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KANSAN PLEASANT See story page nine THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Vol.87 No.50 Minority center debut postponed The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Waart 1 6 1 7 1 8 1 9 2 5 2 6 2 7 2 8 2 9 2 10 2 11 2 12 2 13 2 14 2 15 2 16 2 17 2 18 2 19 2 20 2 21 2 22 2 23 2 24 2 25 2 26 2 27 2 28 2 29 2 30 2 31 2 32 2 33 2 34 2 35 2 36 2 37 2 38 2 39 2 40 2 41 2 42 2 43 2 44 2 45 2 46 2 47 2 48 2 49 2 50 2 51 2 52 2 53 2 54 2 55 2 56 2 57 2 58 2 59 2 60 2 61 2 62 2 63 2 64 2 65 2 66 2 67 2 68 2 69 2 70 2 71 2 72 2 73 2 74 2 75 2 76 2 77 2 78 2 79 2 80 2 81 2 82 2 83 2 84 2 85 2 86 2 87 2 88 2 89 2 90 2 91 2 92 2 93 2 94 2 95 2 96 2 97 2 98 2 99 300 Ford, Carter seek votes in kev states By WALTER MEARS AB Special Correspondent With only hours to go before they rest their campaigns in the hands of a closely divided electorate, President Gerald Ferd and Jimmy Carter yesterday sought to sway voters who would make or break a president in tomorrow's election. For campaled in the rain in upstate New York, then in Long Island, asking us to mandate to continue with the project. Z7 management In person and on television, Carter worked in Texas, then in California. Acknowledging that the election is razor-close, he declared that the nation needs change that only he can bring. CARTER, the runaway leader in midsummer public opinion poll, is rated ahead of Ford in two late voter opinion surveys by margins so narrow that both said the election could go either way. That uncertainty added to the tension and the urgency as Ford and Carter, who were the electoral votes in 2016, held 95% in 2018. Ford moved last night to Canton, Ohio. Today, he goes Akron and then names to Michigan for appearances near Detroit. Carter flew from Fort Worth to San Francisco and Carter flew from Los Angeles, and plans to meet his vice presidential running mate, Sen. Walt Mondale, at a rally in Flint, Mich., for final bid to Polling places The polls will be open tomorrow from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. The polling places are (a ward and precinct map) of the city. Location pry away Ford's home state. Then Carter goes home to Plipns, Ga., to await the outcome. IT WILL TAKE 270 electoral votes to win. In the two days of the campaign, Carter and will have won at least one more vote per candidate. The voters also will elect a new House of Representatives, 33 senators, 14 governors and Cousands of local Ford and Carter aren't the only candidates for the White House. Of the others, the most important is Eugene McCarthy, the former Democratic senator, whose candidacy has helped turn off the tip into the outcome from Carter to Ford in close contests. In the House, where Democrats now rule 290 to 145, the election isn't likely to produce a major shift in the party lineup. Democrats create a probable Republican gain of 12 to 12 seats. Republicans have little chance in winning, and will remain solidly Democratic. THE SAME IS 15 of the Senate, ruled 62-38 by Democrats. When the votes are in, the democrats may rule. The shift in power, if one comes, will be at the top of the ticket, and there the most recent public opinion polls indicate. There are 36 Democratic governors, 13 Republicans and one independent. That isn't likely to change much, either. A New York Times-CBS survey published Saturday night said Carter was just ahead, but that his lead was within the 2.5 per cent margin of error. Thus, Ford could have been correct to publish the percentages of Ford and Carter support. A LOUIS HARRIS conducted for ABC News said Carter led Ford, 45 per cent to 44 per cent. Ford attended a Roman Catholic mass in Buffalo, N.Y., yesterday. Carter went to the University Baptist Church At St. Stanislas Church, in a Polish-American area of Buffalo, Ford heard a Roman Catholic sermon against abortion. Some Catholics have criticized Carter for refusing to support a constitutional amendment to ban Also in Buffalo, Ford reminded a gathering of party workers that the election "countdown is just 50 hours away," and urged them to make sure all their relatives and acquaintances voted. Carter kicked off his final swing through California last with an outdoor rally telecast to four western states. "Every vote counts," Carter declared to the thousands of cheering people crammed into Ghirardelli Square and the courthouse. CARTER WAS TO devote most of his last day of campaigning today to California where Ford is generally the leading contender. "I don't want to lose," Carter told the rally. "I don't intend to lose." Carter was introduced by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., who portrayed the Democratic presidential candidate as a choice "of the future, of possibility, of openness." He said he believed that he would "recycle the last eight years into the status quo." The Carter rally was televised in 10 cities in California, Oregon, Washington and Nevada. Carter, whose campaign is broadcasting radio advertisements urging Southerners not to "let the Washington poll keep one of our own out of the White House," said on Wednesday he would solidify his position in Texas, the biggest Southern state. Carter told a crowd of 3,000 screaming volunteer workers in Dallas that "there are going to be a lot of has that there are going to be a lot See CAMPAIGN page five AT Staff photo by JAY KOELZER Marty Green, Kansas City, Kan., junior, front, took a short break from chewing her gum to shout an encouragery cheer to her football-playing sistery sisters of the Delta Gamma house yesterday afternoon. Joining her in a chorus is Joyce Bradiee, Dewka, Okla., junior. Delta Gamma won the women's intramural championship game against the Joe's, 7-0, played in Memorial Stadium. Chewy cheer Fund refusal jeopardizes Pedalplan By JOHN MUELLER The future of Lawrence's Pedalplan, a comprehensive city proposal to build new bikeways, has been jeopardized by a federal law that requires Lawrence funds needed to begin the project. Myles Schachter, project director and an employee in the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Office, said Friday that a regional office of the U.S. Department of Transportation recently had decided to award bikeway development funds to Wichita, Kentucky, for a project that requests for Lawrence and six other Midwest cities were rejected. BUFORD WATSON, city manager, said the agency didn't indicate in the rejection letter why Lawrence's application was turned down. Schachter said Pedalplan was organized in the hope that it would qualify as a demonstration program under the Federal Highways Act of 1973. Programs begin in cities receiving grants will be models for bikeway programs across the country. The original Pedalman, according to a city report, comprised five phases. Each phase would take two more than five years and since the project was to be completed within 20 years. Pedalplan was to have included bicycle pedals and lanes across Lawrence. It would have included extensions of the city's current bikeway system, which has two sidewalks and a bike rack connected the Deerfield area of northwest Lawrence with the central business district. THE PROJECT was estimated in the report to cost $230,926. Phase One proposed 8.6 miles of bikeways, costing $106,900 which have been completed by spring 2014. "Without the seed money, we're in the scrounging stage," Schachter said. "The faster we get the money, the faster we can implement the plan." But the city had counted on $0 per cent federal funding to finance the first phase, Schachter said. Without federal funding, Lawrence lacks $5,527 to start Pedalman. Schachter said the city has started looking for other federal funding from the Department of Energy and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Department of the Interior. The Department of the Interior has recreation funds that were originally created in phase, he said, but possibly not all of it. "WE MIGHT HAVE to scale down parts of Phase One, but the first part can still be done. The Kaw bridge segment money makes it possible that there's nothing definite." Schaefer said. The first part of the program calls for 1.87 miles of bileway, at a cost of $2,500. The second part of the program calls for 2.45 miles of bileway, at a cost of $3,600. See PEDALPLAN page three PER The graceful 10, and clumsy 70 rub shoulders in Kabuki workshop By MERLE GOLDMAN Watch my fingers Staff Writer Laughter filled the dance studio of Robinson Gymnasium Friday night when graze rubbed shoulders with clumsy eagerness at a Kabuki workshop. The graceful were 10 young Japanese men from the National Theatre Institute of Japan who belonged to the Martial Arts of Kakuki trio. They were slight but robust men who have spent years leaning how to move in a perfectly expressive manner. The clumsy and eager were the 70 students and townpeople who participated in the first day of the course of the fundamentals of a high stylized form of traditional Japanese theater. In two hours they learned that even the simplest movements in Kabuki demanded skill and understanding. Steven Silver, Lawrence graduate student, tried to cross one eye while holding the other one straight as part of an exercise called Mle, which was given Fridays as part of a course. Once Kuroeonell II, Kabuki actor and professor of dance at Harvard University, provided the bridge between the artists and the novices. He wore a lavender Harvard T-shirt, and spoke with a heavy Japanese accent. A travel guide for the journey from West to East. Staff photo by JAY KOELZER Kuroemon taught the group fundamental movements from a version of Kabaki's "Snowbound" routine. The American theater. These ranged from the proud highstepting walk of a Japanese swordman to "roppo," a dramatic hopping performance of a fighter escaping from a dangerous situation. THE WORKSHOP flowed along with three beats a measure. Kuroeon gave a short introduction to each movement, then the workshop participants imitated it. One technique that the workshop participants didn't imitate was a somersault, which one of the troupe members perused. After, after which he landed firmly on his feet. where the performer did a somersault with one motion, the Kabuki actor paused for a second in midair and therefore looked more graceful. The technique that fascinated the workshop participants the most was "mie." This is the pause posture that Kabul artists use to represent a climactic moment in a story. To "cuc'ma," the actor stands very still with his face towards the audience, Kuroemon said that unlike acrobatics, opens his eyes wide and crosses one eye while the other stares straight ahead. "Don't think," he said to the students. "just do!" Even though the troupe members spoke only a little English, conversations were easily started. At one point, Kuroeon had gone to the library and found a member and some students to be quiet. Runny nose ad fools callers Staff Writer By MARTIN ZIMMERMAN Not one of the burning issues of the day, perhaps. But Dave Hay, Overland Park junior, whose phone number was attached to the ad even though he didn't place it himself, said the response has been "great." The answer is as many as 50 persons a day called, each searching desperately to aure their simuitsus, he said. "If you have problems with a runny nose, call KU Runny Nose Information Center. Free literature upon request." This classified advertisement appeared in the Personal section of the Kansan last Monday and Tuesday. The article described how afflicted persons could call for help. UNFORTUNATELY, for both Hay and his would-be patients, the ad was a hoax. There is no such entity as the KU Runny Nose Information Center, and Hay said that the volume of calls dropped off greatly the last few days, but that during the period after the ad was published, his phone rang constantly. Hay, even though he handles first aid chores for the Lawrence Rugley Club, don't consider himself the messiah because you still won't conquer the common cold. "It got bad that we had to take the phone off the hook to get any peace," Hay said. "Some people would just call us and let them go." A runny nose, but some sounded serious." Hay advised one woman, who called to say her bird had a rummy nose, to give the bird a pint of whisky—and stand back. When the ad first appeared, Hay suspected that a friend in Manhattan had pulled the hoax. When he checked Hay's roommate, Doug Letsch, Overland Park junior, said yesterday that the hoaxer had finally confessed and that it was indeed the "buddy" from Manhattan, who attended KU last year. at the Kansan advertising department, however, he found that the guilty party had signed the popular alias, "Jones," on the bill. In the meantime, persons plugged with runny noses should stock up on tissues, take two aspirins and make sure they don't call Dave Haye. DESPITE THE JANGling of their phone and their nerves, Hay and Letoch have remained reasonably calm. He said he thought he saw a possibility for a new career. KU softens move for potential Jayhawks A program to ease the transition of high school, junior college and out-of-state students to the University of Kansas will begin today, through the efforts of the Student Senate and the Office of Admissions and Records. The program, Statewide Activities, will be staffed by KU student volunteers who will conduct campus tours for visiting students and families, accompany students to school events high schools, and distribute information packets to students in their home towns. from their home towns or share their academic interests. Statewide Activities is a subcommittee of the Senate Communications Committee. "This is not a recruitment program," Steve Laben, Communication Committee chair. Sheila Everhart, Statewide Activities chairman, said Friday that a file would be kept of KU students interested in providing buoys for visiting students, giving them a chance to swim in the KU. The file will help visit students be paired with KU students who either are "We do not view Student Senate as a recruitment agency, but rather as a means for helping students who lean toward coming to KU adjust to college life. Everhart said that although the purpose of the program wasn't to recruit, it would still do so. The University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State University and Kansas State University have such "elite tour guide systems that it's gotten to the point that these colleges no longer have to recruit," she said. JOHN MYERS, director of admissions, said, "Even though the program is for students who indicate an interest in us, there are general PR values in it, too." It's almost impossible to know why a person comes up to visit, but just a tour can lead to "We had the student interest, but the program lacked organization," he said. Leben said the program had often been tried but hadn't succeeded. "We started clear back in March to organize this program. I think we figured out the where and the why; now all we need is the people to do it." Leben said the Statewide Activities committee would recruit people this week to work in the program. Forms are available in the Senate office or from Myers. 2 Monday, November 1. 1976 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press Navy raises missile LONDON - A U.S. Navy team conquered gale winds and rough seas yesterday to survive the storm that caused six weeks ago and plunged to the bottom of the Atlantic off the coast of Scotland. The rough weather prevented raising the F14 Tomcat jet fighter that sank with the highly classified missile when they fell off the aircraft carrier John F. Kennedy Sept. 14, the Navy reported. The Navy will attempt to raise the F14 when the sea calms. The missile had a nonnuclear warhead, but capture of a Phoenix and F14 would have provided valuable technical data to a potential adversary. Discovery of the jet 10 days ago and yesterday's recovery of the Phoenix put an end to fears, minimized by the Navy, that Soviet ships might smash the $20 million worth of debris. Lebanese peace efforts fail BIRIUT. The commander of Arab peacekeeping forces failed yesterday to bring together Lebanon's war leaders to begin carrying out the terms of a limping treaty. Christian military commanders snubbed the appeal of LL Gen. Mohammed Hassan Ghoeneim for a round table session to discuss the withdrawal of combatants, the stationing of peacekeeping troops along the fronts and the reopening of main Lebanon roads. The operations were completed to be completed within five days after the caesarea fire began Oct. 21 on a decree from Arab leaders gathered at Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Two killed in shootout MECHANICVILLE, N.Y.—A shipping clerk was charged with two counts of second degree murder yesterday after a police officer and a bar patron were killed and nine other persons wounded by gunfire sprayed from an apartment building here, police report. Police arrested Kenyon Pruyn, 32, who police said was employed at a plant in nearby Latham, N.Y. Pruyn allegedly fired out of the window of his third floor apartment, situated near the police station in this town of about 6,200 in central New York state. Most graduates pleased with KU, survey indicates Recent survey results released by the University of Kansas Office of Institutional Research and Planning (OIRP) indicate that, of those who responded, most KU graduates are satisfied with the education they had received at KU. The survey, conducted last winter by ORP, indicated that 82 per cent of the teachers instructed their students in instruction met or exceeded their expectations. Ninety-one per cent rated the quality of their education in their major studies as "good," "very good," or superior. The survey, which was mailed to about 1,300 or half of the 1975 graduates, was returned by 407 graduates, Deborah Teeter, OIRP director, said Friday. Teeter said that the survey was part of a longitudinal study devised to expand the Freshman Satisfaction Survey conducted in 1975 and a survey of 1972 seniors. She declined to comment on how the survey would be used, but she agreed it could be used to help the University in the future. THE RESULTS from the survey focused on academic performance and evaluation, student characteristics and plans, advising financial, financial aid and University services. Under academic performance and evaluation, 83 per cent of the graduates indicated that the instructor either met or exceeded their expectations; 59 per cent said graduate student instructors met their expectations. However, half of the respondents said their member rather than the graduate student instructor, according to the survey. Ninety per cent indicated that courses in their major area of study were sufficient and 83 per cent rated opportunities to take courses of personal interest as satisfactory. About 78 per cent rated the opportunity to receive individual assistance in a course as "very good." And, according to the survey, 32 per cent of the graduates received and accepted job offers. Although less than half, 48 per cent, were satisfied with their current salary, more than three-fourths, 79 per cent, were satisfied with their career goals making in achieving their career goals. Seventy per cent of the graduates indicated they intended to do some graduate work. About 32 per cent said they would do that graduate work at KU. IN THE AREA of counseling and advising, 51 per cent of the graduates found the services provided by the school sufficient, and 81 per cent were satisfied with information available to them concerning specific degree requirements. Although 61 per cent indicated the assistance provided in planning long-term class schedules was ample, 60 per cent believed that the assistance in exploring The Hair Suite 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 824-8600 for appointment. Katie Ainsworth—Owner-Stylist Thelma Wright—Manager-Stylist Diana Mott—Stylist Beth Cole—Stylist Formerly Ramada Inn Beauty Salon career opportunities before selecting a major was inadequate. Of 56 per cent of graduates who had had some type of interaction with the University's financial aid service, 86 per cent rated it good. THE MAJOR TITLE Our friendly Face sth & Iowa Free Parking Call Now Sixty-one per cent of the graduates received family aid as a major source of funding. ONE OF THE areas needing improvement under University services was career placement services, the survey indicated. Thirty-six per cent were satisfied with career placement services, and 33 per cent were satisfied in a much familiar enough with it to make a judgment. Other services provided by the University were rated sufficient by the graduates. Sixty-four per cent were satisfied with the food services, 77 per cent with the health services and 90 per cent with the extracurricular activities available. And, according to the survey, 92 per cent of the graduates would recommend KU to them. PLAINS, Ga. (AP)—Services at the Plains Baptist Church, of which Jimmy Carter is a member, were canceled yesterday when a black minister who had applied for membership attempted to join the worshipers. Carter's church refuses to admit black minister "The only thing I know is that our church for many years has accepted any worship helium and deep belief is that anyone who lives in a community who wants to be a member of our church, regardless of race, ought to be baptized. This means that cancellation while campaigning in Texas." "I know that the pastor agrees with me," Carter said. "I hope this will be the outcome of the problem in Plains. I don't know what happened." The Rev. Bruce Edwards of the Plains Baptist Church, said that the black church was politically inspired. The decision was made by the church's Board of Deacons, which voted to reaffirm a 1965 resolution that blacks were from the church, the Rev. Mr. Edwards said. The resolution was passed over the protests of Carter and his family he held. protests of Carter and his family, he said. The Rev. Mr. Edwards met the Rev. Clennon King, minister of the nondenominational Divine Mission Church of Altham, at the church steps and informed him that the church's membership and tourists looked on. The Rev, Mr. King had applied for membership in the church earlier in the The Rev. Mr. King, who has run unsuccessfully for many state and local offices and for president on the Afro-American party ticket in 1960, asked whether services would be held next Sunday. When told they would be, he said he would return. Man, wife held after gun found ★ ★ ★ DALLAS (AP) - Two persons who were arrested yesterday morning after carrying pistols into a hotel where Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter was to speak later were released. Police said they weren't considered to be threats to Carter A 31-year-old man volunteered that he was carrying a loaded .25 caliber pistol at a checkpoint outside the room where Carter addressed county Democrats. A police spokesman said the woman was standing in line with her husband and apparently decided to leave because she, too, was carrying a loaded .32 caliber武器。 Officers detained her and found the pistol in her purse. A Secret Service officer said that the matter was turned over to Dallas police and that neither person was considered to be a threat. BEVERLY BRADLEY 3RD DISTRICT COUNTY COMMISSIONER (1) I believe Douglas County deserves better than 20% absenteeism from the person who accepts this responsibility. I do not see discussing the use of your taxes wisely as a "boring" and "unimportant" task. Pol. Adv. Paid for by Bradley for Caucasus Missioner Gilber Giges and Jack Landrigh, Co-Chairman Bev TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1976 After the Polls close — 9-12 p.m. Elephant drinking from pitcher Donkey drinking from pitcher $1.00 PITCHER'S AT... Pizza inn The Rev. Mr. Edwards blamed the attempt by the Rev. Mr. King to join the church on "Republican politics." "I am sure it is an attempt by enemies of the Carter to sabotage his campaign," the Rea said. --- THE TURQUOISE SHOP Turquise & Coral Rings $5.00 end up Turquise Bracelets $6.00 end up 1828 Mass. Mon.-Sat.—10:00 to 5:30 p.m. kings 4:30 p.m. VOTE INDEPENDENT VOTE EUGENE McCARTHY Gerald R. Ford Independent Candidate for Pres. 1976 Come to the McCarthy Election Watch at THE HAWK'S NEST Tues., Nov. 2, 8:00 p.m. For members all the beer you can drink $1.00 For non-members all the beer you can drink $1.50 Paid for by students for McCarthy~76 PRINTING 838 MASSACHUSETTS TELEPHONE 842-3610 THE HOUSE OF USHER AND ITS QUICK COPY CENTER OFFER YOU A COMPLETE PRINTING SERVICE FROM ONE CONVENIENT LOCATION HOUSE OF USHE COMMERCIAL PRINTING HEADQUARTERS for Letterheads, Envelopes, Business Cards, Business Forms, Brochures, Newsletters, Catalogues, Invitations, Books, Posters, Booklets, Handbills, Resumes, Labels, Receipt Books and Typesetting. QUICK Copy Center PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT: all kinds of paper, 8½ x 11, 8½ x 14, colors, both sides, reductions, gathering; all done while you wait by Alice, our exciting Xerox 9200 Headquarters for Thesis Binding and Copying. WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS - PLEASE TRY US! 8:00-5:00 Monday thru Friday 9:00-1:00 Saturday TELEPHONE 842-3610 or 841-4900 musein charge ne someone else needs it FALL BOOK SALE TODAY THRU NOVEMBER 13 OREAD BOOK SHDP IN THE UNION MON.-FRI. 8:30-5:00 SATURDAYS 10:00-1:00 University Daily Kansan Monday. November 1. 1976 3 Senate recycling program active By BARRY MASSEY Staff Writer Response to the Student Senate newspaper recycling program that began this semester has been greater than expected. The student body vice president, said recently. Owens said he had received calls from fraternities, sororites and several campus offices about the program and where paper could be dropped off. "There's a tremendous potential on campus for a recycling program," Owens said, "but right now we're very limited in what we can take." HE SAID THAT a lot of recyclable cardboard was being thrown away on campus, but that the Senate program could take only He said that the program was basically an experiment to show that a demand existed for something. Two weeks ago the recycling program collected 1,200 pounds of newsprint, worth about $6. Owens said in the program's first year that he collected 8,750 pounds of newsprint worth $2.50, he said. Computers to save students more time "Our overall purpose isn't one of making money," Owens said, "but one to raise the social consciousness of students toward recycling efforts." By DEB MILLEn The installation of two new computers—the IBM 370 145 and the Honeywell Information Systems, Inc. (HISI) 66-60 in the University Computation Center not only allow for research work, but also will save time for students in computer programing courses. WITH THE NEW computers' installation almost completed, the turn-around time is down to one hour, according to Jerry Crow, supervisor of systems. Paul Wolf, coordinator of the computation center, said Friday that students usually had five to 10 hours, called turn-around time, from the time they handed in their programs until the time they were paid. He added that problems for students who were in a hurry, or who waited until the last minute to finish class projects, he said. "The one-hour turn-around time was reached just because we installed the new computer," Crow said. "The old computers were 10 years old. The advancements over 10 years have been so great that a 10-year-old computer now is like a 1620 car." THE SMALL JOBS, such as class projects, are now directed to an Express small Programs (ESP) printer, which pushes them through the computer. Crow has been working with Rubber Tubby and Rich Kershenbaum, systems operators, to modify the computer to fit the needs of a production environment. Crow turn-around time of 15 minutes. Crow said. The IBM 370 145 has an administrative job, taking care of new student records and enrollment. However, the HISI 66 160 is for regular students, which uses, which requires more flexibility. Wafle said conversion from the old to the new systems has been completed and the high priority items necessary to run the computers have been converted in both. Pedalplan... From page one Schachter said the rest c. Pedalplan, despite uncertainty about its funding, was a key measure of the firm's strength. connect Eighth and 15th streets. Another section would go from Eighth and Tenth street. "The plan it a waste," he said. "It can coordinate and serve in the future as a comprehensive guide to development. The plan is a foundation to work from, say if a new subdivision goes up, so it will be updated as Lawrence grows." Schachter said Lawrence woul have more cyclists in the future. To try to get money for the plan, he said, "We had to show our needs were unique. The other cities that got the money must have been imaginative." Coors BEER Pitchers $1.00 Mass. St. Deli New Yorker Now, the task is to go back and modify the systems to fit KU's needs. Wolfe said. "CONVERSION IS always a problem because we're dealing with many dialects, as in any language. Every user here at KU has his own way of doing things, and we have to modify our computers to fit those needs." Wolfe said. OWENS SAID there were four boxes for collecting newspapers. Boxes are at Oliver, Lewis, Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin halls. Exp. Nov. 30' '76 Present Coupon Last year (fall, spring and summer semesters), 12,588 students used the facilities at the computation center, and 266 courses used the computers for research or other projects. 33.7 per cent of the computer applications, 39.7 per cent for administrative purposes, 23.7 per cent for research and 2.9 per cent for public service. Owens said that a box would soon be near the scholarship halls and one would be at the south front entrance to the Kansas Union. the containers are emptied each Wednesday afternoon into a truck and the paper is taken to the Whompr, a paper collection store, and New Hampshire streets. Owens said. Rloads said that there had been few problems with the boxes, except that they were sometimes too small to hold all the papers. He said that the services committee would study the structure of the boxes and would try to recommend improvements. HOAIDS AGREED with Owens about the purpose of the recycling program. He said the Senate was trying to show that the agency is working effectively in the agency—one that is proven effective." The money from the recycling program, according to Owens, is being used for operating expenses. He said that included renting a University truck and paying someone to collect the paper and deliver it to Whompr. Owens said that the money also was used to pay for the boxes, which cost $20 each, but added that he didn't foresee paying them off very soon. In the future, Owens said, the Senate hopes to receive some University support if the recycling program indicates a large enough demand for its services. "Where they will go from here," Owens said, "is a question that just can't be answered." A state constitutional amendment on tomorrow's ballot is meant to help keep Kansas farmlands in production, and some farmers are forced at the expense of the city taxpayers. "The basic intent of the legislation is to keep the family farm the family farm," Lloyd Busz, R-Lawrence, said Friday. Buzzi supported the amendment when it was before the Kansas House of Representatives. The amendment would give the legislature the power to set a special lower tax rate for farmland, a pattern that has already been adopted in more populous states where more and more farms have been lost to urban and industrial develop- AT PRESENT, all land in Karas is supposed to be taxed at 30 per cent of its income. If a farmer owns land near an expanding city—for example, on the south edge of Lawrence—he might find the taxes too high because the tax assessment is based on the land's value were he to sell it to a home builder or shopping center developer. Tax relief for farmers on ballot The amendment would allow the legislature to tax the land only on the basis of its agricultural worth, not on its worth to speculators. A FARMER could hold on to the land, paying the lower taxes, while the land's owners might be better developed. He could sell out to developers and realize a huge windfall. As a deterrent to this, the amendment allows the state to tax that land retroactively at the landowner level. The amendment is supported by most Kansas farming organizations. A SJA TRIP KU vs. Mizzou Nov. 20th Trip Includes: 1 Game Ticket Round Trip Bus Ticket Coolers and Pop (BYOB) Leave Kansas Union 9:30 a.m. No Driving or Parking Hassles 2 Hours Post-game Free Time Leave Mizzou 7:30 p.m. Sign up in SUA office. Deadline Nov. 16. For more information, call SUA office 864-3477. COST $21 VOTE YES YEAR MADE Vote VERVYNCK Victory ON NOV. 2 "I want your vote because I'm ready, willing and able to handle your taxes with the most efficiency and least waste . . ." Ruth Vervynck Vote VERVYNCK for Douglas Co. Treasurer Pledged by Rudy Vervey campaign, Mary Ellen Chamberlain Treasurer On the Proposition to Continue Service Programs for the Elderly in Douglas County Offer Expires Nov. 30, '76 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. Pizza The Reuben $1.50 Reg. $2.00 Present Coupon "The original thick crust from New York" Pol. Adv. Paid for by Mill Levy Task Force Ralph Turner, Chairman Present Coupon $1.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA Coupon Offer Exp. Nov. 30, '76 MISS. STREET DELI INC. 041 MASSACHUSETTS The only statewide opposition to the amendment is the League of Kansas Municipalities, a lobbying group of 488 cities. spokesman for the Lawrence League of Women Voters said her group hadn't studied the amendment enough to make a recommendation. PRESIDENT FORD He's making us proud again. RADFORD A bitter, depressed, vulnerable America has become a confident, strong, proud America. Inflation has been cut in half. Paid for by College Republicans. Prosperity has returned. Our jobs are secure. We are at peace. The world respects us again. We trust our own government again. President Ford has started something great. Now he needs your support to finish a job well begun P presentation. the staff of the NATIONAL LAMPOON wishes to thank the Academy for its very kind words on behalf of their monumental special edition, THE NAKED AND THE NUDE HOLLYWOOD AND BEYOND The history of films as it has never been presented before, and hopefully, never will be presented again. In brilliant multicolor and no-sound. Available at newsstands and bookstores everywhere at a mere $2.50. a piddling amount when one considers the magnitude of the subject and scope of the If for some reason your local dealer does not have this tribute to the world of glitter and gold, send a check or money order for $2.50 to NATIONAL LAMPOON, 635 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022. Att: Hollywood Dept. RE-ELECT 3rd District Commissioner I.J. STONEBACK Why? 1985 Because: - 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. - 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. has experience in county government. If I.J. is not elected there will be 2 out of 3 inexperienced County Commissioners to take over the government next January. - I.J. is the only Democrat on the Commission. We need the two-party system for responsible government. Autobiography: 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. 4 Monday, November 1, 1976 University Daily Kansas Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. Mutt not welcome Found: Lab and German shepherd for the pup on campus last week. 842-263-9500 A new, uninvited and unwelcomed game moved into Apartment 13 last week. L-FIE, A 10-week-old pup of mixed breeding, has taken up residence in my two bedroom apartment—much to my surprise. She was found by the girlfriend of one of our friends in a speech class. The dog walked in and looked lost, so the girl took it home. But now, because of pet restrictions in her apartment, the kind heart of one of my roommates, and indiscriminate dog owner, lives with my two roommates and me. Then, last Sunday without warning, L.斐 walked into the apartment. We were stuck with the mutt, and it has irritated me and one of my roommates ever since the other roommate is the dog's pussy. So she has ignored our pleas to get rid of it. I DIDN'T think the dog was going to be placed with us. I had heard some mention of a dog, but I decided it wasn't any of his business. I don't like this dog. I like dogs, but his one is nothing but trouble. BEFORE the letters from dog lovers everywhere start coming in, let me repeat that I like dogs. I raised a pup and I took care of the look of care him until I left for college. But I strongly think that dogs, especially big ones, were meant to be raised in large houses or the outdoors. Apartments like ours are too small for human beings, let alone a 10-week-old pup. L-FIE takes a healthy view of life. She likes to chew on Olympia beer cans (we had to take them away because she punched holes in them. She is interested in newspapers (she especially likes to chew on Chuck Woodling columns) and books (she gnawed the corner off a track and field textbook). She also has to have the largest bowels of any pup I know. Life scratches on the apartment door when she has an urge to relieve herself, her nose is very red. IF SOMEONE doesn't make it to the door in time, then our green carpet will do just as well as the grass outside. The door is not fluffy, and the trapped着 barefoot in the apartment. L'fie will play with an old shoe until she works her way over to the chair. Then, when I'm concentrating on a book I will attack my feet, hands and arms. She's just teething, her benefactor savs, and she'll grow out of it. I'm sure that she'll grow out of her bite-everything--moves stage, but I hope that she isn't around long enough for me to see it. By Carl Young Contributing Writer have, so it seems, come out of their cloaked chambers long enough to acknowledge that some rules are, in the lingo of the day, anachronistic. Before they are acceptable. After all, times, they are a changin'. But if times are changing, changing dramatically on all fronts, maybe some aspect of society should remain unaltered. Perhaps the government should continue tradition. U.S. News & World Report this week reported that religion was still alive and well, despite government admonishment, in the world's Communist countries. I wonder whether people question the effects of religious rule on their lives? A national assembly of Catholic bishops, priests, sisters and午会 meeting in Detroit passed a resolution Oct. 22 urging American bishops to repeal a church law requiring the excommunication of divorced Catholics who remarry. MAN IS a rational animal, and he has the intellect to govern himself. But when it comes to the church, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. The church is tested in the preceding centuries give the church a validity beyond our own endorsement. And, for a society that largely acknowledges the importance of religion, it would be fortunate if our last generations were able to preserve many others, into shades of ambivalent gray. McCarthy merits backers' votes To the Editor: The news was probably welcomed by many Catholics who, in recent years, have decried the ruling that denounced second marriages. Disgruntled Catholics have frequently uttered their regret that the law thwarted all opportunity to marry a priest of the church's most treasured sacraments failed. In recent weeks, I have overheard or participated in numerous conversations in which students, faculty members, and others freely acknowledge that Eugene McCarthy, former senator from Minnesota, and 1968 presidential nominee, party presidential nomination, is the candidate now running who is best prepared to be the President of the United States WINDOW FEATURES HUMAN FRAILTY, they have said, is inescapable. Therefore, the church shouldn't admonish failure. Add a religious aura to the question, they have said, and it seems fitting that the church would support people in their search to share love rather than punish them for it. 1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES But certainly, with all the recent comment about changing church attitudes, news of the resolution wasn't shocking. Considering that bishops themselves called the assembly, in hopes of getting their message across, justice behind Catolic dogma, it wasn't surprising that a resolution of this sort was passed. "What this country needs is a little bran in its diet. For years, the world has been torn up by constipated rich people. I want to wipe out constipation in the United States." So are Eddie Collins and Ernest Whitford. Election diet needs added bulk Staff Writer Laughable. Not a chance in heaven to win. And that's the way it's set up. Concentrated efforts by the Republican and Democratic parties, the League of Women Voters, the Court and the media allow a choice between two candidates—but no more. You haven't heard? Not surprising. With the names of Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford, how could you know? By BILL SNIFFEN Lar Daly is running for President this year. AND WHAT a choice we have this year. Fewer than half of the 140 million eligible to vote may do so, the lowest percentage in American political history. DALY IS making his seventh bid for the presidency. Collins wants more nuity. Whitford's appeal is an anticontest plank: And why should they? They know that the presidential race is decided by no matter which of the two principal candidates is elected, the nation's problems will not get worse. At best, they won't get worse. Eugene McCarthy, the 60-year-old former senior from Minnesota, presents a force that has taken over the Carter and Ford camps. McCarthy has had to go it alone. Unlike Carter and Ford, McCarthy was denied access to BUT THERE aren't just two candidates for President this year; there are, by a mid-October count. 174. Recall, if you will, candidate Paul Trent's historical statement on tax loopholes: VET THERE is one name, among the 174, which will appear on the ballots of 29 states. A name faw are laughing at. That statement is probably enough to send both peanut farmer and President alike into spasms of laughter. Mary Ann Daugherty Contributing Writer "Rather than eliminate tax loopholes," he stated, "we should all learn to use them." All of this, I suppose, is notable. Catholic leaders the back of the closet and replaced by short skirts and skimpy veils. Church leaders interpret their laws less restrictively now, as noted by the increasing number of dissolutionaments and annulments they grant. Many clergy members now affirm their right to marry, and a few have even gone so far as to affirm the right to their own homosexual relationships. And, of course, questions concerning birth control and abortion, once unheard, of have stirred heated controversy. Church should remain stable THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May. On Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, KS. Each day in Douglas County and $10 a semester or $20 a semester paid through the student activity fee. Editor Debbie Gump Business Manager Terry Hannon THE 27,000 petition signatures he gathered in Michigan were ruled invalid by a Michigan court that said his name on the ballot would encourage "the clogging of its election machinery." Vermont law required a justice of the peace to witness a court order against McCarthy faced similarly obnoxious problems in Iowa and West Virginia. And yet, he's still there. Pollsters estimate he will win 2 to 12 per cent of the popular vote. A Louis Harris-ABC poll estimated he'd get six per cent. federal campaign funds—$21.8 million worth. Unlike Carter and Ford, McCarthy was denied by the Supreme Court and the League of Women Voters an appearance in the "Great Debates." And, because he is running as an independent candidate, he fight inane, narrow-minded state campaigns just to get his name on the ballot—also unlike Carter and Ford. Why shouldn't the church examine its principles and their effects? In a time when virtually every group, from the local PTA to the national leadership of the NAACP, is probing American society, it seems indeed, a healthy place for us to live, it seems that the Catholic Church would take up the crusade. AND TAKE it up they have. The long black babbys nuts used to wear have been releasable to Therein lies a catch. Political analysts predict that if McCarthy takes six per cent, give or take a percentage or two, he will virtually hand the election to Ford. But he scores in the upper ranges of the pollsters estimates—and takes the chance to show the election to the House Representatives, giving that Democratic-controlled body the power to elect—who else? Carter. Other Democrats, concerned about Carter's political stands, might attempt to draft another bill. All hall must break loose. Maybe. Is McCarthy a spoiler? "HOW CAN YOU spill this election when there's nothing to spoil," he has said. Carter is the "ultimate compromise" to McCarthy, and no different in political belief from Ford. Funny—that's what the 70 million voters who won't vote Nov. 2 have been saving. come January 1977. Yet, many of these same persons (in the past) have reluctant to vote for McCarthy. Nov. 2 for fear that (1) he cannot win, or (2) a voter in his county is a vote for Ford (or Carter). Although I am realistic enough to admit that McCarthy has little chance for gaining the necessary majority of electoral votes next Tuesday, he may deny such a majority to both of the other serious candidates, thus throwing the decision into doubt and representing. Such a result, I agree, is a healthy exercise for the constitutional procedures of our republic. It is a blot upon our democracy that Eugene McCarthy is prevented by legal maneuverings from participating in this year's presidential debates. Perhaps, though not so literally, we ought to take branating Ernest Whitford's advice—mice-McCarthy is a healthy animal, and they needed now to help unlog the two-party system's pipes. be the best candidate—whether they were planning to vote for someone else, or not to vote at all. If Jimmy Carter is, in fact, deliberately trying to suppress the voice and influence of Eugene McCarthy in this election campaign, then Mr. Carter must muddle through another four years with the unimaginative but basically honest Gerald Ford as our president. Jimmy Carter has the potential being a great President of the United States—he could win if he overcomes energies to overcome unemployment, inflation, poverty, racism, and the arms race. On the other hand, Carter could allow his zeal and ambition to get us into a totally unnecessary and even hypocritical nation not willing to yield to his moral aggressiveness. Our history books will record how many votes Eugene McCarthy received in 1976. I want that number of votes to be large, and for my vote to be one of them. A vote for Eugene McCarthy is a vote for Eugene McCarthy. The calmer, more responsible America—whether or not he wins. Gerald E. Mikkelson Associate Professor Slavic Languages and Literatures I hope that my advice will be heeded by everyone who believes Eugene McCarthy to Gripes clarified To the Editor: In response to the article on the proposed Haskell Loop roadway planned for East Lawrence, the East Lawrence Citizens For Housing Preservation would like to clarify a few of the objections we have with the project and with the neighborhood and so there's been little population increase and hence we don't have increased "traffic pressure." The city has to work with trucks going to and from the industrial area to the east and north. But, this wouldn't be a problem if the city would enforce existing ordinances that require residents using residential streets! Trucks should be forced to use the most direct route to their destination. Now, we have trucks using every street in the city to drive drivers' discretion. The city's negligence in enforcing the law Readers Respond city's treatment of East Lawrence. The Kansas story stated we charged that Oblinger-Smith, the consultants who prepared the Environmental Impact Statement, were biased because the firm was named and that of Lawrence." Oblinger-Smith is biased and has an obvious conflict of interest because they have been in the planning of the Haskell Loop almost from its inception. They designed the roadway; naturally they want to write a negative impact statement. The city has awarded Oblinger-Smith numerous contracts for expensive consultant reports. If they owned tractors and equipment, they would award the construction contract for the Loop to Oblinger-Smith! More than half of the city's Community Development Act money slated for the next three years will be used for acquisition costs in preparation for the roadway construction. This is more than just an "ineffective" use of CD money. It's scandalous and immoral! CD funds are being used to tear down the homes of low- and moderate-income residents, the act was intended to help! Finally, we want to challenge City Manager Buford Watson's claim that the Loop would take traffic pressure away from the area and would rearrive the neighborhood. It's an older neighborhood. It's an older is conveniently designed to convince residents that indeed, the Haskell Loop is needed. The Loop won't "renovate" the area. Some of the 28 homes in the path of the road have already been torn down; 27 homes remain undisturbed and isolation in an industrially zoned area east of the loop. Because they will be non-conforming uses and therefore ineffective for utilization, these homes eventually be torn down for industrial expansion. Other homes left near the Loop will also deteriorate when noise and pollution from the road makes This is neighborhood preservation? Susie Hanna Susie Hanna Member of the East Lawrence Citizens For Housing Preservation Elk apologizes To the Editor: In view of recent "extraordinary" publicity concerning a reception for alumni from the school at the Elks Lodge in Lawrence on October 16, 1978, I want to set the record straight as to persons previously assured in news stories and myself. I previously made some statements to a reporter and these statements were quoted in the newspaper with no explanation of the meaning of my statements. "We'll just have to wait for the ABC opinion. They're the God Almighty over clubs in this state," was made without much thought as to how this particular statement might sound standing alone. I did, in fact, make the statement with malice aforethought or in a derogatory manner. The fact is the liquor laws in the state of Kansas are enforced by the Alcohol Beverage Control (ABC). The state authority by law to issue citations, conduct hearings and decide the disciplinary action he feels is justified. This duty, which is delegated to the agent, a deputy, and first my knowledge that he has always been a very fair and judicious person. A letter had previously been received by the KU law school from William Schutte, assistant attorney general, discussing the case. I was gently held under Kansas laws. I was aware of this letter and its contents. Before the reception was held, I assured the officials of the KU law school that the record would be made in accordance with Mr. Schutte's letter, thus legally. The reception was held, in my mind at the time, in this manner. I was interviewed by ABC agents later time and told them the truth. I have been cited to appear before the ABC director for a hearing Nov. 17. I will appear as scheduled. If I did, unintentionally, violate any of the Kan- I wish to apologize to Gov. Robert F. Bennett, Rep. Larry Winn Jr., U.S. District Judge Winn Jr., of the Corporation Commission Chairman G. T. Van Bebber, Chancellor Archie Dykes, top officials of the KU law school and the third-year law class for the barrassment in attending the reception, having your good names associated in the news,apers with this function and indicating you had com- pleted your service during doing a violation of the law. If I thought I was in compliance with the law, how could any of you have questioned the judge? He would take full responsibility and at the upcoming hearing I will most assuredly learn of my indications and assure you I am not guilty. Lodge in Lawrence, Kansas. Chris Kirkwood Elks Club Manager Butz' topics come to forefront Sad but True Dept.: On Sex, Loose Shoes and a Presidential Election By PAUL JEFFERSON Staff Writer Just the other day, I ran into an old girlfriend while thinking about double-digit inflation. After several minutes of animated conversation, lying in bed for a long time, she more often, she inquired matter-of-factly, "And how's your sex life?" After I'd told her that it was as healthy as could be expected, the question made me think about the "sexual revolution," and what it may mean in terms of romantic relationships. What used to be called love is now sex. SEB EXB an overriding concern in our society, whether it's used to sell toothpaste or found in the lustful hearts of People want to know about sex before they inquire about anything (anyone) else you may be doing. I can think of no other reason than being strangers, will sit around sans clothing, discussing their lamented libidos and calling the situation a sensitivity group. Heady subjects like wars and rape should get as much attention. presidential candidates. It is definitely a leading attention-getter, whether people do it, they do it, watch it or write about it. Questions about sexual experiences are asked often, even more than questions about anyone else's physical or emotional welfare. That may or may not say something about the way people relate to each other. I HARDLY long for a return to the Puritanical days, but "I'll admit it straight out. I really didn't understand Earl Butz's remark about "... loose shoes. . . ." What I found disturbing was how to react to a government official's remark that slandered him. He was the race of which I a member. ... and into a voting booth Nov. 2, I was talking recently with my Uncle Arthur about the upcoming election. Should I get rid of my platyform shoes? Maybe going to an unheated restroom would help. I had worn the shoes though I had been branded with a scarlet letter, or as though a neon sign glared on my head drawing undertention. I felt uncomfortable and walk right out of my shoes. "Nope," he said. "I'm for Nobody." Then he showed me a picture of Nobody. It was blank. "Aw, come on," I said. "You must be for somebody." Forrest (he never could get my name right), I'm supporting Nobody for President." "SURE." I said. "But Art," I said, "there's nobody there." Nobody was sitting in it. "Here are some pictures of him addressing the crowd." "I know," he said. "Wanna see some pictures of a rally for Nobody?" "Here's some pictures of him arriving in his motorcade." I looked at the shots of Nobody's motorcade. A battered sports car was pictured on the sidewalk, with a bunting-festoned wooden chair mounted on the trunk. I LOOKED at the pictures Uncle Art thrust into my hands. Nobody was sitting on the stage, on which banners hung that read, "Nobody loves the poor," and, "Nobody will lower your taxes" and "Nobody can stop inflation." On the lectern a pair of plastic windup teeth chattered into the microphone. "He even knows where Eastern Europe is," Art chimed. "Be serious, Uncle Art. You know that Nobody can't win in this election. Who do you really want?" Suresh not McCarthy? "Why?" "Well, Forrest, I think my man has as good a chance as anybody." Art said. "Remember, in the last election, 40 per cent of the eligible vote turned for Nobody, yes he may get eve more votes." I don't know whether to call this Sad but True, or Making Things Up. Mondav. November 1. 1976 aked some istic, After ing act of the r and week well, world's people their 5 e in o the of its l and ch a for aance last ke so v. es without much this paw might sound did, in fact, ment, I didn't have a derogatory is the liquor of M Kansas are e Alcoholic (ABC). The ABC has the hearings and hearings and linary action d. This duty determined to the accept, and the director every fair and louisiana been UJ law school. I, assistant discussing Kansas law. I, letterer and its reception the officials of the receptions that the receptions are. The r. Schultz's argument. The in my mind as manner. I. my mind. A. agency bots old them the to appear for a rillor will accept for a rillor will accept for uid, unintentional of the Kanto Gov. Rep. Larry Hill. Strict judge Kansas, Kansas Beber, Bebber, Dykes, kyp, law school law class for your good in the meaning of your good in the his function had com- was in com- how could restated the information at and at resting I will repeat you ensure you at the alks Kansas. Sub Manager on the stage, hung that is the poor," lower your you can stop pair of plastic ered into the ows where is," Art ele Art. You can't win in lo you really enter? Surely I think my a chance as i. "Remem- ment, 40 per voters voted this year he e votes." ither to call or Making Retired faculty call KU 'home' Bv SARAH RIDDELL Amid 20,000 University of Kansas students, eight retired KU faculty members live quietly, enjoying each other's company and the everyday noise of students. According to Ruth Mc Nair, resident of Sprague Apartments and professor emeritus of biology, being close to nature will come after teaching here 30 years. staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER 1940 THE BUILDING HAS eight apartments for retired faculty. Henry Martin, director of property management for the Endowment Association, said last week that the units were filled and that a waiting list bad at least 15 names. Sprague Apartments, 1400 Llac Lane, were built with a grant in the name of Elizabeth Sprague, former KU professor of home economics. They are owned and operated by the Kansas University Endowment Association. McNair, who retired from KU in 1964, said she waited until 1988 to move in to Sprague Apartments. Now, she said, she is close friends with the people who live there. "We just know each other so well," she said, "If during the day we haven't been in to see each other even for just a moment, we just feel like the day has been wasted." As she glanced around her small, picture-filled living room, McNair said that the closeness to campus gave the Sprague residents lots to do. **WE HAVE AN EXIT on third floor and an elevator up to the exit, so we don't have to** Campaign ... Carter also made a point of praising the late President Lyndon Johnson, saying at one point that he hoped to carry on in the Johnson tradition. From page one shocked, surprised and disappointed Republicans in Dallas County on Tuesday." In his troublesome Playboy interview, Carter had said that Johnson and Richard Nixon both were guilty of "lying, cheating when it was published, and said Saturday night that the comment about Johnson was the biggest mistake of his campaign. Luci Nueng, daughter of the late President, said Carter at his winup rally in Fort Worth. BOTH FORD and Carter have tapped half-hour programs to appear tonight on each of their shows. Relaxing at home Mondale, campaigning in Canton, Ohio, a few hours before Ford was due to visit, predicted that the Democratic ticket would win. But he said voters although he said, "It's very close." Rhine Mcairn, professor emeritus of biology, is one of eight retired KL, faculty, enpmurs, who live in Sorgue Apartments. The apartments, situated behind Danforth Chapel, are named for the Barbara Spence Specialty of home economics and patrons by the KU Endowment Association. At an airport news conference in Canton, Mondale likened this election year to 1960, when John Kennedy narrowly won over Richard Nixon. Then, as now, Mondale said, public opinion gained in the last days before the election, only to lose by a narrow margin. "There has not been a single poll which "I do not show the Carter-Mound ticket that I would vote for." McNair said that many of the residents used free tickets to University events so they didn't feel the need to organize any activities on their own. Most of the residents enjoy being near the students, McNair said. University Daily Kansan "We enjoy hearing the students when they're having a good time," she said. "But when they stagger past drunk, well, I don't even consider those people real students." She said that it hadn't been until recently that the Wagon Wheel Cafe, down the street from Sprague, had become so noisy at night. "1 REMEMBER the Wheel as a place where students used to meet to have a good time." "It didn't bother me, though. I just turned over, and went back, to sleep." she said. McNair said that students from Battenfield Hall had come to see the Sprague residents many times. One bright night, she said, she was awakened by noise outside. When she got up she saw some boys outside playing softball. Allee Male Chac, professor emeritus of piano and a Sprange resident since 1869, died on January 25, 2014. "IT HAS EVERY advantage, except I could learn to cook, and I could care less about cookware." Conger, who retired after 36 years of teaching, said she had lived at the Faculty Women's Club, formerly at 1300 Louisiana, until her retirement. She said she knew McNair before she moved to Stray Apartment, but had only two weeks to live. McNair said, "You see, it used to be that all the faculty knew each other, if only by name. That was before the University got so big." Martin said that because the apartments were self-contained, no provisions were made for prolonged nursing care if one of the residents got sick. However, a young couple lives in the basement apartment, he and his wife must have some medical training. "THIS YEAR we have a trained nurse living with us, but in former years we've had occupational therapy majors," McNair said. MnCair and Conger said that they thought all the residents were satisfied with "We like to think it'a a favourable rent rate, but we don't feel any inclination to talk about it." their apartments, which have either one or two bedrooms. A living room, kitchen and study rooms. Although Martin declined to give the apartment rental rates, he said that the Endowment Association tried to make them competitive with Lawrence apartments. MARTIN SAID that the apartments were unique as far as be knew. MnNair agreed, saying that teachers she knew at other universities were surprised to hear of such a plan. She said she thought the buildings should be built. "I really feel strongly that it would be a worthwhile project," she said. Martin said that such a plan was under consideration but that he wouldn't admit to any immediate action by the Endowment Association. Tonight, TAKE HER AS SHE COMES, $1.00 cover. $1.25 pitchers mondaynitelast chanceweekend romancedance: Tuesday, Dance to Scalet Come to the Hall for a good time. 841-0817 737 New Hampshire Off the Wall Hall SEMESTER BREAK SKI TRIP WD WINTER PARK COLORADO Beer & soft drinks on the bus Trip includes s uums 4 Nights lodging in condominium 4 Days skiing 4 Days of lift tickets 4 Days of ski rental 4 Days skiing Cost: $135, Jan. 9-Jan. 15, 1977 5th Day of skiing Ski lessons at special rates Sign up now in the SUA office. She'll get things done. She's done it before. NO PRETTY PROMISES. JUST RESULTS. Nancy Hambleton can and will get things done. She's done it before she leaves Lewes, first woman mayor and first city councilwoman. The 5th district deserves effective representation its up to you. 44th HAMBLETON Paid for by KU College Republicans BUZZI LISTENS . . . LLOYD BUZZI Continually worked for Nursing Home, penal, and Mental Health reform Serves KU as, Lifetime member KB Alumni Association, Advisory Board Member Greater University Fund, Advisory Board Member Kansas Memorial Union Co- poration, Member Institute for Social and Environmental Studies Housing Survey Has given you 4 responsible, responsive years of representation for the 45th District Irvad Buzzi don't just say he cares. HIS RECORD PROVES IT! - Introduced bill to create a Student Seaf on Kansas Board of Regents (we now have first Student, Representative). - Consistently supported faculty pay increases RE-ELECT LLOYD BUZZI 45th DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVE Higher Education Week The University of Kansas Monday, November 1 7:30 pm "Legal Education: Four Perspectives," a forum with representatives from KU, Villanova U., U. of Missouri at Kansas City, and Washburn U. B 8 Room, Union. Wednesday, November 3 7:00 pm "Forum on Higher Education," with five 1976 HOPE Award finalists. Kansas Room, Union Friday, November 5 12:00 to 1:00 pm Open discussion between KU administrators and students. Cottonwood, Meadowlark Rooms, Union. Monday through Friday, November 1 - 5 7:00 pm "Jayhawk College Quiz Bowl," contest between KU living groups. Elimination contests nightly; final rounds Friday. Kansas Union. Saturday, November 6 1:30 pm KU - Iowa State football game. Presentation of HOPE Award and Higher Education Service Award at halftime. Reception for award winners following the game. Kansas Room, Union. Sunday, November 7 6:30 pm Higher Education Week Banquet. Featured Speaker, Dr.W. Clarke Wescoe. Presentation of the Higher Education Leadership Prize. Kansas Union Ballroom. The Student Senate is funded by Student Activity Fees. 6 Mondav. November 1. 1976 University Daily Kansan Jayhawks collapse early, smothered, 31-3 93 86 15 Class photo by JAY KORLZ KU linebacker Tom Dinkel (93) tells the officials that the Jayhawks have recovered a first-quarter fumble. Dinkel loses the argument and on the next play Vince Ferragamo (15) scores on a one-yard run. Nebraska takes victory in stride By GARY VICE Assistant Sports Edito After the game Saturday, excitement did not erupt from the winning Nebraska Cornhuskers. In fact, it was barely detectable. They had done what was expected of them, the Jayhawks with ease for a 31-3 triumph. And so the all-too-teen-triumphant Cornhuskers, as far as Kansas is concerned, staged what could be called a non-celebration. No one was turning cartwheels or acting at all exuberant in Nebraska's locker at the rally. A spoken between Humble players occurred a game, which they began to control early in the first quarter. Conversation was directed at more important things, like the bus ride WHEATHER THE JAYHAWKS, now long forgot, were on NU's list of important subjects last week seemed somewhat doubtful. NU coach Tom Osborne, speaking in a slow monotone, had little to say about his team or its talented quarterback—Vince Ferraggio. "We thought it could be a very close, very tough game," Gosborne said. "But it didn't turn out to be. We played real fine today and everything went pretty well. "Vince—he had just about a normal day. He always throws pretty well." FERRAGAMO, A SENIOR from Carson, clifft, blighted KU's defense secondary all day. The secondary tried to confuse Ferraberg by jumping around a lot before each snap to conceal its chosen pass. He succeeded, but Golub said, "Obviously it didn't work." 强 safety Tom Fitch said, "We just tried to disguise what we were doing but Ferragano was really good at reading us. He's the best I ever seen." "He'd just analyze our defense and throw right at its weakness. He knows so much about it." FERRAGAMO, HOWEVER, would claim he called audibles only 40 per cent of the time, calmly saying, "You just walk up to the line and look the situation over." "They were doing a lot of moving around on defense. But we watched them on film a lot last week and had good scouting reports and just took it to them." "I just don't know what you could say about our pass rush," defensive tackle Mike Butler said. "I just don't know. We're not doing anything one." They were doing the job blocking us. The absence of an effective pass rush also contributed greatly to Ferragamo's success. KU's defense failed to sack Ferragamo even once. "I GOT BACK there twice and just didn't get him. I just couldn't wrap him up." Ferragama credited his offensive line for a nearly flawless performance and said he expected KU's defense to blitz more than it did. But little did it concern Osborne, who said, "I think we are averaging only one sack per game. Our offensive line protects Vince real well. But he helps himself a lot also. He recognizes blitzing situations and audibles real well." And several of those audibles turned into touchdowns as the Jayhawk's weren't able to find a victory against NU and assure themselves of their first back-to-back winning seasons since 1961-62. Kansas, now 5-3, was 7-5 last year. IT'S THE Cornhuskers, rather than the Jayhawks, who are most adept at fashioning winning football seasons. Nebraska, now 6-1 on the season—its 15th consecutive winning campaign—has dominated nearly every under ones It was NU's 59th victory over KU in 83 meetings and its eight straight. Nebraska has also amassed a 224-12 eye in scoring over the Jihawks in the last six matchups. Momentum—that's something the Nebraska Cornhoppers had and kept in their game Saturday against the Kansas as the result was a 31-3 thumping of KU "Nebraska has better personnel than we have," Moore said, "at least right now. They've had a top program going for umpteen years and it's hard to take the momentum away from them. That's the key." "The score was 14-0 and we had only run 11 offensive plays," KU coach Bud Moore said yesterday. "We gave Nebraska the momentum and never recovered, and we had a fine football team, but I don't think they are good as we allowed them to look." "We're still building. They have talent to do that use other teams would love to bat." By BRENT ANDERSON Associate Sports Editor The Jayhawks will have to recover if they don't want to end the season sixth in the Big Eight. That's where they sit right now, and their best chance of moving up is against State here next Saturday. The Cyclones are 2-2 in conference play and 4-2 overall. THE *HUUSERKS* kept KU in the hole from almost the beginning of the game, and two first-half fumbles lost by KU in its own territory made the hole deuser. The Hawks' first two possessions started on their own three-yard line, making it difficult for KU's offense to get going. In all, KU was held to 170 yards rushing and 14 yards passing, its second lowest offensive total of the season. "It's extremely tough to mount 97- or 98- runs, but I'm going to mount them like Nebraska quarterback Scott Cash said after the game. "They're so good, they're really great," he noted to have field position to run away the ball. Such was not the case. McMichael completed only one pass in eight attempts "My timing wasn't good at all," McCormick said. "I would have made my pickers more time to open and get the job done." But McMichael rarely had time to wait. Nebraska's defensive line poured in on him, making it hard for him to even see his receivers. Nebraska, on the other hand, riddled the KU pass defense. Its quarterback, Vince Ferragamo, completed 14 of 27 passes for NIL in five games and ran one yard for NIU's first touchdown. **THAT TOUCHDOWN came after NU recovered a Norris Banks fumble on KU's 37. On the ensuing kick, halfback Mike Higgins fumbled and Nebraska recovered three plays later Ferragamo completed his first touchdown pass, making the score 14-0. Then, after an exchange of punts that put NU at its own seven-yard line, Ferragga completed four passes in a seven-play touchdown drive capped by a three-yard pass. The 21-0 NU halffire lead made a KU comeback unlikely. The passing game enabled Nebraksa a running game, which had been slowed somewhat by injuries, to unwind. The "huskers" rushed for 284 yards on 55 carries and were led by fulback Dode Donnel, half-back Monte Anthony, who had 65 yards on 14 carries. NU finished the game with 483 yards in total offseason. "ONE OF THE main reasons for our success was the line," said Ferragno. He only blitzed us a few times, and we were able to pick it up and hit our hot receiver." Nebraska coach Tom Osborne agreed with Moore about turnovers being impatient. "I think when we scored after that (KU's second) turnover and it was 14-0, well, I don't think they quit, but they knew it would be hard to win." Osborne said. Nebraska had built a 31-10 lead before Kansas was able to make a scoring drive, the Nebraskans were unable to stop Mike Hubach. That drive was only the third time that Nebraska penetrated Mike Hubach in the 4th round. MOORE SAID Nebraska's defense was the best KU had faced this year, and, overall, NU was the best team KU had plaved. "They were tough in every way," Moore said. "They were able to move the ball at will sometimes, and prevented our offense from ever getting going." Moore said he knew of only a few slight injuries to KU players. Linebacker Terry McAuliffe was killed when he lead the KU defense, was "pretty brushed up" after the game, Moore said, and halfback Bill Campfield's sprained ankle might keep him out of practice again this season. The loss made KU's season record 5-3 and dropped them to 1-3 in the Big Eight. Nebraska remains tied for the Big Eight with 1-1 record. The Huskers are now 6-1 overall. SCORING KANSAS 0 0 0 0-1 NEBRAKSHA 0 14 7 10 - Spatha 3 gets from Ferreira (Kielkirk) - Steiner 1 gets from Ferreira (Kielkirk) - Steiner 1 gets from Kielkirk - Steiner 1 gets from Kielkirk STATISTICS First downs NU KU 10 rows down 65-284 94-384 Passing yards 199 14 Return yards 94 14 Return yards 142-51 9 Points 5-4 9-36 Penalties-lost 2-1 9-36 Penalties-less 5-5 9-35 INDIVIDUAL Netschak-Donna 167. 157. Anthony 144s, 188s Davis-Thompson 140. 139. Anthony 120s, Craig 23. Evertel 19. McMichael 144s, 188s. Bush 17. McMichael 144s, 188s. Kiraa-Smith - 1647, McMahon 1442, Banks 7.85 *Lightweight* 4.19, Eighteen 3.22, Lissauer 3.22 **Passing** Fussing Nebraska - Ferragamo 14-27-1, Garcia 0-1-0, Kansas. Nebraska - Shamblin 4.2, Malloy 3.37, Thome 2.73, Craig 3.57, Stein 1.9, Berns 1.0, Dimmel 1.1). Funting Nebraska—Lessman 5-43.0. Kansas—Wuhan 0-21.6 Weekend Sports Roundup Runners finish 3rd The KU women's cross country ran in the rain and rain in springfield, Mo., and came fifth. KU totaled 71 points to trail Southern Illinois University's 73 and Kansas State's 26. Behind the Jayhawks were Northwest Missouri State, 96, Southwest Missouri State, 123, Murray State, 121, College of the Ozarks, 190, and Memphis State. 240. Once again Michelle Brewed the KU队, finishing sixth over the three-mile race. KU's Sena Frame was 15th, Lariy Murdy, 24th, Bissell, 21st, Wallace, 21st, and Wallace, 21st. "We're really starting to get fit." coach Tom Lionale said yesterday. "It's a shame we don't have any weights." Lioniale had words of praise for Morley, no has made a dramatic improvement this far. "She's come out of nowhere for us," he said. "At the start of the year she was our No. 8 runner and at Springfield she was No. 3. She has really come around." Kansas football against Nebraska got off to a good start for the Jayhawks Friday when KU's junior varsity defeated the Cornhuskers' freshman team. 19,18 Lionale said he would be take three runners who have run faster than the AIAW qualifying standard of 19:00 minutes, the Bown, Sena Frame and Nancy Bissell. The last meet for the women will be the AWN national championship Nov. 13 in Mason. Time didn't expire and Nebraska had an opportunity to win, only to waste it as a 23-yard field goal attempt went off to the right, ending the game. KU, now 1-2, almost gave the game away in the almost seconds as coach Jack White chose to try to run out the clock on a running play instead of punting on fourth down. JVs stun 'Huskers It was the first loss for the Big Red freshmen since a 1973 loss to Missouri, and the team lost its third consecutive game. The amount of time remaining in the game was rather confusing to everyone except the officials, because no scoreboard was present. The Field House, where the game was played. That miss wasn't the only time Jayhawk fans breathed a sigh of relief. Moments earlier, a two-point conversion attempt by Nebraska failed when tight end Junior Miller dropped a pass that was drilled into his midsection. Those two miscues preserved KU's lead, which was built by the running of quarterback Steve Mueller and halfback Jimmy Little. Mueller, a walk-on from Topek West High School, was substituting for Bill Lilis, who hyperextended his knee in practice Mueller ran for 123 yards and one touchdown. After things quieted down, the Blues held off a late Jayhawk attack to win, 1-7. TMc Grade scored a try and Dave Hay booted a penalty kick for the Jayhawks. Little, from Woodbridge Va., picked up yards rushing and returned k9 $$ of 56 yards. White said, "Little's like an H-bomb ready to go off when he has the ball. The Kansas Jayhawks gave Nebraska a rugby lesson Saturday in the form of a 2-0 win. And yesterday they visited the Kansas team who taught KU a few things about boxing. KU records were also set in the 200-yard breaststroke. 40- and 200-yard medley relay. Two Big Eight records were set Friday night by members of the KU women's swimming team in an untrassid meet at Naples. Several KU records were also broken. The top three butterfly swimmers each turned in times under the previous KU record. Jackie Kellog, Prairie Village freshman, had the fastest time 2:77.2 Ruggers win, lose Debbie Bunker, Chesterfield, Mo., freshman, set Big Eight records in the 100-yard freestyle (55.1) and 200-year freestyle (2.00.7). Three tikes yesterday, the Jayhawks traded fists with the highly favored Blues. The end result was that Rich Coulson left the game with a soliton. Women set marks In Saturday's game, Nebraska spent in the 19th round, freshman Bryan Wells run circle matches. Playing in only the second rugby game of his career, Wells scored three tries to lead the jayshaws. Fullback Rich Millard added a punt but none of the extra points were converted. Soccer splits two KU's first goal came when Roel Vandenzeen scored on a penalty kick. The remainder of KU's scores were made by Marcus Ridley, who scored Tahzeradeh, who each scored two goals. KU's soccer club came back to defeat Nebraska, 5-2, yesterday after suffering a disappointing 1-0 loss to Rockhurst Saturday. The Jayhawks jumped to a 3-4 lead in the game, and the Cormorants game to quickly down the Corcorners. Alt-Amure had a sprained ankle and Taterhadez was hit by an elbow in his stomach. Neither injury proved serious, but players returned to action yesterday. "We were all over them at the end, and it doom't really seem they beat us as much as we were behind when the clock ran out," he said. Malinin said his squad didn't play sharp early against Rockhurst but came back like that. KU to play Emporia Mulin said he was pleased with the performance of goaltender Rafael Perez, who scored in five games. $N_i$ soccer funnels last year, showed a defense that KU had trouble penetrating. Part of the Jayhawks' trouble was that Ariana Hernandez, Tejahudephe, Mullin calls his one-two punch, were forced to leave the game because of injuries. Rockhurst, which placed third in the NLA soccer finals last year, showed a clear improvement. "He played the best game I've ever seen him play. He made several near impossible plays." Friday's field hockey match between KU and Nebraska was canceled because of the rain. KU will travel to Emporia Kansas State College today for a conference match, when the team will compete. 71 19 74 NU's Dodie Donnell spent most of the day diving over the KU defense Three sit atop Big Eight race KANSAS CITY, MO. (AP) — Colorado and Oklahoma State, which have captured only one Big Eight football championship bet, will play a final game familiar, intimidating figure of the Nebraska Cornhuskers, who have won or shared nine conference titles in the last 13 Can the Buffs and Cowboys keep pace with such heady company? One giant step toward answering that question will be taken this Saturday when Oklahoma State and Nebraska collide in Lincoln, Neb., Colorado will play Missouri. But the crazy, topsy-turvey chase for the Orange Bowl has never been more unpredictable or entertaining and the outcome is anybody's guess. Colorado and Oklahoma State overcame big leads by Oklahoma and Missouri Saturday while Nebraska easily manhandled Kansas. The Buffs, Cowboys and Huskies thus moved from a five-way game into one-way logjam with 34 conference marks. At 2-2 are two-time defending national champion Oklahoma, Hawaii and Iowa State, which easily vanquished Kansas State Saturation. Kansas, 1-3, and Kansas State, 0-4, are out of it. But nothing more is certain. Colorado soared past Oklahoma, 42-31. "Colorado proved they're a fine team," he said. "Although the Big Eight is still up for grabs, I'd had to say Colorado is in a fine position to win." "I worried all week long about just what happened in the second half," said handing the Sooners their second con-secutive loss, with three straight second-half touchdowns directed by second team quarterback Jeff Knable. Oklahoma, which has seen its entire defensive backfield obliterated by injuries, suffered another loss Saturday when a tackle by Oklahoma ended up being lost for the season with a knee injury. But much KU, N teams tha winne to pot Men' veste L It d tried, the m They couldl Bruce Tom forme and V nock Bet touch wome pionsh Foll ball or later How behind outsta Jocs. The but th Llew outma line o touche Llev runs t down game. KU' names 6-0; C Follow sity, f State, compe The startin beat, 15-10, game defeat "It said prises and tl State spots. On State Misso the to teams asham Star good Star had no "We in the said." Be Vi Dal and C spell yester The 7 to d the B Minne Viking In Miami New Cleveland New Green 19; At Denv Houst The ahead Detro The team that Johnh Chica Fran recor passii The record 3 Nebraksa wa seen slowed iwind. I 56 carries demnell, and, half- half on yards on 14 with e83 with e83 ns for our erragamo. They only were able to ever." ne agreed being imame. that (KU's 14-0, well, I knew it would be said. head before driving drive, field goal by is only the penetrated defense was year, and n KU had y," Moore the ball at our offense few slight Terry tackles to ty bruised said, and ankle again this ord 5-3 and Big Eight. Big Eights are now 0 3-3 7 3-31 Eveland kick) Eveland kick) Berns 9-57, rragano 1-10. Banks 7-28, sak 3-2. 0. Thomas 2-73, rus 1. --- and con- second- nd team out just if," said team," s still up in a fine s entire injuries, by when Kinlaw injury. Midgets snare men's hill crown By STEVE SCHOENFELD Sports Editor They did it without practicing, without a game plan, without set plays. But you never could tell. They had too much talent—talent that once belonged to KU, Nebraska, and Wichita State's football teams. That was all the Mad Dog Midgets, winners of the Independent League, needed to win the league. Sports Men's A League Hill Championship yesterday at Memorial Stadium. It didn't matter how hard the Phil Dhi tries, how organized they were or how loud the more than 150 screaming fans yelled. The Dhl team couldn't compete with ex-KU players, Bruce Adams, Ken Saathoff, Paul Bower, Tom Krattni, Don Pile and Steve Elliott; former Nebraska lineman Rich Varner, Nebraska state quarterback Chet Pennck "We weren't too organized," said Bower, KANS Ken Saathoff who played split end for the Jayhaws from 1973 until last year. "We don't call offensive plays. When the ball was snapped we would just adjust to what their defense Bower did exactly that. When he was given room to run, he gave the Phil Deltis fits. He scored the Midges' second touchdown on a 9-ward burst, The Phi Delta were so concerned about Bower's running ability they changed their defense for this game and sent in a three-man rush. was doing. If I could not run, I knew I could dumit if to somebody else." "We normally rush two guys," Phi Delt captain Chris Paraghamian said. "But we knew what he (Bower) could do and we needed to contain him so we rushed three. He ("Bower) runs on something nobody else has—a diehid battery." Bower was equally effective passing, nailing saitthoff and Adams with scoring tosses. Saithoff, who played both split end and tight end for the Jayhawks two years ago and is now a graduate student, caught a nine-vard pass for the games' first score. Adams, ranked No. 2 among all-time KU players, snared a 40-yard scoring bomb from Bower and a 46-yard TD loss to Tennessee. Adams also booted two extra points. The Midgets opened up a bulging 19-0 shape. The Midgets could build up much in the direction. "I thought they'd score a lot," Saathoff, Delta Gammas capture hill title Bv ROB RAINS Sports Writer Beth Llewellan didn't know whether one touchdown would be enough to win the women's intramural football Hill Championship game yesterday. However, it was, because Delta Gamma, behind Llewellan's running and the team's outstanding defensive play, stopped the Jocs, 7-0, for the championship. Llewell, who plays field hockey and runs track for KU, scored the lone touchdown on the DGs' first possession of the game. Following a short punt, the DGs had the ball on the joes' 44-yard line and four plays to score. Llewell scored on a 39-yard reverse, outmaneuvering three Jocs defenders at the line of scrimmage and then racing untouched down the right sideline. The point after attempt was successful, but the DGs' offense was through for The DG defense, which hasn't given up a point all year, responded to the challenge by stopping the Jocs in their own territory on all but two drives. day, and it was up to the defense to keep the lead intact. The first drive into the DG's half of the field was set up by a pass interception by Gayle Frerek and a 15 yard return midway through the third quarter. That gave the Joes the ball at the DG 37, but he kept the deepest penetration of the day. The DG defense stopped the Joes there, sacking Freking for an eight-yard loss to Snyder. Midway through the fourth quarter, the ice mounted another drive, going from 10-4 to 9-2. The ice Volleyballers 4th at league An incomplete pass and an eight-yard loss on a run ended the drive, forcing the Jocs to be brought down. The going was tough for the University of Kansas volleyball team at the Big Eight Tournament this weekend in Ames, Iowa, but for Stancil, Stankill, there weren't any big jobs. KU team placed fourth in the tournament with a 3-4 record, behind Nebraska, Okaahoma, 5-1; and Missouri, 4-2. Following KU were Kansas State University, seventh state, sixth, and Oklahoma State, seventh. Colorado didn't enter the competition. "It was a good tournament," Stanciff said yesterday. "There weren't any surprises. I thought that Nebraska would win it and that Oklahoma, Missouri, KU and K-State would fight it out for the next four spots." The Jayhawks played four games Friday, starting with Oklahoma State, whom they beat, 15-8, 15-12. KU then beat Iowa State, 15-10, 12- Nebraska beat KU in the third game Friday, 15-7, 15-2 and then Oklahoma defeated KU, 15-4, 13-11. In yesterday's other NFL action it was Miami 10, New England 3, Philadelphia 10, New York Giants 0; Cincinnati 10, Cleveland 6; Pittsburgh 23, San Diego 0; New York Jets 19, Buffalo 4; Detroit 27, Carolina 5; Tampa Bay 3; Atlanta 23, New Orleans 20; Oakland 19, Denver 6, and Los Angeles 45, Seattle 6. Houston is at Baltimore tonight. On Saturday, the Jayhawks downed K-State in three games, 5-15, 16-14, 15-12. Missouri whipped KU in its final game of the tournament. 15-12 12-15 15-10. Stancliff said that the Jayhawks played a good tournament, despite their record. "We didn't play well," he said. "The teams that beat us were good teams. I'm not a big fan." The Vikings were the only unbeaten NFL team going into Sunday's game, then lost that distinction as Walter Payton and Johnny Musso scored touchdowns for a Chicago victory. Minnesota quarterback Fran Tarkenton, broke Johnny Unitas' record of 40,239 career passing yards, passed for 72 and a career total of 40,421. "We were a little rusty from not playing in the 10 days before the tournament," he said. "I had to be a bit careful." Stancliff said KU didn't do well because it had not paused for more than a week. Bears break Vikings' string Dallas spelled doomsday for Washington and Chicago broke Minnesota's unbeaten spell in the National Football League yesterday. The Cowboys rolled over the Redskins 20-7 to trim Washington's playoff hopes. And the Bears, averaging a one-point loss in nine games, were the first setback by a 14-13 score. Vikings the first setback by a 14-13 score. had earlier in the season when we were plaving more often." Bv The Associated Press Stancliff cited Brenda Wood, Karen Luken and Ken Epperson for having good tournaments. One Jayhawk, David Kuhn, was named to the Big Eight Tour- The Vikings, at 6-1, are still solidly ahead in the NFC Central race. Chicago and Atlanta both have the lead. KU's next match will be against the University of Missouri at Kansas City tomorrow in Kansas City. Then the 'Hawks will have a seven-day layoff before the second conference match between KU, K-State and Wichita State University Nov. 9. The Dallas victory gave the Cowboys a 7-1 record in the National Conference East. The Jocs got the ball back with 29 seconds to play on an interception, but couldn't get it on the other end. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Quarterback Mike Livingston fired up Kansas City's slowstart offense with a pair of third-quarter touchdown passes of two yards each handed the expansion Tampa Bay Buccaneers their eight straight defeat, 28-19. Livingston, one of the top passers in the National Football League, completed 17 of 30 for 183 yards and two touchdowns. But in the first half, the Chiefs managed only two field goals of 42 and 32 yards by Jan Stenerud. KC Chiefs beat winless Tampa The Phi Deltis came back with two second-half scores. Quarterback Dave Fuchs found Jim Fender, who played split end for KU the past three years, open in the end zone twice. Fuchs's scoring passes were for 35 and eight yards — that's all the scoring the Phi Deltis got. Livingston, a nine-year veteran, hit tight ends Billy Masters and Walter White on the short plays scoring. Kansas City fullback MacArthur Lane got a touchdown on a two-yard run in the last quarter, a play set up by Mackey. The second play which took the Chefs to the Bucs' two. Tampa, which for three quarters couldn't get a drive moving against the most generous defense in the American Football Conference, put all three of its touchdowns on the board in the last 10 minutes of the game. the Midges' captain said. "I though they'd smore than they did. But they I thought they'd be better." The Chiefs, now 3-5, added a safety when Spurrier was hit at his own goal line and fumbled. The ball was recovered in the end and the Chiefs 'tackle' like Current, who was tacked. This was the first year ex-football players were allowed to compete in intramural touch football. The Phi Delta, the Hill School, didn't mind playing against former players. Henrys 99¢ "It's more competitive this way," Paraghamian said. "They're really good and it makes for a good game. It doesn't bother us at all." 2 BIG HENRY'S With all the trimmings Mon.-Thurs. Nov. 1-4 Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th OPEN FACE BEEF SANDWICHES $1.75 Reg. $2.10 Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made dressing, mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Offer expires Nov. 30, '76 Present coupon. Throughout most of the year, the Midges fooled around — played for fun, and rarely took the games seriously. That wasn't the case yesterday. 6th & Missouri "It was a matter of pride," Bower said. "We had something to prove. You've got to remember we would have been emeralds in excoffball players we would've lost." 842-1974 www www www www A few openings in Men's & Women's Halls for spring occupancy. Call 864-3552 or stop by 228 Strong. WARREN OATES KEN NORTON PAM GRIEK LVO: 7:15 A.M. 9:30 Sat. Sun. 2:00 DRUM WARREN OATES KEN NORTON PAM GRIEK LVO: 7:15 A.M. 9:30 Sat. Sun. 2:00 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 Hillcrest12 "RAINDING!" LIT THE FUNK "DRUM IS THE EXPLOSION! R DRUM BEST PICTURE BEST ACTOR BEST ACTRESS BEST DIRECTOR BEST SCREENPLAY Anything can happen ... and probably will at the "CAR WASH" POP with GEORGE CARLIN Eve, 7:30, 9:30 Sat. Sun, af 2:30 Granda They wore the girls of our dreams ... "THE POM-POM GIRLS" Varsity TREATY ... Compassing PE JOB 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 Now Showing Evenings at 7:15 & 9:45 at the 10 Hillcrest DID YOU KNOW? QUALIFIED by EXPERIENCE BETTY LESLIE $ $ for $ $ County Treasurer DID YOU KNOW? Betty: * worked up through the ranks * has served in every capacity in the Treasurer's office * is NOW Deputy Treasurer QUALIFIED by EXPERIENCE BETTY LESLIE $ $ for $ $ County Treasurer DID YOU KNOW? Betty: • worked up through the ranks • has served in every capacity in the Treasurer's office • is NOW Deputy Treasurer Paid for by the Citizens for Betty Leslie Committee Foreign Language Broadcasts To hear the latest news in any of the following languages 24 hours a day dial: 864-3003 Oriental 864-3241 Russian 864-3054 German 864-3219 Portuguese 864-3055 French 864-3218 Spanish KU Language Laboratories COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN presents WOMEN IN POLITICS "Women's reign in the smoke-filled rooms." A discussion about political involvement headed by women active in politics. Nov. 2, 7:30 p.m. — Council Room — Student Union Business Meeting — 6:30 p.m. Partially funded by Student Senate Activity Fees 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 these ideals in Tepela 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 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. MICHAE GLOVER Re-elect your State Representative Democrat PETRA BELGAR CITTLE Mike Glover has been a state representative unlike many others. He's not afraid to listen to the desires of his district. He's no 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 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. Re-elect your State Representative Democrat has been a state A Hand by Mike Glover Re-election Fund. Betty Jo Chariton. Treasurer 8 Monday, November 1. 