the GM Environmental Activities Staff and a 1951 mechanical engineering graduate; Robert Eaton, chief engineer of GM's 1959 model car program and a 1963 mechanical engineering degree; Robert W. Smith, vice president of the computer science department at the GM Research Laboratories and a 1960 electrical engineering graduate.
Ford said last week that "California is the real key state in any realistic combination." Carter underscored the importance of California by planning to spend the final day of his two-year campaign at gel-out-the-vote rallies in that state.
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One 6-oz can frozen orange juice
One 6-oz can frozen lemonade
Recipe
ce
Chili ingredients. Mint in bucket,
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SHERIFF SAM JONES 7th and Mass. Downstairs at Eldridge Club
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Friday, October 29,1976
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University Daily Kansan
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From page one
debate watchers. A composite total of 36.5 per cent of the Republicans watched all of the debates, and 63.6 per cent watched all or part of the three debates.
The independents and Democrats both had about 35 per cent of their voters watch all the debates and 59.3 per cent watch all or part of the three confrontations.
Clinic topic Kabuki art
A trope of professional artists and trainees from the National Theater Institute of Japan will give a free workshop in this month's dance studio of Robinson Gymnasium.
However, just because the Republicans watched more of the debates didn't mean they came away as the most satisfied group. The Democrats topped that category, the Republicans were feeling more sure of their vote after the debates. By contrast, the independents
The workshop, sponsored by the University of Kansas International Theatre Studies Center and the Heart of America Japan-America Society in Kansas City, is one of three such programs the Martial Arts Association held in Kansas City and Lawrence this weekend.
Martial arts, like Judo and Kendo (fencing), provide a model for movements in the Kabuki stage fights. The Kabuki artist transforms real techniques to self-defense and attack into highly stylized dance-like patterns without physical contact.
Kabuki is a traditional Japanese theatrical form, dating from the 17th century and characterized by elaborate costumes, rhythmic dialogue and stylized acting, music and dancing. Stage fights are important feature in many Kabuki productions.
At the workshop, the troupe will teach the basic patterns for fight techniques to actors in "Rashomon" and to members of the public who want to participate. "Rashomon," a Japanese play, will open at the University Theatre on November 12.
totaled 39.6 per cent in the "more sure"
catenated the Republicans followed with
10.4 per cent.
--are used to playing bingo games with various twists, such as 'good neighbor' bingo, where the person on either side of the winner also gets a prize. That, too, is illegal, because under Kansas law it is a form of lottery."
As could be expected, the independent voters expressed the most widespread voting choices. The debates had a slightly higher turnout among the independent votes of 18.3 per cent of the unfirming state.
BUT NO PATTERN emerged from the 30 independents (of 154) who switched their
Lord fosl five votes to Carter, three to the undecided column and three to other can-
Carter lost three independent votes to Ford, six to the undecided column and four to other candidates. Unlike Ford, though, Carter gained one vote each from the undecided category and from a former supporter in a minor party candidate (not McCarthy).
The turnover in the Republican and Democratic ranks was much slighter.
Ford gained two Republican votes previously held in the Carter column and picked up three undecided, while losing votes to Carter and one to the noverving ranks.
CARTER GAINED seven Democratic votes previously listed as undecided and one previous nonvoter, while losing two votes to other candidates.
Several voters lamented that a vote for McCarthy would go for naught.
"I'd rather vote for McCarthy but that would be like giving my vote to Ford, so Carter is just a protest against Ford rather than a re-election," she said an independent voting for Carter.
Another Carter independent noted, "I would prefer to have have anyone but Gerald Ford. I might vote for McCarthy except for me," he said. "It would be a good vote for him it might hurt Jimmy Carter."
Most of the rest of the comments were left to unsparingly degrade the candidates. The criticism followed partisan lines for the voters of the two parties, bit it was left to a few independent voters to get in some of the strongest verbal licks.
A DEMOCRAT for Carter said, "McCarthy might be the best choice, but he can't win, so practically I'll vote for Carter."
"Both of them kind of seemed like idiots," said an independent who listed himself unsure of his choice come Tuesday. "Neither one really seemed to know what was going on. I'm more unsure how to vote now than ever."
A Ford independent said, "I think Carter is unrealistic about the promises he's made to me."
Another independent, in the undecided category, simply noted, "I wish Reagan had supported him."
Bingo abuses few in city
Abuses of the year-old Kansas bingo law are apparently confined to larger, metropolitan Kansas cities, a Kansas court of Revenue attorney said yesterday.
"There's a lot of misunderstanding of what the law means," Olsen said. "A lot of games have identical cards, that is cards with the same value, and those numbers in the same order." That is illegal.
The attorney, Bob Olsen, said that although there had been some problems with bingo games in Lawrence, they were not unusual under misunderstandings about the law.
"Another problem is that a lot of people
"Under the law, the only form of disciplinary action allowed is a six-month license revocation and that's just too severe for the judge to imagine. But just doesn't know what he's doing."
To qualify for a bingo license, the applying group must be a charitable, religious, fraternal, veterans or educational organization that has been granted non-profit tax status with the Internal Revenue Service, Olsen said.
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- Friday, October 29th TGIF
- Bugsy's opens at 2, and from 2 'til 7 25c beer and no cover
- Saturday, October 30th
After the game, from 4 'til 7. No cover charge and 25c beer
then Bugsy's 1st Annual
HALLOWEEN PARTY
HALLOWEEN
wear a costume and get in free. The special show starts at 8. Lots of prizes and gifts from Lawrence merchants, including:
Garbage Cassems Gran Sport
Waxman Candles McDonalds Submarine
Don't be afraid to come!
Panhellenic Association Announces: Orientation Meeting for
Spring Membership Program 1977 Union Ballroom
Tuesday, November 2-7:30 p.m.
For more Information contact Panhellenic Association 220 Strong 864-3552
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4
Friday, October 29,1976
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Leisure
They only come out in the chill of the night
©
Staff photo by DAVE REGIER
Ghoulish arins
Nancy Fuhman and Jan Majors, Shawnee Mission seniors, reconsider entering a haunted house in Lawrence when they
realize some noisy apportion may not want company for the night. When started, the girl's language made ghosts shudder.
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Staff writer From ghosties and ghoullies And long-legged beasties
And things that go bump in the night.
A chilling, penetrating rain fell steadily, obscuring any traces of the previous evening's bright orange crescent moon. The wind stirs, glistening as winter starkness, glitched as coated with a thin layer of glass.
Good Lord, preserve us!
It was a dark and stormy night.
Such was the atmosphere confronting a Kansan investigative task force Tuesday at the Museum of Science. I firmly imprinted the above paper in our stream of consciousness, equipped ourselves with candles and set out in a room that investigates haunted houses.
AN UNINHIBITED imagination is required to effectively evaluate a haunted house. Not all are of the Victorian, curtorted, multigated variety—most in this area are deseret and ill-fashioned or without accompanying legendary tales.
After departing from the warm newsroom and secure parking lot behind Flint Hall, the member of our group asserting intimate knowledge of Oskaloosa *apparitions* enlightened us about the quarantine of our first destination.
LEGEND HAS it that the house, built in the 1870s, was the home of old-maid sisters who left about 20 years ago, unexpectedly and for reasons unknown. Since their unexplained departure, the house has stood vacant—except for a short time about a dozen years ago when an orphaned girl found the accommodations of the abandoned house to his liking.
The story says the man was more than a little strange. He kept files and maps of children's habits, outfits and routes they followed; he wrote about penguins, the tundra, Sandra, strangled a woman he feared was onto his "hang-ups," and dragged her through town with a rope tied to her foot.
By this time, we were well into the Kansas countryside—punctuating, our durets about the sanity of the venture and credibility of the tale with unscheduled veerings off the
AUTHORITIES say a ghost can return for many reasons: to re-enact its own death, to complete unfinished business, to find and enforce a normal pursuit when it was alive, to protest or punish, or to warm, console, inform, guard or reward the living. I was confident the mention of the conviviality attributed to ghosts is not an expression of confidence and bravado among the group. Wrong again.
IN AN EFFORT to allay the mounting skepticism of my friends, I drew from my well-researched (30 minutes in Watson Library's "ghost" section located in the innermost sanctum of the building) data on ghosts.
HOWEVER, I announced confidently, our company would have good credentials. Shakespeare included ghosts in Hamlet Marcabeth and other characters from the farnous. We should be so lucky.
These critters, I rationally explained, can be characterized by the appearance of whiteness, light or miscellaneous color. But these creatures should've left out that last part, I realized, after saving it).
Such intellectual musings were soon tested as we turned into a rutten, muddy road that looked like an abyss to the venture—a abandoned house.
I felt obligated to warn my companions that ghost experts say the beasts are prone to be noisy about their hauntings and are a heavy-footed lot, for all their incorporeity.
The car engine died as we drove in—if such was reassurance on the part of some passengers it obstructed kindness at the time. We got our vehicle going again and believing discretion to be the better part of valor, our driver moved forward heading away from the house.
"WE REALLY can't stay here long ya know. I've got a test tomorrow."
"Yeah, but this is neat. C'mon, light your candle."
Nevertheless, undaunted by initial feelings of terror, we pressed forward—onto the
dilapidated, weather beaten,
surrounded by weeds and
debris. Certainly enough to
be among us as our candles saw fit
"Don't step on the porch too hard—I think it collapses easy." The two story house was.
The two-story house was
to muster only the most feeble flickerings.
A Halloween Carol
Duest Writer
By RON HARTUNG
The scattered souls scurrying across campus through the crisp October night probably didn’t even notice that a lone window shone out from the dark building that loomed beside them. It was Halloween night, but the ram working in that room had been sitting on things far distant from trick-or-treat.
fascination with cavorting through a pumpkin patch and dreaming of goblins?
His name was Ebenezer, and he was an acting department chairman. Diligent and dedicated he was indeed, but he was so much jovial and nasty. There he sat this night, grading essays with a ferocity that had curdled in the many a hapless Bic. A smirk played around his lips: Finally he held the reins of power in this city, and they slaved for thirty-odd years. And he wasn't about to let go of them. So he spent all day and most of each night burrowed in his office, counting his degrees in the work of his weak-spirited colleagues.
"A POOR EXCUSE for
"cating the university of its
stipend," Ebenezer growled. He
then gave grudging approval.
"But be here the earlier in
the story, and have a pop
quiz tomorrow."
Those thoughts still occupied him as he arrived home, fixed a snack of Fig Newton and Squeeze Parkay and settled down to watch the Tony DeHaro nasty. A nasty man indeed.
His master anticipated the request. Without looking up from his gradebook he snarled into the outer office, "You'll want all night tonight, I suppose?"
Perhaps hours passed perhaps only minutes, before Ebenezer awoke with a start. The dank apartment was illuminated only by the eerie glow of the now blank television screen.
"If quite convenient, sir," came the muffled reply. "It is but once a year."
Butter-headed fools, he thought to himself. What's the
HE WASN'T alone on these late-night vigils. In a little close off to the side of his office shivered poor Bob Scratchit, his graduate assistant. Because it was Halloween night, because it was Hallowen night, Bob hoped to get off early to observe the holiday.
Suddenly out of the corner of his eye Ebenezer saw that a little man was standing in the middle of the room. He had turned off the TV, but still an officer came to the room. The little fellow's outfit was strange; he wore a cheap plastic mask that Ebenezer, had he been a student of the comic book, would have recognized as the face of the Mulk; on the other hand, he was recalled to the cosmic masse "Me Hulk. Me do Trick. Me eat Treat."
"These are but shadows of the things that have been," the Spirit said. "They have no consciousness of us."
His thoughts were interrupted by a voice—a voice much older than Ebenzeh had expected to issue from so small a frame.
And then Ebeneren saw a group of chubby little rascals all decked out in fancy costume home from school, where they sat before the admiring eyes of their classmates. The boys were dressed as pirates and devils, the girls as princesses and roses, the boys as wild expectation of the sugary booty the night would bring.
"Come with me," he beckoned, and once more Ebenzer was airborne. Soon he had a large window of a window of much butter duplex, gaily decorated with cardboard skeletons and scowling jack-o-lanterns. The wedge of the place touched Ebenzer.
Good heavens, Ebenezer thought, is this little beastie a junior college transfer?
"Folder!o!" replied his reluctant host somewhat nervously. "How do I know you're not some strange dream born of took Newtons? took Halloween—bah, chooe!?"
"I am the Spirit of Halloween Past," the visitor explained.
"COME WITH ME, ebenzee We are taking a trip. Touch my candy apple . . . there!" -and off they flew into the night.
Soon the University was no longer visible. They traveled a road that Ebenezer had made, to the house where he and even now there were little children frolicking about, paying the intruders no heed.
BUT WALKING behind the others was a forlorn-looking little boy dressed as a hobo, bored with dragging an empty trick-or-treat bag on the ground. He would spend the night alone, dressing in classmates and enjoying it. Ebenzer recognized him, and a
Nor did he have time, for in an instant he found himself back at his apartment, his mind racing with thoughts of tricks never done, of treats never tasted. Baby Ruths danced in his head.
of pumpkin-husk caserole and Indian corn, when through the door came more other than Bob Funk, a former mature hoisted bonnet on his shoulder.
"I wish . . .," he began, but didn't finish.
Ebenezer turned to see a jovial fellow dressed in an orange and black jumpsuit with white laffers. The Spirit's belly told a tale of too many popcorn balls, too much apple cider.
Speaking not a word, the Spirit ordered Ebenezer to touch his tocol, and away they went—on and on, into dark wood. He asked the student never before seen. They stopped. The Spirit pointed a bony finger down an alley, where Ebenezer saw a professional type being pummeled merlessly by young thongs On the floor came two men, "Trick or Treat or Taste Pin, Enemy of the Working Class."
"EBENEZER," called a voice from behind him. "I am the Spirit of Halloween Present."
“ITS ALL the fault of that Ebenezer monster,” she cried, and I felt so overwhelmed more often you could walk. Then Jim and put his sweater on him. And that skimpy stipend you on—it barely covers the cost of a winter coat.
AS THE TWO unnoticed guests watched, the woman inside prepared a humble feast
And a fear-inspiring Spirit he was. He was slammed, wrapped in a hooded black cloak, and what was visible of his face appeared to resemble mince-meat warmed over.
And Ebenzer looked on, unseen but hardly umoved. He remembered how he'd spent his last Halloween, trying to conceal a Norelco triple-header in an ample. He felt ashamed.
"Come now, Tiny Jim, tell mommy everything's all right." "Yap!" (cough) "a paddle who was obviously the darling of the household and by, who the books of him, was soo to eat his last Friskes Biscuit. Scratcht he came home, wife and shook his head slowly.
. . ." She sank her head into her folded arms and sobbed while Bob tried to console her.
There was to be one more visitor to the apartment that night—one Ebenenner expected, “YOU—you are the Spirit of
100-120 You are the owner of . . . Halloween Yet to Come! Oh, I fear your coming most of all!"
HE LOOKED on in horror as the beaten continuing and one of them tainted their victim: "Put the knife into her apple, will va, old-dimer?"
Again the scene changed,
this time to a graveward. There on a hill
above Ebenerz. Beneath the
name of Ebenerz. Beneath
the read this epithet: "He
was."
HIS HEART fairly leapt within his breast, for he realized now that there was still time to mend his ways, to embrace the noble pumpkin in the true spirit of Halloween. He ran to the throne, threw open and looked on the night with new eyes.
He was still moaning when he opened his eyes to find himself back in his Spartan home. He had no idea what time it was, but Tony DeHaro was still on the screen, and leading from the door down a trail of caramel and popcorn that it didn't been a dream!
"EXQUISITE exquisite!" he cheered as he raced outside, determined to make up for lost time. He wolfed down fistfuls of candy corn, soaped windows by firecrackers and flicked firecrackers into his own office window, all the time laughing uproariously.
"Must it be so, O Spirit?" he whined. "Must it be so?"
"An excellent lad, a remarkable lad!" chuckled Ebenen, suddenly overcome with a desire to bot for apples.
"OKAY, WE'VE seen it.
Anybody want to leave yet? Hey guys, let's go."
"You there, my good man!" he cried to an undergraduate on the sidewalk below. "Tell me, young prince, what day is it?" "Why, it's Halloween, sir," he confused really.
"You said there's neat stuff in here; I'm going upstairs. But this is a new railing. You sure is your place? I think you're full of it."
And when morning came he wasn't at his desk - nor did he ever return. But it's said in these parts that at the stroke of midnight on Halloween, his sister knocked out their windows a face smeared with apple butter, gigging and chanting, "I trick!" I treat!
The upstairs rooms were littered with pieces of notebook paper and old "girlie" magazines. Pin-up posters with measurements written on them hung on each wall. The writings are quite small, but that whoever stayed here last was strange and perverted.
gotta go now 'cause it's late.
Please you guys. I don't think
I'm enjoying our stay here."
I think the two stalwarts among us would have protested this latest cowardly urging and continued our rumagings through papers and paranormal mail and paraphrases hadn't dictated that discretion again prevail over valor.
When safely nestled into our faithful automobile, signs of trepiration evaporated and we eagerly awaited the next test of our steely nerves and rational minds.
HOWEVER, we agreed that no one had recently questioned the veracity of the safety in numbers theory. So, when we dropped off one member of the group, we commandered the services of three others for moral support.
The second haunting locale was just west of Meadowbrook apartments—right on the edge (comforting to save the least).
The two experienced venturers in the group forged ahead while the three newcomers followed closely and nervously.
"THE ONLY good thing about this is if I die I won't have to take my nutrition test."
"LET'S GO, okay? We've
We entered the room at the end of the hallway. Actually, two of us walked in, while the other three locked arms, through the doorway and huddled together in a corner.
"Com'on you guys, don't be such prissy butts."
"I want to feel a hand on my back at all times."
A winding staircase led to a second floor and, despite reservations among our reinforcements, we decided to assault the upper level at full strength.
BEFORE WE'D sufficiently recovered from the candelight he had brought to his ghost, a screen door that was previously in an upstairs room came flying at us. So much for reassurance—nothing lasts
"Didn't you say you'd just graduated from the Midland Karate School?"
Our strategy for the expedition into the house consisted of a single-file procession with candle lights, first candles supposedly leading.
"I wish we could get closer together. I feel terribly insecure right now."
IT WAS still raining, and getting windier and colder. The glass in most windows was broken out but our research had told us ghosts are particularly interested in doors and windows and we crunched as we walked around the first-floor window that looked what looked like blood stains on the floor were only water puddles from the wind-driven rain.
"COURTNEY, you have no idea how much respect I have for your right now," were words of encouragement heard as I led our process up the stairs. We talked small claims to farnear. I pondered.
"Yeah. But I'm counting on the 20 Marines we know to drop by."
as we uncourageously edged through the door, we saw five candles burning in the front window. Hopefully, we prayed these were left by well-intentioned spirits and were intended to warm or console. True optimists we were.
I FOUND myself bringing up the rear. I also found myself on the bottom of a pile of terrified "investigators."
"We're called Elmer's Glue." "Go check out that red door—it just moved."
After deciding that a gust of wind provided a logical explanation for the rug's movement and after completing our thorough investigation of the upper floor (in well under five seconds), we ventured downstairs.
Two of the group ventured to the back porch only to effect a easy run to report of things a hard, the night somewhere outside.
"Let's go across to that other room. I want a hand on my back at all times. You go ahead--you give me time, the respect I gave for you."
"Sit up, I hear something."
The rumblings we heard were for real. They started out softly but got progressively louder as they fell over the wall, fell over, apparently without provocation. We thought we'd possibly run onto a poltergeist—a particularly obstreperous ghost that throws objects about a house and causes damage in the process (to say nothing of causing normally rational beings to end our interest in intellectual explanations as a throw rug suddenly scooted across the floor.
"SHIIITTT! There's something down there."
WITH CANDLES waning,
feet and hands freezing and
rationality ebbing, bravery
again gave way to sensibility.
We made a dignified but rapid
exit.
"Fantastic—but let me up from here."
"JEEZ-US"
"I'M NOT at all comfortable up here."
"YOU GUYS are so brave. You have no idea how much respect I have for you."
"God, is my bed and three layers of covers gonna feel good!"
Highlights
This Week's
Exhibits
THE MAX KADE COLLEC.
oil paintings and prints,
including works by James
Boyle, is at the
Kingston Gallery.
TODAY'S WORKING CENTER • WORKS WITH BRAKEWORK by Lawrence artis, is displayed at the Lawrence Arts Center. Ninth and Vermont
AMISTAD II: AFRO-AMER-
ICAN ART, is exhibited at the
Watkins Museum, 11th and
Massachusetts streets.
Theater
"EVERYONE IS SOME
TIME!" or "TIME!", an original play by Donna Young, is performed tonight through Saturday at the Warner Bros. Theater.
"THE APPLE TREE," a musical comedy, is performed by Hashinger Theatre tonight at 8 in Hashinger Hall.
Concerts
BRUCE PENNER performs a senior recital on percussion tonight at iS Swarthout Recital Hall, Murray Hall.
THE UNIVERSITY SYMP-
HONY
practiced by George Cogor-
lawer,律师.
Sunday afternoon at 3:30 in
the University Theatre, Murphy
R. E.O. SPEEDWAGON performs in concert Sunday night at 8 in Memorial Hall, Kansas City, Kan.
THE UNIVERSITY SING.
ERS perform Tuesday night at 8 in Swarthout Hourt. Hall.
SHARI WEELBOR, vocalist and guitar player, plays tomorrow and Thursday from 9 a.m. at the Rubayyal, Ramadha Inn.
COLE TUCKEY ON RYE, a
everything from blues to rock
to western music, plays tonight
and tomorrow to 12
from Friday through Sunday.
SKIP DeVOL play banjo
bass to 9, to midnight at al
Grays' Jazz Place. Thursday is
FREE JAZZ JAM SESSION
Films
INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS—Don Siegel's handling of this tale about a young girl who duplicates and replaces the population makes it the most notable of all '50s science fiction. Kevin McCarthy and Dia Dee work together with Peckinpah, who worked as
dialogue director on the film, shows up in a bit role.
S
DRUM—The biggest budgeted waste of film since 1985 is the "Mandingo" is marketed to exploit both the redneck and the hipster in which group you identify with, the here is either Warren Gates
THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE-JAMES V. Cain's novel had already been adapted to film twice, once in France and then in Italy before the two films were published and Lana Turner as the scheming, murderous leads. To those devoted to the hard-edged style of Cain's prose, this is arguably the best treatment; in other words, the poetics inherent in the story, it is arguably the worst.
THE EYES OF HELL-This 3-D movie is campy enough to delight devatives of winking nonsense, but that is unintentional, as is the true horror of *The Maze* and the macachie producing 3-D qinnixm.
Check ads for showtimes.
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Editor Business Manage
Debbie Gump Terry Hannen
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kuala Lumpur August 16, 2015 Subscription price $14.95 and June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscriptions by mail are a member or $18 fee. Subject subscriptions to 2 year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a member or $30 fee.
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Spirit and clothes make the ghoul
By RICK THAEMERT
Staff Writer
"I don't want to be Frankenstein this year. I was Frankenstein last year," squealed a small boy to his mother in the Halloween oak of a local department store. "I am really a little disheveled rack of masks and walks away with a disgusted look on her face.
They have the same goal—to find a unique costume. It's Halloween, their big chance to escape from the complex rut of life into a carefree world of fantasy in which they can become anything their minds can conjure up.
BUT, THE costume must be good and the role convincing, because the fantasy is short-lived. Come Nov. 1, thoughts of pumpkins and parties turn back to Western Civilization for the college woman. And for the young boy, thoughts of witches' brooms and warlocks turn back to Tonka dumptrucks.
Costumes have always been vital to the celebration of Halloween, or All Hallows' Eve, as it was first called. The religious holiday, observed by the Anglo-Saxons and Celts, marked the turning of the year to November when demonic forces were still, are rife.
For that reason, Druids held rites to protect flocks and crops from evil supernatural powers, and also to honor the Lord of Death, who called the spirits of the dead back home on All Hallows' Eve. The Druid directed his servants in the rites, and they dressed accordingly, as animals, spirits or evil creatures.
TO PRESERVE the eerie, mysterious atmosphere of the tradition, people still lean toward the macabre and supernatural when choosing costumes.
"Everyone like something that's going to scare the hell out of them," said Mark Short of Kansas City Costume Co., Overland Park.
Costumes costumes are the most popular outfits for trick-or-treaters, he said and his store carries many realistic rubber masks that can be worn in Hollywood (that cost between $7 and $45).
JOHN'S NOVELTY, 1014½ Massachusetts, carries several rubber masks and such accessories as hairy feet and wart-free hands.
Plastic half-masks, covering only the face, can be found for less than $1 in any store that carries Halloween supplies, but the exposed back of the head often is a dead giveaway to the masquerader's true identity.
Other ghouls would prefer to rent their costumes.
SHORT SAID his store's costumes rent for $7 to $35. The store began feeling the Halloween rush about the middle of September, he said, and would have no trouble renting almost all its costumes by Halloween.
Raggedy Andy and Andy are his store's most popular outfits, he said, and Roaring 20s flappers, Keystone Cops, gorillas, Batman and Robin, gangsters, convicts and large animal characters like those at Disneyland are also popular.
"I've seen some college kids do some amazing things with makeup," Short said, and his store gives free advice with the makeup they see, which includes stage blood, face putty scars, burns, warts, hair and sage eyeballs.
LESS HIDEOUS MAKEUP, such as hair
cascades or theatre costumes, might be
bought at cognac or theatrical stores.
BUT MOST students seem to enjoy the challenge of creating their own costumes.
Similar fake wounds can be found at John's Novelty and Lawrence department store.
Used clothing such as oriental skirts, antique clothing and unusual uniforms, can be bought for low prices at Bokonon. 819 Vermont; Half As At Mucur, 730 Massachusetts; and the Social Service League, 905 Rhode Island.
Some students, especially those interested in art, even make their own masks.
Sally Groom, Arlington, Va., junior, said she made a mold with chicken wire, and coated it with paper-mache, making an allowance for head, nose and eye holes.
"THEY'RE EASY to make," she said,
and can easily as much detail as you
would like.
A careful examination of the physical properties of each person's body can probably best determine the appropriate costume. People with curly hair are apt to
be good Brillo Pads, and persons with
widows' make good Eddie Munsters.
But many students fall into a rut of depicting popular, sterotyped characters. Thus, this season can expect to be rifle with greased-up 356 characters such as "the Fonz," braided Mary Hartmans and mustachioed Groucho Marxes—depicted by tricksters sure to avoid the embarrassing question. "Who are you supposed to be?"
Every costume maker should keep several ideas in mind.
**MASKS OR makeup should allow the face to breath—light rubber masks have a hideous after-effect on the complexion—and masks should be cut in the gobble down treat.**
Sight also must be considered when making a costume.
Driving and walking with restricted vision caused by Halloween outfits can leave trick-or-treaters prey to pinches, swift kicks and chuckles.
Friday, October 29,1976
BUT THE most important thing tricksters should remember is to assume the character of their costume. Get into the spirit of Halloween, Carry a girl to the top of Fraser Hall as King Kong, run for the presidency as a peanut, or just bite a neck as Count Dracula. Be haunted, be possessed—it's Halloween.
Go Big Blue
Beat
Nebraska
HECK &
HARDTARFER
Realty, Inc.
• GENE HARDTARFER
EXEC. VICE PRESIDENT
University Daily Kansan
Residence: 843-0215
601 Missouri / Lawrence, Kansas 66044 / Office: 843-5522
TREE FROG, Friday, Oct. 29 Doors open at 8:30 p.m. Show at 9:00 p.m. $2
Saturday, THE BARKING GECKOS Doors open 8:30 p.m. Show at 9:00 p.m. $1.50
Off the Wall Hall
841-0817
737 New Hampshire
Bridal Fashions
By Jan
1101 Mass.
843 2644
9:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Murray, 34th floor
Bridal Fashions
By Jan
1361 MAES.
841-7664
9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Monday Saturday
Clearance
Sale
20% — 30% — 50%
off on gowns
All styles included. Good
selection.
Friday and Saturday—Oct. 29 and 30 12:00 Midnight----$1-Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
MIDNIGHT MOVIES Halloween 3-D Special
3-D returns!
EYES OF HELL
(formerly The Mask)
A MERGIAN FILMS PRODUCTION
WALTER HARRISON
Late 50's cinema horror classic.
Now a hilarious comedy!
Plus shorts:
BETTY BOOP'S RISE TO FAME Ubiwerk's:
THE HEADLESS HORSEMAN
the GRAMOPHONE shop
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"Three to five times less distortion than most other major brands of stereo equipment!"
KIEF'S
Records & Stereo
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-1544
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Friday, October 29, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Volleyball team seeks Big 8 win
By DAN BOWERMAN
Sports Writer
KU's volleyball team is going to the Big Eight Tournament today and tomorrow with every intention of winning it all, even though two teams have beaten KU.
Nebraska University and Oklahoma
University are the only Big Eight schools to
have a full-time faculty in math.
Ban Sticklift said he expected the toughest competition to come from Nebraska.
KU will run off playing the two weakest teams in the Big Eight, Stancliff said. The Jayhawks will play Oklahoma State University first and they easily handled OSU in the Sooner Invitational, 15-1, 15-2. Next will be Iowa State University, whom
Kansan Predictions
KU split with at the Graceland Invitational,
15-0, 9-15.
Making the Kansas football predictions this fall are Steve Schonefeld, sport editor; Brent Anderson, editor; Gary Vie, assistant sport editor, and Jay Abaouabdine, managing editor and Fall 1973 season review.
GAME SCHOENFELD ANDERSON VICE ABOURALKAH
Nebraska at Kansas Nebraska 2817 Kansas 2917 Nebraska 3014
Kansas State at Iowa State Iowa State 2117 Iowa State 24.7 Iowa State 24.3 Iowa State 21.10
Missouri at Okla. State Oklahoma State 26.20 Oklahoma State 17.10 Missouri 35.21 Okla. State 21.20
Oklahoma at Colorado Oklahoma Oklahoma Oklahoma Oklahoma 15.10
Mississippi at Louisiana SL LSU LSU LSU 26.27 Mississippi 14.13
Texas Tech at Texas Texas Texas 20.17 Texas 28.14 Texas Tech 17.14 Texas 28.24
Cincinnati at Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia 31.18
Mississippi St. at Alabama Alabama Alabama Alabama 26.10
Prediction Record 38.16 704 37.17 685 41.13 759 40.14 740
Sport Shorts
In its third game today, KU will take on Nebraska, who beat KU twice this year—at once at NU's own tournament, 15-0, 15-4, 15-3. The Graceland Invitational, 15-7, 15-5.
JV FOOTBALL—This weekend's football battle between Kansas and Nebraska begins at 1 p.m. today when the school's junior varsity squares square off on the Allen Field House. A quarterfinal game will be played on Friday.
FIELD HOCKY—Because of field conditions, the field hockey game between KU and Nebraska will be played at Emporia Kansas State College instead of here. The game will be
The KU team also was scheduled to play Graceland College in Lamoni, Iowa, tomorrow, but that game was postponed to Nov. 9.
A game with Emporia State, canceled earlier in the week, will be played at 3:30 p.m.
Monday at Emporia State.
SWIMMING--The KU women's swimming team will hold an intrasquat meet at 7 tonight in the Robinson Natatorium.
Gary Kemp, women's swimming coach, said the meet would have the 13 events swimmers will face in Big Eight competition. He said this early taste of competition would help prepare athletes to perform well in future competitions.
SUA
K.U. CHESS CLUB TOURNAMENT
KU
Oct. 31
Parlor B and C, Kansas Union
Begins at 3:00 p.m.
Entry Fee $2.00
Prizes: Trophies to top 4 places. All expenses paid trip to Region XI,
Capo Girardeau, Mo. for top 4 students
Everyone encouraged to participate. Sign up in S.U.A. office Oct. 27-29
The Jayhawks will meet Oklahoma, who best beat SIU in the Sooner Invitational, 15-8, 15-8.
or at tournament (2:00-2:30)
Cornucopia
Restaurant
Enjoy eating good home cooked food at the Connucopia Restaurant. Our recipes, dressings and breads are made from scratch. We use the best basic natural ingredients possible. Featuring this state's finest salad and fruit bar, plus a large selection of omelets, crepes, and sandwiches for the discriminating appetite.
Average meal price, including drink $3.00. Please don't be discouraged by a waiting line. Seating within 15 minutes. Capacity for 104 people, ample parking in the neighborhood, on the street, after 6:00 p.m. and on Sundays.
Good Food Naturally!
Good Food Naturally!
Cornycopia
1801 Mass.
842-9637
Lawrence, Kansas
10-10 daily
KU will run open Saturday's competition with Kansas State University, KU and K-State have met once, with KU winning, 8-15, 15-9, 15-3. The Hawks will finish the tournament with a victory, who they beat in the semifinals of the Graceland Invitational, 12-10, 16-14.
Rockhurst, NUSOCCER CLUB FOES
The RU Soccer Club travels to Kansas City to take on powerful Rockhurst College Saturday before returning to Lawrence to play Nebraska Sunday.
Rockhurst, 9-2-1 this season, placed third in the NAIA soccer final last year.
"We would be doing well to lose by three goals or less, but I really think that if we play as well as we have the last five games, we can beat them." Mulin said.
KU coach Bernie Mullin said that the boutt KU could defeat Rockers but that the Knicks would win.
Mullin pointed to the fact that Rockhurst was a varsity coach with excellent coaches.
KU, 5.2, defeated Nebraska in Lincoln earlier this season when they scored three points in overtime to beat the Huskers, 5.2.
Both games begin at 2 p.m.
Skip Devol
World's Greatest Banjo Player Friday & Saturday Paul Gray's Jazz Place
Ruggers face Nebraska team
A group of ex-Nebraska football players who are now on the NU rugby team will battle the Kansas Jayhawks at 10:30 tomorrow morning on the intramural fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
Sunday, the Hawks will travel to Kansas City, Mo, to face their toughest competition of the year, the Kansas City Blues.
Allen Chapman, who helps coach the Jayhawks, said that Nebraska was a newly reorganized team and wouldn't be big as a threat to the KC Blues.
The Jayhawks posted a rare victory over one Blues last spring, and Chapman doesn't like the added incentive it gives the opposition.
SUA
SUA POPULAR FILMS Upcoming Films for Fall '76
Oct. 29-30 The Exorcist
Nov. 5-6 Farewell, My
Loyalty
Nov. 12-13 Nashville
Nov. 19-20 A Brief Vacation and The 10th International Tournee of Animation
Doc. 3-4 The Passenger
HALLOWEEN GATHERING
Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union
How Do You Explain This:
IF Nancy Hambleton is so concerned about housing, why did she, as Mayor, spend more of the taxpayers' money constructing the Town Center "Flower Pot" (6th and Mass.) than she did on housing rehabilitation?
Vote For The One With Integrity
RE-ELECT MIKE GLOVER YOUR REPRESENTATIVE
Paid for by Students for Mike Glover Comm. Steve Millstein, Chairman
Sun., Oct. 31st at 8 p.m.
41 East 7th St.
THE
7TH
PIRIT
6kEast 7th St.
Drink our special witches brew;
join in on some crazy games.
Prizes for the best costumes.
Nebraska game on Saturday.
Enjoy a "no hassle drink" right after the
SUNDAY NITE PIZZA BUFF BUFFET
All the Salad & Pizza
A Pizza Lover Can Eat
For Only
$2.20
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'B
In Jar Walker cl be the fir back-to-bc A vict nuskers the 1976 walker's
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'Big Red ready for KU
By BRENT ANDERSON
Associate Sports Editor
A victory against the Nebraska Cornhuskers would insure a winning season for the 1976 team, now 5-2, and would meet Walker's challenge. KU was 7-5 last season.
In January, athletic director Clyde Walker challenged the 1976 football squad to be the first team since 1961 and 1926 to have back-to-back winning seasons.
Nebraska couldn't care less about Jayhawks meeting their goal. Coming off their first loss of the season, a 34-24 defeat by Missouri, the 'Huskers would be perfectly willing to take it out on KU after the buff tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
And doing that wouldn't be particularly unusual. The last two times Nebraska (and more than 15,000 NU fans) came to Lawrence, they won. 56-0.
KU DOEN'T have Dave Jaynes this year, nor does it have Nolan Cromwell, who is running to what Jaynes was to passing. Instead, KU will rely on quarterback Scott McMichael, its great running backs, and an interim performance by his defense to win the game.
in fact, the Jayhwaks have managed only nine points against the Cornhoppers since 1971, and those came in the 10-9 squeaker at Lincoln in 1973, when quarterback Dave Jaynes led the Jayhwaks. NU won 55-10 in 1971-60 in 72-54 in '74 and 64 last year.
The KU backfield and offensive line, however, which have teamed for the best running game in the Big Eight, might be missing two of their starters.
The starters, halffallback Billy Campfield and guard John Mascarello, both might not be able to play against NU, KU coach Bud Moore said after practice yesterday.
Both apparently suffered sprained ankles
"UNLESS CAMPFIELD makes remarkable progress in the next days, he won't start and might not play," Moore said.
in the KU-KState game last Saturday, and reinjured them in practice this week. Moore said that it was doubtful that Mascardello, the only KU starter from Nebraska, would be able to start, and doubtful that Campfield would be able to play.
Max Ediger, a sophomore halfback from Topeka, will start if Campfield doesn't, Moore said, and junior Wardell Johnson would back up Ediger.
Moore said he was concerned about whether KU's practice session yesterday indicated that the 'Hawks were ready to battle "Big Red."
"I don't think our concentration was what it needs to be to play a team like Nebraska," Moore said. "It *it* doesn't improve, we could completely run out of the stadium."
"I think the players bounced back before the coaching staff did." Osborn said of the loss. "It was just one of those things. We think of kind we had a better team than Mizoo. As long as we keep the kind of attitude we have, we'll be all right."
NU coach Tom Osborn said his team recovered from its loss to Missouri and went on to win.
Nebraska's attitude so far has been good enough to make it the best defensive team, overall, in the Big Eight. The 'Husker' have the best rushing defense (95.3 yards a game) and the best scoring defense (12 points a game). Their defense against the pass, however, is seventh in the conference and fourth in the N.C. State Moore and KU would have to be able to pass effectively to be able to move the ball against NU.
The Nebraska defense is anchored by its
Friday, October 29, 1976
7
NEBRASKA
tackens, seniors Mike Fultz and Ron Rounty,
who have combined to make 75 tackles. All
Big Eight cornerback D butterfield
leads NU's defensive backfield.
NEBRASKA'S Vince Ferrago is the leading passer in the Big Eight, and leads the conference in total offense. He has passed for 1,182 yards this season, and has averaged 165 yards a game in total offense, leading Nepada to its 5-1-1 record.
Vince Ferragamo
Nu has four of the Big Eight's 10 leading receivers: Dave Shamblin, Bobby Thomas,
Although the "Huskers" running backs have been plagued by minor injuries and the team was "pretty banged up" after their season, they've said his team would be ready physically.
"We might be a little sore now, but we'll be ready to play Saturday," he said.
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Sandy's
Enjoy a great tasting
DELUXE
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Before or after the game,
game, STOP in at Sandy's
2120 West 9th
Pound chopped beefsteak
Sandwiches starters Sesame bun Melted cheese
Shredded lettuce Tomato onion pickle Secret sauce Not just meat but chopped beefsteak
the nest and SUA Present in Concert
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FRIDAY and SATURDAY
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Friday, Oct. 29
Saturday, Oct. 30
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University Daily Kansan
Jocs win intramural division
By ROB RAINS Sports Writer
It took a little longer than normal to determine the winner of last night's championship football game in the Independent Women's intramural League.
It was Freking who gave the Jocs their first score as well. After arriving late because of a test, she raced 95 yards down the right sideline in the second quarter to tie the score. Lewis had scored a touchdown in the first quarter.
The Joes and Lewis played to 6-6 at the end of regulation, but the Jocs' Gayle Frereking broke a 8-4 second touchdown run on a timeout in overtime to give them a 12-6 victory.
The Jocs and Lewis played to a 6-12 tie at the end of regulation, but the Jocs' Galey Frereking broke a 80-yard touchdown run on a 12-6 victory in overtime to give them a 12-6 victory.
Delta Gamma, 6-4, 0-0; the sorority
greatest chapter in school with a 12-0
win over Kappa Alpha Theta.
in a league finale last night, Beta Theta Pi stopped stubborn Phi Delta Theta 13-0 for the fraternity and Palsgraf scored the only touchdown of the game in the fourth quarter to elevate the Scouts, 7-0. The game ended with an afternoon at 4:00 at the recreation fields, 23rd and Iowa streets, for the B league Hill Championship.
A JOHN HADDOCK FORD
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JOHN HANDOCK FORD
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
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---
8
Friday, October 29.1976
University Daily Kansan
Vice chancellor job candidates reduced to five
The field of applicants to fill the office of vice chancellor for student affairs at the University of Kansas has been narrowed to four positions, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
Since July, a search committee headed by Richard Rundquist, director of the University Counseling Center, has been considering applicants to replace William Balfour, who resigned in May to return to teaching at KU.
Shankel said the committee hoped to make the final decision in early December. The committee's choice then will go to Shankel and Chancellor Archie Dykes.
Shankel wouldn't say whether any of the five remaining applicants were from KIT.
Originally, the search committee had 120 applicants a number that was narrowed to 14 semifinalists, and then to the five finalists, Shankel said.
He said a vice chancellor for student affairs should be a pleasant person with administrative and organizational skills. He should be interested and concerned about the needs of all students, leadership, and should be communicative to the needs of all students. Skalked added
In choosing a candidate for the position, the search committee is looking for a "paragon of virtue" who probably doesn't exist. Shankel said.
The vice chancellor for student affairs coordinates the functions of the deans of men, women and foreign students, admissions and records, student financial aid, housing, the Guidance Bureau, the Student Health Service and the Kansas Union.
Donald Alderson, dean of men, has been acting vice chancellor for student affairs.
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Dir. Don Siegel, with Kevin McCarthy, Dana Wynter, Carolyn Jones
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Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads. Call 864-4358.
PITTINGTON MILK COMPANY
On Campus
Events
MUSIL STUDENTS meet at 1:15 p.m. in the Kansas Union's Parlor B and C rooms. THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS is sponsoring a panel discussion of product liability at 1:30 p.m. in the Union's Woodruff Auditorium. THE PEARSON TRUST COMMITTEE meets at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Governor's Room.
TONIGHT: THE BLACK AMERICAN LAW STUDENTS ASSOCIATION banquet begins at 7 in the Union's Ballroom. CAMPUS CRUSADA meets at 7:30 in the Jinayawk Room. STUDENTS FORUM M.CARTHY, independent college president of Robinson College, meets in the IU ballroom. The KU FOLK DANCE CLUB meets at 7:30 in IU Robinson Gymnasium.
SATURDAY: THE KANSAS BAR ASSOCIATION meets at 9 a.m. in the Union's Forum Room. A WOMEN IN LAB seminar is from 1 to 4 p.m. at the University Linwood Center, 9800 Mission Road, Overland Park. DELTA SIGMA THETA meets at 9 a.m. in the Union's Bir Eight Room.
SUNDAY: The WOMEN'S INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP game begins at 1 p.m. in Memorial Stadium. The KU SCOCCER CLUB meets Nebraska at 2 p.m. in Shenk Recreation Complex. SUA CHESS CLUB meets at 2 p.m. in the University of Nebraska. The UA HARRISON CHAMPIONSHIP game begins at 2:30 p.m. in Memorial Stadium. The UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, CHAMBER CHOIR and CONCERT CHORALE will present a concert at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre. The SUA BRIDGE CLUB meets at 4 p.m. in the Union's Pine Room. A KU HILLEL 1856 Halloween dance social begin at 7 p.m. at the Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive.
"TRICK OR TREAT" TIME in Lawrence is from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Sunday, according to the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department and the police. They suggest that: residents turn on porch lights, motorists and trick-or-treaters use cell phones, and children treat beats are thoroughly checked before eating and apples be sliced before eating.