1976 University Daily Kansan Product claims raise premiums By MICHAEL KING If the question of who is liable for product failure isn't solved, it could result in inflated costs for consumer goods, no new products released to the market, and poor technology, James Palmer said Friday. Palmer, a broker with the Haas and Wilkerson Insurance Agency in Kansas City. Mo., was moderator of a panel discussion of product liability sponsored by the University of Kansas School of Business. Palmer said the number of product 2 requests go to Senate Supplemental budget requests of $8,260 from the International Club and $2,911 from the KU Ice Hockey Club were accepted by the University and Auditing Committee last month. The two requests will be sent to the full Senate for final consideration and approval at a later date. The finance committee accepted the requests for fiscal 1977 without cuts after hearing formal budget presentations by both of the clubs. Funding for both clubs had been denied earlier this fall by Senate committees that said that the large amounts requested weren't properly justified. The International Club requested money for office supplies, printing, advertising, rental film and cultural program expenses. The KU Ice Hockey Club request was for office advertising, long distance telephone calls, wages for officials and ice rink rental. liability insurance claims was up 400 per cent since 1967. "Perhaps consumer have an unrealistic expectation of product performance," he said. "OR MAY THERE needs to be a change in the 1897 tort law putting liability on both the seller and the manufacturer." Homer Cowan Jr., assistant secretary of the Western Insurance Companies, said the original tort law made it an actionable tort to sell or manufacture products that were either "defective or unreasonably unsafe. "But something funny happened on the way to the courthouse, called interpretive torts and they ignored the 'defective and unreasonably unsafe.' Cowen said. HE SAID this type of "expansion law," coupled with the high awards for punitive damages, had destroyed the cornerstone of insurance in America. Cowan also criticized the statute of limitations, saying that it allowed too many years to pass between the actual injury and the filing of a complaint. He suggested a limitation of four years from when the injury occurred. Under current Kansas law the limitation is two years from the time the injury becomes known, and a maximum of 10 days resulting from the use of a defective product. PAUL MILLER, president of the Centennial Life Insurance Company of Kansas City, Mo., blamed the torts system for the increase in lawsuits, the premiums and the increase in lawsuits. Miller said that there needed to be a complete "review and revamp" of the torts system and that punitive damages shouldn't be given to the injured party. Miller said one possible solution to the product liability problem was to instill pride in the brand. On Campus TEXAS INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE TODAY: GENERAL MOTORISTS will present transportation exhibits from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., in the Civil Engineering Lab in Learned Hall, NONTRADITIONAL STUDENTS will meet at 11:30 a.m. in Alcove E of the Kansas Union, A TOWN MEETING will be presented by General Motors at 2 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. TONIGHT: THE JAYHAWK COLLEGE QIZ BOWL will be at 7 in the Forum, Council and Walnut rooms of the Union. The SUCH CHESS CLUB will meet at 7 in the Room 102 and the PHILOSOPHY CLUB will meet at 19th ST. THETA TAU will meet at 7:30 in the Pine Room of the Union. The UNDERGRADUATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will meet at 8 in the International Room of the Union. The meeting will feature an open debate between Arthur Skidmore, professor of philosophy, and Peter Thompson, associate professor of painting and sculpture. TOMORROW: THE UNIVERSITY SENATE HUMAN RELATIONS COMMITTEE will meet at noon in Alove B of the Union. TAU SGIMA will offer a class on ballet at 7 p.m. in 220 Robinson. TZVETNAT TODOROV, of the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Littures, will speak on the "Origin of Literary Genres," a part of the course "Introduction to Poetry" co-drafted Auditorium. THE UNIVERSITY SINGERS, KU's freshman chair, will present their annual fall concert at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy. ANOTHER POSSIBLE solution, he said, would be to combine insurance rating classes: lawyer's malpractice, physician's malpractice and product liability. "This could be done if aused manufacturer could then turn around and sue the union of the employee who did the poor work." State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, vice chairman of the House Judiciary Committee and an attorney, said that insurance agencies should look to themselves for the problems before complaining about lawyers and law suits. "That way lawyers might be a little less eager to冲 clams." Miller said. Heinemann said that Miller and Cowan were misleading the audience because there seldom were any punitive damages awarded in Kansas. --pay tuition, textbooks, lab fees, pay off student loans, offer a debt month. The program leads to an Air Force program that equips airmen with challenge, challenging work (with examples such as flying the world), promotes reason, ability, graduate education and education. Serious Service . . . No Joke! Oil & Oil Filter Change Includes 10W40 oil, filter, labor $9.95 SERVICE HOURS Monday thru Friday 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. dale wille The Automobile Man PONTIAC | CADILLAC | AMC | JEEP 1116 W. 230 Street | Phone: 843-5200 Events P Brownriggs dale willey We need certain college majors to become Air Force lieutenants. Mechanical and civil engineering aerospace and aeronautical engineering electronics computer science The Air Force is looking for men and women with academic majors such as these if you're not a college graduate you may be eligible for either the two-year or the four-year Air Force help with the college bills, two, three and four year school students are available. Sphimeros interested in the two year program should contact Cagnabo J. B. Macleen, Science Military Blond, Room 168, or call 644-7447. Find out today about an Air Force ROTC scholarship. It's a great way to leave your country and to help pay for your college education. Baby dies in blaze Saturday Air Force ROTC-Gateway to a Great Way of Life A 10-month-old baby girl was killed and her mother seriously burned Saturday night when fire destroyed their home at 2305 Haskell Ave. The mother, Shirley Droward, 22, a student at Haskell Indian Junior College, was taken to the KU Medical Center for treatment. The child was pronounced dead at the scene. The cause of the fire is unknown. Mrs. Richard Anderson, owner of the house, said yesterday that the victims had been locked up. The fire, reported at 11:30 p.m., caused an estimate of $2,000 damage to the house and land. The Crewel Cupboard Now We Are Six Birthday Sale 6 years in business . . . growing and going strong Yarn Specials Icelandic Lopi — reg. $2.90 now $2.20 Les Saisons Shetland — reg. $1.95 now $1.10 Apollo Thick 'N Thin — reg. $2.50 now $1.50 Silverflake baby yarn — reg. 85+ now 70+ Needlepoint and Crewel Specials "Kit Little" Needlepoints — 1/3 off Needlepointers kits — reg. *4.50 now *4.00 All Christmas kits — 10% off "Holly Hobbie" crewel kits — 1/2 price Select group painted canwasses — 1/2 price Select group crewel kits — up to 75% off Odds 'N Ends Specials All hardback books - 10% off Unfinished frames - 5x5 & 5x7 reg. $2.00 are now $1.50 Knitting tote bags - reg. $7.50 now $6.50 Quilt hoops - 10% off Quilt hoops - 10% off 10*10" walnut finish frames - reg. *5.00 now *3.50 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 841-2656 15 E. 8th St. carol francis kx the 45th Paid for by Carol Francis for the 45th Committee SUA FILMS SCIENCE FICTION SERIES INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS (1956) Dr. Don Siegel, with Kevin Mr. Anthony, Dana Wynter, Carolyn Jones. Mon., Nov. 1, 7:30, 75c CLASSICAL SERIES THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE (1946) Dr. Jay Garnett, with Lana Turner, John Garfield Wed., Nov. 3, 7:30, 75c FILM SOCIETY WIND FROM THE EAST (1970) Dr. Jean-Luc Gedard, with Anna Wiatlasmyk Thurs., Nov. 4, 7:30, 9:30, 75c POPULAR FILMS FAREWELL, MY LOVELY (1975) Dr. Dick Richards, with Ronald Mitchell, Charlotte Rampling Fri., Nov. 5, 7:00 and 9:30 Sat., Nov. 6, 3:30, 51 GUERNICA (1951) Dr. Fernando Arrabel, with Mariangela Melato plus GUERNICA (1950) Dr. Alain Resnais All films shown in Woodruff Auditorium NOON BUFFET ALL THE PIZZA AND SALAD YOU CAN EAT For Only $1.89 11 p.m.—2 p.m. Weekdays Pizza inn. In the Hillcrest Shopping Center Next to the Theatres 841-2670 INDEPENDENTS DEMOCRATS REPUBLICANS 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 X VOTE X TUESDAY X ARDEN BOOTH X X SENATOR X X X Paid for by the Return Booth Committee. University Daily Kansan Monday, November 1, 1976 9 is killed and saturday night come at 2305 Avard, 22, a nior College, 1 Center for boned dead n. , caused an e house and les said. ' Power of the victims had vn. $3.50 h St. Minority center delayed Bv STANLEY WILLIAMS Staff Writer The new Minority Student Resource Center was scheduled to open this week on the third floor of the Kansas Union. But the bare walls, empty door casing and dirty, broken tile floor showed that the Center's debut had been postponed. In fact, it may be spring semester before business for the center can begin. Rodney Dennis, chairman of the Minority Affairs Subcommittee of the Student Senate which is in charge of the center, said last week that he wanted to wait for unity to break out. He opened the center, and that he wanted the group to have realistic plans and goals. Dennis said it was essential that the center's opening be a well-timed, well-planned and well-organized event that reflected the identity and meaningful picture to the University. Dennis said the center should avoid being unprepared, a problem that had unintended consequences. Minority students at the University of Kansas, like those at Brown and Emory universities where Dennis previously went to school have seen the up-and-down cycle of minority activity repeated so often that they are skeptical new ventures, he said. "I've seen cycles come and go. Experience has taught me to stop the problem." The subcommittee thus wants to develop the center into a functioning body that is representative of and responsive to all minority students, he said. MARY STUART, Greensboro, N.C., junior and public relations director for the subcommittee, said that the staff was working with the Chicano and Native Armored organizations and institutions in black block organization to encourage ideas from all concerned groups. As soon as a program with tangible goals is developed, the resource center will begin to deliver them. One tangible goal, Dennis said, is the elimination of "apathy about the concerns of minority students" by giving minorities access to KU's decision-making process. MINORITY STUDENTS at KU need access to power if they are to overcome the "benign neglect" apparent in every area of University functioning, he said. Dennis said the Minority Affairs Subcommittee had a distinct advantage over previous minority organizations on campus, because it has direct contact with the administration, the Student Senate, black faculty and staff, and minority groups. TEDDE TASHEFF, student body president, said the Student Senate, in the fall of 195, invited interested minority students to brainstorming sessions to the problem and needs of minorities. The committee resulted from these meetings. Tasheff said the Senate launched these sessions because it wanted to have stronger minority representation in student government and to develop better overall relations. She said the Senate supported the subcommittee and thought it would be an asset Dennis said he be thought contacts and subscriptions would help the subcommittee survive. However, Dennis said he disliked the idea of the tutoring missions for or in-icing students. "IF THE SENATE thinks it has a better insight into minority problems than we do, then we have a mix-up," he said. "Our senate is not the same as our people are been beautiful. I must recommend them." Stuart said the subcommittee was developing the budget for the center. Possible participants for a proposed study are also being reviewed, she said. Other tentative plans include fall and spring orientation programs for incoming students, and workshops and symposiums with minority problems at the University. "We want everyone to feel free to come in and give suggestions or discuss problems," she said. "We are here to help." BUZZI Your 45th District Representative Political Advertisement Paid for by Citizens for Buzz Committee, Steve Matthews, Tucker 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. A. M. HUSAIN Experience EXPERIENCE Lawrence Police Dept. Douglas County Attorney's Office - Training Education K.U. with emphasis on criminology related courses Education Kansas Law Enforcement Academy Academy Bachelor State College Traffic Inst. & Seminars emphasizing an active knowledge of criminal Combat service in the Republic of South Vietnam Veteran James (Jim) Huskey Huskey ELECT JOHN HANDOCK FORD LAWRENCE, KANSAS Omega Fli Fridnight members made friends Friday night by making children at the Ballard Community Center shudder with terror and delight. JOHN HADDOCK FORD LAWRENCE, KANSAS Frat treats 40 children with party About 40 children celebrated Halloween at the center with sack races, bags of candy and a haunted house, all sponsored by the fraternity. Basketball and softball teams are being considered, he said, and the fraternity is also thinking of starting a choir and a Boy Scout troop. The Halloween party was the first of several activities planned by the fraternity for the center, Michael Bryant, Omega Psi Phi president, said. The center's basement, which served as a haunted house, featured masked men and other surprises, backed by shrieks and screams supplied by fraternity members. A Big Brother program was started three weeks ago by the fraternity, and fraternity members are planning to take their Little League team and to KU basketball players, Bryant写。 Pd. Pol. Adv. from the Huskey for Sheriff Committee Fund. James Huskey, Treas. SHERIFF—DOUGLAS CO. Compare Prices on our Tune-Ups Our regular prices are as low or lower than most service departments' special sale prices. Compare Prices 8 cylinder tune-up $34^{00}$ 6 cylinder tune-up $31^{00} 4 cylinder tune-up $28^{00} Parts & Labor Included John Haddock FORD 23rd & Alabama 843-3500 Compare Services - Service for all domestic makes - Fast courteous service - All work guaranteed - Finest equipment - Genuine Motorcraft parts - Guaranteed price - Factory trained technicians VOTE DEMOCRATIC — FOR A BETTER TOMORROW! CATHERINE H. KENNEDY Re-elect Joan FINNEY State Treasurer Re-select Michael G. GLOVER I Representative 44th District Re-ollect Sue NEUSTIFTER Register of Doeds Philip S. RHOADS Congressman 3rd District 10 State Senator 2nd District P. L. ROSENBERG Jimmy CARTER President C Walter MONDALE Vice-President Arnold BERMAN Representative 45th District PETER BURTON Carol FRANCIS "LEADERS. FOR A CHANGE" Ro-olect I.J. STONEBACK County Commissionor 3rd District CUT THIS OUT AND TAKE IT TO THE POLLS. (SAMPLE BALLOT) X FOR PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT CARTER AND MONDALE Democrat X X FOR CONGRESSMAN and DISTRICT Kansas City Democrat Philip H. Parks X FOR STATE TREASURER Joan Finney, Topeka Democrat X 1 For COUNTY TREASURER Ruth Vervynck, Lawrence Democrat FOR STATE SENATOR 2ND DISTRICT Annelou Woman Lawrence Democrat For STATE REPRESENTATIVE 44th DISTRICT MichaelG. (Mike) Glover, Lawrence For REGISTER OF DEEDS Sue Neustiffer, Eudora Democrat X For COUNTY ATTORNEY Mike Malone, Lawrence X X Democrat For STATE REPRESENTATIVE 45th DISTRICT Carol B. Francis, Lawrence Ruth VERVYNCK County Treasurer Democrat X For SHERIFF James (Jim) Huskey, Lawrence X 45th DISTRICT Carol B. Francis, Lawrence Democrat Democrat X For COUNTY COMMISSIONER 3rd DISTRICT I.J. Stoneback, Lawrence Mike MALONE County Attorney PETER RAYMOND Pamela A. C. R. BURKLEY James (Jim) HUSKEY Paid for by The Douglas County Democratic Central Committee Hal Keltz, Chairman; Verdeania Zelier, Vice-Chairman; Margaret D. Sheriff P. G. K. L. 10 Monday, November 1, 1976 4 from city vie to serve as electors BY SARAH RIDDELL Staff Writer On Jan. 4, 1977, the Kansas delegation to the electoral college will meet in the Kansas secretary of state's office and elect the next president of the United States. As many as three Lawrence residents could be in that group. Four electoral college candidates from Lawrence are on the ballot for Tuesday's election. Three support former Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy and one supports American Party candidate Thomas Anderson. Don Schrag, Pretty Prairie law student; Donna Freese, a clerk in the School of Business; and Hal Wert, doctoral candidate in history, represent the Committee for a constitutional Presidency, which supports McCarthy. THOMAS HART SRT, 2029 Naimith Dr., in director on the American Party chair for an American Kansas has seven electors who are elected on a joint ticket with their national candidate. In other words, a vote for a candidate is also a vote for a vote for Hart and six other electors. The electors then meet on the first Day of Session, January 1st, the secretary of state's office, at 6 p.m. (1200 W. 45th St.) Wert, state chairman of the McCarthy campaign, said that because the Committee recognizes political party, McCarthy had to petition in every state to be put on the ballot. Foes. Foes. Schrag were on the petition. McCarthy, which had to receive 2,500 signatures. ACCORDING TO FROESE, the Kansas petition was signed by more than 4,000 people. John Lungstum, chairman of the Johns County Republican Party, said yesterday that although no electors from each county participated in the Republican year, Lawrence Republicans did participate in the regional and state conventions that elected the party's electoral president. A recognized political party must hold conventions to elect its electors, Lungatum HAL KELTZ, chairman of the Douglas County Democratic Central Committee, said yesterday that one Lawrence resident supported a vote for Democratic party elector but lost. Keltz said the office of electron was totally honorary. He said electrons receive no pay University Daily Kansan ARNOLD BERMAN Senator for the 70's Speaks on the Issues Government was intended to be our servant, not our master—and it belongs to us. I believe we want and we need government that is once again representative of all that is decent and good in American life—fairness, compassion, progress and, above all, a responsiveness to and a concern for people. Isn't it time somebody spoke for you! Pol. Adv. Paid for by The Committee to Elect Arnold Berman, Charles N. Blitzer, Treasurer. Louise's West SPECIAL Mon.—Sat. 3:00—5:00 SCHOONERS...60¢ DRAWS...35¢ PITCHERS...*1 50 CANS & BOTTLES...50¢ Also open: 2:00 p.m.—12 midnite Mon.-Fri. 1:00—12 midnite Sat. She'll get things done. She's done it before. Nancy 44th HAMBLETON Paid for by Hambleton for State Rep., Don Mettiler and Joan Golden, Co-Chairmen Patronize Kansan advertisers. Green Plant Sale 30% off All green plants with this coupon. Offer exp. Nov. 15, '76. Alexander's Bath & Gift Shop 826 Iowa 842-1320 GRAND CANYON BACKPACKING TRIP $135^{00} Dec. 27-Jan.4 - MEALS FOR 5 DAYS - ACCOMMODATIONS DURING TRAVEL - TRANSPORTATION LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE Inquire at SUA office 864-3477 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 BRUNO BENZINA For your upcoming fall and winter social occasions... for those all important interviews ... select your suit from the Town Shop's excellent collection of CRICKETEER and CORBIN suitings. Fine clothing, reasonably priced, and (ask any of our customers) fitted. The Town Shop 839 Mass. 1000 University Daily Kansan Monday, November 1, 1976 11 Good shoes, sense provide help By NANCY TEETER Staff Writer A good pain of shoes and a dose of common sense are the best precautions for the winter weather ahead, buildings and grounds officials say. Buildings and grounds crews work to make the campus as safe as possible but expect students to "use their heads" during inclement weather, Harold Bitch, supervisor of grounds and landscaping, said last week. "A look out the window in the morning before you go out, and a consideration of the equipment you have, will help you the most," he said. Cushion-soled shoes are the best type for a good grip, Bliitch said. "IF YOU DON'T have good snow tires, then walk or take a bus," he said. After a snowy, ice storm strikes, about six men from the emergency crew go out as early as 2 a.m., Blitch said. Workers first grade the streets and sidewalks and then spread a thin layer of sand and salt over bad areas. Bilch said. The emergency grounds crew was out five or six times last year, he said, and used 15 to 20 tons of sand on the worst areas. "Our first priority is street traffic and then if the emergency is taken care of, we work on the parking lots," he said. MISSISIPIPL Sunflower and Naismish streets are the biggest problems because Bitch estimated that 22 to 24 miles of sidewalks and steps ran across on the campus. cars can't climb their hills. All the steps must be cleaned by hand using a dexter machine or a shovel, he said, and about 10 or 11 tons of sand—one large dump truck load are used each time the crews make a complete round of the campus. A minimal amount of salt is mixed in with the sand to stop freezing, he said, because too much salt would cause the deterioration or pitting of sidewalks. winter "The winter of '59 and '60—when we were tied for the record, with over 50 inches of snow—was the worst," Bilch said. "We had over 30 days of subfreezing weather. We had to cut paths through the wind rows with shovels and we all worked for six weeks straight without a day off." BUZZI Your 45th District Representative Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to an unlimited number of regard to whether or not you have permission to BIRL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HAILS. CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES One two three four five time times time times 15 words or Each additional .20 $ .25 $ .25 $ .30 $ .30 .01 .02 .01 .02 .01 Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Saturday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These adverts can be placed in person or by calling the URK business office at 864-538-2100. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall ENTERTAINMENT 864-4358 BOKONOON Parambartheralis for the connexion inside of Wednesday's Kunanai 841-360-6 841-360-6 2-bedroom, furnished. AC, close to hotel. $175. 3-bedroom, furnished. Col 842-982. Kent. rent Jan-May-2015. Five bedroom house for rent, $200 Call 5:00 P.M. 7:00 P.M. Al. AL38745 FOR RENT ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and please come to the office on (415) 376-2900, person (phone voice calls) please at WEISTER. The office is located at 284 W. 29th St. 2 bedroom furnished apartment available January 7281 bath on bus routes 2, Call 501-342-6211 HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service 2 bedroom, modular form home on rent, Call 300 798-5148 at 7:30 P.M. or 2:30 P.M. 2 bedrooms, modular form home on rent, Call 300 798-5148 at 7:30 P.M. or 2:30 P.M. Lawrence on asphalt, 1 unit Douglass Court Lawrence on asphalt, 1 unit Douglass Court 3 bedroom apt at Quailcreek avail for interior occupancy between this sublease contract, Call Stephanie between between 9:30 & 6:00 and 8:43 - after 6:00. Last minute opening in 2 bedrooms on ppm. On last minute opening in bedroom available. Available. Call eva. 832-370. Man A BOY'S CREATIVE FRAMING AT CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE • DRAMMOUNTING • METAL FRAMES • BARN BOARD FRAMING Cross Reference Bookstore 642 3538 Main Shopping Center --for the lowest prices on top quality steel equipment for the LTV call. Resilient at 841-5488 or 10-843-1647. Imported car service problems? 500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444 TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN SEE... FOR SALE STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or a good product from your local store, the most benefit of the GRAMPOHION SHOP at KIEFS. CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Minature sculpture. Mermals. Uniforms. earrings, stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3883. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. BEL AUTOLITER, BEL AUTOLITER, BEL AUTOLITER, ELECTRIC, 832-9690, 3900, W, 60H (www.belautoliter.com) Excellent selection of new and used furniture, tools, appliances, and hardware to trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704 S. Cumberland St., Atlanta, GA 30316. Wärmeisolierung Weitere Informationen www.weiss-wärme-isolierung.de Watermark Electronically Printed Watermark Notifications Non-ion on Sale! Make Mature Electronically Printed Mature Electronically Printed 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation 3) for exam preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available at now at Town Clarendon. If Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerator, dishwasher, microwave, oven, etc. 1639 Eddy St., Toronto,魁北克省 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Fri- day only. Call 416-287-0800. 40%-7% off on warm-up suits, dresses, man's clothing. 80%-10% off at Club Swim. Club SW. Club Swim. CL (west) 829-760-7500. CL (east) 829-760-7500. 4-ET Diamond Spoke Mags. 13XK Universal Flat, 4 will礼键 $25. Phone: 841-6641. 11-2 Mustang-7. Excellent condition. AIR, Al-FM. air-shock must kit. $1500. Call 841-7290 or e-mail: mustang7@hotmail.com JVC Turntable, Semi-automatic, with ADC-VLC mask, new apples, 18 months of meticulous testing. Plat-73 - 72 good condition; very economical new Must sell. Must $1250. Call 812-419 or 11-2 11-2 Siks 125mm Heas IPRP Pro w/ Mirae Bundle Siks 125mm HPW w/ Salmon 55% w/ 112-2 83-0266 83-0266 UNLIEABLE VALUES SAVINGS. New 1925 HONDA*: CB 125 Reg. 725.00 Sale Price. MT 125 Reg. 725.00 Price.458.00 CB 220 Reg. 925.00 Reg. 725.00 Price.458.00 At Horizon, Burlington 843-3333 11-2 our house used bike specs like the Honda CB150R 479.00 the Honda CB150R 479.00 the Honda CB150R 1095.00 the Honda CB150R 1095.00 the Honda CB150R 1095.00 the Honda CB150R 300 1895.00 the Honda CB150R 300 1895.00 the Honda CB175 375.00 the Honda CB175 375.00 See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th. 843- 3333 11.2 173 Vega station wagon. Runs well. 28 nug hield highway, $100 or best offer. 841-217-765 86 Javeline automatic: low mileage -51,000 $15.00 or best offer. Phone 824-5488 after 5 $11.30 Must sell 1971 WV Super Beetle Like new, 55.000 miles. Call 842-8459 weekdays at 4:30. 11-1 71 VW Super BW, AM-FM, radials, 46,000 miles 843-7294 11-2 Pontiac Cathedral 1965 4-dr auto, AC. Power charger, cheap, must买. 11-3 4991 Glih or 842-8124. 11-3 Two white Latin Percussion cengs. Excellent. 11-3 two old $30. Call Rick, 842-6317. 11-3 --- wagon wheel 10 a.m. — 12 p.m. Everyday Is Ladies' Day. has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 VISIONS "Talking about a nice lesson? Don't know what I am talking about." We are too much. We have good news for you. NAMI NAISMITH HALL Now accepting Applications for Spring Semester Call 843-8559 or stop by our office. We have State of the Art Sound Systems at the state fair and we are specialists in the trade. RSA AUDIO, 120. Super Sound systems for $500. Better quality. Super Bass for RAY AUDIO, 8th Hour. Hear the difference. 11-44 A lot of Hype is not right. RAY AUDIO Sound systems are out of sight. 13 e. 8 TEC. 11-4 Excellent condition—used 3 month, Marshal 100 10% response. Slight wear on back. SBO spokesman A real kicker Call. 841-3500, 114- 6277. Ovation Custom Balladeer guitar with case, 2 old, excellent condition $753, 11:44 $738 1974 Honda Civic, excellent condition. New tires. P.M. - 360,600 miles. Call 842-5634, after P.M. Kennedy Electric Stove and Norge Frost-free refrigerator. Mail 842-6516-61. 11-4 Banjo~superb-kuppel Mastertoone, must see hail: 841+4422 11-5 One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Rose Keyboard. Professional sound systems, drum machines, drums, speech processors, Wavetable synthesizers, keyboard, 1420 W. 23rd, 843-3007. 15-11 snow tires, G-6015, studded with wheels for Chevrolet. 811-4422 11-3 1971 Triumph GT6, red, radials; Men's 3-speed Scott amplifier, 20 watts per channel. GB 45.0-48.5. SUBARU 71 450ps, AC AM, band 8 and 7-track 44,000 miles 1$200 or best offer *Call* 841-1236 *Fax* 841-1236 One of the largest selects of music instruments in the area at Rose Keyboard. Professional sound systems, guitars, amples, drums, special flute parts, bass instruments, keyboard equipment. 1420 W. W2rd. 834-897. 11-1 Beautiful well-designed stereo system that is only $225. The sound will wince you. RAY AUDIO® $225. HELP WANTED Our receive does what Yamaha does—at almost the same time. Come prove it to yourself. I like AUDSO, 10:35. Complete stereo system: Pioneer PL-71-run, Sony STR-7652, receives 65 perm. at wireless, two 36-R Cinematica Vega speakers. Receiver 9 speakers. $895.00, $895.00, 11-5 10 p.m. Excellent condition. Allison: I will she turn me on. On her upper end I have a $250, RAY AUDIO $3. Eh. $10. I have have her for $281. RAY AUDIO $3. Eh. $10. Now taking applications for part-time cocktail waiters (catering, dishwashing) only at Carriage House is a bit of an adventure. Apply online at www.carriagehouse.com. OVERSEAS BASE JOBES - summer/join/friend, Europe, USA, UK, Australia, India, Thailand, Singapore. Dept. International Research. International Depth Research. International Deep-Sea Research. International Deep-Sea Research. Delivery—must have own cat $3 approx. In- clining a $15 lunch fee at Heavy Eight W. 107 w. below the W. The Association of Systematic Collections—a national organization, a full-time Administrative Assistant, and a member of the professional federations, management of a diverse publications collection, management of a diverse publication supervision of resultant projects. Salary range is $49,000-$75,000. Sandys Drive-in is now taking applications for the show. Apply in person at xp. 528 West 9th. 11-3 Applicants will be evaluated on the basis of experience, knowledge of computer application skills, and level of education, relevance of previous work experience, two references, and willingness to accept. Part time girl grilled person for evening and week- day lunch in person WIth -1537 W. 6th. 1-12 p.m. in person WIth -1537 W. 6th. Interested persons should send a resume to Daily Journal World Application deadline in New York on Friday, March 29. The Association of Systematics Collections is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. 4. Machine shop service 5. Two stores NAPA 2. Open 7 days and nights For the Do-It-Yourselfer we 3. We have it or can get it overnight 817 Vermont 2300 Haskell 843-9365 843-6960 N.A.P.A. overnight 4. Machine shop service Auto Parts 1. Special Prices 2. Open 7 days and night offer: 1. Special Prices Required qualifications: ability to communicate knowledge of and experience with large systems knowledge of information technology. Bachelor level degree with coursework in comp lent experience. Bachelor level experiential lance experience in applicable areas will be con- firmed upon request. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER- ANCE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY NON EQUAL OPPORTUNITY ALL HACES ENCOURAGED TO APPLY SYSTEMS TESTING ASSISTANT-PRODUCTION SERVICE'S. Responsibilities include software qualification, acting as technical advisor to Production Group. Work with production teams for Production Services with special projects/administration. Resume to John K. Shtte, University of Kansas at Kansas City, KS, on or before November 20, 1976. Kansas 60455, on or before November 20, 1976. Job opening for Research Assistant 30% time, part-time. Req. Master's degree and assisting in research. Social science background required. Job location: McKenzie, Degs of Human Development, 111 South Broadway, New York, NY 10024 or 3 to an 8am Air Guantanamo Employment Qualification. Apply at www.mckenzie.edu/ LOST AND FOUND Lost: $5 REFER for return for ring lost on 13th row of Tennessee and Missouri. 848-8213. 11-1 Lost; black billfold—KU bus pass, ID and Hankle Lost; 842-6454 11-1 Lost-Pocket sized brown leather Bible. Lost- Pocket size on cover of the cover. John 18:32 + 844-384-2379 Found: long-hair white cat. One year old, hazel eyes; clear yellow flame on the back. 3rd and 1st in a row. Tail with black tips. Found: white male long-haired cat, 13th and Kentucky, Oct. 23. Call 843-704-744. 11-1 Found: tennets ricket on foldhouse courts. Call and identify: 864-3015 during day, 843-141 at dusk. Found Silver ink pen with initials, corner of name on back cover. Continental Education Bible. Desk's Office: 844-720-9150. Found: small st. Bernard puppy wearing red collard. Found on campus Call Kathy. 813-775-202 Lost; Military Dependents ID. Need urgency? If found call Richard Underwood, #853-845. Reuse Found: cat. small Siamese-like, last Friday near 10 and Kentucky. 842-469 after 5. 11-1 SET of ks set, leather key bearer Inscription: KEY you re happy. I’m happy sentience. VALUE 11-1 MISSION 11-1 Found: Loot a watch around 16k & Rhode Isle? Call? 814-3138 or 864-4300 for Keywave Found: watch found in Robinson Weight Room tuesday night. Oct 17, 6:30 AM-8:30 PM. 1127 Found: Found on campus a brown and white puppy with a pink caller 861-4281 or 843-2749. Found: woman's watch on West Hills; Parkway, Thurs., 10-28. Call 842-7281. 11-3 Found: black dor. affectionate, 40 lbs, 13" short, white spat on cloak; white shirt, ATH. BLACK dor. affectionate, 50 lbs, 12" short. Last, best braver leather kneegear with 5 h-boys on back. Kneegear with 6 h-boys. Phone call name: Phil Callen (412) 845-4009 (daily) or 845-3179 if not calling. Lost: small silver watch, turquise inlay. Oct. 28 between 5th and 14th; Enwrose and Wenrose. Reward: $300. MISCELLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Udike/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday to Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. NOTICE CASSAHIA CAFE- Good food from scratch. Lunch includes salad, mashed potatoes, cheese, Mascara, Mass. Appliances include backyard equipments. Call (855) 204-7311. YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL FESTIVAL 15 East 8th 844-2646 10:5 Monday Saturday GRAN SPORT Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tent 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Vote you on November 2 for the Proposition to fund service programs for the elderly. 11-2 Saturday's Steak House Delicious food at reasonable prices. Bunny's Sunday 12:39, Weekdays 4:11, Closed Tuesdays 10:30, Wednesdays 6:30. Redeemer Lutheran Church, 30th and Haskell, Boston, MA. We provide morning worship services at 9:00 a.m. and Bible study at 10:15 a.m. We have an active college gym located on the west side of our campus. Needed: Contact Church Office, 842-838-11-12 Toddler center has openings for children 12-30 months, your child will have fun and learn in a warm living atmosphere located in Meadowston, a warm breeze-filled location between 12:00 & 2:00 P.M. 12-12 DK SKILLET says we're not the newest LSQORI they've heard before. Have I seen Trio and Iris? Oh, yes. We have. Drop me in. PERSONAL A few openings in Men's & Women's Scholarship Halls for spring occupancy. Call 864-3552 or stop by 228 Strong Swap Shop. 625 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, dishware, telephones. office daily 10-8. 983-7377 Gay Counseling Service; call 842-7505 6-12 p.m. for Referrals. GAY SERVICES OF KANKSAS UNNINGHING ANNUAL BOOTH OF THE Union. Annual election of the Gay Legislature, March 31. Have you had problems getting to sleep at night for the past year? We are looking for people to participate in an Inmomnia treatment program at the Tampa Bay Medical Center, Don Hutchings, 841-355-0267, evenings. 11-2 --- Hear a Christian musical—"The Apoite" 8 p.m. Nov. 7. First Presbyterian Church. 11-15 Commission on the Status of Women: Women in Nepal - 7.2 p.m., 7.30 p.m. Division Council - Room 11-2 Unidentified Person Former Mayor and City Commissioner wants to support Bertie Hamilton. Pay for by KU College Republi- can. Don't be sorry on Wednesday, Vote for Nancy Reno or Ron Demether & Joan Golden. Actually, it might be "Don Demether & Joan Golden." Let's look at the word "Demether" again. It's "Demether". Okay, I'm ready to write. Dont be sorry on Wednesday, Vote for Nancy Reno or Ron Demether & Joan Golden. Actually, it might be "Don Demether & Joan Golden." Wanted: any attractive young ladies (18 yrs, or younger) who are interested in playing golf or tennis; for a chance to win $2500 in Playboy's Plagio Golf Content. No BS. Any interested golfer can attend this event. Call 641-2341 and ask for Duke. Keep talking. 11-4 Need help, a referral, or just someone to talk to! Head CALL QARTERERS. 814-2345. We never close Notice. Enroll now! in Laverne Drive School (Highway Park) or Laverne Drive, drive new, pay later. Highway Park last; drive new, pay later. SERVICES OFFERED Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 006, 009, 012, 015, 017, 023, 024, 026, 028, 368, 368, 627, 646. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Call Rachel. Call 842-7681. Eyeglasser Optical Eyepocket Optical PRINTED OFFICIAL LICENSE FOR EYE PROTECTION SUPPORT FOR OCTOBER 2013 DISTINGUISH EYEWARE 304 W. 58TH ST. WASHINGTON, DC 20007 HILLCREST BILLIARDS STUDY BREAK - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong - Pin-Ball * Air Hockey * Egg-Ball The Chalk Hawk COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER 1—6 p.m. Schooners — $65* Pitchers — $1.25 THE HAWK 1340 Ohio 9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted 9th and Iowa TYPING ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on the computer, 1128 S. James Ave., N. 306 H. Los Angeles, california 90025. JAMES DAVIS NO. 306 H. Los Angeles, california 90025. 683-7612 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, mike. Expert in word processing, spelling, apology. 843-595-6343, Mr. Wright. Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a new bike. We can customize any bike, include bike and adjust your dents, entire bike, bi-hulble and chain, true bike and your bikes, and chain, true bike and your bikes, accommodates at times up to $1250. U-shaped tires are available WANTED THISIS BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you are Massachusetts or phone 843-269-7818 thank you. Need an experienced typset? IBM Selectric II mounts with a laserjet tape carbon film (hbml). Call Pam at 845-723-0111. Tytipt editor, IBM Picaite; Quality work in brief; dissertations welcome welcome. 842-913-8721 The Lounge Need roommate to share apartment with two other girls. Ow room, 755, $17 usl. 841-466. Foreign student wishes to live with American family. Please call 1-800-423-7900 for interested contact. Call All Pinarchini-842-1800. 11-2 Female roommate needed: $26.50 per month plus $14.00 for 2nd roommate, 2nd room bus room, and 1st roommate. Bid by 8/31. Bid #: 841-799-1480 Resume needed for very nicely furnished apartment with large windows. 875.50 per month and salary. Will call in for a full-time position. 1. rosemary (male or female) to share beautiful- ly, cut in half. 2. rays south of town on a lawn 4 acres. 3. kitchen and laundry, plenty of storage space and plus 1.7 amenities. Call Mike Aitken 843-307-360. Person to babysit in our home Non-smoker. Your transportation. Hours approx. 11:45-4:15 on weekdays. Birthday. Birthday for USD 49. No holidays. Should have 2 hour study time daily. Call 842-6816 after 4:30. 2 studious females needed to share furnishings. 11-12 students required included: Call Both, Bath 841-7455, 11-12 Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." - Bud on Tap RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP - Pool FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS, 209 W Bith 842 8413 BankAmericard Mastercharge P DO'S DELUXE BOIL'N'MASS LAWFRIEND JAMES PHL-274 中 Turner Chevrolet 843-7700 For new Chevrolet and used cars at Keep your car healthy in the summer. Use the student discounts at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 Keep your car healthy Order Now For Christmas MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE Order Now For Christmas Many at Special Discounts ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center Phone: 843-6424 Smiley Face 12 Monday, November 1, 1976 University Daily Kansan 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: Nissan Motor Corporation 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 "TOWN HALL" 2 p.m. Monday, November 1, HOCH AUDITORIUM AN EXPERIMENT IN INDUSTRY-CAMPUS COMMUNICATIONS, SPONSORED JOINTLY BY GENERAL MOTORS AND K.U. OPEN TO EVERYONE. Sunny Day THE UNIVERSITY DAILY PLEASANT KANSAN Vol.87 No.51 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Vote today Parents plan open school for next fall By DAYNA HEIDRICK M. R. BARRA Staff Writer Lawrence 5 and 6-year-olds will have an alternative to public school when a private, "open concept" elementary school begins classes next fall. Michael Bryant, Lawrence graduate student who will coordinate the school, said yesterday that the school wouldn't be a free, or unstructured, school, although it would give the student more freedom and responsibility than public schools. Although parents and educators establishing the school haven't yet found a building for the school, they do have an office at 1101 $^\circ$ Massachusetts St. and this week are beginning cooperative catalog order sales to help lower tuition. MANY TEACHERS IN the Lawrence school district already employ the methods proposed for the new school, Bryant said, but a student and his parents have no choice about which type of instruction the student receives. As a result, he said, the student may have an open structured classroom one and a highly structured classroom the next. Bryant said the parents and educators starting the new school believed that six or seven years of consistent open education would build qualities in children that generally weren't developed by more structured education. PARENTS OF CHILDREN in the new school will pay tuition and also will be required to participate in school meetings. Parents will also choose either to work in a classroom or the school, which earns a profit on merchandise ordered by customers, or pay higher tuition. Tuition hasn't been established. The new school won't be Lawrence's first alternative school. "The third time's the charm," said Marsha Paludan, one of the parents helping with the school, referring to two earlier students to establish an alternative school in Lawrence. Paludan worked with both the Lorient School, started in the fall of 1970, and an alternative school program presented to the Lawrence School District in 1974-75. PALUDAN SAID she believed the school would succeed this time because people with educational experience as well as people with business knowledge were inled The success of other cooperative ventures in Lawrence is also a reason for encouragement, Paladan said. She mentioned the University of Kentucky's support for 35 years; a food cooperative, Community Mercantile; the Community Mercantile credit union; and arts and crafts cooperative, Kaw Valley Craft Exchange; as examples of successful cooperatives. Karl Edwards, professor of curriculum and instruction and a member of the Educational Policy Steering Committee for education throughout the country were successful. Followup studies of students who have attended open schools indicate that students adjust well to other situations and succeed in school. The same is said, even though they prefer open schools. THE IDEA THAT a student is more See SCHOOL page.bra STOP Ara Terminaffans, Tehran, Persian seniator, takes his mount Tee Jay through its early morning workout. Terminaffans rides as part of a horseman's class at the University of Chicago. No stopping Tee Jau Staff photo by JAY KOELZBR White House race closes with final appeal to voters By WALTER MEARS AP Special Correspondent President Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter last night delivered the final, familiar words of a close contest for the White House. Ford went home to Grand Rapids, Mich., and said in an emotional campaign finale that his motto as President is simple: "What can we do to help you?" Carter said the nation needs a president "who is not part of the establishment," and counseled voters against discouragement that might keep them from the poll today. "The promises I've made have been very cautious, and I'm going to keep them," Carter said in an election eve television broadcast. IN DESTROY, suburban Livonia and then in Grand Rapids, Ford sought the votes to guard his home territory against Carter, the governor. The vote was the last-minute survey of voter omition. "I am a part of this great state," Ford said. "I know you will support me as you do." Democrats sought to turn to their advantage the episode in which Carter's Plains, Ga., Baptist Church canceled Sunday services after a black minister tried to gain church membership and join worshippers there. Carter told a Sacramento, Calif., conference that he disagreed with the church deacons who called off the service. He said he would work to eliminate such vestiges of discrimination, but wouldn't resign from the church. "I CAN'T RESIGN from the human race because there's discrimination." he said. "I can't resign from America because there's not a church because there's discrimination." Black leaders campaigning with Carter, among them Mrs. Corsett Scott King and C. Delores Tucker, the Pennsylvania governor, who Carter and praised his civil rights record. Ford's supporters sent a telegram to some 375 to 400 black clergymen and field staff at the United States Congress, the episode, saying if the Democratic nominee can't influence his own church "can we expect him to influence the issues of the United States Congress?" THE TELEGRAM was signed "President Ford Committee. Washington, D.C." Three national public opinion polls reported Carter and Ford in a razor-face President Ford gets early lead ★ ★ ★ DRIVILE NOTCH, N.H. (AP)—The first voters in today's election gave President Gerald Ford a 13 to 11 lead here over Jimmy Carter. Disville Notch, incorporated in 1660 but so it could stage the early-arb vote and immediately release the results, has 18 Democrats. Republicans and eight Democrats. A survey by Burns Roper issued a year ago. The candidate the leader of a four-point margin. George Gallup reported a one-point Ford lead. Harris released a poll yesterday that gave Carter 46 per cent, Ford 45 per cent and others 3 per cent with 6 per cent still undecided. An NBC poll announced yesterday called a dead heat at 41 per cent each with McCain. FORD CONCLUDED his long campaign in a voice husky with emotion, recalling in Grand Rapids that during 25 years as congressman "we said what can we do to help you—and that is the way I want to be your President." Both Carter and Fold appeared on each of the three major television networks in 30 minutes. The Ford program included a brief statement boasting of an America strong and on the move, claiming economic progress and promising more to come. THE PRESIDENT said once again that he would recommend a personal income tax cut, through an increase from $750 to $1,000 in the personal exemption. The Carter broadcast was a tape already shown in three major states. It shows Carter in the study of his home in Plains, Nebraska, where he spent much of the economy, defense and other issues. With the poll close and the race tight in key electoral vote states, today's turnout was a major question—the higher it is, the better for Carter. Organized labor was hard at work, particularly in the cities, scouting voters in the state to vote in a drive to get them to the polls. There are an estimated 150 million voting age Americans. In the last presidential election, the turnout was 55 per cent, and the proportion of the percentage probably will be lower this time. Collection flaws slow KANS-A-N payments As they choose a president, voters also will elect 33 senators, the 438 members of the House, and 14 governors. Continued discussion of both House and Senate is a sure thing. By SARAH RIDDELL Staff Writer Flaims in the system of collecting bills for the KANS-A-N telephone service have delayed payment of August and September 2015. The University of Kansas controller, said Friday. Foul-ups at Topeka, where initial billing is made, and a delay by University departments in confirming their bills have repeatedly slowed the process, McCoy said. The KANS-A-N service is a long distance telephone network for state offices. It was built in 1960. "Topeka is our first problem," McCoy said. "They have tried to upgrade their computer system while billing us and several delays have resulted." FOR INSTANCE, he said, the computer pee for the April bill wouldn't fit KU's specifications. An official of the voucher and audit division of the KU comproller's office, who asked not to be identified, said bills were arriving at KU more regularly now than when the system was begun. He said that the August bill arrived from Topека Oct. 15. The bill was received by the Office. The office expects to receive the October bill Nov. 15, the designated billing date. Laurence Kunkel, director of state telecommunications, said the telecommunications department, which sends the bills to KU, had also been having problems HE SAID THAT his department received a monthly bill from Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. The department then has to divide the bill among state agencies. That bill normally doesn't come until the eighth or ninth working day of the month. "it takes so much time to run the billing through our computers that we wait until the weekend to run it," Kumkel said. "The weekend was run three times before it was set off." Kunkel said he thought that, if there were no mistakes in the billing that Southwestern Bell sent his office, bills could be sent out by the 16th of the month. MCOU SAID things had been slow at MCOU end, too. Bills must be divided among the University's departments from a single billing list received from Topeka. The bills are sent to the departments, where they are returned back to the KU voucher and audit division. The July bill was entirely collected by Nov. 1. According to McCoy, the university has requested that departments return their bills in five days. A problem arises, he said, when students think they have been billed incorrectly. "TOPEKA HAS given us no procedure for calls that a department refuses to accept," he said. "We make a note of a protest but we don't want it, so I tell the department will be charged." McCoy said that the billing system hadn't been explained well when the KANN-A-N-S system was installed. "We sent out notices of a meeting and nobody came at first. When they finally came, nobody could thoroughly explain the billing system." he said. McCoy said he had received many complaints from departments that must keep records of all KANS-A-N calls. He said his office has been busy with business practice to keep such records. "I WISH PEOPLE at the University would look past the immediate problems and see what a savings it would make, and that that's going to be with us for some time in the future." Energy cuts planned for upcoming winter By NANCY TEETER Although the University of Kansas doesn't face an immediate threat of energy cutoffs, as it did one year ago, University officials believe that the university's measures will be carried out this winter. The University has had a program of energy conservation for the past year and a half, Max Lucas, University director of facilities planning, said last week. KU naved more than $4,500 last winter using energy conservation procedures, he had. Departments within the University submitted energy conservation programs to Lucas' Energy Study Task Force more than a year ago, be said Lucas said the same types of conservation measures will be used again this winter. Campus thermostats will be set at 68 degrees, as they were last winter, he said, down from the 70 to 72 degree settings two years ago. THE PROGRAMS included guidelines for turning out lights, wearing heavier clothes and other safety equipment. "The lower temperatures aren't, that much of a problem with people now," he said. "Most people at the University are not going to be able to energy and will continue to be in the future." Although more lights are used in the winter months, people will be encouraged to be more conservative about the way they use lights in offices and classrooms, he said. that windows posed the worst energy conservation problem. "An open cabin can take out a lot of heat," he said. "We encourage students to turn down their heating units first and then open windows if they are still hot." An energy monitor roams each of the large residence halls, usually from midnight to 2 a.m. His job is to search for excess lighting and open windows and doors A STEAK DINNER is awarded to each hall that can cut its gas and electricity consumption by 5 per cent under its consumption for the same period the year J. J. WILSON, director of housing, said "The monitors have done a good job of cutting consumption." Wilson said. The mild winters of the past two years have helped halls with the steak dinner, he said. "One year, a Corbin RA (resident assistant) turned on plenty of heat in a few rooms over break and baked records and plants residents had collected there," he During Thanksgiving and Christmas breaks the temperature will be reduced to about 60 degrees in the halls. Residents will be asked to turn their thermostats down before they leave and turn off lights and heating fans, he said. "We ended up paying several hundred dollars for those molded records and plants by taking responsibility for the RA's action." See ENERGY page seven Graffiti nuts create artistic, humorous mess By MARSHA WOOLERY Staff Writer "What makes you think I would stoop to writing graffiti?" Graffiti such as this, scribbled on desks, walls and tables, keep KU maintenance crews busy, aside from their other duties, Odell Wiley, supervisor of building maintenance, said last week. One year the bathrooms in Bailey Hall had to be painted four times because of the great amount of graffiti written on them. The rest of the room had to be painted at all the last two years. However, the amount of time required to clean up the writing on the wall fluctuates from year to year with the amount of graffiti that students write, he said. In the removed chair arms they have found razor and knife blades that students left behind with their raffiti. Going from building to building and room to room, the crew first tries to remove graffiti by scrubbing and then repainting. In cleaning up chairs, Wiley said, the crew replaces the arms instead of the seat because it takes less time and money. "Progress is but a word used to shield us from the terror of the future." Mimeoaranhed sheets in Watson stacks GRAPHITE HERE "I'm lost. Leave name and address and we will mail directions." To help curb the desecration of the elevator walls in the stacks of Watson Library, the circulation staff began putting up graffiti sheets a few years ago. Nancy Lynott, circulation orbarian, said the sheets had been effective except when they got too full. Then the overflow of students' thoughts goes back on the wall. An elevator in the west stack was painted three weeks ago, Lynott said, but before a graffiti sheet could be put up on the walls, students had written on the walls. Lynott has kept and read the graffiti sheets for the past two years but has been continually disappointed in the students' creativity, often not surpassing their use of vulgarity. "This is a great place to be perverted." Maynard Shelly, professor of psychology, said graffiti were "the major public creative expression." His former students found in graffit studies that most student writings at KU were unhotel comments about sex and marijuana. Because of the presidential election this year, more graffiti have been written about politics and religion, "Ford is America's net rock." Shelly said, usually in an attempt at humor. "It's a primary form of humor," said Shelly, "and yet it don't know anybody who has a really good explanation of humor, so it's not surprising that no one has a good explanation of graffiti, either." He said that graffiti provided a way of expressing and learning things that couldn't be expressed in any other way. He said that graffiti involve more, even he, said. "In the sense that they combine incongruous things, they are an art form, because all art is in one way or another and different things together." Shely said. "We need more campus revolts." "Why? Campus is revolting enough." Graffiti are man's oldest form of written communication. The bond and tool makers, the Aurignacians of the paleolithic age, were the first men to make such drawings. As lava from Mt. Vesuvius preserved Pompeii from 79 A.D., it also preserved the graffiti within this Roman city, "Sodoma, Gomora," was one of the wall writings found there and also this political comment: "The Philosopher Amaneaus Seneca is the only Roman writer to condemn the barbarism of the Greeks." "What can I write here that no one else has written, except that I, as only my husband, will write it?" You have my deepest sympathies." 2 Tuesday, November 2, 1976 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press Britain wants informal talks GENEVA-Britain has called on black and white Rhodesian leaders to meet nowadays to discuss a target date for black majority rule and legal independence. British diplomat Ivor Richard, chairman of the five-day-old Rhodesian settlement conference, is being pressed by each of the four black nationalist leaders to set a 1977 target date. This would be earlier than the two-year target to which he had asked in 1963 during U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's African shuttle in September. 'Turn in auns' drive fails BOSTON — a statewide "domestic disarmament race," a chance for people to surrender their guns with no questions asked, has produced a single rusty revolver As police department waited for guns that never came, promoters of the turn-in law admitted that gun owners probably wouldn't give up their weapons unless force. A survey of 22 police departments showed the drive being ignored virtually everywhere. The event was meant to publicize a statewide referendum on today's ballot that could call for a bate on handgun ownership by anyone except police and museum patrons. Ticket selling to be same Student season basketball tickets will be sold later this month by the same process as last year, but changes from this year's will be made before next fall. Doug Messer, assistant athletic director for business affairs, said yesterday that student basketball tickets will be sold Nov. 17-19 for $15. He said students could buy their ticket on any one of those three days—or afterwards until the first home game—by bringing their money and a validated KU-ID to Allen Fildt Messer said the price increase from last year's $10 ticket was caused by the Student Senate's decision not to subsidize tickets with funds from the student activity fee. He said the option card system used this year for purchase of student season football tickets had been "on an experimental basis with the year.bok and class officers to see whether it would be convenient for us and convenient for the students." Students were given an optional fee card at enrollment this year to be used for paying class dues, buying a yearbook or buying a football ticket. From page one School . . . motivated to learn when he has a greater share in his education and helps to deter- in the new school isn't new, Edwards is smart. Edwards said that the new school wasn't just a traditional institution and that a child who could take initiative to learn and didn't need constant supervision could benefit most from the environment in the new school. "We make no claim that it's best for all beds," Edwards said. "But if there are no beds, you can sleep." We Write All Risks Automobile Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. "For simplicity from our standpoint and for the students, I don't think we'll take that The option card system resulted in lines that meant up of more than two hours. GM explains industry Four General Motors Corp. executives explained GM and the future of the automobile industry in response to student demand at the Town Hall Mall meeting in Hoch Aaddorf, Germany. The meeting, part of an experiment in industry-campus communications sponsored by the University of Kansas and GM yesterday and last Friday, was an open discussion between the audience and four GM executives, all KU alumni. Some of the 50 students present criticized GM for not building an economical small firm. However, George Dodd, assistant head of the computer science department at the GM Research Laboratories, said that GM's new small car, Chevette, was the most fuel-efficient of any American-made car. The Chevette gets 36 miles a gallon, Dodd said. Robert Eaton, chief engineer of GM's 1979 model car program, said GM was studying the potential for a hybrid. Nancy 44th HAMBLETON She'll get things done. She's done it before. - first woman Mayor of Lawrence * first woman City Commissioner * Trustee of Kansas Council on Economic Education Paid for by KU College Republicans 1 2 3 You'll be this go- fort. (2) (3) able in 6 VASQUE HIKER you'll be glad you've got a boot Vasque the mountain book 7th Arkansas One block east of Stables **this good!** 1. **PADDED COLLAR & ANKLE for comfort.** 2. **TONGUE clung for protection.** 3. **FULL LEGS.** 4. **GOOD YOUNG WELT with strong stretching.** 5. **VIBRAM.** 6. **LUG SOLE AND HEEL for support and traction.** 7. **FOLLY LEATHER for comfort.** This medium weight backpackboot is designed for rugged terrain with backpacks of 25 pounds or more. For a professional fitting, stop in and see. SPORT You Can Find Your Future in the Legal Profession if you are seeking a career opportunity — WSJ offers several ways in which you can enter the legal profession. Full-Time Students: Can earn J.D. Degree and be eligible to take the California State Bar Examination in 2 or 3 years. Part-Time Students: Can graduate in 3 or 4 years of study with the same degree as a full-time student by attending a average of 3 months of school. The courses will fit many needs — classes are offered days, evenings and weekends. Western State University College of Law has a Whole Person Admissions Policy – applicants are screened for academic background, personal aptitude, general experience, maturity and motivation. Applications are now being accepted for Spring Semester from men and women with two or more years of college credits. Pre-admission counseling is available. To apply, visit www.wsj.edu/admissions or contact our two counselors. Western State University College of Law 193. 1111 N. State College Bldd. Fullerton, CA 92631 phone (714) 933-7600 1333 Front Street San Diego. CA 92101 phone (714) 232-6506 electric-powered car and the development of a mass transit system. Name The electric-powered车 on display at the GM exhibition in Learned Hull yesterdays. C IT WAY O SPRING SECRET! = COUSSE'S STAT YARNANN! Although the cost of professional education continues to spiral, the school will have a new curriculum. Western State University College of Law Fully accredited by the State Bank of California and by the University of Michigan, this student loan program students eligible for Federal Insured Student Loans The GM executives said they would evaluate the communications project, which also included classroom visits and a luncheon at the Kansas Union, to help develop similar projects at other universities. 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 Comments from KU officials and students will be a part of the evaluation, David Andersen, public relations staff member for GM, said. William Inge Memorial Theatre presents "EVERYONE IS SOMEBODY'S MOTHER." (SOMETIME) Oct. 28—Nov. 6, 1976 8:00 p.m. Tickets 864-3982 Green Plant Sale 30% off All green plants with this coupon. Offer exp. Nov. 15, '76. Alexander's Bath & Gift Shop 826 Iowa 842-1320 Coors Beer Pitchers $1.00 Mass. St. Deli New Yorker Exp. Nov. 30' '76 Present Coupon SUA FILMS CLASSICAL SERIES THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE (1946) WHERE, with Lana Turner, John Garfield Wed., Nov. 3, 7:30, 75c FILM SOCIETY WIND FROM THE EAST (1970) Dir. Jean-Luc Godard, with Anna Wazemsky. Thurs., Nov. 4, 7:30, 9:30, 75c POPULAR FILMS FAREWELL, MY LOVELY (1975) Dir. Dick Richards, with Robert Mitchum, Charlotte Ramping Fri. Nov. 5, 7:00 and 9:30 Sat. Nov. 6, 3:30, 9:1 All films shown in Woodruff Auditorium VOTE INDEPENDENT VOTE EUGENE McCARTHY Chairman of the Board Independent Candidate for Pros. 1976 Come to the McCarthy Election Watch at THE HAWK'S NEST Tues., Nov. 2, 8:00 p.m. For members all the beer you can drink $1.00 For non-members all the beer you can drink $1.50 Paid for by students for McCarthy—76 The Brewery 714 Mass. presents Wednesday Night 9 'til 12 50c Cover Charge ON TAP Coming Friday & Saturday Destiny We're moving to a NEW location AT THE CORNER OF 8th AND NEW HAMPSHIRE 1 Nov. '76 THE 8th Street MARKET PLACE 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. ARMADILLO BEAD CO. 841-7946 WARREN OATES KEN NORTON' PAM GRIER vv. 7/15 | x. 80 | sq. 5am, Sat. 10am Hillcrest "MAGGIDO! LIT THE PULSE! 'DRUM' IS 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 CUCKOOS NEST Evenings at 7:15 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. Matinee 1:50 Hillcrest Anything can happen ... and probably will at the "CAR WASH" PG with GEORGE CARLIN PG with GEORGE CARLIN Eve. 7:30;9:30 Sat.Sun. at 2:30 Granada They were the girls of our dreams ... "THE POM-POM GIRLS" Eve. at 7:20 & 9:15 Sat.,Sun. at 2:30 If you liked him as Henry II, you'll love him as the Earl of Gurney. Varsity Telephone ... 212-345-8000 -a tour deforce by Peter O'Toole that makes some kind of movie history -Rex Reed PETER OTOO ARTHUR LOWE ALASTAIR SIM THE RULING CLASS Now Showing Evenings at 7:15 & 9:45 at the Hillcrest E G Tuesday. November 2.1976 University Daily Kansan ation Writers, the ROS NEST VECTURE OR PRESS VECTOR OPENPLAY R NEST 2012 University RUSSIA BERS, the POSS NEST ATURE OR PRESS VECTOR ENPLAY NEST NO.2 USITY city POLICE DEPT. RESPONDING TO CIVIL INFECTION 2018 On Campus Events TODAY: THE UNIVERSITY SENATE HUMAN RELATIONS COMMITTEE will meet at noon in Alcove B of the Union. TONIGHT: THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 6:30 in Danforth Chapel. TUA SIGMA will offer a class on ballet at 7 in 220 Robinson. The KU SADDLE CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Union's Oread Hall, and at 8:30 in the Primate des Rapes Hautes Etudes in Paris, will speak on "The Origin of Literary Genres" at 8 in the Union's Wooldorf Auditorium. UNIVERSITY SINGERS, KU's freshman dance group, will meet at 8 in Murphy's Swarthout Reall Hall. TOMORROW: KU SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS will have a luncheon meeting at 11:45 a.m. in the Union's Hall of Science, in the professor of philosophy, University of New York at Stony Brook, is the speaker at the Undergraduate Philosophy Club's meeting at 1:30 p.m. in the Union's International Room. The HALLMARK LECTURE SERIES will be at 2 p.m. in the Union's Hall of Science, in the COLLEGE QUIZ HOWL, will be at 7 p.m. in the Union's International, Forum and Regionalist Rooms. The COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. The School of Social Welfare's search committee has narrowed its list to six candidates for dean of the school, Arthur Katz, intrudem dean, said yesterday. Dean search cut to 6 The committee will have interviewed all candidates by Nov. 13 and will then submit its three recommendations to Ron Pendlebury, vice chancellor for academic affairs. Calgair is responsible for selecting the door from the three candidates that said they had seen who knew what. a week to a month after the search committee made its recommendations. One of the six candidates is a KU faculty member. Katz said that being a KU faculty member wouldn't necessarily be an advantage or disadvantage to the candidate. However, he said, the KU faculty member would have the advantage of having developed relationships within the school. Katz has been acting dean since 1978 when Theodore Erstad left KU to teach at San Diego State University. Union snack bar nears finish Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, said yesterday that a snack bar being constructed in Parlor A, next to the Union Ballroom, should be finished by Thursday. Burge said the snack bar would be available for use during dances in the ballroom and while movies were being shown in Wooldorf Auditorium. 'We have a big weekend coming up with Burge said picture windows being installed in place of the center stairway in the building. the Iowa State home football game on Saturday followed by the Higher Education Banquet," he said. "We would like to be able to use the snack bar then." He said the Trail Room, next to the back Nest, would be remodeled during Christmas. BUZZI Your 45th District Representative Political Advertisement Paid for by, Cilitans for Buzz, Steve Matthews, Treasurer Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th OPEN FACE BEEF SANDWICHES $1.75 Reg. $2.10 Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made dressing, mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Offer expires Nov. 30. 76 Present coupon. M. MOHAMED ABDULRAZIZ 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. Education *Experience Lawrence County Dept. Douglas County Attorney's Office *Education K.U. with emphasis on criminology related courses *Training Kansas Law Enforcement Wauburn State College Traffic Inst. & Seminars emphasizing an active knowledge of criminal hacking - Veteran Combat service in the Republic of South Vietnam ELECT James (Jim) Huskey (Jim) SHERIFF—DOUGLAS CO. Pd: Pol. Adv. from the Huskey for Sheriff Committee Fund. James Huskey, Treas FALL BOOK SALE TODAY THRU NOVEMBER 13 OREAD BOOKSHOP READ BOOK SHOP IN THE UNION OREAD BOOK SHOP IN THE UNION MON.-FRI. 8:30-5:00 SATURDAYS 10:00-1:00 Panhellenic Association Announces: Registration for Spring Membership Program 1977 Thursday, November 4 Big 8 Room-Kansas Union, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. In order to participate you need 14 hours from the current semester and a minimum G.P.A. of 2.20-or-12 hours from current semester and a minimum G.P.A. of 2.50 For more Information contact Panhellenic Association 220 Strong 864-3552 Higher Education Week A BOTTLE TREE The University of Kansas Wednesday, November 3 Wednesday, November 3 7:00 pm "Forum on Higher Education," with five 1976 HOPE Award finalists. Kansas Room, Union Friday, November 5 12:00 to 1:00 pm Open discussion between KU administrators and students. Cottonwood, Meadowlark Rooms, Union. Monday through Friday, November 1 - 5 7:00 pm "Jayhawk College Quiz Bowl," contest between KU living groups. Elimination contests nightly; final rounds Friday. Kansas Union. Saturday, November 6 Saturday 1:30 pm KU - Iowa State football game. Presentation of HOPE Award and Higher Education Service Award at halftime. Reception for award winners following the game. Kansas Room, Union. Sunday, November 7 6:30 pm Higher Education Week Banquet. Featured Speaker, Dr.W. Clarke Wescoe Presentation of the Higher Education Leadership Prize. Kansas Union Ballroom. The Student Senate is funded by Student Activity Fees. - Tuesday, November 2, 1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. Political roulette Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford finished neck-and-neck in the presidential sweepstakes. The great race, marred by fouls and strategic blunders by both men, is finally over. Now it's time to decide the winner. Polling places from Seattle to Miami Beach have opened their doors already this morning to let the American voters work their collective will—one by one. How the voters will have arrived at their decision is hard to tell. Some will blindly vote a straight party slate, casting their ballot for one man or another simply because he's the top banana in the party. OTHERS WILL be more objective. Having watched the candidates on the evening news dozens of times, they will have reached an intuitive or "gut" decision as to which man is best. These are the voters who will say they are "scared" of Carter or are "bothered" by Ford's clumsiness or intellectual abilities. Former President Obama the impatient. The last time these voters were really satisfied was when John Kennedy was elected—except for those charmed by Richard Nixon. Then there are the voters who actually study the issues and how the candidates stand on them. This year there's been a lot of talk about how the candidates have avoided the issues or taken unclear positions. Carter especially has had trouble with this accusation, but by rights he shouldn't hurt his chances. Taking definite stands damaged the chances of many men who have aspired to the presidency. Look what happened to George McGovern. THIS ISN'T a new aspect of presidential elections. In 1924, political observer Elmer Davis said that the voters seemed to like candidates who avoided controversy. "At least they vote for men who say nothing and against men who say something," he said. "To do otherwise would mean the devoting of thought and effort to politics, and few voters and to politics, is useless, mixed with boos and hisses, is about all that the average voter is able or willing to contribute to public life." However John or Jane Q. Public makes up his or her mind, one thing remains certain. The roulette wheel of public opinion and caprice will stop somewhere, and it will be either on Ford's lucky number or behind and around and around it goes. It stops not even the pollsters know. Night will soon fall and the polls will close. Thousands of people normally uninterested in, or "turned off" by, politics will gather around television sets in homes, bars and local party headquarters to watch the returns. THE "ELECTION control" centers of the big networks will try to make some sense out of the tallies that trickle in early, and then massive banks of inscrutable computers will tell us who won before he wins. There will be tears of joy in the winner's circle and tears of grief in the loser's. There'll be "aplause mingled with kisses" and then everyone will go to bed. Tomorrow, life will proceed as normal. America will have a president. Contributing Writer We need Houdini encore Americans love a showman, a challenge, a thrill. The idea of death fascinates them, and one who courts death can almost always hold their at- Alas, there are few humans today who are true showmen—who have charisma, who make great boasts and have the talent to back them up. ROCK STARS and comedians are about the only people besides sports figures who perform live for audiences. At times they excite, but few really control a crowd. Even when they do, it is all rather predictable. I had often thought about this, but it never really hit home until this past weekend. Saturday, I saw an Evel Kneel motorcycle jump. Granted, the boy was having a good time his jumping ramp. But his show is so commercialized that there is no mystery. The crowd didn't celebrate his triumph when he successfully jumped. Rather, they were disappointed that they hadn't achieved their goal all was all rather cheap and demeaning. My thoughts about showmen were again rouled Sunday when I realized that Halloween 1976 was the 50th anniversary of their death, Daoudi, the extraordinary医师. Houdini was an incredible man, a legend in his own time. It may be unfair to compare modern showmen with him. The death of vaudville and many nightclubs has changed entertainment. Today a great showman don't have the same opportunities or the same chances to develop and refine an act. Greg Hack Contributing Writer made his escapes possible, and other untrue stories circulated. Many people thought that Houdini, manacled, was dropped through a hole in an ice river. Unable to find the hole, the ice bolted into his body and "bubble" in the ice until he could escape his bonds and finally find the hole in the ice. Houdini did make several successful escapes from manacles after being pulled out by rivers. But the ice story wasn't true. BUT EVEN stripping away the false stories, or even less, showmen who have been hisignant in every way. It is true that Houdini made elephants disappear and swallowed needles and a cotton ball and pulled the needles back out—threaded. He ran into only one jail he couldn't escape from. He was the master of all others. Whenever he appeared in a town, his first move was to challenge the local authorities to let him escape from their jail. Houdini would be stripped naked, searched and locked in a cell. He would always escape. (He was not the one who knew was his match.) Sometimes he switched the other prisoners around. Some of the country's most dangerous criminals didn't know where they were, so they opened their cells and said, "Follow me." HOUDINI worked hard to master every handcuff and lock made. He would take any challenge and win. Others would say they beat Houdini, but they lied. Houdini would show him, and illustrate him. Houdin offered great sums, usually 1,000 pounds, to anyone who could duplicate his escapes. No one was his match. When mitigators of his handcuff escapes grew too numerous, Houdini sent his brother to their shows, armed with cuffs from which only Houdini could escape. But when handcuff escape acts became the rage, so much so that Houdini couldn't stop them all, he moved to bigger and better trikes. He had run through and could tie up city traffic by performing the escape suspended from a flapole. THE HEIN dreamed up the grandest escape of all. He was placed upside-down in a water-filled glass cage, his ankles locked into the cage's roof. "Failure means a watery death," his posters proclaimed. But Boulund was a great personality, besides being the world's greatest, most innovative trickster. He became interested in early aviation, bought an airplane and took a flying lesson, and became the first human to make an extended air flight Down Under. When movies became big, Houdini jumped in. He made a serial and a few feature-length movies, which always featured scary and impossible escaping impossible torture traps. HE COLLECTED magician's lore as one no one ever had, gathering the tricks, notes and advertisements of countless greats. Most important of all, he attacked spiritualists who hurt other people and exploited their *disease* to communicate with dead loved ones. Houdini again took on all challengers and never lost. Such an attack is hard to imagine. And Houdini received much of the credit. SCIENTIFIC American magazine and Houldin offered a total of $15,000 to anyone who could demonstrate psychic ability under test conditions. No one collected. Houdini's tragic death from peritonitis robbed the world of a great magician, showman, personality and servant. I am glad many aspects of the early 20th century are gone, but I wish more of the excitement, romance, wonder and showmanship that Houdini personified were still around. Fan says KSU bad name a fact To the Editor: I have lived in Kansas only about a year now and I attended my first Big Eight football game. My sister-in-law goes to K-State so she was able to obtain tickets when all supplies in Lawrence were cut off. She sat in a mixed section and I must say the people we met in WESTPHAL ELECTORAL COLLEGE Section A were not really what I had expected even though I had heard rumors that the contrary, schools sat in Section A, discussing plays and other subjects in general but mostly 'OH, YOU'LL GET USED TO IT... HAPPENS EVERY FOUR YEARS. I had been informed that people from K-State were crude, vicious, immature and at times hostile. Well, what I heard turned out to be true later. After the game we were walking back to our car when someone in a purple shirt held the head and relieved me of my KU cap. A few seconds later my spouses' hat was ripped from her hand and we were threatened with a sound thrashing because we went to KU. We saw a small boy, probably the son of a man and we threatened with more than five or six years old, knocked to the ground when his cap was stolen. There were also several older alumni who were relieved of their hats. We were informed by other friends at K-State that it was a common practice for students to bat hats, jackets and other property from other school's fans and band members whether they win or lose. students remember it only takes a handful of people to give all of us the same bad name K-State has. Henry L. Johns Lawrence freshman Although I think the hats and other property should be returned or paid for, the loss of many hats is nearly as much as the fact that other K-State students condone the thieves while the police and security people at the games turn their heads, and while a banker is watching townfolks live up to the bad reputation K-State has. Maybe at 22 we ourgrown this sort of childish behavior and expect too much of others when I speak of good sportsmanship or of uncalled-for behavior doesn't start at KU and that my fellow Accidental support To the Editor: Proceeding on the assumption that the ideology of Jimmy Carter is closer to that of Eugene McCarthy than that of Gerald Ford and that, therefore, the McCarthy and saccharine wishwashiness that has characterized Ford. I mean, really, what is the difference between Coca-Cola and Pepsi? Their main ingredient is sugar, which is bad for people. The difference between Ford and Caterrion does not amount to a choice. Bipartisan politics gives the illusion to voters that there really are easy answers. One may have the impression that a party affiliation will really tell you what a candidate stands Readers Respond Carter vote support bases are in a direct numerical relationship. I hope everyone, on the brink of action, realizes that a vote for Eugene McCarthy is, in reality, a vote for Ford. Tom Krische Lawrence junior Up with McCarthy To the Editor: To the so-called McCarthy supporters who ran the ad in Wednesday's Kansan and to others, he said, in Freedom and Democracy: If I had any inclination to vote for Jimmy Carter in moments of fear brought about by the election, I certainly cancelled by the effect of the ad "Paid for and authorized by the 1976 Democratic Presidential Committee Committee Inc." A vote for Carter is like casting a pebble into the splash will not be the same difference. A vote for Carter is a vote for more of the same for. The idea of bipartisan politics makes for feelings of comfort. But then, I have been told, so does lobotomy. These problems are not lobotomies. There are grave and pressing problems in the world as you all know. The time of the thoughtlessly cast vote is gone—let our answers come out inside the old framework. Both parties have been involved in slander against one another. If they are both pointing out real truth, and each candidate is ready to be trusted, let's scrap them both. McCarthy, running as an independent, is offering you a choice this year. You haven't read his name in the so-called "polls" because the media doesn't support him. But he is running and he does have support. He is not a part of binary fascism. Are you? Stale social programs mar family life By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN (c) 1976 King Features Syndicate Jimmy Carter may be the first presidential candidate to make The Family a recurring campaign theme. Until now, touring politicians have paid the Family occasional and ritual reference and then moved on to talk about peace-through-strength. NOW WE have a Democrat campaigning on the promise to facilitate this very thing and a demand that we take action about the issue because for Ford to confront it he would have to talk about what the Democrats are doing to family life. Mr. Ford and top advisers as Mr. What St. Jimmy the Tempted has in mind when he brings up the topic isn't very clear. Is family a code word for more money for the police, or for corporal punishment in the schools, or what? Perhaps the allusions to strengthening law enforcement only cater to pollsters picking up this concern as they try to determine what is on the mind of the great collectivity. the people and by the people. He doesn't have the media on his side. He doesn't have a lot of money. Vote for him and show respect. But there is still hope for a same humanity alive in Lawrence. Carter's answer to that question has been the day-care center. It's hard to imagine a more efficacious way to destroy what is left of our little families than to arrange the economic halfway decent standard of living? What will be left of even the dehydrated nuclear family if both adults must work? system so that it is impossible for even one parent to take care of infant children. It has been "the sadest and most painful parts of the Communist system in Russia and China was forcing parents to hand over their children to oppress institutional care of the state." IF THATS the case, it's too bad, because there is a long, deep and genuine concern about our family life and its future. First, there is the question of the so-called nuclear family (mother, father, 1.8 kiddiploos, 0.35 puppy dog and 0.2 puddy dog) whose family earn money family earn enough money so that the whole group can have a THERE'LL ALWAYS BE AN ENGLAND. Daniel Bentley 916 Tennessee Not everyone is suited for reporting, and it is not the grave responsibility of a contributing writer to appear to endorse a set of candidates for sweeping action when there will be no opportunity for discussion and rebutal of her remarks. NEITHER Ford nor Carter has indicated that objectionable behavior can arise from social or economic causes. The one exception sometimes made is low-income blacks or other minorities whose criminal members are excused on en- It is proposed to treat women alcoholics individually. If that is so successful as the treatment, it is important that stock in a liquor company. TELEVISION watchers the last few weeks may have noticed the arrival of the woman alcoholic. All of a sudden we are being told that it is shocking and unforgivable that almost all alcoholic women and therapists, are aimed at men. Estimates of how many women alcoholics there may be are flung about the airwaves. Last year it was battered wives; the year before it was battered babies. You never know how young problems are or how much they are the invention of job-starved professionals in search of a disease to cure. I am referring to the article by Mary A Daugherty in the Friday, Oct. 29 Kansan in which she glosses over "election philosophies" and declares that "Although all candidates are deserving of a second chance choices are..." The writer had apparently not been privy to the information that all the candidates have strenued around Lawrence and the ad space of the Kansan. Her methods of selection were "...he has shown a knowledge of the community he represents and of the mechanics of the legislature in which he wants to work," (does this mean that Mr. Berman has not?); and "he is willing to stick his neck out for a variety of groups, whether their concerns are liberal, conservative or moderate." Simon have more or less told us that we will not see inflation go under 6 per cent, three times the rate of the '80s and '90s. Our two major presidential candidates are committed to the standard programmatic approaches, the medical examination and phlebotomy. There will be no public discussion of the possibility that it may be enough to drive someone to drink—a revealing phrase—if the someone is a member of the man holds down two jobs and the woman holds down one. vivor mental grounds. The destructive, degenerate or dangerous behavior of everybody else is the product of either moral weakness or medical disability. Alcoholism is a disease. How many times you are looking at someone looking at the history of alcoholism among Indians, for example, it is always noted that spirits were introduced, and their use encouraged, by white men who did it for money. Alcoholism is not a disease in the sense that cirrhosis of the liver is, and alcoholism makes a political statement, even though they usually don't know it. On Nov. 2 you can vote for Ford and give your confidence to a man who was hand-picked by a traitor to the best ideals of America. His vice president's right-hand man in the last campaign. Or you can vote for Carter, who very well may be "all things to all people," including Mayoral Day. (Who else can turn favors for the support they have given smiling Jimmy?) Not of same suit To the Editor: Why must Ms. Dughery exciguate simplistic excuses? To address all her "reasons" would be painful; it will suffice to forgive Glew is really willing to stick his neck out for a variety of groups when his effectiveness rate in the Kansas House is so low? Ms. Dughery also says that American Party candidate Hillary Clinton's ambitions. "Compared with whom? Mrs. Hambleton's service of service to Lawrence was ignored by the writer. But please register a protest vote against these two images created by skid PR and media staff. But they are running against the skid lie, for If all editorial opinions are as accurately drawn as this she should say with everyone she is suited for public office," and my statement might also be true—not everyone is suited for journalism. Laura Trausch Overland Park sophomore THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 18, 2015. Subscriptions: $25.00 June and July except Saturday and Sunday. 66444. Subscriptions by mail are $12.00 or $14.99 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Editor Debbie Gumi Managing Editor Edward Editor Ward School Edwards Editor Campus Editor Stewart Brann Associate Campus Editor Stewart Brann Associate Campus Editor Short Baldwyn Chuck Alexander Phole Editor George Miller Staff Photographers Gene Lewis Sports Editor Steve Schendell Associate Sports Editor Brett Eden Sports Editor Brian Gaye Entertainment Alex Cowan Entertainment Editor Business Manager Terry Hanson *Consultant Business Manager* Carole Rockenholder *Advertiser* Jim Clemente *Advertising Manager* Jim Clemente *Classified Manager* Sarah McAulay *AntiTrust Consultant Manager* Sarah McAulay *AntiTrust Consultant Manager* Timothy O'Bray Tuesday, November 2, 1976 5 personality, thest most in-come an- cmee in Australia un-wn Under. Houdini and a few h always escaping a's lore as the tricks, countless attacked people and communicate again took lost. Such today, and credit. gazine and $15,000 to te psychic ons. No one peritonis magician, victim. I am early 20th more of the under and personified people. He died on his a lot of and show States that or a sane Lawrence. The bentley tennessee c u it sutured for the grave contributing for a set the for tunity for tunity for of her suit the article *in* the art in which *election* *lares* that are the writer *never privacy* all at all the own around space of methods of knowledge represents cs of the we wants to in that Mr. ; and cs tock for ck out for their either their real, con-*lare*. No abnormal reactions to swine flu shots given Thursday at Watkins Memorial Hospital were reported in the first 48 hours of the study. Dr. Daniels, director of health services, said yesterday, Dugherty excuses? "reasons" will suffice Who cares a variety of effectiveness house is so also says candidate ineton's rec- lection was r. KUAC seeking business officer as are as ins as this is right- suited for and my be true- suited for sophomore About 350 people were inoculated at Watkins Thursday as part of Douglas County's public swine flu immunization program. The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC) is looking for a new assistant athletic director for business affairs, or a business manager, to complete a series of administrative changes. The changes began in August when Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director for operations, became director of the Williams College athletic scholarship fund-rising agency. Clyde Walker, athletic director, said yesterday that he would like Doug Messner, the current business manager, to take over Waugh's former position as operations director. There is no specific timetable for the change, Walker said, which will be made according to the availability of qualified candidates for business manager. University Daily Kansan Messer said that about 40 people had applied for the job, and that it might be as Don Fambridge, who had been director of special projects since stepping down as head football coach in 1974, became the manager of the Williams Fund earlier this year. late as January before a new business manager was hired. None ail after shots The previous director and assistant director of the Williams Fund, John Novotny and Gale Sayers, have taken over the administration department at Southern Illinois University. Wollmann said that new batches of swine flu vaccine would be made available during November and that other distribution clinics would be scheduled. --presents Fool's Gold Presents MIKE FINNIGAN One Night Only Thurs., Nov. 4 at 8:30 p.m. Tickets $5 at Kief's Better Day's McKinney-Mason Off the Wall Hall RE-ELECT REX D. JOHNSON REPUBLICAN SHERIFF DOUGLAS COUNTY BENEZO GUARDIAN X Present Sheriff of Douglas County Experienced in law enforcement X Outstanding record as Sheriff Lifelong resident of Douglas County Married with 4 children Lifelong resident of L Married with 4 children Your vote and continued support will be greatly appreciated. (Pol. Adv.) Pd. by Citizens for Johnson, Frank Case and Joe Kelly, Co-Chairmen TUESDAY NITE PIZZA BUFF BUFFET All the Salad & Pizza A Pizza Lover Can Eat For Only $2.20 Pizza inn. Share a pizza today... Next to Hillcrest Theatres Hillcrest Shopping Center TUESDAY Pizza inn. Share a pizza today... Pizza inn. Share a pizza today... Next to Hillcrest Theatres Hillcrest Shopping Center TUESDAY SUA "KID DYNAMITE" JIMMY WALKER Star of "Good Times" (The image is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a black-and-white portrait of a smiling man wearing a sweater with a collared shirt underneath.) SATURDAY, NOV. 13 Tickets $4 General admission 8 p.m. Union Ballroom Question & Answer Session after Show The perfect gift for the one you love. A perfect keepsake diamond says it all, reflecting your love in its brilliance and beauty. And you can choose with confidence because the Keepsake guarantee assures perfect clarity, fine white color and precise modern cut. There is no finer diamond ring 1970s ACCENT JEUNESSE TIPTON MASTERPIECE WEDFORD Keepsake How to Plan Your Engagement and Wedding Everything about planning your engagement and wedding in a beautiful 20 page booklet. Also valuable information about diamond quality and selling. Gifts for complete 44 page Bride's Keepsake Book and giant full color poster. All for 254 Address City State Zip Keepesake Diamond Rings, Box 90, Syracuse, New York 13201 Find Keepesake jewelry in yellow pages or on free 800-243-100 in Conn. 800-882-6500 Kroger KU SUPER COPYRIGHT 1975 WE HAVE WHAT WE ADVOCATE if all possible conditions to control beyond our control, we run our business on a reasonable basis. We compare compatible brand or a similar saving or give you a BANK CHECK for the advertised special at the bank. WE GUARANTEE WHAT WE Sell. If you are ever disappointed by a Krause purchase, we will replace your item or service. SUPER SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT Effective Oct. Nov. 2-7 FREE 8 - 16 oz. Bottles 7-Up With the purchase of 8-16 oz. Bottles of R.C. or Diet 7-Up at regular price plus deposit FREE Kroge 3 oz. Drink Aid With the purchase of one at regular price New for You! Peanut Butter Machine Grind your own peanut butter from our fresh roasted peanuts. Only at Kroger Peo FREE Kroger Rye Bread With the purchase of one at regular price FREE Sta Krisp 10 oz. Corn Chips With the purchase of one at regular price --- Tuesday, November 2, 1976 University Daily Kansan Women defeat Emporia State Ball control in the second half gave the University of Kansas field hockey team a victory over Emporia Kansas State College yesterday and earned the Jayhawks a bersh in the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Region 6 tournament. KU and Emporia State battle to a 2 tie, but the 'Hawks won the game on penetration time (time spent within the opponent's 25 yardline). KU's penetration time was 7:30, and Emporia State's was 5:45. Alexis Wagner scored both KU goals. Alexis Wagner scored both KU goals. KU coach Diana Beebe said that the Jaywahs played the ball in the second half and the team forcing Emporia State to make mistakes. KU's next game will be against St. Louis University Saturday in Busch Stadium in St. Louis. The regional tournament will be Nov. 28 at Saratow High School in Kansas City, Mo. Intramural rankings The four division winners in intramural football competition are on top in the final weekly rankings compiled by the Intramural Officials Association. The rankings, released yesterday, show the two Hill Champions, the Mad Dog Midgets and Delta Gamma, atop the Independent Men and Sorority divisions. The final rankings: Pino Delta Theta, which lost the men's Hill Championship to the Mudgeta Sunday 20-14, 20-12, and 20-11 in doubleheader games. Fraternity 1 Phi Dale Theta 2 Phi Dale Tau Delta 3 Alpha Tau Omega 4 Beta Tau Independent Men 1 Ming Minets 2 Green Machine 3 Gwen Machine Sorcery 1) Delta Gamma 2) Kappa Alpha Theta 3) Pi Beta Phi 4) Alpha PM Independent Women 1) Joes 2) Lewis 3) Oliverettes 4) Sellard Sweathongs We need certain college majors to become Air Force lieutenants. Mechanical and civil engineering majors aerospace and aeronautical engineering majors social science science, mathematics majors The Air Force is looking for young men and women with academic thus such as these. If you're majoring in Air Force, you may be eligible for either the two-year or the four-year Air Force school. Help with the college bills, two, three, and four year scholarships are available. These scholarships pay tuition, textbooks, lab fees, and $100 fee-dollar fees a month. The Air Force ROTC training center offers commission, an excellent training salary, challenging work (with some of the finest equipment in the world), promotions, response to customer education and much more. Find out today about an Air Force ROTC scholarship, it's a great way to leave your country and to pay for your college education. Sphomores interested in the two year program should contact Capt. John E. Macace, Science Military Bldg, Room 180, or 644-7447 during call. Air Force ROTC-Gateway to a Great Way of Life TWO SIZZLER STEAK DINNERS FOR ONLY $5.29 Includes Dinner Salad, choice of Potato or French Fries, Sizzler Toast, Coffee or Regular Soft Drink --in practice tomorrow (today) we'll have to start looking or people to take their Two Sizzler Steak Dinners — $5.29 Offer good with this coupon TUES., NOV. 2 — FRI., NOV. 5 Sizzler Family Steak House BIZZLER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE. Steak House 1518 West 23rd St. Miller on tap --in practice tomorrow (today) we'll have to start looking or people to take their Jimmy Spheris Jimmy Is returning to Lawrence after a sellout performance in Kansas City for a concert in Hoch Auditorium. Friday, 8:00 p.m., Nov. 12 Tickets are: $5.00 in advance General Admission $6.00 day of Show Presented by SUA Although none of the injuries are believed to be serious, KU has nine starters out. They are: halfback Laverne Smith, wide receiver Walt Little, center Mike Wellman, tight end Jim Michaela, cornerback Leroy Irwin, defensive end Steve Jones, linebacker Terry Besson and defensive tackles Mike Butter and Franklin King. A disgruntled Bud Moore said, "It's hard to say who I'll be able to play this Saturday. We probably have only 14 people on the injury list right now. If they can't get back The Kansas Jayhawks are still feeling the effects of the Nebraska Cornhoppers. So much so, in fact, that many players were forced to miss yesterday's practice. Injuries slow Jayhawks When asked what phases he was referring to, he responded lersely. "Just about every" Moore, who had his team practice long into the daylight savings timeless dark hours, said that they were working on a few of the new equipment and defense, but he declined to explain. "It's vital that we have a good week of practice," he said. "Of course it is every week, but we've been going backwards in a bad way." He added that getting corrected before another game." TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1976 After the Polls close — 9-12 p.m. DONKEYS IN A MILK JAR $1.00 PITCHER'S AT... Pizza inn --- AIRPLANE 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 MASS. STREET DELI.in 1941 MASSACHUSETTS The Reuben $1.50 Reg. $2.00 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. Present Coupon Offer Expires Nov. 30, '76 "The original thick crust from New York" Pizza $1.