Announcements
ALPHA DELTA SI poris tortor will sell balloons to Memorial Stadium before Saturday afternoon's KU-Nebraska football game to raise money for the KU deserts.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
The first recorded words spoken by Christ after his baptism by BAPTIST were "MAN SHALL NOT LIVE BY BREAD ALONE, BUT BY EVERY WORD THAT PROCEDEED OUT OF THE MOUTH OF GOD" — Matthew and Luke 4:4. If you profess to be a Christian, in view of this fact, you have given your attitude and effort towards getting familiar with the Word of God, and having worked the in effect in 1987 to "get familiar with every Word of God." Life, Eternal Life is dependent — TO KNOW GOD IS ETERNAL HEAD!" He is a patient, tender, kind and loving teacher that says: "SEEK, AND YES SHALL FIND, ASK AND YES SHALL RECEIVE, KNOOK AND IT SHALL BE OPENED INTO YOU: COME TO ME ALL YE THAT LABOR, AND FOR
Turn to Deuteronomy 17 and get familiar with verses 20-21 and strive to follow them all the days of the laws that God permits you to live: "read therein all the days of his life; that he may learn to fear the Lord His God, to keep all the laws of this law and these statutes, to do (the Christ said in the Sermon on the Mount: I came not to destroy the law, but to fulfill it) that his heart be not lifted up to the end that he and the man had fallen." He was also warned that Mother told him a story when he was about seven years old. It prilled me then, and it has thrilled me many a time since, in fact every time I have heard it and even now as I tell it. It concerned a boy by the name of Dr. Barnett who was Pastor of an Attnchanta Church. He was on a trip to Europe. A storm came up in the night and the Captain ordered all the people awakened and to dress and be prepared for the worst. The porter who awakened Dr. Barnett reported he sat up a few moments, and he woke up from his bed and went back to sleep. "ALL THINGS ARE POSSIBLE TO THOSE WHO BELIEVE" "FATHA COMES BY HEARING, AND HEARING COMES BY THE WORD OF GOD!" We have God's Word, and God's Promises.
Doubtless the trouble with us is neglecting and omitting God's Word and giving too much time to other things!
The following quote is from the late Billy Sunday, spoken not many years after the invention of the flying machine: "TO TEACH A CHILD TO LOVE THE TRUTH AND HATE A LIE, TO LOVE PURITY AND HATE VICE, IS GREATER THAN INVENTING A FLYING MACHINE that WILL TAKE YOU TO HEAVEN BEFORE BREAKFAST, UNCONSCIOUSLY YOU SET IN MOTION INfluences that WILL DAMN OR BLESS THE OLD UNIVERSE AND BRING NEW WORLDS OUT OF CHAOS ANDTransform THEM FOR GOD."
Surely that is God's Truth, and an inspired saying! What can Telatar and Earth Orbit Equipment do towards teaching love of the truth and hatred of a lie if it is in the hands of men or devils that reject God, who cannot be taught? For these are those who can those scientific marvels do towards establishing and teaching purity and hatred of vice in the control of a generation that has more or less stripped itself of modesty, chastity, and goes about God's air in earth near nakedness! "Every proper pleasures and only man is vile" (2 Corinthians 3:19). And in the same way heathen and savages. How true that is of much of the earth now!"
"THAT WHICH IS HIGHLY ESTEEMED AMONG MEN IS
ABOMINATION IN THE SIGHT OF GOD." This quote is from the 18th
CENTURY.
Jeremiah 9:23-26: "THUS SAITH THE LORD, LET NOT THE WISE MAN GLORY IN HIS WISDOM, NEITHER LET THE MIGHTY MAN GLORY IN HIS MIGHT, LET NOT THE RICH MAN GLORY IN HIS RICHT; BUT LET HIM THAT GLORIETH GLORY IN THIS, THAT HE UNDERSTANDETH AND KNOWETH ME, THAT I AM THE LORD WHICH EXERCISE LOVINGKINDNESS, JUDGEMENT, AND RIGHTEOUSNESS IN THE EARTH: FOR IN THESE THINGS I DELIGHT, SAITH THE LORD."
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Friday, October 29, 1976
Hashinger musical is pleasing
By CHUCK SACK
The Hashinger Theatre production of "The Apple Tree" alters Coleridge's famous rule, because it cries out not for a willing suspension of disbelief so much as a willing suspension of professional standards.
In the first place, the residence hall's budget doesn't allow them to compete with Broadway for material. "The Apple Tree," a trio of tales about men and women, is a half-hour long show by Sheldon Harrick, who are justly more famous for "Fiddler on the Roof."
In Act L, "The Diary of Adam and Eve," which is based on Mark Twain's "Letters from the Earth," Eve musically ponds her attachment to Adam thus:
What makes me love him?
What makes me love him?
It's not his singing
I've heard his singing
It sours the milk
Fly the couple who makes that "their
souls"
Given little support from the material, the
Given little support from the material, the
cast injects the play with its infectious spank and vitality. The result is several cuts above the average high school production, and safely below the standard of Off Broadway. However, once the show is under way there is no time for such comparisons.
Adam and Eve awaken and begin naming the creatures. When Eve suggests that "cow" is preferable nomenclature to Adam's "dour-pronged wolf squirter" the
quickly establishes the tone for the entire show.
This is especially important because the humor is often so thin that an actor with a heavy hand rips the fabric and is left exposed. The sole example is Jim Stringer's bammy interpretation of the Devil, who unfortunately appears in every act. But then it was all downhill once the snake entered Eden in the original version. too.
battle of the sexes is joined Act II's variation on this theme is a comic version of Frank Stockton's "The Lady or the Tiger," which was adapted by Jeffery based on Feiffer's cartoon of the same title.
Review
THE FIRST ACT is the longest, and the script badly needs trimming, but in Kevin Williams's work he manages a crucial and delightful performance. Blessed with good timing and a strong voice, he
ON THE PLUS side, director Anne Abrams has cleverly cast actors who have distinctly comic physiognomy and this allows her to subtly countertone tachyflush flavor. Among the other notables are Kate Rogers as Ella, the chinwey rowhen she desire to be a "Moo-Vee Shirr." Judy Dennes as the Princess who wore a skirt more wed than dead," and Sue Blaire's Eve.
Of course, it is the welcome enthusiasm of the chorus that really makes the show take off, and there is a wonderful "make do" spirit to the proceedings that makes "The Saga of Elaine" come despite the amateurish qualities. Professional, it isn't. Entertaining, it is.
SENIOR T.G.I.F.
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WHAT: FREE BEER for Seniors wearing their Big Blue Senior Jerseys
WHERE: The Brewery, 714 Mass. (Formerly Edith's)
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be registered either in Kansas or in their former home state, Ritter said. However, they will be required to be qualified electors-age 18 or older.
New residents of Kansas and former residents of other states can vote for president by obtaining a presidential absentee ballot before noon Monday.
be open from 10 a.m. to noon tomorrow to accommodate those voters.
Ritter also said that a person residing in Lawrence less than 30 days could apply for the presidential absentee ballot in his former state. The ballot must reach the county clerk's office in the person's former hometown by 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Mary Ritter, a spokesman for the Kansas secretary of state office, said yesterday that a person who had resided in Lawrence longer than 30 days could obtain an absentee ballot in the county clerk's office to vote for president and vice president.
Presidential absentee ballots available
The law for presidential absentee ballots was enacted mainly for people who were transferred from one state to another because of their job, Ritter said. She said that many people were interested in only the presidential election.
The county clerk's office in Lawrence will
Those voting in this manner don't need to
Delbert Mathia, Douglas county clerk,
said that so far only four persons had app-
pied him. "I don't know how they get it."
I. J. Stoneback, age 59, married, 3 children, farmer, stockman, Commissioner, Democratic Precinct Committeeeman, past Chairman of the Lawrence Committee for Peace in Vietnam, President Douglas County ECKAN (Organization to help low-income people), member of Drug Abuse Council, and member of the University Student Housing Association.
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RE-ELECT 3rd District Commissioner I.J. STONEBACK Why?
- I.J. has experience in county government. If !J. is not elected there will be 2 out of 3 inexperienced County Commissioners to take over the government next January.
Because:
- I.J. is the only Democrat on the Commission. We need the two-party system for responsible government.
- I. J. knew the war in Vietnam was wrong long before others and did something about it. I.J. helped to form anti-war groups, marched in streets and spoke out against Nixon and the war at student protest meetings.
- I.J. represents the students in the 3rd District. When Vern Miller came to town to shut down a rock concert. I.J. testified in court against the Attorney General.
PETER BENNINGTON
SO JATRAWKS
KANSAS
UNIVERSITY
KANSAS
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1976
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Come to the kansas union BOOKSTORE
10
Friday. October 29.1976
University Daily Kansan
Tuitions don't cover 25% of costs
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ
Staff Writer
Despite the fact that University of Kansas students aren't paying 25 per cent of their educational costs as suggested by a Kansas legislative committee, next fall's tuition increase might be the last for at least a couple of years.
The Kansas Commission for Post-secondary Educational Planning, the 1202 Commission, reported this week that tuitions at the six Regents institutions were providing than the 25 per cent of the total costs afforded by the committee recommended by a legislative committee in 1966.
Even with a $50 increase a semester for residents and a $150 increase in non-residents' tuition approved in June by the Regents for fall 1977, Regents school's average cost is $24.1 per cent of their education costs next year, according to the commission.
NEXT YEAR'S tuition at KU has been raised from $250 to $255. The figure doesn't
include some $80 a student in special and activity fees.
Percentages for next year are only approximate because the general use funds, used in working out the percentages, are not accurate. Therefore, you cannot allocate some schools' total requests.
This fiscal year, without the tuition increases, the commission has estimated that students state-wide will pay 18.9 per cent, and KU students will pay 20.2 per cent, of the cost of their education. Universities and colleges pay different shares.
An estimated $8.8 million in state revenue would have been generated this year had students paid 25 per cent of their educational costs, the commission reported.
A 1986 legislative budget committee first introduced the 25 per cent figure as an estimate of the share that students should pay for their education. Committee members concerning tuition are presented to the Regens, who control tuition charges.
Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge and chairman of the 1202 Commission, said Wednesday that the committee hadn't discussed what recommendations to make at present.
The 25 per cent figure was used as a "rule of thumb," the he said, and when a figure that is more than 25 per cent would be
"I DONT KNOW whether 25 per cent is right, now," Harder said. "We have to determine what inflation has done to the education and how well people can afford it."
Aside from basic tuition fees, he said,
special fees also enter into the amount
students pay. He said the committee was
trained to give a student a contribution to his education.
The committee will continue to study the problem, Harder said, though he didn't know whether committee recommendations could be considered by the legislature this year.
John Conard, executive officer of the
Regents and a member of the 1966 budget committee, said yesterday that the Regents' policy was to increase tuition only every three or four years.
Tuition was last increased in 1973 by $25 a semester for students and $125 a semester for nonstudents. It was increased in 1970 by $125 students and by $125 for nonstudents.
"It would be my guess," Conard said, "that the Regents wouldn't take any further action on this issue and legislate to do so. I would not anticipate that. There really has never been any legislative action on this at all. The Regents have always had the respon-
Chancellor Archie Dykes agreed that it was unlikely the Regents would raise tuition. He said he believed it was important that a student pay his share of educational costs and that a high school graduate become available to students whose otherwise couldn't afford to go to KU
Party labels overlooked, avoided
By MARTIN ZIMMERMAN
Political candidates in Douglas County who leave their party's name out of their advertising do so either overtly or subtly, the candidates and party officials said yesterday.
Americans from both the Democratic and
republican parties said the practice was didn't
deter them.
In a recent issue of the Kansan, only two of nine political ads denoted the candidate's party affiliation. Wednesday's Lawrence Daily Journal-World ran twelve political advertisements, and only three carried the candidate's partylabel.
AN OFFICIAL for the Douglas County Democratic Central Committee, who asked not to be identified, said he thought many of the candidates chose not to identify closely with their party because they wanted to be part of a group as individuals rather than partisans.
The official said that by not affiliating closely with either party, a candidate might win votes among persons registered as independents.
"I don't think that party labels have the meaning for voters that they once did," the official said. "The party serves as a vehicle to bring the candidates to public notice, but we don't try to force them to use the party's name in their ads."
HANK BOOTH, campaign manager for Republican State Sen. Arden Booth's reelection drive, said the deletion of the governor's name was "more inadaptant than intentional."
"Arden is running in areas like
Tonganoxic and Eudora, which are both heavily Republican," Booth said. "So it's not like we're trying to hide the fact of which party he belongs to."
Democrat Carol Francis, who is running for the 45th District seat in the state legislature, said an oversight was also the reason party identification was left off some of her ads. She added, however, that the deletion could work in her favor.
"I DON'T PLAN to add it to future advertisements," she said. "If that attracts independent voters to an independent candidate, then maybe I've gained something."
Other candidates and party officials also said they didn't deliberately leave the party.
admitted that it could work to their advantage.
John Lungsturm, head of the county Republican committee, said that campaigning under the party was easy. Many voters have a low opinion of party affiliation, he said, and some of the candidates have accurately appraised the treatment and deleted party affiliations.
REPUBLICAN STATE Rep. Lloyd Buzii agreed with Lungsturm, saying he has a plan to force him to vote.
"Most candidates have the basic philosophy of their respective parties," he said, "but they want people to understand how to just be representing a partisan group."
SenEx votes for students' voice
With one dissenting vote, SenEx yesterday voted that faculty and student opinion should be considered in a contemplated move of the annual KU-MU football game to Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo.
Pipe repaired
Frances Horowitz, associate dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, voted against the resolution, saying it didn't come under SenEx' juridiction.
A break in a main water pipe水管 of Murphy Hall kept several campus buildings without water for about two hours early yesterday. Service was restored by 8 a.m.
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation has considered making the move in an effort to make more money on the annual football rivalry.
Skip DoVol
The water break was discovered about 3 a.m.
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Pine Fashion
Eyewear
Goldnecker
Optical
742 massachusetts st. 842-5208
Haas Imports
GRAD STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS:
GSC
Supplemental Budget Requests
Due November 1
Forms available in GSC office, Kansas
Union. For more information call
864-4914. Funded by Student Activities Fee
PROMOTED
by the
Tennessee
QUARTER
THE MUSEUM OF THE
MUSIC OF THE
QUAREZ
TEQUILA
CINEMATIC
SHOWROOM
50% COTTON
30 FL OZ (85 ML)
WARREN OATES
KEN NORTON
PAM GRIER
Hillcrest
QUALITY + PRICE = VALUE
GOLD IMPORTED FROM MEXICO SILVER
JUAREZ
80 PROOF
TEQUILA
WRITED AND TEAMED BY TRIJULA JWSCO SA SHUTTUPS
MISSOUR
"MANDING! LET THE FURS!
'DRUM'S IN THE EXPLOSION!"
R
DRUM
For the first time in 42 years,
ONE film sweeps ALL the
MAJOR ACADEMY AWARDS
BEST PICTURE
BEST
ACTOR
BEST
ACTRESS
BEST
DIRECTOR
BEST
SCREENPLAY
JACK NICHOLSON
ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST
Evenings at 7:15 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun. Malinee 1:50
Hillcrest2
BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTOR
BEST ACTRESS
BEST DIRECTOR
BEST SCREENPLAY
PG with GEORGE CARLIN
Anything can happen ...
and probably will at
the "CAR WASH"
Eve.7:30-9:30
Sat.-Sun.at 2:30
Varsity
THEATRE - Tugglers NY 123-4567
They wore the girls of our dreams ... "THE POM-POM GIRLS"
Granada
INTERNATIONAL FIRE INDUCTION CENTER
Eve. at 7:30 & 9:15
Sat., Sun. at 2:30
BOLLYWOOD
The Brush "YEARLY NIGHT ONLY"
"The YELLOW SUBMARINE"
"It BET" Sportsstar 41.70
Plus Frank Zappa's "200 MOTELS"
MARKING BELLBURN
WINNER
3Awards
INCLUDING
BEST
ACTRESS
KATHRYN RUSSELL
THE LION IN WINTER
ENDS SAT.
Eve. 7; 15 & 9; 45
Sat. Sun at 1:45
Hillcrest 3
SATURDAY NIGHT ONLY— Shows
"THE DEVIL WITH WRENCH"
"THE DEVIL WITH HELP"
"REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD"
"SPIRITS OF THE DEAD"
Sunset
Drive to DOWNTOWN • Well in Sidney 570
If you liked him as Henry II, you'll love him as the Earl of Gurney.
-a tour de force by Peter O'Toole that makes some kind of movie history
PETER O'TOOLE ARTHUR LOWE ALASTAIR SIM
THE RULING CLASS
STARTS SUNDAY
Evenings at 7:15 & 9:55 at the
Hillcrest
Skip DeVol
the
World's Greatest Banjo Player Direct from the Landmark Hotel-Las Vegas Tonite and Saturday Paul Gray's Jazz Place
Skip has toured with Arthur Godfrey,
Roy Clark, Jerry Van Dyke and many others.
He has appeared on Johnny Carson,
Mike Douglas and Merv Griffin T.V. shows,
and just finished 30 weeks at the Landmark in Las Vegas.
926 Mass. —upstairs
Admission *3.00
Call 843-8575 or 842-9458
for Reservations
Beer—Peanuts—Popcorn—Food Service
Open 8:00 — Music Starts at 9:00
Flower Special
12 MINIATURE ROSES ... 300
6 CARNATIONS ... 200
DAISIES ... 150
Also offering KU Mum Corsage for $2^{0\mathrm{t}}$:
- Cash 'n' Carry -
100
华阳画院
ALL THE ICE CREAM YOU CAN EAT!!
Nye's Flowers
939 Massachusetts • 843-3255
the flower shop in the center of downtown Lawrence
Yes, all the ice cream you can stuff down your gullet, Clyde, and some heavy vibes from the juke box.
Sunday, October 31st,7 p.m., Jewish
Community Center, 917 Highland Drive.
(One Block East of 9th and Iowa).
Free for Members, $1.00 for Guests.
PRIZES FOR THE MOST ORIGINAL COSTUME.
Supported by InnoT NET. Jewish students:
INOSKALDSON SINGLE
FOOLS N FOLLIES
DORES N DOLLIES
FILM REPORT
World's Greatest Banjo Player
Friday & Saturday
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
Selling something? Place a want ad.Call 864-4358.
University Daily Kansan
M KERTORTON
Thie R. STAT AT 13PM
Friday, October 29, 1976 Skin DeVol
BIERSTUBE
14th and Tennessee
T. G.I.F.
Light and Dark Pitchers
3-6 p.m.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Live Jams
Aecomodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kamen are offered to all students without regard to race or national origin BEING ALL CLASSIFIED
CLASSIFIED RATES
tweer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
effect Additional $0.11 .01 .02 .03 .04
word .01 .02 .03 .04
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These add can be placed in person or phone at the UK business office 623125 calling
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
Spaeus 1 bedroom spt. available anytime after
3:00, on bus route, laundry, indoor pool 825-
1303, on Loon
Five bedroom house for rent. $200. Call 5:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M. AL 843-7815. 11-2
2-bedroom, furnished. AC close to campus. $175/
Jan-Mar-08. Call 843-828-988. Rent $180.
Jan-Mar-08. Call 843-828-988. Rent $180.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and
attend the classroom on Thursday, March 19,
phone two, phone (sales calls) at wcstem@
www.wcstem.edu
2 bedroom, new modular form home, on 40 acres. SBAR lawsuites, insurance on appraisal mile. Doughton County. On-site training.
FOR SALE
3 bedroom apt at Quailcreek avail for immaculately
designed 684-567 between 9:30 & 6:00 and 684-537
between 9:30 & 6:00.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS. -Regardless of any price you see on your less-hit equipment other than factory stock, close-up benefits include a deal and get more benefit at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEEFS.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and saver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermals. Uniforms. Gold stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3833.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialties:
BEL AU100E,
ELECTRIC, 824-939-0000, W. 6th. bch.
ELECTRIC, 824-939-0000, W. 6th. bch.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
South Ave., New York, NY 10026.
VISIONS
has the eyeglasses you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 814-7421
NAPA
N.A.P.A.
For the Do-It-Yourself we offer: 1 Special Price
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
Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale! Makes sense out of Western Civilization makes sense to
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) for exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" available at now at Town Crest Stores. tt
Excellent selection of used furniture, retireser-
ed items. Includes:
East End, Pittsburgh. N14-368-6-m. Floor.
60x20x7. $199.00. (No phone calls. Please call
to check availability.)
40%/75% off on warmup suits, dresses, man's
pants and ruffle's, reester's, dresses, ladies'
Wool Club & Clubwear (845-767-7900,
845-767-8100)
For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call VC. Bruce at 914-8458 or 11-8648-1347.
71 FOR CAPRI 4-cylinder stick shift; good
answer. Asking I250 $call 624 or 10-29
or 10-28
1972 Dodge Van, carpet and paneled interior. Loaded with extras. Call 544-3542. Best offer.
RCA Color TV needs repair. Call 841-763-0783.
RCA Color TV needs repair. Call 841-763-0783.
one season. Call 841-763-8585 after a month.
one season. Call 841-763-8585 after a month.
All Sophomores (paying class days)—get your class mugs now for $130 in 11B of the Union.
4-ET Diamond Spoke Mug, 13XE Universal Flat,
all four wiles 215, Phone #841-6601, 11-2
dusting-71. Excellent condition. Alm, AFR/M.
books. Muilt, mall, sell 514. Call 641-8720, or
872-3241.
JVC Turntable. Semi-suitable, with ADC-VLCM cartridge, new tape and dust-proof cartridge. For additional pricing call 610-294-6000 or 610-294-5978. Call $69.00 per hour.
Dial121, base and aid dust cover with M5IED 825.
Dial121, FM-AF-metal dust cover with M5IED 825.
Rk84-3031-808 or 814-6495.
Flat-72. Good condition, very economical, new
houses. Mint stock. $150. KMH 843-4218 or 841-
6224.
Skis. 135cm HeaL HRP Pro w/ Marker Binders,
Ski90. 135cm Pymastas w/ slab55. Ski 1125. $12.
Ski 1125. $12.
4 channel stereo receiver and 4 Coral 1201 speakers. Turntable included. Call 82-493-006 after 5:00.
Please add the
UNIBELLEAVABLE SAVINGS. NW 1975 HONDA'S:
CB 125. Reg. 725.00 Sale Price. 488.00 MT. 125
Reg. 725.00 Sale Price. 480.00 CB. 200 Reg. 995.00
Reg. 725.00 Sale Price. A Horton Glass. 18
6th. 843-3333. 18, 11-2
and Uhoe used like spectacles.
The Uhoe used like spectacles.
**Bulloon** 390.00
**Bullion** 390.00
**Kwangsi** 180.00
**Kwangsi** 180.00
**Honda CELTS** 395.00
**Honda CELTS** 395.00
See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th. 843-
3333
Closing business, must sell milling drill press, milling machine
1723 Vega station wagon, Runs well. 28 mpg
higway, $10.00, or best offer, 841-217-6.
86 Javelin automatic: low mileage>-15,000 $15
or best offer B+ 824-6489 after 5. $13
Must sell 192. WV Super Bike. Like new, 55,000 miles. Call 842-409-9607 weekdays at 4:30; 11-11.
Mobility Centre Gulustan in excellent condition,
Mobility Centre Gulustan, $150 main tubes and weight 15 lbs. Cat.
$250 main tubes and weight 30 lbs. Cat.
71 WV Super Beetle, AM-FM, radials. 46.000
miles, B4-7294. 13-2
Pontiac Catalina 1965 4-dr auto, AC. Powered car radio, chip swap; must sell. 880-273-3301 GLI 6110-2834-3301
DO'S DELUXE
"GENERATION OF WOMEN"
BOYL PASS
LAWRENCE ST.
PA12754
Two white Lattir Perconcussion conga, Excellent, 6
million; $30. Call Rick. B49-8317. 11-3
Order Now For Christmas
MAGAZINE
SUBSCRIPTION
SERVICE
Many at Special Discounts
ADVENTURE a bookstore
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Phone: 843-6424
Home of
Order Now For Christmas
- Pool
* Snooker
* Ping Pong
--for Spring Semester
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
TRY
We have State of the Art Sound Systems at
the trade. RAY AUDIO, I3E 8, Shilah
14h. RAY AUDIO, I3E 8, Shilah 14h.
A lot of Hype is not right. RAY AUDIO Sound are out of sight at 13 e.8. Eight 11-4
Super Sound System for $650. Better quality.
Rockstar 2, RCA AUDIO, BMG.
Hear the difference.
Thinking about a nice idea? Don't know what to do? We can help. We have good news for you. BAY College is not too much we have good news for you. BAY
Gibson Model 1-45 classical guitar Excellent condition with super nice case $775 Cat. T1-14 14-8
- Pin-Ball
* Air Hockey
* Foo-S Ball
Must Sell: 1 Chevrolet. Reasonable. Snow
reliable. Body good. B43-B30. Keep
trying.
Excellent condition - used 3 months. Marshall 100
SPEAKER - 4 x 8" flat panel speaker.
SRO speakers. A real kicker. Call: 811-596-2745.
Ovation Customer Balladeer guitar with case, two
old, excellent condition. $75. Call 11-4
3738
HELP WANTED
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
One of the largest keynote speakers of musical industry is the world-renowned music educator, Dr. Robert Bornstein, born in Chicago and borne into Indiana, graduated from Southwestern College, and was a member of the Jazz Society.
1045 Honda Civic, excellent condition. New tires
less than 30 600 miles. Call 824-8546 or email
honda@motorcycle.com
Kennemore Electric Stove and Norge Free-frost refrigerator. 842-616-516. 11-4
Delivery—must have own car, $ approx.
Inside shell in person at Heavy Edge!
Available 12/30-1/30.
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer/year-round, $200 S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. all fields. $500-$1200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free tours to New York City, Boston, KA, Box 409, Barley CA, 94704. 11-11
Voiceball Intramural officiates needs: Games
with 8 or more players; travel to 240 Robinson. Salary is $25
or $36-46 per player to come to Robinson. Salary is $25
or $36-46 per player to come to Robinson. Salary is $25
or $36-46 per player to come to Robinson. Salary is $25
or $36-46 per player to come to Robinson. Salary is $25
or $36-46 per player to come to Robinson. Salary is $25
or $36-46 per player to come to Robinson. Salary is $25
Now taking applications for part-time cocktail waiters, cooks, dishwashers, waitresses at Carrière and other local businesses.
Job opening for Research Assistant 95% time,
providing assistance in conducting research and assisting in research. Social science backdrop. Bachelor's or equivalent in Humanities, McRoberts, Dip of Human Development, 111 University of California Berkeley. Resume to Linda Menard, *Menard and Werner* All Area Employees.
Mattress and Box springs, $30. 842-4476. 10-29
LOST AND FOUND
Required qualifications ability to communicate knowledge of and experience with large systems
Loss: $8 REWARD for return of lift on 12th
Middle at Tennessee and Kentucky. 11-1
840-8512
Draft: $6
SYSTEMS TESTING ASSISTANT-PRODUCTION
control, control, control, control, control,
production control, controlling an technical advisor to
Production Group, assisting Assistant Director of
Production Services with special projects/admini-
tion.
Sandy Drive-in is now taking applications for part time employment. Apply in person at saloon 427.
John K. Seltz, University of Kansas
Kansas 6045, on or before 20th July, 1976
Kansas 6045, on or before 20th July, 1976
Bachelor level degree with coursework in comp-
sciences or related and 1 year of con-
tinuous experience in applicable areas will be con-
dicated.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER-
HAIRS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY.
Part time grill personnel for evenings and weekends, cook meal and high price food. Appoint Vistaa-1 and 2.
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
SPAMMING CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE
NAISMITH HALL
Cross Reference Bookstore
842 1553 Mall's Shopping Center
FRAMES RESTORATION
BARN BOARD FRAMING
--for Spring Semester
- DRYMOUNTING • STITCHERY
• METAL FRAMES • RESTORATION
AT
**BRIAN BORN PARKING**
Senior References Prosecutor
TIVE
Now accepting
For Spring Summer
Call 843-8559 or stop
by our office.
Applications
Lost: black bilfoldle—KU bus pass and Haskell
ID: 842-6454
11-11
Lost-Poolet sized brown leather Bloody, Lost-
Poolet to the cover of the John. 840-
P.M. 863-2547 Dust 11:25
Found: long-hair white cat. One year old, hekali
Kentucky. Call 841-194-2380 at 3:38. 11-1
Found: white male long-barded cat, 13th and Kentucky, Oct. 23. Call 843-704-744. 11-1
Found: tennis courts on fieldhouse courts. Call
identify: 864-3015 during day, 864-511
11-14
Found: Silver ink pen with hilts, corner of
cover; black marker pen with hilts, corner of
Continuing Education Bldg. "Deer's Office" in
the background.
Found: small St. Bernard puppy wearing red collar. Found on campus. Call K83-7577.
Lost: Military Dependents ID. Need urgency. If found call Richard Underwood, 843-851-851
Found: cat, small Siamese-like, last Friday near 12th and Kentucky: 842-460-1268
Set of key, leather key chain. Inscription
happy, happy, happy, happy, SENTIENCY
VALUE.
13-11
Found: Lab & Germ Sherphed female pup last week on campus. 842-3063. 11-2
Found: List w/a watch around 680 & Rhode Island
Call: 841-3418 or 846-1540 and ask for Kevin
Found: Watch found in Robinson Weight Room
Tuesday night, Oct. 26. Cat 541-3517 11-2
Found. Found on campus a brown and white
puppy with a red colllar. Cell 864-1831.
14-2
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available, with
pricing based on size. Prints available if
is available from a n. a. printer. McGraw-
Hill Press is available. McGraw-Hill Press is
available.
NOTICE
CABASH LAFE>Good food from scratch. Lunch
10:30-12:30 Mm. Mass. Take backdoor espresso.
10:30-12:30 Mm. Mass. Take backdoor espresso.
Splash, Shop 629. Muzs. Used for furniture, dishes,
parapets, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12
pm-5 pm. Call (847) 530-4100.
Redeemer Lutheran Church, 30th and Haskell,
invites all students and faculty to our Sunday
Study at 10.15 a.m. We have an active college
group. Transportation will be provided if
you are unable to attend the study.
Study at 10.15 a.m. We have an active college
group. Transportation will be provided if
you are unable to attend the study.
www www www www
A few openings in Men's & Women's Scholarship Halls for special occupancy. Call 864-3552 or step by 228 Strong
---
St James Steak House. Delicious food at reasonable prices. Sunday, January 21st - 10:30. Workday, 4:11. Closed Thursday, January 26th.
Become a Gift Wish distribution—merchandise from 1/2 to 1/3 of retail-free info or $2 for product catalog—refundable for order. Hurry up! Merchants BT, FO, POK, ZZK, MG, Moa, MG, Ca, MG, 10-29
GRAN SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tent
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
Eldsworth Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
Call Ottis Vann!
Turner Chevrolet
For new Chevrolets and used cars at
843-7700
Everything from homeware to jewelry - 40% off
fashion items, HKS, 100 W. Poorhouses, Kansas City
Vote yes on November 2 for the Proposition to fund service programs for the elderly. 11-2
DR SKIELT says we're not the new LIGQOR
DR SKIELT has here always. Also 30. Do it and
be ready to come up with the next one.
Toddler center has openings for children 12-30 months, your child will have fun and learn in a bright atmosphere located in Mendowbrook. For more information call 415-846-1128; 12-30 E 2:00 P.M.
Siphop Engineering and Accutical Products wishes to introduce “Toshees.” A speaker system with a 360-degree breathing clarity and depth that you would expect them to cost up to four times that actual price will afford. You’ll need speakers or just to discuss our folded concrete Ray Sandkes. 10-29
Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7605 6-12 p.m.
for Referrals.
Having Inreach晨礼穆明 worship and
having Inreach晨礼穆明 worship you
will receive you to worship at 8 a.m. at 19th and
20th Street at 7 p.m.
Women's art collective forming in Womanuppe,
Need ideas. Potential for drawing classes and
photography in meeting with interest are
organizational meetings Gc 31, 2.10-19
Rhode Island. 842-6000.
A MAN OBSESSED by classical music and especially interested in German, literature, Plato, philosophy, camping and canning wishes into his life may like interests. "Robert mamm," 845-1273. *10-29*
Thanks Lynne. She's a beautiful baby. Love
Tony. Times 10-23
Hey Boy—Happy Birthday. Three days till Monday.
10-29
Don't he sorry on Wednesday. Vote for Nancy
Donat and Donna McMahon. Vote for Ron
Donat & Michael & Jon Golden
Glove.
Saturday night Nov. 13 the Union Bailroom night
will be 10:25 PM. The team will be there, 10:25
PM. TWY AND MTP.
Beaware DY-NO-MITE is hazardous ... but funny. J. W. Walker is coming to KU Nov. 13.
Alpha Delta PI Sorority will be selling red and blue ballouts at the KU-Nebraks football game for 2c. As part of ADB's national Speech and Drama Team, students may buy hearing aids for children in Lawrence. 10-29
Ken "even though" in order to grow—we must part I love you and thank you for one beautiful thought.
REAL ESTATE
Martin Real Estate Inc. ATTENTION: very lento done on home or near the campus become too expensive to maintain. Located in a quiet enclosed area at No. 9 Westside. A 34th rancher, this home offers nearly 100 acres of land. The property is priced at $55,000. Call 845-707-001 e宝. Bury Nu42-1555, or Hill Weaver 844-1628, 1424 W
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thoughts on
the use of 1,150 mAh Li-ion cells in 1150 mHz
headphones. 1150 MHz Ave. No. 368, Los Angeles,
CA 90025. (510) 428-7000. http://academic.research.papers.org
IN A MUSICAL RUT? See how lessons can help you moving. Beginning to advanced in folk, rock, jazz, classic, bluegrass and blues guitar, mandolin, bass and piano. Call McKenny Mason 10-288 0817.
Math Tutoring—competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 012, 013, 014, 015, 016, 017, 018, 019, 366, 588, 627, 648. Regular tests or one-time test preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 843-7851.
Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a bicycle-bike jibcate+ and adjust your own bicycle-bike jibcate+. A jibcate+ brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your own bicycle-bike jibcate+. A accessorieseaker bought at time of "tune-up". Rates: 10 speed $18.50, 5 or 3 speed $15.50, single speed $15.50, double-speed $15.50, single speed $11.50, single speed $15.50. Complete supplies $29.99.
Need a new bike? Come and see the largest
bike store in Lawrence. Lawrence has to
offer! Bring along your used bicycle to
offer! Bicycle Schmidt Cyclery, 9-4 Mon-Sat,
Thurs 11-30, Warm-1, 1-4, 1-8 (530), h: 84,-635,-843.
TYPING
Experienced Typist- IBM-Memory-Call 843-
9471, ask for John.
Experienced typed—term paper, papers, bulletin,
experience. 825-343-1690, Mrs. Wright.
I do damned good typing, Pegery, 482-4476. 10-29
THEISIS BINDING COPYING. THEISIS
thesis binding & copying in Lawrences
for those binding & copying in Lawrences
for those in 838 Massachusetts or phone 838-
1051 for those in 838 Massachusetts or phone 838-
1051
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selectric LTE card (ribbon). Call Pam at 843-7590.
Typist/editor IBM PCaillite Quality work
Typewriter dissertations welcome
welcome 844-891-9787
WANTED
Roommate needed for very nice furnished apart-
ment with 2 bedrooms; $85.90 per month, call Cobbie
(714) 267-2333 or online at cobbie.com.
Roommate wanted to share two-bedroom duplex with a private suite, cash and easy-going. Call 842-736-9177, www.roommates.com.
Wanted: A. talented and versatile music writer
B. knowledgeable in songwriting with a good lyricist. Call 842-1805. 10-28
Foreign student wishes to live with American
friends. Call 842-1805.
Call All Froncanchi - 342-1805
Call All Fernanchez - 342-1805
11-2
Wanted--Tickets for NU Game, anywhere. Call 842-9087.
Need roommate to share apartment with two other girls. Ow room, $75, 1/2 utilities 841-4564.
1 roommate (male or female) to share beautifully furnished old country home located on the corner of a spacious kitchen and laundry, plenty of storage space/ $35/mo plus 1/2 utilities Call Mike after 5:45.
Happy Holidays
Tutor for 102 student who is anxious to
build 842-4661 after 3.30
10-29
Parent to babysit in our home Non-smoker. Your transportation. Hours approx. 11:45 am to 6:45 pm on weekdays except for USD No. 497 holidays. Should have 2 hours study time daily. Call 842-8610 after 4:30 pm.
NOW'S THE TIME FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY
No extra charge
Gift Wrapping Free
HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass.
The Lounge
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
- Bud on Tap
Pool
- Pinball
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa
- Foosball
9th and Iowa
843-9812 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
24
12
6
University Daily Kansan
Fridav. October 29,1976
Smokers ignore smoking policy
By DEB MILLEJ
Complaints about smoking in nonresidential buildings on campus have prompted a reissuance of the policy that controls smoking in those buildings.
Del Shakel, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that the smoking policy
had been removed.
"We've been receiving complaints from students about teachers smoking in class, too."
students about other students," Shankel said.
THE SMOKING POLICY was passed by the University Council Feb. 28, 1976. It states that smoking is permitted only in the following:
—offices; corridors and restrooms that aren't carpeted; areas set aside for food service and eating, except those designated as nonsmoking areas; and seminar rooms, if no member objects, and if ashtrays are available.
THE POLICY ALSO offers the following clarifications:
—Smoking isn't permitted in Hoch Auditorium, Wesboro auditoriums or any other auditorium on campus during any class or public assembly, including concerts Smoking in these areas and in Allen House is permitted only in the outer lobbies.
— In classrooms, smoking is permitted only in seminars and small classes of fewer
than 15 people if no member objects and if
atebrays are available.
In the smoking policy passed by the University, the reasons for the rules are: the Kansas Fire Prevention Code says it is illegal to smoke in places of public health or safety; the Kansas Legislature reinforces the Code; the Surgical General of the United States has declared that smoking is dangerous to health; University property is suffering damage from cigarette burns; and some drivers of the community are allergic to smoke.
Raisin prices rise, survey savs
Items
Hill's St. (new St.)
Milk- 2 per cent, i.v. gal., S.B.
Eggs- Grade A Medium
Colby cheese- i.i. B.S.
Margarine- 1 lb. tub
Crayfish celeriac- 1 lb. B.S.
Ham shank- smoked, 1 lb.
Orange juice-frozen, 6 oz.
Pean-frozen, 1 oz.
Sugar- grounded, 1 lb.
Sugar-cheese, 1 lb.
Flour-bleached, enriched, 5 lb.
Flour-wheal, wheat, 5 lb.
Pen butter-Skippo, 12 oz.
Pen nut butter-Skippo, 12 oz.
Lung- free grain, 1 lb.
Pegel- 10 oz, biscuit deposit
Potato-Northern potato, 4 p.H.
Lettuce-lechere, each 1 or 4 lb.
Tomato- 1 lb.
Carrot- 1 lb.
Potatoes- red, 1 lb.
Potatoes- yellow, 15 oz.
Raisins- 1 lb.
Hill's St. (old St.)
Rind St. (Old St.)
Rind St. (Millennium)
Wayne's
Moore's
Safety
Fallery
Average last week
Average last week
78 mm. 80 mm. X 70 mm. 78 mm. 77 mm. 78 mm. 77 mm. 78 mm. 78
- indicates sale price
X indicates item not available
S.B. indicates store brand
IN DEPTH SURVEY: BEEF average average per pet per pet
Ground beef - regular 1.lb.
Ground beef - family size pkg.
Ground beef - leavened
Ground beef - with bone
Rump meat - boneless
Rump meat - with bone
Chuck meat - with bone
Chuck meat - boneless
Stirred meat
Stirred meat
Bristlet meat
Bristlet meat
Bristlet - boneless
Beef liver
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Judy Kroger, director of the Consumer Affairs Agency (CAA), said yesterday that the number of complaints indicated a shortage. The price of raisins went up four cent per week and several times this week.
Consumers may face a shortage of raisins this winter, this week's food survey shows.
Kroeger said that she didn't know what had caused the shortage, but that people who wanted raisins for holiday baking might need to buy them now.
This week's survey also indicated a continual downward trend in sugar prices. In CAA's first survey Sept. 6, sugar was the second highest price among the average was $9 cents for a five pound bag.
Buchholz, an engineer, inspects every building on campus regularly for fire hazards and irregularities with the fire code.
This week's survey differs from previous surveys because it shows more meat and vegetables.
Part of the reason for the restriction of smoking in places such as Ioch Auditorium is safety. This is especially true because of the Baker fire, Shankel said, referring to a fire Aug. 29 at a Baker University fraternity that killed five persons.
Kroeger said she made the change so the survey would better indicate the types of people in the community.
SINCE THE BAKER fire, strict inspections of University residential housing have been conducted by the Kansas fire marshal. But inspection of nonresidential homes is restricted according to Harry Buchholz, facilities analyst for the office of facilities planning.
Once he finds a problem, Buchholz said,
he reports it to Max Lucas, University
director of facilities planning. From then
on, he sees that budgets are budgeting
money to correct the problem.
★ ★ ★
NOTES ON BEEF SURVEY: The average cost a serving column (taken from information provided by the Cooperative Extension Service at K-State) takes into account the cost of waste in a cut of meat. For example, bone is ground only to three or four ounces, ground into thick roast beef bone, but because ground beef is less, it is 18 cents less a serving.
"If a teacher is smoking in class and you want to complain, go to the department head. If it's the department head that's smoking, then go to the dean," he said.
THE STATE LAW passed by the Kansas Legislature reinforces the Kansas Fire Prevention Code and states that there is a risk of fire in areas posted with "no smoking" signs.
Shankel said it was everyone's job to enforce this law.
In addition to Buchholz's inspections, the State Fire Marshal comes to the KU campus every June to inspect campus buildings, Buchholz said.
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ELECTION 76
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WESTONHAM
After all the hoopla: it's Ford or Carter on Nov. 2
I will look back on my life for what it means to be a president. I was born in 1920 and raised in New York City. I studied at Princeton University and then went on to work as a lawyer in New York City before becoming the first president of the United States from a Democratic party. I was a strong advocate for the rights of minorities and women, and I was a strong supporter of civil rights legislation. I was also an avid sports fan and loved to play basketball. I was a big fan of the Philadelphia Eagles and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Chicago Cubs and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Texas Rangers and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the San Diego Chargers and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Boston Celtics and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Washington Capitals and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Minnesota Timberwolves and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Carolina Panthers and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Arizona Cardinals and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Houston Texans and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Cleveland Cavaliers and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Miami Dolphins and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Detroit Tigers and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Los Angeles Clippers and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Arizona Cardinals and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Kansas City Chiefs and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Tennessee Volunteers and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Oklahoma City Thunder and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Charlotte Bobcats and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Atlanta Falcons and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Denver Broncos and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Minnesota Timberwolves and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Jacksonville Jaguars and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the St. Louis Cardinals and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Baltimore Orioles and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the New Orleans Pelicans and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Minnesota Timberwolves and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Jacksonville Jaguars and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Charlotte Bobcats and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the Atlanta Falcons and loved to watch them play. I was a big fan of the St. Louis Cardinals and loved to watch them play.
Rv PAUL ADDISON
Jimmy Carter
It's almost over now, except for the voting and the counting. Unless Jimmy Carter or President Gerald Ford make a politically damaging statement between now and the 2016 election, American people can expect one of the most contested elections in recent history.
It didn't always look that way. Just three months ago the Gallup and Harris opinion poll gave Carter an overwhelming lead in the election, points over either Ford or Ronald Reagan.
The 1976 presidential election campaign has been a competitive and peculiar contest. It's been a story of personal triumph for Carter, who was almost unknown outside his home state of Georgia two years ago. At the same time, it it's been somewhat more difficult for those in the cumbent, whose narrow victory over Ronald Reagan at the Republican convention owed more to luck than good political judgment.
Too often their rhetoric was too similar; too often their images were too plastic; too often the individuals were too ambiguous and not clearly representing the density of campaigning. In 1975 'moral leadership' and 'fundamental reform' were the rallying cries of many Democratic contestants. Beyond that, it seems, few had been able to imagine they would do if elected—including Carter.
1978 HAS SEEN the rise and fall of a large number of presidential hopefuls. Byrd, Bentzen, Bayh, Sandford, Shriver, Shapp, Harris, Church, Brown and Wallace. Today their names bring back only dim memories that failed to attract the American public.
Carter's campaign has been constantly dogged by those Republicans and Democrats who aimed to present him as lacking issues and clarity. Yet if Carter is to be condemned, so too must one condemn President Ford because both have, in the traditional manner of presidential candidates, aimed to please as many people as
possible by offering wide ranging and unspecific platforms.