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA Present Coupon Offer Exp. Nov. 30, '76 COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN presents WOMEN IN POLITICS Place a Kansas want ad. Call 864-4358 "Women's reign in the smoke-filled rooms. A discussion about political involvement headed by women active in politics. Nov. 2, 7:30 p.m. Council Room Student Union Business Meeting 6:30 p.m. Partially funded by Student Senate Activities Fees "Women's reian in the smoke-filled rooms." WOMEN IN POLITICS BUZZI LISTENS AND SPEAKS FOR YOU! *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 of Kansas* "147 MAINSTREET RESPONSIVE SERVICE FOR KU AND DOUGLAS COUNTY IN THE KANSAS LEGISLATURE Your 45th District Representative ITALIAN FILM Makers DREAMS IN REALITY Paid for by Citizens for Buzz Committee, Charles and Sue Britton, Chairpersons DEXTERiTY Candy B. M.O.C. Big Move on Campus, and everywhere else, is back to nature. Dexter leads the way with natural leathers and genuine plantation crepe soles. A real blast of fresh air and fashion known as DEXTERiTY. DEXTER Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen SKI THE ROCKIES A. M. BERGER Ski Trips for Every Budget Fly or Drive Information on Accommodations in All Ski Areas No Extra Charge for Reservations Sunflower Travel Service 703 Massachusetts Open Daily 9.5 842-4000 Saturday 10 2 Tuesday, November 2.1971 7 Street improvement to be authorized City commissioners will meet briefly to authorize $750,000 in street and public improvement money and to discuss a material expansion from Packer Plastics. The money will pay most for improving Lawrence street, Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said yesterday. He said the money would affect northwest Lawrence street and would also pay for improvements around Heatherwood and Mark I Meadows. Commissioners will also consider a proposed ordinance that would let the city buy real estate and construct buildings to lease to Packer Plastics, now located near Iowa Street north of the turnpike. Tonight's discussion is the first reading of the oration, followed by a step necessary before issuing Packer $625,000 in industrial revenue bonds. Dave Schwartzburg, a Pecker spokesman, said yesterday that Packer wanted to expand its warehouse capacity by 10 percent. The expansion would be finished by March, he said. Wildgen said the commissioners' light agenda was due to the elections. One of the three children attending the Little Indian Center in Lawrence who contracted meningitis sometime before Oct. 1, 2005, was a member of Mr. Mercy's Hospital in Kansas City, Mo. Meningitis victim still in hospital The other two children were treated and released from Lawrence. Memorial The three children contracted haemophilus influenza, a childhood disease that occasionally causes severe infections, one of which is meningitis. in Lawrence last week after Haskell health officials notified the center of the three cases of haemophilus influenza. Ward is doing research on the infection and used the Indian Center and the University of Kansas Hillsboro Child Care Center as control groups. Joel Ward, a physician from the National Center for Disease Control in Atlanta, was Ward took throat culture surveys of the children in the two day care centers and is using the information for his research of the infection. A culture survey determines what bacetates are growing in the area of the body being tested. The Kansas Union must also face energy conservation problems. Energy... "We've always been energy conscious, but increased costs have renewed our vigilance," Frank Burge, director of the Union, said. From page one STUDY BREAK 1-6 p.m. Schooners - 65c Pitchers - $1.25 THE HAWK HE SAID signs were posted in the office to remind that lights be turned off on arrival, be closed and be cleaned. "Lights, fans and heating in a room like Woodruff Auditorium can cost several dollars for the time a movie is playing," he said. 1340 Ohio BUZZI Your 45th District Representative. Political Advertisement Paid for by Citizens for Buzi Committee, Steve Matthews, Trekker W REMINDER: WINTER PARK COLORADO BRING YOUR BOARDS SEMESTER BREAK SKI TRIP The KU Backgammon Club meets every day. at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room inansas The Oread Room to play 7:00 on play in the tournament 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 ims KANSAN WANT ADS Cost: $135, Jan. 9-Jan. 15, 1977 5th Day of skiing Ski lessons at special rates Sign up now in the SUA office. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to students enrolled in the regio or national institution or national institution BIRM ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL Watch the want ads in the Kansan. CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 Each additional 01 02 03 04 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 Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. Applicants can be placed in person or simply calling the UDE business office at 864-1538. wagon wheel 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. Everyday Is Ladies' Day 864-4358 ENTERTAINMENT FLYING BOKONO Paraphernula for the connexion 架 in wednesday's Kansan 181- 841-360. 12-10 4-FT Diamond Spoke Mag, 13x8 Inch FIll, 4 wheels 7125, Phone # 641-3911, 11-2 3- BOKONON Paraphernula for the commissure new shipment of bongs and pipes 12 East 8th September 2023 FOR RENT Join Opta-Cap Flying Club. Lawrence airport friendly for one sale, Member Call Bureau at 612-743-5800. 2 bedrooms, formal home on 40 acres. Shag lawsuits against the county landowner. Lawsuites on appraisal. I mule lease Bounty County. 2-bedroom, furnished, AC, close to campus, $175/month, plus util. Call 642-8063. Heat回炉 NAISMITH HALL Now accepting Applications for Spring Semester Call 843-8559 or stop by our office. Five bedroom house for rent, $200. Call 5:00 P.M. 7:00 P.M. M.A. 843-7815. 11-2 3 bisonfort pti a. Quietwarck vell, for jumminess biorg 2 bedroom furnished apartment available January family, on land; bus routes 1 and Call 614-790- 8563. Female roommate, wanted immediately and for next to meet her, should share apartment with own baby. 18-18-18 Last minute opening in 2 bedroom apt on Peninsula near 23rd. One unfurnished bedroom. Two rooms. STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any price you see on popular hillel equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-produce products, the GAMPIOMONO SHOP at KIFES® if the GAMPIOMONO SHOP at KIFES® FOR SALE For rent, apartment close to Union Park, unpaid. One bdrm. Call 853-8879-Avail or (853) 241-0516. CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermals. Uniforms, etc. Wood cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3832. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties. BATTLE ELECTRIC, 8400-8390, 9000 W, 60 hp, ELECTRIC, 8400-8390, 9000 W, 60 hp. Excelent selection of new and used furniture trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704 S. 38th St., New York, NY 10026. Western Civilization Note—New on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sense out of Western Civilization! 1. For class preparation 2. For class preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available not online. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available not online. 40%-75% on warm-up suits, dresses, man's shorts and ankle boots, waders on rafters (2) or Club. Chub: 83-75-7600. For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call Vince Barr at 814-584-86 or 814-8647. Mustang-T, 162. Excellent condition. AIR, AlFM. air shocks must, $150. Mileage: 641-7129, or 12-12-12. JVC Turntable, Semi-autoamplifier with ADC-VLM cartridge, new design. 18 months of meticulous maintenance. Priced at $499. Flat-73. Good condition, very economical, newocks. Must sell. $1350. $600 + 423-8128 or 812-8155 Skis. 13cm Heas HRP Proc w Margin Blinding, Sks. 13cm Heas HRP Proc w Margin Blinding, Pmatsras w Sablon 55% w 12% w 12% w 12%. UNIBLEABLE SAWINGS. SAVING $175, 187 HONDA's: CB 125 Reg. 725.0g. Sale Price. 486.0g. MT 125. Reg. 825.0g. Price 458.0g. CB 200. Reg. 953.0g. CB 850.0g. At Horizon Ridge. 10th. 11-2. 843.33333. 843.33333. Check out these used bike specials; **special** 1975 Honda FT1730 415.00 1975 Honda CTR-225 185.00 1975 Honda CA700 195.00 1975 Kawasaki 900 185.00 1975 Kawasaki 900 185.00 1975 Honda CL75 275.00 1975 Honda CL75 275.00 See them at Horizon's Honda, 1811 W. 6th. 843- 3333 1973 Vega station wagon. Run well. 28 mpg highway, $1,500 or best offer. 811-2176. 11-mg @ 84% Juvenile automatic; low mileage>-51,000. $450 highway, $900 or best offer. 811-2176. Mollecane Grand Junior in excellent condition, $25 or offer. 23 inch frame. Hurst Jubilee design, tubes and tubes weight 29 lb., $431-922 or after 11-3 71 VW Super Beetle, AM-FM, radials. 46,000 849,724 11-2 Pontiac Catalina 1965 4-dr auto, AC power, cashier card, cheap, must sell. 821-991 491 Cil. or 842-8124. Two white Latin Perugian concourse. Excellent. 16 months old. $200 Call Rick. 842-8317. 15-3 Thinking about a nice news? Don't know what to do with it. Well, maybe I should just bake it! We'd have good news for you. RAV's mother is back home from vacation. Must Sell: 1964 Chevrolet, Reasonable. Snow tires. Very reliable. Body good. $45-$80. Req. electric car. A lot of Hype is not right. RAY AUDIO Sound Systems are out of sight. 18 E. T 11-4 We have State of the Art Sound Systems at the MCMC School of Music and its specialists. the trade, RAY AUDIO. 130 E. 57th St., New York, NY 10024. 1974 Honda Civic, excellent condition New tires and less than 30,000 miles. Kit: 842-5454; after 5 years. Super Sound System for $500. Better quality system—RAY-AUDIO, 13H.耳 hear the bass. Mattresses • Liners Heaters • Frames Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets FELDS COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS WATERBEDS 712Mass.St. Ovation Custom Balladeer guitar with case, two years old, excellent condition $75 Call 1-800-239-4200 Kenmore Electric Stove and Norge Freefront refrigerator. Refrigerator 842-6816. 13-4 Excellent condition - used 3 months. Marshall 100 Riverbank 250. Watercraft 200. Bike 400. AROREBROOK A roaker. A real kicker. B41-8549-3601. Banjo~super-bill Gibson Mastertone, must see hear. 841-4422 11-3 SBUAR 71, 4-speed, AC, AM radio and 8-track, $4,000 units $125 or best offer Call 841-1298- 6565 Snow tire, G-601X, studded with wheels for Chevrolet 811-4422 11-3 1917 Triumph GT6, red; radials: Men's 3-speed bike. Scott amplifier, 30 watts per cylinder. 11-5-4 Beautiful well-designed stereo system that is only $229. The sound will amuse you. RAY AUDIO, Inc. There are a lot of multilingual concepts about tuning the microphone to get tun performance. Better sound systems for playing music on your TV can be achieved by Complete, 800w, system with Primer P2-71T (furnished) Completes complete installation of Primer P2-71T, adds 5 month warranty, 90%+ good credit, 800w+14kW system, ocd, and No room for storage! 4 WV snow skids. 5 skidless. No extra storage space. Large GE ice also in great shale storage. No parking. Free wifi. Oopal Kadette Sedan, 1698, low mileage, $450, 843- 11-8 MG 1100 4-door sedan, 1965, low mileage, $350, 845-0209 11-8 HELP WANTED 1. Two "waters" w/mirrage and highs, enclosed in beautiful waistline. Air suspension enclosed by cushions. Glove compartment. Now taking applications for part-time, cocktail waiters, cooks, dishwashers. Apply at Carrière in St. Louis. OVERSEAS JOBS—numerator/year-round, Europe. S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $300-$1200 monthly, Expenses paid, sightseeing, Free travel to Europe, USA, Canada, France, A box, A440, Calburner, CA 94704, 11-11 Delivery—must have own car. $3 approx. Delivery must be at Heavy Furniture 507 W 10th in the wheel. 18-11 The Association of Systematic Collections—a national professional society, seeks a full-time Administrative Assistant to manage the documentation, management of a diverse publications repository, management of resultant projects. Salary range is $50,000. Interested persons should send a resume to Daily Journal World Application deadline is in the fall. Downtown Lawrence 842-7187 Applicants will be evaluated on the basis of editorial experience, knowledge in medical, biomedical and biological sciences, level of education, relevance of previous work experience, two references, and willingness to meet requirements. Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time. Assist in research activities in the areas of inquiry and in research. Social science background required. Mobilities. Dept. of Human Development 111 to 3 a.m. An equal Opportunity Employment. Qualification: Bachelors degree or equivalent in social sciences or related. The Association of Systematics Collections is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Alem Affirmative. Sandys Drive-in is now taking applications for new employment. Apply in person at 2125 Windsor St. 11-3 LOST AND FOUND Part time girl grasped for evening and week- end duties. Room rate $59.00 per person; Vistoria $127.90, Gift $6.18. A-1-3-2 Last-Pocket—sized brown leather Bibles. Last-Pocket—sized brown leather cover. John K. Davies 342-6547. Dayton 11-2 11-2 Loss: Military Dependents ID. Need urgently. If found call Richard Underwood, 843-8851. Rewind Found small St. Bernard pup wearing red collar. Found on campus. Cat Kathy, 843-7725. Found. Lab & Germany Shepherd female pup last week on campus. 842-3063. 11-2 Found: Watch found in Robinson Weight Room Tuesday night, Oct. 26. Ct 541-5217. 11-2 Found: Found on campus a brown and white puppy with a red collar. Call 844-2381. 11-2 Found: woman's watch on West Hill Parkway, 10-38, 10-28, 842-7210. 11-38 | Round black shirt,贴合屁肌,40 lbs,15" shoulder, white spot on chest, white shirt. At HU. 1-5st. small silver watch, Inlay, Oct. 2-4st. small silver and Emery and Wescott Caj. Jal 844-623. 11-5 Found: bilfellow at Shenanigun's parking lot that afternoon. Contact Kansas Canbus 314-829-7600 31-48 Lost glasses in blue-green case somewhere between Carneiro and Elwisworth. If found 11-3 11-3 Brown leather purse taken from Pc. Dr. Triw Brown leather purse taken from Pc. Dr. Triw and LD. Reward 124-873-9560 11-4 LD. Reward 124-873-9560 11-4 MISCELLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Aliie is available from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. Monday- s, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m. Masr. NOTICE CABASHA *Cook* - Good food from scratch. Lunch, 10:30-3:30. 16:30 Mass. 19:30-20:30. Backyard EVA, 20:30-21:30. Shop Shop 202. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12: 35- 89-2577 Jim's Steak House. Delicious food di reasonable prices. 129, 130, 139, 159, 169, 179, 189, 199, 209, 219, 229, 239, 249, 259, 269, 279, 289, 299, 309, 319, 329, 339, 349, 359, 369, 379, 389, 399, 409, 419, 429, 439, 449, 459, 469, 479, 489, 499, 509, 519, 529, 539, 549, 559, 569, 579, 589, 599, 609, 619, 629, 639, 649, 659, 669, 679, 689, 699, 709, 719, 729, 739, 749, 759, 769, 779, 789, 799, 809, 819, 829, 839, 849, 859, 869, 879, 889, 899, 909, 919, 929, 939, 949, 959, 969, 979, 989, 999, Vote yes on November 2 for the Proposition to fund service programs for the elderly. 11-2 Commission on the Status of Women: Women in Politics, Nov. 2, 7.3 p.m., Room 260-189. Aztec Inn UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Aztec Inn American and Mexican Food DK SKILLET says we are not the newest LQUOR BABY here. Also, 48. Drop in and ask us. We'll be there next week. 48 GAY RAP GROUP, Thursday, Nov. 4, 822 KAYT, Apt. 3, 7:30 p.m. 11-4 PERSONAL Toddler Center has openings for children 12-30 months, your child will have fun and learn in a warm living atmosphere located in Rendover, New York. Toddler Center tween 12:30 & 2:00 P.M. **12-12** Heat a Christian musical — The Apache — 8 p.m. At the Riverside Theater, 407 W. 12th St., 483 Kills (Historic) (407-654-9000) *GAY SERVICES OF KANASSA UNINIGING CLOSET DOORS! BI-weekly meeting 10, 7, 30. Meet with us to discuss the benefits of offices will follow short business meeting 11-29. Notice: Innote now !! in Lawrence Drive School; receive Drivers License in three weeks without Highway Patrol unit; Drive pay, new lay Have you had problems getting to sleep at night for the past year? We are looking for people to participate in an inpatient treatment program, at Hospice West, 841-350-2967, Don Hutchings, 841-350-2967, events. 11-2 Don't be sorry on Wednesday. Vale for Nancy Cohn, Bonnie Cohn and Don Meton & Joan Golden for the Guild of the Month. Excellent instruction in guitar, bass, as well as keyboard. All lessons are available. Keyboard Studio Sessions. Audition date 10/27/2023. OUCH! Well girls, I'm free once again. This well-qualified engineering school is 185 BP American Mechanical Engineering and Biology wishes to meet intelligent and sometimes aggressive students, and gives another bit of light to my future. What do you think? SERVICES OFFERED Kobe -Sorry about Nebraska, guess I own you a coke. Happy 20th birthday. Boulder. 11-2 Need help, a referral, or just some talk to talk **C** HEADQUARTERS, 814-235. We never close. Let's re-read the whole thing carefully. "Need help, a referral, or just some talk to talk **C** HEADQUARTERS, 814-235. We never close." Wait, the word "headquarters" is on line 2. The word "headquarters" is on line 1. One more check on the word "referral". It is on line 1. Okay, I'm ready. Final check of the text: Need help, a referral, or just some talk to talk **C** HEADQUARTERS, 814-235. We never close. One more check on the word "referral": It is on line 1 Wanted: any attractive young ladies (18 yrs or older), who will play the piano, violin or guitar in a chance to win $2500 in Playboy's Playsafe Photo Contest. No BS. Any interested person may apply for Dk. Duke. Keeping 11-34 mid-Julibr. Ask for Duke. All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates Math. Tutoring-competent. experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 003, 111, 111, 114, 117, 119, 121, 123, 125, 128, 158, 558, 657, 658, 657. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7641. Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a bicycle that can handle all the different entire bike-hubricate and install your dailerars, brushes, cranks, and head and install any parts or sheets to it. How many speed limits do you set at 10 speed $1.50, 5 speed $1.50, single speed $2.50, 5 speed $2.50, single speed $3 speeds $1.50, single speed $6.50. Complete professional services for all makes of bicycles. selection of quality library lawwives has to Larence. Larence Sublime Cyprus, 41 Mon- Sta Rue, Paris, 75002, France. HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand Goods Vintage Clothing Furniture Antiques Imported Clothing YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CREWED 15 East 81st 841-2664 10.5 Monday Saturday 842-9455 ACADEMIC RESHARCH PAPERS Thiouanads on molecules from 2D and 3D materials 306 H, Los Angeles, CA 94125 (321) 735-3128 TYPING 730Mass.841-7070 Experienced typist—term paper, tests, mice, thesis. Experienced typist—term paper, tests, mice, thesis. 843-005-9060. Mrs Wright. WANTED THEISI BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us send you 8 Massachusetts or phone 312-654-7891. Thank you. Need an experienced typist? IBM Selectle II carbon (rhinbon). Fax Pam at cpm17280. Foreign student wishes to Bive with American foreign student interested in Internet care. Call Ai Pernanchu-842-186-9151 11-2-5 Typist/editor, IBM Pica edit, Quality work Designer, brief. Discretions welcome. Call: 842-912-3923 Person to babysit in our home Non-smoker. Your transportation hour approx. 4pm. Please note that during KU break except for USD 497 holidays. Should have 2 hour study time daily. Call 842-8180 after 11am. Recommendation for very fine furnished apart- ment to be offered in €575 per month and e.g. coll- lection of €800 per month. Female roommate needed $25.00 a month plus 2nd semester. 2nd woman room bus Call Hi-618 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: female roommate to share 2-bedroom apartment and expire $50,000 by December 31. 2 studious females needed to share furnished bedrooms. For more details, visit www. studiosfurnished.com. Certified utilities included. Call Birth. 841-7455. 11-12 To rent or to unfurnished one bedroom apt. Call 262-9180 after 7.00 p.m. 13-8 Female roommate to share nice house near campus. Own her. 868.75 plus 4 % utilities 841-1868. ROY'S CREATIVE FRAMING AT CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE ●DRYMOUNTING ●STITCHERY ●METAL FRAMES ●RESTORATION Keterence Bookstore 842-1553 Malls Shopping Center 807 Vermont Use Kansan Classifieds 811 W. 6th Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4 Keep your car healthy in the summer. Use the student discounts at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W.23rd 842-4152 The Lounge "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." Smiley face car - Pinball - Bud on Tap 9th and Iowa - Foosball 843-7812 Open Daily 16 e.m., Midnight except Sunday Pool Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl TRY The Chalk Hawk HILLCREST BILLIARDS - Pool - Snooker Ping Pong - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER **COMFORTS** 9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 days a week. No One Under 18 Admitted 8 Tuesday, November 2, 1976 University Daily Kansan Ohse—Five Varieties 12 oz. Luncheon Meats...69¢ Armour Star Grill Dogs...79¢ Morrell Canned Hams...3 lb. $449 Falley's Own Pizza...20 oz. Farmland Sliced Bacon...12 oz. 79¢ Swift Premium Brown & Serve Sausage...8 oz. 79¢ Falley's Own Sausage...lb. 79¢ Hormel Beef Fritters...lb. 79¢ Grade A Large Eggs Dozen 69¢ There is only one way – to know if you are paying too much for your groceries. Come in to Falley's and check our prices against the other stores in town. After checking, we think you will find our prices the lowest in town. Come in and look, like your friends have done, then you will shop Falley's and save — Pepsi-Cola 16 oz. 89¢ Plus Deposit Old Milwaukee Beer 6 pack 12 oz. Bottles 99¢ Armour Star Chile With Beans 15½ oz. Can $1 Van Camp Pork & Beans 3 21 oz. Cans 1 Armour Potted Meats...5 oz. 3 for $1 Armour Vienna Sausages...5 oz. 3 for $1 Three Diamond Chunk Light Tuna...6½ oz. 49¢ Creamette Egg Noodles...10 oz. 3 for $1 Creamette Long Spaghetti...32 oz. 79¢ American Beauty Spaghetti Dinner 7 oz. 2 for 37¢ C & H Powdered or Brown Sugar 16 oz. 29¢ Ruby Red or White Grapefruit 10 for 99¢ Golden Ripe Bananas 5 lbs. $1 Bake-Rite Shortening...42 oz. 89¢ Aunt Jemima Pancake Mix...pkg. Get 1 lb. Free Betty Crocker Layer Cake Mix...all flavors 49¢ Nestea Instant Tea Mix...2 oz. 79¢ Coronet Bathroom Tissue 8 roll pkg. 99¢ California Sunkist Oranges 15 for 99¢ Fresh Ocean Spray Cranberries 16 oz. pkg. 39¢ Kraft Marshmallows...Miniature or Regular 10 oz. 3 for $1 Garden Club Light Corn Syrup...16 oz. 79¢ Liquid Joy Detergent...12 oz. 3 for $1 Kraft Natural Mild Colby Cheese 69¢ Mrs. Smith's Frozen Pumpkin Pie Large $119 Soft Nuspread Margarine 32 oz. Reusable Tub 99¢ Over Falley's Low Discount Prices with These Valuable Coupons FALLEY'S Regular $4.39 GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 25 pound Bag $339 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 FALLEY'S Regular 63c HUNT'S KETCHUP 20 oz. Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 FALLEY'S Regular $1.28 HEINZ STRAINED BABY FOOD 4.5 oz. Jars 8 for $1 Limit 8 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 FALLEY'S Regular $1.39 KRAFT MAYONNAISE 32 oz. 89¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 FALLEY'S Regular $2.49 MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE 1 pound Can $179 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 FALLEY'S Regular 3 for $1.23 HUNT'S TOMATO SAUCE 15 oz. Can $179 Limit 3 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 FALLEY'S Regular $1.38 LAUNDRY DETERGENT TIDE 99¢ Giant 49 oz. Limit 1 with coupon 8, $5.00 purchase good thru Nov. 7 FALLEY'S Regular $1.35 ALWAYS GOOD BUTTER 16 oz. Quarters 89¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 Tide Laundry Detergent 99°c 49 oz. Limit 1 with coupon & '5° purchase C & H Powdered or Brown Sugar 16 oz. Pkg. 29°c Ruby Red or White Grapefruit 10 for 99°c Golden Ripe Bananas 5 lbs. $1 Bake-Rite Shortening...42 oz.89°c Aunt Jemima Pancake Mix...Buy 2 lb. pkg.Get 1lb.Free Betty Crocker Layer Cake Mix...all flavors 49°c Nestea Instant Tea Mix...2 oz.79°c Zipper Skin Tangerines...15 for 99°c Tender Snappy Carrots...2 lb. pkg.49°c Washington Bartlett Pears...pkg.of 8 98°c Mild Yellow Jumbo Onions...lb.10°c Ruby Red or White Grapefruit 10 for 99c Golden Ripe Bananas 5 Ibs. $1 California Sunkist Oranges 15 for 99c Fresh Ocean Spray Cranberries 16 oz. 39c Pkg. Soft Nuspread Margarine 32 oz. Reusable Tub 99c FALLEY'S SAVE $496 Over Falley's Low Discount Prices with These Valuable Coupons FALLEY'S Regular $4.39 GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 25 pound Bag $3.39 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 63c HUNT'S KETCHUP 49c 20 oz. Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 COUPOON FALLEY'S Regular $1.28 HEINZ STRAINED BABY FOOD 4.5 oz. 8 for $1 Jars Limit 8 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular $1.39 KRAFT MAYONNAISE 89¢ 32 oz. Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular $2.49 MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE 1 pound $1.79 Can Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 3 for $1.23 HUNT'S TOMATO SAUCE 3 for $1 15 oz. Limit 3 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 COUPON FALLEY'S IRISH SPRING BATH SOAP 4 for $1 Regular 5 oz. for 4 for $1.56 Limit 4 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 2 for $1.56 COLGATE TOOTHPASTE 3 oz. 2 for $1 Limit 2 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular $1.38 LAUNDRY DETERGENT TIDE 99¢ Giant 49 oz. Limit 1 with coupon & $5.00 purchase good thru Nov. 7 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 55c FRUIT DRINKS HI-C 39c 46 oz. Limit 3 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 FALLEY'S Regular $1.35 ALWAYS GOOD BUTTER 16 oz. Quarters 89¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 7 COUPON BIG BEAR COOL THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol.87 No.52 The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas Wednesday, November 3, 1976 More results on pages 6-8 Carter edges Ford in late returns Martha Keys U.S. Congress. Jimmy CARTER Walker MONDALE Leaders, for a change. VOTE DEMOCRATIC Jimmy CARTER Walker MONDALE Jimmy CARTER Walker MONDALE Double victory celebration With her children looking on, Rep. Martha Keys, D-Kan, got a surprise visit from her husband, Rep. Andrew Jacobs, D-Ind., at a victory celebration last night in Topeka following Keys' victory over Ross Freeman in the race for the 2nd District congressional seat. Jacobs also won re-election in Indiana last night. Keys turns Bv COURTNEY THOMPSON and JIM COBB TOPEKA - Democrat Mara Keys last night ended a hard-fought campaign to retain her 2nd District congressional seat when she stepped before cameras in state Attorney General John Edwards' first husband and wife team in Congress has survived." Her husband, Rep. Andrew Jacobs, D-Ind., arrived as she began to speak and surprised both the Democratic audience and Keys. Jacobs had just flown to Topeka from Indiana where he had also re-election. Keys, first elected in 1974, trailed in polls during much of the campaign but won over Republican Rex Freeman, Gore and Mitt Romney. The contest had attracted national attention. KEYS' DIVORCE last year and subsequent remarriage to Jacobs wasn't a campaign issue, the candidates had said throughout the race. But the question of whether he was the victim of a baffler because of her re-marriage was repeatedly raised. Elated by her victory, Keys said Kansas voters had been open-minded and had reaffirmed her faith in their ns back Freeman's bid The crowd of about 500 Democrats at the Downtown Holiday Inn enthusiastically welcomed Keys and repeaters from the Republican Party. Jacobs later echoed the theme of his wife's speech. "I'm glad Kansans can speak out against bigotry and thereby set a tone for the United States. Walls of prejudice and unequal standards of justice for men and women no longer exist." he said. "NOW THE IDEA that a woman can't think for herself is gone." Four blocks away, amid preparations for a victory --celebration in the Ramada Ijm's Regency Ballroom. Freeman went before Republicans to concede defeat. Party supporters express mixed reaction to election See stories page six See stories page six Fifteen minutes earlier, Freeman had said he thought he could still win. At the time Keys was leading by more than a quarter. A few women Republicans and campaign workers in the audience, whom he had consolated a few minutes before, wept softly as he said, "We have respectfully disagreed and we have offered an alternative. Composed now, but no longer confident, he stepped before the microphone and said quietly, "Oh. gee." "We've run a good, clean campaign. We've been open. we've been honest." REPUBLICANS HAD tried to portray Keys as a liberal who didn't represent the conservative views of the district because she had supported Democratic-sponsored social programs and had favored decreased defense spending. They also said he received large contributions from out-of state labor groups. In return, Keys said that Freeman, if elected, would support big-business interests. Freeman said in an interview that he was disturbed by "vicious" advertising by the Keys campaign during the In particular, he referred to a television commercial he said had been released last Wednesday. It showed three men, partially obscured in a haze of smoke. The ad imitated the actions of political boasies in smoke-filled rooms, Republicans said. Both Democrats and Republicans said Keys' unexpected margin of victory was a result of a last-minute advertising blitz. Some Democrats said televised debates between the candidates had also helped Keys. that many impugned my integrity," Freeman said. "KEYS' BRIEF SPEECH to her supporters was her only appearance at the state Democratic headquarters. She couldn't be reached later for comment. When asked how she had won, Keys said, "I don't know how we did it. But I know it was a good, hard campaign." By WALTER MEARS AP Special Correspondent Washington (AP)—Democrat Jimmy Carter defeated President Gerald Ford and won the White House early today, ending eight years of Republican rule and crowning Carter's long, once lonely campaign out of the political wilderness. He rejoiced in Atlanta, at 3 am. (CDT) a sensation of a long count and a close rays, save his eyes. "I pray that I can live up to your confidence and never disappoint you." He praised the vanquished Ford as a formidable opponent, a good and decent man. At the White House, a spokesman said the President had gone to bed at 2 a.m. (CDT) and would have nothing to say until later in the morning. Carter, an obscure, ex-Georgia governor a scant two years ago, won the presidency after the GOP's victory. The returns as of 8 a.m. today showed Carter carrying 23 states with 272 electoral votes. Ford carried 24 states with 186 electoral votes. The popular vote totals from 90 per cent of waters and Ford, Carter 36,567 tied for 43,848,518. It was a night for rejoicing in Atlanta and in tiny Plains, Ga., Carter's home hamlet. "It's not going to be easy for any of the president-elect said, "I don't claim to know all the answers but . . . I'm not afraid to take the responsibility of president of the United States because my strength and my courage . . . comes from you." So Carter prepared for power,saying he already has a list of names to be considered for top appointments in a new Democratic administration. On Jan. 20th, he will become the 39th President of the United States, and the first Deep South president elected since Zachary Taylor in 1848. "We've made political history," he said. And Ford was left to political history as the only appointed president. He came close, narrowed what had been a runaway candidate and lost to a poll that counted was registered yesterday, by an unexpected high turnout of voters. Georgia's Carter swept out of the South, holding it almost solidly and returning the region to the Democratic column, save for a few faint blips. Georgia crack he could manage in Carter country. To that base, Carter added border states, New York and Pennsylvania. He won in Democratic strongholds like Massachusetts and Rhode Island, cut into the Midwest with victories in Wisconsin and in Minnesota, and his running mate, Sen. Walter Mondale. In Minneapolis, Mondale said the new president will unify America, and make it "the kind of compassionate nation we want it to be." Ford ran strongest in the Midwest and West. Kansas results National President (98 per cent complete) Ford (R) 477,771 543 per cent Carter (D) 408,419 46) McCarthy (I) 12,056 1) Maddox (D) 2,117 1) State 1st District Congress Sebellus (R) ... 129,503 (75 per cent) Yowell (D) ... 47,930 (27) 2nd District Congress Keys (D)...83, 091 (5 per cent) Freeman (R)...72, 368 (48) 14209 3rd District Congress (99 per cent complete) (99 per cent complete Whm (R) 119,919 (69 per cent) Rhodus (D) 50,172 (29) Wyman (R) 34 38 per cent complete) 4th District Congress 5th District Congress Glickman (D) ... 86,769 (50 per cent) Srivir (R) ... 85,426 (48 per) Zhang (T) ... 22,331 (99 per cent complete) Skuluxk (D) Olsen (R) ( 61125 404,880 (59 per cent) 61125 407,875 Commissioner of Insurance (88 per cent complete) Bell (R) (Douglas) (A) Sunday (P) Shreddy (P) 539, 221 (8 per cent) 14, 76 42, 36 (8) Treasurer (90 per cent complete) *Family (D)* ... 415,994 (56 per cent) Weber (R) ... 290,450 (39) Hyatt (A) ... 23,992 (3) Hudin (P) ... 13,511 (2) Amendment No.1 Land Use Yes 362,133 (56 per cent) No 287,543 (44) County Senate—2nd District 100 per cent complete House----44th District Berman (D) 12,845 (52 per cent) Booth (R) 11,660 (48) 100 per cent complete) Glover (D) ... 5,395 (60 per cent) Hambleton (R) ... 3,797 (37 per) ... 249 House—45th District SHERMI (100 per cent complete) Buzzl (R) ( ) , 5,502 (57 per cent) Francis (D) ( ) , 4,224 (43) Johnson (R) ... 14,055 (55 per cent) Huskie (D) ... 11,495 (45) Commission-2nd District Nels (R) . . . . . . . . 5,467 (77 per cent) Flder (D) . . . . . . . . 1,617 (23) Commission—3rd District Bradley (R) 4,647 (51 per cent) Stoneback (D) 4,423 (49) Treasurer Booth upset by Berman By BARBARA ROSEWICZ (100 per cent complete) In an upset last night in the race for state senator, 2nd District, Democrat Arnold Berman, a Lawrence lawyer, outpaced the incumbent Arden who had just 1.185 votes. Staff Writer Verycky (D) 13,829 (54 per cent) Leslie (R) 11,825 (46) Berman said he had anticipated a closer bit, but was "clearly just very pleased." Berman led with 12,845 votes to Booth's 11,660, with all preincidents reported. Glover is re-elected His appearance at the Douglas County Courthouse was enlivened by back-slapping and refrains of "I can't believe it" from fellow Democrats. Democratic incumbent Mike Glover, 44th District state representative for four years, last night was reelected to that office for another two years. Within two hours after the polls closed, and with less than 65 per cent of the votes cast, a runoff was conducted. Glover defeated Nancy Hambleton, the Republican candidate and a former Lawrence mayor, and Thomas Hart, the American senator. Glover had an 103-2 total goal. AS CAMPIGN workers embraced both repeats. I’m fine. I’m fine. Enjoy! But he admitted that he was running He drew more conservative strength in this election, Glover said. He said he thought conservative votes now knew he could present conservative issues such as retirement programs in the same open, outfront way he deal with liberal issues. In his past two terms, Glover has been concerned with issues generally considered more liberal, such as the decriminalization of marjuana. liquor-by-the-drink and alcohol by the drink. If he can deliver on some of the conservative programs, he said, his liberal interests in such things as marijuana don't 'not be an issue with conservative voters. "My greatest concern is that my defeat may cause good men and women to stop from seeking public office. They would not be able to carry on a campaign to which I've been subjected." behind and that Berman had a substantial lead. "I was a happy man before I was a senator and I will be a happy man after I'm a president." The incumbent always has an advantage, she said. Also, she said, the 44th district is somewhat different from others because it has many registered votes who are Booth wouldn't elaborate, but Republican campaign aides expressed concern over a recent Berman ad that listed Booth's voting patterns in the senate. HAMBLETON SAID she couldn't identify a particular issue that gave Glover the See GLOVER page eight The aides contended that the ad specified in the document does that the umbrella with raincoats BERMAN SAD THE ad merely laid out proposals Booth 1b voted for and Berman 2c voted against. Berman said he had won the election because voters sensed that a change was needed in the direction of Kansas government. Deficit spending this year is one of his principal concerns. Berman said—spending that had amounted to more than $50 million or state revenues. Such spending Berman said, would eave away the state's surplus. During his campaign, Berman advocated the elimination of the sales tax on prescription drugs and food, and an increase in income tax exemptions from $800 to $750. FREEDOM FUNDS Checking the returns Arnold Berman, left, beams at an early-morning party at his home, celebrating Berman's win over incumbent Arden Booth in Staff photo by JAY KOELZER the state senator race in the 2nd District. Fellow Democrat Michael Clover, who will return to the 44th District House seat, 2 Wednesday, November 3, 1976 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press Concorde plans halted LONDON - Britain and France announced yesterday that they have decided not to build any more of the costly supersonic Concord jets beyond the 16 planes on the route. The announcement was issued after talks between French Transport Minister Marcel Cavalle and British Industry Minister Gerald Kaufman. Britain and France already have accepted that the $1.92 billion spent on the research, design and development of Concorde won't be recovered directly. Kaufman told a news conference that further cooperation between the two countries in development of subonic airliners such as the European airbus should be established. NEW DELHI—A constitutional amendment giving Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's government sweeping authority to remold India was approved yesterday by the Rajya Sabha. Gandhi to remold India Passage of the bill by the lower house came just three days after the government ordered that the Supreme Court decide whether a postponement since Gandhi proclaimed a national emergency on June 26, 1976. The amendment, which the government says will speed a socioeconomic revolution and the opposition says will legitimize dictatorship, was approved 3664-4. Rhodesia awaits retaliation SALISBURY, Rhodesia—White-rided Rhodesia reinforced military border positions yesterday in anticipation of retaliation for commando raids into Mozambique. Several hundred black nationalist guerrillas were reported killed and several of their camps destroyed in the raids. Informed sources said at least seven camps used by black guerrilla trying to bring down Rhodesia's white regime were attacked within 36 hours from early morning. Ambassador Helms to quit WASHINGTON—Richard Helms, former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, has decided to retire as an ambassador to Iran, U.S. officials say yester- The 64-year-old Helms was named to the Tehran post in 1973. Helms was CIA director from 1968 to 1973, a period that covered some of the most controversial activities of the agency. Critics have charged that Heims supervised activities which included torture and assassination in Vietnam; direct interference in the domestic activities of such countries as Chile; the training of secret police for other nations; and involvement in the Watergate scandal and subsequent cover-up. Religious principles win WASHINGTON—An employee's religious principles—even those against working on certain days of the week—must normally be accommodated by an employer. The justices split 44 in deciding the case of a Kentucky man fired from his job because his religious convictions couldn't allow him to work on Sundays. An equal split in the high court automatically upholds the ruling of a lower court. An affirmative action decision of Appeals rules that the Parker Sen. Co. was guilty of religious discrimination. Burundian president thrown out in coup KINSHASA, Zaire (AP) — A military coup has topped President Michel Cameroburu of Burundi, a small and violence-ridden central African nation. Bujumbura's airport and the national borders were closed, telecommunications suspended and a dusk-to-dawn curfew imposed, informel Belgian sources said. BEST WISHES FALL BRIDES A free gift waits for you at Alexander's. Visit Alexander's Bath Shop, receive your free gift, and register your gift selections for your bathroom, bridal showers and wedding. Bridal Registry Alexander's Bath & Gift Shop 826 Iowa 842-132O SUA SUA FILMS CLASSICAL SERIES THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE (1946) Ellen Hunt, with Lana Turner, John Garfield Wed., Nov. 3, 7; 30, 75 FILM SOCIETY FILM SOCIETY WIND FROM THE EAST (1970) Dr. Joan Lue Godd, with dr. Wesley Kearns. Tues., Nov. 4; 7:30, 9:30, 756 POPULAR FILMS FAREWELL, MY LOVELY (1975) Dir. Dick Richards, with Mike Sullivan Ramping Nov. 5, 7; 10; 9; 30 Nov. 6, 7; 13; 30; 9; 40 Nov. 7, 8; 13; 30; 9; 40$1 Woodruff Auditorium All films shown in ★ BE A PART OF IT ALL ★ ★ BE A PART OF IT ALL ★ The Student Senate has a new program called Statewide Activities— We need volunteers to do the following things: 1. Lead campus tours for visitors 2. Talk with high school students while home for vacation 3. House visitors overnight 4. Assist the Admissions Department in their efforts If you are willing to help, come by the Student Senate Office for an application. We could really use your help — Thanks! Partially funded by Student Activity Fee ficials had been under investigation in this connection. They have declined to identify "There is little doubt that extra profits result from the 'collisive' bidding system," the Army team said in a report made public yesterday. profits arising from the artificially high prices range from 30 per cent to 50 per cent and may involve substantial amounts," the report said. WASHINGTON (AP) — Army investigators say South Korean contractors charged the United States up to 50 per cent extra in "collisive" bidding sanctioned at least tacitly by South Korean government officials. Army reports South Korea rigged bids The investigative report suggested that the Korean Military Contractors association had received inside price information from U.S. employees to guide its bids. "Unofficial estimates of the rate of extra Pentagon officials have said that a number of U.S. military and civilian of- Distribution of the Army report, which was turned in last June, followed a complaint by Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis, that South Korean contractors rig bids on purchases from the U.S. Army and back up that practice with strong arm methods against other Korean business firms outside the association. henrys 99c Mon.-Thurs. Nov. 1-4 2 BIG HENRY'S With all the trimmings 842-1974 6th & Missouri The Brewery 714 Mass. Presents "DESTINY" AN EASY LISTENING FOLK-ROCK EXPERIENCE!! MICHAEL BROADWAY Friday & Saturday 9 'til 12 We're moving to a NEW location 1 Nov. '76 THE 8th Street MARKET PLACE AT THE CORNER OF 8th AND NEW HAMPSHIRE 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. ARMADILLO BEAD CO. 841-7946 IT PAYS TO BE IN DEMAND. Air Force ROTC has scholarship awards and jobs for selected science and engineering majors. Young men and women majoring in engineering academic fields, Engineering academic fields, Mathematics, Physics and engineering pay well now and enrollment pays paying off in i- future. Air Force Rotc offers a 4-year, 2-year and 1-year loan with $100 monthly tax-free offered the $100 tax-free monthly allowance during university scholarship students. The Force and compete for a commission a commission a commission a commission a commission you'll have financial security and salary your job the formation ladder where your ability limits. It pays to be in demand you're the type we're looking for, it pays Sophomores interested in the 2 Year Program should contact Cust. John E. Hahn, or call Military Science Blou. Room 108, or mail 844-6474 during November or December ips, to ing elds ice, er- tyd ITC ot er. ips Air Force ROTO- Gateway to a Great Way of Life THE FIRST WEDDING IN 1978 fall suit SALE! from Mister Guy . . . a large selection of this season's favorites in tweeds, solids and chalk stripes, all vested perfect for parties and those upcoming interviews . . . values to $165^{00}$ now on SALE open thurs. nights wednesday and Thursday only till 8:30 920 mass. for $125^{00}$ MISTER GUY T] fo Audition Theatre ptomorro The p Adventure Jonathan original Anton Cl K four indour The fir plays wills Murphy in room Smith Offer Cal Sur √ Trip Rout Boor 4 Ni 4 De Cos Ha Wednesday, November 3, 1976 in this identify which a com-D-Wis., albos on back up methods outside 3 Theatre auditions set for spring productions The productions are "The Marvelous Adventures of Tyl," a children's play by Jonathan Levy; "Sterile Lullaby," an original one-act play by Donna Young; "Amy," a musical by Vaney; and "An Evening of Dance-Dramas," a collection of four individual dance pieces. Auditions for second semester University Theatre programs will be at 7:30 tonight. The first round of auditions for the three plays will be tonight and tomorrow night in Murphy Hall. "Adventures of Tyl" will be in room 201, "Sterile Lilac" in, the Script Library and "Uncle Vanya" in room 235. Scripts for these plays are on reserve in the Script Library in Murphy. Students who try out for "Uncle Vanity" should prepare their own scripts, and board outside the Green Room in Murphy. Auditions for "An Evening of Dance Drama" will be at 7:30 tonight in room 220 of the Music Building. Students should check the card board for details about all of the auditions. Further information can be obtained from the Theatre Office at 864-3981. Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th OPEN FACE BEEF SANDWICHES $1.75 Reg. $2.10 $1.75 Reg. $2.10 Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made dressing, mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Offer expires Nov. 30, '76 RECREATIONAL SERVICES Rm 208 Robinson Gym 864-3546 KU RUGBY CLUB - Topeka, 2 p.m. 23rd & Iowa Sun., Nov. 7 KU FENCING CLUB — "THE KANSAS OPEN" KU FENCING CLUB — "THE KANSAS OPEN" 1:00-10:00 p.m., North Robinson Gym WATER BASKETBALL, 7:00-9:00 p.m. KU Pools. Bring a team or form a team there. Call "REC INFO" 864-3456 for daily drop-in Recreation hours. SEMESTER BREAK SKI TRIP WD Trip includes Round-trip transportation Beor & soft drinks on the bus 4 Nights lodging in condominium 4 Days skiing lums 4 Days of lift tickets Cost: $135, Jan. 9-Jan. 15, 1977 5th Day of skiing SkI lessons at special rates Stay up new in the SUA office. 4 Days of ski rental Sign up now in the SUA office. Just Flowers mikasa MAKESHIF Bone China PATTERN A4-182 Sale Haas Imports 1029 Mass. The moon will be partly eclipsed by the earth Nov. 6. It may be seen after moonrise from 5 p.m., until about 7 p.m. Two meteor showers will allow gazers to see five to 10 meteors an hour plunge into the earth's atmosphere. The showers are The skies will hold various sights for stargazers in November. Stargazers' month here Venus will be visible after sunset in the southwestern sky, and Saturn may be seen after midnight above the eastern horizon. Mercury won't be visible in November. Jupiter, which may be seen by the naked eye, will visible all month as it rises above the sun. the Taurid, Nov. 4, and the Leonid, which will peak Nov. 16. Karen's Bridal Shoppe private showings only 128 Minnesota Ph. 842-0056 Lawrence, Kansas Now . . . more than ever. Karen's makes beautiful things happen. - Wedding Gowns * Attendants' Dresses * Formals FINEST REPAIR (Watches & Jewelry) DEPT. IN LAWRENCE - 1 Year Guarantee . . . we IN - 1 Year Guarantee . . we will at no cost to you, repair or replace any defective part or workmanship, furnished by us, for one full year from date of repair. - complete disassembling and cleaning of watch movement - Our guaranteed service includes: - electronic time-testing and adjusting for maximum accuracy - cleaning and polishing the watch case and band FAST SERVICE- GUARANTEED WORK Severely damaged ports or rusty watches slightly higher BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Massachusetts 843-4366 OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS presents "KID DYNAMITE" JIMMY WALKER Star of "Good Times" THE MAN WHO LIVES AFTER HE WAS BORN SATURDAY, NOV. 13 Tickets $4 General admission Under 16 not admitted Tickets available at the SUA box office Question & Answer Session after Show 8 p.m. Union Ballroom --and amusing." Christmas & FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST Maupintour travel service KU Union/The Malls/Hillcrest/900 Mass Phone: 843-1211 An outrageous assemblage of SciFi, Marvel Comics and Rock & Roll LATE SHOW FRI. & SA1 THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW FRI. & SAT. NIGHT 12:15 Hillcrest R 1 STARTS FRIDAY "Antic, frantic The New Yorker "Splendiferously Funny." entertainment." THE RITZ your key to hilarious "It's a ball of a braw!" -Johnny Crow STARTS FRIDAY STARTS FRIDAY MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN A thriller R The Hillcrest E NOW THERE IS... PART 2 SOUNDER A Robert R. Harper Jr. Band G ENDS FRIDAY Eve 7:30, 9:10, Saturday 7:00 Hue 8:45 Up the ancient stairs; behind the locked door; something lives, something evil ROBERT EVANS - SIDNEY SIGCHEERMAN production JOHN SCHLESINGER film DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLIVIER ROY SCHEIDER WILLIAM DEVANE MARTHE KELLER "MARATHON MAN" Every Evening 7:30; 9:45 Saturday, Sunday 2:30 Varsity Very funny... a joke box of a movie. A comic book variation on the 1950s film "A Wizard of Oz." V - Cabbage, NY Time CAR WASH PG HELD OVER—ONE MORE WEEK has ever returned. HELD OVER—ONE MORE WEEK Eve. af 7:30 & 9:30 Saf. Sun. af 2:30 Granada STARTS FRIDAY at Hillfort ST KAREN BLACK OLIVER REED and BETTE DAVIS PG BRUCE LEE in FRI. SAT. & SUN. "FISTS OF FURY" and "THE CHINESE CONNECTION" If you liked him as Henry II, you'll love him as the Earl of Gurney. If you liked him as Henry II, you'll love him as the Earl of Gurley. -a tour de force by Peter O'Toole that makes some kind of movie history -Rex Reed PETER O'TOOLE ARTHUR LOWE ALASTAIR SIM THE RULING CLASS ENDS THURSDAY Evenings at 7:15 & 9:45 at the Hillcrest A Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. 4 Wednesday, November 3. 1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. Election night no bore It may have been a boring campaign, but it certainly wasn't a boring election night. Carter climbed to within a tew electoral votes of the presidency and then just hung there. It was a case of 265—er—261—puff, puff, puff, until almost 3 a.m. But he finally won and, for the first time in its history the United States will have a President named Jimmy. NOW IS the time for the last onslaught of the political columnists—the analysis, the second-guessing, the Wednesday morning quarterbacking. Did the larger-than-expected voter turnout make the difference? The Solid South? What were the little things that made one state go 50 per cent to 49 per cent for Carter and another state go 50 per cent to 49 per cent for Ford? I voted for Carter. I wanted Carter to win and I predicted he would win. But, deep inside, I had this feeling that Ford would win in the end. This time, at least, my deep inner feelings were wrong. So, as the haggered Senator-elect Robert Redford asked in "The Candidate," "What do we do now?" WHAT DOES Gerald Ford do? He is still president, you know, even if he is the first incumbent president to be denied reelection since Hoover. For the next three months, Ford has to perform the job he wasn't allowed to keep. This is a strange, unfamiliar and uncommon situation for everyone concerned. And what does Jimmy Carter do? He has won the thing he spent the last 22 months working for. He has triumphed. But he won by a very small margin and there are tens of millions of people in this country that think Carter is a wish- ful religious believer with fanatical religious beliefs and a dangerous, calculating personality. These people are all just waiting for Carter to do something to prove them right. At the same time, millions of other people are waiting for Carter to justify their trust and votes and instantly fulfill every promise. CARTER WILL be under great pressure to make or break himself in his first few months as president. And what about the American public? Jimmy Carter, Jerry Ford and Walter Cronkite weren't the only ones who had to endure month after month of speeches and primaries and conventions and foot-filled mouths. We all had to endure it. And enduring it, at times, took quite some doing. NOW WE can finally relax. We can all ignore politics for a while. Ideally, we would use this time, when the demolition endurance derby of the last two years is still fresh in our minds, to think about reforming the primary system or the infamous Electoral College. The world, however, is far from ideal and the public is far too washed-out to dream of thinking about politics. By Jim Bates Editorial Editor After all, we have to grab our rest while we can. Any month now, some politician will call a press conference to announce his Presidential campaign will be under way. MIAMI NEWS 10.76 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES AND I SAY TO YOU THAT THE HANDS OF THE CLOCK MOVE STEADILY FORWARD FOR ONE HOUR FROM NOW WILL BE LATER THAN HERE, NOW, AT THIS POINT IN TIME, AND THE DAYS DWINDLE DOWN TO A PRECIOUS FEW, SEPTEER-EE-EEMBER--AH, UH-MY OPPONENT TALKS A LOT ABOUT NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION, WELL ONE MUST INQUIRE OF ONE'SSELF:WHAT HAS HE GOT AGAINST THE FREEDOM-LOVING POLANDS? AND THE TRUSTED HAND OF EXPERIENCE? WHEN I TOOK OFFICE 18MO----AH, 22MON--26 MONTHS AGO THIS NATION WAS IN THE MIDST OF A TRAGIC DREAM--OR NIGHTMARE, AS IT WERE, NOW WE HAVE PEACE, PROSPERITY AND LOTS OF WONDERFUL CATHOLICS BY THE WAY, WHO KNOW THAT A VOTE FOR ME. HARRY Ford---ER, JERRY---Jerry Ford IS A VOTE FOR A WHOPPING BIG TAX CUT AND A DUCK IN EVERY POT! MIAMI NEWS 1976 WYT SPECIAL FEATURES I WANT TO RESTORE YOUR CONFIDENCE IN YOUR COUNTRY, IN ITS LEADERS, IN YOUR MOTHER AND FATHER AND YOUR SISTER AND YOUR LITTLE BITTY BROTHER AND YOUR KITTY CAT. I WANT TO PUT AMERICA BACK TO WORK AGAIN, EVERYBODY UP IN THE MORNING, OUT ON THE JOB WORKIN' LIKE THE DE----DEV----LIKE HECK FOR THEIR PAY. I WANT ALL THE NATIONS OF THE WORLD TO LOOK AT OUR GREAT LAND WITH ALL ITS FINE CATHOLIC PEOPLE IN IT AND SAY, LOOK THERE'S A COUNTRY WITH CONFIDENCE IN ITS LEADERS, IN MOTHER AND FATHER AND SISTER AND LITTLE BITTY BROTHER AND KITTY CAT. I LOVE YOU ALL, AND YOU CAN DEPEND ON IT! OH, MIND YOU, WE CAN DO IT--PUT OUR HEADS TO THE GRIB STONE, MARCH HAND IN HAND, LEADERS, MOM, DAD, ITTY BITTY KITTY... MIAMI NEW 8 1976 NYT SPECIAL REFERENCE VOTER GM talked. didn't listen 1977 Cadillac Sedan DeVille varies according to dealer location. . . A definitive text turned up the other day of the new Tax Law, which was produced by U.S. Law Week, the text runs to 131 pages of the law; these pages stigge like those under the grave of common sense. How did we get into this mess? Man and boy, I have been reading the English language for more than 50 years and claim some modest competence in comprehending the word. But this is monstrous. The text falls open at random; Tax Code prose unclear ways the Founding Fathers never dreamed of. When they gave Congress the power to impose duties, imposits and excuses," the framers of the Constitution couldn't have imagined a net so vast. That is among the simpler provisions. Whole battalions of lawyers and accountants—nay, whole divisions, whole armies—are now the primary complexities for months and years. Within the Internal Revenue Service, the task of drafting forms will occupy a full corps of analysts. In the course of those analyses, we probe the impenetrable prose, "FOR PURPOSES of paraphrase (b), the term 'ad-respect to the estate' means respect to the estate" means the excess of what would have been the estate tax liability but for it (a) over the estate tax liability. We have drifted into this sorry mess for one big reason and a host of little ones. The big reason is that the federal government has come to dominate our everyday lives in THE TAX Code directly affects marriage, family, home. business, the buying and selling of property, the survival of charities. The index to the 1976 act touches upon vineyards, cattle, oil wells, gas wells, hospital services and amateur athletics. The provisions deal with trade, stocks, bonds, billboards, large cigars, and livestock sold on account of drougt. James J. Kilpatrick ( c ) 1976 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. a former judge of the U.S. Tax Court. In his knowledgeable view, nothing will be gained by further patchwork. The jerry-built code is beyond repair. He would junk it all, root and embed the bank's money in form tax upon all net income, however derived. IS THIS feasible? Alas, the answer is: technically, yes; politically, no. Train has worked out the revenue projections. His flat-rate approach would produce whatever income Congress desired. There are thousands of such a law. But the howls would be horrendous. Few politicians could resist the pressures that would be applied. If gifts to colleges, charities and churches were no longer deductible, how would these institutions survive? If the interest on state and municipal bonds were no longer from taxation, what would become of these securities? Train has sensible answers. The realistic prospect, sad to say, is that few members of Congress will pause to discuss them. But the next Congress might be persuaded to take one major step, not in the name of simplification in the equivocation we could move toward the "indexing" urged by New York's Senator James Buckley as a counter-measure against inflation. complicated; it isn't. Buckley would discount a taxpayer's income according to the cost-of-living index, so that tax rates were applied to constant income. So, if you say, $20,000 had a purchasing power of what $15,000 had a few years ago, he would tax on the basis of the $15,000. One effect would be to keep middle income taxes below the upper tax brackets where those are putuntively higher. General Motors visited KU Monday in the form of Thomas Fisher (mechanical engineering, 1951), R. T. Kingman (journalism, 1947), R. W. Klinger (mechanical engineering, 1863), George G. Dodd (electrical engineering, 1960). One thing is certain: We must not drift indefinitely from a large mess to a larger one. At some point, a taxpayer's revolt will occur. If the 89th Congress produces only another 131 pages of this type, the revolt may come sooner than anyone thinks. THE IDEA may sound What to do? The only intelligent answer is to scrap the whole thing and start over. This is the straightforward approach urged in a recent essay by Russell Train, a tax expert and The four men, all KU alumni, visited classes, went to lunch with "opinion leaders", visited with students at a GM exhibition in Learned Hall and about 150 people who showed up in Hoch Auditorium for a "town hall" meeting. questions is that GM is doing the right thing. The purpose of the visit was to answer questions about GM, a corporation that some people think was screw the American people. Standard equipment on this vehicle at NO EXTRA COST: AM-FM RADIO W POWER ANTENNA; TURBO HYDRA- MATIC TRANSMISSION; TREX BREAKS; DISC BREAKS; POWER WINDOWS; POWER SEATS ... pretty bad showing, but the GM executives seemed pleased. The group that showed up at Hoch was spread out over the auditorium, which will seat 6,000 people. It looked like a GM looks at ideas for 50-mile-to-the-gallon cars but they haven't found one that people would buy. Courts have ruled that the Corvair was a safe car—bad publicity just killed it. America lives in extravagance while the working class is constantly being dehumanized and brutalized by a productive system that places profits before people." detectives secretly pleased. Kingman said they had a goal of 150 to 200 persons, so a crowd of about 150 was fine. The idea Carl Young Contributing Writer Catalytic converters work well. POWER DOOR LOCKS; AUTOMATIC CLIMATE CONTROL; SOFT-RAY GLASS; FREEDOM BAT- TERY; MONITERING; CORNERING LAMPS; MIRROR; CHROME BODY SIDE MOLDINGS; STOWAWAY SPARE TIRE... The "blue collar blues" is just something dreamed up by the press. The questions asked: How effective are catalytic converters? Is the Corvair safe? Do big car companies buy up patents for cars that will get 50 miles to the gun just to keep the kind of car off the market? What does this mean for blue "color blues" of day in and day out assembly line work? VISOR VANITY MIRROR; MATERNAL LOCKER; DIGITAL CLOCK; MILEAGE SYSTEM INCLUDING WHITEWALL STREET-BELTED RADIAL HOLDER OTHER VALUE FEATURES. A question not asked at the town hall meeting concerned GM's assembly plant in South Africa. A two-page statement submitted by the Liberation Supply Committee charged in part; "The super profits that U.S. corporations," e.g., GM, Ford, Chrysler, and others, use the use of cheap labor in Azania (South Africa) is used to support this decadent system of capitalism in America. Kingman said, after the town hall meeting, that GM pays its employees from companies in South Africa, although there is a difference in the amount of pay that white and African workers get. "The capitalist class in "I had my fact book open to the page, but the question never came." he said. The presence of something like a "fact book" bothered me. The teacher prepared to answer questions, but the impression I received from the town hall meeting was that they didn't want to listen to anyone. They won't go back to GM headquarters and say that some of the students they talked to were children, so cars are built with little care. They will go back and say that 1,000 students saw the GM exhibition and that they told 150 them that the Corvair was a safe car. Options and Accessories on the Display Vehicle by the Manufacturer. . . U.S., Africa inextricably bound The United States, after decades of maintaining a distant laissez-faire policy toward Africa, has suddenly become the Dark Continent's leader in monitoring her internal affairs and sending favored sons to plot her future. With increasing frequency, news of U.S. involvement in Africa is reaching the American public. Most do not follow the publicize policy objectives, it patiently refuses to explain the motives behind them. The puzzlement will probably AINT WE NEVER GON'T TO SEE PAW AGAIN? NOT 'TILL THERE'S SOMETHIN' ON THE TV BESIDES GERALD FORD. complicated day-to-day events. Few try to decipher foreign names or consult an altar to see what nations our new godchild Mary Ann Daugberty Contributing Writer 1876 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES comprises. Many are fearful of our new interest in Africa. AS LATE as August 1975, the U.S. State Department's Bureau of Public Affairs released a statement describing how African Americans involved in Africa. In this statement we said we opposed the continuation in Africa of political systems based on racial discrimination and involvement in African internal affairs, recognized special obligations to assist in the economic development of Africa and showed concern for the safety and security free of superpower rivalry. It was a comfortable policy. Most Americans could agree that the Senate was a glowing example of Democratic rhetoric, and it didn't cost us much if we weren't going to back our own policy with opinion. But questioning minds are asking why all that has changed. Why has Kissinger been sent to negotiate for a peaceful compromise between Rhodesia's white and black leaders? Why has the U.S. suddenly begun pouring more water into the conflict development? In short, why have we eschewed our longstanding policies for active pursuit of African friendship? ALTHOUGH THE state department may be willing to remain until the moment the African situation becomes a world crisis. Meanwhile, our friends in Africa are still a matter of conjecture. There are those who say President Ford wanted a hand in restoring black majority rule in Rhodesia this election year. The idea of taking direct action to participate in the black overthrow of Ian Smith's white regime to bring much-needed glory to the Ford administration in the field of innovation assertion is discounted by those who say Ford would never have entered Africa solely on those grounds for fear of drawing the United States into another war from ridding a loss of votes to the conservative electorate. SOME SAY that our involvement is purely humanitarian, that the United States, being one of the last free societies, seeks to spread its influence across the racial strife. After all, they say, we have pledged ourselves to oppose racial discrimination. But many others are certain the United States wouldn't waste time, energy and possibly the lives of the name of humanity alone. A third and possibly more viable explanation is that U.S. strategists want to have a strong influence in Africa to protect our commercial and naval operations in the area. If we lose control of their sphere of influence to include key African ports, waters and territories, U.S. forces will have strength will be leopardized. But there's one other explanation that no one seems to be discussing. It involves rich African resources that the U.S. has. We can say that our primary resource is chromium, a valuable substance that resists rust and heat when mixed in the metals of certain machinery. If we lost our supply of chromium, which we now import, we would lose a good deal more than shiny automobile bumpers. We would lose spacecraft, aircraft, satellites, and some of the machinery on the major industries. In fact, many of our highly developed devices UNFORTUNATELY, the United States produces almost no chromium. We rely almost entirely on South African exports, which could at any time be used as a lever against us by South African regime. We would like to avoid using it. We find other supplies, for the only other major producer of chromium is the U.S.S.R. Each explanation has its merits, and it is conceivable that elements of all four are present in the still-secret reasons for our recent interest in Afghanistan. We know that the days of ambivalence toward a sleepy continent halfway around the world are over. The military and economic complexities of this nation are too demanding for many to handle; hope to employ a laissez-faire attitude toward so promising, yet treacherous, a continent. Pl wi cil City give $85 Packer factory space March. Schw the ext custom Pack in bond space b wanted compar so it asl $250,000 "We' pansior to 12 another COM definite Instead commit on real present of the In authori improv northw country I Mead Published at the University of Kansas daily August 12, 2016. See http://www.unk.edu/~honor/yearbook.html and Joly June egalist Saturday, July 30 and Holliday, August 4. Subscriptions by mail are $1 amateur or $15 county. Subscription by phone is $14. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $15. Outside the county. Wats a chang They w but are THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Editor Bufo Lawer tending Mud C Lawer respon s in the progru THE $80,000 extensi for the Comm heard about t The half of Leeoue Guang Managing Editor Editorial Editor Managing Editor Campus Editor Stewart E. Associate Campus Editor Campus Editors Bill Sillen Campus Editors Chuck Alexander Bachelor's Degree Business Manager Terry Hanson Ambassador Business Manager Carolle Bounderstein Business Associate, Marketing Manager Campaign Advisor, Marketing Manager Sarah McMahon Marketing Director once is isedive itsn itser ca in, teers to ver ing be was as as to M me to on that M 50 on the most most exst- ence by ne. to of itles ole are et nince int dies and ais in re g. at. Plastics firm will receive city money City commissioners acted last night to give $875,000 in industrial revenue bonds to Packer Plastics, a northwest Lawrence factory that wants to expand its warehouse space and buy new equipment by next March. Packer originally had asked for $625,000 in bonds to pay for expanding its warehouse space by 50,000 square feet. But Packer also wanted more equipment, according to Schwartzburg, so it asked commissioners an additional $250,000 to buy machinery. Schwartzbarg said that Packer needed her extra money because of increased competition from other firms. "We'll create new jobs through the expansion," he said. "We should get at least 10 to 12 new employees permanently and another 10 to 12 part-time." COMMISSIONERS postponed passing a definite ordinance on the Packer financing. Instead, they approved a statement of commitment to provide Packer with a lease on real estate and future buildings at the site, near Iowa Street north of the turnpike. In other action, commissioners authorized $670,000 in street and public improvement money. The funds will go to northwest Lawrence near Deerfield and the country club, and to Heatherwood and Mark I Meadows. Buford Watson, city manager, said that Lawrence would take bids Nov. 23 for ex-Construction Workers and Mud Creek. Although the bridge isn't in Lawrence, Watson said, it's the city's responsibility to pay for any involvement in the Mud Creek dechannelization THE COMMISSIONERS voted to issue $80,000 in flood control bonds for the bridge extension. No voter approval is necessary for the bonds' issuance. Commissioner Mike Bibek said he'd heard a number of complaints recently by the city and state police. "The garbage is getting picked up only half of the time in one area," he said. Watson said that the city was completing a change in pickup policies for apartments. They were formerly considered residential but are now commercial for trash pickups. Wednesday, November 3, 1976 Capital CAPITAL LTD. CAPITAL LTD. CAPITAL LTD. Capitol Blank Cassettes We have these great cassettes . . . millions have been sold because they are great in quality, looks and value. C-60 min. - 3 pack special $2.30 Events C-30 min. - 75° C-60 min. - 80° C-90 min. - $1.40 kansas union BOOKSTORE OnCampus TODAY: KU PSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS will have a luncheon meeting at 11:45 a.m. in the Kansas University's Regionalist Room. The UNDERGRADEM PHILOSOPHY CLUB will host Donald Idle, professor of philosophy, University of New York at Stony Brook, at its 1:30 p.m. meeting in the Union's International Room. THE HALLMARK LECTURE SERIES hosts Terry Allen, California artist, musician and storyteller, at its 2 p.m. meeting in Woodruff Auditorium. CPA REVIEW ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE MAJORS LET US HELP YOU TO BECOME A CPA BECKER CPA REVIEW Kansas City 816 561-6776 COURSES BEGIN MAY 26 & NOV. 24 OUR SUCCESS FOUL STUDENTS RETURN LEVEL 1/3 OF USA BALKAN CITY HOTELS TONIGHT: MORTAR BOARD meets at 5 in the Union's Alcove D Room and at 6:30 in the Union's Governors Room. The SUA SPECIAL EVENTS committee meets at 6:30 in the Union's Governors Room. A DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY dinner begins at 6 in the Union's English Room. The 4-H ACHIEVEMENT banquet begins at 6:15 in the Union's Ballroom. The JAYHAWK COLLEGE QUIZ BOWL begins at 7 in the Union's Forum, International and Regionalist rooms. CAMPUS CHRISTIANES meets at 7 in the Union's Big Island House. A HOPE THE SUA BRIDGE CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Kansas Room. THE SUA BRIDGE CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Pine Room. RICHARD MOORE, professor of electrical engineering, will speak and show slides from a recent trip to Russia at an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers meetings at 7 in 2002 Learned Hall. The SUA BACKGAMMON CLUB meets at 7 in the Walnut Room. THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN meets at 7:30 in the Union's Council Room. A WORLD SERIES OF BEEP BALL planning session begins at 7:30 in the Coors Restaurant Hospitality Room. 2711 Oregon St. in Denver is hosting a student art exhibition by Governors Room. LEON BURKE III will present a student rectal conducting chamber music at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall. DONALD DIHE will speak on "Humans and Machines: A Phenomenological View of Technology" at 8 in the Union's Jayhawk Room. Announcements OUR SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS REPRESENT 1/3 of USA TOMORROW; a UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB meeting begins at 1 p.m. in the Union's Watkins Room. The UNDERGRADUATE ATHOPROLOGY ASSOCIATION meets at 3:30 p.m. in 627 Fraser Hall. Alfred Johnson, professor of anthropology, and Michael Crawford, associate professor of anthropology, will speak on jobs in anthropology. FRANK DAUSTER, professor of Spanish, Rutgers University, will speak on the history of African-American Drama Today" at 4 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room. THE JAWHAWK COLLEGE QUIZ BOWL begins at 4 p.m. in the Union's Pine, Big Eight and Council rooms. The KU ISRAEL FOLK DANCE CLUB meets at 7 p.m. in Oliver Hall. The AAUP chapter meeting, scheduled for Thursday, has been postponed. William Inge Memorial Theatre presents "EVERYONE IS SOMEBODY'S MOTHER.' (SOMETIME) Oct. 28 - Nov. 6, 1976 8:00 p.m. Tickets 864-3982 REMINDER: The KU Backgammon Club meets every Wednesday, at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room, Kansas University; to play 2:00 to play in the tournament BRING YOUR BOARDS SUA BILLIARDS TOURNAMENT MU Sun., Nov. 14 1:30 Tribal culture to be presented Jay Bowl—Kansas Union Trophies for 1st and 2nd place. Entry Fee $2.00 Sign up in the Jay Bowl by 4:00 p.m. Friday, Nov. 12. Entertainment, ceremonial and ritual music from the Basothe tribe of southern Africa will be presented, along with a talk, by Charles Adams, assistant professor of Anthropology at 7:30 tonight in the Panorama Room of Dyce Museum of Natural History. For more information call the SUA office or Jay Bowl. First place winner qualifies for the Region XI Tournament in Cape Girardeau, Mo., Feb. 10-12 Adams will complement his talk with slides and tape recordings from his field work in 1969 and 1970 in the country of Lesotho. The talk is the second in Dyche's Wednesday Evening Series. Admission is $150. GUN GREY University Daily Kansan LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY $1.00 at door 841-3145 GravityAsTheTherapist a film on Rolfing followed by discussion and demonstration by Tom Pathe Wed., Nov. 3 8:30 Thurs., Nov. 4 - 7:30,9:30, $ 75^{\circ} $ FILM SOCIETY Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union AIRLINE TICKETS HOME LOW STUDENT FARES All airlines—use your credit card! RESERVE NOW FOR HOLIDAY Hurry! Visit winter vacations and group tours. Call Artru Sanchez. wind from the east ALLEN BELL CARTERSHIPS 313 Armour Rd. N. Kansas City, Mo. (816) 212-0100 (24 hrs.) Free Parking Hasta Elsa Estan "IN THE EPICENTER OF THE REVOLUTION . . . " TIME Free Parking—So Habla Espanol) Use your定向 Kansas City Campus Phone westside greenhouse & lawns unlimited Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358 A NEW FILM BY JEAN-LUC GODARD SCREENPLAY BY GODARD AND DANIEL COHN-BENDIT. "A MARXIST MINI-WESTERN." THE N.Y.FILM FESTIVAL "THE ONLY TRUE MILITANT FILM IN CANNES..." SIGHT & SOUND "IN THE EPICENTER OF THE REVOLUTION..." TIME 440 Florida 842-0039 Jayhawk Room Kansas Union CHILE! Co-sponsored by International Club What's happening in Chile now? Two Chileans are coming to answer your questions. Thursday, Nov. 4th at 7:00 p.m. Sponsored by Venezuelan Club Try our Whole Wheat Pizza, Deep Pan Pizza at "The Wheel" Also, Sandwiches and Salads Ask for free double cheese today only! At "The Wheel" 507 W.14th 841-3100 X-RATED SPECIAL el" das Open Sat. at 11:00 a.m. FAST FREE DELIVERY HEAVY EDDYS Panhellenic Association Announces: Registration for Spring Membership Program 1977 Thursday, November 4 Big 8 Room-Kansas Union, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. In order to participate you need 14 hours from the current semester and a minimum G.P.A. of 2.20-or-12 hours from current semester and a minimum G.P.A. of 2.50 For more information contact Panhellenic Association 220 Strong 864-3552 6 Wednesday, November 3.1976 University Daily Kansan Democrats cut into GOP holds By JERRY SEIB Staff Writer TOPEKA-Bob Brock, executive director of the Kansas Carter campaign, hung up the telephone in his suite at the Downtown Holiday Inn at about 10:30 last night. He stood and turned to a knot of party workers watching election results on television. Republicans not in mood to celebrate By JIM COBE Staff Writer TOPEKA--By midnight last night, the state Republican headquarters in Topeka's Downtown Ramada Inn was nearly deserted. A dozen people gathered in the lobby to listen to presidential election results. A sixman Dixieland band banded its instruments and played political dignitaries who had visited the headquarters. Ross Freeman, 2nd District candidate for Congress, strolled across the patterned red carpet of the ballroom where his victory was announced, even as his opponent, U.S. Rep. Martha Keys, swept ahead in what early returns indicated would be a very close, see-saw THE STRUGGLE to win back the 2017 District seat, held by Democrats since 1970, wasn't the only battle the Republicans lost last night. They listened to television news and used a string of state victories for Democrat Jimmy Carter in his bid for the presidency. Returns also indicated that Damon Weber, Republican candidate for state treasurer, was well behind incumbent Joan Finney, a democrat. Democrats were ousting as many as 14 Republicans from the state legislature. "I may have lost but I'm in good com- pose." He said. "A lot of good men have lost to me." Republicans acted as if these defeats were enough to worry about. The impending defeat of 6th District Hop, Garner Shriver by Democrat, a Democrat, was hardly mentioned. SOME REPUBLICANS speculated on why their candidates lost. Some were already looking forward to future victories. One speculated that he might be whenever Carter's name was mentioned. "I feel the same in law I did when Kennedy was running," she said. "a middle-aged woman said." was running," a middle-aged woman said. A student from Kansas State University said former President Richard Nixon was to blame for the party's troubles. An elderly man suggested that the television channel be changed, "so we can hear some better news." An elderly man sat dozing in a chair. Later, he said he had been invited to attend the gathering and wanted to see "what it's all about." He asked how the election was going and nodded his head when he was told Carter was ahead. Around the corner, two 14-year-olds had helped themselves to some lionier A group of young people stood by. One said he planned to stay with the Republicans a while longer before going to the Democratic headquarters: "The Republicans have better booze, and more of it." "IUPI has named (Dan) Glickman the winner," Brock said, referring to the Democrat's upset win in a race for governor. He smiled while worked its way across Brock's face. It was that kind of night at state Democratic headquarters. Glickman, a young Wichita lawyer, scored the biggest of the Democrats' upsets by unseating Republican Congressman Garner Shriver in the 4th District. Martha Keys also cheered the Topkapi crowd by turning back challenger Ross Freeman and retaining her seat in Congress in the 2nd District. THESE VICTORIES give Democrats two seats in the Kansas House of Representatives delegation for the first time in 18 years. The victory of incumbent State Treasurer Joan Finney, a strong showing in state legislative races, and a win over incumbent Republican performance in the presidential race also made the night a happy one at the Holiday Inn. "I've been very pleased," said Jane Roy, Kansas national Democratic Committee member "We've hung onto our House seats and picked up some nice seats elsewhere. We just hope everything goes this well nationally." Although Glickman's victory was more surprising, it was the victory of Keys, who won the game after the attention of most of the crowd at the Holiday Inn. Keys had made large gains in the final days of a bitter campaign, and after the victory, she was assured of victory before 11 p.m. WITH 98 PER cent of the 2nd district vote counted, keys led Freeman to 5,883 votes. With 98 per cent of the 4th district counted, Glickman led Shriver to 3,143 votes. Republicans easily retained their other congressional seats. Keteib Sehbil won in the 1st District, Larry Winn won in the 3rd and Joe Skubtz won in the 5th. As expected, Republican Fletcher Bell, state insurance commissioner, easily he. Bad no Democratic opponent. Gov. Robert Bennett, titular head of Kansas Republicans, and other leading state party officials had joined in the effort to prevent the Democratic nomination for Democrat who was once a Republican. FINNEY LED from early returns on, although she delayed her victory appearance at the Holiday Inn until a few minutes after Keys had left. It was a quiet crowd and there were only crowds or with newsmen but merely shook hands and talked with supporters. A major Republican effort to defeat State Treasurer Joan Finney failed when she beat back the challenge of GOP state party official Damon Weber. State Democrats may have made their most impressive showing of the night in state legislative races, in which they are trained to take control of the Kansas House. With 86 per cent of the state's precincts reporting, Finney led Weber 391,840 to In the early morning hours, it appeared that Democrats had unseated 10 Republican state representatives. If Democrats lose fewer than three of their own seats to the Republicans, they would have a majority in the traditionally Republican-controlled state. DEMOCRATS ALSO appeared to be taking four Republican state senate seats, but that wouldn't be enough to give them control of the senate. A large turnout of voters in Kansas Gordon Garrett, legislative director of the state Democratic headquarters, said the performance was the result of improved public tickets and sentiment against Bennett. delayed final reports on many of the state races. "We are winning very simply because we have the best candidates," Garrett said. "I spent months on the telephone lining up voters, and it shows how you win state legislative races." GARRETT said that state Democrats had also raised more money than ever before this year and that candidacy.sd received more advice on running their See DEMOS page eight Johnson wins Sheriff's race Rex Johnson, the Republican incumbent sherriff of Douglas County, defeated James Huskey, chief investigator for the county his office, by a wide margin last night. Johnson received 14,055 votes to Huskey's Party candidate, collected 96% vote. Neither Johnson nor Huskey was available for comment early this morning. available for comment early this morning. In the race for county treasurer, Democrat Ruth Veryvyn, who led the entire night, defeated Betty Leslie by 2,004 votes. Vveryvyn had 13,829 votes to 11,825 for Leslie. Incumbent Sue Neutifiter was unopposed for register of deeds. Mike Malone, assistant county attorney, was unopposed in the election for county attorney. Election mood is varied in city By CAROL LUMAN Staff Writers A mood of quiet acceptance fell over the campus last night as it became increasingly apparent that President Gerald Ford had been defeated by Jimmy Carter. On the second floor of Naismith Hall, Ford supporters sat quietly around three tables, and the staff Lloyd Buzzi, incumbent state representative in the 45th District, landed the only successful area bid this election for a real American representation in the state house. "It was a lot more festive here before it became apparent that Ford's going to lose," said Randy Sollenberger, Hutchinson senior. "Half these people," he said, surveying the room glumly, "are leaving for Canada in time to get back home." Buzzi gained 1,280 more votes than his opponent, Democrat Carol Francis. Buzi won in a landslide with 51% Buzzi coasts Burzi, who has served four years as a state representative, attributed his victory to an active voting record. Francis said the campaign had been worthwhile despite her loss because she had learned much about Kansas politics. The problem, he said, "is deciding whether to take the bus or the train." Across the street at Oliver Hall about 20 students also sat quietly watching the election results, some wandering in and out of the main floor lobby. AS CARTER'S lead grew, shouts of Carter N. Forr, were bantered back and stopped. Ready to join his Naismith counterparts, someone asked, "How much does it cost to run?" From the back of the room, Brad Boerger, Topeka freshman, said, "As one who worked for McGovern, and who got to know Ms. Larsen, good to see the Republican recipe falling." At Hashington Hall, a Ford supporter watched the vote tails from the fringe of a panel. "The only reason I'm staying up," he said, relishing some hope, "is because it allows me to see the world." Earlier in the evening, Lawrence bar crowds seemed to display only a halfinterest in the election results slowly tabulating on the television screens. AT SEVERAL BARS, only a few interested patrons grouped around TV sets to watch the returns. They had ready answers to questions they had not answered across the room: "Wo's leading now," At the Jahawk Cafe, Ken Wallace, the owner, drank a beer for every state that Ford carried. Shortly after 11 p.m., he had been driven to another beer he was on his seventh or eighth beer. “It’s been a long night,” Wallace said. I was behind, but now I'm catching up. I hope Ford wins some more states so I can drink some more.” A slightly inbirated pinch then leaned over to throw in his two cents worth. "You write that this is a Republican bar," he said with authority, pounding his flat on the table. With that, Wallace looked up at the color television set, which had a microphone propped near the speaker to carry the sound above the din of the bar. "IT TEEMS LIKE I drank Kansas a long time ago," he said. At Quantrill's Saloon, patrons had been nature-fully debating daily, evening said, and Monday's evening. Beside the debates, she said, "one guy who was really out of it kept walking around the hallway," she recalls. While Ford and Carter supporters either groaned or cheered at the election's results, a group in the Hawk's Nest of the Kansas Union were disappointed because their candidate—Independent Eugene McCarthy—wasn't doing as well as hoped. "A good snow storm would have helped McCarthy here," said Hal Wert, Lawrence graduate student and McCarthy's Kansas chairman. Bad weather, he explained, would have kept a lot of voters from going to the polls, thereby giving the former Minnesota senator a bigger percentage of the vote. "McCarthy people would have come out no matter what the weather." he said. TUESDAY Staff photo by DAVE REGIER Memorable niaht This year's election has generated many souvenirs. Fred Sherman, 2017 Sagebrush Drive, holds one he collected last night at the Douglas County courthouse during his vigil of the returns. Sherman later had his calendar page autographed by a few of the local winners. Bradley beats Stoneback; Neis outdistances Elder By MARY RINTOUL Democratic incumbent I. J. Stoneback was narrowly defeated last night by Beverly Bradley for 3rd District county commissioner seat in a see-saw battle that went down to the wire. Bradley received 4,647 votes to Stoneback's 4,423. received 739 votes to 585 for Stoneback at the field house. The race for the 2nd District county commission seat was wavily by Republican Robert Neis. Neis defeated Robert Elder 5.467 to 1.617. It wasn't until the Allen Field House polls had been abolated that Betts, who lost to him in Bradley said that her door-to-door campaigning and personal contact with people helped win the election. Stoneback didn't comment on the reasons for losing the race, but he said he thought that the race was "very close" and that he had campaigned well. Neis, director of Kaw Valley State Bank, who had a 4-1 margin over Elder, said he didn't know why people voted for him except that he was well-known. He added that the commission term he wanted to "push through a centralized landfill proposal." Unofficial election returns from Douglas County These returns were obtained from the County Clerk's office and are as complete as was possible at press time. 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H Elizabet It was 1,500 peo 3-ge year gave me front law streets motorca stepped before bad ever "I CA people b basketba his days DESPI began an Dole's sc welcomin street w business The ju University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 3, 1976 (1978) Hometown hero Photo by JOHN FULLER Bob Dole. Republican vice presidential nominee, yesterday waved to crowds in his hometown of Russell before voting in the presidential election. Later in the day, Dole flew to Washington to be with President Gerald Ford. Dole campaign ends in hometown By JOHN FULLER Contributing Writer RUSSELL—Sen. Bob Dole reached the end of the 1976 campaign trail yesterday morning in his hometown—the town that has proudly watched the progress of his political career from Russell county attorney Robert Snyder. Republican vice-presidential candidate. Before returning to the White House to watch the election returns with President Gerald Ford, Dole visited Russell to cast his vote in the election and for a brief reunion with President Ronald Reagan mother's house. He was accompanied by his wife, Elizabeth, and daughter, Robin. It was Bob Dole Day in Russell, and about 1,500 people, all in a festive mood, gathered at 75-year-old Bina Dole's house to help with the cleanup of the front lawn and overflowed into surrounding streets and yards. After Dole arrived by motorcade from the Great Bend airport, he stepped up on a podium in front of the house to show it off, and they had given him throughout the years. "I CAN'T REMEMBER this many people being on our lawn since one of our basketball games," Dole said, referring to his daws as a high school basketball star. "You put me on the map, and now we're going to put Russell on the map. The small towns of America definitely fit into the bigger picture. "Elections are won and lost. I've not lost an election yet, and I'd like to keep the string going. But I'm realistic. It's a close race, but we're going to win." DESPITE A CHILLY wind, the crowd began arriving a couple of hours before Dole's schedule arrival at 10 a.m. banners welcoming him hung across the brick main street with its four stoplights. Many businesses closed for the morning. The junior high and high school bands started the crowd chanting "Go! Fight! Beat Carter!" in rally fashion, and the bands played "Rhinestone Cowboy" and "The Pioneers." The crowd re-encamped. Eiching "repeated until Bob arrived." Dole's homecoming was the final stop in his attempt to bolster the farm vote for the Republicans in several midterm states. Monday night he was in Independence. Mo. "THIS HAS BEEN a great experience," Dole said of the campaign. "We've been to 44 states and have traveled over 60,000 miles." Following Dole's brief speech and some words of thanks to the crowd from Elizabeth and Robin, Dole accompanied his mother to an elementary school two blocks away to vote. He was trailed by TV crews, reporters and security personnel. After voting, Dole visited some classrooms and returned to his mother's home for a short private visit with relatives and friends. Dole remained there only a few minutes because he was scheduled to fly back to Washington. He didn't get to eat any of the homecooked food that was in abundance at the house, but his mother fixed him a paper plate to go, topped with his favorite sweets. COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN presents WOMEN IN POLITICS "Women's reign in the smoke-filled rooms." A discussion about political involvement headed by women active in politics. Nov. 3, 7:30 p.m. — Council Room — Student Union Business Meeting - 6:30 p.m. Partially funded by Student Senate Activity Fees Due to a Kansan error, the date was incorrectly printed as Nov. 2 - Actual date is Nov. 3. An Evening Of The Best BLUEGRASS RED WHITE & BLUE (grass) KIDS - Voted most promising vocal group.