DESPITE UNCERTAINY about which candidates would rise from their party's base, many voters now look back to the first formal political actions this year, the Iowa precinct caucuses and the New Hampshire primary, where they will divide a virulent even at this early stage.
In Iowa, Carter gained widespread support in rural and urban areas, among blue and white collar workers and in divergent ethnic groups to coast to an easy route for many. In California, Bayh of Indiana. One month later Carter gained a majority over Arizona Rep. Morris Udall in New Hampshire. For the Republicans, the Iowa straw poll and the New Hampshire primary gave President Donald Trump a conservative California Ronald Reagan.
NETHER CARTER nor Ford, however, was to have an untramured path to his respective nomination. In March Carter crashed to a crushing fourth place defeat in Massachusetts behind Sen. Henry Jackson and former state senator Robert Wallace of Alabama. Later that month the Florida, Illinois and North Carolina primaries extended Carter's victory total, but the late entry into the Democratic race of Sen. Frank Church from Idaho and Gov. Edmund Brown of California dampered early celebrations before he faced Senator Hubert Humphrey, admitted he was prepared to run "if my party should need me."
For Ford, the early primaries were hopeful signs that a first ballot nomination was in his grasp. Then came Reagan's victory in North Carolina March 23, followed by his clean sweep of all the Texas delegates.
MAY 1 TRULY was a 'may day' for Ford.
Besides the Texas loss, Ford suffered defeats in Indiana, Georgia and Alabama, the worst series of defeats for an incumbent
TITANIC REPUBLIC OF KOREA
See AFTER page 14
Gerald Ford
Campaign's ins-and-outs in review
1974
Jan. 17- Sen. Walter Mondale, D-Minn.
ann.ulates exploratory bid for presidency
1975
Sept. 23—Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-
Mass., says he won't run
Nov. 23—Sen. Mondale withdraws, saying he won't have "the overwhelming desire to become president."
Nov. 23—Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz., announces official candidacy bid
Dec. 12—Gov. James Carter of Georgia opens his campaign for Democratic governor.
Jan. 11-Former Sen. Fred Harris, D-Okla. declares himself a candidate
Jan. 12—Former Sen. Eugene McCarthy,
D-Minn, says he'll run as an independent
Republican.
Feb. 6—Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash.
enters竞赛 race
Feb. 17-Sen. Lloyd Bentse, D-Texas,
enters Davis race
May 28--Former Gov. Terry Sanford of North Carolina, president of Duke University.
July 8 - President Ford officially announces his candidacy for Republican party掌舵
Sept. 20—R. Sargent Schriver,
candidate in 1972, announces his candidacy
in 1972, announces his candidacy
Sept. 25-Gov. Milton Shipp of Pennsylvania enters Democratic race
Oct. 21.-Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., joins the Democratic fray
Nov. 12—Gov. George Wallace of Alabama nominated his fourth bid to gubernatorial office.
Nov. 20—Former Gov. Ronald Reagan of California opposes campaign for Republican nominee in the race.
Jan. 9.-Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W. Va., enters Democratic race
1976
Jan. 23—Gov. Sanford withdraws
Feb. 10—Sen. Benten withdraws
March 4—Sen. Bayh withdraws
March 12—Gov. Shaw withdraws
March 12—Gov. Edmund Brown, D-Calif.
nounces favorite-son campaign in
California.
March 16 - Sargent Shriver says he's no longer an active candidate
March 18 - Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho,
enters Democratic race
April 8 - Former Sen. Harris withdraws
May 1 - Jackson ends active pursuit of
Senator Clinton.
June 8—Gov. Wallace releases his delegates to Carter
June 14-Sen. Church withdraws candidacy, endorses Carter
June 14-Rep. Udall stops active campaigning
July 15—Gov. Carter nominated as Democratic candidate for president; Sen. Mondale approved by Democratic convention as running mate
Aug. 19—President Ford nominated as Republican candidate for president; Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas approved by Republican convention as running mate
Nov. 2—Election Day
14
Fridav. October 29.1976
University Daily Kansan
Vice president no longer unknown man
By JULIA BEBEAU
The vice presidency, long called the most neglected office in the land, is changing. It now is being given more careful attention than ever before in history.
Both Sen. Walter Mondale, D-Minn, and Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan, have been affected by this increasing attention. Their backgrounds have beaten scrutinized, their campaigns closely followed and they've debated one another on national television.
This new public awareness stems from increasing concern over the possibility of a vice president becoming president. It has allowed me some times before, five times in this century.
IT IS THE FORD presidency that has really pushed the question of vice presidential qualifications into the spotlight. Three years ago, then Rep. Ford became Richard Nixon's hand-picked vice president after Spiro Agnew was forced to resign. When Nixon resigned the following year, he received an approval of convention delegates or the electorate. Ford in turn chose Nelson Rockefeller as his possible successor.
For two and a half years the nation has been served by a president and vice president it did not elect. Because of this unusual situation, the people have begun to focus on this potential of the vice presidency.
THIS HAS CAUSED great change in the traditional view of the second-place office. Some had called the vice presidency a fifth option, while Franklin once suggested the title "His Superfluous Excellence." Even vice presidents have enjoyed making light of the
The vice presidency was a more prestigious office in the early days of the country. Of the two candidates running for president, the loser would serve as vice president.
A. R. H.
Dole
A change came in 1804 with the creation of the electoral college. The college was to elect a president and a vice president from only one side of the ballot. The vice president became a running mate and caused a gradual loss of prestige.
TOM PATRICK
THE RUNNING MATE was chosen to provide geographical and ideological balance and to woe certain segments of the world, so that everything in the selection process.
In the 1952 campaign, Nixon was valuable as Eisenhower's partner because the two were opposites in age, personality and style. In 1960, Kennedy needed the southern vote
Mondale
to win the election and Texan Lyndon Johnson became his running mate.
This year, Ronald Reagan reached desperately for Sen. Richard Schweiker of Pennsylvania. By coupling the liberal Schweiker to his own conservative position, Reagan hoped to make the ticket more palatable to uncommitted delegates When he lost in a statewide contest, pointed supporters pushed unsuccessfully for a Ford-Reagan ticket.
BEGINNING WITH FDR and his first partner, John Nance Garner, vice president of the company's credibility, Garner helped with the New Deal. His successors, Henry Wallace and Harry
Truman, were instrumental in war programs. President Truman started the tradition of putting the vice president on the National Security Council.
Although the political games continue, this year has seen further innovations. During the five weeks before the Democratic convention, Carter and his staff surveyed at least 40 possible running mates. That said that capability to serve as president would unlikely be of interest and political balance was among his considerations.
Memories of George McGoventry's last minute search for a suitable running mate in 1927 are supportive of Carter's methods and foresight.
MONDALE CAME out of this search. As a liberal and a northerner, Mondale balances the ticket and attracts labor, liberal and ethics. He shares Carter's special concern for social programs and is in general agreement with the Georgian. In addition, he has experience, experience and seriousness seem suitable for a man who might become president.
On the Republican side of the ballot, Dole's *s*-section came as a surprise to many, even party insiders. The President was also an aggressive and willing campaigner.
AT THE TIME of the Republican convention, Ford was trailing far behind Carter in the polls. Dole's main role has been to enlist the enthusiasm for the Republican ticket.
Dole is a witty and tenacious campaigner,
and it is hard to imagine what kind of a president he might make. Dole often plays the role of the voice by saying, "I just must the boss you get."
Such is the history of the vice presidency. Voters now must judge the merits of the candidates against the new importance of the office and its future roles.
Believe it or not, election issues exist
Skeptics and critics of the 1976 election campaign have constantly contended that relevant issues haven't been discussed or questioned over by the two major party candidates.
Despite the criticism, a number of major issues have taken on increasing importance in recent months and will undoubtedly have brought on the outcome of Tuesday's election.
President Ford has been running as a moderate Republican and stressing five major campaign themes—dedication to the free enterprise system, fiscal responsibility, a strong national defense, control of government at the state and the local level and freedom for individuals against an all-powerful government.
Jimmy Carter, the Democratic nominee, has campaigned for full employment, trust in government, improved health care, increased inflation and reform of the tax system.
Throughout the campaign other issues, such as busing, abortion, women's 'rights and Eastern Europe have also received attention from both candidates. In most cases their ideologies have overlapped; rarely they run on parallel lines.
On domestic issues, Carter's positions have been biased toward middle and lower
income people, resulting in a $10-billion tax reduction. Carter's objectives are to tax income only once and introduce a progressive, simplified tax system.
Health care has been a constant theme in Carter's campaign. He proposes a nationwide mandatory health insurance program as the key to a revised system that would be financed by employers, employees and general tax revenues. The Republican party platform, however, opposes such programs and aims to make the Social Security system sound without increasing the cost to employers.
Conservation Voters; Ford was called "hopeless."
Environmentally, Ford made a major policy statement Aug. 29 by proposing a 10-year, $1.5-billion national park and recreation area program. Carter opposes development of the SST and he holds fast against efforts to lower clean air requirements, reduce budget increases for utilities, and increase national policies to lower energy consumption growth rates. Carter has been called "outstanding" by the League of
In the field of education, President Ford opposes forced busing of school children for
'Ford opposes forced busing of school children and advocates a constitutional amendment to allow prayer in schools.'
racial balance, advocates a constitutional amendment to allow prayer in schools and proposes to consolidate federal aid for schools. The state also adds into single block grants for the states.
Carter advocates the use of court-ordered busing plans for small town areas and voluntary plans for metropolitan areas. He proposes increased tax aid for education of all pupils in nonsegregated schools and a separate Department of Education.
In foreign affairs, Carter says he supports detente with the Soviet Union, 'rough
equivalence" with them in nuclear power and strengthened ties with other nations. The Democratic party platform supports a new Panama Canal treaty recognizing U.S. interests there while yielding some sovereignty to Panama.
Ford has repeatedly said that America must continue to be No. 1 militarily and must not grant unilateral favors without expecting something in return. The United States is the largest donor to the Panama Canal as an international waterway, improving relations with mainland China without compromising relations with Taiwan and maintaining a strong national defense. The Republicans hope to develop new missile launch systems to defend the Rhine and restore the effectiveness of the intelligence system.
On the defense matters, Carter would pursue disarmament and arms control agreements that contribute to mutual reductions in both nuclear and conventional arms, and he hopes to reduce spending by eliminating waste and duplication.
since Taft lost 12 primaries to Theodore Roosevelt in 1912.
After all . . .
From page 13
Suddenly the pace of the Republican campaign intensified. Reagan won Nebraska, Arkansas, Idaho and Nevada and Ford secured Michigan, Maryland, Kentucky and Tennessee. By June 8, the day of the final primaries, the result was still in doubt.
and he picked up more when Chicago's Mayor Richard Daley and Gov. Wallace pledged their support. By mid-July all the Democratic candidates—except Brown—had thrown in the towel and, in the interests of party unity, offered their support to the first Southern major party nominee since Zachary Tavlor in 1848.
Carter, meanwhile, was slowly edging his way to the Democratic nomination hotly pursued by Church, Brown and a strong 'stop Carter' faction. For them it was too late. On June 8, Carter was within 338 of the 1505 delegate votes needed for nomination
FORD'S ROUTE TO the nomination was more difficult. Delegate selection ended without a resolution of the struggle between the two candidates, and the key to the nomination became focused on the uncommitted Mississippi delegation. Political maneuvering carried on until an emotional conclusion in Kansas City, Mo.
PRESIDENT FORD — He's making us proud again.
PETER BERTHOUSE
A bitter, depressed, vulnerable America has became a confident, strong, proud America.
Inflation has been cut in half.
Prosperity has returned. Our jobs are secure. We are at peace. The world respects us again. We trust our own government again.
We trust our own government again. Just Feed us started something great!
President Ford has started something great. Now he needs your support to finish a job well begun.
Paid for by College Republicans.
ARNOLD BERMAN
Senator for the 70's
Speaks on the Issues
Only you can reject once and for all the notion that government is designed to serve only the needs of special interest groups.
Remember, the true test of any government is not how popular it is with the powerful few, but how honestly and fairly it deals with the many who must depend on it.
Isn't it time somebody spoke for you!
Pol. Adv.
Paid for by the Committee to Elect Arnold Berman, Charles N. Bilzer, Treasurer.
'Carter supports the Humphrey-Hawkins Bill . . . as well as a balanced budget and comprehensive planning to reduce inflation.'
income voters. He supports the Humphrey-Hawkins Bill, which aims to reduce unemployment to three per cent by 1980, as well as prescriptive planning to reduce inflation. Ford opposes wage and price controls beyond the present wage-price council system and stresses private rather than government as the way to reduce unemployment.
On taxes, President Ford aims to simplify the tax system and give a tax cut to middle
WEBER WILL CLEAN UP THE MESS IN THE STATE TREASURERS OFFICE!
X
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Approved by Weber for Treasurer Committee.
Paid for by Douglas County Republican Central Committee, John Lungstrum,
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The Treasurer's Office:
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*Invests over
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Paid for by the Citizens for Betty Leslie Committee
BUZZI LISTENS ...
BUZZI LISTENS . . .
* Introduced bill to create a Student Seat on Kansas Board of Regents (we now have that Student Representation)
* Consistently supported faculty pay increases
* Continually worked for Nursing Home, penal, and Mental Health reform
* Serves KU as: Lifetime member KU Alumni Association, Advisory Board Member Greater University Fund, Advisory Board Member Kansas Memorial Union Corporation, Member Institute for Social and Environmental Studies Housing Survey Team, University of Kansas.
* Has given you 4 responsible, responsive years of representation for the 45th District
* Lloyd Buzzi doesn't just say he cares. HIS RECORD PROVES IT!
RE-ELECT LLOYD BUZZI 45th DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVE
... AND TAKES ACTION.
Lecture Auditorium paid for by Citizens for Buzz, Charles and Suzanne Leo Chairpersons
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Roads Winn Keys Freeman
Davids
PETER C.
Ross Freeman, Republican challenger to incumbent Martha Keys in the 2nd District said he thought the major issues confronting Congress after the election would depend on who is elected president. One of the main issues, he said, will be providing education in the university who are in need, such as the poor, the unemployed and minorities.
Freeman said he thought federal in-
vention int state and local government was
important.
One area that the states can't handle, Freeman said, is the energy crisis.
"When a problem transcends the state and local governments' ability to handle it," he said, "there is justification for federal intervention."
On the question of the nation's future energy needs, Freeman said private companies should be given incentives by the government to sell excess oil, gas, oil and coal. These incentives should be given in the form of tax breaks, he said. He also favors federal incentives for the energy industry, but he added that he didn't like nuclear energy, but that it was a necessary evil at present.
"NUCLEAR ENERGY is not safe, but there is no question it will have to be used on a short term basis to keep us from getting into a worse crises than we're in now," he added.
As Tuesday's election draw near, there may be a scramble by some voters to find out where the candidates stand on various issues.
Republican incumbent Larry Winn in the 3rd district said that the major issues facing Congress would be the national aid and the expansion of the federal bureaucracy. In particular, priorities, he said, are the control of inflation and unemployment, developing an
By BILL CALVERT
Some clarification of their stands was provided by the candidates in the races for the U.S. House from the 3rd District, incumbent Republican Larry Winn and incumbent Democrat Michael from the 2nd District, incumbent Democrat Mary Keys and Republican Ross Freeman.
In a telephone interview each candidate answered four questions: What they considered to be major issues in the election, how the ration should fulfill its energy mission, what resources are available in state and local affairs is necessary and the causes and remedies of voter apathy.
U.S. House candidates tell views
Freeman said he expected that the voter turnout in Kansas will be higher than in the rest of the nation. It has been predicted that fewer than half the eligible voters in Kansas would vote. Freeman said he expected about 60 per cent of the eligible voters in Kansas to vote.
★
ONE OF THE causes of voter apathy is the difference between the two groups.
"A lot of people have said it doesn't make any difference who they vote for," he said. "It's the candidates' responsibility to show the differences between them."
Another problem, he said, is that the campaigns often don't focus on issues of any concern to the voters. This is illustrated by the attention given to Jimmy Carter's remarks about adultery which appeared in Playboy magazine, he said.
O'Dell said the issues that Keys thought were most important were estate tax
BUZZI
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Gloria O'Dell, MarthaKeys' press secretary, answered the questions for Keys, who described their work.
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Keys Freeman
energy program and protecting the environment.
In the area of energy development, Winn said he was an advocate of the development of nuclear power until a breakthrough occurred in another energy source.
"It's a fact that we can secure energy from nuclear plants," Winn said. "They are safe because we have put safeguards on them, but we must keep improving these guards. But nuclear energy is not a priority by any means."
Other energy sources, such as solar power, coal and coal shale, should be explored in the meantime. Winn said, adding that renewable sources are best and cheapest potential energy source.
"The Republican philosophy is that we should let state governments do more for themselves," he said. "In some cases, they could furnish federal leads and guidelines."
The expansion of the federal bureaucracy was another area that concerned Winn. He admitted that, in some areas, federal intervention in local affairs was needed.
revision, a balanced national budget and energy.
Limited federal intervention in state and limited affairs is supported by Keys, O'Dell ask.
Keys is against nuclear energy, O'Dell said, and is opposed to the development of fast-breeder nuclear reactors because the safeguards on these reactors are not proven. One reason is that it is the requirement of nonpolluting renewable energy sources such as wind and solar energy.
"She feels that state and local government O'Dell said. "But where national interest is
University Daily Kansan
But Winn added that federal intervention was desirable for tax collection, education, or remediation.
On the question of voter apathy, Winn said that past events in government and restrictions on campaigns had decreased voter interest.
"Vietnam, Watergate, the Nixon paradox and the congressional scandals are all responsible for voter apathy. I would also say that neither presidential candidate is really exciting enough to bring out the voters," he said.
Winn's opponent, Phil Rhoads, listed several issues he thought would face the winner of the election. Among these were unemployment and the economy, human rights on a national and international scale, the establishment of a world food policy, national health care, education, the environment and energy.
"Also, the federal election laws providing for a lid on campaign expenditures have meant that neither candidate has the same share of votes in signs, posters and other campaign cross."
involved, incentives provided by the federal government is an approrecr.
'O'Dell said that Keys supported federal intervention in the form of revenue sharing and block grants, which provide money for certain areas such as education or health.
Kews thinks that voter participation is the base everything works on, O'Dell said. She said Kews thought the conduct of some individuals in office had turned a lot of voters off.
"She feels the best thing to do is to share the electoral process with people to show that they do count. She does this by the way she hands herself in office."
"I think we're going to have to cut back in our lifetimes, and I think it's going to be pretty painful," Rhoads said, referring to conservation.
He said that energy conservation would soon be a reality and that government should provide a program to cut down on fuel consumption. Rhoads suggested a four point conservation program: Advertising for the need to conserve energy, setting up a university library and mandatory conservation, rationing and sleep increases in fuel ores.
Solar and wind power seem to be the most practical energy sources, Rhoads said, adding that he was against further development of nuclear energy.
"I would like to see the nuclear plants shut down, or, rather, see if they can be used temporarily." Hbada said. "I would also turn on the construction of any new plants."
Ribbons said the intervention of the federal government in local and state affairs was necessary when local policies might be harmful to the entire nation. He said one area in which federal intervention was warranted was land use planning. He said the government might not have the incentive to conserve land because of economic priorities.
Ribbais said voter apathy was caused by the shallowness of the candidates, who came across in their campaigns as packaged products. He also said the dimensions of the campaigns made people feel intimidated by the electoral process.
"The way campaigns are run makes people feel that they could not handle it," he said. "If you think of yourself as never being a candidate, you lose interest. The level of the campaign I'm running shows it is not impossible for anyone to run."
REX D. JOHNSON
REPUBLICAN
SHERIFF
DOUGLAS COUNTY
RE-ELECT
100
Present Sheriff of Douglas County
Experienced in law enforcement
Outstanding record as Sheriff
Lifelong resident of Douglas County
Married with 4 children
Your vote and continued support
will be greatly appreciated. (Pol. Adv.
Pd. by Citizens for Johnson, Frank Care and Keith Kelly. Co. Chattanooga.)
Pd. by Citizens for Johnson, Frank Case and Joe Kelly, Co-Chairmen
Education needs more advocates
in the State Legislature.
Kansas teachers know that Arnold
Berman is dedicated to education.
Education needs more advocates in the State Legislature.
Kansas teachers know that Arnold Berman is dedicated to education.
For that reason, the Lawrence Education Association and the Kansas National Education Association urge you to vote for Mr. Berman in the interest of quality education at all levels.
BERMAN FOR STATE SENATOR.
2ND DISTRICT
Selling something? Call us.
Vote VERVYNCK Victory
"I want your vote because I'm ready, willing and able to handle your taxes with the most efficiency and least waste . . .." Ruth Vervynck
10
Vote VERVYNCK for Douglas Co. Treasurer
LARRY WINN WANTS YOU TO KNOW WHERE HE STANDS.
ON GOVERNMENT HONEYEST. While Jimmy Carter, lying and congressional democrats are willing to talk about cheating, and all sorts of corruption during the Watergate era, they quickly scuttle talk or avoid about cheating, indiscretions and lying by their members of Congress.
That is why I have sponsored legislation which would open all congressional committee meetings to the public and eliminate practices like proxy voting. I have also sponsored the Public Records Act, which would require the registration of special interest groups and lobbyists.
The fact is Congress, controlled for the past 22 years by one party, has been too lax in its efforts to clean up its own record. It has become a rudderless, undered body with independent little fiefdoms and interest groups, that has lost the confidence of the American people.
It's time we cleaned out the last traces of scandal and impropriety, and applied discipline with equanimity to the powers of power.
YO
HE
YOUR CONGRESSMAN,
LARRY WINN.
HE LISTENS. HE ACTS.
RE-ELECT
LARRY WINN
NOVEMBER 2ND.
authorized by the Winn for Congress Committee, Box 411, Shawnee Mission Nassau, Jack Brand, Chairman
She'll get things done.
She's done it before.
Nancy
HAMBLETON
Paid for by Hambleton for State Rep., Don Metzler and Joan Golden, Co-Chairmen
16
Friday, October 29, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment on
The Election: Ford or Carter or forget it
ECONOMIC TRENDS
bye bye
1800 WYW SPECIAL FEATURES
Ford earns back-pat, not 4 years
Contrary to popular belief, this presidential election will make a difference. Beneath the yawns, the clumsy cracks and peanut jokes are a few real issues.
For eight years now, the Republicans have been in the White House. During that eight years, the dollar has gone spiratically upward, and attempts to improve the position of minorities have come to a standstill.
TRUE, OUR relations with China and the Soviet Union have improved, and the war has been less than gloriously ended in Vietnam, but the Republicans will be better prepared to promise it will all be remedied in Ford's next term.
The increased unemployment and lack of social progress (the number of Americans below the poverty line is actually increasing now) might be understandable if they were the result of a Republican tax increase, or the fiscal budget. But the truth is the evil federal deficit has continued to increase under the Republicans.
Perhaps part of this is due to the "free-spending, liberal Democrat Congress," but part is also due to the GOP's love affair with the Pentagon.
A STRONG defense is an undeniable necessity, but cutting a few billion from the defense budget is hardly a ludicrous and frightening idea when B-1 bombers cost about $1 billion each.
President Ford didn't give the unemployed the time of day until he realized they could vote. He has played politics with his foreign and domestic policies with the whim of the latest Gallup Poll. He has succeeded in being as vague as Bob Dole says Carter is while actually being President—nuite an accomplishment
Jimmy Carter isn't a saint. He is a competent and probably too candid man who, although not completely
EVEN IF the presidential aspirants were indicted unlawfully, the identity of their running mates should be disclosed.
known, has been stuck with a lot of easy-to-remember labels such as "vague." Yet his positions are clearer than those of most of the presidential candidates of recent memory. Most of the alleged vagueness comes from the fact that he was a presidential, campaign, and from a constant harping on and misquoting of Carter by GOP hatchet men.
Bob Dole has no business being a heartbeat from the Presidency. He is a decent senator, but once he gets beyond that the same partisan and streetfighter would like to take over and assume would also make him a less-than-desirable president.
Walter Mondale may not be as quick on the draw as Dole, but he is admired by both Republican and Democratic senators for his abilities and intelligence.
FORD HAS a reputation for being a "nice guy." A real good buddy. This is very likely so, and Ford is probably really fun to go bowling with—but does that qualify him to be President in his own right? When he was sworn in, Ford said he saw himself as a caretaker president and wouldn't run for President in 1976. As a caretaker president, he earned a pat on the back for a good try—not another four years.
Americans like to stick with the tried and the known until they have no other choice. Many of them will stick with their choices.
But it's hard to see Ford doing anything different in the next four years. In fact, it's hard to imagine him doing anything at all. Knowing Gerald Ford is a reason to vote against him, not for him.
By Jim Bates Editorial Editor
Ford is the safe, realistic choice
Gerald Ford or Jimmy Carter will win the presidential election. A vote for anyone else won't have much impact. And a vote for anyone except Gerald Ford won't make much sense.
Gerald Ford has shown a grasp of America's potential in the limits of what government can do. He is a realist.
HE HAS tried to strengthen the economy, not weaken it with patchwork programs that benefit few except government bureaucrats. Like John Kennedy, he has spurred economic recovery by giving industry incentives to produce more goods and employ more people.
Carter likes to say 2.5 million more people are unemployed than when Ford took office. But it is unfair to blame Ford for the deepening recession during his second term, dime to time to turn things around—but Ford has done it.
From August 1975 to August 1976, 2.7 million more people were put to work. Unemployment was cut by one-half million and 2.2 million people were added to the job force. Even Carter's chief economic adviser says next year will be one of continued economic improvement.
**FORD DID** this while inflation was being cut in half or the average taxpayer wasn't being asked to pay more.
Ford has been a realist abroad, too, despite his slip on Eastern Europe. The Middle East is quieter, and a peaceful solution to African problems is possible because of U.S. help. Ford perhaps has let the Russians have too much, but this trend, inspired by Henry Kissinger, is being reversed.
In contrast to Ford the realist we have Carter the muddled idealist. Jimmy says he will put people back to work, which will produce revenue to balance the budget. But then he says he won't adopt expensive
programs to put people back to work until the budget is balanced, which he previously said couldn't be done without putting those people to work.
CONFUSING? Such clarity is Carter's hallmark. Concerning defense, Jimmy promises a stronger defense and less spending, something even the liberal analysts of the Brookings institution say isn't possible.
Jimmy says we need leadership, but he conducts polls to find out what people want to hear and then says those things. His "promise them anything" attitude isn't my idea of leadership.
Concerning integrity, Carter said no records were kept of the contributors to his 1970 campaign for governor. Then why did a partial list of them turn up in a campaign worker's basement? And why did the list contribute more than $1,000 include 11 persons later appointed to spots in Carter's administration?
WHY DID Carter's fundraisers, between Carter's primary and general election victories for governor, accept $11,500 from road-building contractors who expected to continue doing business with the state?
Why were Carter's books so poorly kept that there is an apparent discrepancy of $200,000 between Carter's 1970 expenditures and campaign contributions?
Those who don't seriously question Carter's efficiency, honesty or integrity should take a look at his record. Gerald Ford's record is not perfect, but he did investigate by Congress and a special prosecutor.
Gerald Ford will give America four solid years as President. Carter offers impossible promises, false leadership and a record that raises serious doubts about his integrity.
By Greg Hack Contributing Writer
LIBERAL CONSERVATIVE
1978 WITH SPECIAL FEATURES
Sitting this one out
I am going to sit this presidential election out. I can't put my trust in Jimmy Carter. President Ford has a record of getting with his leadership or intelligence.
Gene McCarthy, who tugs at my heart, really is washed up. I couldn't vote for him and honestly say that he would make a good president. The other candidates, who are too numerous to mention, are either too far to the right or too far to the left for me.
THAT LEAVES me with one choice. I am not going to vote. I have made my mind up already to sit at a rally and call for all protest, but it is the best I can do.
If someone would have told me in 1972, when I was too young to vote for McGovern, that I wouldn't even bother to register to vote in 1976, I would have told them that they were crazy.
I WANTED Richard Nixon out of office so much in 1972 (and '73 and that I would have done almost every day) but only 17 in November 1972, and the
I am upset with myself for taking such a dim view of politics in the Bicentennial year, but I don't know what else to do.
law says you have to be 18 to vote. So I watched Nixon burr McGovern.
I hope that I am missed at the polls this year. I doubt that I will be, because politicians look at winning percentages, not nonvoting ones.
Whoever wins the presidential election will look at the size of the victory, declare it a mandate to elect a president, and declare the people's choice. Hi ho, hi ho.
No, the winner will be pleased that he won and go about doing what presidential election winners do. He will ignore me.
He won't look at my non-vote and the non-votes of others and say that something is missing, that he might have done something wrong, or that he might have failed to reach a few people.
Someone who won't ignore me is the person who will say, "Young, you slacker. What right have you to say anything. You didn't even vote."
That's right, I will say. I have been displaying my lack of enthusiasm for the President for some time. Look at my voting record.
By Carl Young Contributing Writer
Of course that won't satisfy them, but I will have done the best I could.
The student revolutionary banners of the '60s have long since been furled and stored away. Who knows how long it will be before they and the rocks fell? They are still flicking again. It certain that the fiery political zeal that so many students possessed, or thought they possessed, is absent in this country, and probably aware of the numerous reports saying that all college students are interested in now are football, drinking and sex; except for the usually worrying about their job futures in the real world.
Elections fail to motivate public
These often simplistic analyses, which seem to give assurance to those who were frightened or erased by the '60s activism, correspond to the results of several recent polls examined student interest in politics and the presidential election.
ACCORDING TO the polls, it is estimated that for the first time since 1920, when women were first allowed to vote in presidential elections, less than one percent will vote. Of those nonvoters, 48 per cent are 35 or younger. Seventy-two per cent of those younger nonvoters said one reason they weren't voting was that they did not indicate a thing one thing and did another after winning office.
Fifty-eight per cent of the same group picked John, and 42 per cent of the most admired, Carter and Ford were each picked by one (that's right, one) per cent of those who should leave them with few
delusions of receiving popular adulation.
John Fuller Contributing Writer
ERNEST Herningway once said that a good reporter should have a built-in bulbish detector and think about the American people as a
whole like to pride themselves on having that ability, even though they have been diped often in the past. In any event, it seems that millions of Americans have had their detectors turned on high in this trivial and mediocre mental essentialism. Since the detectors give high similar readings for both candidates, apathy is the natural path to take.
Many voters just can't figure out whether believing in our two-party political system and its candidates is a blessing or a curse. Many don't see much difference between sitting on the fence and being cynical, and knowing which of us in politics only to discover what cynicism and disillusionment really mean. Think of all the loyal Republicans that defended Nixon until the very end. (The sarcastic nonparticipant would say, "Whaddaways? Look at all the blind fools that still unknowingly support Nixon staffers that are still in powerful government positions.")
DESPIETE ALL the negative aspects of the current political scene, a lot of citizens still believe that the faithful in their faith in our flawed system.
Even though this is only a fraction of the student population, the students' involvement shows that the spirit of participatoryocracy isn't totally unburdened.
and the College Republicans here are proof that somebody still has time for politics. The Republicans have about 300 members, but, according to officers of the club, only about 10 per cent of them really get out and do the grassroots work so we are swayed to a well-run team. Likewise, only about 40 per cent of the 110 members of the Young Democrats really get involved
The KU Young Democrats
MOST OF them will admit that their parents were either
active in their political parties or held strong political views that were passed on to their children. But the serious differences in their parties and that there are major differences between them.
Those I talked to were home about their involvement. Ego and self-inferite definitely play a part, but they are also motivated get a chance to meet and know politically influential people. Some join to meet other people with the same interests as you, but just to take up spare time.
BUT IDEALISM showed too. One student said he felt fortunate to be an American and then went on a journey spent canvassing door-to-door.
putting up yard signs and answering the phone gave him a sense of paying his debt to work. Another student said she wouldn't be involved if she didn't think that sooner or later something good for society came from her contribution.
"Realistically, the cynics might be correct about police, she said. "They can't stand a world without hope."
Amen. In 50 years, when we look back on the winner of the Ford-Carter contest as just another Millard Fillmore, it is no surprise that he or at least more interesting and inspiring to the average voter.
WHY DO YOU SUPPOSE FORD SENT US A NUCLEAR AIRCRAFT CARRIER?
BECAUSE I TOO HIM WE WERE IN URGRANT NEED OF MILITARY AND THAT I HAD TWO SISTERS AND A COUSIN IN PEORIA WHO WERE THINKING ABOUT VOTING FOR CARTER!
RETURNS OF BANANAJA
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 29,1976
17
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INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGY
Voter turnout rises. falls with age of electorate
Bv ALLAN CIGLER
Associate Professor of Political Science
The widespread decline in voter turnout in recent years in American elections is disturbing to many people and has received considerable attention during this presidential election campaign.
Some think that voting is so basic to the theory of the democratic state that the failure of a sizable proportion of the U.S. electorate to take the trouble to vote appears to challenge the essential validity of popular democracy. In a low-quality environment, where both men who wins, the elected government will be denied the legitimacy so necessary for effective leadership in domestic and foreign policy.
RECENT POLLS indicate—and they may be conservative on the matter—that turn in this election may well be under 50 per cent, a figure that hasn't been approached since the early 1970s. It was rising in light of the common perception that the 1976 election will be an extremely close contest.
If poll results prove accurate, this will be the fourth consecutive presidential election in which a candidate can win in the electorate election in which 63.5 per cent of the electorate voted. Even the 1972 election, the result of which was evident to most observers by the end of the campaign, was the summer, had a turnout rate of $5.7 per cent.
Just what figure would constitute an "acceptable" rate of turnout is of some conjecture. Critics of the current levels of participation are quick to point out that in the latter part of the 19th century, turnout rates approached 80 percent in some presidential elections.
But the context of politics nearly 100 years ago is too dissimilar for significant comparison. For example, women and blacks, traditionally low in wealth and education, are even part of the electorate in that period.
FURTHER, ballots weren't secret, there were essentially no registration barriers for white males and political parties often acted like a militia on election day, virtually herding potential voters to the polls and giving them ballots with only one party's candidates on them.
In some eastern cities dominated by political machines, turnout even exceeded 100 per cent of those eligible to vote in some precincts. Obstacles to the turnout figures were a function of political corruption.
A comparison of our turnout rates with those of other western democracies also is fraught with error. Some countries impose a fine for not voting in a primary, while others raise turnout rates in the United States.
MOST IMPORTANT, the meaning of turnout varies among countries. Some western democracies report turnout as the percentage of those eligible to vote who participated in the election. U.S. turnout figures are derived from surveys of all voters dividing the total of those who voted into the total "potential" electorate, or all persons of voting age as determined by the U.S. Census Bureau.
According to survey data compiled by the University of Michigan's Survey Research Center, more than 72 per cent of the U.S. respondents who were eligible to vote in 1972 said they did so, which is, in relative terms, a good turnout compared with many other countries.
WHAT IS truly surprising about turnout in the United States is not so much that it's low, but that it's consistently getting lower. After all, the period since the 1960 election has been one of rising educational levels; increasingly salient issues; the removal of many voting barriers, including poll taxes and registration and residency requirements; increasingly available
'What is truly surprising about turnout in the United States is not that it's low, but that it's consistently getting lower.'
political stimuli provided by the mass media, particularly TV; and campaign efforts unparalleled in the history of American politics, in which the magnitude of both cost and candidate exposure.
Just about all observers of American politics have their pet explanations for decreasing turnout. Most think that decreasing turnout is a result of the events of the most recent period in American political history and the personalities associated with them.
FOR EXAMPLE, in the final presidential debate, one panelist, in phrasing a question dealing with turnout, suggested that the electorate be divided among them and their election tactics. Not surprisingly, Carter and Ford agreed, that the electorate was indeed turned off, not by the choice of candidates, but by memories of the Southeast Asian intergate and the Washington morality scandals.
Both candidates made clear that they viewed us as having nothing to do with these disruptive issues.
Poll data seem to lend strong support to the alienated voter thesis. The polls indicate a linear decline in the electorate's political trust and afflicty, starting right before the 1964 election.
Certainly disillusionment with the war, the social disruptions of the 1960s, the Watergate revelations and the credibility gaps so obvious in the Johnson and Nixon administrations cast strong doubts on our nation's ability to solve problems. They also suggest that perhaps our political leadership isn't worthy of the trust that's almost automatically given.
RECENT SCHOOLLY literature suggests that it wasn't only the "message" of the disruptive period, but the medium that conveyed it that's responsible for the rise of political alienation. The author of an article in the most recent issue of the American Political Science Review concludes that TV has presented the controversies of the last decade in a manner
He also suggests that the tone of the TV medium is largely antestablishment. Much of the news, for example, is critical of authorities in general, vividly showing the human weaknesses of our political leadership. The result is a cynical view that public power is not high political efficacy is associated with a high turnout rate, decreasing political efficacy should bring about a low turnout.
that tends to overwhelm the viewer with the complexity of political problems convincing the public that it's politically ineffective and that problems may be too complex to solve.
NONVOTING probably is a result of a variety of factors, which, in varying degrees, operate in elections. Following the 1968 election for president, a poll of 450 college examiners found 44 million nonvoters and asked, "What was it that kept you from voting?" Here are the Gallup estimates for the number of people influenced by nonvoting.
- About 15 million (34 per cent) were evenly split between disinterested in or hostile to the candidates.
- About 10 million (23 per cent) could have registered but didn't.
- About seven million (16 per cent) were sick or disabled
- *About five million (11 per cent) were prevented from voting by registration request*
- A final one million (2 per cent) didn't obtain absentee ballots.
- A further three million (7 per cent) said they couldn't leave their jobs.
An understanding of the demographic composition of today's electorate can perhaps best explain the unusually low turnout projected for this election. The particularly large drop in turnout in the 1970s may be caused by the same thing that's related to the large rise in crime in recent years—the baby boom of the late 1940s and early 1950s.
FOR EXAMPLE, a major cause in the rise of crime since 1965 has been an increase in the number of people in the "crime prone" age range—18 to 25 years. Also, the electorate today is composed of a high percentage of people in the "low turnover prone" age range—18 to 30 years.
There are no official voting records that breakdown turnover on the basis of age. But survey data can give us a rough indication of voting participation differentials on the basis of age, though the social norm that people should vote tends to bias the results upward.
For example, roughly 10 per cent more people indicated they had voted in the 1972 postelection surveys than actually did vote, according to official statistics.
In 1972, 25 million voters were added to the potential electorate. Yet, according to survey data from 2008, only 64% of voters said they participated in the election. Probably, this figure was an overestimate. Of those people between 45 and 64, 81% (per cent) are likely to vote for the relationship between age and voting turnout is
YOUNG MEMBERS of the electorate have always had lower participator rates. A high proportion of people in their 20s or younger don't see politics as immediately salient to their personal lives. Many aren't paying taxes and aren't directly involved in the production side of the economy. Politics has to compete with social events and courtship concerns.
curvilinear, with those under 25 and those older of 65 having the lowest levels of turnover. The largest group is between 30 and 49.
In short, the salience of politics is an important motivation for political partisans, and politicization is a key challenge.
The current generation of young members of the electorate does differ from previous generations of young voters. The events of the previous decade have left their mark. Young potential voters are even more cynical about political change than they did in the generation. Young members of the electorate in the 1980s were markedly less cynical about politics than their elders.
ACCORDING to a poll done after the 1972 election, more than one quarter of those under 24 thought they had "no duty to vote" and "had no political power." Both figures are more than twice as large as comparable figures for people who were part of a study during the 1966 election.
Evidently, the events of the past decade not only contributed to higher levels of political alienation, but also retarded the development of civic participation values in the early political socialization process. The belief that participation is to be valued in and of itself evidently isn't widely held by the current younger members of the electorate.
THE UNUSUALLY low turnout in the mid-1970s, then, is the result of a peculiar mix of period, life cycle and generation effects. For many members of the electorate, the events and processes of the United States political efficacy and political trust, causing a withdrawal from politics. The electorate also
'The unusually low turnout in the mid-1970s is the result of a peculiar mix of period, life cycle and generation effects.'
now is composed of a high proportion of "low turnout proven" people, bringing overall par-
And this younger political generation is further unique in that its sense of citizenship duty is unusually low, especially its sense of voting duty. It should be surprised that turnover is as high as it is.
IT SEEMS to me, however, that there's room for optimism, and it's likely that turnover will start to increase within the next decade. The high degree of political alienation as indicated by the polls doesn't seem to be deeply rooted and appears to be more directed at current political
incumbents rather than at our basic system of government.
A series of poll data by Time magazine dealing with personal happiness and job satisfaction indicates that Americans are overwhelmingly happy in their current circumstance. At the end of the survey, 72 percent of those sampled by Gallup indicated they were "in general, very happy or fairly happy."
In a 1974 poll, only 10 per cent of those sampled indicated that if they were free to do so, they would settle in another country—the lowest total among the nine western democratic countries in which the question was asked. Many political scientists think that political cynicism would quickly change under improving economic conditions and more popular leaders.
JACK CITRIN, a prominent political scientist, has recently put forth a baseball analogy. Political systems, like baseball teams, have slumps and winning streaks. Having recently endured a succession of losing seasons, Americans boo the home team when it takes the ball. But fans are often fickle; victories quickly elicit cheers. And to most fans, what matters is whether the home team win or loses, not how it ends. The team wins 'streak' and, perhaps, some new names in the lineup may be sufficient to increase trust in government.
It also appears likely that within the next decade, life cycle effects will aid rather than hinder the growth of new plants in future, the large, currently "low turnover prone" proportion of the electorate will reach the stage in life in which politics becomes extremely difficult. Because of this group should increase correspondingly.
THIS SHOULD raise the turnout rates markedly for the total electorate. The worry, of course, is that the generation effect upon this type of electorate will be exaggerated by exceptions of higher turnout in later years.
In the meantime, it seems to me that there's little that can be done to increase turnover, which is necessary for life cycle effects. Registration barriers are already pretty well eliminated, and changes such as postcard voting may increase turnover but are unlikely to influence turnover a great deal.
One suggestion would be to concentrate resources less on registration efforts and more on election day attempts to get people to the polls. Political parties used to be highly involved in this activity, but the decline of parties in losing the largest a result of the parties' losing their financial resources to the media and candidate public relation relations, has left a massive void in this area.
OTHER RECENT suggestions include having the polls open for longer periods (one writer recently suggested a three-day national election period) and a national advertising campaign, run by the Federal Elections Commission, to get out the vote.
Overall, however, such efforts probably would increase turnover only marginally.
Local contests offer test of election philosophies
Not everyone is suited for public office, and it's the grave responsibility of Lawrenze voters to decide, by Tuesday, whether victorious Victor in seven state and county races.
This year, local contests have provided an arena for the testing of a number of election philosophies. Should worthy candidates have made promises in a specific area or should they have vaguely discussed a host of problems? Does the experience of an incumbent give him a winning edge over a youthful, but perhaps naive, first-time contender in the primary race against his opponent be taken as innocent political rhetoric, or should charges, no matter what the setting, seriously affect a candidate's worthiness?
seeking his third two-year term, bases his campaign on what he says has been his responsiveness to the diverse needs of the district, which include problems peculiar to KU as well as to Lawrence. Hambleton, Lawrence's first woman city commissioner and mayor, says she primarily will strive to
Mary Ann Daugherty Contributing Writer
THESE ARE questions local campaigning has spotlighted. They must be answered by voters next week. And, as if these questions aren't difficult enough, they're further complicated this year by an overwhelming suspicion that any candidate, including the Clinton administration, many skeletons in the closet to deserve continued faith.
upgrade housing but will give some attention to civil service and the penal and court systems. Hart, who has professed few ambitions, says he will try to subdue the state bureaucracy by striking one law from the statutes for every law he implements.
In the race for the 3rd District Douglas County Commission seat, incumbent Democrat I. J. Stoneback, 59, is opposed by Republican Bradley, Debrady charged that Stoneback had had excessive absences from commission meetings. Stoneback explained that the absences were for good reasons, in connection with and to a commissioner's convention.
Republican incumbent Lloyd Buzzi, 32, Buzzii has said an estimated $20 million in revenue sharing funds could be used by the state to continue funding state services without increased taxation. Francis has proposed that the state set up a toll-free telephone service that would provide information on needed state services. Calls were tabulated, she said, to determine what new services are needed.