—Record World - Voted 3rd best vocal group in the nation. -Cashbox - The band's instrumentation is almost uniformly first-rate. - Zoo-World -The Music Magazine - The distinctive style of this group makes them very saleable to both Bluegrass devotees and to the college set--Billboard - This man makes more music with the autoharp than you can imagine. —The Washington Times BRYAN BOWERS - Most popular performer at the Walnut Valley Spring Thing Festival - May 1976. - A more than interesting, and very unique performer. —The Village Voice - Smash hit at Cambridge, England Festival in 1975 and 1978 PATRICK HANSEN Available at Norwegian Wood 1144 Indiana 842-3602 Tickets Nov. 6 8:00 p.m. $4.00 8:00 p.m. Exhibit Hall Shawnee County Fairgrounds Exhibit Hall 85.00 At The Door McKinney-Mason Stringed Instruments 737 New Hampshire 011-6257 walnut valley association, inc. BOX 245 WINFIELD, KS 67158 316/221-3250 THAI NIGHT BANQUET Nov. 14, 1976 at Kansas Union (5:30-9:00 p.m.) Dinner & Entertainment (Classical & Folk dances, Thai Boxing, Movie) No tickets at the door Admission $4.00 Tickets at SUA office or contact any Thai students or Pratin - 864-2157 This advertisement is sponsored by the International Club. HATTER ME TONIGHT GIRLS FREE GUYS $1.50 25° DRAWS MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE - 700 New Hampshire 842-9476 FRESHMEN T.G.I.F. Friday, Nov. 5th Disco, Free Beer, Pop, Pretzels ★ 2:30—5:30 p.m. Members Free with Student I.D. Non-members $1.50 (cash) Memberships available at the door* Place: HAWKS NEST BE THERE Aloha *Get your class cards at the B.O.C.O. office, Union, or at the door. S 8 Wednesday. November 3. 1976 University Daily Kansan Democrats maintain leads in Congress, statehouses By The Associated Press Voters lashed out at Senate incumbents yesterday, knocking three Republicans and at least four Democrats out of office in one vote. In the chamber's membership in years, In the House, Democrats roared back into control, apparently headed for another massive majority in defiance of President Obama and poor showings in public opinion poll. One state, Washington, chose a woman to lead in the next four years. And, in a contest straight from a 1930s movie, a crucissor prosecutor defeated the annotated candidate of a big-city political boss for governor of Illinois. Two other states chose for their governors the scions of business dynasties. Senate Fresh faces in eight Senate offices were guaranteed by retirements, meaning that the election produced a change of cast in nearly half of the 33 seats up for grabs. The Democrats easily retained overall control of the Senate, as they have since 1955. With races in only Vermont, California and Ohio undecided, it appeared the Democrats would keep their current margin of 62 to 38, give or take one seat. Defeated in their bids for reelection were Glover ... "It's a hard district to run in," Hambleton said. Her views were similar to Glover's on many issues, she said. For example, both condoned the decriminization of marijuana. Although she wouldn't sponsor a decriminalization bill, she would support one, she said. A large part of her campaign had been directed at the students, she said, including the recent on-campus debate among Glover, Hart and herself. But she said she doubted that the debate influenced many voters. HART, WH) had only 249 votes, said he realized from the beginning that his victory was a long-shot, but that he had run for office to build up the American Party. "The American Party's here now and is going to be here two years from now. I formally announce my candidacy for this same seat two years from now." Hart said that he hadn't spent any money campaigning this year, but that in the next campaign he would raise funds and organize an all-out effort. Sers, James Buckley, R-CON-N; J, Joseph oontmann, D-MY; Vance Harke, D-Ind; J. Glenn Bell, R-Md; Bill Bock, R-Tenn; Gale McGee, D-Wyo; and Fran Moss, D- A McGee was defeated by Democratic state sen. Malcolm Wallop and Moss by political rivals, the Republican governors. The last race decided was in California, where incumbent Democrat John Tunney lost a sequester to his 70-year-old GOP candidate, who is the State College president S. I. Hayakawa. In Michigan, Rep. Donald Rickle Jr., a Republican turned Democrat who had strong labor backing, defeated another House member, GOP Rep. Marvin Esch, for the seat given up by Democratic Sen. Philip A. Hart. In Ohio, Republican Sen. Robert Taft Jr. was trailing Cleveland businessman and ex-Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, a Democrat, 48 per cent, with 85 per cent of the vote in. Montyoga, a liberal who served on the Senate Watergate Committee, was defeated by Republican Jack Schmitt, a former astronaut. HARDTKE, WHO had sought a fourth term, was defeated by former Indianapolis Mayor Richard Lugar, a Republican who lost a 1974 Senate bid. Beall was defeated by Rep. Paul S. Sarbanes, D-Md. Brock was beaten by Democrat James Sasser, a former state party chairman. In Missouri, Republican Atty. Gen. John Danforth defended ex-Gov. Warren Hearnes, the Democrat, for the seat vacated by retiring Democratic Sen. Stuart Symington. Democratic challenger Daniel Patrick Moynihan but conservative incumbent John Hancock. DEMOCRATIC INCUMBENTS elected to another term included Sens. Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, William Proxime of Wisconsin, Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, Lawton Chiles of Florida, John Lennon of Texas, Benton of Texas, John Sternis of Mississippi and Robert Byrd of West Virginia—the last two unopposed. House With three quarters of the contests for the 435 House seats settled, Democrats won 238 and Republicans 112. Democrats were leading for 49 seats and Republicans for 36. As the returns mounted, only 14 seats had changed party affiliation and the switches canceled each other, seven from Democrat to Republican, seven the other way. junior members of any in recent years, at least one-fourth with no more than two years' previous service. If the new freshman class follows in the tradition-buckling footsteps of the 1974 class, the 95th Congress could be a notably lively one. BUT THE NEW House won't be a carbon copy of its predecessor. It appeared on the cover of *The Wall Street Journal* in 2013. Scandals and allegations of wrongdoing, largely among Democratic representatives, hurt a few incumbents, but more survived such charges. Five incumbents were defeated. The other overturns were of open seats. Rep. Allan T. Howe, D-Uttah, who is appealing conviction of soliciting a woman for prostitution, lost to Republican Democrat D. Maria Mattox and Democratic party had dismissed Howe. Democratic Rep. Richard Vander Veen lost Ford's old house seat in Grand Rapids, Mich. Vander Veen had been the seat then left it to become vice president, in 1974. REP. HENY Helstoski, D-N.J., lost to Republican Harold Hollenbeck. Helstoski has been indicted for helping aliens remain illegally in the country. Rep. John Young, D-Tex., won handily despite allegations by a former member of his staff that he required him to have sexual relations with him. Three of the 19 women in the House didn't seek re-election. At least two women were newly elected, both Democrats. They are Baltimore City Councilwoman Barbara Barragan and Republican former Mary Rose Oakar. The 16 incumbent women appeared headed for re-election. Governor The gubernatorial victory in Illinois belonged to Republican James Thompson, a former U.S. attorney who convicted some Chicago Mayor Richard Daley's followers. The district attorney State Michael Howlett, a veteran politician hand-picked for the race by Daley. Incumbent Republican Gov. Christopher Bond was defeated in Missouri by Democrat Joseph Teasdale, a Kansas City lawyer who campaigned from the back of a nickel truck. West Virginia chose Democrat John Rockefeller IV, who now follows in the footsteps of Republican uncles Nelson and Winthrop, also once the heads of state governments. It was the younger Rockefeller's second try at the job. In Delaware, champion vote得FIERer DuPont jonee the rank of governors by a vote of 75% to 25%. In Washington state, one of the two races in which women were candidates, Dixy Lee Day, former secretary of State, defeated her Republican opponent, county executive John Spellman. Democrats . . . "There's no question that there are an anti-Bernett voice," he said. "It's hard to tell if he's an outsider." campaigns from the state headquarters. "Gov. Bennett is a man of considerable abilities. There is a no question that a lot of people are impressed." went down to defeat in the Republican stronghold of Johnson County. J. C. Tillotson, R-Norton, the vice president of the Kansas Senate, was among Republicans trailing in incomplete returns, and another longtime Republican senator In Johnson County, Frank Smith, now a Democrat member of the state house,戈ed veteran Republican D. Wayne Zimmerman, 12,807 to 12,422. In Wyandotte County, Republican Tom Rehner won election to a senate seat with ease over Republican Bob Peck. THE COMBINATION of successes left Assas Democracy who filtered around and surrounded the attackers. they usually are on election nights in Kansas. Their happiness was somewhat tempered by a gnawing concern over the unemployment race, which was doubled until 2:30 a.m. But a pipe-smoking Democrat who sat in a lounge off the Holiday Inn lobby perhaps turned up to work on the phone up 10 p.m. news. A friend shouted a hello, and the man turned and raised his drink. "Cheers," he said. "It's a night to celebrate." JOHN HADDOCK FORD LAWRENCE, KANSAS JOHN HARDOCK FORD LAWRENCE, KANSAS Compare Prices on our Tune-Ups Our regular prices are as low or lower than most service departments special sale prices. Compare Prices 8 cylinder tune-up $^{\star}34^{00}$ 6 cylinder tune-up $31^{00}$ 4 cylinder tune-up $*28^{00}$ Parts & Labor Included John Haddock FORD 23rd & Alabama 843-3500 Compare Services - Service for all domestic makes •Fast courteous service •All work guaranteed •Finest equipment •Genuine Motorcraft parts •Guaranteed price •Factory trained technicians IF YOU THINK CHAMBER MUSIC IS STUFFY— YOU MUST HEAR The JSIC GUARNERI STRING QUARTET Presented By The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Sunday, November 7, 3:30 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE Tickets on sale now at Murphy Hall Box Office FALL BOOK SALE TODAY THRU NOVEMBER 13 OREAD BOOK SHOP IN THE UNION MON.-FRI. 8:30-5:00 SATURDAYS 10:00-1:00 Accommodation advert are offered sex, color, BRING ALL CLASSIFII 15 words o fewer ... Each addit word AD DEAD to run: Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday ERRORS The UDI than tw ances wi materiall FOUND AIL Found it charge days. Then simply be at 864-43 UBD KUSHI 111 Flint H I. BOKONON See our ad 841-3600 BOKONON New shipmer 841-3600 Join Opta-C based. For si 841-4769. --- 2 bedrm., me carpet, centr Lawrence or State Lake. 3 bedroom a occupancy th at 842-8831 after 6:00. 2 bedroom fum lst, laundry, 7281 Female room next semester 842-568 For rent: aj utilities paid: Nov. 1. Spacious 2 b Jan. 1 On bi Fully equipn Need to subl Apt. $295/mo 841-6409 Sublease—2 b Ridge, $155/m --- STEREO COI of any price other than fr you will pay at the GRAM CUSTOM JEW work at reas Miniature ac Complete stor 841-3883 Presently occupant 2 bedroo unfurni 2410 W. Order Many ADVE Hillcrest Order 10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 All Mexico on pipin 807 Vermont South 843-96 University Daily Kansan Wednesdav. November 3. 1975 KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kamen are offered to students without regard to their background. BIRLING ALL CLASSIFIED TO I11F FLINT HALL. CLASSIFIED RATES time times times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional ERRORS Question 1... .01 ... .02 ... .03 ... .04 ... .05 Question 2... 1.00 1. LENGTH Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months and can be placed in person or simply by calling the UB business office at 864-1538. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall ENTERTAINMENT BOKONO Paraphernalia for the cornmeal. Bokono in Wednesdays' Kisanei at 11:10 841-180-690. BOKONON Paraphernula for the compassure. mortars of bongs and pipes. 12 Eighteen: 841-3600. FLYING Join Opta-Cap Flying Club. Lawrence airport 814-750-6790, one sale, member Card 113- 814-750-6790 FOR RENT 5 bedrooms, apt. at Qualcomm avail, for limited rental. 845-361-2700 at KBSI 9:30 & 6:00 and KBSI 845- 371-2700 2 bedroom, modular form home on 40 acres. Shag and large yard. 3 car garage. Doggie Kennel. Lakewood; amphitheater; millstone. Douglas County County Park. 2 bedroom furnished apartment available January 2018, on bus route 2, road route 6, 7291. 11-3 S Female roommate wanted immediately and for share apartment with own wife. 842-864-5684 11-8 For rent : apartment close to Union. Parking free. One-bedroom. Call 932-709-9900. Availability: Nov. 1 Need to submit two-bedroom Jayawhaer Towers 841-6800, utilities as of December 2019. 841-6800 Sublease- 2 bedroom unfurnished apt. at Frontier Ride, $155/mo. 841-7140. 11-9 Brainstorm 2 bedroom apt. available for sublease 3-bedroom apt. available for sub lease Fully equipped kitchen. Call 641-7687. 11-9 100 West 55th Street, NYC 10024 FOR SALE CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermals. Uniform. etc. Complete stone cutting. Satisfaction guaranteed. STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-produce products, they are highly sought after by the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. ¹ff Presently offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1977. 1 and 2 bedroom units, furnished and unfurnished. 2410 W. 25th Park 25 842-1455 Order Now For Christmas MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE Alternator, starter and generator. Specialties: ELECTRIC, 843-900-3600, W 01h. BH. ELECTRIC, 843-900-3600, W 01h. BH. Many at Special Discounts Excellent selection of new and used furniture trades. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704 W. 56th Street, New York, NY 10023. Western Charity College Nairobi on Sale! Make Western Charity College Nairobi on sale! Make Western Charity College Nairobi on sale! 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation 3) For exam preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Clerk Stores. tt Excellent selection of used furniture, refinished furniture. Toilet, Toilet Tops, Kitchen Tops, a.m.-d.m.p. free delivery within New York and San Francisco. 40%+/2% off on warm up suits, dress man's suits & Swim Chub Rt. 4 (west on 842-766-176, 842-766-190) For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call Burke at 841-5848 or 10-8434 at 841-347. 173 Vega station wagon. Wuns well. Rush high, $1,000 or best offer. 841-2176. 11-3 68 Javain automatic: low mileage>-51,000 $45-10 or best offer. 924-812-4584 after 5. 539-755-8000 Mobilitybase Grand Public in excellent condition. Chest tube, upper and lower mandible and tubes and鼓乳 the 21 Calf 848-5196 848-5197 Porsche Catalina 1965 4-dr auto, AC. Powered. Catalina 1965 4-dr auto, cheap, must be 13-33 4919 GII or 826-8214-8213 Thinking about a nice stereo? Don't know what to do? Here's a guide to good news for you. RU: AUDIO-18 E-SERIE - I TALK TO ME Two white Latin Percussion concerts. Excellent. month old, $300. Call Rick, B42-6317. 11-3 We have State of the Art Sound Systems at the New York Institute for Technology, the trade. RAY AUDIO, 13 E. 8th St. 31-4 718-250-6000 Super Sound system for $650. Better quality. Super Bass - RAUD AUOI, 11-4 Rhb. Hear the difference. A lot of Hype is not right. RAUD AYUO Second Systems are out of sight. 13. E 8. 11-4 Phone: 843-6424 Must Ski: 1984 Chevrolet, Removable, Snow trying, body good. B44-830, B46- trying 1974 Honda Clue, excellent condition. New tires less than 30,000 miles. Battery 824-652-486. 11-4 Ovation Cardinal Balladeer guitar with case, 2 years old, excellent condition $75 Calls 1-24 Kornmeier Electric Stove and Norge Front-free refrigerator. Call 842-6616. 13-4 Excellent condition - used 3 months. Marshall 1014 518-269-7000 SRO speakers. A real kicker. Call: 841-359-114 SRO speakers. A real kicker. Call: 841-359-114 Banjoi~super-billion Masterstone, must see and hear. 841-6422. 11-3 Snow tiree, G-60X15, studded with wheels for Chevrolet. B141-4422 11-3 1971 Triumph GT6, red; radians; Men's 3-speed 2006 Schott amplifier, 20 watts per channel 11:15 SURABY 71" 4-速度, AC AM, radio & 8-track, $4,000毫元 $1200 best offer. Battery 85-131- 380毫元 Beautiful well-designed stereo system that is only $250. The sound will amuse you. RAY AIS 14.95. Our receiver does what Yamaha do—at almost no cost. We prove it to your students. AUDIO, E. B. S. St. 11-5 There are a lot of misleading concepts about high-performance systems. You should get top performance. Better sound systems for your home or office will have an even better sound quality. I love Allison: she turns me on. Her upper end speak loudly, her voice is lyrical. For $261. RAUD AYD, 8e. b. 115. Complete stereo system: Pioneer PL-71 transmit, Sony STR-7658 receiver, 56 per channel, two 36-R.CRVMega Vega speakers. Receiver 3 of 4. Strand SRX905B, 855, 854-1145, 11-5 p.m. Excellent condition. No room for storage! 4 WK snow 2, stained. No space for storage! GBRE also in great shape. GBRE has a large GEBRR also in great shape. Opal Kadette Scan, 1608, low mileage, $450, 843- 11-8 SUNY MG 1100 4-door sedan, 1965, low mileage, $250. MB55 3-door sedan, 1965, low mileage, 11-8. Mexican Food Aztec Inn All Mexican Dishes served on pining hot plates American and Two" 15 wafers w/wi/fldrange and hights, enclosed in aluminum. Air airplane suspension. Magnesium 84-2818 11-8 has the eyeglasses BOOKS-Thousands of paperbacks and hardbacks at reasonable price. Well-balanced selection including just about any category. New, used, vintage, secondhand. Ship. open Sun-Sat., 10:00-5:00. 11-5 you want. 806 Massachuseits Phone 841-7421 VISIONS VW 412 station-wagon. Clean and good condi- tion. Air transmission, air condi- tion 11-9 8,100 $ 835 Complete. Component Stereo, BHN turbilt, complete. Complete. Component Stereo, BHN turbilt, complete. Ultra-lar speaker; $250. Call 643-7823. 11-9 Guitar- Guild P-50, acoustic in mint condition 841-4422 13-5 1971 Toyota Mark II 4, speed, AC, new tires, engine capacity, 30 mpg, call 844-8251. 11-9 NAISMITH HALL HELP WANTED JVERSHEL JOBS - summer/year-round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia. All airfields. Europe, $200 million. Expenses paid. sightseeing. Free $180 million. Airport transfers. KA, KA. KA, Box 449, Berkeley CA, 94708. 11-11 Good used 10 speeds and single speed. Lawrence Switzerland Cyclone 4 - 2 Mon-Sat. Thurs. 11:30 to 8:30. Now taking applications for part-time cocktail waiter, cook, dishwashing app, at Carriage Inn, near Boston, MA. The Association of Systematic Collections—a national association for scientific data management—is working a full-time Administrative Assistant. Duties include: curriculum development, management of a diverse publications database, management of a resentant publication supervision of resentant project Salary range is Applicants will be evaluated on the basis of artificial experience applied to computer appliance background. In biology, level of education, relevance of previous work experience, two references, and willingness to One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Rose Keyboard. Professional sound systems, guitar drum, drums, special equipment, synthesizers. Board, 1420 W. 82d, 843-2007. 11-3 Interested persons should send a resume. Involvement in the Daily Journal World Application deadline is May 18, 2015. The Association of Systematics Collections is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer Sandys Drive-in is now taking applications for part time employment. Apply in person at Sandys Drive-In. Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, in NYC, New York, assisting in research Social science bank-McRoberts. Dept. of Human Development, 111 Lexington Ave., 3 tpm to 3 pm. An equal Opportunity Employer. Qualification: Master's Degree or equiv in Social Science or related field. RC STAR Route carrier 2 A.M. daily=7 days RC STAR route economical car For app-10 电话 869-344-8948 For new Chevrolet's and used cars Now accepting Applications HENRY'S drive-in is in the process of remodeling and are now taking applications for employment. We will be updating the front view. Must work at least 20 hours per week and two weeks, day or night per month. Starting Monday through Friday. BROADCAST ENGINEER. KANU needs a Broadcast engineer immediately. Person must have previous experience in the field of broadcasting and be able to work with a team. contact Brad Dick KANU 844-1530-45-19. LOST AND FOUND 843-7700 807 Vermont Found. black dog, affectionate, 40 lbs, 18" shucked. Bright smile. Battered clothes. Somebody. Another please hurry! 11-3 Lost, brown leather bear bag with 8-9 key codes Hotline Please 664-8428 (dry) or 661-5179 *Must be returned by 6/31/17.* Found: woman's watch on West Hills Parkway, Thursday, 10-28. Call 642-7201. 11-3 for Spring Semester Call 843-8559 or stop by our office. Turner Chevrolet Found: billfold at Shenanigan's parking lot three afternoon. Contact Kansas University 11-4 Call Ottis Vann! at Lost: small silver watch, turquillein lilac. Inot: Two sienth and Emery and Wescoe. Reward卡 for the watch. 2414 Ouadahl 843-1116 Cedarwood Apartments Selected Secondhand - Imported Clothing for occupancy January 1 & 2 bedroom only forklift and unforklift Goods • Vintage Clothing New offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1973 - Furniture - Antiques Lost: glasses in blue-green cue somewhere behind Lewis and Edwin. If found 11-3 *密码:684-1054* HALF AS MUCH 730Mass.841-7070 Brown leather purse taken from Carr. frt. Night. Brown leather purse returned by L.D. Award. 843-926-301. 31-4 SEE... Lost: Brown photo-grey glasses in print case. Mary: Black please Mary Call Marty 845-864-9644 11-5 - Foosball MISCELLLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ushers/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday- Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m. Mass. Found, 3 month, black male kilt; white spot neck. Found 1 month, Call 841-325-11-5 NOTICE service problems? TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN CASHIER Good-Food from scratch. Linch 10-SUN 20-MON 600-MASS. The shop has a backyard event and the staff are friendly. $45/day. LLOST? One 'Jubilee' skier, slender, slender, gold hand, for her 'Jubilee' skier; or in air, around Murphy, Seminole or Oct 28 in or around Murphy, Seminole or Rochester. Found: Grechen Cox's bus pass. Call 842-2562 to 114 evening—alarms. Redeberen Lutheran Church, 30 and Haskell, invites all students and faculty to our Sunday classes. Students will be admitted to Study at 10:15 a.m. we have an active college agroup. Transportation will be provided if you are not attending. Swap Shop. $20 Mass.Used furniture, dishes, toys, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12pm- 843-3777 Found: Small black female kitten, found Oct. 31. 843-7566 DK SKILLET says we're not the newt Liquor Bever Hold here since 9. We drop 10 and we use it. We'll get our bottles from 9. Drop 10 and we use - Pinball PERSONAL Commission on the Status of Women: Women in Nov. 3, 7:38 p.m. Room: Coombs Room: Urban Institute He said the Haitian militant — the "Atocha" — p- m 22. The United States government says it will GAY RAY GARR THURSDAY, Nov. 4, 8:36 AM. (AP) **Auction--Nov. 4, 7 P.M. Complete bed, 2 peach baskets, 1 large candle, small dish.** Overseated staircase, small chair, desk for nine household items. Carned goods, groceries, many sold by case, other item too numerous to count. Most recently except Sunflower, 10 west. Sunflower Glow Gemini Club. Auction 11-4 "A different kind of bar "eating seclusion and quiet." **Wanted:** any attractive young ladies (18 yrs. or older) who would be a good photographer) for a chance to win $2000 in Playboy's Playmate Photo Contest. No BSA. Any interested ladies can apply by calling 64-231-2411 or for Dale as for Dance Keeping. 13-4 OUCH! Well girl, I'm脱困 once again. This well-known robot is a new generation in Mechanical Engineering and Business Admin wished to meet intelligence and some other aptitude. It gives another bit of light to my future. What's the plan? Need help, a referral, or just someone to talk to? CALL HEADQUARTERS. 812-3454. We never cloak. "Twas the night of the King's captainment. If you know this poem, call 842-1866. Keep trying." NAPA Eyelooker Optical wagon wheel 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. Everyday is Ladies' Day DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE 34 Main Street 500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday For the Do-It-Yourself we 2. Open 7 days and nights 3. We have it or can get it overnight N.A.P.A. 4. Machine shop service 5. Two stores The Lounge 3. we have it or can get it overnight Auto Parts 2300 Haskell 843-6960 1. Special Prices 817 Vermont 843-9365 overnight RIDES Mattresses • Liners Heaters • Frames Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets RIDERS Want ride to Boston around Christmas. Need to know this week call Call after 6: 514-8456 11-5 COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl TYPING SERVICES OFFERED 712Mass.St. FIELDS exception of Quality Lawyers, law firm or organization Lawrence Berkshire, Died in 2015 and Mon Baer, Died in 2016. We extend our condolences to their grandchildren. Math Tutoring—competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 1005, 1023, 1032, 1040, 1048, 1056, 1064, 1072, 1080, 1096, 1104, 1112, 1120, 1136, 1368, 538, 627, 648. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Rates are 843-7841. ACAFIENG RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands on covering research in 368 field areas. 200 Hr. Low Ang. Basis (905) 8025-7411; 200 Hr. Low Ang. Basis (905) 8025-7411. Home of Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a "Tune-up"—we will clean and adjust your bike, brakes and chain, both wheels and adjust your brakes and chain, true treads and adjust your accessories bought at time of "tune-up". Rates: $15.00 for a new bike; $20.00 for accessories October to Nov. 10 price $13.50. $35 spares $11.50 speed specs $6.50 Complete protection. Need a new bike? Come and use the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer! Bring along your used Schwinn to trade in. See us at www.brandswinn.com/trade-in. Thursill up to 9:30, Sum. 1-4, 1-24, W. 6th, 843-653-633. Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a bike rack, stroller and adjuster. Have an entire bike, lubricate and adjust your dailers, brakes and chain, trust both wheels, adjust your dairies, accessories bought at time of "tune-up" Rates: 10 speed $15.00 or 3 speed $15.00 single speed $15.00 double speed $15.00 single speed $15.15 single speed $65. Complete professional Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, mice. Experienced typwriter, freewrite, spelling. 843-762-5911 www.typestudies.com Bikes-Boofs-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents Home of The Chalk Hawk --in the summer. ●DRYMOUNTING ●SITCHERY ●METAL FRAMES ●RESTORATION ●BODY BOARD FIXING Downtown Lawrence 842-7187 BARN BOARD FRAMING SPORT Cross Reference Bookstore 842 1552 Mall's Shopping Center Pin-Ball CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE Ping Pong HILLCREST BILLIARDS - Pool - Snooker - Ping Feos-Ball THEISIS BINDING COPYING The House in Uther's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawnery. Let us review the 8 Marchman offices or phone 452-763-1754. Thank you. E SELECTION OF BEER Air Hockey Need an experienced typist? IBM Selective LTC (applied to 453-6298, tacp. card, (ribbon). Call Pam at 642-7098 Typist editor. IBM Pica/cite. Quality work. Designs dissertations welcome. Welcome. Baji, 84-921-5172. - Bud on Tap Experienced typist THRESSES ONLY. Will type code for MSSQL 8441-6341 days, 8441-7189 days or 8441-8641 days. WANTED - Pool Penalty roommate needed. $62.20 a month plus 2 dorm rooms, 2 onewait Room, bus 13- Call 841-4974 Penalty roommate to share house near campus. Room owner, 828+75 plus 4 ushites, 11:44 11:44 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: female roommate to share 2-bedroom apartment and expires in August. 2 studies females needed to house furnished bedrooms, one with two bedrooms. One address included. Call Broth. 641-7455. 11-12 Bosunzee needed for very nice furnished apart- ment for $750.00 per month and two calls. Call (861) 245-3458 or (861) 245-3460 to see how we can help. Wanted:- female grad student to share house / 2 students grad student to close KU $10. 80 # Good used electric guitar under $100. No Jack. anne guitar - 843-8473 after 5:00. 11-5 Person to be hospital in our home Non-smoker. Your W-Th-F. Must be able to sit at durin KU breaks except for USD No. 429 holidays. Have 2 study time daily. Call 862-8561. 11-3 p.m. Two roommates wanted to share 2 bedroom Two roommates $190 + infillites | Call 643-896- 6975 Use the student discounts at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 RAASCH SADDLE A BRIDGE SHOP Chapter 10, p. 231 FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS, BOOTS, HATS, JEANS. 芦 842-8413 Mastercharge BankAmericare O HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service DELL 1900685215470180001 1811 W. 6th Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4 Keep your car healthy NOW'S THE TIME HAAS IMPORTS 1029 Mass. No extra charge Gift Wrapping Free FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY Smiley face KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU 10 Wednesday, November 3, 1976 University Daily Kansan Basketball team changes offense; Owens pleased with workouts By ERIC MARTINCICH When the University of Kansas basketball team opens its season later this month, it will be a different team from last year with KU fans opposing one—KU fans haven't seen before. trying to better last year's record of 13-13, KU coach Ted Owens will use a less restricted offense than has been used in the past. "It's a motion type of offense in that everyone is constantly moving," Owens said yesterday. "This offense is not quite as easy as it was for me, the freedom of choice in what we can do." Owens said that the success of the new offense relied on the ability of the offensive players to read the defense and then respond to how that defense was playing. KU fans also will see a team with more experience and depth than it did a year ago. The team is now returning to starters, returning from last year's squash, each bringing with him an added year of experience. With the addition of three freshmen and a junior college transfer, Kansas has depth it will never lose. Hasan Houston (6-2 guard), Mac Stalloup (6-7 forward) and Scott Anderson (6-7 forward) are the freshmen. John Douglas is a 6-2 junior guard who transferred to KU from John C. Calhoun Community College in Alabama. Douglas, who finished his junior college career with 14 school records, is giving last Clint Johnson competition for a playing position. "I've been very pleased with John Douglas. He's playing with good stability, and he gives the team good outside shootout." Owens said. Another aspect that must please Owens in the first few weeks of practice is the absence of injuries that plagued the team last season. Donnie Von Moore, who missed last season because of illness, is back with the squad this year and is batting Ken Koenig and Herb Noble for a position in the front Paul Mokesi, who sat out part of last season with a pulled hamstring, also is back Owens said that the practices, which officially started Oct. 15, had gone well. "We've improved in the area of fundamentals, which was our primary goal," he said. "We're starting to get things fitted together now. We're making good together good." Kansas has several weeks of practice left before it opens the season Nov. 27 here against Montana State. Owens knows that there is still work to do. "Our biggest problem right now is the conversion from offense to quickly getting back and assuming a good defensive posture," he said. "The only way you can improve is to scrimmage a lot, which is what we're doing now." Eddie Lombrick Coach Ted Owens Volleyball wins Good net play by Laura Frost helped give KU's women's volleyball team its second victory over the University of Missouri at Kansas City this season. The Jayhawks won in three games last at UMKC, 11-15, 11-15, 15-9. KU beat Boston, 12-7, 10-6. KU coach Bost Stancliff said that UMKC was a much improved team from a month ago. "We've seen an improvement," he said. The victory gave the KU squad a match record of 29-8. UMKC's junior squad defeated KU'S JV, 15-6, 15-11. Big Eight investigating OU NORMAN, Okla. (AP)—Officials of the University of Oklahoma announced yesterday that they had been informed that the Big Eight Conference would make a investigation of allegations that football players had sold tickets at inflated prices. The pending Bight Eight probe was disclosed in a release by the Office of Media Information, which insisted the allegations weren't being investigated by the National Collegiate Athletic Association as reported last month by the Oklahoma City Times. OU President Paul F. Sharp said in the According to a release by the school's office of media information, Big Eight Commissioner Chuck Neinas arrived on the OU campus yesterday to inform officials that "the adverse publicity in the press was due to the Big Eight involvement at this time." The Transcendental Meditation Program COIN WEDNESDAY Free Public Lecture Tonight, Nov. 3 7:30 Kansas Union—Oread Rm. release: "It is understandable that the allegations being made by certain newspapers have created a high level of concern within the Big Eight Conference. We welcome this opportunity to cooperate with our colleagues in a systematic evaluation of the charges." No notification has been received that the NCAA has initiated an investigation of the team. Music of the Basotho of Africa 7;30-9;00 p.m. $1.50 Museum of Natural History November 3 SUA presents: A BAHAMAS EXPERIENCE January 2-9 $186.00 for those desiring lodging $129.00 for those who wish to camp For more information call SUA 864-3477 NOW SIRLOIN STOCKADE GIVES YOU COMPLETE LUNCHES 1.69 Everyday Low Prices...Everyday Monday Thru Friday 11AM 'til 4 PM CHOPPED STEAK 1.89 CHOPPED STEAK FISH 1.69 CHICKEN ERY 1.69 CHICKEN FPV CHICKEN PYR 1.2 GERMAN STYLE SAUAGE 1.5 STOCKADE CLUB STEAK 1.69 Each lunch includes salad, toast, and potato plus your choice of coffee or tea. Open 11AM to 9PM Weekdays — 11AM to 10PM Weekends Prices shown available only at the following Siriom Stockades. Kansas City > 11828 Blue Ridge Extension • Gladstone - 6006 N Oak Lee's Summit > 828 Birmingham Rd • Liberty - 601 S1 N Oak Olaina > 215 N Rahuhite • Shawnee Mission - 7474 N Ramitaw Lawrence > 10135 N Ocala • 8th Trafficway Warensburg > 708 N Charles SIRLOIN STOCKADE SIRLOIN STOCKADE The Family Steakhouse Come in NOW Get your "PUNCH+A+LUNCH" Card You buy 9 Lunches Get one FREE THE PAPER MONTHLY NOVEMBER 2014 NIGHT LADIES Ladies Admitted Free on Friday Night. Dance to Roy Racody's All-Stars at The Nest— Level 2, Union nest Coors Pitchers $1.00 Mass. St. Deli New Yorker Exp. Nov. 30' '76 Present Coupon FOREIGN AUTO PARTS Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan 864-4358. Rear Window Defroster Kits Fits All Cars $750 Lucas Square Eight Driving Lites Retail Value $14" $2450 each Retail Value '33' Go North across bridge to stoplight, turn right, go one block. JAMES GANG 304 Locust 843-8080 M - F 8 - 5:30 SATURDAY 8:00 - 5:00 FOREIGN AUTO PARTS A piece of bread with some cheese and butter on top. MISS. STREET DELL 941 MASSACHUSETTS The Reuben $1.50 Reg. $2.00 Present Coupon Offer Expires Nov. 30, '76 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. "The original thick crust from New York" $1.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA Present Coupon Offer Exp. Nov. 30, '76 Pizza Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Eighth Three Seven Massachusetts Street Your 20-inch feet can be well padded even if your wallet isn’t The Puff from Bass [ ] H E Offe custom Ameri seems be me But hoping Minist the Af althou slimme "It's to expl plav." Kiny Rhodes because they are too rule, whites the poles lead to "I / whites together see a create: While Kinyon method better s the Uni The c Kinyon Ir More of Kang second Jerry cellor 6 that 67 compare A com available Nov. 1 vertiser Hutch enrolled Because however during admissi- MOST hours. graduat undergr Ford congratulates Carter, promises to cooperate AP Special Correspondent By WALTER MEARS WASHINGTON (AP) - President-elect Jimmy Carter, the outside come to power, yesterday accepted the hoarse congratulations and the promised support of President Gerald Ford, the appointed incumbent that Carter so narrowly vanquished to win the White House. At the railroad depot in Plains, Ga., his hometown campaign headquarters, Carter said a first task must be "the unification of our country after a close and hard-fought election." He said Ford's promise of cooperation to that end will make the job "much easier for me." The President's voice was so hour-e and weak that in his telephone call to Carter, Ford had aide Richard Cheney read his telegram of concession and congratulation. newsmen and the nation in an appearance televised from the White House. LATER, FORD turned to his wife to read it to Carter said, "I look forward to working with patients and others like him who, even though divided by race, have similar needs." Related stories pages 2,3 devotion to this country and the well-being of our people." Carter said he deeply appreciated Ford's call and his gracious expression of congratulations and thanks. North provided the base that made Carter the victor. He said he had expressed his admiration for *ord* and for the President's strong, effective campaign. He added that he was "very pleased" by beating Carter, against the odds. But a near-solar South and the traditionally Democratic blocs in the And so the Democrat who began by running against the Washington establishment prepared to take it over, his confidence forecasting an activist movement that will change the face of government. THAT WILL TAKEN the support of a new DEMAND by demons as margins one-sided as the current ones. Carter's franchise for that mission was a narrow one. Ford had 925 He had 272 electoral votes, two more than a majority, with Ohio's 25 and Oregon's six still in doubt, although he was narrowly ahead in those states. More than 79 million ballots were cast, and the switch of a relative handful in closely contested states would have been enough to tip the electoral college verdict from Carter to Ford. FORD CARRIED 26 states, Carter 22 and the District of Columbia. But Carter's near-solid south, his command of Democratic bastions of the North, and his inroads into the Midwest added to victory. Carter 40,173,854 or 51 per cent In the popular vote, with 99 per cent of the nation's precincts reporting, the outcome was: Independent Eugene McCarthy 654,770 or one per cent. Carter went home to try Plains, Ga., at dawn, after a tumultuous victory rally in Atlanta, and the welcome of his neighbors choked him with emotion. "I came all the way through 22 months, and I didn't feel any pain," he said. HIS VOICE TRAILED off, and he embraced his wife, Rosalynn, who went with him. her. For lack of a voice, Ford had asked his earlier, Betty, to read his concession statement. She said, "I don't understand." "The President asked me to tell you that he telephoned President-elect Carter a short time ago "The President also wants to thank all those thousands of people who worked so hard on his behalf and the millions who supported him with their votes. It has been the greatest honor of my husband's life to have served his fellow Americans during two of the most difficult years in our history. "The President urged all Americans to join him in giving your union support to President-elect Carter as a leader." THEN SHE READ a telegram Ford had sent Carter. See FORD page two THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Thursday, November 4, 1976 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Vol.87 No.53 Village 51aff photo by DAVE REGIER methods to Rhodesian farmers as a missionary sponsored by the United Methodist Church, Klinny's children have completed their formal education, so he says he may go back to school and teach there. Home-again missionaru Winterizing the underground pipes is one of the chores Wallace Kinney does now at his Winterground of an RFD, 3 P. But for 16 years he helps teach better agriculture Ex-missionary hopes for peace in Rhodesia Bv MARSHA WOOLERY Staif Writer Offering a warm smile and patient help to customers who enter his Kampground of America on RPD 3. (KOA), Wallace Kinyon, is the third person to spend 16 years as a missionary. "It's a very confused state and very hard to explain, but a lot of forces are coming to plain But in spirit he isn't. He says he's always boping for a peaceful transition from Prime Minister Ian Smith's white minority rule to the African majority rule of the country, although he sees the possibilities growing slimmer. Kinyon isn't optimistic about the present Rhodesian settlement conference in Geneva because the whites, many who have close ties with the government, are too deeply entrenched in the country's rule, he said. The ultimate decision of the whites to give up power will depend upon the political position of South Africa, and the likelihood of explosive it could easily lead to war, he said. "I AM PLEASED to see blacks and whites siting around the conference table together," Kinyon said. "I'll always hope to create a more positive because war creates more bad than good." While in Rhodesia from 1948 to 1964, Kingon and his wife taught agricultural methods, such as the uses of fertilizer and crop rotations, sponsored by the United Methodist Church. The couple decided to go to Rhodesia after Kinyon was graduated from the University of Wisconsin because they thought there was much to do agriculturally in that part of the state. "The political atmosphere had a lot to do with the agriculture," he said. "Black politics are important to that by introducing better agriculture it would be a means for the government to address." MANY HAVE GONE to school in the United States, Kinyon said, such as the United Methodist bishop Abel Muzorewa, who attended the Central Methodist University in Fayette, Mo., and is now at the Geneva conference. HE SAID the people were skeptical of new farming methods because they feared an increase in acreage production would force families to live on fewer acres of land. Added to the racial problem is the friction between the two black parties within Rhodesia, Kinyon said, and their conflicts with the ruling Ribbons that are dominated by blacks. Most of the black leaders were educated by church missionary programs, Kinyon and Chukwan. "The strategy of the older men is under fire," he said, and the fighters are composed, to a large degree, of students who have left the high schools." Kinyon is confident, however, of the ability of the African leaders to govern themselves once they gain power, particularly because they are educated. There also is division between the older black leaders and younger revolutionaries, but there is a Nkomo, who also is attending the conference and who was educated by the "The churches have historically provided education for Africans long before the government got into the picture," Kinyon said. The main impetus for the education of Africans came from churches, but the government provided grants and aid, Kinyon said. government. They're not devil," he said. But problems between the bishops and the government arose when many bishops in the southwestern African majority rule, Kionyn said. "THERE ARE a lot of fine people in the government. They are not helpless." he said. "A number of whites are very anti-mission because it's a threat to their way of life. Kimyon said, "Aparthid is placed in missionaries who push for human freedom." The situation has changed because missionaries are leaving on their own to avoid military service, which is required of all whites, he said. THE MINISTRY of the church now is entirely African and self-supporting Kinyon said. Kinyon he said thought Rhodesia would be the ultimate for freedom of choice and religion "The church is growing faster in Africa than on almost any continent in the world," he said. "But of course the tribal religions are very strong. Intersession curriculum expands In the community where the Kinyans in there were 15 white couples. Now there is a girl. A complete timetable and catalog will be available at the Office of Admissions after Nov. 15. For course listings, see advertisement, pane two. Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said Tuesday that 67 courses were offered this year, compared with 37 last year. Hutchison said that about 500 students enrolled in intercession courses last year. Because of this year's expanded program, however, about 700 are expected to enroll during enrollment from Dec. 6 to 10 at the admissions office. Last year, KU offered seven courses at the Kansas City, Kan, Community College, and at the Linwood Center in Overland Park where the will be offered in the Kansas City area. More classes will be offered to University of Kansas students in year during KU's summer vacation. Interassess is an intense learning situation, Hutchison said, because students are in class from two to three hours each day. "Sometimes these topics can't be taught during the regular semester because of the time element, or maybe the professor wants to teach it so how will it work," Hutchison said. Hutchison said that most of the intercession classes were developed by her husband. Only two buildings -Robinson Gymnasium and Summerfield Hall - are used for them. In the future, Hutchison said, intercession classes probably won't be expanded. HE ADEDed that professionals often took intersession classes to gain more experience. HUTCHISON SAID that both were kept heated during Christmas break anyway—Robinson for its recreational facilities and Summerfield for the computation center. Both buildings have ample parking areas, he said. To conserve energy, service facilities for students, such as the Kansas Union, are usually shut down during Christmas break, he said. Another reason intersession courses might not be further expanded as that they are experimental and innovative, Hutchison said. "We don't want them competing with the spring semester courses. They could never compete." - MOST OF THE classes are for two credit hours. They cost $22 a credit hour for graduate courses and $16 a credit hour for undergraduate courses. The Kiyoshi also spent three and a half years in Zambia under the sponsorship of "The Christian community is very closely knit. Our closest friends are missionaries and, just like uncles and cousins, we hug and kiss." See EX-MISSIONARY page 12 Carter's policies viewed by profs By PAUL ADDISON and STEVE LEBEN Staff Writers Allan Cigler, associate professor of political science, said that Carter would institute an economic policy with emphasis on jobs. Although an Associated Press poll of voters on election day showed that one in five Carter voters still weren't sure where Carter stood on the issues, several people have said they would yesterday there would be clear policy changes under the Carter administration. Though Republicans emphasize fighting inflation to stimulate investment and jobs, Cigler said, Carter will be immediately concerned with setting people back to work Cigler said that Carter probably didn't favor public service jobs as proposed in the Humphrey-Hawkins bill, but that he would be reluctant to veto such a proposal if it were passed by the Democratic-controlled Congress. "IF THE EMBOYMPLOMENT figures stay up, I think you'll see a major attempt to correct that, probably with a version of the Humphrey-Hawkins bill," he said. "Carter's advisers don't know the simple facts that in 1973-74 we had an enormous money supply, and we had double-digit inflation and double-digit interest rates. If Carter and Kline have their way, we can expect more double-digit inflation or worse." Leland Pritchard, professor of economics, said that Carter's economic plans were destined to failure and probably would increase inflation. Col. Walter Wondrack, professor of Air Force ROTC, said that if Carter carried out his campaign promises to cut the defense budget by $-5 to $7 million and scrapped the One of the major reasons for this, Pritchard said, is the attitude and ideology of Carter's chief economic adviser, Laurence Kline. "GATTER AND HIS advisers are living in crisis," he said. "The economist who is 35 years out of date. He thinks it is necessary to expand the money supply, but that is inflationary." Pritchard In the department of military science, officials were cautious about the changes they thought Carter would bring about in defense. MANY OF THE CHANGES will depend on WHO is chosen as secretary of defense, Wondrock said. If James Schlesinger, the former head of the Navy won't be disappointed, he said. Capt. Ray Jones, professor of Navy Marine Corps, said he didn't expect great changes in database design. "The bureaucracy is so massive that there probably won't be any directional changes, certainly not immediately," he said. Even though Carter's military actions seem nebulous, his approach to social actions will be clear, Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Welfare, said. Voter totals National 79,398,843 52.9 per cent (99 per cent complete) National (99 per cent complete) 70 899 843 70 899 843 Kansas 950,000 ... 80 per cent Douglas County "A RECENT STUDY by the Congressional Joint Economic Committee to Harvey Brenner had significant data on the impact of indicators of social problems in this country. Five years after a period of financial turmoil, social, mental and physical problems." (100 per cent complete) "Carter's election will change absolutely the positive approach to social programs," he said. 28,011 75.8 per cent 10% per cent Voter turnout and the turnout percentages of registered voters. Katz said that as chairman of the Political Action Committee of the National Association of Social Workers, he had spoken with Jimmy Carter during the campaign and was convinced that his unemployment program was feasible. "I feel there's no real concurrence that there is necessarily a relationship between See CARTER page three Voters reject past assumptions; New policy changes predicted By STEVE LEBEN The 1976 presidential election returns showed that the American electorate still votes by the pocketbook, but some other states have had more assumptions might have been dispelled Carter voters listed unemployment and inflation as the issues of most concern to them, according to a nationwide poll conducted by the Pew Research election day. Slightly more than 41 per cent of those polled who voted for Carter said jobs and unemployment were the country's most important problems, with inflation being the main issue, saying inflation was most important THE ONLY noneconomic issue mentioned by a large number of Carter voters was trust in government, cited by 19 per cent. Ford voters also said that economic concerns were uppermost in their minds. Thirty-nine per cent mentioned inflation, 25 per cent mentioned excessive government spending and 22 per cent mentioned inflation. But another concern mentioned by Carte votes, 19 per cent of whom said it was still hard to tell where Carte stood. The vote clearly reflected in the election results. "Yer, Carter does promise more than he can deliver and yes, people are still asking for it," she said in question as this. Were they confident with the leadership they had in Washington?" Herman Lujan, associate professor of political science, said. "THE PEOPLE ARE saying they want new, fresh leadership in Washing-on. They want to take Carter even though they're not sure what he'll do." Allan Cigler, associate professor of political science, agreed. He said that the new rule would limit the use of federal funds. "If I'd have had to guess how many voters would have been unaware of Carter's position, I thought it'd be a lot higher than that." he said. difficulty giving the voters a clear perception of their positions because they weren't in a position to take any action on issues. One common political belief—that a presidential candidate helps others of his party ride to victory on his contails—was disproved this year, Ciarl said. "THE PRESIDENCE is almost approaching what amounts to a not-so-bad news conference," mass media coverage the presidency," he said. "There's no coatsuit effect." and organizations are centered on the candidates." Another prelection prediction—that voter turnout might be a record low also was proved false. Kansas had a record turnout of 950,000 voters, or 80 per cent of all registered voters, surpassing the old record of 928,000 set in 1960. Lujan said that a new element—an increased youth vote—contributed to the high turnout. "You look at the Douglas County returns, and Democrats Mike Glover and Ardern Berman won in this strongly The candidacies of Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter were both organized around the man, not the party, he said. Mr. Obama has tried to present a nonpartisan image. DOUGLAS COUNTY'S turnout was about 300 votes slays of 1972% record turnout at 38.011 voters, or 75.8 percent of the county's registered voters, voted Tuesday. Republican county. There must be a new element there." be said. Nationally, about 53 per cent of the age-wed population went to the polls—more than the number predicted by many political analysts but less than in the fourth consecutive presidential election in which voter turnout declined. LUJAN AND Cigler agreed that the closeness of the presidential race had contributed to the higher-than-expected turnout. Cigler looked to national trends to try to explain the victory of Democratic candidates for the Kansas Legislature. Democrats gained 12 seats in the House, gaining control of that chamber for the first time in 64 years. Republicans have lost control and now have a slim 21 to 10 edge there. "It's incredible that the Democrats could win the House," Cigler said, noting that the House was usually an indicator of the strength of each political party. "It appears that in this state, at least, the one-party state trend is losing to the national trend," he said. CIGLER SAID that although some observers saw the demise of the Republican party in this year's election returns, he saw the demise of political parties as well. A lot of this year's work were done on individuals and issues, not parties. Lajan said the Republican party could be rebuilt around upper middle class suburbanites. Lujan said the Republicans might look for leadership to the U.S. Senate, to newly elected Illinois Gov. James R. Carpenter to帚赴 Kansas Gov. Robert Bennett "Don't underestimate Robert Bennett," he said. "He's a very articulate, very talented man." Lajan said. 2 News Digest From the Associated Press Antinudity law to be tested TOPEKA-Police raided a Topeka private club that featured danced and arrested three men and three women last night in the first test case of the city's The ordinance was approved by the city commission last month in an attempt to stop nude performances in Topeka clubs that serve food and beverages. Club owners said they intended to join in a court test of the disputed ordinance which they believe to be unconstitutional. NEW YORK—The stock market declined broadly yesterday as the traditionally conservative Wall Street community absorbed the news of Jimmy Carter's victory. But most of the drop occurred in the first hour of the session; late in the day prices managed to recoup some of their early losses. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, down about 16 points less than an hour after the opening, closed with a 9.56 loss at 956.33. last week wave stemming mainly from an exodus of traders who had bought stocks last month. Gerald Dord P might score an upset election victory and spark a market rally. "It is apparent now that you have won our long and intense struggle for the presidency." Ford's message said. "I congratulate you on your victory." From page one Ford said it was time to put aside the divisions of the campaign and unite America in the pursuit of peace and prosperity. Ford congratulates CARTER WILL FIND new faces but the command in Congress. This was the best solution. The Senate retained its power balance of as Democrats and 38 Republicans. Each side held an equal share. "Although there will continue to be disagreements over the best means to use in the study, I think that you will have my complete and wholehearted support as you take the oath of leadership." Then Fond gamely strode out to shake hands in the crush of reporters crowding the field. In the House, Democrats won 293 seats and led for five others. Republicans won 142 But most foreign leaders and commentators yesterday were generally cautions in assessing the effect of the Carter era, which would probably mean no basic changes. As Ariel Greeks banged pots and pans in noisy celebration, South Korea worries about their future and South African blacks were upset over news of Jimmy Carter's election victory. Many Western leaders immediately cabled their congratulations to the victor, and Prime Minister James Callaghan of Britain and Pierre Elliott Trudeau of Canada suggested meetings with Carter soon after he takes office. Foreign observers were quick to find reasons for the election results. Foreign reaction to Carter mixed AMERICAN VOTERS cast their ballots "against the economic, moral and political consequences of the eight-year Republican government newspaper. Investia said Former Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan said Carter's "religious, almost nessanic" attitude toward Israel reflected the feelings of the American neocle. A newspaper headline in Greece, where the U.S. Republicans were blamed for the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, explained that Greek-Americans Bury Ford and Kissinger." "Carter remains an unknown quantity Dole says Southern pride won election for Carter WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Bob Dole took a brief backlight glance yesterday at his campaign for the vice presidency and conceded some mistakes. But he denied the election showed the United States was leaning to the left politically. "The majority of the country is moderate to conservative," Dole told a news conference at the Capitol. "Southern pride prevailed, not liberalism," he said of Jimmy Carter's victory over President Gerald Ford. Senate term, said he had no idea what role if any he would play in the Republican leadership after Ford leaves in January. And he said the Republican party "is still a great force in American politics" despite Tuesday's setback. In some states, a few votes would have made the vote. We did close the gap. I think they (the Democrats) were worried over the last few days." Dole said he had telephoned congratulations to Vice President-elect Walter Mondale and also bad again thanked Ford for giving him a spot on the ticket. Dole, who still has four years to go on his Because the election was so close, Dole said, Carter has no mandate from the voters. However, with the House remaining unchanged, the Senate's 62 of the Senate's 100 seats, the new President should have "a fairly long honeymoon," with Congress. both abroad and to many Americans," the London Evening Standard said in an editorial summarizing the feeling of many foreign observers. IT WENT ON to say that uncertainty "is disquieting and will inevitably damage business confidence. From the viewpoint of the immediate future in Britain, his success will be more important." In apparent reaction to that uncertainty, the U.S. dollar dropped slightly in value on currency markets across Europe Wednesday. Western European Communists were cheered by Carter's campaign statements that he wouldn't interfere in the domestic political affairs of other nations. Italian Communist party chief Enrico Berlinger issued a statement saying the election result "clearly indicates that a will has prevailed in the American electorate." SECRETARY OF STATE Henry Kissinger attending Berlinger and others by openly campaigning to keep Communists out of Western European governments. In Tokyo, some business leaders and government officials said they feared that organized labor's support of Carter might new U.S. trade restrictions against Japan. The presidential edge was razor-thin in several states. But a government spokesman said Japan welcomes Carter's apparent interest in U.S. Japanese relations and anticipates no "drastic changes" in U.S. policy. Some officials of countries ruled by military governments said privately they believe Carter may be hostile to regimes accused of human rights violations. In Ohio, Carter's edge over Ford was fewer than 8,000 votes. In Oregon, it was fewer than 1,000. In Hawaii, Carter's margin was a scant 7,000. "We may be headed for a wave of conference on Carter takes over," said an Argentine. Among them, those states have 35 electoral votes; enough to have given Ford the Republican majority. SO IT WAS close, but it was clear. To underscore that judgment, New York State has a law requiring county ballots for a recount of the vote delivered Carter 41 electoral voters there. At the White House, a spokesman said there would be no effort to challenge the state court's ruling. Sen. Robert Dole, the Republican vice presidential nominee, telephoned his congratulations to Vice President-elect Walter Mondale. Mondale will be resigning his Senate seat from Minnesota to an appointed successor. He was a candidate for the governor. An Associated Press poll of voters showed that their desire for a change in Washington overrode their misgivings about Carter and their respect for the incumbent Ford. CARTER WON by gaining support from traditional blocs of Democratic voters, despite their belief that he promised more than can be delivered. He gained heavy backing from lower-income groups, union members, blacks and the less educated. The poll surveyed 2,489 voters outside 100 polling places across the nation, and 51 per cent of them said they had voted for Carrie Clinton as percentage of his national popular vote. Carter's win closely called NEW YORK (AP)—Pollster Burns Roper was alone among the major political polls to report a significant Jim Carter lead over Hillary Clinton. Lord on the eve of Tuesday's election. But the major polls proved to be right in charting the course of a campaign that ended in a close election, although some Democrats have called for Democrat Carter's ultimate $4.07 per cent victory. In a poll released Monday night on the Public Broadcasting system, Roper said Carter was leading Ford by 47 per cent to 43 per cent. He added that "when all popular votes are finally counted, the result will be per cent, Ford 47 per cent, others 2 per cent." The actual popular vote, virtually comp gave Carter 51 per cent and Ford 48 per cent. The final Gallup poll, reported Monday, gave Ford 47 per cent and Carter 46 per cent. After estimates of undecided voters were tallied, Ford 49 per cent, and Carter, 48 per cent. A late poll by Louis Harris, completed Sunday, gave Carter 46 per cent, 45 and 44, respectively. Mondale says he will be active MINNEAPOLIS (AP)—Vice President-elect Walter Mondale said yesterday that he wasn't afraid of vanishing into ceremonial duties once he takes office. Mendale told a news conference that he and president-elect Jimmy Carter hadn't yet outlined details but are in "complete agreement" that the presidency will be an active partnership. Mordale said he hadn't decided when he would resign his Senate seat, which, under Minnesota law, would leave a vacancy to be filled by governor's appointment. Gov. Wendell Anderson, considered by many a likely prospect to take the post himself, said yesterday he wanted advice from Mondale, Sen. Hubert Humphrey and Rep. Bob Ferguson. THE BEST FOR LESS! HASHINGER THEATRE PRESENTS THE APPLE TREE a musical comedy OCT. 28, 29 8:00 P.M. NOV. 5, 6 8:00 P.M. NOV. 7 2:30 P.M. 50¢ CHEAP! IT PAYS TO BE IN DEMAND. Air Force ROTC has scholarship opportunities and job benefits for science and engineering majors. Air Force ROTC offers well paid young men and women in specialized science and engineering fields. Fields such as Aeronautical, Aerospace Engineering, Mathematics, Physics and Computer Science enrollment pays well well and keeps paying off in the future. Air Force ROTC offers 4-year, $100,000 stipend with $100 monthly tax-free fees for the $100 tax-free fee received the last two years to non-educated students. Upgrades in tuition will receive a commission in the Aeronautical competition for challenging students and offer greater opportunities for involvement in your field, plus you have financial assistance way up the promotion pathway and ambition are the only requirements it pays to be in demand. We need you to look like the type of person who gets the details. No money required. ted art & ring fields race, army, nd DTG and e ear, helps Sophomores interested in the 2-Year Program have contact Cast John E. Mackey Military Science Blvd., Boone 180, or call 844-4876 during school hours. Air Force ROTO - Gateway to a Great Way of Life Classic 3 Piece Suit Classic 3 Piece Suit By Happy Legs, $60.00. Sizes 5-13. Brown, Cinnamon, Blue, Black, & Gray Pinstripe THE ATTIC 927 Mass. The University of Kansas Intersession January 3 - 15, 1977 January 3 - 15, 1977 AFRICAN STUDIES A.F. 520 SEMINAR IN IN- MENARIAL STUDIES A.F. 520 SEMINAR IN URGENT ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS LAE 488, LAA 232, and SSA 480. ANTROPHORY ANTH 171 EPILOGRAPHIC RESEARCH LAE 488, LAA 232, and SSA 480. EAST ASIAN STUDIES EAS 488 SEMINAR IN EAST INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS LAE 488, LAA 232, and SSA 480. ENGLISH ENGL 297 TOPICS AND PROBLEMS ON IT 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1700, 1701, 1702, 1703, 1704, 1705, 1706, 1707, 1708, 1709, 1710, 1711, 1712, 1713, 1714, 1715, 1716, 1717, 1718, 1719, 1720, 1721, 1722, 1723, 1724, 1725, 1726, 1727, 1728, 1729, 1730, 1731, 1732, 1733, 1734, 1735, 1736, 1737, 1738, 1739, 1740, 1741, 1742, 1743, 1744, 1745, 1746, 1747, 1748, 1749, 1750, 1751, 1752, 1753, 1754, 1755, 1756, 1757, 1758, 1759, 1760, 1761, 1762, 1763, 1764, 1765, 1766, 1767, 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771, 1772, 1773, 1774, 1775, 1776, 1777, 1778, 1779, 1780, 1781, 1782, 1783, 1784, 1785, 1786, 1787, 1788, 1789, 1790, 1791, 1792, 1793, 1794, 1795, 1796, 1797, 1798, 1799, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1600, 1601, 1602, 1603, 1604, 1605, 1606, 1607, 1608, 1609, 1610, 1611, 1612, 1613, 1614, 1615, 1616, 1617, 1618, 1619, 1620, 1621, 1622, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, 1627, 1628, 1629, 1630, 1631, 1632, 1633, 1634, 1635, 1636, 1637, 1638, 1639, 1640, 1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645, 1646, 1647, 1648, 1649, 1650, 1651, 1652, 1653, 1654, 1655, 1656, 1657, 1658, 1659, 1660, 1661, 1662, 1663, 1664, 1665, 1666, 1667, 1668, 1669, 1700, 1701, 1702, 1703, 1704, 1705, 1706, 1707, 1708, 1709, 1710, 1711, 1712, 1713, 1714, 1715, 1716, 1717, 1718, 1719, 1720, 1721, 1722, 1723, 1724, 1725, 1726, 1727, 1728, 1729, 1730, 1731, 1732, 1733, 1734, 1735, 1736, 1737, 1738, 1739, 1740, 1741, 1742, 1743, 1744, 1745, 1746, 1747, 1748, 1749, 1750, 1751, 1752, 1753, 1754, 1755, 1756, 1757, 1758, 1759, 1600, 1601, 1602, 1603, 1604, 1605, 1606, 1607, 1608, 1609, 1610, 1611, 1612, 1613, 1614, 1615, 1616, 1617, 1618, 1619, 1620, 1621, 1622, 1623, 1624, 1625, 1626, 1627, 1628, 1629, 1700, 1701, 1702, 1703, 1704, 1705, 1706, 1707, 1708, 1709, 1710, 1711, 1712, 1713, 1714, 1715, 1716, 1717, 1718, 1719, 1720, 1721, 1722, 1723, 1724, 1725, 1726, 1727, 1728, 1729, 1730, 1731, 1732, 1733, 1734, 1735, 1736, 1737, 1738, 1739, 1740, 1741, 1742, 1743, 1744, 1745, 1746, 1747, 1748, 1749, 1750, 1751, 1752, 1753, 1754, 1755, 1756, 1757, 1758, 1759, 1600, 1601, 1602, 1603, 1604, 1605, 1606, Thursday, November 4.1976 sion 3 Losses stun Kansas Republicans TOPEKA (AP—Kansas Republican salvaged their state for President Gerald Ford and their own Sen. Bob Dole in Tuesday's election, but it was a hollow victory in the wake of devastating losses in state races. Surveying their setbacks yesterday, state Cities have been stunned by these developments. —They lost one of their four incumbent Representatives for the first time since the 1912 election, and saw their majority in the State Senate erase to a scant 21-19 ad University Daily Kansan vantage. Democrats seized the House by a 65-60 margin. ★ ★ Decline of state GOP worrisome to Bennett --They lost one o their four incumbent U.S. representatives when eight-term Democrat Mark Levin district to young Democrat D.Gluckman. Additionally, they failed to recapture the 2nd district when Democrat Martha Keys became a strong challenge by Ross Freeman. ★ ★ TOPEKA (AO) -Gw, Robert Bennett, admitting Republicans "got pretty well thumped" in Tuesday's general election, said yesterday that substantial gains by the legislature would force that party to vote in favor with funding for its tax reform package. Democrats staged a stunning coup in the Kansas House of Representatives, gaining 12 seats to dominate the lower chamber for the first time in 64 years. In the Senate, Democrats closed the gap by leaving the Republican majority at 21-19. The governor admitted he was surprised by the outcome, but said there were some bright spots. He also said the state's 53 per cent vote for President Ford and Republican vice president candidate Hillary Clinton. Currently, Republicans hold majors in both chambers, 72 in the House and 26-14 in the Senate. BENNETT SAID he had been saying all along there wasn't enough money to fund the Kansas, so he expanded homestead tax exemptions and increasing the Kansas personal income tax exemption from $000 to $750. He said, he would keep his workers' liability of actually coming up with funding. "I think the big question now that they have the responsibility of a majority party is whether they are going to continue to be part of it," Bernett said with reckless irresponsibility. "Bennett said, THEY FAILED in a strenuous bid to unseat incumbent Democrat state Treasurer Joan Finney when she waplied concessionally only seriously contested state office race. He lamented the loss of incumbent Rep. Garner Shriver, 4th District Republican, and of Topeka insurance company executive Ross Freeman, who was unsuccessful in his attempt to unset Democratic agenda, the GOP defeated weak main THE GOVERNOR conceded a Democrat-dominated House of R-presentatives and a razor-thin Republican advantage in the state Senate might cause problems for him, but lawmakers say the programs to be submitted when lawmakers convene the regular session in January. He noted an effective campaign organization on behalf of many Democratic candidates, adding that an anti-incumbent feeling and a variety of local issues operated in many areas and were responsible for the GOP slippage. He denied that a reported anti-Bennett feeling among Kansans led to the downfall of some Republican candidates, saying figures he's seen show that, although some campaigned on that theme were successful, others weren't. Democrats in the legislature, buoyed by a new sense of political power, could act in a manner that would allow them to embarrass the party or embarrass me" or constructive to enact legislation benefiting "DEMOCRATS WERE just more effective in getting the vote out," Bennett said, citing organization advertising and mass efforts at the local level in mannez runs. "When we analyze the results of who was successful we see that each race was a success." "Unless they can manufacture dollars out of something more than dreams, they will never be rich." Carter policies From page one an effective rise in inflation and a drop in unemployment." Katz said. Herman Lujan, associate professor of political science, said that Carter's domestic policies probably would result in a more democraticocracy," which some would call socialism. LUJAN SAID that many industries, particularly utilities and transportation firms, would find themselves faced with rising energy and labor costs. To save those firms the government probably will nationalize them, been done with some railroad companies. He said that the rationalization of industries was still a few years away, but its chances would be increased greatly under a Carter administration. J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business, disagreed that nationalization was necessary. Lujan also said that Carter would "introduce the most significant innovation since the Bureau of the Budget was established" in Tinkin Rosewell—zero-based budgeting. "Utilities are coping with the resource problem at the moment with their rate increases tied to the price of the fuel," he said. "This alleviates the problem." UNDER THIS plan for allocating fund to government agencies, which Carter used in Georgia, each agency must justify its entire scope of program goals each year, he said. --made possible by a grant from the Campus Hideaway Zero-based budgeting doesn't assume that an agency shouldn't receive any funds unless it is for a specific program goal, Lujan said. It was the Democrats' best political surge in Kansas since 1958, when the late George Docking won re-election as governor and Democrats wore treasurer and state printer, elected two U.S. House members and experienced gains in the legislature. Both political scientists interviewed, Cigler and Lujan, said they don't expect any major shifts in foreign policy. Lujan said that the major change would be in their personal, on-the-road diplomacy that Secretary of State Henry Kissinger was noted for Picking through the wreckage, Republicans could console themselves only in a victory over Jimmy Carter in the battle for democracy or electoral votes; Fletcher Belt's retention of the insurance commissioner's office against them is a crucial factor and the fact they甩 out a major poll in Lujan said that there might be a reassessment of U.S. relations with Arab nations, centering on whether U.S. arms should be shipped to Arab nations. Several professors doubted that Carter would be able to keep his pledge to balance the debt. PRITCHARD SAID that it was preposterous to talk in terms of a balanced budget unless structural changes also were made in the economy. "Carter will remember that he got Jewish support in key states—he's not going to follow the other way." "We must introduce competition in the price structure," he said. "Unless we do the price tags will keep rising. It's like a dog chasing it's tail." Anthony Marino, assistant professor of economics, agreed. Shriver, 64, the state's副U.S. House member, lost by a 312-voice margin in complete returns in the 4th District to Glickman, a 31-year-old Wichita attorney and head of the Wichita School Board. Glickman had 89,655 votes to Shriver's 86,726. Jazz in the Night weeknights 10-2 sundays 12-2 K4NU 91.5 "I don't see any feasible way of balancing the budget in a short amount time," Martino said. "The major question is how long we are going to do all he says in four years." IN COMPLETE, unofficial returns, Ford-Dole won Kansas with 501,759 votes to 429,080 for Carter and Walter Mendale, an eight per cent margin. Minority party wins off only about 19,000 votes, with 12,900 going to independent Eugene McCarthy. Keys, 46. joined her husband, Rep. Andrew Jacobs, D-Ind., as a victor Tuesday when she defeated Freeman, Topeka insurance executive, 88,451 to 82,400 in She and Andrews are the first husband and wife to win election to the House in history. KEITH SEBELIUS in the 1st district defeated Randy Howell of Hays, 141,638 to 52,588. Larry Winn Jr. in the 3rd district beaten Philip S. Rhône of Kansas City, 72,697. Brian Skelton in the 3rd district turned back Virgil Leon Olson of Chanute, 108,484 to 65,082. The state's party, three incumbent Republican U.S. representatives all won honors. Ford and Dole won the presidential battle in Kansas in the metropolitan areas, piling up a 40,000-vote plurality in the four most populous counties. Ford won 80 counties, Carter 20 with five virtual dead heats. However, Ford won Johnson County by 40,000 votes, Shawnee by 8,500 and Sedgwick by 6,000, and Carter won only Wyndotte among the big ones, by 14,000. A constitutional amendment to permit a change in the way Kansas assesses open land was passed, but not by the predicted margin. It won approval of 414,728 voters, while 331,009 voted against it. The legislature now will draft legislation to implement it, changing the assessment from fair market value to the land's ability to produce income, but Bennett has written his 1877 session will delay implementation a year to study its ramifications. CARTER CLAIMED, among others, injured Lilly, Elsa, Lillez, Reno, summer counties. And, it was painfully obvious to Dole hadn't believed the party slay of Maria. The GOP had a net loss of five state Senate seats and 11 House seats, putting Republican Gov. Robert Bennett in the position of learning how to deal with an opposition leadership in the House for the first time. Ford's eight percentage point victory over Carter was less than the final pre-election margin. Finney, who had campaigned more against Bennett's administration than against Wetherell, the state GOP treasurer, by a staggering 148,239 votes. She polled 179 percent or 56 per cent, to his 339 983. Another 40,000 went to minority party candidates. Chief Justice Harold Fatzer and Associate Justice Robert Miller of the state Supreme Court both won voter endorsement for new four-year terms under the state's nonpartisan n judges selection process. Both won 80 per cent acceptance. BELL ROLLED UP 612,688 votes to 30,000 for two minority party candidates, and 957 for nonparty candidates. Control of Kansas House good news for Democrats ★ ★ TOPEKA (AP) — Kansas Democrats won control of the Kansas House for the first time in 64 years in Tuesday's election, and the man who might become the new Speaker of the House said Democratic control should mean better government. Rep. John Carlin, D-Smolan, is now the top democratic leader in the House and is the likely choice for the speakership when December-to-organize for the 1977 session. The surprising Democratic surge in the House made moot the lively contest between Reps. Wendell Lady, R-Overland and Josh Hayes, R-Hutchinson, for the speakership. The results are a sharp blow to the power and prestige of Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan. and 1976, but got most of his legislative program approved. Bennett experienced some troubles with a Republican-controlled legislature in 1975 In the 1977 session he must court House Democrats if he has hopes of winning appeal on the bill. "We've got a situation with a Republican governor where the Democrats are going to win." After reviewing the results, Carlin said it was obvious "there is going to be more balance in state government. "There's going to be more emphasis on merit and less on politics. I look forward to being able to do that." "Obviously there is going to have to be some give-and-take and some cooperation. The most significant difference is I feel the system is going to work better." For the Democrats, the election results marked a dramatic comeback from their party's low ebb in the 1944 election. Then, in December, Democrats won senators and five of 123 House members. Casual Sophistication by Happy Legs yours at the VILLAGE SET 922 Mass. How states voted STATE ELECTORAL WINNER VOTES Alabama (9) Carter Alaska (3) Ford Arizona (6) Ford Arkansas (6) Carter California (45) Carter Colorado (7) Ford Connecticut (8) Ford Delaware (3) Carter Dist. of Columbia (3) Florida (17) Georgia (12) Carter Hawaii (4) Carter Idaho (4) Ford Illinois (26) Ford Indiana (13) Ford Iowa (8) Ford Kansas (7) Ford Kentucky (9) Carter Louisiana (10) Carter Maine (4) Maryland (10) Carter Massachusetts (14) Michigan (21) Ford Minnesota (10) Ford Mississippi (7) Carter Missouri (12) Carter Montana (4) . Ford Nebraska (5) . Ford Nevada (3) . Ford New Hampshire (4) . Ford New Jersey (17) . Ford New Mexico (4) . Ford New York (41) . Carter North Carolina (13) . Carter North Dakota (3) . Ford Ohio (25) . Carter Oklahoma (8) . Ford Oregon (6) . Ford Pennsylvania (27) . Carter Rhode Island (4) . Carter South Carolina (8) . Carter South Dakota (4) . Ford Tennessee (10) . Carter Texas (26) . Carter Utah (4) . Ford Vermont (3) . Ford Virginia (12) . Ford Washington (9) . Ford West Virginia (6) . Carter Wisconsin (11) . Carter Wyoming (3) . Ford CARTER total—297 electoral votes FORD total—241 electoral votes Limits on nuclear power among rejected referenda By The Associated Press Voters in two states say you can have guns and betties. These are the results of dozens of initiatives on various state ballots around the country. In six others they say that you cannot limit the growth of nuclear power plants. In two states they say you can require only bottles and in two others that you cannot. A measure to ban the sale of handguns was defeated by a more than 2-01 margin in Massachusetts, which was believed to be a state with a referendum on such a measure. New Jersey citizens voted to allow legal casino gambling in the state's best-known resort, Atlantic City, known mostly in recent years as the home of the Miss Universe contestants and the centers of the nuclear power plants by imposing strict into a "Las Vegas of the East." In Maine and Michigan, voters accepted proposals to require deposit beverage bottles. Similar measures were defeated in Colorado and Massachusetts. Botany'500 The first name to look for in a suit FILM RELEASE Affluence comes early in Botany's new "Cartier Collection." This vested selection is truly regal. From the high and handsome shoulders, to the neat, close-to-the-body fit, to the trim trousers. And the fabrics! Made for looking and for touching. With rich solid colors and new striking stripings. From $135.00. Calkoun's Store hours: 9:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. 1744 Massachusetts Find it in Kansan classified Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. 4 Thursday, November 4.1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer Toughen up testing Education is one of the most exciting and challenging processes, or at least it should be. Unfortunately, there are a lot of things we don't know that aren't interesting to everyone. Schools have met this problem in a variety of ways. Progress has been made in making some basic subjects more "fun" for youngsters without sacrificing learning. Some choice of subjects is good for high school students and most school systems provide them. Some schools without teaching less material, have let students see how what they learn will apply to their lives and careers. NONTHELESS, too many schools and teachers have gone too far in "reforming" education. Some schools let children, no matter how young, decide what they want to learn. Who cares that they can't add when they are grown? Or that they don't know a noun from a lump of coal? Many "wise" educators will have nothing but scorn for my opinions. The National Education Association says that standardized tests prove little, and that teachers should vote learning should be things of the past, some educational scholars say. But in most cases, common sense says otherwise. A recent survey indicates that 11 per cent of 17-year-olds can't read everyday items such as newspapers and medicine bottle labels. College entrance examination scores keep declining. Clear speaking, writing and thinking become more and more difficult as the American language becomes filled with jargon. BUT WHAT is to be done? You might think I want a return to traditional teaching methods and subjects. To an extent, those steps are needed. But rather than just straitjacketing schools and teachers, a way must be found to insure accountability. In other words, we must make sure students learn the basics of English, mathematics, science and government. Sam Owen, superintendent of schools in Greensville County, Virginia, decided to require standardized tests for everyone. Students couldn't move to the next grade unless they passed the tests. Many students flunked—something most schools avoid by passing everyone, regardless of achievement. But overall, students improved. After two years, the county's students are doing markedly better on standardized tests. The dropout rate is declining. Those who graduate from high school truly have a high school education. PERHAPS such mandatory testing isn't needed everywhere. But standards must be set and met if we are to stop turning out students who are poorly equipped for life, especially in so complex a society as ours. Testing or some similar method of insuring that students learn wouldn't have to mean boring schools or rigid uniformity of teaching methods, either. Rather, we would have to look for the different student subjects in different people. The same methods don't work for everyone, and this would have to be faced. Measuring achievement more closely would help to identify students who need more ehlp and students who can advance faster than average. Rather than abandoning standardized testing, as some advocate, we should work to make tests and other indicators more widely used. By Greg Hack Contributing Writer Letters Von Hoffman off mark To the Editor: Your front-page article in the Kansan of Oct. 20, "Von Hoffmann's choice suggests that Von Hoffmann didn't do his homework before speaking to a student," writes Donna Urnall Room Ballroom the day before. The race for the White House started officially with the victory of Republican Hillary Clinton American citizens. Nicholas Von Hoffman, being a "decent" citizen should date "such a good-looking girl like America On foreign policy, Von Hoffman says, "Richard Nixon was the only president who attempted any change in foreign policy and see what happened to him." I would like Von Hoffman to answer this: was Watergate domestic or foreign? Von Hoffman's solution to a dall campaign" .. that Secret Service protection be removed from the best public solution to death. Would Von Hoffman run for the highest public office in "such a good-looking girl like America" .. that inadequate protection? I doubt it. Baridoo Deeyor Ikaba Port-Harcourt, Nigeria, senior Injudicious label To the Editor: I'm glad that KU is becoming more responsive to the needs of the physically disabled, and that I am confident we week was commendable. May I suggest, however, that you be more judicious about the words you use, especially in your writing. "I am not a cripple," have a perforative connotation and should be avoided. Next time, if in doubt about a word, why not check out the Office of Affirmation Action. 3rd year law student ONCE UPON Δ TIME IN Δ LAND NOT FAR FROM HERE (GRAND RAPIDS, TO BE EXACT) THERE LINED Δ FROG NAMED JERRY. JERRY LINED A NORMAL LIFE UNTIL Δ MAGIC SPELL BEFELL HIM AND... HE BECAME Δ...WELL...