IN THE 45th District House race,
Democrat Carol Francis, 48, challenges
IN THE sherrif's fire, Republican incumbent Rex Johnson, 43, has met a tough challenger in Democrat James Huskey, 26, to the nomination. County attorney's office, he charged that Johnson allowed his deputies to accept gratitudes from local businessman. He also said Johnson has refused to debate the election. Johnson, rather feelly, denied the charges.
from the 2nd District pits Republican Robert Neis, 52, against American party candidate Robert Elder, 47. Neis favors long-range planning, and Elder, in true American party form, argues against increased government intervention of any sort.
The race for county treasurer between Republican deputy treasurer Bessie Leslie, 46, and Democrat Ruth Verynck, 43, is largely unissueless.
Although all candidates are somewhat deserving, my choices are:
BOOTH, because he has shown knowledge of the community he expresses and of the mechanics of the legislature in which he wants to work.
GLOVER, because he's willing to stick his neck out for a variety of groups, whether their concerns are liberal, conservative or moderate.
Run for state representative of the 44th District are incumbent Democrat Michael Glover, 29. Republican Nancy Pelosi, 30. Democratic David Thomas Hart, 52. Glover, who
BUZZI, because he understands how important federal revenue亭, without increasing taxes.
**BRADLEY** because she can replace a commissioner who has sometimes neglected the good of the entire county for the sake of his own interests.
NEIS, because he sees there's a need for government intervention in a properly structured society.
IN THE race for the 2nd District Kansas Senate seat, incumbent Republican Arden Booth, 64, is challenged by a lawyer, Arnold Berman, 46. Booth, who has served six years in the Kansas Senate, says Berman, who has lived in Lawrence since 1973, doesn't know the needs of the community or what it takes to be effective in the legislature. Berman on the other hand, Boven power of KIWN media domain has been responsive only to big business, public utilities and the news media and Lawrence represents representation by someone who would work for the entire district.
Without question, most local races this year have one or more elements of concern, question, interest and debate that voters shouldn't discount without scrutiny. Tuesday, when votes are counted, it would be unusual if victors could be acclaimed because they were not by voters, who went to the polls with definite ideas about what was for fit public office.
HUSKEY, because he has promised increased public participation in a legally operated sheriff's office.
LESLIE, because, in a contest in which neither candidate seems to outshine the other, experience is reassuring.
Tuesday, Lawrence voters, including students who have registered in Douglas County.
Candidates' personalities, motives get attention
BY MARION BAXTER
The American electorate in this campaign is paying a great deal of attention to the personality and motivations of both major party candidates. Both President Ford and Jimmy Carter seem to be at搐ing the attention of the Democrats in a particular posture. It is now a matter for the vote to choose the more believable personality.
Ford wants to be perceived as the steady, dependable leader who rescued his country from its deep recession and the shock of Watergate. He devoted his first campaign weeks to being presidential, grasping opportunities without actively taking risks. Instead of going directly to the people, he depended on his record.
The candidates' use of the word "trust" is an example of the dichotomy they have drawn for the voter. "Just trust me," the candidates say, "their response is that trust must be earned.
With Fird's showing in the second debate and thereafter, with increased exposure, however, his earlier strategy may have been better. Voters saw his six-day delay in correcting his foreign policy "boo-boo" of the United States (in the case of eastern Europe) as incompetence. Ford's personal style of a "bumble" had been widely discussed, and he depended on
It follows that Carter would do well to take the opposite stance, with Republican transgressions all too fresh on the voter's mind. To offset the incredible amount of secrecy in the Nixon administration and Ford's known conservatism, he epidemicized the compassionate underster to the Washington bureaucracy and related scandals.
his mistake to blow over rather than admitting such an obvious gaffe.
His grass-roots beginning gave that role
secretary. Carter has had cause to regret quick judgments, however. His rapid evaluation of FBI Director Clarence Kelly could have cost him some support. Carter's staff might be concerned about rapid turnover in the unit. An instant removal of anything embarrassed.
The voters don't see Carter's self-assurance in Ford's personality. He trusts experts to the extent that he isn't ashamed to say, "I don't know" at times. Henry
'In spite of all the ways to assess the candidate's personalities, they appear similar to many observers. Either candidate is likely to begin his tenure rather conservatively.'
creditibility. His constant availability to the people and unusual candor have also strengthened it. Candor is his strength, but it is also his weakness. In baring his secret longings to the world through the windows of his office, he has had reason to question his motives.
Carter's attempt to use his personality to present a clear choice to the voters is also evident in his too-quick opposite reaction to anything in which Ford has been involved. He was a naturalist, and he often affix to Ford after his hesitancy in dealing with Earl Butz, former agriculture
even though still unproved, has passed difficult tests.
Kissinger's success in Rhodesia presented a hollow victory for Ford because, to some Americans, it was still another symptom of Ford's dependence on others. This, along with Ford's cautiously deliberate, nature-driven approach, generated serious flair to many Americans. The capacity of his gifted has often been questioned.
those of other 20th century presidents. They were rated in the areas of power motivation, affiliation (need for friendship) and achievement needs.
The study showed that Carter might instead be inclined to govern in the manner of former president Lyndon Johnson, with scores closest to him in those three areas.
Quite the opposite is true for Carter. His intellect has proved superior under difficult circumstances. Even for supporters must be reminded that he was a man of stature and figures in the debates. His competence,
Lack of experience may not prove a liability for Carter as much as that image he has earned of trying to please too many people. In her first assessment, his many-faceted personality may only stem from the fact that his parents had opposing effects on him. His mother is a social liberal whose compassion and sensitivity made him the businessman, a was hard-nosed segregationist with rigid self-discipline. One can even see the roots of Carter's candor in his mother's surprising statement about never lying.
"Psychology Today," however, looks at this another way with a comparison of Ford and Toyota cars.
But, the intricacies of the candidates' personalities are still examined. Giving Richard Nixon a virtual mandate in the 1972 Presidential election should give the voters ample reason for caution. It wouldn't seem outraged to predict that a candidate lose the election because something in his personal style was reminiscent of Nixon.
Carter's personality, that of the often-complex Ioner who seldmakes others into his confidence, has been compared with Nixon's.
Ford, who scored lowest of any former president on desire to exert power, was
His achievement needs higher of
needsthese needs for afl-
filiationwere also extremely
Carter scored above average on all three motives, but not as high as former President John Kennedy, the only former candidate who scored unusually high in all three areas.
In spite of all the ways to assess the candidates' personalities, they appear
Either candidate is likely to begin his tenure rather conservatively. Carter and Ford can see what the needs of the economy are, and found personal success through hard work.
Neither Ford nor Carter's integrity has been seriously questioned and personality shows detecting are largely exaggerated and the possible result of campaign circumstances.
18
Friday, October 29.1976
University Dally Kansan
PRECINCT MAP REIT
Location of Points
National Guard Armory, Second and Iowa Woodlawn School, Fifth and Elm Newfield School, Fifth and Lawrence Pineley School, Sixth and Maassachusetts American Academy, Sixth and Kasloid West Junior High, Vale and Cradleville West Core School, Vale and Cornell West Creek School, Vale and New York Library, 70 Vermont Road, and Schwarf Island Hill School, Hills and Schwarr Douglass County State Bank Community building, 12 W. 11th St. Museum Doncaster Park, 11th and Massachusetts East Heights School, 11th and Haskell Forest Hills School, 11th and Massachusetts Central Junior High, 11th and Massachusetts Lurie Field House, 11th and Kalamaki Cordeley School, 19th and Vermont Kennedy School, Drexel and Harper High school administration Int and Louisa Falconi Historic Site, Int and Louisa Schweiger School, 2nd and Outdahl Connecticut School, 2nd and Lowelliana Prebysterian Church, 845 W. 27th St. Burtla Y. 27th and Cedar Street Indian School, East 27th Street Nileywauh School, 27th and Louisiana South Junior High, 27th and Louisana Hillcrest School, 164 Hilton St.
INDEPENDENTS DEMOCRATS REPUBLICANS
1946
If a major concern is adequate funding for the University of Kansas.
THINK!
We've had three good years.The legislature fulfilled a commitment. University students, faculty, staff have done a great job in building the University image yet many legislators have other priorities for tax money. It won't be so easy in'77.
Senator ARDEN BOOTH has 6 years experience in the Senate. He's bridged gaps between Democrats and Republicans, and between rural and urban areas. He's a leader. He gets things done. He listens and is listened to. He'll get adequate funding for the University.
This is no time to send to Topeka an inexperienced person of the minority party. If a major concern is adequate funding for the University:
X VOTE X TUESDAY
X ARDEN BOOTH X
X SENATOR X
X
X
X
X
X
Paid for by the Return Booth Committee.
Tunney's troubles aren't over yet
In his six years as senator, John Tunney, D-Calif., has put together what many think is a comprehensive bill.
Rv.JAY BEMIS
The 42-year-old sponsored 38 bills during his first senate term—more than any other freshman senator—which included an amendment to cut off secret funds to Angola that Henry Kissinger would most likely want to forget.
He also was one of the first senators to call for the resignation of former president Richard Nixon, and according to his Democratic senatorial colleague from California, Alan Cranston, he was the first senator "to lay a glove on the Klein-Diem (former attorney general) and L. Patrick Gray (former chief of the FBJ)."1
Sounds as if Tumney's 1976 re-election bid is in the bag, right?
The same state that has drawn GOP interest among Hollywood figures (Ronald Reagan, Pat Botee and Efram Zimbabwe) to mention a few) has a new Republican star.
But no.
He is 70-year-old Samuel I. Hayakawa, a semanticist and celebrity from the campus.
It was Hayakawa, as president of San
Francisco State University, who jumped up on a sound truck during a student demonstration in the late '60s and cut off the amplifier. It's a stand manny won't forget.
What has Tunne and political experts puzzled, however, is how Hayakawa has so much support among voters. Throughout his campaign, he has selden taken major stands on issues. Instead, he is launching a campaign that is highlighted by a semantics of humor or, as Hayakawa himself puts it, "having a hell of a good time."
Hayakawa is small, but looks quite healthy for his age. His small, rounded face is highlighted by big, black, thick-trimmed eyebrows and a symbol of his gava as SFSU president.
Turnney is practically the opposite of Hayakawa in presence. He is tall and long-faced, and in a recent appearance with Democratic presidential hopeful Jimmy Carter, one wondered which of the two had the widest and whitest grin.
Tunney will stress to anyone that he's going to win this election, although he's also one of the first to admit that Hayakawa is hard to get a grip on.
Whenever Tunney tries to pin Hayakawa a statement Hayakawa says he has for the last time
"And it works," Tunney has said.
"Sometimes it's like punching a bag of smoke."
One topic that Hayakawa does like to talk about is racism.
He favors the way Japanese-Americans were treated in the United States during World War II.
"It's the best thing that ever happened," he says, "because it forced them out of their houses."
As a result, Hayakawa himself has been called a racist, some of the same radicals include Hayakawa.
Some criticize Hayakaay about his age and never having any political experience. "Dr. Sam" (as he calls himself) doesn't see it that way. He thinks his academic training and semantic background—from which he has studied foreign languages have been one long preparation for politics.
A poll conducted by Mervin Field of Field Research Corp, in the second week of October indicated that 24 per cent of the Democrats interviewed, indeed, planned on voting for Hayakawa. Sixteen per cent of Democrats, however, planned on voting for Tunney.
The most significant figures in the poll, though, were the ones that showed the race a deadlock, with 43 per cent of those in favour Timmy and 43 per cent favoring Hayakawa.
Extrovert challenges introvert in N.Y.
By MARK WOLFF
The New York race for the United States Senate puts a soft-spoken candidate against an outspoken one. James L. Buckley, the soft-spoken Republican-Conservative senator from New York, is competing with Senator Hillary Clinton, the outspoken former United States representative to the United Nations and now a member of the Harvard faculty.
Buckley is firmly entrenched in conservatism. His brother, William F. Buckley, is a nationally syndicated columnist and founder of the National Review, a publication noted for its conservative views.
Buckley, the senator, won his seat six years ago in a three-way race with 39 per cent of the vote. Buckley, from a wealthy New York family, became a vice president in his family's oil exploration business after completing Yale Law School.
Moyyanhua is a liberal Democrat who, at various times in his career, has flirted with other factions of that party. He has served in the Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon administrations as an economic adviser. He served as ambassador to India and is best known for his vitriolic statements while serving in the United Nations.
The contest should prove to be an interesting one. The primary elections that led up to the nominations were fierce in both political camps. Buckley ran against Rep.
Peter Peyser of Westchester County and soundly defeated him 234,138 to 98,517. Buckley had offered some resistance to Peyser's primary candidacy by questioning the legitimacy of the petitions Peyaser had filed to be allowed to run. The discrepancy was ironed out, but Peyser's trial run failed nevertheless.
The Democratic primary race was a bit more crowded. Five contenders filled the primary ballot; Rep. Bella Abzug, D-N.Y., Moyhain's closest competitor, took 317,965 votes to Moyhain's 327,478; former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark; New York City Council President Paul O'Dwyer; and Abraham Hirschfeld, a building tycoon.
The race has focused on two main issues: taxes and social programs. Moynahan proposed that the responsibility for welfare be handed to the federal government. He also wanted states to pass a bill and favors more legislation to help the Northeast out of its economic troubles.
Buckley answers Moynihan's proposals as being too reliant on the federal government. He favors moving fiscal authority back to local communities where "taxayers have some degree of control over how their tax revenues are used, the economy has comeback potential if federal spending and taxes are sufficiently controlled to encourage private investment.
Buckley's support is strongest among low-income voters, surprising for a conservative, with Moynihan has 57 percent of the support of the over $2,000-a-year
Perhaps more important than the issues are the personalities and ideologies of the candidates. Buckley's conservatism and lackuster campaigning style have placed him in the position of challenger, instead of the leader he has cast Moynihan ira, the role of an ivory power professor who is unaware and unbothered of the people's desires.
group. A recent poll by Newbury indicated that women was absent 50 to 41 with nine per cent of the population.
And so began this name-calling campaign between the two candidates representing opposite ends of the political spectrum. Buckley has six years experience in the Senate. His Buckley Amendment, a piece of legislation supporting the individual's right to vote, is his personal records, is a definite asset, among the first to ask for former president Richard Nikon's resignation, another factor acting in his favor.
Shortly after winning the primary election, a reporter asked Moynhan his impression of Buckley's describing him as a professor. Moynhan replied in his chemical iconographic way: "He did! Well, it's begun, has it! I call it a conservative."
This year's Senate race will be an interesting one to watch nationwide, and all the more interesting in New York. Both candidates offer definite choices and neither can be accused of being the lesser of two evils.
The Candidates are NOT the same
Nancy Hambleton obeys the law even if she doesn’t like it—and then works to change the law where needed.
Nancy Hambleton will work full time at representing the 44th district.
Nancy Hambleton has the respect of local and state officials for her careful study of problems and issues. She does not make decisions based on politics, emotions of the moment, or the influence of pressure groups.
Nancy Hambleton helped neighborhood organizations such as East Lawrence Improvement Association — she doesn’t just talk about local interest. She is working on the Governor’s Task Force on Housing, a 26 County Health Planning Board, and on the Advisory Council on Aging.
First Woman Mayor
First Woman City Commissioner
Board of Director , Junior Achievement
Trustee of Kansas Council on Economic Education
Paid for by Hambleton for State Rep.; Don Metzler & Joan Golden, Co-Chairmen
Friday, October 29, 1976
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Ethnic voters catered to by candidates
By MARY MYERS
Ethnic purity, Soviet domination of Eastern Europe and loose shoes have brought to light the importance of ethnic identity. Jerry Ford and Jimmy Carter weren't ignorant of the ethnic vote before these controversies arose. Significant numbers of votes are to be found among these groups, including black working steadily to woo each vote can be.
Carter's campaign has established "desks" for every major voting interest.
Ford's attention to these groups is being coordinated by a single organization called the National Center for Women.
DC QUACK ABORIGINALS ON THE SIDY
VOTE REPUBLICAN
Ford's strategists say he must win the northern industrial states or not win at all. The President has pinned his hopes of winning these states on the chance of swaying urban Catholics away from their traditional Democratic fold.
Many analysts think that the opinions of church leaders won't necessarily sway the votes of church members. The Time poll mentioned above indicates that as of early September, 48 per cent of Catholics oppose a Constitutional amendment banning abortion, 43 per cent favor an amendment and 9 per cent are undecided.
BOTH CAMPS SEE the winning of ethics as integral to a November victory. These blocs might not make up a particularly high percentage of the nation's voting age concentration in certain states could affect the outcome of college electoral votes.
One in five potential voters is Catholic. The populations of Illinois, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and New York are more than 30 per cent Catholic. If a good portion of these people vote, and if a majority of them vote will strongly influence the direction of electors' five states' 125 electoral votes—nearly half of the 720 needed to elect a President.
CARTER'S CAMP is equally concerned about the Catholic bloc. In the past six presidential elections, Democrats have lost every time they received less than 60 percent of the Catholic vote. That figure might not be enough, because Carter might have strong allies in evangelical Protestants who usually vote Republican.
Catholicists of Eastern European origin usually have voted heavily Democratic, but conservatism among them seems to be growing.
To win the Catholic vote, both candidates have met with church leaders, appointed Catholics to their campaign staff, studied theological texts, and visited heavily Catholic neighborhoods.
A Yankelovich, Skelly and White poll conducted for Time magazine in early September indicated that Catholics supported Carter over Ford, 48 to 37 per cent. He was seen at about the same time stated that Carter had 54 per cent of the Catholic vote.
IN 1964,76 per cent of the Catholics who
THE CANDIDATES TELL the voters what they want to hear. Carter has pledged to support federal aid to parochial schools as far as the law allows. Carter's camp also feels secure with Catholics on the issue of school matters of low- and middle-income families.
Abortion became an issue following the candidate's meeting with the National Congress.
Barner ran into the most trouble with this. Before his meeting with the bishops, he had stated that although he did not approve of a constitutional amendment prohibiting it. At the meeting he modified his position, indicating that he might not rule out every proposed
CARTER THEN encountered antagonism from pro-abortion factions angry at him for changing his position, and from anti-immigration groups who thought he hadn't changed it enough.
The most vocal protesters were those against abortion. Thus Ford, who favors giving each state the right to decide the type of abortion, escaped most of the controversy.
voted, voted for Johnson. This figure eroded to 59 per cent for Humphrey in 1868. By 1972 only 48 per cent voted for McGovern. Not all, but some of this erosion can be attributed to the switched allegiance of urban Eastern European Catholics.
There are some in the Carter camp who fear that northern, urban Catholics dislike Carter's born again evangelicalism. And some observers think that many Catholics are remembering and noting the recent, Catholicism of some Southern Baptists.
Some criticis saw Carter's "ethnic purity" statement as a coded attempt to woo urban Catholics by appealing to their desire to be Catholic. But the same thing Carter had said in an interview with the New York Daily News that he saw nothing wrong with communities of Polish, Czech, French-Canadians or black Americans who were the ethnic purity of their neighborhood.
IN EXPLAINING THIS statement, Carter said that he would fight housing discrimination but that he was against the government promoting "the intrusion of alien groups" into a neighborhood for the sake of mass interation.
Carter was more attacked for his language than for his message. Rep. Andrew Young, D-Ga., called by U.S. News Carter's 'premier black advocate', said the truth of purity "was 'Hiderian' and urged Carter to 'repeat' or lose the nomination.
Vernon Jordan, executive director of the Urban League, called the language "infuriating."
AND SO DID most black voters, apparently. A poll conducted by U.S. News and Wesley in early October said that vote in accorded black voters would for Carter.
Ford's support from blacks probably wasn't hurt very much by Earl Burt' ssl against them, because so few blacks supported Ford in the first place.
When Carter did apologize, many black
leaders, including Martin Luther King Sr.
forgeries.
BLACKS HAVE OVERWHELMingly democratic since the days of Franklin Roosevelt. The problem Democrats have to vote Democratic, but to vote at all.
About one in 10 potential voters is black. Fifty-seven per cent of 15 million blacks are registered to vote, compared with 70 per cent of 125 million whites. Black voters are most uniformized "Operation Big Vote" to register new black voters in at least 11 industrial states.
Black apathy this year might be attributed to the fact that blacks think they are victims of race-based injustice, given much attention because major civil rights legislation has already been passed, and the country's sentiment seems to be against big spending for social programs.
DURING THE DEMOCRATIC primaries, Carter was the only candidate to pursue the black vote. George Wallace's campaign disintegrated partly because of the 70 per cent of Florida's voting blacks and 90 per cent of North Carolina's who voted for
staff is 13 per cent black. He has asked black leaders to submit a list of positions they would like blacks to fill in his administration and has promised to appoint blacks to regulatory agencies and as federal judges.
Another bloc both candidates are pursuing is that of the Jewish, which represents a minority group who have consistently high turnout at the polls, and traditionally lean Democratic in presidential elections. But Republicans say any vote from the bloc would by paying a significant number of Jewish votes.
BOTH CANDIDATEHS have visited Jewish neighborhoods, speaking of their support for Israel. Carter flew 100 prominent Jews to Atlanta to ask for their help and advice.
Some Jews dislike Henry Kissinger and his policy of detente with the Soviet Union, which they and some others think misreathes its Jews. Some also dislike the sale of American weapons to Arab nations. These issues hurt Ford's support among Joe Jews.
Though Jews do have a heavily Democratic voting record, Democrats can't count on their undivided support, Jews, perhaps more than other ethnic blocs, carefully analyze issues and positions of both candidates.
But neither candidate can count on undivided support from any ethnic bloc. The blocs mentioned here have usually given most of their votes to Democrats—but the key word is "most." In the close contest coming up, small numbers of voters could make all the difference. And so the wooing continues.
CARTER
PLATFORM
ABORTION
An established and impressive record involving
AS GOVERNOR, Carter appointed 53
blacks to supervisory boards. His campaign
Time magazine says that blacks are drawn to Carter because of his fair treatment of them while governor of Georgia, his Baptist evangelicalism, the presence of several high-ranking blacks in his campaign and his support of programs like welfare reform and national health insurance.
Carter. Carter narrowly beat Morris Udall in Michigan because of black support.
- family living
THEN I WAS
- professional journalism
- community affairs
- Help Carol transfer her
- skills, training and ability to work with people
Standing, Jon Francis ninth grade, West Junior High, football quarterback). Wendy Francis (CHI Omega, junior transfer) Jill Coyle (U.S. Army), Carrie L.C. George Francis (owner, Francis Sporting Goods) seated, Jav Francis (owner, Lawrence High, gymnastics). Bill Burris (KU graduate, 1973) and April Francis Burles (Delhi Ram temple president, KU graduate, 1974). Achievement Place Research Project.)
o to the State Legislature
Warrensburg State College Traffic inst. & Seminars emphasizing an active knowledge of criminal justice
Dennis Teepe, Treasurer—Lawrence, Ks. 66044
INDEPENDENT
EUGENE McCARTHY
FOR PRESIDENT
Training
Kansas Law Enforcement Academy
Elect the professional who vows to eliminate politics from law enforcement and whose goal is to provide the leadership necessary to bring our law enforcement agencies above reproach. These ideals are sincere promises and not just campaign rhetoric.
Eugene X. Macartt
Watch McCarthy on NBC–Fri., Oct. 29 at 9:55 p.m. Pay for by McCarthy–76, 1501 Rhode Island, 842-6832.
Fri., Oct. 29 at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Presented by Students for McCarthy. Members $1—Non-Members
$1.25.
Lawrence Police Dept.
Douglas County
Attorney's Office
Combat service in the Republic of South Vietnam
1776-1976 YEAR OF THE INDEPENDENT
o to serve all Kansans
Eugene McCarthy asks:
"WHAT KIND OF COUNTRY DO YOU WANT?"
FILM FESTIVAL
Veteran
Education
Ibrahim Ali Shahid
Experience
RETURN OF CHANDU—(1934, 44m) with Bela Lugosi as Chandu the Magician—Master of the occult.
JUNGLE BOOK—(Color) (1942) The famous adaptation of Rudyard Kip,ing's beloved "The Jungle Books" brought to the screen by the veteran director of exotic adventurers, Zoltan Korda.
James (Jim) Huskey
carol francis for the 45th
R. 6. with emphasis on criminology related courses
Pd. Pol. Adv. from the Huskey for Sheriff Committee Fund, James Huskey, Treas.
SHERIFF—DOUGLAS CO.
Paid for by Carol Francis for the 45th Committee
ELECT
(Jim)
BUZZI
Your 45th District
Representative
Political Advertisement
Paid for by Citizens for Buzzi, Steve Mathews, Treasurer
Do you have any news tips?
Call the KANSAN
864-4810
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WHO?
BOOTH...
IF YOU GIVE A HOOT
PARKS AND RESORTS
R.
A MARRIAGE IN PARIS
LAWRENC NEEDS
Mike Glover has been a state representative unlike many others. He's not afraid to listen to the desires of his district. He's not afraid to stand up for those ideals in Topeka for you. Even though not all of these ideals have become realities yet, Mike has forced other legislators to confront them, which is progress in itself. If you want just another status quo legislators don't vote for him. If you want someone to really represent you then vote for the person who can and will ... Mike Glover.
Re-elect your State Representative Democrat
LAWRENCE NEEDS
Mike Glover has been a state representative unlike many others. He's not afraid to listen to the desires of his district. He's not afraid to stand up for those ideals in Topeka for you. Even though not all of these ideals have become realities yet, Mike has forced other legislators to confront them, which is progress in itself. If you want just another status que legislator, don't vote for him. If you want someone to really represent you then vote for the person who can and will . Mike Glover
20. 1960s
21. 1970s
22. 1980s
23. 1990s
Mine
A
M. A. H. BERKSHIRE
Pardot by Mike Glover Re-election Fund. Betty Jo Charlton Treasurer
20
Friday, October 29,1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Voters' guide to candidates
County Commission
2nd District/Elder, Neis
1. What are the three top problems facing Douglas County today? How do you plan to address them?
1) I see the increased needs of senior
administrators in major areas of concern in
Douglas County.
2) Are any of these problems unique to Douglas County?
If the one mill levy is approved, the commissioners will have to determine how this can be best used to benefit the most people.
ROBERT NEIS (R)—Route 1, Eudora.
Director of Kaw Vail State Bank.
The opening of Clinton reservoir will present the country with problems in the areas of law enforcement and area planning.
The county, at present, uses the City of Lawrence landfill. It is imperative for the county to establish an additional landfill in a central location in the near future.
2) Only the problems connected with Clinton are unique to Douglas County. I believe we can benefit here from the ex-convict experience, because we learned to cope with the problem of increased use of county facilities and services with no increase in revenue.
ROBERT ELDER (D)—26% Arkansas.
Co-owner of Western Home Building.
1) Federal controls through federal spending. We should keep the tax money that we collect at home and eliminate the taxes that will eliminate the federal controls.
1b) The comprehensive plan of Douglas County. This is a disgrace of federal control in red tape. I believe the people who own the land and pay the taxes shouldn't be conceived as government or an appointed few on a planning commission. I am against such a plan.
1c) Overstaffed departments. Demand that all department heads maintain the same budget for the next five years and trim all the "fat" from the administrative departments. This should reduce the county budget and, in turn, red tape.
2) No. Nearly all the counties in the United States are faced with these problems. I feel that with the elimination of these problems we can operate the county more efficiently.
3rd District/Bradley. Stoneback
1. What are the three top problems facing Douglas County today? How do you plan to address them?
2) Are any of these problems unique to Douglas County?
I. J. STONEBACK (D)—Route 4. Incumbent, first elected 1972.
1) We have taken care of most of our problems the last four years while I have been in office. For example, the new law requires that 54 new bridges under construction, et al.
Unemployment is a problem. We have many qualified applications for each job opening. This is probably unique because of the University. Lawrence needs more industry or office buildings, especially for young women.
2) Dusty roads are a problem in rural areas, but it takes a lot of money to solve.
BEVERLY BRADLEY (R)-Route 2.
would be served on Board,
Dountney County Cross.
Cross board.
1) The three top areas of concern for
County Clint, Clinton Reservoir,
county county are.
I would like to see limited orderly growth for the Clinton area with some bike trails in it.
There are some roads in Douglas County that are desperately in need of resurfacing. I am in favor of doing away with the intangible tax and finding some favorable mux to replace it. The burden should not be placed on taxpayers. My program in which the county is involved individually and weight it carefully to make each tax dollar get a dollar value.
2) Clinton Lake is unique to Douglas County because it is so close to the urban area.
County Treasurer
1) what are the major problems facing
them as we vote? What would you do
about them?
BETTY LESLIE (R)-Lecompton.
Deputy County Treasurer.
2) Why do you think you are more qualified for this job than your opponent?
1. I do not see any problems facing me as the winner of the election. I am confident, with my direct experience in the office and my knowledge of the statute requirements, legislative actions, vehicle department amendments and county endorsed policy changes. If the land use bill is passed by the voters, there may be mechanics to be worked, if the treasurer gets involved. This would be "proposal and "if" stage at the present time.
2) I am a graduate of Lecompte High School, attended Lawrence Business College and have served in every phase of the office, being the present driver for one and one-half years, bookkeeper 14 years, as well as vehicle supervisor, custar, tax
clerk and auto clerk. First-hand experience has prepared me to recognize and understand the required duties and service duties. The county treasurer is responsible for:
All money brought into and paid out by the county.
Investment of county funds.
Properly pledged security for county funds.
Sale of license tags and titles on all vehicles registered in Douglas County.
RUTH P. P. VERYNCK (D) —113- Ver-
St. F. Count in County Assessor's
office
1) One of the major problems is running the office more efficiently. I would want to run it this way to improve relations with the public that we serve.
2) I have a great deal of energy to put to work in making the office run more smoothly and efficiently. In addition to working in the Assessors office, I have had time to attend conferences at Real Estate Broker license and have been a leader in community organizations.
State Senate. 2nd District/Berman. Booth
2) What should Kansas do to fill its future energy needs? Are nuclear power plants a solution?
1. What do you see as the major issues facing the winner of this election? How did your party win?
I ramsaw now has a sizable but dwindling budget surplus. When this surplus is gone, should the state raise taxes to maintain its revenue? The program programs? If cuts pre to be made, where?
The consumers of Kansas and the industries of Kansas which provide jobs, and thus much of the source of revenue to the state, are the most important part of energy at the lowest possible cost.
ARDEN BOOTH (R)—2518 Alabama.
Incumbent, first elected 1970.
1) The major issues are: adequate funding for education; product liability; public employee unions; adult care homes; local government revenue, needs and sources; alternate sources of energy; health care services; due process requirements for defendants found not guilty by reason of insanity and hearing procedures prior to release of such defendants; implementation and direction of penal reform; housing; and most of all, establishing priorities for funding of services, without tax increases.
The results of the election will have a good deal to do with this list.
While it is a state issue, the feasibility of nuclear power plants is not an issue facing
2) Kansas should push exploration and research in respect to every potential energy source, not just the obvious. It may be our most practical available source of energy, the process of discovery in the brain of some Kansas University undergraduate.
40
BOOTH
P. S. MORGAN
BERMAN
3) Kansas really doesn't have a surplus. A balance of some 60 to 70 million is a prudent cushion against which to do business. Projected spending, already legislated, will eat up the difference between that cushion and our balance in three years.
the legislature. The Kansas Legislature has not voted, nor will it be called upon to vote, on whether a nuclear plant will be built in our state.
Anticipated state revenue is projected to increase 7/12 per cent per year. Given these facts, Kansas can fiscally continue to fund present services in a progressive way.
Should state revenue fail to keep the 7½ per cent pace, that is, level off, or decrease, program funding will suffer—because fixed costs can be expected to continue to increase.
The most obvious (not necessarily the best) places to cut will be welfare and education, since they take such a massive share of the budget.
ARNOLD BERMAN (D)—Coventry Manor, Lawyer.
1. Our legislature this coming session must face up to the absolute necessity of increasing revenue by a year the legislature appropriated $50 million more than our state revenues. At this rate the state surplus will quickly increase and higher taxes can be anticipated.
Tax reform is also a critical item. I believe we should immediately eliminate the sales tax on prescription drugs and work towards the praslated elimination of the sales tax on food items. We should raise individual income tax exemptions from $600 above all, we should work to close the door on powerful special interest tax loopholes.
Other critical issues include adequate funding for higher education, which I wholeheartedly support, and capital investment to ensure on both ethical and practical grounds.
2) Short term future energy needs should be met by coal-fired generating plants.
Conservation of energy and the use of alternative energy sources should be encouraged by offering tax incentives. I would propose tax incentives for improving home insulation and would extend the incentives needed to those installing solar power systems.
do not currently regard nuclear power as a safe and practical energy source. Existing plants have been plagued with technical difficulties and no long term solution has been found for the safe management of radioactive wastes. The people of Kansas, who must live with these hazards, are often forced to them. At the least we should insist that state legislative approval be required for the stine nuclear power plants in Kansas.
3) Necessary programs can be maintained without raising taxes. It will require, however, considerably greater legislative authority over the budget and permit pendencies than we have seen during the past several years. We can start by demanding the use of zero base budgeting (making government agencies justify every increase in federal spending, the increases over the past year's budgets). We can start with the passage of a Kansas "sunset law," that would periodically require a government agency to justify its continued existence. Above all, we can start with the budget, which requires you with a deliberate and thoughtful approach to the solution of our pressing needs.
State House. 44th District/Glover, Hambleton, Hart
1) What do you see as the major issues facing the winner of this election? How would you cope with them?
2) What should Kansas do to fill its future energy
3) nuclear power plants a safe and practical
4) way?
3) Kansas now has a sizable but dwindling budget surplus. When this surplus is gone, should the state raise taxes to maintain its programs or cut some programs? If cuts are to be made, where?
MICHAEL G. GLOVER (D) - 1719 W. 20th St. Terrace.
Incumbent, first elected (1972).
1) Obviously, funding of higher education, adequate civil service compensation and continued support for the building program in progress on campus are major issues that must be addressed by the winner of this election.
Decriminalization of nonvictim crimes such as possession of marjuana, sexual privacy, liquor-by-the-drink, and paramutual gambling are all issues designed to get the government out of the home and raise money for education, civil service salaries and tax reform such as exemption of food and prescription drugs from the sales
2) Kansas should not allow the building of nuclear power plants but should shift to support research in solar and wind energy. The storage of nuclear waste has not been determined completely safe for Kansas, and in fact such storage was blocked by Governor Docking when he was in office.
help keep as much of the surplus as possible without increasing taxes or outlaying vital purposeful services.
Just last year the legislature passed tax incentives for solar and wind energy to encourage research and construction, and I was a member of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce to press for legislative support for these two types of programs.
NANCY S. HAMBLETON (R)—2009 Oxford Road.
Former mavor.
Finally, I think we should remember that this country still has a 600-year supply of coal on reserve and to build nuclear power plants that depend on uranium from Russia. We can also build coal to energy sufficiency. Depending on coal does!
1) If use value assessment tests, the legislature will have to implement it wisely to carry out the purpose of preserving agricultural land and maintaining adequate tax revenues. We are probably close to the time*for an
3) The state budget surplus is currently estimated at $130 million. What this state needs is a "sunset law" to automatically abolish state agencies at a certain time (such as public health agencies, police departments, have approached, or achieved their original purpose).
This would also incorporate the idea of "zero based budgeting" which makes an agency justify not just an increased appropriation, but the base upon which the increased appropriation is figured. These proposals will
A. D. BALDI
PETER MAYER
SAMBURY MARSHAL
HART HAMBLETON GLOVER
overhaul of our tax legislation with special attention to removing its recessive features.
Housing needs of low and middle income families and preservation of existing housing needs attention. We need dependable "people" programs which we monitor to check their effectiveness and cost.
2) We need a good strategy for conservation that places responsibility on individuals, industry, business and government to develop an adaptive development of existing state resources and alternative energy sources. We need a good inventory (part of which we have) of storage facilities, information about critical infrastructure, plan for how to supply these needs in emergencies.
Given the state of the engineering arts today and the safety record of nuclear plants in operation in the U.S. and in Europe, I believe we need nuclear plants until at least the year 2000.
Accelerated research should be stressed to find alternative sources of enervy in the meantime.
3) The surplus was created by revenues (particularly in agriculture) that exceed expenditures. This could possibly continue. If we do continue to dip into our surpluses, it should be done to improve existing programs
first with new ones added carefully as the need is documented. Inadequate budgets, however, are a false economy when they prevent our having qualified staff. The rate of inflation will determine how fast the cost of government will climb. Decisions about future taxes are made until we see the circumstances which prevail.
THOMAS H. HART (American)—2039 Nalsmith Drive.
Engineer technician.
1) Tax reduction: Everywhere I have gone in the 44th District, voters have told me "we are fed up with government at all levels." "the tax load is too high," "get the government off our backs." In order to reduce taxes, government services must be reduced or eliminated. This is what I have been talking about in this campaign.
My two opponents are as different from me on this issue
from white. All they have talked about is
programming.
My offering to serve the 44th District in the state legislature really gives the voters a choice.
2) I like natural energy—solar–wind–thermal-
tidal and any other natural source that we may or may
not be aware of at this time. I would support and
encourage research to these ends.
For current needs, I would encourage exploration for oil but give increasing importance to coal, for we know he
I have an open mind about nuclear energy. It has many problems—cool, waste, I really doubt it is a final answer.
1. Are there any other sources of renewable energy?
2. What are the pros and cons of nuclear energy?
3) With discipline and sound legislation, there is no need to spend all the surplus. I do not favor any raise in taxes, for any reason. We must cut out services. Examples: tighten welfare and social programs, reduce non-producing programs of the agriculture department, cut out the new government ethics commission—ethics cannot be legislated. Starting this agency is just like letting the camel get his nose under the tent flap; it will only keep the camel out. And so the insurance department of revenue staff can be cut, reduce insurance requirements so department of insurance staff can be cut, cut out offices so office space rentals and building costs can be reduced.
All of these reductions would allow for the reduction of the state vehicles.
State House, 45th District/Buzzi, Francis
1. What do you see as the major issues facing the winner of this election? How would you decide?
2. What should Kanas do to fill its future water supply? Plants a plants a and practical energy source?
3) Kansas now has a sizable but dwindling budget surplus. When this surplus is gone, should the state raise taxes to maintain its budget? If so, what changes? If cuts are to be made, where?
LLOYD BUZZI (R)—Route 4. Incumbent, first elected 1972.
1) I feel we must keep our ongoing programs working within the present budget. Any new programs must be studied in depth to determine whether we can implement them and still stay safe within the Kansas Constitution required by the Kansas Constitution.
There are many pertinent issues to be faced. Among them, senior citizen problems are a major issue.
1) What would be your priorities as sheriff?
1) My No. 1 priority as sheriff has always been to recognize that I am elected to serve the people of Douglas County. They are entitled to efficient and courteous treatment on a year-round basis. Our office takes great pride in its acceptance in this county in the way the citizens cooperate with us. What is his law enforcement is all about.
County Sheriff/Huskey, Johnson
2) I would honestly have to say that the Douglas County Commissioners have been very sensitive to the needs of our office, for which I am very grateful.
2) Do you think the sheerff's department is adequately funded and equipped? What?
- yes
- no
why do you think you are more qualified for this job than your opponent? REX D. JOHNSON (R)—Route 5. Incumbent, first elected in 1964.
For example, although Clinton Lake will not be operational for another year or two, the commission has already begun implementation of the plan our office developed for additional patrol and law enforcement service capability in the lake. We are now developing communications services with the city police department in the new Law Enforcement-Judicial Building, we now will be able to achieve greater saving of the taxpayers dollars while providing more efficient and broader services.
Ethiopian President
PETER MILLER
HUSKEY
JOHNSON
3) Law enforcement has been my life. I started as a dispatcher and worked my way up to sheriff. The experience one gains in dealing with people and treating them fairly has given me a sense of purpose and have worked hard to gain the trust and respect of all the people of Douglas County.
We have also earned the respect of the law enforcement agencies in the state. We regularly supply manpower for the major crimes unit in Topeka and cooperate with the KHI, FBI, campus police department, Lawrence police department and various other agencies. We provide enforcement offices in Baldwin and Eudora. These ties are only developed through trust over a period of years, and I am proud of the record of my deputies, many of whom may
be your neighbors. My opponent has criticized me for running on my name. My response to this is only to say, what more I have than his name and reputation?
vitrimental studies, energy, nursing homes and nepal and mental health reforms.
1) Foreset and the most necessary is the need to bring the office of sheriff above the level of politics so that it may function effectively; this has been refused to accept any campaign contribution that constitutes a conflict of interest, and will disclose all contributions to the public.
JAMES HUSKY (D)—2448 Cedurwood.
JAMIE Investigator for County Attorney's
office.
Along with this a program of preventative law enforcement will begin. Especially with juveniles, where a large portion of the population is not well educated and designed to educate and gain the cooperation of the youth of Douglas County. This hopefully will help towards gaining a better understanding of the law.
Again, we must maintain our ongoing programs, which means recognizing and
When elected, there will be no acceptance of gratuities or favoritism shown toward the electorate.
2) The sheriff's office currently has adequate funds and equipment. The problem seems to be in the application of the funds, personnel and equipment. A
I am a lawyer in New York City.
FRANCIS
BUZZI
JOSÉ MAYORAL
It is especially difficult to fathom why the sheriff himself and the process server need full-sized vehicles since they aren't even used for extensive patrol work. Intermediate-sized vehicles would better serve the office, both economically and in terms of safety. They are better governmental agencies to quit being frivolous with the taxpayer's funds.
slight reorganization of personnel could result in positive dividends. One area where economics is a factor is the type of patrol car utilized by the sheriff's department. It is hard to understand why a full-sized luxury vehicle can be transported a deputy about his duties.
3) Essentially because I am a professional, while the incumbent is a politician. A true professional does not rely on just experience alone as the incumbent must be able to govern with law enforcement has been valuable, I have supplemented it with substantial training from accredited law enforcement institutions and also with criminology-related studies. I will allow myself to stagnate and become entrenched in the job as the incumbent has done. At the end of my second term or possibly even my first I will actively seek out a position in the office and run to run for the office. Entrenchment of politics in law enforcement has to end.
establishing funding priorities without tax increases.
2) Kansas must continue to find methods to utilize our current energy resources as long as possible. We can and should work in partnership with industry to conserve energy areas as coal processing and ways to conserve use of other existing energy sources. I feel we are on the right path with programs such as the one to encourage better insulation of homes and businesses.
I feel we need much more research in the area of nuclear energy as a major power source even though several nuclear plants are still being built, and there are many problems such as nuclear waste disposal to deal with. We should continue to look at areas such as nuclear or wind power as a potential future technology.
CAROL FRANCIES (D) — 1916 Coun-
turial Carol Francis
Creative Communications.
3) I feel we must always consider the fact that Kansas operates on a cash basis when we speak of budget balances or surpluses because our programs must stabilize soon as it is on the decline. Even now we face the problem of main-line operations and current programs simply because of inflation.
Thus it seems to me the issue is to continue to set priorities as we are now doing. I feel education should not and will not be affected greatly. History has shown Kansans are willing to pay the price to continue educational programs.
1) The major issue in any legislative session is taxation, its collection and distribution, which should respond to the people's concerns rather than those of an individual, a political party or the Governor.
Coping? The same way I've demonstrated my ability to cope with past problems in family living, community affairs and professional accomplishments. Essentially, it's caring. Caring enough to research when I listen carefully and respond carefully.
I expect my ability, honesty, integrity and lack of special interest influences to help me vote for effective legislation for the people of Kansas.
2) I feel future energy needs could be solved with the application of creative thinking and problem solving techniques to investigate ways in which wasted wind power, water power, and various kinds of trash power (solid waste, waste farm, toilets, compost bins) can be recycled or converted to effective energy sources. Not all experts concur that nuclear power plants provide a safe plant maintenance operation. For that reason, I recommend a more cautious approach before establishment. But more important, my life-long concern and work towards reducing waste to present a problem for future generations of Kanansa—my children or yours.
3) One account indicates our state surplus at $75 million, which is gradually being chipped away through legislative mandated programs or wasteful spending.
For instance, removing the tax on food and drugs. Or it could have permitted much deadlines and follow-up ignoring fund updates studied for highway maintenance, which recommended that 50 per cent of the new tax money be sent back to local units of the state for reimbursement or provisions rather than keep 100 per cent for administration at state level discretion.
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