Δ PRINCE SOON TO BECOME KING. ΔLAS AND ΔLACK, THE SPELL SOON WORE OFF AND JERRY WAS TRANSFORMED ONCE MORE! WESTPHAL We'd like to change dying October-November is the season of the harvest and nature's most psychedelic colors. It is also the season of wreaths, as skeletons doing the dance macabre in the night, one of the periods of the year when we hear a bell. For this is the time of Veterans Day when wreaths are laid at tombs where the soldiers stand guard and where flags and stones are put on graves less grand. are that we'd like to make some changes if we only knew what and how. Nothing in this world or the next would seem to be more settled, less changeable than death, but it's not so our attitudes and behaviour have changed fairly frequently through the centuries and may include dying and our deaths are expressions of our life and our living, and the outward sings WE'RE AT something of a crossroads as to how to dispose of our bodies. Cremation or burial or some form of preservation? In much of Western Europe, it appears, services take place; the black arm bands for the men and the mourning clothes for women are unheard of. Restrictions of activities for a period after a death include the official Cult of the Dead, the keeping of flags at half mast, the cancellation of parties and Nicholas Von Hoffman (c) 1974 King Features Syndicate cremation and the rapid nullification of any public expression of memory of the dead is on the ascendance. This isn't, of course, true of the State's official observance, like the Tomb of the Unknown in Jerusalem and signs of mourning so universal in the 19th century have vanished on both sides of the Atlantic. Black bunting is now seen only, and even rarely, at the church where the funeral given way to the declamatory figures of angels and such. Now that's gone. Death has become a secret subject; too awful and taboo to speak of children. It is also difficult to privacy that many hospitals discourage the presence of relatives or friends, a practice that would have been appalling to people so indispensable to people 100 years ago. Beneath the glory, politicians normal I have always been comfortable with romanticized political reality but the closer I get to politics the more I see politicians falling to earth with the power and influence of presidents and men of power who truly have been set apart from others because of their brilliance, charm or advenience in political machinations. In addition, government leaders are merely shrewd political bargainers who intuitively take the right steps at the right times. All are compromised to some degree. Not many have any division of government or America. Power with a capital P. That's what the White House represents in the minds of most people around the world. The Strangevow war rooms, formal state dinners, the hot line and Air Force One. The world is at the fingertips of the men who reside there. When people are invested with such power society naturally elevates them to an elite class that most of us will never come in contact with, let alone be interested in. Such people are permanent residents in the White House. The public delightes in tidbits of intimate information in the media concerning the powerful and their families and the powerful are usually treated as long as it harves their interests. THUS AMERICA asks for and gets literally thousands of magazine and newspaper articles about the Kennedy assassination. Jack Ford as if he was an exotic animal—the meeting of the decadents with a homo all-american. Nixon was a perilous heavy. Johnson was a poterious Machiavelli with a Texas drawl. These political movers work their way up through the ranks of governmental leaders, and often outside their home states or even districts for many years before they make it to the rarified power levels inhabited by men like Henry Johnson. THEY HAVE families that could be interchangeable with millions of upper middle calfs families in suburbs throughout America. The kids need braces and barely know the point of asking for a divore. Bob Dole is an excellent example of the type of politician I'm talking about. I got to see firsthand the clash of everyday reality with the American version of power this week when I went to Dole's and mv hometown, Russell, Kan. would soon be a "heartbeat away from the presidency." In fact, almost every facet of this type of politico's life is normal, normal, normal. Except for the fact that these men are sometimes fortunate and persistent enough to gain great power. I WENT there to cover Dole's brief homecoming on election day. I had a personal angle on the story because I've been friends with Dole's nephew, Bill, and his family for years. A friend I met in Washington one summer and wanted to ask him for a job since there was a good chance that the senator Monday night my friend and I stopped in to see Bill and found that he had become something of a recluse. He certainly didn't give a damn about politics. He wasn't all enthusiastic about the prospect of a rally for Uncle Bob's fundraiser, but he's the Bill's nick name Dole's mother, Bina.) He told us to go on over that night and see the preparations so we did. He stayed home. I had met Dole's mother and father several times but since the senator visited Russell infrequently I never had the opportunity to meet him. I just heard about "Uncle Bob" and his doings in Washington. Several relatives and friends talked about the secret service men patrolling outside and the excitement of the arrests, Mrs. Dole demanded quiet. WHEN WE arrived at Mrs. Dole's modest but comfortable brick house, Bill's sister was fixing Mrs. Dole's hair and complaining about a headache and the fact that she hadn't eaten all day, so all day because of all the activity. Then Bill's father took us out to see the podium and the makeshift press area in the tiny garage. He made jokes about Carter's peanuts, gave his opinion on the election reform laws and gave us a Ford-Dole button. Everyone watched Dole on the newscast and I wondered how many times Mrs. Dole had hushed a room like that before to see her son on the SHE REPEATED one sentence quietly to herself that he had said: "The spirit's still there but the voice is zone." The next day more relatives and friends showed up at the house along with 1,000 spectators. The house was "Ssshhhh! Bob's on," she said, pointing to the TV. DOLE GOT a heroe's welcome from the townpeople then went back in the house to visit with the select group that had been put on the secret service watch, and it turned out he seemed he had been campaigning so long he did not know how to stop circulating through a crowd shaking hands. He did this for about 20 minutes and after his mother fixed a plate of sweets to go, he was off. set up like a big family dinner was going to be there with all sorts of home-baked pies, cakes, meats and vegetables. There was the mandatory pie, the everyone's pie and everyone was given little American flags. It was so wholesome. Now Ford and Dole have lost. I will offer one reason that contributed to their defeat. Both men are cut from the mold that I have described. They are capable administrators. They have learned the workings of power over their many years there and know what it takes to make it in politics. Dole hadn't made much of an impression on me. He just didn't have the aura of a man that could meet the needs of a world if ever he were to become president. BUT THE public has built a mystique around the White House for at least one good reason. That is that the man must truly measure up to the office. He must either be strong and ruthless or possess vision and the ability to inspire the people. Perhaps he presidents combine these qualities. hangman do his job in the public squares and marketplaces. Death wasn't as horrible or as terrifying, but more problematic as fascination. The 8th century had grotesque death fantasies, the dancing skeletons and the dramatic depictions of death in ghoulish style. The 19th century saw the死 romanticism of the lovers who lived to die sweet deaths in each other's arms. Even the deaths of warriors were quite the rage. The public wants leaders—not administrators. Carter may not measure up either but there is a chance he will and the public took it By John Fuller Contributing Writer other activities that might be deemed inappropriately gay. IN THE last four or five decades it has become increasingly important to show what's now considered excessive grief. He who walls too long the loss of his beloved is liable to find himself fact to face with psychiatry. Death is bad and it's banished. It's been pointed out that, whereas the Victorians did their own manifestations of manifestations, they revealed in death. Prolonged mourning, visiting graves and such is a very 19th century activity. In fact, it wasn't until the 17th century that the common run of people had individualized forms for their bereaved kin to visit. OUR PASSION now is for hidden, mysterious deaths. We can't get enough of the lonely men in our lives. Marilyn Monroe and Janis Joplin. They always die offstage, but if we don't permit ourselves to see them commit suicide, they will come home, we'll watch it for hours when it comes in the form of violence. It's almost as if it had to shoot its way into our conspiracy cognition with magnum force. THERE ARE probably millions of us who have seen other people mate but have never seen another human die. An absolute reversal of the past, of the Victorian death scene in which women took children and the great granchildren around the bed with minister and friends of the family in attendance. We, on the other hand, can't teach our students enough, but never is death mentioned. Death is looked on as such an unnatural, sinful act that even the most ardent advocates of capital punishment would not support, but public execution. You would imagine that if execution is a deterrent to crime, televising our electrocutions and our gas chamber dramas would teach the lesson even more vividly. But these suggestions of such an idea most pugnag. Before that most people were buried in a field next to the church around which galleries were constructed. The first graves would sometimes come to the surface, as in Hamlet's "Alas! poor Yorick," or sometimes they be dug up and used to decorate the chamber houses; was the grave of an army or of terrifying and disgusting our ancestors, there was a good deal of socializing and carrying on in such places, until in 1231 the Church Council of Rouen had decreed that people weren't as respectful of authority as they might have been because two centuries later the forces of law and order were still issuing decrees against gambling and making money in the courtiers. By the 19th century all that had changed, and we had highly individualized mortuary art in which the simple headstone had Our ancestors, who went with the flow of life somewhat more harmoniously than we, weren't harmed at seeing the Letters Policy Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and enclosed in brackets. All words are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judge. Any student must have been signed; KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their contact information; provide their address. More and more, those of us who can face our own mortality, don't wish to perish out of sight but are born with the ability not only of natural childbirth at home but natural death at home as well. There is even discussed that you must die on mortals, as you might call them, where we might escape the lonely and hidden death of the hospital to depart this earth with our friends and lives nearby. Reqnexe in place. S A mem tere Asso 1,574 and men THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 4 Pacemaker award winner Kansan Telephone Number Newsroom--864-4810 Business Office--864-4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily August 10, 2018 June and July举晚 Saturday and Sunday at 10:30 a.m. 66444 Subscriptions by mail are $8 a semester or $14 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $7 a semester or $9 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions At KU Rowl with Earl Deba At deba senie sophi team Debbie Gump Managing Editor Editorial Editor Yaei Aboulkah Jim Bates The comp last deba Editor Debbie Gum **Managing** Yadav Yadav **Journal Editor** Eduard Yadav **Editorial Editor** Jalil Yadav **Campus Editor** Stewart Barrant **Associate Campus Editors** B蹄 Salient **Chuck Alexander** Darry Salient **Photo Editor** George Miller, **Staff Photographers** Steve Schenell **Sports Editor** Steve Schenell **Associate Sports Editor** Gary Viee **Entertainment** John Viee **Entertainment Editor** Elizabeth Leech **Contributing Writers** Cory Young. **Copy Chiefs** Ame Daugherty, John Fuller, Alfonso Glen. **Greg Hawkins** Greg Hawkins **Make-up Editors** Chuck Alexander, Jewis Dombilov, Jovem K Business Manager Terev Hanson --- *Instant Business Manager* Carole Roosterkottie *Advertising Manager* Jia Clemente *Manager* John Macdonald *Claudified Manager* Sarah McAnabb *Assistant Claudified Manager* Kurt G. Saffall *Manager* Robert Wancher *Manager* News Advisor Publisher Business Advisor Bob Giles Dary Dairy Mel Adamau University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 4, 1976 5 Students say life in Eudora is 'down home By RICK THAEMERT Staff Writer EDUORA-The sign on K-10 reads, 2 044 AND GROWING* is for ms. We lonely and pop e and sies die permit commit in our hours arm of man or r con- with of us tatality, f sight is now child- death s even or the might might hidden added ins and scat in Officer Bill Long—just Officer Bill to most residents here—waits on the side of the road, radar gun ready, hoping to catch any speeding motorists who could endanger the safety of children coming home from school. Meanwhile, kids cruise up Main Street in jacked-up cars, make a U-turn at the corner by the stearfield Baptist church and cruise back down, look for other kids to talk to. Some of the drivers, however, turn onto K-10 and head west for the University of Kansas. They are the students who have chosen to live in this small town while at college. "I LIKE THE small town atmosphere. It is seems easier to get along with people." Carl said of his neighborhood. Abel said that he could live in Lawrence, but that he'd rattle in Eudora, where he lived. “It’s a root thing,” he said. “The town grows on you. You know you’re accepted. Even if you mess up, people always talk to me. You seem more concerned than in a big city.” Abel said that life in larger cities such as Lawrence moved at a faster pace than in Eudora, and that the people weren't as involved or communicative. "We only have one bar in Eudora where a lot of people go," he said, "but it'a a taven for everybody. Young people and old people both go there and talk." A FULL TANK of gas and a six-pack of spare-time activities in Eugene, Oregon. "What gets me the most is when the people who live here gripe about having their children get sick." have to witness a murder or a rape before they can say there's something going on." Abel said residents were affected greatly by the proximity of Lawrence and Kansas City, and often drove to either place for movies, concerts or dances. ABEL SAID the town's residents also were exposed in other ways by KU's presence. "If I lived closer to KU I could get more information, what they teach, like lectures and tutorials." Alba added that it was no trouble traveling to Lawrence if he really wanted "When they hear about some of KU's programs they'll say, 'Well, hell all, they teach up there is communism,'" he said. "KUpens up a lot of new ideas to them. It’s good because it’s kind of an awareness thing." Association not just for alumni By DAVID JOHNSON A fairly common definition of alumni are graduates or former students of a school. To the University of Kansas Alumni Association, the term applies broadly to anyone who was graduated, attended, or, in a sense, has an interest in KU. Dick Wintermorte, executive director of the Alumni Association, said Tuesday, "If a former student who has not graduated has an interest in the University of Kansas, we want him to consider himself as an alumnus and participate in all our activities." Wintermute said that parents, faculty members, current students and other interested nonalumni join the Alumni Association as associate members. The members pay the same dues and have the same benefits as regular members, he said. There are three options for paying membership dues; paying $10 annually for a single membership or $12 for a joint husband and wife membership; buying a THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION keeps more than 92,000 names and addresses of alumni. Of these, 25,179—28 per cent—paid dues. life membership in 10 installments of $21 for a single or $24 for a couple; and buying a life membership for $175 for a single membership or $200 for a joint membership. Alumni who join within the first three years after their graduation get a 25 per cent discount on dues. All rates except newcomers increase next January. Wintorme said. IN RETURN, members annually receive eight issues of the Kansas Alumni, a newspaper published twice as a magazine and six times in tabloid form. A Sports Report on KU athletics also is mailed for an additional $5 a year. In addition to traditional class reunions, the Alumni Association sponsors other alumni activities, such as the "Flying Jayhawk" tour program, which offers charter trips at special group rates to alumni. Last September and October, alumni visited Tokyo and Hong Kong. Next month, alumni will visit Scandinavia, Los Angeles for the KU-UCLA game, Ireland and the Caribbean. THROUGH VARIOUS programs, Winternote said, the Alumni Association has supported education in Kansas. Since 1971, the Alumni Association has sponsored the KU debate tournament set Three University of Kansas debate teams competed in different areas of the country last weekend in preparation for the KU fall debate tournament this weekend. At the University of North Carolina, the KU team of Frank Cross and Robin Rowland, Lawrence seniors, won first place with a record of 11 wins and one loss. Earlier this year they won the National Debate Tournament. At Xavier University in Cincinnati, KU debaters Jeff Brunton, Shawee Heights senior, and Steve Griffin, Lawrence team, won second place among 26 teams. Chris Simmons, Independence freshman, and Chris Folsom, Manhattan freshman, finished fifth at Colorado College with seven wins and two losses. The KU fall tournament begins Friday with 80 teams from 10 states. Preliminary rounds will be in Wesco Hall through Saturday and elimination rounds will begin on Sunday. The round will be at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in 495 Wesco. All rounds are open to the public. The topic being debated is: Resolved, that the federal government should increase the guarantee of consumer product safety required of manufacturers. Kansas Honors Program, which recognizes the top 10 per cent of the seniors in Kansas The association also lobbies in the Kansas education for increased support of higher education. "The University has no real constituency except for the alumni," Wintermote said. "And through the years, the Alumni Development Committee has been given the authority to governers as being extremely effective in speaking for the needs of higher education." Registration for the spring membership program of the Panhelenic Association, or sorority rush, is from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Registration begins today for rush week Participants must turn in 14 registration cards and an $8 nonrefundable registration fee, which covers expenses from rush and paperwork. Rush week is Jan. 10-17. Women who are interested but who can't register today should send their registration materials with a friend because late registration is discouraged, Maribeth Olson, Panhellenic Campus Affairs chairman, said yesterday. Paul Nels, also a junior from Eudora, said that despite the growing population of Eudora, residents kept their down-home attitudes. Minimum requirement for participants in the program are 14 hours of credit with a GPA of at least 2.20 from the fall 1976 semester, or 12 hours of credit with a GPA of at least 2.50 from the fall semester alone or cumulative. Membership program information is available in the Dean of Women's Office, 1250 W. Harrison Blvd., Madison, WI. 53701. NEIS SAID there wontn't make for young people to do in Eudora, so they were mindful. "We'd always go out wanting to do something, but there wasn't anything constructive, so we'd get in a lot of trouble," he recalled. "Kids still go out and drink beer in the country. That's where we had all our parties." Neis said that he liked the country life around Eudora because it was quiet and because he didn't like being around a lot of people all the time. Another advantage of Eudora, he said, is that there isn't much crime. "SINCE EVERYONE knows everyone else, there wouldn't be much chance of someone coming up to you on the street and doing anything," he said. Neis said knowing most of the people in the town encouraged involvement in community affairs, which added to the quality of life in a small town. Another KU student from Eudora, Greg Coleman, freshman, said that small-town schools are a good place to learn. "Eventually, I'd rather live in a small town," he said. "In a city, it doesn't seem like kids can get out and run because parents are scared it's not safe. But here, I can't remember the last time we had any problems with crime." TODAY, COLEMAN said, Eudora residents aren't as positive toward their town as they used to be, even though they still have a small-town attitude. "More people are taking the attitude that they just sleep in Eudora and work somewhere else, they don't participate like us." It doesn't depend on each other as much," he said. Martha Gronnerig, Eudora sophomore, said that her hometown had all the groceries and hardware she needed, but it was expensive for Lawrence for clothes and entertainment. Groninger said people often made cracks about Eudora, especially about the three people. "I DON'T THINK they're the bumbling, inefficient idiots people make small-town cops out to be," she said. "They just don't have much to do because there's not much going on. Eudora isn't a high crime district." However, Dick Vick, Overland Park junior who lives in Eudora, said that Eudora wasn't crime-free. His trailer home has been broken into once, he said. Volk said he would move to Lawrence at the end of the semester because there were fewer students. "I have more in common with people in Texas," she said. "Eudora seem to be more agriculturally mudded. All the kids my age hang out with me at school, and the Jawhail Gold station after it closes." VOLK SAID that he was sometimes late for class because of combines on the road, and that he had to leave half an hour early to get to class on time. "It's easier to study because it's quiet, but FILM NO. 30793 fall suit SALE! from Mister Guy . . . a large selection of this season's favorites in tweeds, solids and chalk stripes, all vested perfect for parties and those upcoming interviews . . . values to $ ^{5}165^{00} $ wednesday and thursday oaily now on SALE for $ ^{1}25^{00}$ open thurs. nights till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 mass. it's harder to get to class because of the drive," he said. Eudora wasn't always quiet, according to Volk "Until school was in session, it was hell," recalled. "Kids were screening and beamed." ON THE WHOLE, Volk said, the community seemed to be friendly and closely "The man at the grocery store knows me by name, but I don't know him," he said. "Even though there's not much selection, it's more personal. It's more of a go-down there-and-play-checkers thing than a business." William Ingo Memorial Theatre presents "EVERYONE IS SOMEBODY'S MOTHER." (SOMETIME) Oct. 28--Nov. 6,1976 8:00 p.m. Tickets 864-3982 Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan. 8641358 864-4358 Fool's Gold Presents MIKE FINNIGAN One Night Only Thurs., Nov. 4 at 8:30 p.m. Tickets $5 at Kief's Better Day's McKinnev-Maso McKinney-Mason Off the Wall Hall LATE SHOW FRI. & SAT. An outrageous assemblage of Sci-Fi, Marvel Comics and Rock & Roll THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW FRI. & SAT. NIGHT 12:15 Hillcrest R --- "Splendidly Funny." "The New Yorker" "Antic, frantic and amusing." "Boulder ester" THE .RINZ YOUR KEY to history "It's a ball of a brawl" - Judith Cree entertainment." STARTS FRIDAY struggle to findity STARTS FRIDAY R MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN Athriller ROBERT EVANS - SINÉLY BECKERMAN production JOHN CLOSINGER program DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENC OLIVIER ROY SCHEIDER WILLIAM DEVANE MARTHE KELLER "MARATHON MAN" Every Evening 7:30, 9:45 Varsity Hillcrest NOW THERE IS... PART 2 SOUNDER A Robert Reid Lecture G FRIDAY Eve 7:30, 9:30, Sat, Sun 1:00 HILLSTER 2 Every Evening 7:30,9:45 Saturday,Sunday 2:30 Varsity 2147478 ... telephone 319-5061 Up the ancient stairs, behind the locked door, something lives, something evil, form which no one Very funny . . . a jukebox of a movie. A comic book variation on "NASHVILLE" -V. Canby, NY Times CAB WASR Street Shores Franklin Algea - George Carlin Lake Forest - CAR WASH PG from which he on has ever returned. HELD OVER—ONE MORE WEEK Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. at 2:30 Granada Tel. (471) 309-6580 www.granada.com "BURNTOFFERINGS" STARTS ERIDAY Hillcrest FRIDAY at KAREN BLACK OLIVER REED BRUCE LEE in and BETTE DAVIS PG 9:30 FRI.SAT. & SUN "FISTS OF FURY" and "THE CHINESE CONNECTION" Grantley School 2016-2017 Ninth Grade If you liked him as Henry 11, you'll love him as the Earl of Gurney. a tour de force by Peter O'Toole that -a tour de force by Peter O'Toole that makes some kind of movie history Rex Reed PETER O'TOODLE ARTHUR LOWE ALASTAIR SIM THE RULING CLASS ENDS THURSDAY Evenings at 7:15 & 9:45 at the VG Hillcrest 6 Thursday, November 4.1976 University Daily Kansan Butler uses intimidating finesse to crush opposing running backs By GARY VICE 7 NU's Steve Hoins exchanges blows with Mike Butler Mike Butler is looking for someone to try to push him around. But after being a first team All-Big Eight selection at defense tackle last season as a junior, his reputation has so far been unsurpassed, most have tried to avoid him this year. Opposing teams have been running away from Butler and robbing him of opportunities to gain the recognition of pro scouts. "I suppose it's kind of an honor that they run away from me," Butler at 8-5 and 252 pounds is the biggest man on the squad, said. "but I'd rather have it. It would give我 more opportunities to make big plays behind the line and all." "IT WOULD be more of a challenge if they ran at me, but there would also be more of a chance for them to look like a fool if they get a lot of yards." Butler, however, has looked anything but foolish this season when opponents do try to run at him. He leads KU's defense linemen with 46 tackles this season and leads the team with eight tackles and leads the scrimmage for 37 yards lost. And he has complied these totals facing All-American tackles Dennis Lick of Wisconsin, Warren Bryant of Kentucky and Mike Vaughan of Oklahoma this year. "IVE SEEN him up against the guys who are supposed to be the best in the country, AllAmericans," nose guard Dennis Ballagan, said. "and he just crushed them. I don't think anyone will ever dominate Mike Butler." "He's so quick that he could stunt his way around them, but he doesn't need too. He just lines up and knocks the shit out of them." His biggest challenge this season may have come last weekend against Nebraska, when the Cornhuskers came his way. "THEY RAN at me more than anyone else has this year," he said, "but they double trained me a lot. They were using our techniques and developing their tight end, or a running back." Such special attention limited Sather to eight tackles, but it often allowed one of his teammates to make the play unchecked. "When they use two blockers on me." he said, "I'm taking out a lot of the interference so the linebackers can make the tackle." On the other end of the defensive line at tackle is Franklin King, who has been the beneficiary of many running backs coming his way instead of Butler's, King, a sophomore, is second to Butler among linemen with 41 tackles. "Nebraaska is really the only team that's challenged him," King said. "That's something that's hurting him this year. When nobody runs at you you can't get up for the games. Last year he had to get up for every game." Butler. And that game was Kansas '23-3 upset victory over Oklahoma last year when Butler was named by Sports Illustrated as the national defensive player of the week. "Last year I really wanted to beat Oklahoma." Butler said. "You see there's that myth that they're unbeatable and I wanted to destroy that. And this year I would have loved to have beaten Nebraska. I was really up for them." What opponents try to do against a fire up Mike Buller, besides running the other way, is to fire off the line and cut it out. But Buller knows how to deal with them. "WHAT I try to do is sit back more and read him," he said. "If I fire off and try to cut me, I can hurt him. So out we over them. Then, since they usually go to the other side when they cut me, I can get on their side where the play is and help out." It sounds a little difficult for such a big man, but Butler has been in 475 in the 49-year dandr. His speed is one of the reasons many KU boosters believe Butler will be highly sought in the pro draft. "You know, some people say I will go to the first round," he said. "If I don't get drafted my pride isn't so big that I won't on and try to play for somebody. I'll "Well, I'm going to try to play pro ball. If I don't make it, I don't make it." King has no doubts about his teammate's ability. "He'll make it," he said. "Mike Butler intimidates, crushes and fineshes. He does all three things. He's a complete football player." 'Buffs favored in conference race Sports Writer BvSTEVE CLARK The elections are over. At last, no more polls, no more predictions, well almost. The Big Eight cross country championship is coming to town. It will be run at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the Lawrence Country Club and, because the rest of the sports staff didn't ask for my insights into college football, this will have to do. Whether I was given this assignment because nobody else went it or because I know something about the sport doesn't matter. But I convinced myself of the latter. As for practical experience, I've logged five competitive seasons of cross country although it doesn't have anything to do with it, I did suffer through a 8:40-10:00 marathon. COLORADO: The Buffaloes are more formidable than the mountains that provide a backdrop for the Boulder campus. They are loaded. Kirk Pfeffer, who was eight in the marathon trials for the U.S. Olympic team, is also here without him. As it is, he'll probably take individual honors and pace his team to the championship. Keep all that vital information in mental, here in the order in which I believe that it is most important. An indication of their strength came a few weeks back in a five-temme meet in Lawrence. Colorado runners were first, 2nd, 7th, 11th, 15th, 17th and 28th. And three of the top seven runners missed the meet with minor injuries. IOWA STATE: The Cyclones have depth, a statement not many squads can make. Jeff Myers, Steve Manley, Gene McGivEN and Dan Gilchrist have finished within 13 Analysis seconds of each other, a performance not many squads can match. OKALIHOMA: Coach Larry Rose has made extensive use of a podiatrist to care for runners. It's paid off. His squad has built up so far that Stan Vernon is Oklahoma's best. Brian Geissler will be right behind Vernon and his top runners should come in a cluster. MOSQUIER: The Tigers might not place a man in the top 10, but when the first Mizzou runner does finish, there'll be plenty of opportunities in black and gold uniforms right with him. KANSAS: George Mason has an outside shot to win the individual title should Puffer feiffer. So does John Roscoe, assuming his ankle troubles are over. Bruce Goldsmith should place in the top 10. KU's top three are as good as anybody's but the fourth and five men haven't been spectacular. However, if Ted Crank continues his improvement and one of the other Jayhawk runners really performs well, KU could move up a couple of notches. Quarterback position open; injury situation improves KANAS STATE: Coach Jerome Howe probably will have mixed emotions during this meet as he watches the team be coached last year, Colorado, run away with the title. That might be the only satisfaction he'll get. The Wildcats are the defending champs, but will only repeat if all the other schools are so busy rapping that the wild night life in Lawrence that they miss the start. That team does have two runners, and unlikely K-State does have two runners, who could place in Junichel Nielux, who could place in the top 10. Jones, who has a sprained ankle, would be replaced in the line up by Jim Young. Irvin, who has a twisted knee, is backed up by Andy Reust and Caleb Kowe. Freshman pitcher Mitch Dougherty, who walked on the team after its opening game against Oregon State, has quit. Dougherty averaged 37 yards a punt until losing his starting job two weeks ago to another freshman, Mike Hubach. NEBRASKA: For the past two years the Big Red have been at the Big Bottom of the conference. The Commhaskers have much better runners than the previous two squads, but they won't go any higher than seventh. Quarterbacks Scott McMichael and Mark Lissack both worked out with KU's first team offense yesterday leaving some doubt as to who will start Saturday against Iowa State. Coach Bud Moore said yesterday he wouldn't announce his decision until game H OKLAHOMA STATE: Injuries to some key runners have made it a long season for coach Ralph Tate. The only bright spot is the hard Rose who could skip into the top five. "I'll admit that these choices are just my opinion, but I think that I have some sort of belief in it." "Ifigured if you could walk on a team you could walk off," Dougherty said. At least I didn't promise to balance the budget. Coors Pitchers $1.00 Mass. St. Deli New Yorker KU's injury situation improved yesterday as only two starters, defensive end Steve Jones and cornerback Leroy Iroin, missed practice. Nine starters sat out Monday. Exp. Nov. 30' '76 Present Coupon 842-8413 Open 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. announces: Jimmy Spheeris Joint subcommittee for Academic Affairs and Student Rights RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP Funded by the Student Senate --- SUNY COMFY,DOWN PARKAS AND VESTS Parkas $49.50 Vests $20.00 Bring this ad in for 10% off the price. Present Coupon CHARLES RAASCH Get your BIG BLUE hats to wear to the Jayhawks remaining game. Show your support with a BIG BLUE hat. Seminar on 20% Student Representation "The original thick crust from New York" NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. Pizza Offer Expires Nov. 30, '76 MASS. STREET DELI in 041 MASSACHUSETTS $1.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA Seminar to be held. November 9, 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room—Kansas Union The public is invited. 图 Offer Exp. Nov. 30, '76 Jung K. Lee, professor of chemistry Clifford Griffin, professor of history Ronald Calgaard, Vice Cancellor for Academic Affairs James Corothers, assistant professor of English Dennis Embry, assistant instructor of Western Civ. Speakers Will Be: Is returning to Lawrence after a sellout performance in Kansas City for a concert in Hoch Auditorium. The Reuben $1.50 Reg. $2.00 Presented by SUA Friday, 8:30 p.m., Nov. 12 General Admission $6.00 day of Show Tickets are: $5.00 in advance Cornucopia Restaurant 1801 Mass. Announcing New hours, new Salad Bar from Lawrence's finest. We are now open 10 ill to 10 daily. Now ten feet of seasonably fresh fruits and yogurt. SALAD BAR: all the cheese, soup and salad fixings you can eat, also 1/3 lb. seven grain bread CREPES: chicken, turkey, Canadian bacon, crab. HOME BAKED SEVEN GRAIN BREADS, BAGELS, SAID BAR, all the cheese, sour and salted CREPES: chicken, turkey, Canadian bacon, crab, broccoli, asparagus, mixed vegetables broccoli, asparagus, mixed vegetables POT PIES: chicken, peef, turkey POT TOMATOES: tomato LT SANDWICHES; ham, roast, beef, Canadian beacon, turkey, corn, beef pastrami, avocado, BLT, mushroom. 1. 4,194,304 possible combinations. Make up your own items in our kitchen sundries list of 22 different items. FINEST NATURAL FRUIT JUICES Table service with seating for 104. Taped music, beer, and average meal price, including drink, only $2 to $4. The the mi NCAA the mi w The happen univer meet e they h N Thai Associate large univer the size schola the CF Larg big foot of being same of unit USC problem that B have t THE should when restric Good Food Naturally! Cornucopia The unders experi smalle certain desire bigger 1801 Mass. 842-9637 If th themse CFA pi that's t the sm NO The Associa Sharp about that vestiga be OKL directo Associa that prelimi Oklahc parenti by OU a compli previou that we source sources support results determ enforce state OU of they ha Confere the all sold tie The r formati weren't reporter It sa Neinas afterno advers reason time. Thursday, November 4, 1976 7 馆艺 Sports Scene Brent Anderson Associate Sports Editor PETER E. HELENBERG New football association would keep powers mighty The midguts slay the giants—that's what happens each year when colleges and universities that are members of the NCAA play at the Pac-10. The NCAA teams they have in intercollegiate athletics. The giants are apparently getting tired of the midges telling them what to do in the NCAA, so they are going to try to get rid of the midges. That's what the proposed College Football Association (CFA) would do. Instead of the large numbers of smaller colleges and universities having the power to restrict the number of players in their athletics, the CFA would have that power. Larger universities, especially ones with big football programs, have become weary of being ruled by schools that don't have the same problems they do. Athletic directors of universities like Nebraska, Michigan, and Ohio have said that the problems they have to face aren't the ones that Ball State University in Munice, Ind., have to face. THEREFORE, they say, Ball State shouldn't have the same power they do when votes are taken on proposals restricting football programs. The argument is illogical. It is easy to understand the frustration the big boys experience when they are told to do by smaller and less solvent schools, but that is not appropriate for an apparent desire to turn college (outdoor) into an even bigger machine than it already is. If those football giants want to govern themselves (which is basically what the CF A proposal probably would accomplish), then they should be the smaller schools are jealous of them and want to ruin their football programs is ridiculous. To be a member of the CFA, a school must have a stadium with a seating capacity of at least 30,000, an average attendance of at least 20,000 a game in the last five years, and an average of at least 80 grants-in-aid to football players in the last five years. All Big Eight Conference teams could be members of the CPA, should the conference decide to join. Chances are they will conferences decide to do the same thing. THE FIRST formal meeting of potential members of the CFA is scheduled for mid-December. Judging by the reactions of many athletic directors to decisions made during the CFA convention, it is likely that the College Football Association will become a reality. If it does, my guess (and reason for concern) is that the Nebraskas and Oklahoma will get stronger and richer and schools similar to Kansas State and Kansas will have to continue to struggle even harder to compete with them. Also, the pressures on the lesser school's budgets will increase and, unless the school wins a few games each year, they might themselves wanting to rejoin the NCAA. The potential exists for the CFA to have a positive effect on college football, and maybe it will. It could, for example, bring a national champion to a true national champion in football. Conceivably, the CFA could bring about competition between member schools. But, considering the high correlation between the amount of money a school has to spend on football and the success of its program, it is doubtful that will happen. When the KU field hockey team takes the field this Saturday against the University of St. Louis, it will play a different brand of field hockey. By DAN BOWERMAN Different turf awaits hockey team The Jayhawks aren't going to try a strategy of offense or defense; they're trying a different one. KU's field hockey team has been used to play on fields that have grass on part of the field and holes all over the field. But the university's athletic department provides an official turf in Busch Stadium in St. Louis. "It's a lot different," Nancy Lumbros, St. Louis junior, said yesterday. "It's a better game. It's faster, much more highly skilled and more challenging." The team got a feeling of what it will be like playing on artificial turf yesterday and Tuesday by practicing in Memorial Stadium. BOTH THE TEACH, Diana Beebe, and the players seem to be excited about playing in Busch Stadium, but they agree that it will seem to play a different type of field hockey. She also said that the Jayhawks would have to reel on ball control more than they did in last year's game. "We'll have to have more control and use lighter passes," she said. "You can't use long passes because they'll get by you and go out of bounds." BEEEB SAID that playing on artificial turf was "absolutely unbelievable." "It's a totally different game. It's a more game, a more finezese game and a very fast game." Beebe said she was looking forward to playing on the artificial turf, but she was worried about injuries that the turf might help cause. "We're not going to practice on it any more," she said. "This game isn't worth any knee strains or ankle strains on. We're not going to win, but we hope no one gets injured." BEEEB SAID that her team hadn't experienced any injuries in practice other than tight leg muscles from running on the concrete-bared turf and bruises on the goalie's feet from stopping the ball, which moves faster on the turf than grass. "On artificial turf, the goalkeeper is in 'a very vulnerable position,' she said. "In the goal, he could go give him a chance to have change if a lot of games are played on artificial turf. But it'll be fun and an experience that we don't want to pass up" But the game will provide added excitement. "I've seen the professional teams play things going to be something else to play here myself." Kings clobber Sonics The Brewery 714 Mass. Presents "DESTINY" AN EASY LISTENING FOLK-ROCK EXPERIENCE!! Friday & Saturday 9 til 12 AIR FORCE BASE YELLOWBANK, N.Y. Kansas CITY (AP)—Guard Ron Boone pumped in a game-half 20 points and reserve center Jim Eakins added 23 as the Kansas City Kings romped to a 126-106 National Basketball Association decision over the Seattle Supersonics last night. The victory was Kansas City's fourth straight loss on the road that year. Brian combined with backcourt mate Brian Taylor for half of Kansas City's first-quarter points as the kings pulled away, 36-21. Kansas City led 63-48 at the half and extended its lead to 20 in the third quarter. The Sonics couldn't recover. NCAA inquiry begins at OU OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) – The executive director of the National Collegiate Athletic Association said in Kansas City yesterday that the NCAA was conducting a preliminary probe into the University of Oklahoma's athletic department, apparently refuting statements made Tuesday by OU officials. The director, Walter Byers, told the Associated Press that OU President Paul Sharp had called him Oct. 25, inquiring about reports in the Oklahoma City Times that the NCAA was conducting an investigation. "I advised him that allegations of non-compliance with NCAA requirements previously had been received by our office, that we were in the process of investigating those allegations and that the sources of the allegations and the extent of supporting details for the charges and that results of those initial interviews would determine whether there was cause for the formal notification procedures of the NCAA athletic program." Byers said in the statement. OU officials in a statement Tuesday they had been notified that the Big Eight Conference was planning an investigation of whether players had sold tickets at inflated prices. The release by the Office of Media Information insisted that the allegations weren't being investigated by the NCAA, as reported last month in the Times. It said Big Eight Commissioner Chuck Neinas arrived on the OU campus Tuesday afternoon to inform officials that "the adverse publicity in the press was the reason for the Big Eight involvement at this time. Pizza Inn serves $1.00 PITCHERS & 25¢ 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 Panhellenic Association Announces: Registration for Spring Membership Program 1977 Thursday, November 4 Big 8 Room-Kansas Union, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. In order to participate you need 14 hours from the current semester and a minimum G.P.A. of 2.20-or-12 hours from current semester and a minimum G.P.A. of 2.50 For more information contact Panhellenic Association 220 Strong 864-3552 CHILE! 864-3552 What's happening in Chile now? Two Chileans are coming to answer your questions. Thursday, Nov. 4th at 7:00 p.m. Jayhawk Room Kansas Union Sponsored by Venezuelan Club Co-sponsored by International Club FRESHMEN T.G.I.F. Friday, Nov. 5th Disco, Free Beer, Pop, Pretzels ★ 2:30—5:30 p.m. Members Free with Student I.D. Non-members $1.50 (cash) Memberships available at the door* Place: HAWKS NEST BE THERE Aloha * Get your class cards at the B.O.C.O. office, Union, or at the door. Pop. University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 4.1976 '60s protests still felt, prof says The protest movements of the 1960s helped strengthen the precedent of civil disobedience in the United States and increased the chances for future unrest, Rex Martin, professor of philosophy, said yesterday. "Civil disobedience is much more a part of the American tradition than it was before World War II," Martin said. "The idea of civil disobedience has been accepted way of thinking about politics." Martin presented a paper entitled "Two Ways of Justice Civil Disobedience" *Oct. 9 at the Bicentenial Symposium of Philosophy in New York City, a convention sponsored by the American Philosophical Association.* In the paper Martin said that civil disobedience was "perhaps one of the most important contributions of contemporary thought to the stock of traditional civil philosophy." The paper also discussed a moral justification for civil disobedience and a newer political justification that accepted the government's overall authority. Martin said his main contributions were his ideas on the latter subject. "This political civil disobedience has become one of the most fascinating trends in Western politics—that is, the extent to which it can distract a dissent and disobedience," he said. The more traditional view of political civil disobedience is that one either accepts all of a government's laws or completely rejects that government, Martin said. RELATING HIS ideas to the student unrest at the University of Kansas in 1970, Martin said the participants in civil unrest "had little faith in moral reasons and justifications." "I don't regard their views as well thought out." Martin said. Although the students who practiced civil disobedience said they had moral justifications, Martin said, there were some politically influenced justifications. "They had feelings of moral superiority and moral outrage, and their rhetoric claimed that political demands were beneath contempt," he said. "But I think they were annoyed because they had previously held such high expectations of the system that they appeared to hold in contempt." Pterodactyl's Egg hatches writers sells well in its adolescence A magazine with the unusual title of Pterodactyla's Egg is circulating at KU this year, and it's not about paleontology. In fact, it's a forum of the KU Science Fiction Club. Paula Helm, Wellsville junior and founder of the club, said recently that the magazine, now in its third issue, would cover its first ten months this year, more or less monthly. She said the magazine was named after "our friend in front of Strong Hall," referring to a statue in front of the building, and she says similar to a paternality. HELM SAID the magazine was started to provide a way for science fiction writers to get their work published and to give science interesting, reading on a regular basis. She said the idea came up at one of the club's meetings last spring and was accepted enthusiastically by the 30 or so people who attended. The mimeographed magazine includes science fiction stories, articles, drawings, puzzles (the current issue has a word-for-word layout) and Heinlein book titles) and book reviews. Helm said most of the stories used were from contributing writers, although she and her coeditor, Mur Mimray, Lawrence junior, often wrote pieces for the magazine. AT 35 CENTS an issue, the Egg has sold well in its adolescence, Helm said. "in fact, we almost sold our whole print run of the first issue and barely had enough to sell." John Kessel, Lawrence graduate student and faculty adviser for the Science Fiction Club, said, "The Egg is a typical example of a science fiction 'fanfare.'" Panhellenic studies plans to improve sorority system THE COVER OF THE third issue of the Egg is illustrated with a pterodactyl, which has arms and legs and is slashing at a wall. The Egg's head is thrown through space, on some sort of vehicle. "They do crazy things and have self-mocking attitudes," he said. Expansion, extension and improvement of sororites could result in increased sorority membership and improved relations among the 12 sorority houses at KU, Linda Pfisterer, Panhellenic president, says. The 1975-76 Panhellenic Presidents' Council, which includes the president of each society, has organized a task force to research the idea of expansion, or inviting another national society to start a chapter at KU, Pfisterer said recently. He described it as an amateur magazine designed for both ardent science fiction fans and others with just a casual interest in the subject. Kessel said that most fanzines weren't meant to be very polished, and that some were even crude. Plasterer said an advantage of this plan was that more women could pledge sororites during rush, which would increase the number of sorority members. Helm said the Christmas issue's front cover may show a pterotype) tearping apart the skin. "We must build Panellinic spirit and make the system work as a whole," she ate. Kessel, who teaches a science fiction study course, said that he thought science fiction fans were very organized and that the large number of conventions they have is proof of their organization. One example he gave was the MidAmericCon convention this summer in Kansas City, Mo., which has writers and writers from throughout the country. mendations to the incoming council to improve houses now at KU. Pilaster said the goal for improving the present system was to eliminate each house's stereotypes. Herm said writing contributions would be bonvivally accepted and should be sent to her. She said that the members of the KU club shouldn't be confused with Star Trek fans, as they are often named for her. She said that the Presidents' Council had voted not to take action on the plan now because not all of the sororities at KU are filled. Because lower enrollments expected in the future, Panhellenic can't risk not filling a new house, Pflasterer said. Through activities such as the Red Cross blood drive, sorority life-in-exchanges and sorority-fratremly dinner exchanges, she helped a Greek system have improved, she said. A second plan is extension, which would allow members to move out of sorority houses into anexes or apartments to make room for new members in the houses. But she said, the extension plan could be harmful to houses that lost the leadership of their owners. "This would be more flexible than expansion if there were no interest in the study." **Plastics** Kessel agreed with Helm that a distinction should be made between the two types of Each sorority president submitted to Panhellenic an opinion paper based on their houses' votes on expansion and extension, Pflastere said. Incoming council members may review the information and make a decision later. The Presidents' Council made recom- "Star Trek fans are just Star Trek fans, but science fiction fans have a broader scope of interests. They aren't restricted to one type of story," she said. SUA presents: A BAHAMAS EXPERIENCE January 2-9 $186.00 for those desiring lodging $129.00 for those who wish to camp For more information call SUA 864-3477 SUA SUA FILMS FILM SOCIETY THE INVISIBLE RAY (1936) Dir. Lambert Hillyer, with Boris Karloff, Blaugosi Mon., Nov. 8, 7:30, 75c MARTIN SAD *out* lvrule alone only "made a big wave that soon washed away." WIND FROM THE EAST (1970) Dr. Jean-Luc Goddard, with Anna Wizemsky. Thurs., 4. 7, 130; 9:30, 75c FAREWELL, M.Y. LOVELY (1975) DFAREWELL, M.Y. LOVELY (1975) Baltimore Mitchum, Charlotte Rampling 5, 7:00    8:30 Sat; Nov. 6, 2:00    7:00    9:30    $1 POPULAR FILMS All films shown in SCIENCE FICTION SERIES Woodruff Auditorium Pre-Game Warm-Up in red corduroy blazers and slacks Sizes 5-15 TURTLE BAX by "If all their motives would have been laid out on the table, the protest would have been less excessive, more effective and longer-lasting," he said. 10% off with KUID The mood of the United States today is the warmest of the late '60s and early '70s. Martin said, He said that although the change in the nation's mood was partially caused by the end of the Vietnam war and former President Richard Nixon's resignation, it also partially "a natural relaxation after a period of great emotional excitement." Janell's "We had similar periods after the Civil War and World War II." he said. AFTER THE current period of relaxation is over, civil disobedience might occur more easily because of the precedent set in the case that a woman has violated the area of unrest might be women's rights. "If there is a constitutional amendment banning abortion, I could see that becoming as big of a cause as the things of the '60s," he said. 9th & Mass. the bus stop corner "However, I don't think there will be any more civil disobedience coming from the civil rights movement. They've achieved everything they could through civil disobedience. Most civil rights problems now are not with laws or even public policy, but with behavioral habits and residential patterns." 1977 HONDA EXPRES Only 299° it's automatic, gets ap- proved and is almost maintenance-free. Stop by and learn to ride with no fear. Horizon 1811; BW 194. We Write All Risks Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th OPEN FACE BEEF SANDWICHES $1.75 Reg. $2.10 Automobile Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made dressing, mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Offer exp. Nov. 20 - 74 Present coupon ROBERT MITCHUM • CHARLOTTE RAMPLING JOHN IRELAND • SYLVIA MILES IN "FAREWELL, MY LOVELY" AVCO EMBASSY RELEASE TECHNICOLOR ™ JAZZ Offer expires Nov. 30, '76 ALEXANDRA DURANE TONITE Jazz Jam Session No Cover Friday, Nov. 5 and Saturday, Nov. 6 7:00 and 9:30 p.m.—3:30 Matinee Fri. and Sat. Woodruff Auditorium-Kansas Union $1.00 - Tickets Available at SUA office Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358. BEER JAZZ only at Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass. upstairs FRIDAY The Joe Utterback Trio Great Modern Jazz JAZZ PEANUTS POPCORN Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. FOOD PUBLIC LECTURES ON ETHICS AND BUSINESS "IS FREE ENTERPRISE COMPATIBLE WITH SOCIAL JUSTICE?" Three views: MICHAEL HARRINGTON, Editorial Board, Dissent Fri., Nov. 12, 1:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium IRVING KRISTOL, Editor, The Public Interest Fri., Nov. 12, 8:00 p.m., Forum Room JOHN HOSPERS, Director, USC School of Philosophy Sat., Nov. 13, 1:30 p.m., Forum Room K ex Or Unknow student Hoch / bicycles The b proper. ment's Eve Kansas Union sponsored by the School of Business & Free Admission Dept. of Philosophy TOBA CLUB Watkins UNDEFER ASSOCI auser of associa associa speakin. DAUSTI Univers Americ Union's TONI COMMIT Oread women' meets BOWL I Eight ISRAELI in Oliver CLUB m Room. meets a Union's Union's BUSINESS the UNIC TOMC men seen and serve be from tonwood JAYAH EIGHT ar CLUB w room. Ann Awa Tomor for the ACADEE the dead abroad. and rett. JAME law stu Burdick top-rank school. 11 75 2.10 oon 9 KU Police lost and found service experiences expansion problems By BARRY MASSEY Staff Writei Unknown to most University of Kansas students is a room on the fourth floor of Hoch Auditorium that holds about 35 bicycles that have lost their owners. The bikes are only part of the unclaimed deeply-owned police office. Depe- ment's lost and found services. On Campus Events TODAY: The UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB meets beginning at 1 p.m. in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union, the UNDERGRADE ANTHROPOPLOGY ASSOCIATION at 3:30 p.m. in B27 University Hall in Alfred Johnson College of anthropology, and Michael Crawford, associate professor of anthropology, speaking on jobs in anthropology. FRANK DAUSTER, professor of Spanish, Rutgers University, will speak on "Social Context for Form": Spanish American Drama Today" at 4 p.m. in the Walnut Room. TONIGHT: The MINORITY AFFAIRS COMMITTEE meets at 6:30 in the Union's Oread Room. ANGEL FLIGHT, the women's auxiliary, is in the Military Science building. THE JAYHAWK COLLEGE QUIZ BOWL begins at 7 in the Union's Pine, Big Eight and Council Room. The KU SCIENCE CLUB meets in Oliver Hall. The KU SCIENCE FICTION CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Governors Room. The INTERNATIONAL CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Cork 2. THE VENEZULIAN CLUB meets at "in the Union" BUSINESS STUDENTS club meets at 7 in the Union's International Room. TOMORROW: an open discussion between students and Chancellor Archie Dykes and several University vice chancellors will discuss the importance of woodland and Meadowlark rooms. The JAYHAWK COLLEGE QUIZ BOWL will begin at 7 p.m., in the Union's Pine, Big Eight and Council rooms. The SUA CANOE will meet at 7:30 in the Union's Great Room. Announcements Tomorrow is the deadline for applications for the directorship of the COSTA RICAN ACADEMIC Y ABRAD, and Dec. 1 is the deadline for students applying for study abroad. Applications should be picked up and returned to 108 Strong Hall. Awards JAMES JOHNSON, Lawrence first-year law student, was awarded the William Burdick Prize for his achievement as the making first-year student in the law school. Maj. Bob Ellison of the KU Police Department. Ellison said last week that his department stored any lost material brought in by KU police officers or students. Small items such as watches, book and coats are kept in a metal cabinet in the KU Parking Services office in Hoch. Ellison said lost property was tagged, and a card identifying the property was put into a cross file. To claim lost property, people often have to describe it, he said. ALTHOUGH A LOST and found service has always been offered by the KU Police Department, Ellison said, the service is regular staff assigned solely to its operation. Lost property usually is held for at least six months before it is disposed of, Ellison said. In the past, lost bicycles have been given to the Lawrence Police Department, which sells them at bike auctions, and keeps the money it makes, he said. Smaller items usually are given to non-profit public service agencies such as Penn House, he said, and books generally are given to Watson Library. A LOW RATE OF recovery for lost property is causing problems for the lost and found service, especially a problem with storage space. The lost and found "I can get rid of the stuff, but I have to make value judgments as to where the stuff will go, and I would prefer not to have to do this," he said. ELLISON MET with the services common to the board, which solved problems of the lost and found service. The committee, which took no action, was to have made a recommendation by Monday morning. *service has on\* we cabinet and one room on the fourth floor of Hoch for storage. For this reason, Ellison said he talked to Ed Rollfs, former student body president, last year about starting a central lost and found service. The idea was discussed then and is being discussed now in the Senate Student Service Committee. At the committee meeting, Ellison said that a centralized system would make it easier for students to recover lost property, but that the problem of storage still would exist until a better method was found to dispose of lost property. One method a member suggested was that the Student Senate have an auction to sell the material. In the meantime, the gray metal cabinet continues to be inbunded with lost water. Local industries stable; little expansion planned Business is stable in the 54 industries in Lawrence and Douglas County, and no major industrial expansions are planned, as a result, number of commerce member, said yesterday. Activities scheduled for a visit by journalist Peter Lisasor have been cancelled because Lisasor is ill. Dl Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, said last night. Hallmark card, which employs from 800 to 1,000 people depending upon the time of year, is the largest area industry. During the spring, when Hallmark manufactures seasonal greeting cards, it generally employs 1,000 people. Brinkman said ceremonies had been scheduled for Monday and Tuesday to present to Lisager the 1976 William Allen White Foundation Medallion. Preservation of the annual award was to have been last year, but it has not yet been awarded he was advised by his doctors not to travel. The number of employees in other area industries is considerably smaller. The number of people employed 400 people, is the next largest employer. Cooperative Farm Chemical, Lisgar is a Washington correspondent to the Chicago Daily News and a com- munity reporter. Journalist ill; award activities are canceled Brinkman said Lisagor was suffering from cancer. Brinkman said efforts might be made to present the medalion to Lasigor in Kansas Color Press, and Lawrence Paper Company all employ about 350 people. No area industry now has an unusually large amount of business that would indicate a need for expansion, he said. The evidence continues to draw new companies. Workers in these industries, except Damion Marks, belong to unions, Dana Hempel. One reason Lawrence attracts industries, Danielson said, is its "diversified needs, ranging from dependency on the University to providing for the private sector" "Also, we tend to turn away polluting industries and bring in industries that we think people will like. We want to put them back into Lawrence and make it successful." TRW, Inc., which came to Lawrence in January 1975, manufactures power petroleum cables for pumps at the bottom of all wells. In January 1976, Brown Cargo Van Vans carried Brown Cargo manufacturers truck body kits like the ones on the back of Haul tractors. HE USED TWO new Lawrence industries as examples of varied businesses. Danielson said that there were no new industries the chamber could announce now, despite continual inquiries from various companies. Lawrence doesn't have an unusually large barrge of banks to cater to industries like steel. Lawrence has four banks, he said, which is average for a town this size. Lawrence banks are stable and substantial, Danielson said; Lawrence National and First National banks both have resources of $30 million. The Doughies have resources between $30 to $55 million, and the State Bank has $15 million, he said. Announcing . . . The Pizza Inn GIANT PIZZA SPECIAL A GIANT PIZZA, A PITCHER OF SOFT DRINK, AND ALL THE SALAD YOU CAN EAT — FOR ONLY Thursdays $5.95 5 p.m. to Midnight Pizza inn. In the Hillcrest Shopping Center —Dial 841-2629 In the Hillcrest Shopping Center —Dial 841-2629 (Next to the Theatres) Visiting artist narrates story A tale of love and murder, told through slides, music and drawings, was presented yesterday by Terry Allen, a visiting California artist. Allen gavehis multimedia presentation of "Juarez Device" to about 200 students in Woodruff Auditorium as part of the Hallmark Lecture Series. Allen is an associate professor of art at California State University. In "Jaurez," Allen uses both slides and drawings. He makes an attempt to invite the viewer to "play the drawing." He narrated this story with couples with country and western ballads. "Juarez Device" is the story of two couples traveling through the Southwest. While meeting in a trailer in Cortez, Colo., they find that the results in the murder of one of the couples Allen said he first started to think about the relationship of music to his drawings when he was working on "Cowboy and the Bighorns" at the University. Allen showed as a prelude to "Juarez." "Cowboy and the Stranger" is a group of colorful drawings of Texas, where Allen grew up. In one drawing, "Five Bar Celebration to the Death Bags of Beauty," Allen uses musical staffs to provide structural framework. In both the music and the drawings for "Jaurez," Allen contrasts a rigid form with flowing images. His songs have simple rhythms and his melodies are uncomplicated. Alien's work is far from the usual. Satire, an integral element in his work, finds itself in a familiar form. University Daily Kansan Listen to the TWANG BROTHERS direct from Kalamazoo, Michigan. Friday and Saturday night for only a $1 cover. mondaynitelast chanceweekend romancedance: CARGO performs at the Hall. Only a $1 cover. Off the Wall Hall 841-0817 737 New Hampshire Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. Higher Education Week The Higher Education Week Steering Committee of the Student Senate cordially invites you, the general public, to attend a reception honoring the HOPE Award recipient and finalists and Higher Education Service award recipients Saturday, November 6, 1976 in the Kawasos Room of the Kawasos Union immediately following the game Ford Call 843-2931 ADMIRAL LEASING AND RENTAL 23rd and Alabama Rent-A-Car FORD PINTO TELEPHONE 843-2931 TO RENT A NEW FORD!!!
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THUNDERBIRD SOUURE WAGON$15.00 plus 15¢ per mile$90.00 plus 15¢ per mile$195.00 plus 15¢ per mile$12.00 plus 15¢ per mile
Above rates include insurance ($100 Deductible) Must be 21 (Insurance) Business Discount 843-2931 SEE: Susan or Paul ADMIRAL LEASING & RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA LAWRENCE, 66044 2340 ALABAMA LAWRENCE, 66044 843-2931 10 Thursday, November 4, 1976 University Daily Kansan University Relations a 'know-it-all' By RICK THAEMERT Staff Writer There's a know-it-all on campus. It's the Office of University Relations, and as a public relations agency for the University of Kentucky, I know all about KU and report that information. University Relations is responsible for churning out almost all KU publications: University catalogues, athletic and fine arts programs, departmental brochures, parent events, campus calendars, calendar of events, press releases and radio and television broadcasts. Larry Krupp, director of the division of information, said recently that his division was responsible for any information used in those publications. Consequently, it has to be an all-knowing, up-to-date clearing house for KU facts, he said. **IF PEOPLE from time to Newsweek** *want to know something about KU, they call us* *and they call me* "The division of information runs just like a newspaper newsroom." He said his division used a modified news-beat system that relied on contacts, such as deans and heads or departments, for its information. Because University Relations employs only 18 full-time workers and 12 part-time students, Knapp said, it's difficult to cover all university events. For that reason, the information relies on other sources to submit news whenever possible, Knapp said. "IT'S A TWO-WAY street," Uml Collier, director of University Relations, said. "We rely on others to communicate news to us, and we, in turn, communicate that news to them." He also said that the office occasionally bought photographs and drawings from other artists. Marla Gleason, writer in the information division, said, "We ask people to submit information to us 10 days in advance when the information is available." Collier said his office offered clients anything from advice on public relations problems to complete work on public relations programs. A COMPLETE job would include concept, news-gathering, copy, artwork, layout, production and distribution. The only cost, however, is for the materials. He said. B. J. Leiker, information office manager, said the amount of materials used She said envelopes posed a particular problem because they had to be hand-stuffed. Most folding and stuffing machines can't handle six to eight pages, the average size of University Relations press releases, she said. "THAT'S ONE flew, because when we're running late we have to call in the whole University Relations staff, from all corners of campus," said Mrs. Ussold and stuff envelopes," Lecker said. She said, however, that the production division, with only three part-time students, managed to work rapidly and stay on schedule. This year, University Relations was allotted $85,000 by the University. Leiker said that $14,000 of the budget went for postage and $1,500 went for envelopes. was staggering. She said their Xerox machine ran at least five hours out of each eight-hour day, using 12-15 reams of paper a week. "They type, reproduce, fold and stuff envelopes," she said. "It's incredible how fast they are. They have it down to a fine science. "It's only because we've got the mailing lists down to a fine art that we are able to do it." Plants can survive winter with a little extra attention The art of growing house plants isn't restricted to the warm weather months. Any plant may be kept healthy in it, although extra care may be necessary. Ferns are among the plants that require high humidity not present in dry, heated Jim Freeman, manager of the Garden Center, 15th and New York streets, said recently that plants should be moved away from extreme temperatures around heating ducts and frequently opened doors. Plants should be set back at least one foot from single-pane windows, which become too cold, Freeman said. "Misting a plant once a day is almost like planting a flower," the woman said. "Several times it is better." The best way to provide adequate humidity in winter is to put plants in a humidity tray, he said. A saucer or pie tin with a layer of crushed rock in the bottom, covered with water also will work, he added. Light direction and intensity varies with Dykes, Shankel to talk at forum Students will have a chance to talk with up KU administrators tomorrow as part of the workshop. Chancellor Archie Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, will meet with students in an open discussion about the role of education at Meadowlark rooms of the Kansas Union. Dykes said yesterday that the event would give students a chance to express their opinions. Shankel said that there were talks between students and administrators twice a semester, but that this was the first of the talks without a set format. the season. In the winter, plants that night should be placed near a south window. Motzie Gilland of Gardenland, Inc., 91-91, W.23rd St., said that although plants needed frequent misting in the winter, they need water and food isn't necessary in the winter, she said. "Winter is the resting period for most plants, when they build up bads for the spring. Gilhann said "Plant owners don't grow until winter." Plants show little or no growth in the winter." ALTHOUGH THE jobs are mechanical, there can't be any mistakes or backtracks. "Typographical errors are the most time consuming to correct when we pressed for time," she said, "but they're the one thing we have to make time for." The hard work pays off, though. According to a survey of all Big Eight universities by Mary Am Beahon, editor of the Oread, a newspaper for KU employees, KU's public relations department is among the best. Beahon conducted the survey for her master's thesis. She found that the division of information was especially competent because all the writers on the staff were experienced. She also said that only KU and one other Big Eight university had a copy editor to insure accuracy of the information sent out. ★ BE A PART OF IT ALL ★ GLEASON ASD the division subscribed to a state and national newspaper-clipping service, which allowed it to see how the KU staff responded. He also said the division kept in touch with newspapers and radio stations to find out what kind of press releases they liked to use. The Student Senate has a new program called Statewide Activities We need volunteers to do the following things: Because of that communication, the features and press releases from KU are of exceptional quality and are interesting, Beahon said. "It doesn't do any good to send a news release if no one reads it," she said. 1. Lead campus tours for visitors 2. Talk with high school students while home for vacation She said many of the press releases were about KU people and are sent to the media. 3. House visitors overnight 4. Assist the Admissions Department in their efforts If you are willing to help, come by the Student Senate Office for an application. We could really use your help — Thanks! KU DOES, by far, the best job of pursuing all of big Eight universities, " An Evening Of The Best BLUEGRASS RED WHITE & BLUE (grass) ★ Partially funded by Student Activity Fee ★ REDH Collier said he hoped that programs like hometowning would increase enrollment. - This man makes more music with the autohrp than you can imagine. — The Washington Times Knapp said the public relations $p_{m,n}$ were so effective that it had been in the past. - Voted most promising vocal group--Record World - The distinctive style of this group makes them very saleable to both Bluegrass devotees and to the college set—Billboard - Voted 3rd best vocal group in the nation.-Cashbox BRYAN BOWERS - The band's instrumentation is almost uniform first-rate. - Zoo-World - The Music Magazine 中國人與印度人 - A more than interesting, and very unique performer. —The Village Voice - Smash hit at Cambridge, England Festival in 1975 and 1976! - Most popular performer at the Walnut Valley Spring Thing Festival - May 1973. Available at Norwegian Wood 1144 Indiana 842-3602 Tickets $4.00 "A lot of the bad impressions people gained about KU during the late '60s were because there wasn't an adequate press relations operation," he said. Nov. 6 8:00 p.m.$. Exhibit Hall Shawnee County Fairgrounds Exhibit Hall $5.00 At The Door McKinney-Mason Stringed Instruments 737 New Hampshire walnut valley association, inc. BOX 245 WINFIELD, KS 67156 316/221-3250 HEAVY EDDYS PIZZA HI I'M FREE TONIGHT PEPPERONI Remember Our Subs FAST FREE DELIVERY 841-3100 TRY OUR WHOLE WHEAT AT 'THE WHEEL' 507 W. 14th SHERIFF SAM'S TRAVELING DJ SERVICE ★ We'll bring our quality sound system to your party. We have lots of prizes, plus all the hits. Call 841-4666 to reserve your party after Jan.1, 1977. SHERIFF SAM JONES 7th and Mass. Downstairs at the Eldridge 80 JAYHAWKS KANSAS UNIVERSITY KANSAS UNIVERSITY KANSAS RELATS KU 1976 KANSAS JAYHAWKS SUPPORT THE 'HAWKS WEAR BLUE TO THE GAME with New! Big Blue Jackets $6.95 and up T-SHIRTS Children's sizes $2.95 and up Adult sizes $3.35 and up FLEECE-LINED JACKETS—$19.95 RED and BLUE UMBRELLAS— $8.35 STUFFED JAYHAWKS—$4.95 STOCKING CAPS- $3.25 6-FOOTER SCARF—$3.75 For all your Jayhawk Souvenirs Come to the kansas union BOOKSTORE F --- CLA Acc ment are o sex, c BRING MUSIC Contact - --- BOKO See on 841-36 BOKO New 2 841-36 Join based. 841-470 2 bed carpet, Lawyer State 1 3 bedOccupancy after 6 2 bed lit 7281, Thursday, November 4,1976 Rough start plagues law center's opening 11 A rocky start plagued the opening of the new Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center at 11th and New Hampshire streets this week, but city cops were working in the building now think that the work parts of the move are behind them. Police and court officials still were unpacking large boxes of old records Tuesday. A district court secretary, who asked not to be identified, said, "We've had a lot of confusion trying to sift through our old records." The secretary said that a computerized switchboard system also had caused confusion. Employees have been having problems learning the telephone "language" used in processing incoming and transferred calls. Some Lawrence residents who have been in the center apparently have had trouble finding the building and finding offices in the building. Several people who had business in the municipal court Tuesday said that they "How the hell can I think about traffic incidents when I'm stuck in the lobby?" one person says. were angry because the city had not posted better directions to offices. A listing of office numbers is posted in the lobby by the main entrance on the west side of the building. The offices, however, are numbered. Lockers sign signs or aren't numbered at all. University Daily Kansan Municipal court business, such as city traffic tickets and municipal citations, is done in Room 134. Police and sheriff's offices are in Room 203 and the jail is nearby in Room 280. Marriage licenses can be obtained in Room 144, the office of the district court's specialized division clerk. That office also handles tickets issued by the sheriff's department and by the Kansas Highway Patrol. Despite problems, one employee said, "This place is really excellent, space-wise. We had a real need for the building, and we're finally getting used to it." KU-Y'S Issues & Ideas Forum Exploring Problems of Discrimination Confronting Today's Youth PANEL ON YOUTH: AGEISM: Judy Sardo...Job Service Center Colt Knutson...Juvenile Court Audience Participation Invited Linda Suderman...Lawrence High Donna Flory...Social & Rehab. Services Tues., Nov. 7:30 p.m. Pine Room Union Advertise in the Kansan Call 864-4358. 1 Nov. '76 We're moving to a NEW location AT THE CORNER OF 8th AND NEW HAMPSHIRE ARMADILLO BEAD CO. 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. 841-7946 KANSAN WANT ADS Associated hospitals, goods, services and employment, including health care, education, recreation and housing, toys, food and supplies (ITF) and the environment (EPA). CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirteen thirteen fourteen fifteentheirteeenthirteenfifteenthirteenthirteenfif AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS **count items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These items can be placed in person or by calling the UK DBU business office at 864-5358.** UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Employment Opportunities ENTERTAINMENT BOKONON Paraphernails for the comissaire Sog adur on Wednesday's Kuman 12, 18 am 7pm at the Bokonon Bar. MUSICIANS Part-time job for band numbers. Contest #14 - Army Reserve band in Lay- ton 343-1031. BOKONON Pacapathrainla for the commissariat 841-506 for bongs and pipes $ E_{12}$ 181-506 $ E_{18}$ FOR RENT In Opta-Cap Cycling Club, Lawrence airport 841-769-3500, one mile, membership. Cairn 814-769-3500 2 berm, modular form home on 40 acres. Shag land with waterfront property in Duggett Coun- lage. Nestled on a beautiful Kingston Dres- dge County property. 3 bedroom apt. at Qualcore avail for immm up to $85,000. Availability 9:30 & 10:00 & BS-755T at BS-685; between 9:30 & 10:00 & BS-755T 2 bedroom furnished apartment available January 7, 2018 on bus route 2, bus lines 31-15 7281 DO'S DELUXE BOY'S Mass LAWRENCE, JOHN PH: 212-754 Female roommate wanted immediately and for share apartment with own 11-8 892-564-684 For rent apartment close to Union Park, unpaid paid. One berm. Call 858-8579. Available in Brooklyn, New York. Speculum 2 bedroom apt. available for sublease. Speculum 1 bedroom apt. available for sublease. Pully equipped kitchen. Call 641-7687. 11-9 FOR SALE Need to submit two-bedroom Jywhakher Tower Towers as suites of at 52-894, 811-6409, 811-6409, 11-9 NAISMITH HALL Now accepting Applications for Spring Semester Call 843-8559 or stop by our office. Sublease- 2 bedroom unfurnished apt. at Frontier Hosier $155/mo / 841-7140. 11-9 STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or dism out products, the STEREO COMPONENTS at the GRAMOPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. tt CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design Miniature sculpture. Mermals. Unicorns, etc. Non-binding cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-883-7980 Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. ELECTRIC, 833-6905, 2000 W, 61-61. BELL AUDIO, ELECTRIC, 833-6905, 2000 W, 61-61. Excellent selection of new and used furniture from a variety of brands. Trade the Furniture and Appliance Center, 704 N. 2nd Ave., Denver, CO 80210. Western Civilization Note=Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Make sure to use note to Western Civilization! 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available at Town Crier Stories. tt ExcelBelt selection of used furniture, refrigature- ent cabinets, washrooms, bathrooms, etc. 48hr call. Toys R Us, 150 E. 6th St., a.m.-m. p.m. 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. (Monday-Friday) (30% off). 40% - 75% off on warm-up suits, dresses, man's shorts and shirts, sweaters, etc. A123-8780-7126. All rights reserved. For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call Vivarel at 841-568-3478 or 841-384-1378. We have State of the Art Sound Systems at a specialist in trade. RAY AUDIO, 12 E, Mumbai, India. Super Sound System for £600. Better quality. Super Performance-RAY AUDIO. 13m- 8m. Bath. Heir to the original A lot of Hype is not right. RAY AUDIO Sound Systems are out of sight. 12 eight. E 18. 11-4 Must Sell. 1964 Chevrolet Reasonable Snow Must Try. 1964 Body good. B434-$800. Trying to 1974 Honda Clive, excellent condition. New tires less than 30 600 miles. Call 822-5446, after hours. Ovation Covenant Balladeer guitar with case, 2 years old. excellent condition. $75 Call 817-643-0914 Opal Kadette Sedan, 1608, low mileage, $450, 83-1 0309. Kenmore Electric Stove and Norge Free-frost refrigerator. Kit 842-6616. 11-4 FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS. RAASCH 209 W. Rd. Crown 32 Thurday Our receiver does what Yamaha does—at almost no cost, and proves it to you. AUDIO, AUDIO 1, E 8th S. 6h. 11-5 Excellent condition - used 3 month. Marshon 100 SCORE 796. Excellent condition. Marshon 100 SCORE 796. A real baker. Call: 841-3590. 11a STUDY BREAK 1-6 p.m. Schooners — 65° Pitchers — $1.25 THE HAWK 1340 Ohio 1913 Titrum GT6, 70, radial; men's 3-speed bike: Scott amplifier, 30 watt per meter. 11-5 There are a lot of misleading concepts about the 16-bit bus. The 16-bit bus is used to get top performance. Broad sound systems for the Internet, for instance, use the 32-bit bus. Beautiful well-designed stereo system that is only well-worn and sound will amuse RAY ACKMAN 13. E 808. I Complete stereo system: Pioneer PL-71 transition. Sony STR-90M5 receiver. 65 watts per channel, two 65-R Carmin Vega speakers. Receiver 2. Sony STR-90M5 receiver. $845, $845, 10 p.m. Excellent condition. I1-5 No room for storage! 4 YW snow slider, 3 shaded, 1 aluminum can, 2 windows. $25 large, GEVirginia also in great shape. $25 mini, GEVirginia also in great shape. I love Allison, she turns me up. Her upper end is so sweet and elegant and has the perfect mix of warmth. RYAUDO. 12 hrs. BankAmericard BOOKS- Thousands of used paperbacks and hardcover fiction from all over the world. Bound in BQ, Quantity Filed Five Months, New Haven, New York. (10) 800-725-9040. MG 1100 4-door sedan, 1965, low mileage $350, 843-0209 11-8 VW 412 station-wagon. Clean and good condition. Aircon transmission, air conditioning. Two 1x2" wondrous w/ windramp and highs, enhanced Two 2x4" wondrous w/ air suspension and highs, 82-918-8944 11-8 Near-new mattress and box springs, double bed size, $30 for each. 842-4476. 11-5 Guitar—Guild F-59, acoustic, in mint condition. 841-4224 11-5 1971 Toyota Mark II, 4-aperiod, AC, new tires, engine regular, 20mm. pts. fuel: 882/593. 11-9 Sturo-Onikyo TZ 220 AH-MF Receiver. Techniques Canton Tissue Deck-4 - 48 x 108 mm, 190 spille机的. Achetez en ligne. Good used 10 insets and single speed. Lawrences Synchron Skeleton 0-4 8-inch Thurs. 9:30 to 11:30 Diamond Balloon 6-inch Thurs. 10:30 to 11:30 STEREO SYSTEM: Mikko receiver, glennbur tumbletable Netsize: Netsize best offer. Bid online 815-362-8274. HELP WANTED Pair of Pioneer 63DX speakers Retail $600 Will for $200. 841-845-835 11-10 HENRY's drive-in is in the process of remodeling and are now taking applications or employment. We've already hired 20 students. Most work at least 20 hours per week and two weeks dap, day or night per month. Starting next week, we will have a full day. OVERSEAS JOBS=nummeryear*count, Europe, S. Americas, Australia, Asia, all fields, Euro- $120,180 expenses Expenses paid, sightseeing, Free travel, Food and lodging KA, CA, KA, KA, Box 490, Berkley, CA 94707, 11-11 YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CENTERED 15 East 8th, 841-7644 10.5 Monday-Saturday 730Mass.841-7O7O - Imported Clothing - Furniture - Antiques Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing HALF AS MUCH Interested persons should send a resume. Interesting papers or research may be mailed to: Daily Journal World; Application deadline is May 16, 2015. Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time. Position requires a Bachelor's degree and assisting in research, Social science backcamps or McRoberts, Dept of Human Development 113 to 3 km. A qualification in any field LOST AND FOUND BROADCAST ENGINEER KANU needs a broadcast engineer immediately. Must have previous experience in the field of broadcasting or electrical engineering. Send Broad Disk at KANU: 1840-35-13. 15-9 TREACHERS at all level Foreign and Domestic Teachers, Box 105 Vancouver, was 19860, 15-10 Applicants will be evaluated on the basis of editorial experience, knowledge of computer appraisal techniques, and level of education, relevance of previous work experience, two references, and willingness to work. AAM-En extra cash on your own time Fallout Tactical - Fallout Tactical Mrs. Sells, B21-M271 1-38 KC STAR Route carrier 2 A.M. daily-7 days economic caricom economic car for 12 age cells 844-3094 LOST ONE "One Lady's watch. Master gold hand- set. Out in 8k, or around Miriam Gold. In- titled. Available at Midnight. $165.00. 1-400- 237-3890. Found billedoff at Shenangtian's parking lot for therifferson. Contact Kansas Banks. 12-8 The Association of Systematics Collections is anEqual Opportunity/Affirmative Action HI5479. The Association of Systematic Collections—a national association of academic researchers—sucking a full-time Administrative Assistant. Duties include managing and supervising professionals, management of a diverse publications team, supervision of resultant projects. Salary range is $40-120 per hour. Lost: small silver watch, infection, Inct. Owner: Emery and Wescow. Renewal Call: 88-240-7563. Lott. Brown photo-gray glances in print case. Area, area. Area please Mary Pat Mullan 14-5 845-9454 Found. Gretchen Cox's bus pass. Call 842-2346 to 11-5 evenings. Found a load of eggs at Laundromat at 19th & Lexington. Call 841-2678. 11-8 - Pinball Found: Ring in Fraser 11-1. Call 842-999-096 Identify, identify and claim. 11-8 MISCELLANEOUS Found 3 month, black make-up white spot on left arm of right hand. Found 2 months, black make-up white spot on left arm of right hand. Found 41 weeks, alpha skin color bitten, found Oct. 31. PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday-Friday. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday. at 9 p.m. NOTICE - Feosball JSASSH CAFE-Good food from sachchai, Lunch @ Jassh Café, 903 Main, Delhi-110082, big door, very clean, very good food. Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday THOMAS WEST COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS Mattresses • Liners Heaters • Frames Bedspreads • Flatted Sheets WATERBEDS PERSONAL Downtown Lawrence 842-7187 Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dresses, hampers, lamps, television. Open daily 12-5am. (364) 879-8749. FIELDS Redeemer Lutheran Church, 30th and Hadkell, 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 able to attend. 712Mass.St. DK SKILLET says we're not the newest LEGQUOR baby born here. A month ago, DK Drop in to see his brother, Ivan. "We're having a baby." OCCI! Well, all gets two free once again. This well-educated, well-inclusive, well-motivated, well-trained Business Admin within to meet intelligent and sometimes aggressive managers who give another lot of help to my future. What's a better way? Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl The Lounge Aztec Inn Need help, a referrer, or just someone to talk to 67 HEAD CALLSHARE: 814-295. We never close Excellent instruction in Guitar, Banjo, an all- way student. Enriched with advanced virtuoso violin Worships available. Keyboard and guitar lessons. "Twin the night of the King's cavitation." If you know this poem, call 842-1366. Keep trying. AI. This is for you the girl who never had any wives are blue, the girl who been weeks end, and Ty wants you to be their bridesmaid. And Ty wants you to be their bridesmaid. And Ty Hear a Christian musical—The Apotee* — p.m. Nov. 7; First Presbyterian Church, 11-14 Auction - Nov. 4, 7 P.M. Complete bed, 2 pe- sitional couch, chest of drawers, game- condition. Over stair cases, small office, other nice rooms. Bed, dresser, closet sold by case, other items too numerous to mem- berate. Each item except Smoker, 10 & 6 everyday except Sunflower, Highway 10, west Sunflower, below Glen Club; Auction every 5 days. RIDES ___ RIDERS Want ride to Boston around Christmas. Need to know this week call. Call after 811-5466-11-5 Wanted: any attractive young ladies (18 yrs, or under) with a telephone number in the local broker/advertiser for a chance to win $2000 in Playboy's Playmate Phone Contest. No BS. Any interested people have questions or an interview at 61-821-7110. POETRY WANTED for Anthropology Include Ethnicity, Sex, and Gender P.O. Box 30426; San Francisco, California "A different kind of bar 'featuring seclusion and quiet." GAY RAP GROUP. Thursday, Nov. 4, 82 KSEN 11-4 4:30, 7:30 p.m. EUROPE 1968 IBRAEI APRICA ASIA 1969 IBRAEI APRICA ASIA Student ALI President 1969 IBM First Student ALI President 1969 IBM First Aztec Inn SERVICES OFFERED - Bud on Tap American and Mexican Food All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont 842-9455 - Pool Math Tutoring—competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 558, 627, 646. Regular sessions or one-time lesson. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681. TYPING BOY'S CREATIVE FRAMING AT CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE • ON MOUNTING • FITTERTYPE • METAL FRAMES • RESTORATION • WARN BOARD FRAMING Cross Reference Bookstore 9135 Main Inagawa Center INFORMATION INFORMATION INFORMATION INFORMATION LAWYER Lawyer Lawyer Lawyer Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a new bicycle. Check out our entire bike, lubricate and adjust your dervilers, brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your mountain bike, lubricate and adjust your accessories bought at time of "tune-up". Rates: 10 speed $15.00, 5 or 3 speed $15.00, single speed $20.00, double speed $20.00, 15 speed $6.50, complete professional --- ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERH Thousands on computer systems 1140 Hex 266 H, Los Angeles California 90026 266 H, Los Angeles California 90026 THEISI BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us handle $83 Massachusetts & phone $84. Thank you. Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, milie. Experienced tech. assistant, spills, spillage, corrected. 830-7536. Mr. Wright. Good used electric guitar under $100. No Joe guitar music-843-8473 5:00. 11-5 Wanted: female grad student to share house/w 2 students grad student to close KU $ 400 + /- $ 150 --- Need an experimented typa? JBM Selectle LLC (ribbon). Call Pam at 648-3210. (ribbon). Call Pam at 648-3210. 2 studious females needed to share furnished Jacqueline Tower apartments 890 a.m. each. .128. .128. .128. Female roommate to share hire near campus. Room room, 850 plus 1% house utilities. 814-1868- 829-7238. NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: female roommate to add a plus 12 yr old, Call Collegen 81-7767 11-5 Two residents wanted to share 2 bedroom Townhouse: $90/mo + utilities? $44/mo Broadway: $15/mo + utilities? $8/mo Female roommate needed. $22.50 a month plus immediate. IMMEDENAL. Room, bus, road Call 811-4971 WANTED 1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-29 Typed editor, IBM PPC edit.exe. Quality work. Assist in drafting discussions welcome. Bilal, 842-913-7271 EXPERT TYPING. Fast and accurate, reusable rate, proofreading and minor grammatical纠 便 Experienced Loyalty. *THESES ONLY* Will Spend Much Time with Clients in San Francisco, Karolina at 840-431-2711, 841-789-1000 or www.thesesonly.com. Roommate needed for very nice furnished apartment in Los Angeles with 6' x 10' bed, $9.50 per month rent and call (855) 234-7222 to discuss. HAPPY SANTA NOW'S THE TIME FOR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY No extra charge Gift Wrapping Free HAAS IMPORTS 1028 Mass 1029 Mass. The Chalk Hawk --- HILLCREST BILLIARDS - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pon Ping Pong - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Pin-Ball Fees-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Open 7 Days a week No One Under 18 Admitted 12 Thursday, November 4.1976 University Daily Kansan Quiz bowl tests trivia knowledge By SANDY DECHANT The author of "Oedipus Rex," the name of the actor who played the Skipper on Gilligan's Island and John Wayne's real name take on added importance this week. Correct answers to questions like these mean points for teams competing in the Jayhawk College Quiz Bowl, which started Monday and continues through Friday. The bowl, part of Higher Education Week, was organized by the SIL Society, a sophomore honorary, and the sophomore class officers. Thirty-seven teams, representing 16 fraternities, six sororities, eight scholarship committees, and 43 members. dependent living groups, are competing in the bowl. THE IDEA FOR the bowl came from a KU alumnus who had participated in bowls while attending KU, Russ Engel, sophomore class president, said yesterday. The game might have been taken more seriously in the 60s. There were annual college colleges at KU from 1969 to 1989. KU teams were invited to participate in the CBS General Electric television nationally televised content, in 1960 and 1968. After losing to Smith College, a private women's school in Northampton, Mass., in the 1960 G.E. College Bowl, the team returned to find it had been in hungery. "COLLEGE BOWL games were a big event in those days." Mary Loveland, a 1970 graduate who played on KU bowl teams for three years, said. "I knew the name of Gene Autry's horse, so I was a prized member of the team." Questions used in the context are on such things as history, sports and literature, in which case they are not included. according to the Jan. 12, 1960, Karsan. Campus pranksters had dunny a dummy labeled, "College Bowl Team," from a tree from Watson Library, the Karsan reported. the World Council of Churches. There, Kinyon said, the teaching environment is much healthier because the government is supported by the people. While there, Kinyon helped organize a school to train young Africans in agricultural skills. He helped clear the land, teach the students to assign the curriculum and hire the teachers. "The rest of Higher Education Week is serious and is success-oriented," Engel said. "This is intended to be the lighter side of the week." THE CITY dwellers had been previously led by the white landowners, he said, but after the changeover to African rule in 1865, they were left without a feeder meant wouldn't be filled by Zambia's own agricultural production. Zambia, therefore, began recruiting teachers, he "It was our joy to see the first class graduate and to see them pioneer on new tracts of land and become commercial engineers." We know that sports we receive, they're doing very well. From page one Ex-missionary . . . born in Rhodisia, and all were required to attend a segregated boarding school 10 Kinyon said he would have stayed in Africa, except he wanted his children educated in the United States. Now that the youngest has graduated from Baker University in Winnipeg City, he said, he will return for an administrative position if conditions improve. The following questions were used in Monday's elimination round: But at the KOA office, a room with a painted border of sunflowers and Conestoga wagons, he moves happily to direct some of his team through the city (grant), as if his mission could be nowhere else. - Who was the baseball player who could read a record label when the recorded was tumultuous? —What English millionaire developed the Kimberly diamond mines? KINVON SAID his four children obtained a broad, international perspective from a broad range of schools. -Where were the men under the command of William Travis killed? ACCORDING TO rules set by the sponsors, each match is moderated by a member of the KU faculty. A scorekeeper and timekeeper also are present. If the team answering the toss-up question gives an incorrect response, the opposing team can earn 10 points by answering the question correctly. —This most important of the digestive enzymes acts only in a acid medium and only in acidic solutions. The team answering the toss up, correctly receives a two-part or four-part bonus question. Each part is worth 5 or 10 points, for 20 possible points. If any part of the bonus question is answered incorrectly, the other team gets a chance to answer that part and to receive all points possible for that section. Elimination rounds continue at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union. Semifinals will be at 7 p.m. and 7:39 p.m., and finals will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Union. AFTER 20 MINUTES, the team with the most points is declared the winner and advances in competition. The team who wins final will be awarded a traveling trophy. Engel said the sponsors had had only a few problems with the bowl. Because a buzzer and a light apparatus, scheduled to be ready Monday failed to work, competitors Monday had to raise their hands when they wanted to answer a question. ENGEL SAID the buzzer would be ready for the signal and fire sounds Friday He said another minor problem arose. Monday when team members and supporters listened to other rounds and heard the answer to questions asked in their Each match is a series of rounds. Each round consists of a 20-point up-question, followed by a two-part or four-part bonus question, provided the给出题上 is answered correctly. wind from the east Now, the same question is asked of all teams competing at the same time and isn't as simple to answer. A NEW FILM BY JEAN-LUC GODARD SCREENPLAY BY GODARD AND DANIEL COHN-BENDIT. "A MARXIST MINI-WESTERN." THE N.Y. FILM FESTIVAL "The ONLY TRUE MILITANT FILM IN CANNES . . ." SIGHT & SOUND "IN THE EPICENTER OF THE REVOLUTION . . . " TIME Thurs., Nov. 4 - 7:30,9:30, 75° FILM SOCIETY kansasunionBOOKSTORE Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union Watch the want ads in the Kansan. C-60 min. - 3 pack special $2.30 C-30 min. - 75° C-60 min. - 80° C-90 min. - $1.40 kansas BOOKSTORE Show features rhythmic, ritual music of tribe Rhythmic chanting, occasional piercing and violent screams formed the focus of a slide and tape show on the music of theoplee stage of Africa last night in Dyche Hall. Charles Adams, assistant professor of anthropology, told about 15 people that the tribal music of the Basotho people of southern Africa was a highly developed part of their society, which he said was tremendously diverse. Adams said that the Basotho music related to all aspects of their lives, from religion and politics to medicinal cures and circumcision ceremonies. Unlike Americans, who concern themselves with visual aids, the Basosthos place greater emphasis on their musical instruments. In practice, they are said, are played either by hand or mouth. We have these great cassettes . . . millions have been sold because they are great in quality, looks and value. Adams played recordings of 'lekolou' reed music, usually played by cattle briers in the Lesotho highlands, and played back loudly, amplifying sounds emitted at circumcision rites. The flute music, Adams said, is played to control cattle, which are used in barter. Each song directs the cattle in different directions he said, and enables the herdsmen to concentrate their attention on their tasks. Capital 04069179 Capital 04069179 Capital 04069179 Capitol Blank Cassettes NOSKOWSKI'S UNIVERSITY BOOKS When it's halfway into the semester and 34 books have just arrived for a class of 35 ...it's no time to get filled up. (1976 The Miller Brewing Co.; Milwaukee, Wis.) Lite MILK BEER ALL COLOURS Ev. Lite Beer from Miller. Everything you always wanted in a beer. And less. V --- Nov John busin G A small open the John's N St. The ait with the candy. T thousands sizes. Squirtir snakes, Groucho with win appendag within ar The boy cases car item that crowded a man with the count THAT I John's No since late His now War II, he aspirin an earthquake, or then adden However, year, and section an earthquake. "I guess Emick sa working." ALTHO through the small- "It's too Su res Loren Former client at tuesday Hurphman department of surgery looking for However with the B at the Unit (UMKC) Humph unavailab Rober F for the Me A LITTLE WARMER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY A LITTLE WARMER KANSAN Vol.87 No.54 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Moon followers move to Wichita Friday, November 5, 1976 See story page five Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER JOHN' N NOELTY CO. Novelty man amputated appendages to an old favorite, the whoopee cunton Emick was mayor of Lawrence in 1968 and 1972. John Emick, author of John's Novelty Co., has been in the novelty business in Lawrence of 1946. He sells everything from fake Carter reaffirms pledges, suggests possible tax cut BY LAWRENCE KNUTSON A.B. Special Correspondent Carter said he would likely seek a tax cut for average wage earners if the economy didn't perk up by Jan. 20, the day he will be inaugurated. Carter made the remarks in his first nationally televised news conference, from the chilly platform of his hometown railroad denot. PLAINS, Ga. (AP) --President-elect Jimmy Carter said last night that the narrow margin of his victory wouldn't keep him out of trouble and to carry out my campaign commitments." *Hs stated goals will be difficult to achieve, but with the help of a Lorem ipsum copywriter.* He said that the closeness of the election Tuesday wouldn't prompt him to adjust his plan. - HE IS CONCERNED about a possible increase in December in the price of imported oil, but can do nothing about it now except voice his concern. Carter said he didn't want to mislead Americans into thinking that oil prices or make decisions before taking office. - Cabinet members won't be announced before December, and they will be chosen on merit, after personal interviews, and in a careful, very slow and very methodical way. If the group would try to achieve balance, including geographical balance, in the Cabinet. "I WISH WE COULD have carried all 50 at demonstration — didn't hope to demonstrate—even before insurgation —my complete commitment to be president of all the American cities." Carter appeared with Sen. Walter Mondale, but the vice president-elect was silent during the first major pronoun discussion in the administration. Carter did all the talking. - Among its main points, the international continuity in American foreign policy, toward both the United States and Russia, is central.* Gewgaws galore—John's got 'em "It's too late in my life to make any kind Bv RICK THAEMERT A small boy with a baseball cap pushes open the heavy glass door and steps into a large kitchen on St. The air in the 10-by 46-foot room is thick with the aroma of popcorn and cinnamon candy. The shelves, too, are thick with thousands of novelty in all shapes and sizes. Squirting flowers, spider earrings, rubber snakes, flavored-pepper chewing gum, Groucho Marx glasses, motorized glasses with windshield wipers, fake imputated appendages and fake ice cubes with flies within are only a few. ALTHOUGH BUSINESS has increased through the years, he said his content with them is growing. **THAT MAN is John Erick, the John of** **THE Novelty, who has run the business** **with a company** The boy surveys the shelves and glass cases carefully, so as not to miss that one with a curious eye. Finally, crowded merchandise. Finally, he tells the man with the kind green eyes leaping over the shelf. His novelty trade began during World War II, he said, when he sold things such as aspirin and razor blades for a company. In 1946, he moved to a lessening company at his present location, then added the novelty section in late 1946. However, he sold the vending company last year, and now concentrates on the novelty section and Hillcrest Lounge and Billiards, which he owns. "I guess I've always been a kid at heart," sick said recently, adding that he enjoyed working with the kids. of a big movie. I'm not trying to get rich here," he said, adding with a devilish grin, "Well, I like it. I am looking for that one to sell and make a million." But, he hasn't found it yet, he said. Frank Masters, plastic surgeon and acting chairman of the surgery department, said Humphrey wanted to do something different. He declined to say whether he thought dissatisfaction with the Med Center caused Humphrey to resign. Surgeon at Med Center resigns to go to UMKC "I've been looking for a particular item that will sell like hotcakes so I can become a millionaire, but I haven't found it in forty-some years." CONSIDERING THE cost in time and materials in making homemade novelties, Emick said, he could make a profit of only 10 cents an hour. "i sit up nights trying to think of some novelty or prank that will sell," Erick said. letter of resignation indicated he wanted to continue his research and do more private work. The only items Emis has the time to make are Jayhawk buttons and cinnamon toothpicks, both of which consistently have been top sellers, he said. Emick leaned over the scratched glass counter, smudged by the noses and fingers of small fores, and recalled a time when he clicked a button he wished he would have kent. THE FOLLOWING day, he said, a student came in and ordered about a hundred Carter buttons. But, unfortunately, Emrick was there, keep one for a collector's item, he said. He said he was at KU's first football game last fall when he and some other fans noticed an airplane pulling the 'sign, the sign, the sign,' they all lauded and "who's Carter?" Except for buttons -hia No. 1 seller- and the toothpicks, Emick depends on about 12 toothbrushes. When Humphrey resigned as chairman, he cited problems with salary funding and insufficient office and laboratory space in the Med Center's surgery department. "I never thought I'd hear of him again," he laughed. Masters told that a new surgeon would be recruited, but that there were enough people to fill the positions. Loren Humphrey, general surgeon and former chairman of the surgery department at the KU Medical Center, resigned yesterday for excessive Jan. 31. "The cost of operation has picked up to beat the devil." Emrick said. For that reason, he has to be careful when buying novels in bulk. he said. Hammhey, chairman of the surgery department since 1971, resigned from that position Sept. 29 but stayed as a professor and in charge, he said he wasn't looking for another. "You got burned once in a while," he said. "We've had to throw away hundreds of dollars." HE SAID THAT it was very hard to predict what new novelties would sell, but that some standard novelties had always "sold like mad." "We sell wigs and masks year round," he said. "We're the only place in town that carries expensive masks, sometimes as much as $14." by Halloween, and that he had to order as early as August to get any, because masks are not available. He said that he always sold all his masks Popping matches, hand buzzers, whoopee cushions, and KU Jawkypuppies are some items that always have sold well, so. Occasionally, he witnesses a fad that sells big, such as the hula-hop or skateboard. Emick said. \ EMICK SELL$ make-up year round also. "A lot of the students come in and buy them." However, he has now accepted a position with the Harry S. Truman Medical Center at the University of Missouri at Kansas City (UMKC) School of Medicine. "We get little bites on up," he said, "but it's surprising that we have a lot of attorneys and professional people come in looking for gags to play on each other. Emnick said it was surprising how many different types of people bought novelties. All ages seem to be looking for things to add humor to their lives, he said. Lawrence Klein, a University of Pennsylvania economist and a top Carter economic adviser, has recommended to Carter a $10 billion to $15 billion tax cut or a *Someone comes in everyday asking for something weird they expect to have, and asks them what to do.* BUT, HE SAID, he doesn't carry some kinds of novelties. He said the cut would try to increase the purchasing power of the average American family, and would be oriented toward lower-income taxpayers. Rober Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said that Humphrey's "I've tried to stay out of pornographic stuff," Emick said. "It's not that I'm a Carter again thanked President Gerald Ford for his offer to cooperate in the investigation of the bombs, ministration, and said he hoped to meet with Ford and the President's top advisers. campaign promises, including an overhaul of the government and the welfare system, tax reform and a new, comprehensive energy policy. Humphrey was out of town and unavailable for comment last night. See GEWGAWS page 10 CARTER SAID THAT if the current economy slowdown persisted he might seek to cut the cost of insurance. The night was cool and crisp for the news conference. Newnes sat on folding metal chairs in the street in front of the railroad building, where 400 looked on from behind roar barriers. quick increase in federal spending to stimulate economy at the start of the decade. CARTER SAID THE news conference would be the first of many. ☆ ☆ "I hope that I can have at least two full-scale press conferences a month when I am ready." He began the conference by thanking his supporters, and said, "No matter how anyone may have voted on Tuesday, for me or for President Ford or others, I deeply disliked you." American people as we approach the day for a new administration next January." See CARTER page two By BARBARA ROSEWICZ Demos' effect on KU now only speculation Effects on KU of the power turnover are only speculation. But University administrators are unsure of what repercussions to expect when the budget is presented to the House in the 1977 session. The legislators convene in January. The Democrats gained 12 seats in the election Tuesday and hold a 65-80 advantage. The fate of KU's fiscal 1978 budget now lies in the hands of the first Democratic-controlled House of Representatives in Kansas in 64 years. Some legislators agree that there will be differences from past years because of a Democratic majority and a Republican governor. There is still a two-seat Republican advantage in the Senate. 21-19. Partisan lines could be drawn on issues such as tax reform, State Rep. Mike Glover, former Republican House leader. State Rep. Wendell Lady, R-Wichita, and past chairman of the House Ways and Spaces committee, would definitely be partisan voting in the next legislature. There's going to have to be if Republicans are to have any control over who goes on. We're going to have unity. STATE REP. LLOYD Buzi, R Lawrence, said, "It might make a difference on how far some of the proposed legislation would go, as a majority of Democrats in the E-use, the Senate is still controlled by Republicans. With a Republican governor, it's going to make it hard for any program that might be with Republican approval to get through." A solution for dealing with state funding will be decided this legislative session. The source of state funding seems to be the key that will determine whether the University budget request will be given a close shade in the legislature. KU has requested $50 million for the Lawrence campus operating budget and about $90 million for the KU Medical's operating and construction budgets. TAX REVENUE and money in the state general revenue fund reserve are important sources of revenue. These funds come from universities and other state agencies. How Democrats and Republicans use those sources is discussed in this chapter. "I don't think any major party will be in favor of tax increases." Shankel said. Lady said there would be no tax increases this session because Gov. Robert Bennett is running for reelection because there will be a projected $120 million in the reserve fund at the close of the month. MONEY FROM THE REServe fund will be available this session, he said, but the legislature has to look ahead. He said a balance of about 10 per cent of the general fund budget should be held in case of a disaster or a downflow in the economy. That amount would approximately $750 million in the fiscal 1978 general revenue fund. The legislature needs to hold a line on spending, he said, to keep a balanced budget and enough money to the reserve. The state spent $50 million more than it took in. More than $30 million in federal revenue sharing funds, principally used for capital improvements, might be one other way of funding the state operating budget, he said. But he said he didn't think that was a very important piece of the plan to minimize the revenue sharing program and leave the state without funds for on-going programs. Any new programs that could cause a tax raise will be scrutinized, he said. See DEMOS' page 12 Beginners bust in Bahamas bar Bv JOE RADCLIFE Statt Writer FREEPORT, Grand Bahamas—The young black dealer with curly red hair and a strong British accent had been playing Five minutes earlier. The man had lost $50 and had bid his farewell. Now he returned, tossing a $100 bill at the door. The dealer smiled again and gave the man $100 in chips. "Back for some more, sir?" The man was, indeed, back for some more. Four hands later all his chips were gone. He slowly got up, grumbled a good-by and walked away from the table at the El Casino here. The entire trip lasted 14 hours, and in that time they received a round trip flight, two meals, free drinks, a floor show at the casino and all the gambling they could afford. All for a mere $2. SEVERAL HOURS before, on a day in late October, he had boarded a chartered DC-9 out of Des Moines, Iowa, with a group of 100 other "gambblers" that included several college students, some businessmen, factory workers and school teachers. At 8 p.m., that they had started their mind-trip to the Bahamas. Of course there was a slight catch—each person had to bring $500. No one had to spend it, but most of them THE TRIP WAS sponsored by Walter Allen Tours, a travel agency based in Des Moines. Bob Bedwell, who drives a grad leader in Des Moines for a living, borrowed the $500 for the trip from his employer. "Jim's been down here before," Bodwell said, "He plans on losing $1,000 every time he comes." Walter Allen, the tour director, stood at the craps table looking like one of his customers. "We get all kinds of people on these trips," he said, "businessmen, students and factory workers, just get it." At the suggestion of any professional gamblers taking the trip, Allen laughed. "NO HIGH ROLLERS here," he said. "We get people who don't usually do things like this." At the bar, Bedwell stood with his friend Thomas, a chubby, likeable man who was gulping his Scotch and tea. "Last time I was here, I hit four straight 60-to-one shots on the roulette," he said. "I was $2,900 ahead and I went over to those damn black jack tables. That dealer saw me come a mile off." He ordered a double and laughed, "That dealer really burned me." BACK AT THE craps tables, a man was swearing loudly at the dealers. "I had my chips right there," he said, pounding the table, "and now they're gone, dammit." A manager in a tuxedo leaned from the stand that overlapped the same. "The man rolled a nine and you lost," he said. "And if you don't watch your language, sit, we will ask you to do it." MEANWHILE, BODWELL had just finished a visit to the rolette tables Most of the people on the trip had gambled before, In reply, the man grumbled something about 'damm bastards' and slammed $100 worth of chips on the table. He said he was a 'slow cooker'. "I'll tell you be the truth," he said. "I just came out ahead at that route wheel, and I didn't know what was going on." This time he was luckier. He grabbed his wins and stomped away, still stawing at the dealers. but not as heavily. The minimum bids for craps and blackjack were $5 or $10, compared with $1 or $2 in Las Vegas. A frail-looking, 34-year-old man with horn-rimmed glasses, who works grading college entrance exams in Iowa City, said that he wasn't betting much money because the minimum was too high. "HERE, YOU WIN or lose so much money so fast that you don't have time to think," he said as he slipped on the floor. "I just come to have some drinks and have a good time." He said that he had gambled a little that night but that he was going to stop before he any more needless. "In Las Vegas, you really have to at losing $100," he said. "But here, you can blow it before you get broke." Another person who wasn't betting much was Jane Todd, one of the few women on the trip. Todd is a 23-year-old junior high school teacher from Des Moines. "OH, I NOT a gamber," she said, smiling. "I can't afford to lose my hard-earned money." Toddy said that she heard some of the dealers complaining that the women weren't gambling enough. The evening was nearly over, and Allen was selling some customers to grab a cab back to the airport. Some customers still had to leave. He flashed a smile and said, "Luck? Sure, I had lots of luck—all had." Outside the casino, several college students plumped into a cue. One of them asked when the next trip was, and he answered, "Don't worry." "NEXT TRIP," he said, "Are you crazy? I have to loan the $1.25 cab fare back to the airport." --- News Digest From the Associated Press Kissinger to stay till end WASHINGTON—Secretary of State Henry Kissinger yesterday ended any battles that he was going to leave his post before the end of the Ford ad- ministration. "I'm going to stay till Jan. 20th," he said. That date is the time set for the inauguration of President-elect Jimmy Carter. Kissinger was at the White House, conferring for about 90 minutes with Earlier, the State Department had announced the formation of a committee to handle the transition of American foreign policy to the new administration. Kissinger said he was waiting to hear from Carter about what role he would play in the transition to Carter. Polish hijack lacks polish VIENNA, Austria—A Young Pole being deported from Denmark widened dummy weapons made of bread colored with shoe漆 to hijack a Polish airliner on a Russian plane. Police armed with machine gun ringer the plane of Poland's LOT airline as it landed at Vienna's Schwechat Airport, but the hijacker immediately surrendered. Police identified the man as Andrés Jarcelaw Karasinski, 20, who said he had been ordered deported back to Poland after a four-month prison term in Mexico. Nude club request refused TOPEKA - Shawne County District Judge Judge McFarland yesterday denied an injunction requested by a Topleka club manager; who wants police to stop arresting Mike Halley, manager of Sunny Sam's, said that he would appeal to the Kansas Supreme Court or a federal court and that the dancing would continue. The dancers continued their nude acts last night and police continued to arrest each dancer after her performance. The injunction request came after police raided the bar two Wednesday night, arresting 10 persons for violation of the city's new ordinance banning nude dan- Artist to finish murals TOPEKA-Lumen Martin Winter, an artist with early roots in Kansas, was asked yesterday to complete marals in the state Capitol that John Steurur Court left A screening committee selected Winter following a meeting during which two state lawmakers suggested abolishing the project entirely. The vote to give Winter additional time was carried unanimously. Curry left the mural cycle finished on the second floor of the state Capitol when he left Kansas in 1941 after losing a battle with the leniure. Carter reaffirms pledges . . . Carter said the three percentage points in the popular vote and the majority of the candidates that had made him president-elect were not adequate to the tasks he had set for himself. From page one "We had a clear majority of the total electorate." he said. CARTER GOT 51 PER cent of the popular vote, and Ford got 48 per cent. Carter had a much larger percentage than majority—with Oregon's six electoral votes still up in the air because of the closeness of the race in that state. However, a late count showed that he came to Ford, giving him 241 electoral votes. Carter said that because of the election result, and a Democratic Congress, the new administration would keep its campaign promises. But, he said, "I don't underestimate the difficulty." Carter said he hadn't set an order of priorities for action on his pledges. But he will he do so over the next few weeks, because he knows the decisions publicly as they are made. CARTER SAID after the news conference that he had reconsidered his plan to spend two or three days a week in Washington during the transition period, because a president-elect should keep some distance between himself and the capital while an old one is a good place. BUT CARTER SAID Mondale would be in Washington representing the coming administration. "He will be me." he said. Carter said he didn't think the election demonstrated either a strong reaction against Ford or a substantial difference in the voters' trust for him, or for Ford. But he said most Americans thought it was time for a change and for his promised action to deal with unemployment and inflation. Carter said he would seek to improve relations with U.S. allies and to open up the country for American interests to the American people. He said he could assess both allies and potential adversaries, including the Soviet Union and China, that the United States would seek peace and stable relationships CARTER SAID THAT within the next two weeks he would convene a two-day meeting of foreign policy experts, including those from the European Union, Monday and congressional leaders. Carter amended one campaign statement he made in the last debate with Ford that he LOS ANGELES (AP)—The three commercial networks and the National Association of Broadcasters violated the First Amendment in adopting a "family viewing" policy for programs aired during yesterday, a federal judge ruled yesterday. NBC and the broadcasters association declined immediate comment. CBS and ABC said they would appeal U.S. District Court Judge Weregson Ferguson's ruling, a major victory for Hollywood artists who began fighting the policy in court a month after it went into effect in September 1975. Ferguson also held that the Federal Communications Commission "violated the First Amendment" by issuing threats of government action should industry not adopt the family viewing policy or the equivalent thereof." Judge rules against family viewing'policy IN WASHINGTON, FCC Chairman Richard Wiley said his agency was consulting with the Justice Department about a lawsuit appeal would be filed by the government. He said U.S. forces would not likely be used, but said a final judgment would be made if such an invasion occurred, and the type of Soviet action extremely unlikely. IF THE SOVIET took such action, he said, it would be a serious breach of the peace and a threat to the entire world. Also, he said, it would make it almost impossible for the United States to continue policies of detente toward Moscow. wouldn't as President act militarily to thwart a Soviet invasion of Ugoslavia as would an American invasion of Iraq. Although Carter said he wouldn't name his Cabinet before next month, he indicated that some who might become Cabinet members would work with him during the Wholesale price index jumps sharply again transition. He said he would like them to act as adviser during the two-a-d-half day session. Carter and Mondale had conferred earlier with campaign and transition staff aides on the ground. Wholesale prices of consumer foods- basicly the prices paid by supermarkets and retailers. In October, the wholesale price index stood at 185.2, meaning that a selection of goods that cost $100 in 1967 cost $185.2 last month. Although all percentage changes are adjusted to reflect normal seasonal changes, the overall index isn't. "I would never permit my White House staff to try to run the major departments of government." CARTER WILL LEAVE Palmview flattering at ST Simons Island, off the Gulf. The game is He stressed during the news conference that in his administration, the directors of government agencies would run them, and that his White House aides would be assistants to him, not bosses for the rest of the administration. signal broader trends several months in advance. Nancy Hambleton I wish to thank all my supporters and workers. Now that the election is over let's all work with our elected representative for the best interest of all. energy products, including petroleum and natural gas; and higher lumber prices because of the recent increase in homebuilding. AGEISM: Exploring Problems of Discrimination Confronting Today's Youth PANEL ON YOUTH: WASHINGTON (AP) - Wholesale prices jumped sharply in October for the second straight month because of the biggest rise in U.S. payrolls by the Labor Department reported yesterday. Falling prices for hogs and grains led the decline at the farm level. These offset higher prices for cattle, eggs, coffee and produce. Colt Knutson...Juvenile Court ESPECIALLY SIGNIFICENT for future trends was a 4 per cent jump in crude material prices in October. Price movements for these materials usually Judy Sardo...Job Service Center Higher costs for 1977 model cars, lumber products and fuel led a 6 of 1 per cent increase in the wholesale price index, a cost of prices consumers eventually will pay. Donna Flory...Social & Rohab. Services Linda Suderman...Lawrence High Part of the October increase was due to a 3.6 per cent rise in motor vehicle prices, reflecting price tags on new model cars and trucks; a 2.5 per cent increase in prices for "THIS SUGGESTS that unless we get some moderation in industrial prices, the overall index might rise more in future months." he said. A decline in farm prices kept the overall index from rising more sharply. ment's chief economist, said he welcomed the slowdown in the rate of increase in the overall index from September to October. The decline is disturbed by the trend in industrial prices. Although the October increase was smaller than September's 9 of 1 per cent report indicated continuing strong inflationary pressures on the economy. Audience Participation Invited KU-Y Is Partially Funded by Student Senate President-elect Jimmy Carter has agreed with President Gerald Ford that inflation would be a serious concern next year and he will be in the range of 6 per cent for the year. DURING THE PRESIDENTIAL campaign, Carter said that the government should play a more active role in getting private industry to restrain price increases. Although the drop in farm prices is good news for grocery shoppers, the industrial price trend is a more disturbing sign for the economy. John Kendrick, the Commerce Depart- Farm prices fell 1.2 per cent in October following a 1.9 per cent rise in September and declines in July and August. During the past three months, farm prices have fallen to a 6.8 per cent annual rate while industrial prices climbed at an 11 per cent annual rate. Economists follow movements in industrial prices—which make up more than 70 per cent of the wholesale price index—more carefully than farm prices, because industrial price changes are likely to have a prolongage impact on the overall price level. They can even after adjustment for seasonal influences, fluctuate from month to month. INDUSTRIAL PRICES have been rising steadily for the past five months—increasing by 5 per cent in June, 7 per cent in July and August, 9 per cent in September and 1 per cent last month. The October rise was 2.4 per cent last month, the last October, when prices rose 1.2 per cent. PUFF'S FRAGRANT WEEDS. Chew roots! Weerschaums! Beer Roots! PIPES OF PEACE FOR PAYMENT ON Georgo's Pipe Shop 727 Ackland Politicians' Stories constantly on hand. DEMO SALE Save Up To $800 on a good selection of TOYOTA DEMOS. Corona 5-Door Wagon Corolla Wagon Corolla Liftback Deluxe LAWRENCE TOYOTA Lawrence Auto Plaza Ph. 842-2191 TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA DEMO SALE Save Up To $800 on a good selection of TOYOTA DEMOS. Corona 5-Door Wagon Corolla Wagon Corolla Liftback Deluxe LAWRENCE TOYOTA Lawrence Auto Plaza Ph. 842-2191 TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA CLIMB THE LETTERS TO SUCCESS: Air Force ROTC can give more value to your college years and help you pay for your schooling at the same time. You can compete for a two, three, or four-year Air Force ROTC scholarship that will pay you $100 a month and pay you your tuition books and lab fees, too. Plus, there's flight instruction for those who qualify, a com- mission as a second leie- ment after graduation, then responsibility and challenge in an Air Force job. The list goes on. Check it out. See if you can climb the Air Force ROTC ladder to supe- rprise a great way to serve your country. Sophomores interested in the 3 Year Program should contact Capt. John E. Macken, Military Science Blog. Room 168, or call 844-4474 during November of December. DEMO SALE Save Up To $800 on a good selection of TOYOTA DEMOS. Corona 5-Door Wagon Corolla Wagon Corolla Liftback Deluxe LAWRENCE TOYOTA Lawrence Auto Plaza Ph. 842-2191 TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA CLIMB THE LETTERS TO SUCCESS: Air Force ROTC can give more value to your college years and help you pay for your schooling at the same time. You can compete for a two, three, or four-year Air Force ROTC scholarship that will pay you $100 a month and pay for your tuition, books and lab fees, too. Plus, there's flight instruction for those who qualify, a commitment as a second leaseendant after graduation, then responsibility and challenge in an Air Force job. The list goes on. Check it out. Seize if you can climb the Air Force ROTC Leader to success. CHOLARSHIPS is a great way to serve your country. Soophonoris interested in the 3-Year Program should contact Capt. John E. Macke, Military Science Help, Room 16, or call 780-324-8300 or December 16th to serve your country. FRESHMEN T.G.I.F. Friday, Nov. 5th Disco, Free Beer, Pop, Pretzels ★ 2:30—5:30 p.m. Members Free with Student I.D. Non-members $1.50 (cash) Memberships available at the door* Place: HAWKS NEST BE THERE Aloha Get your class cards at the B.O.C.O. office, Union, or at the door. CLIMB THE LETTERS TO SUCCESS. Air Force ROTC can give more value to your college years and help you pay for your schooling at the same time. You can compete for a two, three or four-year Air Force ROTC scholarship. That will pay you $100 a month and pay for your tuition, books and lab fees, too. Plus, there's flight instruction for those who qualify, a commission as a lieutenant after graduation, then responsibility and challenge in an Air Force job. The list goes on. Check it out. See if you can climb the Air Force ROTC to surpass others and have a great way to serve your country. Some members interested in the 2-year Program house contact Capt. John E. Mackes, Military Science Blog, Room 108, or call 844-455 during November or December. FRESHMEN T.G.I.F. Friday, Nov. 5th Disco, Free Beer, Pop, Pretzels ★ 2:30—5:30 p.m. Members Free with Student I.D. Non-members $1.50 (cash) Memberships available at the door* Place: HAWKS NEST BE THERE Aloha Get your class cards at the B.O.C.O. office, Union, or at the door. Re R A roft between day of f SenEx Senate Effect n Roben Calenda KU wou were reo For exa for might b In the rotating spread "LAS7 up taking finals w The n schedul Uniho mittee responses will be responses the stat semestre for final Friday, November 5, 1976 3 n to act d-a-half earlierides onn. norrow Island. reference vectors of am and should be rest of 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789 Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER Relaxing at home When Bert Springer isn't at work as a buildings and grounds gardener with his horses, he relaxes with his daughter, Sharon, and his dog. Springer plays basketball for K-State. Cowboying only part of gardener's history By NANCY TEETER The sound is the only one heard in the chilly air, Tap. Staff Writer Tap tap. Bert Springer crouches under the barn's only fluorescent light with a small minifanister on his head. "I guess I was always meant to be a horseshoe," said Springer, former rodeo cowboy turned Buildings and Grounds gardener, as he filled around the tiny hoof. "I learned from an old Dutch blacksmith in my home town of Leonard, Kan., and my dad bought me my first tools," he said recently. SPRINGER FINISHED the little pony by dabbing an oil and gasoline mixture on each hoof, which he said warded off soreness and infection. "This is a pulling pony and use to be one of the top 10 in the country," he said. "I "I guess I'm a showoff. I like to think I shoe more winners than anybody else around." guess I'm a show off. I like to think I show more winners than anyone else around." University Daily Kansan He said he liked to shoe horses no one else wanted to shoe. Most of them need corrective sheing to improve their stride, or to make them more comfortable be- "A shoe that doesn't fit hurts a horse as bad as it does a person," he said. SPRINGER SAID he shoed army mules, cast hoof and even one of the Badwalser machines. He played basketball for four years at University and at York Business College. "I've been kicked a few times," he grinned, showing a mouthful of crooked and missing teeth. "When I was young; people said I had the most perfect set of teeth they Horseshoe is only a small part of Bert Srinerine's past. Springer was also on the K-State rodeo team. *T$^{i}$ had planned to be a varietarian, but the $T$^{i}$ h AFTER K-STATE, he played professional baseball for the Minnesota Lakers from 1984 to 1997. were mad because I was ornery, and they said I was doing too much," he said. "It was really rough in those days," he said. "You were on the floor as much as you on the table." "You didn’t big the money then. I sneaked out and got fired a lot. I don’t like to be in there." The 6-foot-4 Springer said he was too short for professional basketball and quit for a career at the University of Arkansas. 1. "bail君锁og, rode bulls, roped calves and had to do just about everything to make them as brave as possible." "TVE ROODED in 46 of the 48 states and won a few big ones, too. I won in Pendleton, Ore., and won in Madison Square Garden." The former was the winner. I was the woman to ever win there." *10* estimated that one year he traveled 55,000 miles and spent $6,000 for plane tickets. So he decided he didn't have enough money to continue in rodeo another year and never returned to the rodeo circuit, he said. Springer is still involved in rodeos through his family. His house, on a 47-acre farm south of Lawrence, is filled with trophies his 16-year-old daughter, Sharon, SHARON ESTIMATED she had about 100 trophies for her competition in barrel racing. Springer said he didn't have any trophies from his rodeo days because only money was awarded. But, he said, he would rather have the money anyway. Springer has about 12 horses now. Sharon's horse, San Juan Lou, nicknamed "Pork Chop," has won several championships, he said. "Nothing is finer than horses," Springer said. "I like to do anything on horseback." Springer has been a gardener for Buildings and Grounds for six years. He said he roofed houses and shed horses before he began working at the University. OF HIS JOB for Buildings and Grounds, Springer said, "I like to run those mowin' machines where nobody else wants to. It a' snares me laugh and think I am a fool, I don't care. - "Why live to 100 when you can have a life at 50!" if die tomorrow, I've had more fun * GO BIG BLUE BEAT IOWA STATE HECK & HARDTARFER Realty. Inc. • GENE HARDTARFER EXEC. VICE PRESIDENT Residence: 843-0215 601 Missouri / Lawrence, Kansas 66044 / Office: 843-5522 Joint subcommittee for Academic Affairs and Student Rights announces: Seminar on 20% Student Representation Speakers Will Be: Jung K. Lee, professor of chemistry Clifford Griffin, professor of history Ronald Calgaard, Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs James Carothers, assistant professor of English Dennis Embry, assistant instructor of Western Civ. Seminar to be held, November 9, 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room-Kansas Union The public is invited. Funded by the Student Senate Rotating finals schedule approved by SenEx Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. By DEB MILLER Staff Writer A roftailing finals schedule and a day off between the last day of classes and the first day of finals were approved yesterday by SenEx. The proposals came from the University Senate Calendar Committee and will go into effect. Robert Umholtz, chairman of the Calendar Committee, said yesterday that KU would rotate its finals much like names were rotated in the enrollment schedule. For example, a final for a 9-30 NWP class on the last day was assigned to the first day the next semester. In the past, KU has had no pattern for rotating finals, Umholtz said. *LAST YEAR, the bulk of students ended up taking their exams on the last days of school.* The rotating schedule was designed to spread out the finals. The new schedule will add uniformity to scheduling finals, Unpholtz said. is May 10. The following day, May 11, will be a day off, and finals will start May 12. Unhulitz also said the Calendar Committee had received favorable student response to a day off before final week. It was noted by students, if student response remains favorable. THE LAST DAY of classes next semester Although the Board of Regents approves the starting and ending dates for the semester, the University decides the dates for finals week. University Council and SenXe meetings. Only one member now is required to be A MEMO sent to SunEx by Peg Byrne, chairman of O and A, said that the members of the committee reported that faculty members in some schools would like a greater representation in University governance. SUA FILMS Frances Herowitz, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and a The proposal states that at least two members of the Faculty Senate from each school of the University and from the libraries should be present at both In other business, SenEx decided to send a proposal by the University Council Committee on Organization and Ad- ministration of the University Council meeting No.11. POPULAR FILMS FAREWELL, MY LOVELY (1975) Dir. Dick Richards, with Robert Mitchum, Charlotte Rampaging Film: Sat. 6, 3:30; 7:00 8:30 Sat. Nov. 6, 3:30; 7:00 8:30 POPULAR FILMS SenEx member, suggested that the number of representatives from each school could be decided by the number of faculty members in the school. SCIENCE FICTION SERIES THE INVISIBLE RAY (1936) Dir. Lambert Hillyer, with Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi and Sergio Levine. THE CRIME OF M. LANGE (1935) Dir. Jean Renoir, with Rene LeFevre and Jules Ferry THE MATCH GIRL (1928) (La Petite Marchand D'Alumettes) Dir. Jean Renoir and Tedesco Jorge Mengel Wed., Nov. 10, 7:30, 75c CLASSICAL SERIES All films shown in Woodruff Auditorium All the Salad & Pizza A Pizza Lover Can Eat For Only $2.20 SUNDAY NITE PIZZA BUFF BUFFET Pizza inn. Hillcrest Shopping Center (Next to Hillcrest, Theatres) 841;2670 pizza Share a video today... SUNDAY IF YOU THINK CHAMBER MUSIC IS STUFFY— YOU MUST HEAR The MUSIC GUARNERI STRING QUARTET Presented By Presented By The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Sunday, November 7, 3:30 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE Tickets on sale now at Murphy Hall Box Office University Daily Kansan Friday, November 5,1976 Bluegrass buffs find Lawrence listening plentiful thought By BILLUYEKI Lawrence seems to have its share of bluegrass music lovers—not only listeners, but also fiddlers and guitar pickers. They attend or play at local festivals, including a major festival in Winfield each fall. And each Wednesday night there is a bluegrass and folk music jam session at Off the Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St. which attracts quite a few bluegrass fans. WHAT IS bluegrass music? It's unfair to tag a label on any music genre, but bluegrass is generally from this country's rural or from this country's rural or Steve Mason of McKinney Mason Stringed Instruments sums up bluegrass as 'baroque music in high speech.' Mason also grew from old-time fiddle styles. mountain regions. the instruments include guitar, banjo, fiddle, mandolin and string bass, none of which are amplified. It would be an understatement to say that much bluebird is foot-tapping. The music often is played at a blistering pace, with improvisations on the main melody line. Gloria Thone, a local bluegrass supporter and also a board member of the Friends of KANU FM, says the hot pace of bluegrass music, in which each soloist fires off rapid riffs during instrumental breaks, largely was influenced by jazz. Old-time music is more relaxed and places less emphasis on the fast solo breaks, she said. KANU GIVES listeners two two-hour programs of bluegrass "Grass Grass" is produced locally by Jarnie Jones, programmer at KANU. "Folk Festival U.S.A." is a syndicated show produced by National Jones, who started "Even Grass" about nine months ago, age says the program's title was chosen to represent the wide range of music that could fall under the label of bluegrass. "The title explains the music we play," Jones said. "It covers the whole spasm." The "spasm," he said, includes old-time music, Irish fiddle tunes and even some offshoots of jazz. Jones said listeners had reacted to his show "violently, wonderfully and sometimes sleepy." Once, some progressive bluegrass music offended some Kansas City listeners that they sent him some hate mail. "WE PLAY everything from traditional music to jazz, which is what Vassar Clements has been getting into," he said. But then when Jones played traditional bluegrass, some Lawrence listeners called and wanted more progressive music played, he recalled. WHETHER IT'S traditional or progressive bluegrass, Lawrence has a large following for this music form. The annual festival in Winfield people, and many drive from Lawrence and stay the whole weekend. Throne says the Wednesday night jam session has as many as 200 to 300 participants, even though many don't attend regularly, and they include the young and the old, town girls and often four or five KU professors. And Jones says the increase in requests from listeners indicates a growing audience for his show. The first marathon, or special Sunday evening three-hour show for bluegrass, drew three requests from listeners. BUT SAYS JONES, "The last marathon we had, we couldn't keep the phone board clear." His program, which used to be programmed by Bill Evans, a Kansas State University-English teacher, was in length from one to two hours. Last year, KANU lost the underwriter—the organization providing funds—for programing funds in bluegrass benefit concert be given to help pay for the programing costs, to make it easier for attendees to enjoy bluegrass music and to give some Throne says the admission price ($1.50) was kept low so many people could come and enjoy the music. A SECOND benefit concert will be from 1 to 6 p.m. at Off the Wall Hall this Sunday, to help raise funds for the programing of "Even Grass." Seven local groups will perform. One group, Lyman Enloe and the Bluegrass Association, played at the in the same room. Enloe is one of the most famous and popular old-time fiddle players in the area. Arts & Leisure Also on Sunday will be a special call-in request marathon for bluegrass music on KANU, from 7 to 10:30 p.m. jam session participants an opportunity to perform. [Image of four people in a dynamic, skating motion. The focus is on their bodies, with arms and legs extended as they move across a flat surface.] Disco denizens dance the latest unison dances, a necessity at the Lawrence discos By STEVE FRAZIER Staff Writer “It's a real drag if I have to spend the first two hours of every day just teaching the guy to dance.” "When I go on a date I want to go to a disco, and my date better prepares me," she said. She stop the New Yorker and Stop Hustle," said a female University of Kansas student who asked to remain unidentified. Do the Hustle, Latin Hustle, Broken Hip Hustle, San Francisco Hustle, Rope Hustle, or the Arnist Hustle, the Bus Stop Hustle, the Mexican Hustle, Yorker, Mexican Hustle, Hop Scotch, Hop stop, Chicago Shuffle, Watergate, Madison, Space Walk, Ford's Funk, Trip, Jump or the Rochet, be sure you know the steps. LOCAL DISCO employees and dance instructors said perhaps soon she won't have to worry, Of Lawrence's three discos—Bugsy's, Shenanigans and Sarn. Now offers dance lessons to its customers. However, the response to the lessons has been positive. Sheriff Sarn's disco library, Sheriff Sarn's disco library, said because more disco customers are learning formalized dance steps. But others said the dance steps were just a passing fad and before long everybody was back to "free-form" dancing. "When we first opened in February, I only saw about two couples who knew and dance steps," he said. "Since then, it's heavily grown more popular to watch people know at least one step. "It is impressive," agreed Oshirak. "It makes you look better, a lot better. People look at you if you are good." area," Uttan said. "It's going to be catching on even more in the future. "The dance floor is like a stage-ours is lighted and raised above the rest of the club—and people feel a sense of pride when they know others are watching them dance. Cheryl Hoag, one of the instructors at Sheriff Sam's, said knowing special disco steps "is the popular thing to do now. "If you don't know any steps, you feel left out, or kind of inferior. If you're good, it's an easy way to get to a feeling of performing." "I SUPPOSE disco dancing brings out the hot dog in people." Others say that knowing at least one step, the Bus Stop, is a matter of necessity. The Bus Stop has been the most popular step to step in the game, and although it is getting a little old. "When the disc jockey ups up the song "The Bus Stop," soon the entire floor is moving Finnigan's energy igniting intricate moves and then vanished into the night. Shenanigans used to offer dance lessons Tuesday nights, "but it didn't go over too well so we had to redo it." Employee, Joleke Lester, said. Tim Grimm, manager of Bithouse Dance Center, never hired dance instructors. "We have a real regular group from Kansas City with about 10 to 20 people in it that has something new every time it comes in," Grimm said. "Everybody else watches and some practice logos them. They practice logos them, make up new routines, because they usually do stuff I've never seen before." "IF 'BUS STOP' comes on and you don't know the step, you better get off the floor," he said. It's "just a mass of moving couples together, there's no room for anyone else." SOMETIMES, there are more tangible rewards than feelings of pride for good dancers. Utan Khalifa will perform second in a dance disc contest in New York, and local disc offer prizes ranging from free beer to a weekend at Crown Hotel in Kansas City, Mo. Several of the disco denizens referred to "expert" dancers from Kansas City, Mo., who have been able to dazzle the locals with their 3y TIM BRADLEY "We always give the best prize to the best students, but we lose our prizes to people who prize to people if they've been improving and working hard." BUT at least one local dance instruction group is going strong, according to its leader. Leslie Utton, Monsey, N.Y., junior, teaches the Hashingter Hall class for residents of Hashinger Hall that has grown to include about 25 people. Some music originates in the brain and other music starts in the heart. Still other music comes from places more southern, and that is the kind the heart is most at night on "The Wall Hall" "There's no demand that I've heard of." he said. Mike Finnigan was in town and there was nary a tacit toe in the hall. Maria Muldaur. Now it's a stab at a solo career. "This sort of thing has just started to be noticed in this His band now consists of Bill Smith, Bob Glob, Rick Jaeger and Amos Garrett on keyboards, bass, drums and guitar. Individually, the list of luminaries these gents have Spontaneous combustion is the only way to describe what happened when Finnigan and his crew of crazies took the stage. "Willie and the Handi-Jew" whisked the wall-to-wall crowd of whooops and screams in a special body music that comes from an incendiary mixture of blues, rock and a little gospel. the beer and the crowd encouraged the group to stretch out, so some of the numbers were a little long. In places, the band weren't sure whose turn it was to solo or sing. MIKE FINNIGAN has a voice that could make a crow cry and is without dispute the world's best honkyuki singer. In 1964, he came to KU on a basketball scholarship but gave up the ball to catch the Serfs was his first real exposure in the area, followed by a stint with the Jerry Hahn Brotherhood. Next, he worked with Jimi Hendrix, Jerry Wood, Dave Mason and fingers in the stead of a pick, he's able to coax a feathery, almost whimsical tone from his guitar. His soles comment on or embellish it, without hustle or hype, muscle or tripe. Hsg said, "But I think it might end up to be more of a passing fad. You don't find near you. Distance contrasts as you used to." worked with extends from Dave Mason, Mark Almond, Rod Stewart and Bonnie Raitt to John Lennon and Ringo Starr. Bassist Bob Glob provided the best bottom since Thumper the Rabbit and the whole band just cooked and cooked and cooked. The tunes ranged from rhythm and blues to soulful ballads to rock 'n' roll, where what you get is what you sweat. BUT THIS band showed more spirit than any of the gruntmongers who call themselves bands could ever muster. The everything-gives atmosphere set feet and souls on fire, and the show was a definite five-pointer. IVE SAID it before, but I would drag myself naked through broken glass and kill the foot of Amos Garrett This particular band was put together with the idea of touring for just one month, and last summer they toured the city. The flow of the music and mayonnaise jar, so the sound is somewhat muddied. And you have to make sure you get it into your bathroom at the beginning of the night, because once the place fills up and the crowd starts buzzing, you risk grave injury trying to get through. MOST OF the tunes were blues-based, but ever so danceable, and the audience was impressed. Now, with the band, proving as one entity. At a time when many a rock at guitar doesn't know his axe from a hole in the ground, Amos is a beacon in the fog. Using his Just the blues, you say? It may seem that anyone can play the blues by just following the two-bar formula. But the result, then, is the feathers without the flight. MOST AGREED, though that whether or not the formalized steps come or go, the discus will always remain while longer. Newsweek magazine said there are about 10,000 nationwide, and the discus will remain longer. The Finnigan Band demonstrated that special kinesiesthesis that comes from oneness with the audience. The tunes ranged from rhythm and blues to soulful ballads to rock 'n' roll, where what you get is what you hope they could play those blues. OKAY, OKAY, before I drown in hyperhele, here there were some problems. Off The Wall Hall has the acoustics of a Perhaps more telling than statistics is how Hesler summarized the attraction of disco dancine: "I think people are addicted to it." The members of the quartet—Arnold Steinhardt, John Dalley, Michael Schoenberg, Tree and David Wilson will all play in G Major," by Mozart, The Guarneri String Quartet, an ensemble of relatively young musicians of worldwide acclaim, will perform in the University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Sunday. Guarneri quartet in concert Sundav "Quartet No. 1 in A minor," by Barkot, and "Quartet in F Major," Op. 59, No. 1, by Beethoven. Steinhardt, a violinist, received the Leventrit Award and won the Queen Elizabeth Competition in Brussels. He has appeared as a solist in many major orchestras, including those in Philadelphia, New York and Cleveland. Zaniness fills Monty Python book The members of Monty Python's Flying Circus have compiled a zany collection of hilarious short articles in a style that makes National Lampoon a book of a grade school child. By PAUL ADDISON for something completely different, read The Brand New Monty Python Papperbok and that lunacy isn't quite dead. The Brand New Monty Python Papperbok, Warner Books. $6.95. The Papperbok, a sequel to Monty Python's Big Red Book, comes complete with grubby cheese and mock reviews by famous Staff Writer ONE FEATURE, the Python Book of Etiquette, shows how to recognize the Queen of England and how not to talk to her. Another page is a game sponsored by "Democrats for Fascism," that asks the reader to place six photos of Richard Tucker and complete the following: "Take a Tricky Duckie because tennis players on the back. Inside, no famous person or institution is spared as the butt of humor. The humor served up by these masters of dry British wit is often ambiguous, often ridiculous, but always illuminated. The wisdom obscure thoughts, such as taking your appendix on the EACH PAGE, however, is delicate concoction of crazy ideas. There's a page that enunciates how to rub your stomach with sonality and a partly on club, clubs, which asks: "Did you know Chuck Berry wrote man of Shakespeare's plays? This is just one of the totally inaccurate Hackenborn the Hackenborn Holo of Lies." Piccadilly Line. Many of the jokes concern peculiarly British institutions and personalities. For gourmet chefs, the Monty Python team explains the rudiments of preparing rat pie and rat souffle. The directions are simple. "Raise the chopper high above the head and then THROUGHOUT the book, allusions are made to many of the ongoing Python characters, including the reader to identify with the TV format in a literary concept. Unlike the Big Red Book, which includes the movies and authors most of the hours it is in release, not rehoused from TV sketches. bring it down—wham—with a vivid crunch–straight across the taut neck of the terrified and make it into a souffle. " Tree, who plays the viola, made his debut in Carnegie Hall in 1953. He noted as both a violinist and violist, he has given solo performances with orchestra in Baltimore and Los Angeles. DALLEY, ALSO a violinist, appeared in his first concert when he was 14. Before joining the quartet, he was a faculty member at the Oberlin Conservatory, a member of the Quartet and an artist-in-residence at the University of Illinois. This is '70s humor at its best and provides hours of hilarious reading and can be picked up time and time again without losing its initial effect of sheer delight. Highlights SOYER, A cellist, debuted with the Philadelphia Orchestra when he was 17, and has been a member of the Bach Aria Group, the Gullet Quartet and the New Music String Quartet. This Week's Exhibits Tickets for the concert are $5 and can be bought in the box office in Murphy Hall until the time of the performance. AMISTAD II; AFOR-AMER-ICAN ART, is exhibited at the Watkins Museum, 11th and Massachusetts streets. "TODAY'S WORKING work by Lawrence artists, is displayed at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vernant PHOTOGRAPHS by Steve Szabo are on display at the Spooner Museum of Art. Concerts FREE FOLK JAM SESSION, from 7 to 12. ROY RACOY AND THE ALL STARS play dance music tonight and tomorrow night to 12 at the Nest, Kansas Union. Nightclubs SHARI WEELBORG, vocalist and guitar player, plays tomorrow night and Thursday night from time to time in a m at orlando, Panama. THE CHAMBER CHOIR AND CONCERT CHORALE perform tonight at 8 in Swar- tion Rectal Hall in Murbah THE TWANG BROTHERS, a country rock band, play tonight and tomorrow night from 9 to 12 At Off the Wall Hall CARGO plays at the hall Monday night from 9 to 12 Family BLUEGRASS BAND plays Tuesday night from 9 to 12 Wednesday night is the hall's THE KANSAS WOODWIND QUINTET, composed of KU night numbers, performs Monday night at 8 in Swarthwout Recital Hall. MARATHON MAN- A- n- a - Dustin Hoffman and Laur- en Olivier. Written by Willi- m Goldman from his novel, and throughout the year. * RICHARD CRYDER performs a faculty recital on the trombone Tuesday night at 8 in Swarthown. Films THE CRIME OF M classic satires, revolving around a small publishing firm taken over by the workers after CAR WASH—A variation of the "Grand Hotel" format in which all the events take place by a person who is the script is very thin and the name actors (Richard Pryor, George Crompton, Sisters) are wasted in scaries. FAREWELL,MY LOVELY- Raymond Chandler's novel gets a respectful treatment that makes him feel like the substance of the original. Jack O'Halloran as the aplistin, with its mischievous Mitchum as the tired Philip Karmen lead the cast, which also includes Rampage and Sylvia Miles. SOUNDER, PART II - A belated, badly conceived sequel to the tale about a poor family of orphans in the Middle East, adapted from an award-winning children's story. Only screenwriter Lonne Elene III and Tai Mahal return from the past, which was truly sounder. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Check ads for showtimes. Published at the University of Kassel daily August 13, 2016. Students attend June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Halloween. Subscriptions by mail are $8 or $18. Subscriptions by phone are $9. Subscription by outside the county. Student subscriptions are $7. The university is a year outside the county. Students subscriptions are $5. Business Manager Terry Hanson G Er mer rese impr comp puter servi The he sa Libra Friday, November 5, 1976 l pants an op+ concert will be the Wall Hall raise funds for "Even Grass," will perform. Enloe and the has played at area., and at institutions like players in mission price many people the music be a special arathon for NU, from 7 to 18 o, ow s and then night. real regular City has市 in that it in that we every time Grimm, said, watches and them. They together and eines, because suff I've never are more here than feelings tensions. Utan blend of contact contact local disca local disca from free and at crown Kansas City, save the best encers, but we give other they've been working hard," but I think it be more of a don't find near interns as you b, though, that the discus formalized, the discus around for a Newsweek tree are about jee, and the x. telling than Hesler sum- tion of disco are addicted MAN-A starring and Laurence by William novel, and Schlesinger. OF M. OE Renoir's revolving polishing firm workers after inrupt. variation of "format in s take place r wash. The and the name yor, George Sister Sisters) oes. AID II—A squared kept or family of which, was only Only to Eiden III um from the it was truly owtimes. Moonies leave Lawrence behind Staff Writer By RICK PADDEN The Unification Church, a worldwide religious organization that once was active in Lawrence, has packed up and moved to Wichita. The church is a Christian fundamentalist organization, founded in 1854 in Korea, which offers a new interpretation of the Bible. The church's members professe a vowure past before he could believe that Christ died before he could believe that God, and that the Rev. Sun Myung Oh complete that work by eliminating the world and creating a "heaven on earth" for the workings of the church's members. of Kansas through an organization called the Collegiate Association for the Research of Principles (CARP), and its Lawrence of Principles were in a rented house at 700 Ohio Street. The church was active at the University A UNIFICATION church official said recently that, at one time, nearly 500 people at KU participated in CARP, which spanned from the late 1970s and discussions about psychic phenomena. The church also had active chapters located in Manhattan and Emoria, but in November 1975 it shifted its centers to Wichita and Kansas City, Mo. The Moon follower, often referred to as Moonesi, no longer have a central communication role. Tim Miller, assistant professor of religion at KU who has studied the activities of the Rose said yesterday that injuries in the labs were seldom serious enough to require hospitalization. He said the only serious accidents he could remember in his 14 years with the department had occurred recently. Protective eyewear, shields and rubber gloves have helped to prevent fatal accidents in the chemistry laboratories of Malott Hall, according to Jack Rose, director of laboratories in the chemistry department. Burman was injured last spring in a lab explosion and was blinded for several days. Burman said that he had fully recovered, but there is still no worth of work as a result of the accident. Few serious injuries in Malott laboratories By BOB MACKEY Staff Writer STITT SUFFERED burns on his hands for five weeks ago in a fire flash. He, to- mos and his family were moved. Two graduate students, Anand Burman, Madison, India, and Richard Stitt, Lawrence, were injured in unrelated incidents. Laboratory safety standards vary, Rose said, depending upon whether the student is an undergraduate or graduate student. State law requires that all students wear protective eyewear, but the degree of protection required varies. Undergraduates wear full goggles, and graduate students may wear special protective glasses. WHEN A PROPOSED addition to Malott is built, Rose said, the heating and cooling system will be more efficient; the system will be able to move more air, eliminating the chemical smell that sometimes permeates the hallways. The oven is only in the planning stages. Rose said. In addition to eye gear, ventilation hoods and Plexiglass shields are provided in the labs to protect students from potentially dangerous chemical fumes or explosions. Showers also are provided in case a dangerous chemical is spilled. Rose said it was difficult to set up rules for the labs because few guidelines apply to KU. He said he tried to have the labs meet standards set by the Occupational Safety Council, which required observed safety techniques in other labs and had implemented some of them. Rose said that in cases of flash fires, the type of clothing worn could determine the severity of any burns received. Instructors determine what dress standards they will enforce. "BUT IT'S TOUGH in these libertarian times to tell someone he can't come into the house." When a student is injured, he is taken to Watkins Hospital for treatment. "No matter how minor the injury, we check the student health services people check them out." Rose said, adding that some students don't think their injuries weren't very serious. Miller and Donaldson said they hadn't board of any CARP activity at the University. JOIN DONALDSON, a graduate student in the School of Religion, has written a research paper about the organization. He said that the movement hadn't been getting much response in the area and that unintended results may have made the church less effective. Engineering students and faculty members will be able to do faster and easier research because of a grant to develop and improve information retrieval from computers. Grant to speed engineers' work with computers Dale Rummer, associate professor of electrical engineering and principal investigator for the program, said yesterday that the new system saved time and made the retrieval of engineering information easier. The National Science Foundation awarded the University of Kansas Center for Research, Inc., a grant to carry out a research program in the areas of Technical Information Services (STIS). One of the problems with using the STIS is that the computer is in California, Humbermer. University Daily Kansan The minimum cost for renting the computer and using long-distance telephone lines is $150. church in recent years, said that he had no knowledge of any active members left in the church. RK. "As more and more people use the system, the system should go down." Rummer "The traditional approach to obtaining literature has been used a printed index" "The computer makes it possible to do the job economically, with less time and effort." but the cost of STIS is less than implementing a new computer program at Although organized Unification Church activity has ceased in Lawrence, Herb Williams, president of the Malls Merchants Association, said that solicitors working for the company were still confronting shopper in the area, selling candy and seeking donations. san. The system is limited to selected classes, he said, but anyone can go to the Science Library in Malott to use it. Capt. Walter Parmer of the Lawrence Fire Department said he couldn't remember the last time a fire call had been turned in from Malott. He said that in his 19 years in the department, Malott had accounted for only on or two calls a year, and half of those calls were false alarms. The rest of them were minor incidents, such as small fires from faulty light fixtures. THE CHURCH SENDS many of its members on fund-raising projects to earn money to maintain its more than 200 "unification centers" throughout the states. ROSE SAID the 22-year-old building wasn't a fire hazard. "Our safety requirements are geared almost 100 per cent toward the protection of life," he said. The solicitors working in the Lawrence area are working on national mobile fundraising teams and have no connection with any Lawrence Unification center. The church has been accused of not letting its fund-raisers, many of whom work 12 to 14 hours a day selling candy, flowers or candles, keep any of the money they bring in. A SIX-YEAR church member from Germany, Werner Seubert, who is the assistant director at the Wichita center, said that the church had undergone some changes on the local level and that it had consolidated its operations in Wichita. god made me god doesn't make junk Seubert said that the organization didn't moved from Lawrence because of adverse publicity, but that local changes were the only reasons for the relocation. Millions of children in the rural South and Appalachia are as positive as possible. Oversee a pastor or priest, you can help them believe-in themselves. And you'll grow in the process. Write for free information—without obligation. Glennary Missioners, Room J-12 Box 46404. Cincinnati, OH 45246 Name ___ Age ___ Address ___ City ___ State ___ Zip ___ ROBERT MITCHUM · CHARLOTTE RAMPLING JOHN IRELAND · SYLVIA MILES IN "FAREWELL, MY LOVELY" AVCO EMBASSY RELEASE TECHNICOLOR R Sabert said that many members of the Lawrence and Manhattan chapters had gone to Barrytown, N.Y., site of the church's seminary, to go through an in-depth training designed to heighten the member's understanding of their spiritual commitments. He said that CARP was inactive now in Kansas, but that it was till operating in Missouri. Friday, Nov. 5 and Saturday, Nov. 6 7:00 and 9:30 p.m.-3:30 Matinee Fri. and Sat. Woodruff Auditorium-Kansas Union $1.00 - Tickets Available at SUA office Fansher's parents had contended that affiliation with the church's Lawrence chapter had made their daughter mentally incompetent and court-ordered restraints were imposed on Fansher that had limited her travel and activities. THE UNIFICATION Church has made national headlines for several years and is an important source of many American youths in Moon's teachings and because of the reactions of members' parents, who in some cases have accused the organization of brainwashing their The church made headlines in Kansas in the summer of 1975 when the parents of two former KU seniors, Pan Fansher and Jan Osborne, attempted to break their daughters from the church's ranks through a process known as demograming. A COURT BATTLE ensued when Fannsie and the Unification Church protested against a court ruling. Fansher was granted her freedom by a Great Bend district judge, who said the restraints weren't justified. Fansher has shifted to mediationization despite the efforts of her parents. Observe was successfully deprogrammed and is now living in Independence, Kan. We Write All Risks The Gentlemen of the Topeka Rugby Football Club as a Gesture of Fair Play caution the Lawrence Rugby Football Club to be at their very Best this Sunday. Automobile Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. 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 Advertise in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. 90 JAYHAWKS KANSAS UNIVERSITY KANSAS UNIVERSITY KANSAS RELAYS NU 1976 KANSAS JAYHAWKS SUPPORT THE 'HAWKS WEAR BLUE TO THE GAME with New! Big Blue Jackets $6.95 and up T-SHIRTS Children's sizes $2.95 and up FLEECE-LINED JACKETS—$19.95 Adult sizes $3.35 and up STUFFED JAYHAWKS-$4.95 RED and BLUE UMBRELLAS—$8.35 STOCKING CAPS-¥3.25 and up 6-FOOTER SCARF—$3.75 For all your Jayhawk Souvenirs Come to the kansas union BOOKSTORE --- 1. Friday, November 5.1976 University Daily Kansan YORK KU's cross country team prepares for tomorrow's Big Eight meet KC picks Tenace in draft NEW YORK (AP)—Five of Oakland's former top players made the shopping lists of the maximum 12 teams in yesterday's free agent re-entry draft. But the important thing is which of the interested clubs will buy. The first re-entry draft went off smoothly and will undoubtedly be extremely profitable for more than a dozen players and one lucky agent, Jerry Kapstein. Kapstein represents 10 of the best free agents. All of his stained draw a lot of support on them. The Oakland players—catcher Gene Tenace, donkey donder Baylon, outfielder Joe Rudi, relief pitcher Rolle Fingers and shortstop Billy Campanari—decided to be unable to get a suitable contract offer from A's owner Charlie Finley. The Kansas City Royals, as expected, chose Tenace in the first round of the draft, then raised some eyebrows by selecting such diverse performers as pitcher Bill Campbell, Fingers, Bando, second baseman Dave Cash and bassist Bobby Gobb. Meet tomorrow The KU women's swim team will play host to a meet with the University of Arkansas this weekend. The meet will be at Nathaniel tomorrow in Robinson Natatorium. This will be KU's only formal competition before meets begin with other Big Eight Oakland's Finley said he would try to sign his unsatisfied players. "It's like having someone come into your house and snatching up your children," he said. In the new free agent draft, each team can sign only two players, and no one player can be drafted by more than 12 major league teams. Those 12 teams can then bid on the players they have drafted. Each player or his agent can then take the best contract offer. General manager Joe Burke and manager Jeff Rosso log sales loads for a company. Royals would take in the draft. But it was thought that the Royals, the American League West champions, were interested in acquiring a player with righthanded hitting power. Tenace, an eight-year veteran with the Oakland A's, would fill both needs, but the Royals also must contend with 11 other teams seeking his services. Tenace, the free agent catcher available, was gone from the 12 team eligibility list in the third round. Kansas City selected the right-handed Campbell of the Minnesota Twins, the best reliever in the American League in 1975, he second round. Swimmers in intrasquad meet The KU men's swim team will have an intrasquat meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Natatorium. The meet is open to the public and there will be no charge. we're a young team and an intrasquad meet could be very helpful." "We need this intrasquad meet to find out where we are before our first meet," head coach Dick Reamon said yesterday. The Jayhawks open their season next Friday against the University of Colorado in Boulder. "We've been working out since school started," Reasonan said, "but we need a competition opportunity to find out our skills and how they work, and good about how practices have gone, but KU's 1976-77 roster has 26 members, including 20 freshmen and sophomores. Field hockey team to meet St. Louis KU's field hockey team will battle the university of St. Louis in a game tomorrow in Busch Stadium at St. Louis. The game will start at 8 p.m. and will precede a soccer game between the University of St. Louis and Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, Ill. --cordially invites you, the general public, to attend a reception honoring the HOPE Award recipient and finalists and Higher Education Service award recipients The Higher Education Week Steering Committee of the Student Senate Higher Education Week Saturday, November 6.1976 in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union immediately following the game "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 Recently part of my daily Bible reading was in the Book of Ecclesiastes. Am quoting verse 11 of chapter 8. almost involuntarily this comment was made vocabulary *God* Truth in that verse if believed and acted upon would doubtless clean up any sort of evil and bad conditions anywhere, and any time it is the Word of God is QUICK AND POWERFUL, and FOR THE DWORD OF GOD is SWORD, PIERCING EVEN TO THE DIVIDING ASUNDER OF SOUL AND SPIRIT, AND OF THE JOINS AND MARROW, AND IS A DISCOVERER OF THOUGHT AND INTENTS OF THE HEART. NEITHER IS THERE ANY CREATURE THAT IS NOT MANIFEST IN SWORD, OR IT IS OPENED UNTIL THE EYES OF HIM WITH WHOM WE HAVE BEEN COLumn will be able to keep from you formulation "This Word of God." *"BECAUSE SENTENCE AGAINST AN EVIL WORK IS NOT EBUCTURED SPEEDLY, THEREFORE THE HEART OF THE SONS OF MEN"* The first sentence in this paragraph was written about 8:30 P.M. Oct. 1st, 1954, four hundred and fifty-fifix (456) years after Martin Luther King Jr. founded the Church Door declaring war and began fighting the greatest power in history for God the fight he made and the victory. Liberty, is one of the wonderful fruits won in his fight. We are losing some of the fruit that today, and I will not keep up the fight, with the same weapons, we will fight in the future. And the more we believe, Michaelus, a Catholic in his 'Lie of Luther' acknowledges his indebtedness to Luther for the liberty he had to write what he wanted to. Another great Historian tells us what we are a different people from Luther and how he knew what he would want in him had not God used Luther to do his great work. Kansas goes after its first conference cross country title since 1969 tomorrow as it hosts the Big Eight meet. The five-mile race will start at 10:30 a.m. at the Lawrence Country Club. There is no admission charge. Listen Luther speaks of himself: 'in my conversations I have had mnemonics I have taken him my whole life from the beginning to end. I am very much a part of that process.' were all common peasant. My father went to Manilaw, got employment in the mines there; and there I was born. That I should ever take my bachelor of arts degree and doctor's degree, etc. seemed not to be good for me. I spent the next two years, then again, by changing the brown cap for another. By so doing I caused real grief and trouble to my father. Afterwards I went to loggers and worked as a sawyer and a maid, and had a family. Whofore she in this star? Who could have done that? Note three significant things about Luther who may explain, humanly speaking, his marvelous life, ministry and accomplishment. His "Pear of the Lord is the Beginning of Wisdom" — John Bunyan (1575-1638), the author of *The Pleas for the Lord*; nor the end!" While a young man, Luther and a friend were struck down by lightning in a storm. His friend was killed. Being spared, in the presence and reality of death," The fear of the Lord caused him to make mistakes, he said, and his plow, and he refused to turn back—regardless of circumstance. He took those over him even in the menial task required by the monks. In due time he found God's Word, The Bible. He devoured it, reading it over and again. His fellow monks told him would be of more value to the king than the servants. He settled in the city and beg supplies." *in that Book*, The Earth's Monarchs and Rulers, secular and spiritual, man or devils. He obeyed That Authority, marvelously served his generation, as well as many to come, and fell in love with God. His Gentile Breast," He too, like the Apostle Paul "fought a good fight." Following KU's win in 1969, the Jayhaws have finished fifth, second, fourth, fourth. This season KU has run well at times, but has yet to put it all together. Assuming that the team will be saving their best for tomorrow, they will have some people and finish as high as third. CU favored in Big 8 meet "AN ALMIGHTY JUSTICE DOES VERLY RULE THIS WORLD, IT IS GOOD TO FIGHT ON GOD'S SIDE, AND BAD TO FIGHT ON THE GODSIDE." "FOR NOTHING SHOULD THE PEOPLE OF GOD MORE PRAY THAN TRIES THEIR GREAT MEN MIGHT BE GOD AND LOVE." Colorado, the odds-on favorite, and Iowa State appear to have a lock on the top two spots. Oklahoma, Missouri and KU look to Senior George Mason has been the top KU runner this fall, placing at or near the top in every race. Mason goes into the meet with inside shot of winning individual honors. If Mason, Roscoe and Coldsmith all manage to finish near the front, KU could surprise some teams. However, the outcome of the meet for KU depends on the performance of Ted Krank, Brent Swanson-Bill Rutherford and Joel Cambon. Should Mason place first and defeat Colorado's Kirk Fieffer, the favorite, he would be the first Jayhawk to accomplish that feat since John Lawson in 1965. P. O. BOX 405 SCOTTDALE, GA. 30079 year ago and ran well early this fall. He experienced some tendonitis trouble in his ankle during the past few weeks, but should be ready for the meet. Colmitham has been either the second or third runner all fall and has an excellent chance of winning. Two other consistent runners for KU have been John Roscoe and Bruce Coldsall. OU says it isn't target of NCAA investigation NORMAN, Okla. (AP) - The National College Athletic Association (NCAA) has confirmed that it wasn't conducting a formal investigation of the University of Oklahoma football program, according to a news release yesterday by the university. If they put together a good race, KU and its fans can forget about the Jayhawks seventh place showings in 1974 and 1975. The key word is if. OU President Paul F. Sharp, in a telegram Wednesday to Walter Byers, executive director of the NCAA, asked that the NCAA state "in plain language whether or not the University of Oklahoma is under control" by NCAA as required by Section 3 of the official procedure governing the NCAA enforcement program." Morris said, "the reason so much confusion has existed now until about the role of the NCAA is that a newspaper's headlines mention when in fact that was not the case. Byers's statement prompted Sharp's request for an answer "in plain language" as to whether the university was under official NCAA investigation. A statement released by the university's media information office said that Byers sent a letter telegram saying, "As to your question pertaining to Section 3, the answer is no." The university's statement said that Sharp and J. R. Morris, vice president for the university community, "have said from the outset, and we say again today, the Oklahoma is not under any official investigation or official inquiry by the NCAA." "To be specific, some sort of complaint had been filed, but that complaint had not yet been evaluated by NCAA in order to have an official investigation was warranted. Byers had issued a statement earlier Wednesday saying he told Sharp Oct. 25 the NCAA had received complaints against QU that were not addressed by the sources of the allegations and supporting details for the charges. The results of those initial interviews would determine whether there was cause for the formal action because the NCAA enforcement program. "We have no knowledge of the precise nature of the complaint, but we do know that most complaints never reach the point of becoming official allegations." William Ingo Memorial Theatre presents "EVERYONE IS SOMEBODY'S MOTHER." (SOMETIME) Oct. 28—Nov. 6, 1976 8:00 p.m. Tickets 864-3982 THE BETTER BARGAIN TOYOTA AT LOW '76 PRICES A BLAKE II Lawrence Toyota has all the Better Bargain Toyotas So Come & See The Better Bargain Toyota At; Now is the time to buy a small car at those low '76 prices. This is the last year the Toyota will burn regular gas. Plus! Right now, Lawrence Toyota is offering a free car stereo or '200 off any '76 Corolla in stock! And '300 Off any '76 Corona in stock! AWRENCE Lawrence Auto Plaza Phone 842-2191 TOYOTA We Apologize!! But we've decided to make it up to you. Sunday Nov. 7, 4-9 P.M. our buffet-reg. $2.20 will be: $1.89 Pizza inn Hillcrest Shopping Center-next to the theaters N G Nebras Jay in ] Coach B gymnastics year than that KU w Eight Invit Neb. "We're pulsories b on them," have to su The meet in the optic Olympic were chanc, Games, w morning a routines of Olympics, better pre- prior than for la The final bringing to each of the performers average of score. THE SI: exercise, p horse vault bar. Lockwood probably at full st Nebraska strongest c their top competing Iowa State and the Cyp point. Lock won't be at take four Missouri, O don't comp Although placing well several indi chance at HE SAID Sean Williar had good o Summers a gymnasts tums" stron and parale bars, accor Williams vaulting ar events, Loci are special horse, resp KU gymnasts championsh Rug for7 Some of Jayhawk Ri Topeka Ru friendships several rec club will vis of making it A ivadah yesterday, Wichita, clubs in the Two-Jaidah Yathaiah wrapped and sprained with a splint But the Services of Regan, reggan, say's he is good to them when they The game tramural fie University Daily Kansan Friday, November 5. 1976 et He. an his. he should. or. willant. all could. he all the the lesson. and. wake. The. Staff photo by DAVE REGIER 6 Nebraska's Clete Pillen wraps up halfback Max Ediger Jayhawks seek experience in Big 8 gymnastics meet Sports Writer Bv DAN BOWERMAN Coach Bob Lockwood said the men's gymnastics team was better prepared this year than it was last year, but predicted that KU would still finish last at the Big Eight Invitational this weekend in Lincoln, Neb. The meet begins tonight with competition in the onelonal routines. "We're a lot further ahead on compulsions because we've been concentrating on them," he said. "But our options will have to suffer this meet." Olympic compulsory routines, which were changed following the 1976 Olympic Games, were adapted for morning and afternoon. The compulsory routines are changed following each Olympics, but Lockwood said the team was better prepared for the new compulsories. The finals will be tomorrow night, bringing together the top 10 performers in each of the six Olympic events. The top 10 performers will be determined by the average of the compulsory and optional score. THE SIX Olympic events are floor exercise, pommel horse, still rings, long horse vaulting, parallel bars and horizontal bar. Lockwood said that Iowa State would probably win the meet. Iowa State should be at full strength, Lockwood said, and Nebraska and Oklahoma—iowa State's teammates—shouldn't have to compete with their top performers because they are competing in an international meet. Iowa State met Nebraska this year, and the Cyclones won that meet by half a point. Lockwood said Colorado, who also won't be at full strength, would probably fourth and the dayhawks fifth. Missouri won Kansas State don't compete in gymnastics. Although he discounted KU's chances of placing well as a team, Lockwood said that several individual competitors at KU had a chance at making the finals. HE SAID Jody Summers, Mike Hynes, Sean Williams, John Nunley and Bill Harmons. Summers and Harmons all three finals. Summers and Harmons are all-around men's gymnasts that work all six events. Summer$^4$ strongest events are horizontal bar events; Harmons is parallel bars, according to Lockwood. Williams works floor exercise and vaulting and can make finals on both events, Lockwood said. Nunley and Harness are specialists on the rings and pommel horse. He said that the KU gymnast to make finals at the Big Eight championship meet last season. Ruggers ready for Topeka club Some of the members of the Kansas Jayhawk Rugby Club have friends on the Topeka Rugby Club, but Sunday the friendships end, at least temporarily. After graduation from high school, the club will visit Lawrence with the intention of making the Jayhawks its next victim. "A rivals has grown up in the last few weeks," player-coach Allan Chapman said yesterday, "especially after they beat one of the one of the strongest clubs in the area." Two Jayhawk starters are injured. Paul Diedrich won't be able to play because of a sprained ankle, and Rich Coulson is still out. The Lakers won the game against Sunday against the Kansas City Blues. The Jayhawks should benefit from the services of Emporia's top player, Kevin Regan, who will play wing forward in Sunday's game. Regan hopes to prove that he is good enough to start for the Jayhawks when they tour England in January. The game will start at 1 p.m. on the intramural fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. BESIDES SUMMERS and Hynes, Lockwood said he would take Scott Holman and Foul Culbertson to the meet all as-airound performers. Chad Kelley will round out the eight-man KU squad. He will work pimpel horse, although he has a bad helm. Kelley's is the only injury the Jayhawks have suffered so far this season. Although it will be the Jahayhaws' first competition of the season, Lockwood doesn't seem to be worrying about the invitational. "This isn't supposed to be a pressure meet," he said. "We just get together to throw so that we can be better gymnasts." Two years ago they were sophomores. They were young and some were green. They sat and watched the big boys play. They remember the time well. KU hopes to save football season By STEVE SCHOENFELD Sports Editor They can recall seeing the seniors let KU's season wilt away. There's nothing new to learn from it. It's not that easy to forget. It could always happen again. And several Jayhawks will have that in the back of their minds when they meet Iowa State at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Memorial Stadium. A crowd of 40,000 is expected to see KU's final home game this season. "SURE IT'S in the back of my mind that it can happen again," senior guard Roger Hammond said yesterday. "A lot of guys are going to try their hardest not to let it happen again because they know what we went through." "This is one time history can help you. The seniors that year gave up. After the first quarter of their final game at Missouri, they said, "Heil it, with it. It's our last game." " Tomorrow won't be the Jayhawks last game. They travel to Colorado next week and are expected to face the players admit that of the three teams remaining, the Jayhawks have the best record. linebacker Terry Beeson said, "I've played at Colorado and at Missouri, and I know how it's almost impossible to win at Colorado and tough to win at Missouri. "We're in a must-win situation," "THIS is our last home game. We have something to prove to people. We owe them all." The Jayhawks, 5-3 and 1-3 in the Big Eight, will try to bounce back from a crushing 31-3 defeat by Nebraska last Saturday. KU is seeking to regain some momentum after losing three of its last four games. KU WILL BE trying to get its once explosive offense back together again. The offense gained only 184 yards against the Huskers. The Jayhawks could be starting a new quarterback tomorrow as sophomore running back, but the Jays McMichael for the job. KU head coach Bud Moore said he wouldn't make a decision on a starter until game time. "This game is the turning point," Hammond said, "whether we are going to have a good, average or poor season. But these guys (the KU players) can win at least two more games counting this one. If we win, then it's going to be tough from here on out." Sophomore Mac Vincent, who was being red-shifted this year, could also see his opportunity. "He's not going to start," Moore said. "I know that. But there's a possibility we will." this point, I can't assume we are going to red-shirt any of our quarterbacks." "You have to run their passing game," Moore said. "But they, run very well when their quartbacks are forced out of the pocket. Stanley and their other quarterback, Buddy Hardeman, do an outstanding job when they run. is one of the big reasons for the turnaround of the Cyclones, 6-2 and 2-1 in league play. Kansan Predictions Whoever starts at quarterback will lead the Jayhawks against a not fancy, but solid, Cyclone defense. Iowa State's defense is led by the Ravens, who hold a pound tackle, and his older brother Maynard, a 64, 237-pound nose guard. Tom Randall, a 64, 245-pound, ISU's other tackle, and be, too, is a good one. So its is to push the defense leads the Big Eight in interceptions with 19. Making the Kansas football predictions this fall are Steve Schonefeld, sport editor; Brent Anderson, editor; Gary Vee, assistant sport editor; Ale Alouhaina, managing editor and Fall 1973 movie editor. | GAME | SCHÖNFEELD | ANDERSON | VICE | ABOURALKAH | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Iowa State at Kansas | Kansas 20.17 | Kansas 10.14 | Kansas 27.9 | Iowa State 31.14 | | Oklahoma State at Nebraska | Nebraska 20.10 | Nebraska 21.14 | Nebraska 28.7 | Nebraska 17.14 | | Colorado at Missouri | Missouri 30.21 | Colorado 17.10 | Missouri 24.21 | Colorado 28.10 | | Kansas State at Oklahoma | Oklahoma 42.2 | Oklahoma 47.0 | Oklahoma 35.1 | Oklahoma 35.10 | | Florida vs. Georgia at Jacksonville | Florida 24.28 | Georgia 10.7 | Georgia 14.13 | Georgia 17.10 | | Cincinnati at Kentucky | Maryland 28.16 | Maryland 17.14 | Maryland 21.10 | Maryland 28.3 | | Louisiana State at Alabama | Alabama 20.10 | Louisiana 21.20 | Alabama 17.54 | Alabama 24.44 | | Houston at Texas | Texas 20.14 | Texas 24.17 | Texas 31.17 | Texas 21.13 | | Prediction Records | 44.18 .701 | 42.20 .677 | 47.13 .709 | 45.17 .706 | So does Dexter Green, the Big Eight's third leading rusher with 723 yards. Iowa State's receivers lathen the field, split end, and snap second and fourth, respectively, in the league. JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ Paul Gray's Jazz Place TONITE the Joe Utterback Trio, exciting Modern Jazz (Sorry, we're already sold out for Saturday concert with Claude Williams) Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. POPCORN More think he knows why Earl Bruce the team has done so much better this year BEER PEANUTS FOOD KU also will try to get back on track defensively where it slipped to fifth in the conference against the run, seven against eight and giving up an average of 328 yards a game. 11 JOHN HADDOCK FORD LAWRENCE, KANSAS JOE B. MALONE FORD LAWRENCE, KANSAS Our regular prices are as low or lower than most service departments' special sale prices. "A lack of injuries." Moore said. "They haven't had any to speak of since some of their early ballgames. Plus, they've gained momentum. They've kept on winning." Compare Prices on our Tune-Ups Compare Prices 6 cylinder tune-up *$31^{00}$ 4 cylinder tune-up $28^{00}$ 8 cylinder tune-up *34⁰⁰ THE JAYHAWKS will be severely tested by the Cyclones' powerful offense, which ranks third in the nation in total offense, and fourth in ranching. The Cyclones are led by rifle-armed quarterback Wayne Stanley, who is second in the nation in ranching. Red-shirted last yr. e., Stanley touchdowns. Red-shirted last yr. e., Stanley FORD Parts & Labor Included 23rd & Alabama 843-3500 John Haddock Compare Services - Service for all domestic makes Moore's Jayhawks have had their share of injuries. Starters Jim Michaela, tight end John Williams, corner back, end reserves Sam Smith, free reserves Wayne Ricks, corner back, won't play. - Fast courteous service -All work guaranteed Finest equipment Genuine Motorcraft parts Guaranteed price Guaranteed price Factory trained technicians Jimmy Spheeris Is returning to Lawrence after a sellout performance in Kansas City for a concert in Hoch Auditorium. Friday, 8:30 p.m., Nov. 12 Tickets are: $5.00 in advance General Admission $6.00 day of Show Presented by SUA 2014 MAYA CALENDAR CALENDRIER MAYA REVENUE ENTRANTÉ RÉVENUE ENTRANTÉ REVENUE ENTRANTÉ Aztec Inn Home of the Aztec Calendar The Aztec calendar reminds you that memorable dining in centuries-old tradition awaits you at the Aztec Inn. We invite you to share our proud heritage. STOP BY STOP BY AFTER THE GAME All Meals Served on Piping Hot Dishes Dine in the true Mexican Village "Huts" Mexican and American Food Immediate Carryout Service on Roheatable Trays [Image of two people seated at a table, engaged in an activity that involves writing or drawing on paper. One person is sitting with a pen and a notebook, while the other is standing and appears to be discussing or observing something. The background consists of wooden poles arranged vertically.] 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-- 10 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-- 11 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday Closed Monday 807 Vermont 842-9455 Edward and Naomi Rosto invite you to stop in soon. 8 Friday, November 5, 1976 University Daily Kansan Mail-in classes popular QUESTION: What kind of course taught at the University of Kansas has over 2,500 students, is taught by over 200 teachers, and is almost impossible to cheat in because you never see your classmates or, for that matter, the teacher? ANSWER: A correspondence course There are more than 200 correspondence courses taught by the University of Kansas that are available to both traditional and nontraditional students, Sally Bruce, editor-in-chief of independent study programs in continuing education, said recently. The majority of these are concentrated in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, but more courses in journalism, business and engineering have been added recently. No specific grade point average is required to enroll in a correspondence course, but students are restricted to taking a maximum of 30 correspondence credit hours, which must be completed before their senior year. Most correspondence courses average 24 lessons for a regular three-hour course, Bruce said, and most teachers require at least one completed lesson each week. Kansas House could undergo leader changes TOPEKA (A÷) Rep. John Hayes, Hutchinson, may announce today whether he will challenge Rep. Wendell Lady, Rivers Park, to become House minority leader. Hayes said yesterday that he wanted to check with Reno County election officials to confirm his narrow 23-vote victory in Tuesday's election, and confer with some Republican House colleagues before Wednesday. "We are leaning toward running for the post." Lady told a statehouse news conference yesterday that he would seek the top Republican position, now that the GOP has won the governor's race to the Democrats on an 65-40 margin. House and Senate members of both political parties convene here Dec. 6 for organizational meetings, and that's when the will be taken on the leadership positions. Lady and Hayes had been declared house speaker candidates until the Democrats shocked everyone by winning House control for the first time in 64 years. On the Democrats' side, rep. James Holderman, D-Wichita, said he would decide by next week whether to challenge Senator Carlin, D-Smokel, for house speaker. Both had said at the end of last session wanted the job in the event the Department did not. Carlin, now House minority leader, reiterated at a news conference his in- spirations. Holderman said he still was weighing his options between a leadership post and a managerial role. He also could bid for House majority leader, the post now held by Hayes. Rep. Patrick Hurley D-Leaventworth, declared his candidate for majority position. Many on-campus classes in which the student receives an incomplete grade are made up by taking correspondence courses between semesters. Bruce said. Other courses in regular correspondence course may take as much as a year to complete the course. "Correspondence courses give a student more time to study by getting him out of the one-semester routine of coursework," Bruce said. Ken Suter. Hutchinson senior, said that he is working at his own pace in correspondence. "I think that I had about a year to insist this history course I took when I was a junior. It wasn't too hard, and there wasn't a lot of it," he said. "It was easy to day to pick up some hours," he said. Bruce said that correspondence courses were probably a little harder than their on-campus counterparts because the student had to use the online examination or immediate answers to his questions. "Correspondence courses aren't inferior to or easier than any regular course," she said. "The student must take a more active role in it because he has no external motivation like friends or teachers present." Most of the materials and books used in a correspondence course now can be purchased at the Kansas Union Bookstore, and the books can be resold at the end of the course. In the past, the materials were sold only at the Continuing Education building. "The teacher has control over the objectives and content of the course, but the design and techniques are developed by us." Bruce said. She said that Continuing Education was reimbursed by the Bookstore for the materials that it sold. When the teacher develops and uses his own course materials, he must report to the account of investment only, and usually is pivoted during a period of years, she said. "The teacher never makes any money off it, and the money we make is plowed right back into developing or improving other programs," she said. Aside from textbooks and materials for correspondence courses, additional costs may be required. incidental fee for postage, processing and special assignment paper for each lesson Students who have finished college, and those who are just starting, have taken advantage of KU's correspondence program. "Some come back for refresher courses to reacquaint themselves in a specific field," Bruce said. "Last summer we started a program for recently graduated high school students who got a head start by taking three years of college English by correspondence." "It's still cheaper than enrolling in six hours of on-campus courses." Bruce said. The correspondence program is part of the University's Outreach program, designed to spread University services throughout a wider area. Changes seen for third parties Election results have signaled the end of independent support for Eugene McCarthy and the beginning of support for the Democratic women for both movements said yesterday. Hal Wert, state coordinator for the McCarthy campaign, said the state and national vote for McCarthy, about one per cent, was disappointing. Without the five per cent of the vote required to get federal funds for the 1980 presidential race, Wert said, neither McCain nor Clinton would be the candidate would have a chance of winning. 1" would predict that the liberal third-party movement has been nipped in the肚脐. But Wert said he was pleased with voting results from Douglas County, because more voters have come to vote in the district. If every place would have done as well as SUA BILLIARDS TOURNAMENT Sun., Nov. 14 1:30 KU Jay Bowl- Kansas Union Trophies for 1st and 2nd place. Entry Fee $2.00 Sign up in the Jay Bowl by 4:00 p.m.Friday, May.12 Nov. 12. First place winner qualifies for the Region XI Tournament in Cape Girardeau, Mo., Feb. 10-12 For more information call the SUA office or Jay Bowl. Sandy's Enjoy a great tasting DELUXE SANDEE 1/4 pound chopped beefsteak Before or after the game, game, STOP in at Sandy's 2120 West 9th Sandwich lovers start here Sesame bun Melked cheese Shredded Tomato Secret/Not just... Tomato Secret Not just meat, but juice sauce beetroot 1029 Mass. Haas Imports Everything you need for eggs Douglas County, we'd be alive and well today." he said. Tom Hart, American Party candidate for state representative from the 44th district, said he wasn't disappointed with election results. He won three per cent of the vote in losing to Democratic candidate Michael Glover. He said the newly formed American Party, which stresses a reduction in government involvement, hadn't expected to win any races. American Party candidates in Douglas County ran for sheriff and two county commission seats as well as for state representative. --- 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. fixings you can eat, also 1/3 lb. seven grain bread CREPES: chicken, turkey, Canadian bacon, crab, cocktail HOME BAKED SEVEN GRAIN BREADS, BAGELS, SALAD BAR: all the cheese, soup and salad fixings you can eat, also 1/3 lb. seven grain bread broccoli, asparagus, mixed veget POT PIES; chicken, beef, turkey ...L. SANDWICHES: ham, roast, beef, Canadian turkey, corn beef, pastram, avocado, BLT, cheese OMELETS: 4,194,304 possible combinations. Make up your own configuration list of 20. FINEST NATURAL FRUIT JUICES WELSE T: 4,194,304 possible combinations. Make up 22 different items in our kitchen sundries list of 62 items. Table service with seating for IO4. Taped music, beer, and average meal price, including drink, only $2 to $4. Good Food Naturally! Cornucopia 1801 Mass. 842-9637 LATE SHOW FRI. & SAT. An outrageous assemblage of Sci-Fi, Marvel Comics and Rock & Roll THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW FRI. & SAT. NIGHT 12:15 Hillcrest R NOW SHOWING "Splendiferously Funny." "Antic, frantic Funny." and amusing " and amusing. "Rowdv. nuttv William Wolf. Cue Magazine entertainment." William Wall. Car Magazine NOW SHOWING THE RITZ ...your key to history "It's a ball of a brawl!" -Justin Gray R Eat 7:45, 9:30 Sat 3:00, 1:35 MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN Athriller Hillcrest E present > ROBERT EVANS - SINTE BECKERMAN production > JOHN SCHLESINGER.com DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLLIVER ROY SCHEIDER WILLIAM DEVANE MARTHE KELLER "MARATHON MAN" Evening 7:30; 9:45 Saturday, S- Varsity August ... September 12 - 16 NOW THERE IS... PART 2 SOUNDER A KENNETH JONES FESTIVAL ENDS FRIDAY Eve 7:30 A.M. 9:30, Sat.Sun. 3:00 Up the ancient stairs, behind the locked door, something lives, something evil. "NASHVILLE" —V. Canby, NY Times CAB WASH Tweet Shares Franklin Ajage - George Carlin Very funny... a joke box of a movie. A comic book variation on WICKED V - Cabbage NY Times CAR WASH Lorraine Gary · Jack Kaele · Clarence Muse The Pointer Sisters · Richard Proper from which no one has ever returned PG HELD OVER—ONE MORE WEEK Eve.at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat.at 5:30 & 12:30 Jerrodia "BURNTOFFERINGS" Eve. 7:20, 9:40 Hillcrest Sat..Sun. 1:45 7:30 BRUCE LEE in KAREN_BLACK OLIVER REED and BETTE DAVIS PG 9:30 FRI. SAT. & SUN "FISTS OF FURY" and "THE CHINESE CONNECTION" Sarles 042-755-3160 www.sarlesbooks.com american nation inpected you can-usher iff well as ED P.G. IN. Friday, November 5, 1976 University Daily Kansan Directories will arrive Tuesday By JANET FERREE staff Writer The twice delayed University of Kassan student directories are expected to arrive "I have the president of the publishing company's word that they will be here Tuesday," John Everside, developer of the institution, said. "He's very drivingly driven here from Dallas." EVERSOLE SAID that a directory was distributed to each of the 14,000 campus telephones (any 864 number), and that telephone cases were sold in the Union bookstores. The directories, originally expected Oct. 15, were delayed until Nov. 1 because the wrong computer tape was sent to Napo, a publishing company in Dallas. Difficulties in programming the information for the directories caused the second delay. Emma Dean Barland, chief operator for the University telephone services, said that she didn't think the directories would number of calls made to campus operators. "There is too much wrong information in the directory," she said. "Either too many files are missing or too many are not." It's not easy to throw away broken equipment in the University of Kansas, at a cost of $400 million. State heads the disposal of old gear To prevent it from throwing away desks, file cabinets, chairs and other office equipment that could be used by others, the purchasing department can't dispose of equipment found in furniture without permission from Kikuyu state director of purchasing in Topeka. PUCKETT SAID if a department had a broken piece of equipment or unwanted furniture, it had to fill out a form describing what the equipment or furniture was, how old it was, what repairs were needed and when the equipment or furniture was still usable. Gene Puckett, director of purchasing at KU, said recently that he offered suggestions to the state purchasing department about whether an item could be used again, but the final decision was up to the state. The KU department of purchasing tries to make known across campus what surplus equipment is available and what is needed. Puckett said his department also published a list of available equipment several times a year. If the equipment can be used again, the purchasing department tries to transfer the equipment to another location where it is needed. Puckett said. IF THE EQUIPMENT is beyond repair, the KU department of purchasing has to clear it with the state purchasing office in order to ensure the equipment can be disposed of. If a department can't find someone who wants its supply equipment, then it is up to that department to find a place for the equipment. Puckett said. KU used to auction off the surplus equipment about 15 years ago, Puckett said, but there haven't been any auctions of this sort in the 11 years he's been at KU. Rodger Oroke, director of facilities and storage auditions had al- ways been successful. "Once you start handling used equipment, you start sinking money into it," he said. "If then you have a sale, you have to load it, haul it, unload it and set it in place. A chair will bring you maybe 50 cents. There's another chair a chair that much and make money." "YOU LOAD IT on a truck, haul it somewhere, unload it, carry it into a warehouse and shift items in the warehouse around to make room for it. "A great number of individual departments have service contracts for repairs, like Buildings and Grounds" Xerox which is on state contract as far as service." Barlard said that the campus operators had 10 to 12 corrections for each page of faffing. or too much information was incorrect in the first place." THERE IS a checking process to correct information that goes into the directories before printing. Eversole said, but the students' phone numbers aren't confirmed "The information for the directory is pulled out of the computer right after enrollment so that we can try to get the stories out early in the semester," she said. Ewensole said that the campus operators saw the material for the directories before it was sent to the publisher so that they could find them. He also changed that had been phoned in to them. IF A STUDENT's phone number or address is printed incorrectly in the directory, Eversale said, the student should contact the Office of Admissions and Records to see if she has the information recorded correctly, and then contact the campus operators. "Our office has talked about putting out a supplement to correct mistakes in the data." Bill Collinson, manager for Southwestern Bell, said that he thought the campus directories would help reduce the number of calls made to directory assistance because students made the largest number of information calls. Collinson said that the Lawrence phone book would arrive Nov. 18 and would be distributed on Wednesday. OnCampus THE RYAN STATE HOTEL Events TODAY: THE KANSAS BAR ASSOCIATION meets at 9 a.m. in the Kansas Union's Forum Room. AN OPEN FORUM between students and Chancellor Archie Dykes and several university vice chancellors will be from noon to 1 p.m. in the Union's Cottonwood and Meadowlark rooms. A FRESHMAN CLASS TGIF begins at 2:30 p.m. in the Union's Hawk's Nest. The PEARSON TRUST COMMITTEE meets at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Governors Room. TONIGHT: The STUDENT SENATE MINORITY AFFAIRS subcommittee meets at 5 in the Union's International Room. AEROSPACE ENGINEERS meet at 5:30 in the Union's Curry Room. HOST FAMILIES of KU foreign students meet at 7 in the Union's Big Eight Room. JAYHAWK COLLEGE COLSEZ QUIT BOWL elimination matches against KU foreign students at 7:30 in the Finals begin at 8 in the Union's Forum Room, SIGMA DELTA CHI meets at 7:30 in the Walnut Room. CAMPUS CRUSSADE meets at 7:30 in the Union's Jayhawk Room. THE SUA CANG CLUB meets at 7:30 in the Union's Oread Club. The KUL DANCE CLUB meets at 7:30 in 1730 Robinson Gymnasium. The KU CONCERT CHORALE and CHAMBER CHORI dance a concert at 8 in Swarthwell Hall. A SIGMA GAMMA RHI dance begins at 10 in the Union's Kansas Room. SATURDAY: THE KU ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION meets at noun in the Union's Winkin Room. An SUA POST GAME RECEPTION begins at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Main Lobby. A reception for the 1978 HOPE AWARD winner begins at 4:30 in the Union's Kansas Room. SUNDAY: The KANASAS INVITATIONAL FENCING TOURNAMENT begins at 1 p.m. in North Robinson Gymnastium. SUA CHESS CLUB meets at 2 p.m. in the Union. The KU RUGBY team teams Topela at 2 p.m. in Shenk Recreational Club, 2x2d and Iowa streets. SAU BRIEKA club meets at 4 p.m. in the Union. Union. Announcements PUBLIC SWINE FLU immunization clinics for individuals 18 through 44 years of age will be given at the following times and locations: Watkins Hospital Nov, 18, 19 and 22, 2-7:30 p.m. and Community Buding, 701 New Hampshire St., Nov. 7 and 21, noon-5 p.m., and Nov. 15, 4-8 p.m. People allergic to eggs should not receive the vaccine. Clinics for individuals 45 years of age and older and younger individuals who are in the high risk group will allow them to participate. Watkins Hospital Nov, 18, 19 and 22, 2-7:30 p.m., and Nov, 20, 1-5 p.m. --- From Kalamazoo, Michigan the TWANG BROTHERS. Friday and Saturday night, $1 cover. mondaynitelast chanceweakend romancedance: CARGO returns to the Hall. Only a $1 cover charge. Off the Wall Hall HEAVY EDDYS PIZZA 841-0817 737 New Hampshire --reg. $6.80 SPECIAL: For every large Pizza purchased with 2 toppings get 2 toppings free Only $5.60 507 W. 14th At "The Wheel" 841-3100 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 PIZZA LOVERS UNITE You have nothing to save but your dough. FAST FREE DELIVERY U THE KANSAS UNION ... catering to your needs before and after the game. PRE-Game 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 OR LIGHT LUNCH RIVER CITY SALAD BAR 10:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. BUILD YOUR SALAD AS YOU LIKE IT POST-GAME Immediately Following The Game SUA RECEPTION—LEVEL 4 ENJOY A TOUR OF THE NEW LUNGE AREAS, THEN STOP FOR REFRESHMENTS. HAWKS NEST-LEVEL 2 UNWIND WITH YOUR FRIENDS POPCORN, HOT PRETZELS, PITCHER OF BEER AND GOOD MUSIC PERFORMED BY THE TOM MONTGOMERY TRIO The Football Season has been Great . . . Thanks from All of Us at the Kansas Union kansas union BOOKSTORE Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION union BOOKSTORE Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION OREAD BOOK SHOP SUS THE KANSAS UNION the nest Concessions SUVA THE KANSAS UNION the next Go Jayhawks! 10 Friday, November 5, 1976 University Daily Kansan Chicken breasts are better buy ITEMS Pillowcase (W. S.) 78 79 78 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 8A 8B Milk - 2 per cent, 1 gal, S.B. 90 90 83 81 81 83 83 83 83 77 77 81 81 Eat - Grade A medium 93 93 83 83 83 83 83 83 83 85 85 85 85 Cottage cheese - 24 oz 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 1.09 Marigarnet - 1, tbl. 55 55 55 X 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 Ground beef - regular, 1 lb. 69 69 X 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 69 Turkeys - self-basting, 1 lb. 69 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 12 Porklets - self-basting, 1 lb. 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.57 1.57 Fresh fillet - 1 lb. 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.59 1.57 1.57 Peas - frozen, 10 oz. 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 *20 *20 *20 *20 *20 *20 Ice cream - gall, S.B. 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 Coffee - Frother, 1 lb. S.B. 4.99 4.99 4.99 4.99 4.99 4.99 4.99 *1.15 *1.25 *1.25 Coffee - Frother, 1 gal. S.B. 89 89 89 1.19 1.19 1.19 1.19 1.19 1.29 1.29 Flour - whole wheat, 1 lb. S.B. X 4.49 4.49 4.19 4.19 4.19 4.19 4.19 4.25 4.25 Ratelnut - Sum Malt, dark, 15 oz. 27 27 27 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 20 Plato beans, 1 lb. 27 27 27 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 20 Pepsi - 16 oz. 2.46 2.46 2.51 2.52 2.46 2.46 2.46 2.52 2.45 2.50 Tissue tablet - Northberg's 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 85 Tomatoes - 1 lb. 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 69 61 62 60 Potatoes - red, 5 lb. 79 79 89 89 89 89 89 64 11 11 11 Onion - yellow, 1 lb. 17 17 27 27 17 17 17 17 17 17 15 Apples - Red Delicious 49 lb. 37 lb. 10 lb. 49 lb. 14 lb. 17 lb. 17 lb. 20 lb. - indicates sale price X indicates item not available S.B. indicates store brand IN DEPTH SURVEY: POULTRY Chicken fryer - whole, 1 lb. 43 43 49 49 49 43 47 49 56 32 Chicken fryer - cut-up, 1 lb. 52 53 55 49 49 49 52 48 54 34 Double-breasted fryer - 1 lb. 79 X X X X X X X G4 67 26 Fryer bread-1, 1 lb. 90 99 99 49 X X X 69 28 Fryer bread-1, 2 lb. 90 1.09 99 89 X X 99 99 87 22 Fryer bread-1, 3 lb. X X X 1.49 X X 99 79 87 20 Round bread-1, 1 lb. X X X 1.49 X X 99 79 87 14 Chicken fryers - 1 lb. 1.19 1.19 99 1.29 1.29 1.29 1.18 22 Jacket 1, 1 lb. X X X X X X X 1.04 1.04 The last column reflects the average cost a serving, based on information provided by the Cooperative Extension Service at K-State. Even though chicken legs, breasts, thighs and livers are considerably more a pound than whole chickens, the cost a serving is about five times that of cents a pound more than whole chicken. Gewgaws . . . From page one prude or anything, we just have a lot of younger customers." He lowered his voice because of a nearby woman and whispered that stripper playing cards and a product called a "pecker monster" which was a nose warmer! were as far as he would go. He said the magic tricks were hard to sell because, "To make the tricks work right, you have to take the time to know them, and my fingers are all thumbs." ALTHOUGH HE DOES not approve of them, he said, Polish-joke novelts sell well. For that reason, he said, he carries products such as the Polish electric calculator, which is nothing more than a pencil with an electric plug on the end. "They've kind of put the Polish people on the map," he said. "I know a lot of them that laugh right along with the gags." Not everyone laughs, however. "I play a prank on my wife now and then, but she doesn't always appreciate it," he said. "I have to be a little cautious. A snake in the bed and 'I probably lose her.'" But, he said, he still enjoys seeing the new novelties and gags come into the store. "ITAKE SOME of them home and tinker with them," he said, adding that his daughter and grandchildren enjoy them, too. Emick, who twice was mayor of Lawrence, in 68 and 72, said his most memorable novelties were those related to his experiences in Lawrence. He walked to the storage room in back of the counter, climbed a ladder, brushed some cobwebs from an old box, pulled out utensils and brought them back to the counter. One was a picture of an old friend, "Wilt the Stilt" Chamberlain, in action for the KU basketball team. The other was a 45 p.m. flier of his last year as a high school short-hired career, while at KU. "YOU AND I are probably the only ones in town with a copy," he said with a smile, "and we know who's coming." Consumers might save money by buying more expensive cuts of poultry, this week's consumer Affairs Association (CAA) food survey indicates. Judy Kroeger, CAA director, said yesterday that differences in the amount of meat and, consequently, in the number of calories that breasts burn a better buy than whole fryers. Whole fryers have an average price of 46 cents a pound compared with an average price of 99 cents a pound for fryer breasts, according to the survey. Kroger said that whole fryers contained more bone than chicken breasts, cost an average 35 cents, for each serving, and included one or one-third servings a pound. This compares with an average cost of 25 cents a serving for brunches, and an average cost of $1.03 per serving. The survey indicates that other prices in the city are holding constant, with the exce- Sugar prices are up seven cents after falling steadily since the first week of September. The seminar, at 1:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union, was organized by the Senate subcommittee on student representation. "STUDENTS ON THESE committees simply do not know what's going on," Nettles said. "Students have a vote, yet many times that vote gets wasted. Perhaps the committee is illuminated by committee proceedings. The purpose of the seminar is to alleviate this." John Nettles, chairman of the sub- committee, said yesterday that student representatives at KU didn't take an active part in policy-making at the departmental level. Nettles estimated that there were 150 to 200 policy-making committees at KU. Student Senate will sponsor a seminar Nov. 9 in an effort to make student representatives on departmental communication problems and responsibilities they face. Activities at the banquet, besides Wescow's speech, will include presentations of the Rusty Lefell Outstanding Leadership Award for a KU student and the Higher Education Leadership Award for a Kansas citizen. According to the University Senate Rules and Regulations, all policy-making committees at the University of Kansas are allowed at least 20 per cent student representation. Italled that there were 100 to 200 policy-making committees at KU. Nettles said that part of the problem rested with the procedures used by The banquet will be the final event of a week of activities at KU in observance of Earth Day. Seminar for reps scheduled which makes it difficult for students in that department to contact them. The banquet is open to the public, and tickets can be purchased at the Student Senate office at 16B in the Union. Student tickets are $2.75, and tickets for others are $4.75. NETTLES SAID that improving student representation on departmental policymaking committees is the first step toward better selection and publicity procedures within a department. departmental committees to select student representatives. He said that every department determined its own method of selection, making it difficult for students to choose the best representative. He said that departments rarely publicized the names of their student representatives, SC If you haven't been to Britches Corner within the last few days you're missing a lot! Jones of New York and Gant have arrived for women and men, Pierre Cardin—Yves St. Laurent suits and 100% wool wrap coats by Betaller! So stop in and browse through Britches Corner. Open Daily at 10 a.m. 843 Mass. "Contemporary Clothes for Men & Women" 843-0454 Sheriff Rex D. Johnson In April 1974, Wesco returned to KU to attend dedication ceremonies for Wesco Hall, named in his honor. In 1975, Wesco was honored as International Businessman of the Year by Brigham Young University College of Business. Sunday marks return for KU's Clark Wescoe W. Clark Wescoe, former university of Kansas chancellor, will be the featured speaker at the Higher Education Week meeting p.m. sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. BETTERMAN Wescoe, chancellor from 1960 to 1969, is chairman of the board of Sterling Drug. Inc., a drug and consumer products manufacturer. He now lives in Allentown, Pa., and commutes to work in New York City. Again, Thank You Pd. by Citizens for Johnson, Frank Case and Joe Kelly, Co-Chairmen wishes to thank you for your votes and support in the recent election. Your continued support will be appreciated. 6th Anniversary SALE MISS STREET DELI CENTER FOR MASS AUTOMOBILES 50° OFF with this Coupon REUBEN SANDWICH Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye. The Bull & Boar 图 $175 11 W. 9th with this Coupon Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Reg. $2.00 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Reg. Price $2.10 Expires Nov. 30, 1970 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. with this $1.00 OFF—Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETT ST. Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 SANCHOS BUY TWO GET ONE FREE NO COUPON NO LIMIT TACO TICO Weekend Special HIGHLIGHTS OF TACO TICO'S BURRITO EATING CONTEST. 10 THE WINNERS! Men's Division — Boo Hodges — Delta Upsilon — 9½ Burritos Women's Division — Conni Taylor — Canterbury House — 6½ Burritos Special Thanks to Rose Keyboard for use of their excellent Public Address System. 2340 Iowa 841-4218 TACO TICO Holiday Inn IOWA 23rd St. 1980 TO 1985 PLEASE DO NOT USE THIS IMAGE ON ANY OF THE SECTIONS BELOW. TACO TICO Friday, November 5, 1976 University Daily Kansan 11 bring student policy- first step and publicity intent. dents in that you for support. support. and. Frank airmen E k You Horse show to begin saddle club activities ST. University of Kansas riders will display their skills Sunday at the "November Playday Horse Show" at North Shore Farms near Clinton Lake. The informal show, sponsored by the KU Saddle Club, will begin at 9 a.m. and is open to contestants of all ages and riding abilities. Events include English-style competitive jumping, a rescue race, a double-bareback race and a barrel race. Eggs and balloon nets are scheduled for young competitors. Admission to the show is free, but there is a $1 entry fee for contestants in each event. Horses also will be available for rent for $1 for each event. The November Playday is the first. major activity of the KU Saddle Club. The club was organized on paper last year, but it began in 2014, according to Valerie Walle, coordinator. The club sponsors riding classes for all degrees of experience, in both English and Western style. Polo groups for both experienced and novice riders will begin soon. Two trail rides are scheduled for Nov. 13 and Nov. 18. The club meets at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. This month programs will include a demonstration on horse shooting, a talk by a demonstrator on horse health, and a presentation on how to look for when buying a horse. Voight said yester day that the idea for the club occurred to her while she was taking the "Basic Skills in Horsemanship" class on the health and physical education department, a class was revived in the spring of 1752 after a 10-year absence from the curriculum. Classes in horsemanship were originated at KU in 1899 by F.C. "Pog" Allen, then head basketball coach, and Gayle Mott, the instructor. In 1950 a riding club was started, and it sponsored cross country rides, overnight trips and hunts on horseback. MEXICANO NATIONAL TAPENO QUANTITY VIEJO UNAREZ TEQUILA COFFEE PREMIUM BOTTLE 250 ML. QUALITY + PRICE = VALUE GOLD JUAREZ BO PROOF TEQUILA WATERCOLOR BY TABUJA JASSE SCA SANTA JOANE MISSOURI IMPORTED FROM MEXICO SILVER Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358 Larry's Auto Supply 1502 W. 23rd Full line of foreign and domestic parts Student discount 25%-45% KANSAN WANT ADS 842-4152 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to ability or background. BING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 11 FENN HALF CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $3.00 $3.00 Each additional $4.00 $4.25 $4.50 $4.75 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. The ad can be placed in person or by calling the UK business office at 864-4358. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Employment Opportunities ENTERTAINMENT FLYING MUSICIANS: Part-time jobs for band members MUSICIANS: 843-165-2000 jobs 11-12 843-165-2000 jobs 11-12 BOKONO Paraphernalia for the compassure of bones and pipes 12 pipe 13.18 841-360-9000 841-360-9000 BOKONO Paraphernialia for the commissio ad in wednesday's Kanam. 11-10 841-360-696 Coming. Nov 13 live performance of "Godfather" Ave. Come见到 us with us admission $1,000 $2,500 FOR RENT Join Opta-Cap Flying Club. Lawrence airport 841-4790 one, sale one, membership 11-18 841-4790 3-bedroom apt at Quailcreek for inmiled. 2-bedroom apt at Quailcreek for inmilled. 480-655-7188 at 9:30 & 5:41 and 848-572-755 at 9:30. 2 bedroom, modern form home on 40 acres. Blank lawrence, on agatha l r nineule Douglett County lawrence, on agatha l r nineule Douglett County 2 bedroom furnished apartment available January 7281, bus route 2, routes 8, 11-4 11-5 VISIONS has the eyeglasser you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 814-7421 HORIZONS HONDA SALUS, PARTY, SERVICE Female roommate, wanted immediately and for next semester share apartment with own 11-8 For rent: apartment close to Union Parking. November. One bdm. Call 851-8579. Availabl Nov. Snapcue 2 bedroom apt. available for sublease Snapcue 3 bedroom apt. available for sublease Fully equipped kitchen. Call 811-7687. **11-9** Fully equipped kitchen. Call 811-7687. **11-9** Need to subnet two-bedroom Jaywalker Towers 41-609.41-609.41 utilizes as of Dec 20, 19 647-609. Sublease- 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment, at Frontier Rollage $155/mi. MB4-7140. 11-9 Need to nibble Jaykower Towers atp $135. m w/utilities. Call 843-107 or (913) 828-3800. Sublease-2. bedroomURN jumped ampt. for 2nd seme- terna. Call 1867 after 11. 6 2 male or female rooms need to share a deck. large bedroom app 10; jam 1- 25 ft. beams must connect to another room. DW, pool, ete—bus route or walk to campus—843-390-2999 1/3 utility call—684-132-9900 11-11 FOR SALE Sublase furnished 1-badm utn. air, cond. electric kit, gas heat furnished, ceramic bath 48-5725-3600 1-badm utn. air, cond. electric kit, gas heat furnished, ceramic bath 48-5725-3600 STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dumps or cloak-out products, the STEREO COMPONENTS AT THE GRAMPHONE SOPA AT KIIPER- tt Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. BELLO AUTO ELECTRIC - 8403-900, 3600 W, 60 hp. FEDERAL ELECTRIC - 8403-900, 3600 W, 60 hp. CUSTOM JEWELERY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermaths. Unicorns. Jewelry. Stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3881. tf Excellent selection of new and used furniture trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 7011 North Avenue, New York, NY 10024. Western civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense of Western civilization! Make sense to be 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation 3) For exam preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. **tf** Excellent selection of used furniture, refi- gerator, dining table, upholstery, plywood, Pukka, from 8-6 a.m. - 5 p.m. For the lowest价 on top quality stereo equipment, for the lowest价 on phone call. Bauer at 914-8486 or Craig at 864-1347. Opal Kadette Sedan, 1968, low mileage, $450, 842- 11-8 10-9 1917 Tritum GT8, red; radials; Men's 3-piece biker Scott amplifier, 29 watts per channel 11.5 Our receive is does what Yamaha does—at almost the same time, prove it to you with the AUDIO, AUDIO 1, E. 8th St. 11-5 Beautiful well-dressed stereo system that in only a small sound will amuse you. RAY AACM 13. Eh 80h. DOS' DELUXE ROLL'S MASS LAWRENCE, KEN There are a lot of misleading concepts about the sound system. For example, it doesn't sound good to pick up the bass from a hard sound system for bass to take its place. The Lounge NAPA For the Do-It-Yourselfer we offer: Special Prises 4. Machine shop service 5. Two store N.A.P.A. Auto Parts 2. Open 7 days and nights 3. We have it or can get it "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." 5. Two stores 1. Special Prices 817 Vermont 2300 Haskell 843-9365 843-6960 - Foosball BOOKS-Thousands of used paperbacks and hardbacks at reasonable prices. Well-balanced selection including just about any category. New York, New York. Shire. Open Bath-Sun. 10:00-5:00. 11-15 VW 412 station-wiring. Clean and good condi- tion. air transmission, air condition- ing 1-98, 840-213-952 I love Allison; she turns me on. Her upper end is flat, but it feels like a bit of a thigh. For her $61 RAY AUDIO, E 8.5, E 10h = 90 - Pinball Complete family gymnastics Pinger M21-TI tumour remission 85 years old 40 years old 35 years old age up 51 years old 36 years old 34 years old age up 31 years old 32 years old 31 years old age up 27 years old 26 years old 25 years old age up 22 years old 21 years old 20 years old age up 17 years old 16 years old 15 years old age up 12 years old 11 years old 10 years old age up 9 years old 8 years old 7 years old age up 6 years old 5 years old 4 years old age up 3 years old 2 years old 1 year old Two*15" woes with m/ridden and highs, enclosed between the beating of Air suspension enclosure & belts. 844-818-895 MG 1100 4-door sedan, 1965, low mileage, $350, 843-0200. 11-8 Good used 10 speed and single speeds. Lawn-eater S 1-4/18, W 60, 912-842-6360 14-9/9 14-9/9 Guitar—Guild F-5, acoustic, in mint condition. 841-4422. 11-5 1971 Toyota Mark II 4-quad, AC, new tires, engine control, 30 mpg, call: 842-5811. 11-9 HELP WANTED Near-new mattress and box springs, double bed size, $30 for each. 842-4176 11-5 Complete Component Stereo. BSR turntable. With 4+16-channel, Panasonic Cassette deck, large volume, high-resolution display. Stereo>Okinyo TX 220 AFM-FM Receiver. Technikshouse 190 speakers. Latent听觉 814 Bmj 61-2022. Pair of Pioneer 60DX speakers. Retail $600 Will for $350. Mul1435W Will STEREO TPCX IBM TPCX Mikro recovert, glambam TPCX TPCX TPCX Nikon, Nintendo 14. Hear it. Best offer, $41-5465. Nikon Virtually indestructible Dog Houses, $25. Choice of colors. 843-1085. 13-11 Interested persons should also have a resume and a deposit for the Daily Journal World. Application deadline is Friday, October 10th. - 10 Student ID discount on all used car trucks, wagons, and vans. Open evenings. A3 Auto Center. 570-622-4960. Applicants will be evaluated on the basis of editorial experience, knowledge of computer appraisal, ability to perform level of education, relevance of previous work experience, two references, and willingness to commit. One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Reward Keyboard. Professional sound systems, guitar amps, drums, special equipment, keyboard and synthesizer. 12-8 barcode, 140 W, 23rd, 843-3007. 12-18 The Association of Systematist Collections—a national organization seeking a full-time Administrative Assistant. Dedicated to the success of her firm, management of a diverse publications portfolio. Supervision of resultant project. Salary range is $50,000-$75,000. Women's black leather coat, size 8, $100 or best offer. 841-5568. 11-11 Open Daily 10 a.m. - Midnight Except Sunday Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl Glebkocher Optical The Association of Systematics Collections is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Enthusiast. OVERSEAS JOBS=summer-year-round, Europe, S. America, Australia, Astia, etc. All fields $100-$200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free travel to most countries. Box A4, Box 409,箱康 CA 94704. 11-11 - Bud on Tap CAPITAL RIGHTS ROADWAY WEST OF 10TH STREET AND 4TH AVE. NW CAPITOL RIGHTS ROADWAY WEST OF 10TH STREET AND 4TH AVE. NW NAISMITH HALL DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE Now accepting Applications for Spring Semester Call 843-8559 or stop by our office. --all makes of cars --all makes of cars INTIVE EATIVITY AT CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE DRYMOUNTING - DRYMOUNTING •STITCHERY •METAL FRAMES •RESTORATION LOST AND FOUND BARN BOARD FRAMING HENRY's drive-in is in the process of remodeling and are taking应用ipads to enhance their work experience. Call 843-2120 for a tour. Must work at least 20 hours per week and two days, day or night per month. Starting pay is $25.00. Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time. Perform research, data analysis and assisting in research. Social science back-office at McKenzie DD of Human Development 111; Coordination between 3 to 9 mph. AnEqual Opportunity Employment. Qualification: BS or equiv in Computer Science or related. Weekend waitlist at the Sandwich Shops to be available. Mail application to: Marina G. Wittzeug, Master of Music, 340 W. 16th St., New York, NY 10026. mwittzug@marinagwittzeug.com BARN BOARD FRAMING BROADCAST ENGINEER KAUEN needs Broadcast Engineer immediately. Person must have previous experience in the field of broadcasting or a related field and must be able to contact Brad Dick at KAUEN. 864-133-919 TEACHERS at all levels Foreign and Domestic Teachers, Box 1063 Melbourne, ww.9860-11-10 KC STAR Route carrier 2 A.M. daily-7 days/ 4AM daily-economic economist For appl. for phone 842-230-6611 Call: gmail silver watch, turquioise inlay. Oct. Lost: call 842-5031 and Ernesto and Wescoe. Revwis Call: 842-5031 AVON—Earn extra money on your own time AVON—Full-time. Full-time. 11-30 Mrs. McIlleen 842-816-8957 LOST ONE "Oubliez" watch, shoulder, gold hand- band. See #1872. In the back, 26 Oct in or around Murphy, Summertown or mid-April in the southwest. For more information, see www.lostone.com. Part-time work: work Noones and Evanities apply in person at the Drive In Drive 12-11-11 Lost: Brown photo-grey glues in print case Please call. Are they Mall Pat 847-964-964 846-964-964 11-5 Pound: Gretchen Cox's bus pass. 842-2342 to claim-events. 11-5 Found: 2 men, black male knife (white spot on peck found 12th & Hall) Call 841-325-10-5 Found. Small black female kitten, found Oct. 31. 842-766-766 Cross Reference Bookstore 842 1551 Mailz Shopping Center MISCELLANEOUS Lott. At Hoc Aud. and after Louis Falco concert, 10-26. At Hoc Aud. and after Louis Falco concert, 11-10. ed. Eitward. 841-6858. * Found a load of clothes at Laundromat at 1901 & Louisiana. Call 841-2678. 11:18 October could be the first time 841-3242 to identify 841-3242 Found: Ring in Praser 11-1. Call 842-996-11-8 identify. Identity and claim. Found. Salvation Army plastic chain key chain with key bag, Key Tray, Key Case, Department Box, Bristory Bar Furniture. PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alicia at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Aliie is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday- tuesday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. Presently offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1977. 1 and 2 bedroom units, furnished and unfurnished. 2410 W. 25th Park 25 842-1455 Order Now For Christmas MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE Many at Special Discounts ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center Phone: 843-6424 We service PICKENS AUTO PARTS NOTICE & SUPPLIES Warm Shop, 420 Mass. Used furniture, dining shelves, lamp, clockes, televisions. Open daily 12. 55-7. Redemere Lutheran Church, 3001 and Haskell invites all students and faculty to our Sunday Study at 10:15 a.m. or the Study at 10:15 a.m. we have an active college agency. Transportation will be provided if needed. CASAM CAFE=Good food from scratch. Lunch 10:30-3:30 PM. Mass. Please be backpacked. 10:30-3:30 AM. Mass. Please be backpacked. DE SKILLET also were and the new LMGQOR DE SKILLET here, again. See **40**. Drop 18 to drop 26. Drop 34 to drop 52. Drop 64 to drop 92. He ahrt Christian musical—'The Apoorte'—8 p.m. Nov. 7 First Presbyterian Church 11-5 26th & Iowa 843-1353 The Viola Drive-In, 1237 W. 520,开业 daily until 1 A.M. Fri. + Sat. until 2 A.M. 11-11 FIND OUT WHY GAY DANCES ARE THE BEST HOSTING CHOICE for National Day in Kuwait United Airlines sponsored by Gray Services of Kuwait. This will allow you to see a gay couple socializing, calling 854-9235 or visiting socializing activities, call 854-9235 POTTERY WANTED for Anthology Include *Bradley W. Johnson* P.O. Box 26442 San Francisco, California PERSONAL Happy birthday to a wonderful man, who bred and loved Mike. I love him. Fred Mike loves you, Mike. 11-5 "Itwat the night of the King's catastrophe. If you please peel, call 841-2866. Keep trying." Need help, a referral, or just someone to talk to HEADQAUM1, 841-254. We never close. PLANNING A PARTY? For a good time call JOHN-842-7128. 11-5 Brig. Happy Birthday! Will miss you next year. The girl in No.12 11-5 Girls tried of the three R's (Reading, "Rilling and Rogers") For further information call 843-6520. Roger. For further information call 843-6520. 3 Pharmacy Students hope to meet compatible A 21 yr old 5th-Athletic, fun loving and studi- cent individual. A 20 yr old 6th-Athletic, harder-Prize Private Pilot... S 22 yr old 3rd-Fairly playing team player -Mcq 64-6620 and indicate your RIDES-------RIDERS Want ride to Boston around Christmas. Need to know this week please. Call after 5:41 - 841-5668. SERVICES OFFERED Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you turn to courses 001, 001, 012, 103, 105, 106, 110, 111, 115, 116, 117, 121, 123, 124, 145, 146, 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, 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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, 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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, 102 GRAN SPORT Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tent 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Imported car service problems? 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(20 points) The following statements are true. By CAROL LUMAN Self-service pumps lose out to auto owners' pride The one to two cent a gallon savings of fered at self-service gas stations isn't significant enough to draw many customers into the business, but to several station managers in Lawrence. "People who buy self-service gasoline are the people who go everywhere, the ones who buy gas anywhere they light," Tom Davis wrote in *The Times*, 1733. Massachusetts N.A., said tightening laws. "The people who buy full-service are the people who are with you all the time," he Several other service station managers agreed. Patton's station has both full-service and self-service nums. "WE HAVE PRETTY regular customers here," Don Phelps, manager of Jayhawk Oil Company, Inc., 106 W. Sixth St., said. "People are getting tired of going to self-service stations and waiting on themselves." Jayhawk Oil has only full-service pumps. "A lot of our customers trade here all the time," Dale Solwedt, manager of Dale's Standard Service, 1300 Massachusetts St., said. "The others just go back and forth between full and self-service." Demos'... From nage one However, federal revenue funds would be used to finance the operating budget before taxes are collected. KU NOW HAS two projects that could be affected by the use of federal revenue sharing funds. Plans have been drawn for an addition to Robinson Gynnasium and Malot Hall, but the legislature hasn't funded construction vet. "Before we would raise taxes before the 8 election, every other source of revenue was cut." Bennett has vowed not to approve a tax increase. Lady said that for political reasons the Democrats wouldn't propose a tax increase before the 1978 election. Buzii said he doubted that Democrats would want to risk going on a limb by attacking him. SOME PROGRAMS may be cut to stay within the budget, he said, but some would have been cut regardless of who was in power in the House. He said he didn't foresee any major cutbacks, especially in the areas of education. "How we handle federal revenue money will get a very thorough going over this bill more so than in the payoffs conceivable to the public, it will be proposed. I think we're going to have face the fact that any capital improvement is going to be made in KU giving our money because of the change." The funding will depend on each particular program and each capital improvement. James Holderman, D-Wichita and Means Committee member, said. There is no need to increase taxes, he said. Karsas is in very good fiscal shape through at least 1980 from the looks of budget projections, he said. Taxes won't need to be increased because of the amount of money in the reserve fund. "IF THE TIMES comes that the money in the reserve dwindles to a dangerous level, the legislature will have to evaluate every program and every agency and cut out some of them that might not have a high priority with the people." Glover said that economic growth in Kansas would generate state revenue, and consequently, taxes won't need to be increased. He also recommended using tax credits from the state to enable the passage of tax reforms without an economic shock to the state funds. Capital CASE0179 Capital CASE0179 Capaka CASE0179 Capitol Blank Cassettes We have these great cassettes . millions have been sold because they are great in quality, looks and value. C-60 min. - 3 pack special $2.30 C-30 min. - 75' C-60 min. - 80' C-90 min. - $1.40 kansas BOOKSTORE kansas sunton BOOKSTORE However, Naomi Mensch, manager of La-Ball, Inc., a self-service station at 602 W. Ninth St., said that self-service stations also have their regular customers. MANY OF THEM, she said, buy self-service gas because they take care of their cars and don't need the extra service given at a full-service station. "We sell a lot of filters and oil," she said, because a good lot of them change their properties. Lo-Ball also gets a lot of business when people come in because it is handy when you go to a restaurant. THE PEOPLE WHO regularly gas买 bus at full-service stations are the ones who want their cars taken care of. Bob McBride, a manager in San Diego distribution company at 640 Locust St. said, "There's always going to be a place for full-service because people want to take care of their automobiles and are willing to pay for it," he said. "There's a big difference in the profits between full and self-service," he said, "because no-service means you don't have near the overhead or the payroll. But despite the smaller profit margin, there's still a need for full-service." **PEOPLE WHO ARE tired of waiting on** **we are coming back to full-service** from self-support. "They're tired of washing their own windows and checking their own tires and all that." And, he said, the cold weather also will help bring people back to full-service. "Just in the last three weeks we've sold 300 to 400 gallons more," he said. "You're not saving but just a penny a dollar at self-service and at full-service you get." At Kieper Oil Company, 2447 W. Sixth St., customers use both the full-and self-service pumps, manager Jack Faulconer said. ALTHOUGH SOME PEOPLE SEEM to think the saving is worth the extra trouble, many are willing to pay for full-service, he said. People who buy self-service gas don't have much regard for their automobiles,邯郸人。 "From my viewpoint, they're just interested in wheels that turn," he said. Managers agreed that no one age or economic group frequented self-service pumps more than other groups. "It's very, very mixed here," Mensch said. "We get a lot of business from students and others. We have doctors, professors—the whole gamut." westside greenhouse & lawns unlimited 440 Florida 842-0039 --- HEAD FOR HENRY'S HENRY'S DRIVE INN HEAD FOR HENRY'S We are in the process of remodeling and are taking applications for part-time help. Must apply in person for an interview. Call 843-2139. Must be able to work at least 20 hrs. a week and at least two weekend days or nights. SPECIAL TODAY FISH CAKES SPINACH LIME JELLO Nowcomes Miller time. er time. Miller County Wine The Champagne of the West D1976 The Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. W Mensch studentsessors— 12 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol.87 No.55 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Monday, November 8, 1976 Library receives additional funds See story page eight Sororities have problems complying with fire code Staff Writer By MARTIN ZIMMERMAN Questions about fire safety recommendations made recently to University of Kansas sororities by the state fire marshal are addressed in this section of sororites to comply with the guidelines. Soriority officials said last week that they were working to meet the state's requirements, but that uncertainties about the type of equipment needed to meet state requirements led to a 08-day deadline set by the fire marshal for implementation of his proposals. THE FRATERNITIES, most of which were inspected after the sororites, are also beginning work on compliance with the fire marshal's guidelines, fraternity board presidents said last week. Most of the officials contacted, however, were not involved in the covered copies of the guidelines and that planning for corrections was still in the preliminary stages. The safety guidelines were issued to each of KU's 12 sororites and 24 fraternities after the houses were inspected by city and state fire officials in September and October for fire code violations. The inspections were prompted by an Aug. 29 fire at a Baker University fraternity house that killed five men. In a letter sent to each of the sororities after the inspections, Floyd Dibbern, state fire marshal, ordered that a plan of correction be submitted by each house to his superior. The Board approved and that the requested improvements be completed within 90 days of the inspection. HOWEVER, PAUL Markley, state fire protection technical adviser, said last week that "all sorts of problems" were slowing down efforts to comply with the proposals. He said the original timetable set forth for compliance was unrealistic. "We understand that these people are having problems," Markley said. "The compliance plan is flexible. People have us for extensions and have received them." Several safety improvements, such as the installation of self-closing smoke doors with easy-opening "panic" bars, the proper lighting of exits and the posting of evacuation plans, have already been complied with, according to sorority See FIRE INSPECTIONS page eight Citizens group votes on loop project today By JOHN MUELLER Staff Writer THE STATEMENT, written by Oblinger Saint Corp. of Wichita, says Lawrence The future of Lawrence's proposed Haskell Loop could be affected tonight when members of the East Lawrence Improvement District will support or oppose the $2.5 million roadway. ELIA's stand is expected to influence the change in money she must start construction of the loop. The group will meet at 7:30 in the East Lawrence Center, 10th and Delaware streets, to reconsider its previous support for the loop, which is designed to carry traffic from 10th Street and Haskell Avenue to Seventh and Connecticut streets. The Federal Highway Administration and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development will decide early next year whether Lawrence receives funds for the loop. The final decision will be based, in part, on public reaction to the city's recently released environmental impact statement on the loop. needs the Haskell Loop to move traffic efficiently through East Lawrence, prevent automobile-pedestrian conflicts, ease access to the Kaw River Industrial District Barbara Willits, ELIA president, said Saturday that she planned to speak for 10 minutes at the meeting in opposition to the proposed ordinance by a member of the East Lawrence Citizens for Housing Preservation, which two weeks ago called the environmental impact statement a "whitewash" that hadn't considered the effects on East Lawrence neighborhoods. WILLITS SAID that ELIA's vice president, Ed Down, 909 New York St., would speak for 10 minutes in support of the loop. Kyle Andregg, Lawrence community development director, and Carl Mibke, her son, will also be there to answer questions. Members of the audience may give speeches limited to five minutes each, Wescoe speech stresses role of higher education By BARRY MASSEY W. Clarke Wescoe, former University of Kansas cannasser, last night emphasized the importance of a continuing commitment to address the speech at the Higher Education banquet. Speaking to a crowd of about 500 people in the Kansas Union Ballroom, Wescoe said that higher education was America's most productive investment. "The genius of America is its commitment to higher education," he said. "Without educational opportunity" wescue said, "the democratic system might be better." He said that even though America had a history of ensuring and providing educational opportunities, an uneasy responsibility existed for the maintenance of this "glorious past." ELIA supported preliminary steps to build the loop and voted in May 1974 to support city expenditures of $16,100 in federal Neighborhood Development Funds to buy land for the loop. But ELIA may have changed its mind, according to Willis. "OUR COUNTRY is strong, viable and resilient because of higher education," he Wescoe, who was the 10th chancellor of the University, is now chairman of the board for Sterling Drug, Inc., a drug and consumer product manufacturer. He left the University in 1989, after serving as vice president to accept a position with the company. Before his term as University chancellor, Wescow was dean of the School of Medicine, Wescoe told students and faculty members in the audience that it had been over seven years since he last spoke in the ballroom. "We have a different membership now," "And I am very proud to see the loop variable drawn." HE SAID it was in June 1969 that he bade himself to him, that he considers his "intel- lectual burgee." oee said that higher education was WESCOE page eight Wescoe said that higher education was WILLIES SAID she couldn't predict how the vote would go, but said it would be close. "We've got a chance, and I'm feeling really hopeful." Down said the outcome of the meeting "depends on how successful the opponents have been in brainwashing people. They've spent considerable time bringing in members who are basically uninformed people from East Lawrence." Loop opponents, Down said, have "tried to rile up a bunch of people with scare tactics. They've caught people unaware, they're coming, the builders are committed." Down said he'd talked with persons whose houses would be destroyed to make way for the loop. Most of them, be said, want to move from East Lawrence. "People will get the costs of their property, the costs of moving and the city's obligated to find housing for them. How can that be a bad thine?" Down said. See GROUP VOTES page three FESTIVE YEAR AUTHORIZED BY MOVE BRAKE INSPIRATION THOMAS M. LENNARD Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER winner, as Chancellor Archie Dykes looks on. The announcement and presentation were made before Saturday's KU-Iowa State, Peter Turk, act assistant professor of journalism, displays the plaque he received after being named the 1976 HOPE award HOPE winner Turk credits 'Flint gang' Staff Writer BvSANDY DECHANT It hasn't taken long for Peter Turk's abilities to be recognized at the University. Turk, acting associate professor of journalism who has taught at KU only three years, won the 1976 HOPE Award Saturday. The HOPE (Honor to an Outstanding Progressive Educator) Award, given for excellence in education, nominated and voted for only by seniors. Turk received the award at pregame festivities at the KU-lowe State football game. finalists in the Kansas Union. "Pheraps Iam biased, but there's a little more 'spirit de corps' in journalism than anywhere else. College people tend to be apathetic. We're not." "I wanted to thank the gang at Flint Hall but I didn't have time," Trump said at a rally in Michigan. Calder Pickett, professor of journalism, won the 1975 HOPE Award. ELLY TURK, Turk's wife and assistant TUNK, the founder of the Liberal Arts of Science said he always been devoted to his teaching. He puts a great deal into it, and I think it Turk, who teaches advertising courses and a law of communications course, said his 10 years of actual work experience in advertising were invaluable to his teaching. "I talk about my experiences and I share my mistakes." Turk said. classes because students tended to take things so seriously. TURK RECEIVED a $100 check and a plaque, and his name will be engraved on the back. Trying to pinpoint my teaching person, I don't take myself too serious. I offer, if needed. But being a HOPE finalist has its other rewards. The HOPE finalists received special awards in the football game and sat with all the browns. "Governor Docking was sitting behind me and former Chancellor (W. Clark) Wescoe was there," he said, "Those seats were on the floor, actually sit in the end zone now looking." Other finalists for the 1976 HOPE Award were: Allan Gillan, associate professor of computer science; James Cummings, associate professor of curriculum and instruction and of English; J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business; and Jean Pyfer, associate professor of physical education. A young girl and her horse, intent on the jump and obliquous to a strong, chilling wind, soared gracefully over higher and higher fences in the KU Saddle Club November Playday at North Shore Farms yesterday. Girl captures 8 of 14 events at horse show Susie Santee, a West Junior High School ninth grade, won the high-point prize—a leather batter—for accumulating the most points in each game out of the four. She did so in the informal horse show. The walking race, in which riders must hold their horses to a walk, was won by Russell Mosser. He rode his nationally known horse, Royal Gentleman, a 9-year-old Arabian gelding that was in the top 10 National Reserve championship in 1974 and was an International Point Award overall accumulation of points in International Arabian shows. Chris Voorhees, operator of North Store Farms, and O'Neill won the rescue race, and Krissy Moffett, a broken Arrow sixth-grader, and Santee won the double bareback blindfold backwards obstacle race. Valerie Voigt, coordinator of the KU Saddle Club, won the barrel and lead-back races. Voigt and Alice Sams, another Saddle Club member, together won the Sophie O'Neill, a Central Junior High Sophie O'Neill, a Central Junior High Chase Charlie Chase Charlie English Junior High Royal Gentleman is the grandson of Witz in a horse that the Poles hid from the Renaissance. The horse is the foot of the booty General George Patton acquired. The horse has been shown from Calgary to Louisville, according to Mosser and his wife, Lorene, who operate Lawrence. He said he tried to add a little humor to his DOW Tight turn Staff photo by JAY KOELZER Taking a turn in the barrel race, Valerie Voigt, Birmingham, Ala., senior, competes in the KU Saddle Club November Playday. The event, which consisted of various events of horsemanship, was at the North Shore Farms west of Lawrence. Luck gives Battenfeld win in battle of brains By SANDY DECHANT A team from Battelfield college scholarship hall won the 1976 Jayhawk College Quiz Bowl. A team from St. John's College won the 1976 St. John's College Quiz Bowl. "Everything went our way," Peter Orazem, a member of the Battelfield team, said. "They asked what the initials in B.F. were." He added that Franklin, I was right. I couldn't believe it. Battenfield, who defeated a team from Joseph R. Pearson residence hall, 240-105, to claim the bowl title, received a trophy. More than 150 people listened to the final round in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. THE BOWL, was sponsored Nov. 1-5 by the SIL Society, a sophomore honorary, and the sophomore class officers in conjunction with Higher Education Week. Thirty-seven teams competed in the contest. Jack Weir, of Oklahoma, was the裁判员 for the semifinal and final rounds. BILL DOUGAN, a member of the JRP team, said. "Some of those questions were "I was amazed that they answered some of them. We wrote some of them at six in the morning." Ralph Munny, sophomore class vice president, estimated that 3,000 questions were generated. "He was six foot six," another member of the team added. The victory wasn't the first for Battenfield, which also holds the trophy for the 1969-70 content, the last time a college basketball team had been held annually, starting in 1899. Both Battfeld and JRP defeated four other teams before advancing to the final round. In semifinals, Battfeld defeated a team from Hashinger residence hall, 455-20; and JRP defeated a team from Delta Tau Delta. 440-110. Munyang the sponsors of the bowel were pleased with its success and hoped it would succeed. "WE WANTED it to be the lighter side of Higher Education Week," he said, "and it Muyan said the sponsors had only one major problem with the bowl. Because a buzzer and light apparatus, scheduled to be ready Monday, failed to work, competitors had to raise their hands when they wanted to answer a question. Munyang said the $ 6 entry fee for each team was used for preparation expenses. The sophomore class and SIL Society little, if any, profit from the bowl, be said. Battelfield's team comprised Orsem, Manhattan senior; Richard Burkard, Kansas City, Kan., freshman; Robert Gottesign, sophomore; and David Tholei, senior. JRP's队 comprised Dougan, Pretty Prairie junior; Greg Gecchies, Wichita senior; Hector Quemada, Parkville, Mo. senior; and T医 Dowling, Admonitorson. 2 Monday, November 8.1976 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press USSR shows military might MOSCOW—The Soviet Union staged one of its smallest annual military parades in history yesterday to mark the 59th anniversary of the Communist revolution. It presented no new military equipment and even toned down the marching style of its troops. "The Soviet army and navy are reliably guarding the cause of revolution, socialism and peace." Defense Minister Dmitri Ustinov announced to the marshal of Ukraine, Volodimir Novakovich. The collection of armored personnel carriers, artillery pieces and surface-to-air and surface-to-surface missiles that rolled for six minutes through Red Square No official explanation was given for the toned-down nature of the parade, but the Soviet government has been increasing its calls in the past year for ending the annual celebration. Earthauake kills 16 in Iran TEHRAN, Iran—A severe earthquake struck a mountainous region of northeast Iran yesterday morning, killing at least 16 persons and injuring 32, according to the United Nations Office on Disaster Relief. Most of the victims in the Iranian quake lived in the village of Dandik, in which the 150 m² building collapsed ordering to a spokesman for the agency, for fear of being thrown into the river. Some casualties also were reported in the villages of Kalatalam and Noughab. Quake strikes Mindanao MANILA, The Philippines—A powerful earthquake rocked eastern Mindanao at 12:11 p.m. yesterday, the official geophysical observator said. It reported the quake's epicenter to be about 400 miles southeast of Manila. Mindanao is the southernmost island in the Philippines. There were no reports of casualties or damage immediately, but the observatory was still located on the eastern coast of Sargia del Norte province, which is the northern tip of Mindaña. The quake registered 6.8 on the Richter scale, the observatory said. Mayers seek Carter's aid CHICAGO—Mayors of the nation's cities met yesterday with a representative of president-elect Jimmy Carter looking for ways to stern the flight of industry and pressure on companies. The strategy session underscored the dependence of financially trapped cities upon the federal government. The U.S. Conference of Mayors meeting mainly centered on the question of what the Democratic president will do for the cities. The mayors and Carter's representative, Howard Samuelis, agreed that the most crucial task is stimulating employment in the cities and stemming the flight of the unemployed. UAW. Chrusler settle DETROIT—The United Auto Workers and Chrysler Corporation have reached a tentative agreement on new three-year contracts covering 9,000 salaried workers. The accords, announced early yesterday, are separate from the last-minute settlement reached Friday covering 109,000 Chrysler rank- and-file production workers. The agreement avoided the industry's second national strike. In a joint statement, UAW and Chrysler negotiations said the tentative settlements covered salaries office and clerical workers and engineering employees, both in the United States and Canada. Ford relaxing with family making plans for future PALM SPRING, Calif. (AP) – President Gerald Ford arrived at this desert resort yesterday for a vacation stay and immi- tations. He and his team and routine- shaking hands with welcomers. After greeting them, Ford moved along police barricades, shaking hands. Upon emerging from Air Force One with members of his family, Ford immediately beaded toward a high-school band and a group of football lettermen holding a banner that read, "A sunny welcome to Palm Springs, Presidents Ford." The Ford family plans an eight-day postelection vacation of golf, rest and recreation. Nixon Nessen, press secretary for the president, planned any activities for their first night. Ford spent most of the five-hour flight in his cabin with Mrs. Ford, while members of his staff, daughter Susan and sons Jack and Steve relaxed in other parts of the plane. during the vacation. He was welcomed there by a long time friend, Leon Parma, who came to visit him. The vacation will give Ford a chance to consider what he will do when he leaves office Jan. 20 to be replaced by President-elect Jimmy Carter. Ford was expected to spend several hours a day on official business, such as budget planning and writing the State of the Union address he will deliver to the new Congress. Several golling partners are already lined up for him, including comedian Bob Hope and former Army football coach Earl "Red" Blake Earlier yesterday, a friendly crowd greeted Ford at church in Washington. Among those in front of St. John's Episcopal Church was Helen Williams, Ford's former art teacher at Grand Rapids High School. "This is a real nice surprise," Ford said as he reached out to greet her. "She taught me art, but I was never very good at it." Bee O'Clock Dress & Gals 842-1144 842-1144 REDKEN $ ^{2} $ (In Malls Shopping Center) Mail's Beauty Salon IS "ANY KIND OF A JOB" ALWAYS GOING TO BE GOOD ENOUGH FOR YOU? Blane—Owner & Hairstylist Police said the death occurred Friday night and was "part of a hissing program for abusive drivers." Sure, you can make the car payments and still have money in your pockets. Is that all you'll want? Think about it. Think about it. Think about it. *cautionian . . . or a helicopter mechanic . . . an accountant or an electronics technician . . . or one of more than a hundred technical and administrative specialties YOU CARE FOR.* Pay in the Air Force. Consider the stimulating challenge – and other benefits, like paid vacations, promotions, the medical care. It's a great way to serve your customers by skilling with your Air Force recruit today. HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. (AP) - Police and St. John's University officials disagreed yesterday on circumstances surrounding the stabbing death of a 20-year-old student. A spokesman for the university maintained that hazing wasn't involved in the death of Thomas Fitzgerald of Queens, a member of an ROTC fraternity at St. John's. Msgt. Rudy Cleveland 842 Massachusetts Ave. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 Ph: (913) 843-3000 Air Force... A Great Way of Life Police on Long Island said the stabbing apparently occurred when a block of wood worn on Fitzgerald's chest as a shield slipped and the other student plunged the knife into him, severing the main artery to his heart. Another student, a cadet second lieutenant in the Pershing Rifles honorary drill society, was charged with second degree murder in the death of Fitzgerald. Student's death stirs charges of frat hazing "If it were having, they all would have been charged, since it is illegal," said the university spokesman. "They elected to go out on their own for additional training." ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. (AP)--Jimmy Carter received Communion at an Episcopal church at his vacation retreat here yesterday and worried about changing the whites-only policy of his Baptist church in Plains, Ga. The Rev. Cleonomian, a black minister from a nondenominational church in Carter's church again refuses to admit black Albany, Ga., failed for the second consecutive Sunday to gain admittance to the all-white Plains Baptist Church. But Carter told an aide he had reason to hope his congregation would accept blacks would be changed at a church conference after worship services next Sunday. Spokesman Jody Powell said Carter and Police identified the weapon as a bayonet, but a spokesman for St. John's University said there was no evidence of it. Charged with the killing, which occurred on an uninhabited island off Long Island's south shore was James Savino, 21, also of Queens. 11. Col. James Rafferty, commander of ROTC at St. John's, said the activities on the island weren't sponsored by the unit and declined to describe the activity as having Officers said about 10 members and pledges in the society padded in rubber rafts from Lindenhurst to the 50-acre Indian Island, where Fitzgerald was required to be a naval officer. He was posed as an *enemy officer* trying to intimidate him into divulging information. Fitzgerald died almost instantly, and the cadets paddled back to shore and called the boaters. Savine and Flitzerger belonged to the CKC unit at St. John's, but neither attended. Savine is a senior majoring in mechanical engineering at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, N.J. His lawyer said he attended the Air Force Academy in Colorado but dropped out because of asthma attacks. Fitzgerald, a Regis High School graduate, was a junior at Queens College. Thank you ... to the many people who made positive contributions of time, talents and money to the Carol Francis Campaign — those who made it with their members — members-door-to-door partners—fellow candidates—financial contributors—friendly dogs that didn't bite fundraisers—homeowners for their clients — customers — listeners — manager — meeting organizers— newspapers — printers — reporters — researchers — staplers — treasurer — word-of-mouth of reporters — and especially YOU VOTERS! carol francis for the 45th Paid for by Carol Francis Campaign, Mike Shaw, chairman POL. ABOV KU vs. Mizzou Nov. 20th SUA TRIP Trip Includes: 1 Game Ticket Round Trip Bus Ticket Coolers and Pop (BYOB) Leave Kansas Union 9:30 a.m. No Driving or Parking Hassles 2 Hours Post-game Free Time his family had been relaxing and resting. Carter told reporters as he left services at Christ Episkopal Church that he and some friends caught 17 sea trout and bass Saturday in a "very good fishing afternoon." Leave Mizzou 7:30 p.m. COST $21 Sign up in SUA office. Deadline Nov. 16. For more information, call SUA office 864-3477. "I HOPE THAT the church conference will be able to reach an amicable conclusion and guarantee the right of all to worship without regard to race," Powell said. Powell said Carter would attend the meeting next Sunday and might try to convince others to change the church policy. The Rev. Mr. Edwards didn't attend Sunday's services. He said last week that he hadn't attended Sunday's service yesterday said he was on vacation. Deacons requested the Rev. Mr. Edwards' resignation after he criticized their refusal to admit Sunday's services, and considered at the meeting next Sunday. Carter and his family voted against the 1965 church rule to exclude "Negroes and civil rights activists." He has often said he hopes the rule can be changed. The Rev. Mr. King first tried to attend the Painsch church a week ago, but services were canceled to avoid admitting him. Yesterday, deacons forcibly restrained the Rev. Mr. King from entering the church through a basement doorway after Sunday school classes ended, and the front doors to the church were locked as services began. POWELL SAID that he gave Carter details on the latest exclusion of the black minister from the Plains church and that Carter met last week with the church's pastor, the Rev. Bruce Edwards, and three or four members of the board of deacons. He described Carter's mood as "concerned and hopeful the situation can be improved." POCKET MONEY SPECIAL! Yesterday was the second day of a post-election vacation during which the President-elect will spend some of his time conferring with aides and studying staff documents dealing with plans for assuming control of the government in January. POWELL SAID that if next Sunday's vote continued the whites-only policy, Carter would then have to make "a difficult personal decision" about what course to take. He didn't outline the options Carter might have. Two ground beef platters $2.99 Includes dinner salad plus your choice of coffee, tea or soft drink. Limit 2 dinners per coupon. SIZZLER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE Good thru Thurs., Nov. 11 1516 W. 23rd St. Lawrence, Ks. HEAD FOR HENRY'S HENRY'S DRIVE INN We are in the process of remodeling and are taking applications for part-time help. Must apply in person for an interview. Call 843-2139.Must be able to work at least 20 hrs. a week and at least two weekend days or nights. Have you considered a career in INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS? Our two-year program, Master in International Business Studies, includes intensive language study; in-depth cultural studies; business skills; and a six-month work experience in Latin America or Europe. Other business graduate degree programs at the University of South Carolina include master's in business administration, economics, accounting and transportation; and Ph.D. in business administration and economics. EAST AND WEST WEST AND EAST For further information clip and mail this coupon to: Director of Graduate Studies College of Business Administration The University of South Carolina Columbia, South Carolina 29208 1. (Paid for by SC Partnership Fund) THE TIME IS NOW 3:36:17 BATTERY CHARGER This unique new BINARY CLOCK from ROMIC will be the talk of your home or office. Mount it on any well or use it as a desk tapper. How is her exciting work? Hours, minutes, and seconds are encoded in a constantly varying pattern of lights, replacing the conventional simple time units. The correct time is determined by observing the pattern and decoding the binary representation. The RINARY CLOCK is housed in a light wood grained case and features a deep red rief front panel. This stylish design blends well with any decor. ROMIC backs each clock with a full one year, unconditional warranty. Binary coding was first used by mathematicians in the 17th century who found it both easy to use and simple to explain. With just a little imagination, anyone can learn to use this new type of clock and store information in seconds so fast that time will be curved within three seconds per year. Place your order here. Use the coupon at right or call (913) 722-0018. Please allow three weeks for delivery. Mail to: Romie Integrated Computing Systems, Inc. 4002 West 74th Terrace Shawnee Mission, KS 65208 Shawnee Mission, KS 65208 Please use me... BINARY CLOKY at $49.55 each. EACH in my check or money order for $1.50, plus $2.00 on residence add 3 1/2% value to rent. Name Address City State Zip Mondav. November 8.1976 3 ck arch conference table conclusion all to worship owell said. mood as "con-uation can be old attend the might try to e the church ked against the "Negroes and its often said he neged. Sunday's vote opinion, Carter "a difficult course to options Carter 'S day of a post- which the one of his time taking staff- with plans for government in cess Must w. work least 17 national inary J et. or .00 reas Union remodeling increases use A major life-face of the Kansas Union during the last year has enhanced the Union's popularity, according to Frank Burge, Union director, and Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union in charge of finances. The face-life has included remodeling the Union's main lobby, removing its center staircase and renovating some of its food service areas. "We have had considerably more people in the building this fall than ever before." Foster He said the increased use of the Union was exemplified by the increased sales volume in food service areas. For example, the September sales volume in the Hawk's Nest and the Prairie Room, two recently built buildings, increased significantly higher than it was last year, he said. THIS INCREASE is due only in part to the remodeling, he said. The intention of beer sales in the Union, started in Nov. 1975, and large crowds at football games this fall also have contributed to the increase in the sales volume. Stretch of K-10 opened; completion set for late '77 Travelers on Kansas 10 highway will need plenty of patience during the holiday season because construction on 11.4 miles of the highway won't be finished until next year. However, a stretch of road west from the junction of K-10 and Kansas 7 to a mile south of DeSoto is completed and was opened today. Joe McCourt, Highway Commission civil engineer, said Friday that because of cold weather the surfacing of the 11.4 mile section won't start until spring 1977. Completion of the highway isn't expected until late next year, he said. "I don't anticipate any problems with traffic during the holidays because people are used to the construction, and the sharp turn that happens there since this summer," McCourt said. The curve has 15-mile-an-hour signs posted. There have been a few minor accidents on the curve, McCourt said, but they are not severe and no other people are used to the curve and obey the signs. One of the uncompleted sections on K-10 is Bob Sleese, public information director for the Kansas Department of Transportation, said grading on this section was 95 per cent complete. Five bridges are in 70 per cent complete and work on sixth officers is well under way, Slease said. a 7.3 mile stretch that starts two and a half miles north of the Johnson and Douglas county line. Surfacing costs for this 7.3 mile section are estimated at $7 million. On the 4.1 mile stretch from the Johnson-Douglas County line to one mile west of DeSoto, the grading is $5 per cent complete, and four of the six bridges are complete, each with a surface area of $3 per cent complete. The surfacing cost for this section is estimated at $1.9 million. Cost of the entire 11.4 miles, for grading and 18 bridges, is $11.9 million. Cost of the section that opened today is $20.8 million. The cost includes grading, 17 bridges, surfacing and roadside improvement, Slease said. New placement office little but busy with job market The University Placement Office; situated in the Kansas Union, is a cubbyhole compared with the Union lobby surrounding it, and it serves as a communication center for eight specialized placement offices on campus. "Wetry to find out what's going on in each placement office and then tell them what the other offices are doing." Vernon is faculty placement director, said vesteday. Geisler said that because his office was new, his job and those of his staff still weren't clearly defined. His staff is complying with the new assistant and three student assistants. The placement offices in the department of chemistry, the schools of architecture, business, engineering, journalism, law and education, and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences have been working with university Placement since it opened July 1. "We're trying to work together as a team to determine solutions to problems that involve people who have different experiences." recruiters and informing students about the interviews," he said. The office schedules special programs concerning such things as internships and meets with faculty members to tell them about job markets in their fields. The University Theatre Box Office has a new policy making it easier for students to obtain unclaimed tickets for performances in Inge Theatre. Students can now pick up unpurchased public tickets without charge any time after the box office opens on the day of the performance. Policy loosens for Inge tickets In the past, if all student tickets for a performance were sold, students had to wait until 15 minutes before a production begins to get unused public tickets. Burge said there also had been more reservations made by different groups in the country. GUDSPQkk "We had 56 functions on Friday," he said. That's up from an average of about 40 or 45 functions a week. GODSPOLK 8 pm FRIDAY, NOV. 12, 1976 United Ministries Center 1204 Oread Ave. LIVE PERFORMANCE! Ferguson said there had been a 13 percent increase in income from room cost. Admission ___ $1.00 INFO.CALL 843-4933 *STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS don't pay rent for this increase has increased.* The Crewel Cupboard Now We Are Six Birthday Sale 6 years in business...growing and going strong Balloons Icelandic Lopi - reg. $2.90 now $2.20 Los Salones Shetland - reg. $1.95 now $1.10 Apollo Thick W Thin - reg. $2.50 now $1.50 Silfraffake baby yarn - reg. $1.00 now $7.00 In addition, the sales volume has increased for the Information Counter in the main lobby, which sells magazines, candy and souvenirs. ANDREGG DEFINED Oblinger Smith and said he hadn't heard any criticisms of him. Needlepoint and Crewel Specials "The sales volume from the Information Counter in September was up 6 per cent over last year, but after most of the lobby had been remodeled, we expect October's increase to be even greater." Obolinger Smith had ignored neighborhood opposition to the loop, according to Willits. The impact statement says that "all of these (neighborhood) groups have concretely expressed their support for the project and commitment to seeing it accomplished." Yarn Specials Williams said she didn't know how the East Lawrence Citizens for Housing Preservation had arrived at the estimate of 27 residents. The impact statement's estimate of 18. THE ENVIRONMENTAL impact statement says the loop "will necessitate the dislocation of 18 residences and five houses." The correct figure was actually 27 houses. Odds 'N Ends Specials Ferguson, who will have October's figures in a few weeks, said he expected them to show large increases in income over the next decade. "October was an especially busy month." "Kit Little" Hoodlopoints — 1/3 off Noodlepointers kits — reg. 4.50 now $4.00 All Christmas kits — 10% off "Holly Hobbie" crawl kits — 1/2 price Select group painted caneuses — 1/2 price Select group crawl kits — up to 75% off Ferguson said that he expected to see continued increases in revenue from reservations, the Information Counter and the hotel, including a new snack bar by the ballroom. "It's damn funny to ask me questions about the group's charges (from the East Lawrence Citizens for Housing Preserve) and why I don't even know what the charges are." ^ dredd said Oblinger Smith didn't stand to benefit from construction of the loop, as opponents of the loop have previously charged. "Oblinger Smith isn't in construction and won't get anything out of this," Andregg All hardback books -- 10% off Unfinished frames -- Sx5 and Sx7 reg. '12.00 now '1.50 Knitting tote bags -- reg. '17.50 now '6.50 Quilt hoops -- 10% off 10×10" walnut finish frames -- reg. '5.00 now '3.50 Group votes From page one 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 841-2656 15 E. 8th St. the BayLeaf Dough mixer – reg. 25.95 sale 19.95 Kneads enough dough for 2.8 loaves of homemade bread in minutes. We have pizza stones, 14.50 & 25.00 other selected items on sale ... limited supply. 725 Massachusetts 842-4544 announces: Cookware Factory recommended service license for all Charges, Transmission fluid, filter. Fiat TRANSMISSION TUNE-UP Joint subcommittee for Academic Affairs and Student Rights THIS WEEK'S SERVICE SPECIAL Seminar on 20% Student Representation dale willey The Automobile Man PONTICAC CADDILAC AMC JEEP 1174 W 250 Street Phone: 843-6200 Front Wheel Drive Vehicles $9.00 Additional Wrench dale willey The Automobile Man PARKING, CALLAGHAN, ARC, AEF 111 W. 26TH STREET Phone: 843-1000 Speakers Will Be: Jung K. Lee, professor of chemistry Clifford Griffin, professor of history Ronald Calgaard, Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs James Carothers, assistant professor of English Dennis Embry, assistant instructor of Western Civ. Seminar to be held, November 9. 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room-Kansas Union The public is invited. Funded by the Student Senate --i An Oblinger Smith employee who helped write the impact statement, Martin Leitner, Kansas City, Mo., said yesterday that he was running through the loop at the time he prepared the statement. IN SEPTEMBER 1974, the ELIA rejected one version of the loop proposal before changing its mind and, again supporting the loop two months later. Leitner said he didn't remember this disagreement among ELIA members. Leitner said he had reviewed all the minutes of past ELIA meetings and had talked with city officials in assessing East Jerusalem's situation, according to Leitner. All of this opinion was recorded to Leitner. "No one ever told me how to write the statement," Leitner said, "but it would be hidious for me to say I didn't know that the city already favored the loop." SUA Letterer said the decision to build the town was the city's, not the Oblinger Smith's, and the environmental impact statement was intended to create citizen responses to the engaged. "All of the comments and criticisms are very much a part of the process," he said. Letner said he hoped the city would take the feelings of groups such as ELIA into account in deciding whether it still wants to build the loop. presents "KID DYNAMITE" JIMMY WALKER Star of "Good Times" THE NEW YORKER SATURDAY, NOV. 13 8 p.m. Union Ballroom Tickets $4 General admission Under 16 not admitted Question & Answer Session after Show Tickets available at the SUA box office NOON BUFFET ALL THE PIZZA AND SALAD YOU CAN EAT For Only $1.89 11 p.m.-2 p.m. Weekdays Pizzainn. In the Hillcrest Shopping Center Next to the Theatres 841-2670 4 Monday, November 8, 1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. Airport grants lauded After more than 10 years of trying, it appears that Lawrence may come up with funds to make much-needed improvements at Lawrence Municipal Court, a mile east and a mile north of the U.S. 99-U.S. 24 junction north of town. For years, talk of improving the airport has crept in and out of discussions at City Hall. The sad state of the airport has been a mark against a community that sports, among other things, a remodeled downtown and new library, city office and educational facilities. TO MANY, THE airport is Lawrence's worst municipal facility. Much of the criticism concerns the existing runway, which badly needs repair and is too short to permit much use, especially in high winds. You would like to take off and land there. The city wanted to improve the airport long ago, but the problem, as with so many other city projects, has been a shortage of money. Estimated costs of buying 250 acres of land, building a new runway, improving the existing runway and building a new hangar are about $3 million, a rather hefty sum that has long been beyond the city's grasp. On two occasions, the city almost received grants that would have paid for 75 per cent of the improvements. Lawrence residents, however, didn't see fit to approve bond issues that would have allowed the city to raise the remaining 25 per cent. BUT NOW, it appears that the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is willing to give the city up to 90 per cent of the money under a special grant program the FAA will fund for the next two years. City officials are preparing the initial applications, and the FAA should make a decision on whether to fund Lawrence airport improvements by January. The question of how to raise the remaining 10 per cent to match the FAA funds is still prominent, and city officials have learned that the public most likely can't be persuaded to pay the sum. Fortunately, it appears the necessary money can be generated by offering funds, federal revenue sharing funds or even enthusiastic local businessmen. BUT NO MATTER how the final 10 per cent is acquired, it's certain the federal government will play a big part in funding the airport improvements—by giving money through the FAA and possibly through revenue sharing funds. As a rule, I'm opposed to federal interference in local projects. The less federal supervision, inspection and regulation by federal agencies, the better. But when it comes to giving money, the federal government can invest cent in its willingness to fund bill for local projects. With the prices of land, building materials and labor continually increasing, it's a wonder that medium-sized cities even entertain thoughts of raising a significant fraction of the funds for their planned projects. If the FAA approves the city's grant application and the airport improvements are made, it will be because federal funding programs have been upgraded in two areas. First, the government now is establishing grant programs that will pay up to 90 per cent of a city project, an amount few cities could shoulder by themselves. Second, the federal government has improved its guidelines for the use of federal revenue sharing funds by allowing cities to use the money as part of a match for city project grants. I LOOK FORWARD to seeing the federal government continue to set up funding programs and guidelines that will help, not hinder, city efforts to improve public facilities. I also look forward to the development of an airport that can accommodate the many people who would like to travel to and from this university community by air. In both cases, it's about time. Mary Ann Daugherty Contributing Writer IAN SMITH KISSINGER PLAN 1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES "IS THAT YOUR FINAL ANSWER?" Book dissects laws-turned-racist WASHINGTON—In a familiar phrase, we often speak of the "body of the law." By metaphorical extension, one gets to the anatomy of the law and thence to dissection of the law. In his recently published book, "Disaster by Decree," he describes a masterful job of dissection on the body of law concerned with race and schools. This is a superlative work. Yorker, a graduate of City College of New York, a graduate in law from Columbia and a former Department of Justice attorney. He is now a professor of constitutional law at the University of Texas Law School. His book is published by Graglia brings impeccable credentials to his pathological task. He is a native New James J. Kilpatrick ( c ) 1978 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. Brown decision as such; the South's scheme of compulsory segregation plainly disadvantaged some children and therefore denied these children equal protection of the law. But Graglia has great trouble with Chief Justice Earl Warren's decision, and he has still greater trouble with the contradictory decrees that have followed in its wake. regard to their race. . . . "Degreelegation, Congress, said, "shall not mean the assignment of students to public schools in order to overcome racial imbalance." Staff Writer Graglia marshals irrefutable evidence that Congress meant what it said. The leading librarians of the time—Jovian Laverne Celler—repeatedly insisted that the Civil Rights Act could not be misunderstood; it couldn't be perverted into a requirement of racial integration or racial balancing. But the bureaucracy had done little, proceeded at once to pervert the language all the same. The Brown case of 1954 led directly to the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In construing the 1964 act, Graglia demonstrates the Supreme Court disdained the history, the spirit, the intention, and the plain language of the law. Will Ford become Jerry who? the enormous advantage of seeming to combat racism while in fact imposing a racist sentiment. The law was by Humpty-Dumpty. By PAUL ADDISON Staff Writer WHAT TROUBLES Graglia especially is that the high court, by its judicial activism, has introduced race as a permissible form of first time a sometimes constitutionally required, basis of government action." This feat has been accomplished by the judges only to countable only to themselves. So far as the public schools are concerned, the judges have brought the country "to a position increasingly aggrieved with the autocracy goes on." And the autocracy goes on. the Cornell University Press. He suffers no Southern stigmata. As President of the United States, one of Richard Nixon's great hopes was to somehow make a name for himself in the world he succeeded, although not in the way he had originally intended. memorization tests in grade school. Nixon's successor, Gerald Ford, had few such pretensions. He became president in August 1974. The historical significance of his 28-month term in office will be要待 to assess for some time. By a feat of dazzling word play, Graglia observes, the courts asserted that their decrees required only that racial discrimination be removed before discrimination in the name of eliminating discrimination. The court "was thus able to retain Gerald Ford hadn't had an easy task as America's foremost citizen. He didn't plan to seek the office, he didn't want it and he wasn't fully prepared for the rigor of the job. ment expenditures and the budget deficit. The reality of a weakening economy forced postponement and, finally, a state-led effort to make Ford's proud hope for "energy independence" was foiled by political differences with Congress and twice it was forced to postpone a planned additional fee on imported oil. ONE THING is almost certain. President Ford won't go down in the ranks of American great leaders; rather he is deserved be judged alongside of some lesser presidents, such as Franklin Pierce, Rutherford Benjamin Harrison—president names bring back only dim recollections of history THE CIVIL RIGHTS Act spelled out explicitly what "desegregation" means and what it doesn't mean. Desegregation, Congress said, "means the assignment of students to public schools and within such schools without In foreign affairs, Ford continued to seek compromise solutions and to play a mediating role in the affairs of other nations. The end of that effort in Southeast Asia brought, and will continue to bring, conflicting interpretations about its necessity. Ford's foreign policy was further marked by a lackuster expedition to China in 1987. By the end of that defense with the Soviet Union, Ford's presidency has been a survival struggle. His ability to withstand two assassination attempts and the exoneration of former National Guard role in the nation's emotional recovery from Watergate marked him as a fighter until the sands of time ran out Nov. 27. After a tougher job, President, he had every intention of cutting back govern IN SOCIAL PROGRAMS, the discerning historian will find little to exonerate Ford from the Step by patient step, Graglia traces the course of desegregation law from a point before the famous Brown decision in 1864 to the most decisive decision in the United States and Boston and Detroit. He finds the course "incredible." The Supreme Court, he observes, began by prohibiting and deploring racial discrimination; the Court now stands in a position of requiring proving the very racial discrimination it once condemned. criticisms that followed the extensive use of his presidential veto power. While conceding that he had made a post-Vietnam America had already surfaced when Nixon was hastily making his retrace, Ford can't escape the statistical evidence that Americans out of work in 1976. Ford's overall record hardly contains the material from which memories are made. Ford has had the misfortune of being a "caretaker" President. He has had little time to forge his own policies and little time to appoint his own advisers. "THIS IMPOSSIBLE task has required it to resort to methods—in unfair and inaccented patentlyfallacious reasoning, and perversion of the 1964 Civil Rights Act—that would be considered scandalous in any context of American government." The middle years of the 1970s consequently are destined to be remembered more for the events surrounding Watergate and for the arrival of a southern conspiracy that inflicted a troubled nation and failed to gain election as President in his own right. In some years of reading books about the law, I cannot recall a critique more comprehensive, or more graphic, than Greitai's assault upon the Supreme Court's twisted trail in the matter of school desegregation. He has no trouble with the Gregalia's scholarly polemic may not influence a willful court; but if his work is sufficiently read, it could have great effect upon a constitutional amendment intended to undo the evils of racism the Court has wrought. Letters To the Editor: B1 estimates inflated I'm sure you will wish to print a clarification of the grossly inflated cost estimate of the B1 bomber as stated by Jim Bates in his comment on "the real issues" in the Oct. 29 Karsan. exaggerated, if not erroneous data, does little to enhance whatever credibility the article might have had. MR. BATES informs us that the BI bromer bombs "about $1 billion each." I'm aware that in an article of this kind, only the most intelligent think, however, that reinforcement of one's opinion by As of May 1976, the unit cost of a Bi was $22.8 million (based upon a total buy of 244 units). Any total buy less than that figure obviously would increase the unit price because development costs are amortized over the total number. B1 as a bargain. That depends upon one's feelings about the need for the B1 and how much that need is worth. PLEASE DON'T lst me appear to be making a case for the Walter M. Wondrack, Colonel, USAF Professor of Aerospace Studies MIAMI NEW 1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES CIA KOREAN INTELLIGENCE AGENCY US MAIL Demos ambush GOP By CARL YOUNG Contribution Writer The Kansas Democrats have ambushed the Republicans. - Gatescap district captain * * Gatescap captain eight years in the U.S. House representing the 4th District. He was defeated by Dan Glickman, a Democrat, Wichita Woman, for the Wichita Storm Boat. - The Kansas House of Representatives. The House now is controlled by the Democrats by a 65-40 margin. This is the first time in 64 years that all states have controlled the house. - A 26-14 majority in the 1976 Kansas Senate that has been reduced to 21-19. - Martha Keys defeated her Republican challenger, Ross Freeman, in the race for the seat case from the 2nd District. - Joan Finney, state treasurer, defeated her Republican foe, Darnon Weber. Weber's strong campaign. The new makeup of the Kansas Legislature resulting from the Democratic gains in the state was higher education lobbyists and the new legislature will give to schools supported by the state. THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas and the other state schools have received substantial backing for the past year from a state government controlled by Republicans. Now the supporters of higher education will have to deal with a Democratic Speaker of the House, who is also the House Ways and Means Committee. The two men who occupy those offices could play an important role in determining how much from the state. The man most likely to become speaker of the House, State Rep. John Carlin, D-Solan, has said that there will have to be more cooperation between the Democrats and Republicans in state government. THAT COOPERATION will be needed to get anything done. The government should parties bicker over every issue that comes up, higher education and the whole function of state government could come to a conclusion. It's nice that the two-party form of government has returned to Kansas after more than a half century of one-party rule, but let us hope that it is constructive government. Open warfare between the parties will do nothing but damage Kansas government. f The Hous have Kans told a talk 1 P THE UNIVERSITY DAILY A THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 19, 2016 June and July are expected Saturday, June 17 and Sunday, June 18 and September 5. 66044 Subscriptions by mail are a $2 coupon or $15 cash award. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $3 cash award. A year outside the county. The approx some AAUl physi Editor Debbie Gump Managing Editor Editor's Editor Yael Abolphatua Jim Bates nation chap prope the ctenu guard decis The outlin finan dism sched Unive Auntian Business Manager Carole Boonekoster Advertising Manager Janie Clements Business Manager Terry Hanson Fou and a speak The Irani Organ A lo of the Lebanese Pales Big I in M O Ex University Daily Kansan Monday, November 8.1976 5 一. UNION WORLD AL FEATURES st avantage of racism ag a racist s law by *Graglia high court,* *nism, has as a per- manent con- tains cannes basis of this feat has washed by nism. In somethings schools are es have "to a missingly And polemic a willful k is sufuld have a con-intended acism the ] depends about the row much Colonel, deniably aircraft the U.S. the "st about can buy 1 billion Colonel, Studies operationats and govern- By DEB MILLER Staff Writer NON will done done the two theory issue education of state ne to a between the ing but government. Parties don't affect budget, Dykes says two-party ent has er more one-party that it is nt. The first Democrat-controlled Kansas House of Representatives in 64 years will have little effect on the University of Kansas budget, Chancellor Archie Dykes told reporters last week, talk between administrators and students. Administrators attending the talk were Dykes; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; Donald Aderson, acting vice president; and Adam Calgair, vice chancellor for academic affairs; William Argersinger, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies; and Ward Zimmerman, director of the Cellor Center. In response to questions from students, Dykes said that in the past a Republican House and a Democratic governor, a Democratic House a a Democratic governor, or House and a House and a Democratic governor had made little difference to KJ's budget. ZIMMERMAN ADDED that it had always been tough for the University to get exactly what it wanted in its budget requests. AAUP offers suggestions for financial exigency plan The executive committee of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) Friday presented recommendations for the University's financial exigency document to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor. These recommendations, which were approved recently by the committee, reflect some of the issues discussed at lab 7 (see appendix C). In addition, physics and AALP chapter president, said. The financial exigency document, outlining procedures to be followed if a financial crisis forces the University to dismiss tenured faculty members, is scheduled to be voted on Dec. 2 by the University Senate. AT THE OCT 7; meeting, Dan Adler, national AAUP secretary, told the KU chapter of AAUP that the provisions of the proposed financial exigency document gave the chancellor too much power to dismiss tenured faculty members and didn't guarantee faculty participation in such decisions. One of the new recommendations clarifies those provisions by adding that the chancellor will dismiss tenured faculty members upon the recommendation of a promotions and tenure committee of the school where tenured faculty members are to be released. Mideast studied in conference A lecture and movie on the current status of the Palestinian revolution and the Lebanese situation will be presented at a reception in Room 106, the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Fovaz Turkey, author of several books and articles on Palestine and Lebanon, will be visiting. The conference is sponsored by the Iranian Student Association and the Oriental University. On Campus Events TODAY, A SEDIMENTATION CONFERENCE will be at 8 a.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. A day-long conference on HEALTH CARE will be in the University and SUMMERFIELD, WATKIN-Sberger scholarships will be at 8:30 a.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. NONTRADITIONAL STUDENTS will meet at UNIVERSITY. SENATE FOREIGN STUDENT COMMITTEE will meet at 11:30 a.m. in Alcove F of the Union. THE LAWRENCE TRACK CLUB will meet at 11:45 a.m. in Alcove B of the Union. The LAWRENCE TRACK CLUB will meet at 12:30 p.m. in Alcove D of the Union. TONIGHT; THE STUDENT SENATE SPORTS COMMITTEE will meet at 6:30 in the Council Room of the Union. The SENATE STUDENTS COMMITTEE will meet at 6:30 in the Council Room of the SENATE SERVICES COMMITTEE will meet at 6:30 in the Union's regionalist Room. The SUCH CHAES 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 UNDERGRADEATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will meet at 8 in the International Room of TOMORROW: GOV. ROBERT BENNET will be featured speaker at a forum sponsored by the KU Student Bar association and the DBA Center. WRITER will read her poetry at 3:30 p.m. in the Gread Room of the Union. A subcommittee on STUDENT REPRESENTATION OF the ACADEMIC AFAIRS COMMITTEE of the Student Senate will sponsor a seminar for student representatives at 3:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. Foreign Language Broadcasts To hear the latest news in any of the following languages 24 hours a day dial: 864-3003 Oriental 864-3021 Russian 864-3129 Portuguese 864-3219 French 864-3218 Spanish - That University-wide proportional adjustments possibly be used to prevent overburdening. Other new recommendations are: KU Language Laboratories - That the term "faculty" in the document refer to all unclassified personnel so that administrators can be included in the pool for faculty reductions. The University Senate and the national AUAP policy consider one year's notice of dismissal to be the minimum acceptable period, but recognize that the chancellor has no legal authority to guarantee such records according to the financial exigency document. —That the chancellor present evidence that a one-year notice is impossible if a faculty member must be released within less than a year. Eldon Fields, chairman of SenEx, said at last week's meeting that neither SenEx nor the administration had taken a stand on the exigency document. If the Senate passes the document, he said, the administration will take a position. Shankel said that the task force would be named within the next week, and that as much information as possible, with the exception of individual salaries, would be given to the members of the task force when they considered graduate student problems. Several questions from the audience concerned the formation of a graduate student task force to deal with problems of teachers' aides and assistant instructors. Another graduate student concern was a fee waiver, which would exempt graduate students involved in research or teaching from naying semester tuition fees. SHANKEL SAID that for the last two years, KU had given the fee waiver high priority in budget requests. However, Calgaard said that until other Regents' institutions "give it lip service" it won't be approved. KU has 70 per cent of all the graduate students in Kansas—one reason other institutions don't give the fee waiver high priority. Dykes said. Other Regents' institutions don't disassemble of it, Shankel said, but they have An institution such as KU has many budget requests, Dykes said. One year, to give priority to more areas, the requests were put into three separate lists, but when they reached the legislature they were put back into one list, he said. SMALLER schools have only academic requests, but KU also has research, graduate studies and other requests in its budget, he said. At one point, discussion arose over whether today's students communicate as well as their teachers. Calgaard said that employers of the 1940s and 1950s complained about their employees' lack of writing skills just as employers do today and that today it was fashionable to complain because of lower SAT and ACT scores. The discussion between administrators and students was part of Higher Education SUA Indoor Rec— Table Tennis TOURNAMENT Sun., Nov. 14 2:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom $1.50 Entry Fee 1st and 2nd place trophies DOUBLE ELIMINATION 1st and 2nd place winners go to Cape Girardeau, Mo. from Region XI Tournament Sign up in SUA office by Fri., Nov. 12 NOW SHOWING The New Yorker "Splendiferously Funny." "Antic, frantic NOW SHOWING and amusing." "Rowdy, nutty entertainment." William Wolf, CFO Manager THE RIZZ your key to intelligence "It's a ball of a brawl" -Jaudith Case MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN George Segal Glenda Jackson in Hillcrest Replacement Picture presents a ROBERT EVANS - SIDNEY BECKERMAN production JOHN EWINGEN Athriller 'A TOUCH OF CLASS' DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLVIER ROY SCHEIDER WILLIAM DEVANE MARTHE KELLER "MARATHON MAN" PG 7:30 & 9:30 Every Evening 7:30, 9:45 Saturday,Sunday 2:30 U$ the ancient stairs, behind the locked door, something lives, something evil, from which no one Hillcrest Very funny ... a jukebox of a movie. A comic book variation on the film's plot. V - Canbax, NY Times JOHN SCHLEISNER SHOP HORSEBAR "MARATHON MAN" Varsity 102437 ... Savannah RT 5842 **CAN MUSIC** Dan Berry Franklin Angie - George Carlin Professor in Curry - Irina Winn Larrienne Bark - Jack Ganez - Catherine Mc The Pointer Stars - Richard Koch CAR WASH Eve.at7:30&9:30 Sat..Sun.at2:30 SUA There are seven openings in KU women's scholarship halls, and four or five in the men's scholarship halls for the spring semester to the scholarship hall selection committee. Applications must be submitted by Friday to 228 Strong Hall, and those selected to live in the halls will be notified by Dec. 3. HELD OVER--ONE MORE WEEK Students will be selected on the basis of scholastic ability, participation in University and community activities, experience as a cooperative group and financial need. THE INVISIBLE RYA (1936) Dir. Lambert Hillyer, with Boris Karlof, Bela Luog沂 Mon., Nov. 8, 7:30, 75c CLASSICAL SERIES Ivarnian Singer Jack Kush Christine Music Buckley Singers Michael Prairie PG SCIENCE FICTION SERIES FILM SOCIETY THE CRIME OF M. LANGE (1935) Dir. Jean Renoir, with Rene Melville. THE LITTLE MATCH GIRL (1928) (La Petite Marchand D'Alumettes) Dir. Jean Renoir and Jean Tedesco Wed. Nov. 7 to 9:30. FILMS Granada 107241-58-39-6981 TEL/FAX/SMTP 107241-58-39-6981 "BURNTOFFERINGS" Scholarship Halls advertise spring openings Eve, 7:20, 9:40 Sat., Sun, 1:45 Hillcrest MONDO TRASHO and DRIVER (1971)1970)(1971) Dr. John Waters, with Divine, David Lochary and Mink Stole $1 both Hotels — $3c for one $4 each POPULAR FILMS KAREN_BLACK OLIVER REED NASHYILLE (1975) Signed to the team with Henry Gibson, Renee Blackley, Lily Tomlin and Sat. and Nov. 13 3:30, 7:00, 10:00, 8:1 and BETTE DAVIS Woodruff Auditorium KANSAS UNION There are four men's and four women's scholarship halls. Each has about 50 Students share the cooking, cleaning, minor maintenance and governance of the kitchen. The halls are only for undergraduates, but "everyone is on an equal footing." Lance Willoughby, Nortonville sophomore and selection committee chairman, said, "and I would encourage everyone to apply." mondaynitlast chanceweekend romancedance: CARGO performs at the Hall tonight. $1 cover for a good time. Off the Wall Hall --- 841-0817 737 New Hampshire S SWITZERLAND CHEESE FESTIVAL | | Reg. | Sale | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Appenzeller | 3.62 | **3.27** | | Emmenthal | 3.19 | **2.87** | | Gruyere | 2.97 | **2.67** | | Raclette | 3.69 | **3.32** | | San Sago | .89 ea. | .79 ea | Sap Sago .89 ea. .79 ea. St. Paulin 3.29 2.89 Also: Vacherin Fribourgeois and Tete de Moine. Plus ready made fondue from our own recipe. SALE MONDAY-THURSDAY Nov. 8—Nov. 11 809½ W. 23rd. Next to McDonald's The Stinky Cheese Shoppe 842-7434 Mon.-Sat. 10:30-6:00 Thurs. 'Til 7:30 McDonald's Fans' Favorite Football Facts Game. It's almost as much fun to play as it is to win. If you think you know a lot about football, we’re going to give you a chance to dance with a free *fries* prize in a free *large fries* Every time you buy a "Quarter Pounder" or a Quarter Pounder with Cheese between Nov. 5 and December, you pay you a Football Facts Rub and Win Game card. First, rub off the silver area covering the question. You can use the card to challenge your football LQ.! Then select the answer you think is correct and nib off the silver oval next to that answer. It the letters "T1" appear under the silver oval, you win! Come into participating McDonald's tour complete details and play our fans' Favorite football Facts Game. And see if you really do know as much about football as you think you do We do it all for you. McDonald's 901 W.23rd St. "Say, do you remember who lost the Super Bowl in 1973?" --- 6 Monday, November 8.1976 University Daily Kansan 15 Iowa State's Mark Williams harasses KU quarterback Mark Vincendese New KU offense falls short By GARY VICE Assistant Sports Editor To get its one-potent offense back on the track Saturday, the Kansas Jayhawks threw a season-high 24 times, revealed the team's offense in the game, subpoenaed quarterback Mark Viremedes. Although all three had their moments of success against Iowa State in Memorial Stadium, the Jayhawks were unable to outplay the offensive-minded Cyclones and last, 37-17. After being kept out of KU's last 12 games, Vicendeen came in to play with 2:57 remaining in the first quarter when McMichael was unable to combine to direct a solid Jayhawk drive. Vicendeen from Berkeley Heights, N.J., didn't played well at third base and was out of season. He wasn't expected to play this season as he was expected to be red-shirted. "I WAS A litle Hater," Vlcendeas said, "especially after having been running the machine all of the time this year. But that doesn't matter. Nothing matters to me except we lost." Vicendesa, 6-1 and 180 pounds, was 5-12 passing for 99 yards. He also gained 50 yards and one touchdown rushing on 15 carries. Both Lissak, who made his first KU play in the first half now have playing experience this year for next season's tough schedule, which includes nonconference opponents Texas A&M, Miami of Florida, and UCLA. Lissak was also supposed to be red-shirted this season, but he suffered injury forced his activation three weeks ago. "TM SURE the experience I got today will help me for next year. I accondered said, "I'm not sure what to do." Vicenedean said he was told by Kansas coach Bud Moore the middle of last week that he might put him in against Iowa State. Moore said, "We planned to play Vicendez this week. We felt we had to come up with someone who could move the football. We've been very ineffective doing that as of late. "I didn't want to expose him too quickly, but we were forced to. I was pleased with the way he played. He did some things well the moment of mistakes like a youngster will." Besides surprising the Cyclones by using Vicendese for most of the game, the Jayhawks also displayed the shotgun formation on third and long situations. The team had a special formation that was designed for a special quarterback—McMichael. MEMICHAEL, WHO had his best success early against the unprepared Cyclones, threw from the shuttle to complete six of 11 aircraft in 24 yards, but he suffered two interceptions. Explaining his role, MeMichael, who started against K-State and Nebraska, said, 'I'm used to playing瘫 anyway. I'm used to I have to do, come in and pick things up. "There's some pressure to make the first down. We thought we would surprise them at first and see how they'd play it. They started dropping their ends back, covering the deep outs, and we started hitting our backs, floating out and just dumping it off." **ISU COACH** Earle Bruce said, "I think the surgical help needed to them. We weren't ready to go." Cyclone cornerback Jerry Jaksch agreed, saying, "We didn't expect the shotgun at all coming into this game. But we did expect them to pass much more in this game than they have been. Their shotgun adjustment and didn't seem to affect us." On McMichael's first three opportunities in the shogun, he noted first down on 16, then in the final quarter on 28. COLORADO 132 185 OKLAHOMA 129 375 Staff photo by JAY KOELZER terference penalty. The shutgun offense was four for ten in picking up the first down. Moore, analyzing the effectiveness of the shotgun, said, "We were using it to give Michaël a chance to stand back there and his receivers. It served its purpose." "We have no plans to play three quarterbacks from here on. We felt that we should give Lissak a chance to move the ball, and it was not able to do, we made some changes." MOORE ALSO used using three quar- ters in one game was unlikely to be duplicated. By passing 24 times, KU surpassed its season-high total of 15, which came against Wisconsin. However, occasional lacrosse ats and football limited the Jyhawks to 11 completions. Colorado's Pfeffer and Kansas' Mason head for finish Moore said, "We dropped far too many passes. That's probably the biggest disappointment besides losing the football game." KU has taken the rest of the Big Eight's best punch and has been reeling for four of the last five rounds. Now they must get up and die or in die sole possession of seven places. THEIR SEASON is down to two road games-at Colorado this Saturday and at Missouri Nov. 20. And for the Jayhawks, 54, may take them, those two games may make the season. All fell—so have the Kansas Jayhawks, who after rising to the top quickly this year hit bottom rock last Saturday after being embarrassed, 31-17, by Iowa State. To Arthur Miller, it was a starlet's career. Chicken Little, it was the aile. "To poor Henry," he said. "It's all about money." Fallen KU looks to future "We think we need to play like were starting all over again," said Vince Semary, KU defensive line coach. "We lacking something. As coaches, we're trying to pinpoint it and put our fingers on it so we can start new." KU head coach Bud Moore was even more blunt. He didn't mound around with the old clichés about the next game always being the most important and a,"must game." By STEVE SCHOENFELD "I know this," Moore said. "I know it's a well-important for us to win the next two battles." THE KU COACHES spent yesterday trying to decide what the Jayhawks must do to win their remaining games. Moore didn't give many clues. "That's something the players and I will have to visit about," he said. "No, I'm not going to say we've had players give up," Moore said. "I don't think that's necessarily true. We had our share of tough breaks. Some have been brought on by ourselves and others just happened. But this is a fine grum of vomie KANSAS CITY (AP)—Franco Harris rambled for two touchdowns, and Terry Bradshaw ht Frank Lewis with a 19-yard scoring strike to lead the Pittsburgh Steelers yesterday to a 45-0 crunching of the Kansas City Chiefs. ★★ Right behind him was John Roscoe; ninth a year ago, 128 in 25.08. Moore said one problem that definitely has not occurred is some of the Jayhawks SCORING IOMA STATE 0 21 0 10 — 31 KANAS 0 10 10 17 Ted Crank ran his best test of the fall, making 50th in 25:20. And the Jayhawks' fifth win was a celebration of the game. It was the first shout against the Chiefs in 179 regular season games, dating back to 1963, the longest streak in the National Football League. It was a tremendous showing by KU and George Mason, who has been the top runner all fall, nabbed third in 24:40. Brice Coulsmith slipped into the 10th spot with a .98:02. Steelers bomb Chiefs, 45-0 ISU-Base 12 pass from Hardeman (Kellman klek) ISU-Base 12 pass from Hardeman (Kellman klek) ISU-Base 12 view from Hub (Hutchack clek) VISU-Base 12 view from Hub (Hutchack clek) **TEAM STATISTICS** EU 18 IU 21 Rushes - yardie 62-344 IU 141 Rushes - yardie 52-344 IU 141 Return yardie 9-16-2 IU 15-4-2 Return yardie 9-16-2 IU 15-4-2 Lumpots - lobs 3-3 IU 3-2 Lumpots - lobs 3-3 IU 3-2 ISU-Starved 12 interception return (Kalm kidnack K-Campfire 24 pass from Vincenzo (Haback kidk) INDIVIDUAL **Hawaii Diamondbacks** at **Milwaukee Brewers** 5:39, Cleveland 10:29, Grayton 10:49, Cincinnati 10:59, Brown 11:07, Minnesota 11:19, Smith 11:19, D. Liew 11:26, K.J.ager 11:38, N.C. Hornsby 11:49 However, their No.1 and No.2 men, Stan Vernon and Brian Geisler, had problems. Vernon, who was expected to be among the top players, said Geisler Geisler did a little better, bringing 24th The Sooners' third and fourth men throughout the season, Randy Wilson and Mark Bishop, ran good races. Wilson finished ninth and Bishop was 11th. Passing Iowa State—Stanley 7-13-2, Hardeman 2-3-0. Komasan - Vincenzo 3-12,0 Michelsen 3-16, Campbell 3-14 Iowa State- Blue 51, Rogers 120, Green 214, Solomon 121 Kansas- W. Smith- 34-54 Miller- 132, Banks 32-29, Camped 132-12, Little-W. 119-28, Wright 62-60 Cross country squad is surprising second Iowa State—Blaboll 5-42.8. Kansas—Rubaeh 7-40.0. Iowa State's Jeff Myers, a four-minute miler, didn't help the Cyclones -be placed 31st-and Oklahoma experienced similar difficulties. Bv STEVE CLARK KU tailed 71 points to finish behind an impressive Colorado team that netted just 6 points. Kansas didn't win the Big Eight Cross. Country title Saturday, but the Jayhawks came a lot closer than most people expected. Then came Missouri with 80, Kansas State, 110, Iowa State, 125, Oklahoma, 132, Tennessee. Colorado was led by individual winner Kirk Pfeffer, who grabbed the lead near the mile mark and gradually extended his stride to more than 250 yards, clocking a 24.98. TWO TEAMS that were expected to challenge for second place—Iowa State and Oklahoma State. BUT THESE problems weren't of any concern to KU, which recorded its best conference finish since 1971, when the squad was second. good enough to warrant a trip to this Saturday's NCAA Regional Championship in Stillwater, Okla. — meet that KU passed up the last couple of seasons. "We're really tickled," coach Bob Tummon said afterward. "I'm really proud of you." men and they are trying their hardest to win the football games." 1. Colorado 48 (1-9) (3-6) 2. Minnesota 60 (5-11) (7-8) 3. Missouri 60 (5-11) (7-8) 4. Iowa State 125 (13-23) (31-38) 5. Oklahoma State 143 (7-12) (34-42) 6. Kentucky 143 (7-12) (34-42) 16% Prifiter, CT 242-580 Lt. Surgeon, Bresley NYC 24-248 19% Plastic Surgery, CT 242-580 Lt. Surgeon, Bresley NYC 24-248 21% Dermatology, CT 242-580 Lt. Surgeon, Bresley NYC 24-248 23% Orthopedic Surgery, CT 242-580 Lt. Surgeon, Bresley NYC 24-248 24% Internal Medicine, CT 242-580 Lt. Surgeon, Bresley NYC 24-248 MOORE SAID HE planned to make one definite change this week, starting sophomore Mark Vicendese at quarterback against the Bucks. Vicendese was being red-shirted before entering the game Saturday late in the first quarter. "I felt like he played very well," Moore said, "considering he had virtually no exposure and it was his first time out this year." both sophomore Mark Lissak and senior Scott McMichael played quarterback for the Jayhawks against the Cyclones. Lissak started the game and McMichael brought in KU's shotgun whenever they were faced with a third-and-lone situation. Moore said he hadn't decided who would be the Jayhawks' No. 2 quarterback. He also didn't rule out the possibility that he would continue to firt with the shotgun. "SURE THERE'S the possibility of us doing that," he said. "But really I don't know what we're going to do. I don't think we should be extremely, but you never knew. We might be." Moore also doesn't know which players he's going to have to work with this week. So he's got a lot of room to stretch. game. Starting nose guard Dennis Balagain, who has a rib injury, may have been the most serious casualty. He will have x-rays taken today. The Jayhawks controlled the ball for all but eight plays of the first quarter, but didn't score against the Cyclones. Freshman kicker Mike Hibuch gave KU a 7-0 win in the second half when he booted a 38-yard field goal on the first play of the second game. THE REST OF the quarter belonged to the Cyclones. Iowa State went 83 yards in eight plays to go ahead when reserve Jake Schmitz scored a 12-yard touchdown nassw to Luther Blue. KU cut ISU's lead to four when Vicenzie marched the Jayhawks 75 yards, capping the drive by going around left end untouched for a six-yard score. But like the week before against Nebraska, KU's defense willed right before half and the Cyclones went ahead by 11 when halfback Dexter Green scored on a three-yard run with 641 to play. Iowa drove the drive on their own 20 with 3:10 to 10. Refusing to die, the Jayhaws, scored with six seconds left when Vicendese completed a 22-yard touchdown pass to halfback Bill Campfield. 64 Offensive tackle Lindsey Mason nurses late injury Home course lifts KU's runners By RICK BRYANT What a difference 10,000 feet can make to the Kansas Jayhawks' cross country team. Kansas Jayhawks' cross country team. After a seventh place finish in the 1975 Big Ten, he joined Colorado University, Boulder, Colo., and a similar finch the year before that, KU descended in elevation to its home course after a win over North Carolina in the 1976 conference championship. Paced by George Mason's third place and Bruce Coldsmith's 10th place, the Jayhawks fooled the predictors who had selected KU third. EARLY IN the race it looked as if seniors Mason and John Roscee would give KU a good shot of winning the team title. Both were running together in the top five spots through the first two miles, but a recurrence of the tendonitis that has plagued Roscee most of the season forced him to drop back. Mason never ran lower than fifth throughout the race and battled Kansas State University's Larry Beasley for a fourth placed hold on to edge Mason by two seconds. Mason credited a summer conditioning program, which helped him gain not only strength and endurance but also confidence; from the 40th spot he flashed in last year. "I're really happy," he said, panting after the race. "Everybody was psyched up for today. It was tough out there! nobody gave up to people and they passed me right back." MASON THOUGHT he could beat individual champion Kirk Pierce of Colorado in the World Cup. Mason's time of 24:40 was 32 seconds behind Pfeffer, and Coldsmith was 54 seconds slower with a 25:02. Only 45 seconds separated the final three KU runners, with Roscoff finishing 12th in 25:08. Ted Crum 20:29 and Brent Swanson 20:38 in 25:53. course record of 24:13, which he set earlier this year, with a 24:08 clock. KU coach Bob Timmons was pumping congratulatory handshakes like a farmer's "COACH TIMMONS is just great," he said. "He was the one who got me fired up for the race. This team is really close and I think we can do it together each other and I'm happy to be a part of it." "We were very pleased to finish like we did," he said. "We were very competitive in Crank wanted to discuss the team's unity and his coach more than his 20 place team. that second place position. Mason and Roscoe were especially pleasing because they ran so well. They've been our leaders and they did well. They did well. Everybody did well." Roscoe said that the team wanted to prove it could do better than a fifth place finish that was predicted in a premeet analysis in Friday's Kansas. "I'm proud of this team's attitude," he said. "We haven't run well as well as we capable the last couple of weeks, but we really wanted to bus one today. We wanted to show them (the Kansan) they were wrong," he said. All agreed that the home course was a big advantage for them after running last year at Colorado. Roscoe probably summed it up best for the team. It wasn't the Big Eight championship, but it was evident to those in attendance that Friday night's intradual swimmers... almost as important as KU'z swimmers. Intrasquad meet intense KU's swimmers and divers competed against each other in Robinson Natatorium to determine how much progress they've made and to help coach Dick Reamon decide who will be on the traveling squad. Sixteen of the 20 members of the traveling team will probably be freshmen or sophomores. The swimmers were allowed to choose the intraasqd events they wished to participate in. Each swimmer had to compete in at least two events, but no more than four. David Estes and Peter Bakter-Arkane each won two events. Kurt Anselmi won both one and three-meter diving events. Etsen won the 200 individual medley and the 100-meter dash respectively. Bakter-Arkane, Okenus, Mich., freshman, won the 200 freestyle and the 500 freestyle. University Daily Kansan Monday, November 8, 1976 7 ure ennis Balagna, have been the ill have x-rays the ball for all quarter, but clothes. Fresh- e-cha game—when al on the first er belonged to ent 83 yards in when reserve an tossed a 12- ber Blue. when Vicendese cards, capping left end un- before against right before ahead by 11 n scored on a way. Iowa State with 3:10 to 3:10 TEXAS --wanted to a fifth place a premeet S JAY KOELZER injury JAY KOE JE83 attitude," he be all as we're ekks, but we We wanted they were se was a big long last year immed it up the course is old, because there yelling Weekend Sports Roundup choose the ad to compete more than team in team er-Arkerm winsmil won eventing events. andey and 18:3.3 Okemos. ostyle and Gymnasts finish last The KU men's gymnastics team opened its season this weekend by placing last in the Big Eight Invitational meet in Lincoln, Neb. Iowa State won the meet with 410 points. Nebraska edged out Oklahoma for second, 400 to 399. Colorado was fourth with 300 and KU, fifth, with 260. K-State, Missouri and Oklahoma State don't participate in gymnastics. The Jayhawks were the only team competing without a full squad, Nebraska and Oklahoma, though, didn't have their top gymnasts at the meet. Larry Gerard, Nebraska, and Tom Comer, Oklahoma, competed for the United States in a meet in Red China. John Nunley, keeping up his pace from last year, was KU's top performer. He placed 10 on the still rings, even though he missed both his dismounts. Sean Williams missed his full-twisting handspring vault and took 12th in the long horse vaulting. He also was 12th on the floor Couch Bob Lockwood said he thought his team did better than what was expected and credited Chad Kelley, who scored in the good performance on the pommel horse. Ruggers trounced An improved Topeka Rugby Club gave the Kansas Jayhawks a 27-4 thrashing yesterday in what coach Allen Chapman said, "our worst performance of the year." Topeka's passing and kicking game, coupled with KU's failure to capitalize on scoring opportunities, accounted for the lossd score. Midway through the first half Rick Renko scored only two points of game, scape was set at 17-0. Walter then fumed into the hands of Bernro, who fell over the goal-line for the footing. Rodger Walter, who plowed his way to the Toeako two-vard line. The KU women's team队 defiled the University of Arkansas, 94-37, and set two records during the game. Women win easily Cam Gallughle, Shawnee Mission freshman, turned in a time of 31.1 in the 50-yard backstroke, topping the previous record of Cam Gallughle also won the 100-yard freestyle. Tracy Hagerson, Kansas City, Mo., freshman and cocaptain of the team, set a KU varsity record in the 100-yard butterfly with a time of 1.03.5 Cathy Call, Prairie Village sophomore and the other team captain, also had an outstanding meet, easily winning the 500-yard freestyle in n.22.2. The KU field hockey team's debut on artificial turf went well despite the fact that By DAN BOWERMAN The Jayhawks lost to the University of St. Louis on the artificial turf in Busch Stadium Saturday, 2-1, but KU coach Diana Beebs did the 'Hawks played a good game. Hockey squad loses on new turf She said KU's loss was due to several ranges, including the officiating, the lighting and sound, and the crowd. "The officiating was very one-sided," she said, "and it was pretty evident." BEEBESAID that both of St. Louis' goals were made on questionable plays. The first was a goal by Kyle Ridley, crossbar, she said, and it should have been nullified because of dangerous hitting. (The ball can't be hit above waist-height in field basketball.) Heckey said St. Louis' other goal was a free kick. The lighting was a problem, she said, because the glare off of the field made it difficult to see. "You couldn't see the ball coming at you until it was right on you," she said. "It was especially bad for our goalie, Janet Ballard." ANOTHER PROBLEM for KU, Beepe said, was St Louis' rough play of play. "They were a very physical team," she said. "They did a lot of body checking." Despite all the problems, Beebe said she enjoyed having the chance to play in Busch Stadium and hoped KU would get the chance again. She said that the teams came close to having two fights during the game. "It was an experience," she said. "The it was flat and really nice. I had fun and I like it." Soccer team edges Missouri, 1-0 Mansour Taherzadeh, Iran junior, scored the lone goal, and Rafael Perez, Venezuela senior, picked up his fourth shutout of the season. A 1-0 victory for the KU soccer team over the University of Missouri yesterday in Lawrence boosted the Jayhawks' record to 7-3 on the aseason and 4-2 in the conference. Couch Bernie Mullin said a strong defense led by Rod Van der Veen, the Netherlands national team, to an eight-point victory. "We had a tremendous performance again by Roel," Mullin said. "He's just been playing the great last four or five games." The junior varsity squad whipped Leavenworth, 4-1, Saturday in Lawrence. Dan Coon, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, led the scorers with two goals. The KU varsity squad's next contest will be against Colorado in Boulder, before the KULAC at Oklahoma. KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered free of charge or national origin. FAREBRING ALL CLASSIFICATION TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer .$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional word .01 .02 .04 .05 .06 .07 .08 .09 Ask additional word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or phone calling the UDK business office at 212-845-7630. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Employment Opportunities ENTERTAINMENT MUSICIANS: Part-time jobs for band members **343-851-1601**, 3204 Iowa, **11-12** **12-12** FLYING BOKONOON Paraphernalia for the commiserate. Support of bongs and pipes. 12 Ies. 12-15 841-360-360 Coming, Nov. 12 live performance of "Godspell" and the movie "Avenue G". Ame, Come celebrate with us, admission $1.00 FOR RENT Opinia Cap-Caping Club. Lawrence airport 841-4709, one sale, member Call 314-841-4709 3 bedroom apt. at Quailcreek, for inundated room (802-591-4678) between 9:20 & 6:00 and 843-7278 (802-591-4678) between 9:20 & 6:00 and 843-7278 Female roommate wanted immediately and for share apartment with own home. Room. 822-5644 SPORT Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 DOS DELUXE BOYLAND MASSE LAWRENCE KENNEDY 841-737-7414 Presently offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1977. 1 and 2 bedroom units, furnished and unfurnished. 2410 W. 25th Park 25 842-1455 Gideoeker Optical DISTRICT 1 MEM WARE 808-654-9277 For rent: apartment close to Union Parking. Bills paid: one bdm. Call 853-897-0590. Availability: 24/7. Sinclair 2 bedroom bedroom apt. available for sublease On four rv tour, not new, no shopping water path 360 sq ft. 2-bedroom apt. water path Need to submit two-bedroom Jaywalker Towers utilities as of December 10, 2019 841-6490 Sublease-2 bedroom unfurnished apt, at Frontier Hotel, $155/mo. 841-740. 11-9 To need to subsitute Jahewker Towers apts $131/ m w/tiltures Call 845-1107 or 1126-989-820. Sublease- 2 bedroom furnished apt. for 2nd se- mentar. Call 1867 after 11-11 inster Unit 1.20 2 male or female roommates needed to share a bedroom. 1 woman, Jan 1-25, 7.5 ft. beam ceiling, 1 car garage, 2 full bathrooms, alco, AC 240v, 120/240v, 1/3 ullite-camp, 864-4047 $125 monthly fee 1/3 ullite-camp, 864-4047 Sublime furnished 1-bram air, airt cond. electric gas heat, gas陶瓷, ceramic hard B$78-376 B$78-376 - male students.* Furnished room, available now. * female students.* Kitchen, privatises. CA one block from campus. * boys and girls.* Sublease 1 barm, apt. 1m at downdowbreak for 2nd year 1barm, apt. 12/15-76 Call; MARY 226 226 Upstairs room for rent. Clean, quiet, reasonable. Room 184-294. Share kitchen, dishwasher, 841-294 after 5:00. 11-12 FOR SALE STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any price you see on popular lift equipment other than factory dump or close out products, you will be charged at least $100 for the GRAFMON SHOP at KIFF. CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermaids. Unicorns. Gift box. Stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-5833. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. BELT AUTO ELECTRIC, 843-259-3000, 3000 W, and 16 Volts. Excellent selection of new and used furniture. Trade name: Furniture and Appliance Center, T015. Furniture, Appliance, and Décor Center. Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization makes sense to you. 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. tf Excelent selection of used furniture, refrigerator, furniture, dishwasher, microwave, oven, m-6 p.m. floor lamp, light fixture, 1-384-295-7755 floor lamp, 1-384-295-7755 40% - 75% off on warmup suits, dress man shirts and blouses, sweaters, etc. Alba Harvey Baptist Church in Rochester, NY For the lowest prices on top quality equipment or call BVL at 814-548-1028 or 864-1347. Opol Kadette Sedan, 1608, low mileage, $459, 843- 0059. MG 1100 *4-oor sedan; 1965, low mileage* $355, 843-0209 11-8 Call Ottis Vann! 1971 Toyota Mark II, 4-speed, AC, new tires, engine pressure, 30 mg, call: 842-651-11-9 For new Chevroletts and used cars at Turner Chevrolet 843-7700 Order Now For Christmas MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE Many at Special Discounts ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center Phone: 843-6424 Two "10" woolers w/midrange and highs, enclosed in beautiful leather. Air suspension enclosures to keep the feet dry. Complete Component Stereo. HDR turbail, complete Components. HDR turbail, ultralinear speakers. $250. Cell 843-7827. 119-8 VW 412 station-wagon Clean and good condition. Automatic transmission, air conditioner $150.00 Good used 10 speeds and single speed Lawrence Scalper Cymbeline; 4-6 Mon. Thurs.; 8-10:30 Saturday; 9-11:30 (Bronx); 11-20 Monday; 12-10 (Brooklyn). Streake-Onkyo TX20 X250 FM Receiver. Techniques—HS 250 Aux Sturtec Cassette Tape Deck—4 Ultra- 360 Aux Sturtec Cassette Tape Deck—4 Ultra- STEREO SYSTEM: Nikko reeiver, glenburn turtleable. EPIC microserver Nier system. Nier system. Pair of Pioneer 63DX speakers. Retail $600. Will sell for $250. B1-413-835. 11.10 One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Keyboard. Professional sound systems, guitars, amplifiers, drums, special effects equipment and more. 11-8 1420 W. 23rd. 843-3087. 11-8 Women's black leather coat, size 8, $100 or best offer. M41-3568. 1x11 Virtually indestructible Dog Houses, $25. Choice of colors. 843-1083. 11-11 68 Cameron, Yellow. 57,000 miles, excellent condition. Call 845-322-392. Tonganoxie. 11-10 Excellent seats for Nov. 13, Manfred Mann Coll. Data: 864-933-0329 Porsche 194, 1970 model, must sell immediately. Call topline: 1-235-873 or 1-235-879. After sales. CAMERA: Eskata RTL 1000. 50 mm lens, excelent condition. 842-8236. Keep哭ing. 11-12 Realistic 44 BSR turntable. Never used. $35. Call 841-301 for 2 a.m. 1922 Dodge Van carpet and paneled, loaded with extra Mint well-bet. Baldwin, W1-984-5526. Sale price: $349.00 Original handmade coral and turquefie bearer heart sailing silver Best offer Basket 13.12 486. Pat. HELP WANTED Want to save money? Buy your used ear from a certified air conditioner. All service records available. One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Rite Keyboard. Professional sound systems, guitarists, drummers, special effects technicians and more. Board, 1420 W. 23rd. 843-3007. 11-8 36 Ford 4.3 ton truck equipped with 682 auto repair package, w/ windshield wiper, winterized $1200, 1968 Mogulzur 794 good cond., low mileage $700, Motobeche 10 yr. warranty, $399. Come see and see at 255 No. Mich. No. NW. Come see and see at 255 No. Mich. No. NW. OVERSEAS JOBS—summer/year-round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia. Etsail, fields $200- $350. Internship reqs. Bachelor's degree in inform—WT. International Job Center, Dept. K-140. B库 4890, California CA 91704. HENRY's drive-in is in the process of remodeling and are now taking appointments or for employment. Call 843-261-5000 for a preview. Must work at least 20 hours per week and two days weekly or day per month. Starting as a part-time worker. BROADCAST ENGINEER KAUN needs a Broadcast engineer immediate in the field of broadcasting or electronic machine maintenance. For further information, contact the field office or Weekend warehouse in the Sandwich Shoppe to supply in Brugay in the Sandwich Shoppe to be MF, CK, MF, KK, TK, TM, TW, WT. Call Curtis 842-6830 - 4-M-F. 11-11 Part-time foundation work Noones and Staines in person at the VIA Drive In. 1225-11-11 KC STAR Carrier carrier 2 A.M. daily-7 days for emergency economic carousel For appointment call 842-304-9911 Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, working in research, education and assisting in research. Social science back office. Job offered to MK Roberts, Dept. of Human Development 111 St Paul's College, London 3 to 8 p.m. At Equal Opportunity Employment. Qual-*for equiv 2 yrs exp as Research Assistant. HORIZONS HONDA SALES, PARTS, SERVICE 1811 W. oth Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4 TRACIERS at all levels Foreign and Domestic Tactics, Box 1635 Vancouver, was $960. 11-10 AVON- Earn extra money on your own time- Mrs. Selia. 842-8162. Annie. 11-30 Undergraduate assistance, assistants in chemistry and computer science, supervisive and grading in Chemistry 164, 188, 204, 227, 309, 330, 345, 354, 359, 10 hrs per week. Require extensive knowledge of chemistry, including coursework on the grade earned, previous teaching experience, or other relevant experience. Req. BSc or PhD from 1976. The Dept. of Chemistry must have an employer and researcher applications from at least three years prior to application. LOST AND FOUND LOST! One "Jubilee" shattered, gold band, gold disc. $20-$40. Oct 18 in or around Murphy, Simmonsville or Columbus. Mail by mail. At Hoeh Auid and after Louis Falco convert, all ID. e. reward. 841-9855. 11-10 Found a load of clothes at Laudronat at 19:08 & Louisiana. Call 841-267-81. 11-8 Found: Ring in Fraser 11-1. Call 842-996-996 Identify, identify and claim. 11-8 hings identity and cann. Textbook outside Flint. 842-2145. 11-9 Found: Textbook outside Flint. 842-2145 Found: Calculator on 19th and Ninth Bus. Call 842-2145 Found: Calculator on 19th and Nailsmith Bus Call 841-3242 to identify. Found. Salivation Army plastic chain chain with seven keys, two air-filled car keys, and a toy car. Found: set of car keys in 311 Summerfield for Dorl car. Claim at 864-358. 11-10 Identify and claim. From M6-4606. 864-602-12 or leave message at M6-4606. Found: young black female cat at Irving Hill wearing red collar. 843-715 after 11-10 MISCELLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Aice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Aice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday- s, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 11 Mas. NOTICE Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, pan lamps, televisions, clocksonal. Daily 12-5. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. CASABA CAFE-Goed food from scratch. Lunch 10:30-3:30 MW. Mass. Please be a backup door. Please call 911 for emergency help. Redeceren Lutheran Church, 30th and Haskell, invite all students and faculty to our Sunday classes at 10 a.m. in the Library or Study at 10 a.m. we. We have an active college age group. Transportation will be provided if you wish. Please see student handbook. The Vita Drive-In, 1237 W. 6th. Open daily until 11 a.m. Fri., +11 a.m. Sat. until 12 a.m. We service all makes of cars PICKENS AUTO PARTS & SUPPLIES 26th & Iowa 843-1353 CREATIVE SPAMING CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE ●DRYMOUNTING ●STITCHERY ●METAL FRAMES ●RESTORATION Cross Reference Bookstore 842 1553 Mall's Shopping Center DB SKILLT just says we're not the new LEGOR DB SKILLT again says we're not the new LEGOR **Dump and Try!** Drop in and try to work. **Dump and Try!** Drop in and try to work. PERSONAL **EXPLORE** ISRAEL - AFRICA - ASIA - SOUTH Aid to Iraq, Syria and Turkey Al-Azhar University First Award 2015 843-96462 POETRY WANTED for Anthology Includes "The Lost Poetry of Dylan Thomas" P.O. Box 26442 San Francisco, California FIND OUT WHY GAY DANCES ARE THE BEST DANCES ON CAMPUS. Dlue Dance, Saturday, June 13, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas. This will be the last dance until Sunday's Day For No. 296. (Dance) SERVICES OFFERED Girls tired of the three R's (Reading, *Riting and Imagination); Try three other R's (Ra'g, *Rating and Imagination), Rita, *Rita-050* and *Rita-051*. Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a bike that’s not as big as your entire bike, lubricate and adjust your doorkers, brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your tires, and have accessories at time of “tune-up.” Rates: 10 speed $15.00 or 3 or 5 speed $12.50 single speed $18.00, 4-speed $22.50 single speed $18.51, single speed $26. Complete professional maintenance. Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 601, 102, 602, 356, 568, 627, 464. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681. Need a new bike? Come and use the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer. Call 1-800-324-5670 or Lawrence SchirmwCycle CYBER, 9-4 Mon.-Sat. thru April 9; SUN-1-4 1829 W. 6th, 843-683-6011 ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thoughts on and Strategies for Health Research in Los Angeles, CA (2013) 473-8914. *Can't Sew!* See me for all your sewing needs: *All types of all sizes* *847-668-7668* 1217 TYPING Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, mla, electric ppt typewriter, proffessing, spelling typing. Send resume to: stuart.krueger@microsoft.com YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CREWEL 15 East 8th 841-7264 10.5 Monday Saturday Cedarwood Apartments New offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1977 1 & 2 bedroom suites and unfurnished 2414 Oakland 843-1156 VISIONS has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 814-7421 Need an experienced typet? IBM Selective LIT carbon (ribbon). Call at 645-7289. THESIS BINDING COPYING. The House of Usher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us handle the binding & Massachusetts or phone 844-761-3500. Thank you. Individual name: Tracey dissertations welcome Call Joan. 842-917-11 tt Experimented typet **THRESES** ONLY. Type **T** in the field of type of the Karel at 646-411 (dll), **A** at 814-790 (dll) and **B** at 835-792 (dll). EXPERT TYPING. Fast and accurate, reasonable rates,proofing and minor grammatical care. I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4470. New address. WANTED Phone 843-1211 KU Union Lobby Need roommate for spring sem, to share 3 dbm: Phone: 842-6850; $96 - 1/3 slice, or Call 842-6850. 2. studious females needed to share furnished room; 3. male and female students utilized included. Call Birth # 841-7454 11-12 Wanted- fresh grad student to share house w/ 2 studios- fresh grad students close to KU $10 $18 Restaurant needed for very nice riffled apart- ture with $750 per month and $250 per month. Call: 917-865-4000. (Brian) FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS, ROOTS, HATS, JEANS. Ghost Writers. Must have creative ability plus journalistic background. Write Box 20, 11 Flint Hall. University of Kansas, enclosing a file with replies are confidential and will be answered. Two roommates wanted to share 2 bedroom Townhouse. $99/mo. + utilities. 11-9-19 RAASCH SADDLE & MIDDLE SHOP Open 9:30 am to 6:45 pm Open 10:30 am to 7:45 pm AIRLINES BankAmericard Mastercharge 1 SEE ... 802.841 Mastercharge TONY'S IMPORTS- DATESUN 500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444 NAPA For the offer: 1. N.A.P.A. Auto Parts the Do-It Yourselfer we Special Price 1. Specific times 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 843-9696 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. in the summer. Use the student discounts Make Reservations Keep your car healthy + LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 9th and Iowa at SUA Maupintour travel service The Lounge "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." - Bud on Tap Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl e Pool Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday The Chalk Hawk --- Hawaii TRY HILLCREST BILLIARDS - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcock Bowl! Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Attended 8 Monday, November 8, 1976 University Daily Kansan Grant aids library finances Problems for funding student employees at Watson Library have been partially alleviated by a $2,000 addition to the library's budget from the Office of Academic Affairs, Jim Ranz, dean of libraries, said last week. "This money will be enough to get us through 'til the end of the year," Ranz said. "I think we'll make out one way or another, but won't be reducing the hours of the library." The money was granted after the University Senate Libraries Committee asked the University to provide $35,000 to supplement student wages in the library system. The committee indicated that if additional funds weren't provided, it might be possible for a project to move forward. Janet Riley, assistant to Ron Calgaard, vice chairwoman for academic affairs, said the money came from the Office of Academic Affairs because expected work-study funds intended for the library hadn't materialized. The work-study funds were merely suggested as a possible source of funding for the library budget, she said. The $2,000 might be reimbursed to Academic Affairs, Rily said, the University collects additional fees from the state as a result of a higher enrollment this semester. representatives. But they said some of the gulfines provisions were difficult to handle. Fire inspections . . . From page one However, four of the board presidents said that the smoke detection systems also might put a financial strain on their houses. The cost of such a system, according to fire safety equipment companies, ranges from $1,500 to $5,000, and some sorority representatives said they didn't have enough money for the equipment. The detection systems aren't required by the state fire code, but Russ Collins, chief deputy state fire marshal, said the smoke detectors were included as a tradeoff for structural improvements in the houses that would be too expensive to undertake. According to the sorority corporation board presidents, who are responsible for approving financial outlays for their houses, the chief stumping block has been installation of smoke detection systems, and a marshal recommended for all the houses. “It’s going to be very expensive,” Jan Riley, corporation board president for Delta DeltaDelta sorochi, said. “We certainly don’t have that much money available. We might have to take out a short-term loan to pay for it.” Mary Lawrence, board president for Alpha Gamma Delta, also said she didn't know where the money would come from to pay for the system. She said that attempts to comply with the yearly inspections by the city fire department had drained the funds and that they probably would have to make an appeal to alumni for contributions. Another board president, Janis Hutchison of Alpha Phi, said that her house had budgeted money for a smoke detector after the city fire department had requested one last winter, but that now the state wanted a system with 13 of the devices installed. "We didn't expect this at all," Hutchison said. "I doubt very much that we can comply with it." Juliet Gilmore, adviser to the Sigma Kappa house manager, said her house had already complied with almost all the guidelines, but the cost of the smoke detection system could prove to be prohibitive. Wescoe . . . "WE CARE ABOUT fire safety," Gilmore said. "Goodness knows the safety of the girls is the most important thing to us. But this smoke system is going to cost upwards of $2,000 and I just don't know where they expect us to get all that cabbage." In addition to the expense of the system, houses are having trouble soliciting bids because contractors say they are uncertain of what the state wants. From page one A spokesman for a Kansas City, Kan. company that has been working with the sororites said he asked the fire marshal for detailed specifications on smoke detectors two months ago and hadn't yet received them. emerging from a time of trouble, and that certain developments such as the credit-no-credit option and more vocational curriculum at the university level had helped to develitate education. He also said a need existed for more comprehensive course requirements and a more "liberalizing arts education." Science Teachers Wanted for New International Project Expand your knowledge of the natural world by living in a country where you can see animals and the S. Pacific. Many young minds are waiting to discover the wonders of our planet. Please help a Peace Corps Volunteer Free trav. i health./dent. care; 48 allow $300 lunch comfort service. Must be U.S. citizen, SIGN service. Must be U.S. citizen, SIGN RECRUTERS ON CAMPUS ATLAS. Tues., Nov. 16 On EDC, Wed., Nov. 17 Wescoe said the myth that businesses expect a packaged project in university research is flawed. THE STATE, for its part, said it would look at the systems that are submitted for bidding and then approve or disapprove them. Collins said the companies should be able to tell what is required from the guidelines that were sent to the sororities. Four of the six companies contacted said they had systems they were confident would work with them. However, Rick McKernan, director of Greek Management, Inc., an interfraternity purchasing agency that has offered to act as go-between for all Greek houses that are buying smoke detection systems, said the smoke has been very, very vague on what it wants. "I'm almost embarrassed to call and ask the companies for bids because I don't have a concrete thing for them to bid on," McKernan said. "The state wants us to comply with something, but they won't tell us what it is." MCKERMAN SAID that houses choosing to buy their detection systems through Greek Management would pay at least 20 percent less than the normal cost of the system. Another problem has arisen over fire escapes. The fire marshal has said fire escapes must be approved staircases providing a continuous path to the ground. Juan McGee, board president for Chi Oslo *ga sozir*, said it would be dangerous to have a stairway leading from the street into the sleeping rooms. Such an arrangement, McGee said, would make it easier for intruders to enter the house. McGee said she met with Dibbern, who said the house could convert a back stairway into a fire escape to fulfill the requirements. The Chi Omega sorority was the first house to meet with the marshal after the inspections, McGee said, and they felt "very, very positive" about meeting all state regulations. "If the scriottes are having problems, we will meet with them," Collins said. "The level of communication between us and the houses has been acceptable so far." COLLINS SAID the fire manshal's office would reevaluate improvements the sororites thought were impractical, such as fire escapes, but said much would depend on the progress and intentions of the houses in meeting the requirements. "I don't think any of them are dragging their feet on this and I hope we don't run into anything." "BUSINESS IS NOT looking for robots, but a bright minds that have learned how to work." The need for placement education within the factual group of all students is also very important. "There is something obscene about asking a student to mortgage his entire future in order to pay for his education," he said. Wescoe said that the educated mind was the single most important source of energy for the country and that the people who had learned it were the most tremendous responsibility to keep it great. Also presented at the banquet was the Higher Education Leadership Award. The award was given to Paul Wusch, Kingman, a member of the Kansas Board of Regents. It is given annually to a Kansas citizen whose outstanding leadership has contributed to the development of higher education. Following wescoe's speech, the Rusty Leffel Outstanding Student Award was given to Rosalea Postma, SUA president. The award is given each year to a KU student for outstanding contributions either among the ideals of the University. Recognized at the banquet as recipients of Higher Education Service Awards were Donald Alderson, acting vice chancellor for student affairs; Martin Wollmann, director of Health Services; and Kathy Hoggard, director of the KU Information Center. Although a network of underground tunnels connects buildings on the University of Kansas main campus, they aren't the comfort of pedestrians on cold winter days. The tunnels contain steam pipes and electrical and telephone wiring, Rodger Oroke, director of facilities operations of buildings and grounds, said Friday. Pressurized steam from the central power plant is sent through the pipes to heat buildings, and temperatures can get as high as 150 degrees inside the tunnels, he said. "It can be dangerous down there, and have is a definite risk involved," Orokie said. "All workers who go into the tunnels have to be familiar with the entry points in case problems develop. We don't give guided tours." Tony Bier *dee*, steam fitter foreman, has worked in the steam tunnels 19 years. He said the tunnels are made of brick or concrete and vary from four to seven feet in height. "We try to send two meetings at a time down the hall and we weekly at all of the tunnel sail." The first underground tunnel was constructed in the 1890s of brick and stone. Branch tunnels were added to it as new buildings were created. Today the main Health policy issues and their relation to social values will be discussed from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas University. Health program scheduled today wunam May, chairman of the department of religious studies at Indiana University The discussions are part of a conference entitled "Health Care and Human Values: An Inquiry into Health Policy and Social Athletics" by the Alumni Association for Health Care. Underground tunnels not for public use $ ^{O N _ {L Y}} $34¢ Reg. 45c TREAT YOURSELF TO DELICIOUS HOT CORNDOGS Vista RESTAURANT tunnel runs in a direct line from Lindley Hall to Fraser Hall, and tunnels branch off to serve other areas of campus. "If you want to know where the tunnels 1527 West 6th Ph.842-4311 are, look for a clear strip of ground after it' snowed this winter." Oroke said. "You can be fairly sure there's a steam tunnel under there." THIS WEEK TUES. & WED. at the FAST FREE DELIVERY! 841-3100. today's special Free Double Cheese with any large pizza ASK FOR OUR STEW ROCK SWEET WHITE CRUST OR REGULAR WHITE CRUST! HEAVY EDDYS Pizza At the Wheel 507 w.14th Sun.-Thurs.- 4:30 PM to 1:00 Meatball Grinders & Friday & Saturday until 2:00 AM Submarine Sandwiches, too ASK FOR OUR STONE GROUND WHEAT CROSS OR BAKED LAKES WHEAT CROSS. HEAVY EDDYS At the Wheel 507 w.14th Pizza Sun - Thurs. - 4:30 PM to 1:00 Meatball Grinders & SUA Lawrence, Ks. BILLIARDS TOURNAMENT KU Sun., Nov. 14 1:30 Jay Bowl—Kansas Union Trophies for 1st and 2nd place. Entry Fee $2.00 Sign up in the Jay Bowl by 4:00 p.m.Friday, Nov.12. First place winner qualifies for the Region XI Tournament in Cape Girardeau, Mo., Feb. 10-12 For more information call the SUA office or Jay Bowl. KLY'S Issues Ideas Forum AGEISM Exploring Problems of Discrimination Confronting Today's Youth PANEL ON YOUTH: Judy Sardo...Job Service Center Colt Knutson...Juvenile Court Donna Flory...Social & Rehab. Services Linda Suderman...Lawrence High Audience Participation Invited Tues., Nov. 9 7:30 p.m. KU YUE FURNITURE FSDD Audience Participation Invited KU-Y Is Partially Funded by Student Senate Tues., Nov. g 7:30 p.m. Pine Room Union 6th Anniversary SALE MISS STREET DELI OR MAASSACHUSETTS 50¢ OFF— with this Coupon REUBEN SANDWICH Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye. Reg. $2.00 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 The Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th $1.75 with this Coupon Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes--smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Reg. Price $2.10 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETT'S ST. $1.00 OFF— with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. $1.00 OFF—with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. $1.00 OFF — Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Budweiser® presents "Beer Talk" Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Does beer improve with age? Does beer improve with age? What do you say; Definitely? Definitely not? 1. H Well, the Budweiser brewmaster says: Not indefinitely! + WILLOWSTEAD Besides, everything you are always about ageing you'll find in one test. What he means is beer is really only aged while it is in the aging cellars at the brewery; not after it's been bottled! BUDWEISER ORIGINAL EITF. OF Budweiser. A BREWING COMPANY. BARRIER STREET, NEW YORK. MUNICIPAL CITY: NEW YORK. WASHINGTON, DISTRICT: WEST VIRGINIA. CITY: MIDLANDS. STATE: WASHINGTON. REGION: WEST VIRGINIA. from a cold bottle of Beechwood Aged Budweiser. (Time after time after time... ) Get a free copy of the Budweiser "Beer Talk" Booklet Write "Beer Talk" Ashuser-Busch, Inc., St. Louis, Mo. 63118 Most profs see no conflict of interest in book sales By STEVE FRAZIER Under current University of Kansas policies, textbook authors who receive royalty payments can profit from increased sales when they assign their books for their own classes. Some KU officials and professors say such royalty payments are usually insignificant, but others say that a professor who accepts royalties from his own classes is involved in a conflict of interests. "If a professor writes a text, he and his colleagues are torn between choosing the best book and choosing the book that would benefit either himself, his friend or his colleague," Francis Tuggle, associate professor of computer science and business administration, said yesterday. TUGGLE WROTE the computer science text formerly used at KU, but he said he didn't accept any royalties from books sold to KU students. Grid Publishing Co., Tuggle's publisher, paid him 15 per cent of the retail price for each book sold elsewhere and sent royalties computed from that. He also sent to the Kansas University Endowment Association "I would like to see that as a general rule—to insist that locally generated royalties go to some charitable institution, although I know some would argue it as an infringement of academic rights." Tylerguess. Oscar Haugh, chairman of the Academic Procedures and Policies Committee, said the question of a professor receiving royalties from sales to his own class has never come before his "HOWEVER, I THINK it ought to," Haugh said. Mike Davis, University attorney, said he couldn't comment on any possible conflicts of interest because he represented faculty members. "This is something that is tremendously important. I do think there is a possible problem with conflicts A list compiled by the Kansas Union Bookstore, students and faculty members shows that more than 20 KU faculty members have written texts used at KU. The University of Minnesota department of political science decided several years ago that "a faculty member shouldn't profit from his classes because there is an inherent feeling of conflict of interests," Samuel Kristlov, department chairman, said. KRISLOV SAID political science professors at Minnesota either returned local royalties to "We didn't develop the policy because of any particular incident, we just thought nobody should have any reason to be suspicious," Krislov said. "It was one way to resolve the question that I don't see what it is." students or donated the money to charities or scholarship funds. Krislov said there also was a university wide requirement at Minnesota that a faculty textbook author must make a formal application to receive royalties from local sales. PHIL MEKNIGHT, director of the Office of Instructional Resources, said KU did not need much He said the advantages of having a professor who was challenged by his own text in the classroom outweighed the disadvantages of possible conflict of interest or the temptation for excessively duplication of text material in lectures. "It could constitute a conflict of interest, but the rottytees are so small that it's really not that big, as an example." ALTHOUGH ADVANCE payments, minimum book sales and royalty percentages all vary with the author and the text. Esquire magazine reported in 2014 that most of the texts are on to a good thing, and they know it." Royalty payments usually range from 10 to 20 per cent, according to both Equip and several local textbook authors. At the extreme is Paul Samulson, an M.I.T. professor who wrote a basic economics text used at KU and many other colleges and universities. Since his first edition came out in 1948, Samulson has received $6 million in royalties, Esquire said. See TEXTBOOKS page three PLEASANT KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Vol.87 No.56 Student architects propose city hall Tuesday, November 9, 1976 See story page five Bernice Staff photo by DAVE REGIER Dukeses' manor The chancellor's house, remodeled in 1989, is used by the Dykes as a home and a place to entertain University guests. Mrs. Dykes, sitting in the first floor entryway, has decorated the house with Oriental artwork and accent pieces. Double duty for KU White House By DAVID JOHNSON 1532 Lilac Lane It doesn't exactly have the same ring as 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue or 10 Downing St., but the house that campus-bound students walk by on southeast campus is the University's equivalent of an executive mansion. Since 1939 when Elizabeth Watkins gave her home, the "outlook," to KU, 1523 Lilac Lane has been the address of every chancellor from Deane Malott to Derek Dokes In addition, new drapes were added and some rooms were recaptured uplants. New DURING THE interim after Chancellor E. Laurence Chapman resigned in August 1972 and Dykes took office in July 1973, the house was vacant. Then acting Chancellor Raymond Nichols, who elected not to move into the house, and his wife, Clytze, coordinated an extensive remodeling of the 60-year old home. And considering the improvements and remodeling done to the house during Chancellor Dykes' occupancy and the nine months it was vacant before he came to KU, students and staff would sit together for sometime as a home and a place to hold University entertainment functions. Every room in the house was repainted off-white by a Building and Grounds crew, and the main floor was recarpeted in gold. The room is the first living room were reupholstered. mirrors were installed in a bedroom, the bathrooms and a dressing room, and some hallways. Exterior work on the house included repairing and repainting trimwork and replacing some large cedars in the front yard with low-growing bushes. MARTIN JONES, associate vice chancellor for business affairs, said recently that a balcony also was repaired and steps were built from the third floor to a lower level. Additional electrical outlets were installed and doors were hung on some bookhelves. Nancy Dykes, wife of the chancellor, said she was happy with the remodeling and was Jones said Buildings and Grounds' total tab including labor and materials was $17,733. Of that, the University reimbursed Buildings and Grounds$4,122 for material costs and $6,507 for out of the University's special repairs, improvements and remodeling fund. The remodeling costs also were supplemented by the Kansas University Endowment Association, Todd Seymour, president, said the Endowment Association of the University of the Simmertree Building Fund, used for various University building projects. ALTHOUGH HIS records aren't specific, Seymour said, he thinks the money was largely used to buy carpeting for the chancellor's residence. grateful to Clytie Nichols for "devoting her time so unseasonal" to improving the home. Mrs. Dykes asked a new heating and air conditioning system was installed this spring. The last extensive remodeling of the chancellor's house was done in 1969. Then, two bathrooms and two standing closets were converted from an office on the first floor. The kitchen was completely remodeled and two large refrigerators were installed to preserve gift flowers and to keep food for parties. Mrs. Dykes' taste in Oriental art is reflected in the two Japanese paintings in One full-time maid and a half-time cook are employed by the University to help with daily maintenance, reception and parties. Other staff and support staff repairs were done by Building and Grounds. Materials for the work, which isn't completed yet, have cost $6393.35, according to records at the University's Purchasing Office. See WHITE HOUSE page seven Although the division isn't strict, the Dykes entertain on the first floor and live on the second floor. The furnishings on the first floor belong to the state, Mrs. Dykes said, and those on the second floor are theirs. MRS. DYKES SAID a dining room where the Dykes eat their family meals also was on Monday. By JOHN MUELLER Lawrence's proposed Haskell Loop was decisively rejected last night by an East Lawrence citizens' group that formerly supported the $2.5 million roadway project. Group votes against loop The East Lawrence Improvement Association (ELIA), a citizens' group which voted in 1794 to have the city use federal Neighborhood Development Funds to buy land for the loop, repudiated by a 68-36 margin its earlier backing of the loop. The vote is expected to influence whether federal officials release money to start loop The group's decision came after nearly three hours of often heated debate. Loop supporters and opponents filled the East Lawrence Community Center meeting room, 10th and Delaware streets, to trade messages of city officials who favor the loop. ELIA'S VICE president, Ed Down, 909 New York ST. opened the meeting with a defense of the loop. He said that "sometimes you have to hurt some things to really make progress." Down put a sign in front of him that said the loop was a Berlin Wall. But Barbara Wilkins, 2025黛贤 St, ELIA president, argued against the loop. "I do feel this is going to ruin the neighborhood," she said. "It's pitiful with the (East Lawrence houses) that we have to go there and not the rehabilitation route." Willits said the loop, which is designed to carry traffic from 11th Street and Haskell Avenue to Seventh and Connecticut streets, would increase traffic in East Lawrence neighborhoods, destroy 18 houses that are in them, and probably harm neighborhood schools. "HOPE SINGERELY that of you in a brainwashed or intimidated," Willis said. Her statement was a reference to Down's allegation last weekend that the East Lawrence Citizens for Housing Preservation, a group Willis belongs to, had been targeted by people 'from East Lawrence who were "musically ignorant" about the Haskell Loop. Lance Burr, a Lawrence attorney who owns land at Seventh and New York streets in East Lawrence, also spoke against the loon. "Aren't we talking about moving goods in traffic truck so those of us in a capitalistic society can make more money?" Burr said. "We're not living conditions that are ridiculous." KYLE ANDREGG, Lawrence community development director, said that the loop would be a buffer zone between industrial and residential areas of East Lawrence. Andregg also criticized what he called "unfair shots" taken by loop opponents. Andregg said that opponents of the loop had been using a community development loan that Down had received to hurt Down's credibility. A number of city officials attended the meeting, including Carl Mibek and Barkley Clark, city commissioners; Fred Pence, mayor; and Buford Watson, city manager, Mibble and Pence are members of ELI and split their time with Pence for the last year. The Mibble is manager. KEN KALLENBACH, employee of Oblinger Smith Corp. of Wichita, defended his company's environmental impact statement that favored the loop. According to Kallenbach, the city had wanted the loop since its 1939 Comprehensive Plan. "We didn't try to sell the statement, we just said it's there. How do we make it better?" Members of the audience disagreed with Kallenbach often, as well as challenging Down's statement that "the main reason for the loop is to build incentive." Several members of the audience said they didn't understand how a road could build in- See LOOP page three Kansan posts to be opened Applications for positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester Kanan are available in 105 Flint Hall, the Student Senate office in room 105B of the Kansas Union and the offices of the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women. The application deadline is 5 p.m., Nov. 17. Interviews will begin Nov. 19. Applicants will be notified of the time and place of their interviews. Salary increases of 5%-7% likely Bv BARBARA ROSEWICZ A future increase in faculty salaries at the University of Kansas apparently will be somewhere between the 7 per cent recommended by the Kansas Board of Regents and the 5 per cent suggested by Gov. Robert Bennett. KU's budget will be reviewed this week by James Bibb, state budget director, and Bennett Nov. 18 and 19. Budget recommendations will be presented to the 1977 Kansas Legislature, which convenes in January. After Bennett's final recommendations, KU officials will prepare a defense, if necessary, of the proposed 7 per cent salary increase. DEL SHANKEL, executive vice chancellor, conceded last week that the salary proposal might have a tough time in the legislature. However, he said he didn't expect the increase to fall below Bennett's proposed $3 million. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said he thought the legislature would appropriate at least a 6 per cent salary increase for Regents' schools. Wendell Lady, R-Wichita and past chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said he supposed that the House would be more than Bennett's suggested 5 per cent. One of KU's major defenses of the salary increase could be KU's runk in comparison to its peers. A REPORT FROM THE Office of Institutional Research and Planning has indicated that KU ranked 12th among 14 state-supported, Midwestern universities in salaries for professors, associate professors and faculty members. University ranked out of instructors' salaries. Kansas Regents' schools have received salary increases for the past three years in an effort to bring them up to par with comparable Midwestern universities. Salaries were increased 10 per cent the first two years and 8 per cent last year, after a 2 per cent cut by the legislature. FUNDS FOR faculty salaries, including increases, are appropriated to the University in a lump sum. The increases are determined and distributed once a year through individual schools and departments. Last year's salary increases were distributed according to the seniority of the employees. According to statistics for continuing faculty (these faculty members who stay on year to year) given in the American Association of University Professors bulletin, KU instructors received a 12 per cent increase last year, assistant professors, 9.9 per cent; associate professors, 10.9 per cent; and full professors, 9.9 per cent. ALTHOUGH THE legislature appropriated 8 per cent for overall faculty funding, some faculty members received more than 8 per cent in merit raises. The See SALARY page five Mary CHESTER LILLIAN MURPHY Cheryl Wyckoff, Overland Park junior. learns American Sign Language in a noncredit class sponsored by the KU occupational therapy department. See story page seven. Staff photos by DAVE REGIER 2 Tuesday, November 9, 1976 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press Refinery blazes in KC KANSAS CITY, Kan.—A fire touched off by a massive explosion in a large storage tank burned for almost 12 hours and caused an undetermined amount of damage yesterday at the Phillips Petroleum co. refinery in the Fairfax Industrial District. The blast ripped through the 42,000-gallon tank about 12:18 a.m., throwing a wall of fire nearly 500 feet into the air and sending shock waves felt 15 miles away. Flames boiled out of the tank, which contained 630,000 gallons of natural or light gasoline, a blending ingredient used in motor oils. About 100 Phillips employees and 40 Kansas City, Kan., firemen fought to contain the blaze, which burned itself out about 11 a.m. no one was injured. Investigators said the cause of the fire hadn't yet been determined. Killer's execution delayed SALT LAKE CITY—The Utah Supreme Court issued a stay of execution yesterday for convicted killer Gary Mark Gilmore, despite two requests by the court to release him. The court didn't specify the length of the delay which was requested by two court- appointed attorneys. The court said it would review the case before deciding the length of the stay. The court also had to hear Monday. Gilmore was convicted last month of slaying a Provo motel clerk July 22 and is charged with the slaying of a service station attendant July 21. Gilmore, who has spent 18 of his 35 years in penal institutions, said he wanted to face the firing squad next Monday rather than spend the rest of his life in prison. Senate study continues on Events group authority By SANDY DECHANT A Student Senate committee study into the authority of the University Events Committee raised many questions last night but failed to provide any final answers. The Student Rights, Responsibilities and Privileges Committee met last night with three members of the University Events Committee to assess the Events Committee's jurisdiction. The controversy on the committee's authority arose in mid-September when two men playing guitars on campus were asked by University police to move because they didn't have the Events Committee's permission to play. SHE SAID THAT people who wanted to hold an event on campus were requested but not required to approve it with the University Events Committee. If the request is for an area and time when there is a strong possibility that someone will be disturbed, the committee advises against the event, Smith said. She said that if a group whose event was approved with the committee encountered problems with the police because a community would interfere, the group would intercede on the group's behalf. If the group ignored the denial of its request and was arrested, the Events Committee wouldn't intercede. Smith said. She said that complaints were filed by private citizens with the KU Police Dept., which investigated the problem. The Events Department investigated the problem before it starts, she said. Smith said that if the guitarsist had checked with the Events Committee before they played on campus, the committee would have a greater possibility that they would disturb classes. KATHY HOGGARD, Events Committee member said that the committee didn't mind. "We may deny approval, but we do not enforce anything." Hogger said. However, members of the Events Committee said that the only people to whom the committee had been responsible were the Chief Justice and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor. The Student Senate committee study was began in late September because the Senate Rules and Regulations put the Events Committee under its jurisdiction. STEVE McMURRY, the Senate committee chairman, said that it mattered little whose jurisdiction the Events Committee was under. He said the Senate committee was more concerned with an understanding of the committee and its relation to the University. By BARRY MASSEY McMurray said the committee would meet next week to continue discussion of the next steps. Committee rehashes move of annual KU-MU game Although the committee discussed the reasoning and the future of the possible future of this project. "It doesn't look like a reality at this point," she said. Jill Grubbish, chairman of the sports committee, said that she thought the issue The possibility of the game's move was first disclosed at an Oct. 29 meeting of the Student Senate, when the Senate passed a resolution expressing its opposition to such a proposal. The issue of a possible move of the annual University of Kansas—University of Missouri football game to Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., resurfaced last night at a meeting of the Student Senate Sports Committee. SINCE THAT time, some board members of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC) who had been discussing the game's possible move with MU officials were suddenly unable may have seriously jurorized a decision yet, no completed proposal has been made. SHE SAID THAT although no decision has been made by KUAC on the possible move, because of adverse public reaction, it didn't look as if the move would *e*-made. Dave Shapiro, a student member of the KUAC board, said that because of opposition at MU toward the move and because Lawrence merchants would lose a substantial amount of business if the game weren't played at Lawrence, it appeared that the game wouldn't be moved to Kansas City. Mo. The reason for the possible move, according to Grubaugh, was basically that of money. She said she had been told the intake of money from the game each year would double if the game were moved to Arrowhead Stadium. ALSO DISCUSSED at the committee meeting was intramural guidelines now being written by the Senate Recreation Advisory Board. Shapiro said the board was trying to organize guidelines for eligibility requirements, expulsion of participants and matters concerning the intramural program. He said the board was considering the creation of a judicial board comprised of nine members. "The people participating in the sport will be overrun themseleves." Shanion said. The advisory board will meet to continue its work on the intramural guidelines at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the Oread Room at the Kansas Union. DATSUN DATSUN FOREIGN AUTO PARTS DATSUN DATSUN JAMES GANG FOREIGN AUTO PARTS JAMES JAMES GANG GANG 304 Locust NOW OPEN M-F, 8 to 5:30 SATURDAY SATURDAY 843-8080 AFTERNOONS 8:00-5:00 CHICAGO (AP) — The deterioration of the nation's troubled central cities can be stopped if Jimmy Carter puts the full weight on state and federal strategy, by city mayor; puts said yesterday. Mayors say Carter can ease city woes The mayors said they supported creation of an Urban Development Bank, federal reorganization to reduce the paperwork enawaes city halls and more money. Representatives of President-elect Jimmy Carter and Vice President-elect Walter Mondale the mayors' shopping mall in line with much of Carter's thinking. The U.S. Conference of Mayors yesterday concluded a two-day brainstorming session on priorities to present Congress and Carter. Conference officials said they were seeking a meeting with Carter to discuss their urban plan. CONFERENCE PRESIDENT Kenneth Gibson of Newark, N.J., said the proposed National Urban Investment Program earned its title because of "the return" the nation would receive through urban recovery. It was Carter's help and that of the Democrat controlled Congress that the mayors were actively seeking by meeting here so soon after Carter's election. The Urban Development Bank, part of the plan, would be modeled after the World Bank, which extends low-cost aid to foreign nations. It would provide loans to businesses and to cities for economic projects. Mayor Abraham Beame of New York expressed confidence that Carter would be a successful leader. "There was no deal, except we needed to do for the cities what President Ford should have done, but did not." Beame, who served as governor during his city's financial crisis, said. to the mayor's initiative. He said Carter's concern was "real, not a political payoff." None of the 100 mayors meeting in Chicago expect Carter to adopt their entire plan. They said what they were looking for was for Carter "to set a tone of concern" similar to that set by Lyndon Johnson in pressing civil rights issues during the 1960s. French soldier is shot by dog; no charges filed LUNEVILLE, France (AP)—A French soldier was slightly wounded in the shoulder Friday by a rifle shot triggered by a dog, police said. The dog belonged to a 17-year-old hunter who was firing from an upstairs window of his home at practice targets he had set up in the garden. The dog, apparently excited by the shooting, jumped up and touched the trigger as his master prepared to fire again. The dog took a member of a passing army platoon. British official heads home GENEVA (AP)—British conference chairman Ivan Richard flew home to London late yesterday to consult on how to prevent stalemated talks on Rhodesia's future from collapsing into a guerrilla war solution. The police said yesterday that they were satisfied the shooting was an accident, and the police had no reason to believe it. Richard said he was "not at all despondent." But the conference appeared locked in. "We have a great deal of faith," A spokesman said Richard would return today to try to set up another working day. Richard met separately during the weekend with leaders of the conference's five delegations. But he failed to win support for a proposed March 1, 1978, deadline on achieving black majority rule in Rhodesia, a rebel British colony. A spokesman said Richard couldn't make contact with representatives of the five black African countries: Angola, Zambia, Tanzania, Botswana and Mozambique. The presidents of those countries met in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania, over the weekend and are likely way for Rhoeasian blacks to gain power through continued guerrilla war. The black Rhodesian nationalist leaders refused to consider the proposed British deadline or to side-step the issue and go on to other matters. The blacks maintain that Rhodesia is 278,000 whites must give up their positions by November and less than 12 months. The Rhodesians whites have refused to compromise much below a two-year minimum transition period. BRITCHES CORNER CHRISTMAS PREVIEW SALE Coming Soon! 843 Mass. 843-0454 Thurs. 10 a.m.—8:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Is returning to Lawrence after a sellout performance in Kansas City for a concert in Hoch Auditorium. Jimmy Spheeris New Math Teachers are Wanted for Overseas Project Friday, 8:30 p.m., Nov. 12 Tickets are: $5.00 in advance Presented by SUA General Admission $6.00 day of Show REMINDER: High probability of good experience as a math teacher in a country of the U.S. and Canada, S. Pacific as a Peace Corps Volunteer. Free Irae; health/dent. Volunteer. Free travel; small, smart comfort, lil. allow.; $3000 stipend 2 years service. Must be teaching degree not needed, but math required. SIGN UP NOW ed. degree required. SIGN UP NOW CRUTERIS ON CAMPUS AT LAKES. Nov. 16 On Educ. Wed., Nov. 17. The KU Backgammon Club meets every day, at 7 p.m., in the Oream Room, Kansas State University. 7:00 to play in the tournament BRING YOUR BOARDS Issues & Ideas Forum KULY'S Issues & Ideas Forum AGEISM: Exploring Problems of Discrimination Confronting Today's Youth PANEL ON YOUTH: Judy Sardo...Job Service Center Colt Knutson...Juvenile Court Donna Flory...Social & Rehab. Services Linda Suderman...Lawrence High Audience Participation Invited Tues.. Nov. 9 7:30 p.m. Pine Room Union KU-Y Is Partially Funded by Student Senate Tues., Nov. 7:30 p.m. Pine Room Union IS "ANY KIND OF A JOB" ALWAYS GOING TO BE GOOD ENOUGH FOR YOU? Sure, you can make the car payments and still have money in your pockets. Is that all you'll want? Think about it. Think what you could do as a computer technician . . . or a helicopter mechanic . . . an accountant or an electronics technician . . . or one of more than a hundred technical and administrative specialties YOU CAN LEARN - while you earn regular pay in the Air Force. Consider the stimuli, like vacation and other benefits, like paid vacation, the finest medical care. It's a great way to serve your country. Talk with your Air Force recruiter today. Msgt. Rudy Cleveland 842 Massachusetts Avo. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 Ph: (913) 843-3000 Air Force. A Great Way of Life Air Force... A Great Way of Life 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 T Kl Every make thе There, t. The p joint ae astronon Lawrent Steve astronon said ye observa most of number determi No KI total, bu at the KI KU-AL copies a copies an AMON book by structor, tructoor McGo McGo yesterd. Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358 Sun.- Frida Tuesday, November 9, 1976 3 University Daily Kansan Textbook sales . . . From page one 58 No KU author approaches Samelson's total, but Steve Gewitt, textbook manager at the Kansas Union Bookstore, said some KU authors consistently sell up to 2,000 copies of their books each year to KU students. AMONG THESE are a physics laboratory book by Glen McGonigle, physics instructor, and Kenneth Armitage's introductory biology manual. McGonicle was unavailable for comment yesterday. Armitage, professor of physiology and cell biology, said his manual earned about $1.000 each year in royalties at a rate of 10 per cent of the wholesale price. He said that he donated the royalties to the Endowment Association to finance his graduate students' research. BEATRICE WRIGHT, professor of "It seemed to me to be the best use of the money." Armitage said. "University activity generated the royalties, so I think it should go back in." KU opens starry eyes Every clear Friday night, about 39 people make their way to the roof of Lindley Hall. The public stargazing sessions are the joint venture of the KU department of astronomy and the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence (AAL). Steve Shawl, associate professor of astronomy and director of the observatory, said yesterday, that the group used the observatory's eight-inch reflector telescope to survey the sky. The number of qualified personnel available determined whether more telescopes were used. The observatory has seven telescopes used. The observatory has seven telescopes. Viewers get to Lindley's roof by going to room 506 and climbing the stars. Members of the staff work in AAL supervise the star gazing session. Some of the sights include double stars, star clusters and other galaxies, he said. One featured sight for stargazers this month is the planet Jupiter, which rises above the eastern horizon after sunset. It can also be seen in the southwestern sky after sunset. The observatory is open to the public from 8 to 10 p.m. every clear Friday. psychology, said she donated the royalties for physical rehabilitation programs. Leland Pritchard, professor of economics, said he received 16 per cent royalty payments for the text he used in his money and banking class. He said there was no conflict of interest involved because his book is used at several other universities. "It would be questionable if the text were used only at KU," Pritchard said. "If a text is used at other places, that means it is a good book and it should be used here." FAST FREE DELIVERY! 841-3100 today's special Free Mushrooms with any large pizza ASK FOR OUR STONE GROUND SWEET WHEAT CRUST! OR NUBLE WHITE CAST. HEAVY EDDYS Pizza At the Wheel 507 w.14th Sun.- Thurs. = 4:30 PM to 1:00 Friday & Saturday until 2:00 AM Meatball Grinders & Submarine Sandwiches, too John Bremner, professor of journalism whose book is required in most editing classes, said he wouldn't comment because he had already seen the faculty was too involved with the Kansan. Stanley Shumway, professor of music theory and composition, said his text was used by about 80 colleges. He said the 10 per year courses he taught were an integral part of KU each year was an insignificant sum. Hillesheim, professor of education, said that the book was an anthology and that he had to split the royalties with another author. The book received five per cent royalty payments. THE BOOKSTORE sells about 300 new copies of James Hillems' "m" in *Theory and Practice* in the History of American Literature, each year at $13.50 a copy, Genuity出版。 ASK FOR OUR STONE GROUND WARM WHITE TOAST OR REMEASURE WHITE CRUSH. HEAVY EDDYS At the Wheel 507 w.14th Pizza Sun.-Thurs. - 4:30 PM to 1:00 Meatball Grinders & "It's so small—I certainly hope it wouldn't be considered a conflict of interest." DOWN SAID AFTER the meeting that "hopefully, this will vote for cool down the opposition, so that they not only think of starts, but also start to think with their heads." In other business, commissioners will hear the appraiser's reports for public improvements. Most of the improvements are for street paving and sidewalks, sanitary sewer and storm sewer improvements in the Pioneer Ridge, Alvamar and Deerfield Park districts of northwest Lawrence. The Federal Highway Administration and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development will decide early next year whether Lawrence receives funds for the decision will be used, in part, on public reaction to the loop from groups such as ELIA. TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA COMMISSIONERS also will officially consider an ordinance that adopts the parking changes decided by the commissioners two weeks ago for members of two university of Kansas fraternities. the fraternities, Phi Delta Theta and Phi Kappa Sigma, lost 24 parking spaces in the 1600 block of Edgehill Road because firemen said they couldn't fit one of their large trucks by the curb if a fire broke out. Alvarmar residents have objected that the PUD revision would cause an increase in traffic and would disrupt the view of the golf course. A staff report of the planning commission. modification in the Alvamar PUD would change its land use designation for a 10-acre area, providing 14 single-family lots and open space around a nearby golf course. Although the meeting is expected to last at least four hours, it starts at '1:30 instead of 7. Another meeting Wednesday may be called. We should consider all of the rehearing items tonight. Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. The planning commission has said, however, that present traffic around Alvamar on Quail Creek Drive and Tam O'Shanker Drive is partially a result of the PUD revisions to the employees. The PUD revision would completely eliminate this employee traffic. dividual initiative, as Down had said it could during the debate. Automobile Insurance DEMO SALE Save Up To $800 on a good selection of TOYOTA DEMOS. Corona 5-Door Wagon Corolla Wagon Corolla Liftback Deluxe LAWRENCE TOYOTA Lawrence Auto Plaza Ph. 842-2191 TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA Loop . . . Alvamar is between West 15th and 23rd streets, west of Kasaldo Drive. The proposed Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, said yesterday that most of the PUD and rezoning items proposed by the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission at its last meeting were routine. He said, however, that a PUD revision in the Alvamar area has caused controversy among Alvamar residents. From page one --stop by for a closer look at the new Carousel! City commissioners will face a lengthy agenda when they meet at 7:30 tonight to consider a number of rezoning items and Unit Development (PUD) revisions. We Write All Risks I Commission to review planning items 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 We've moved 3 Now open . . a beautiful new Carousel. We've expanded our floor space, and completely changed our look! You really ought to stop in for a closer look. We're only six doors down from our old location. master charge the corporate name Your BANKAMERICARD worldwide bank Malls Shopping Center 23rd & Louisiana A TOTALLY NEW CAROUSEL CHARGE Store Hours Mon. & Thurs. 10-8:30 Tues., Wed., Fri. & Sat. 10-6 carousel 4 Tuesday, November 9, 1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. Spray laws needed There's no doubt that the use of chemical pesticides and herbicides has dramatically improved crop yields throughout the world. Without them, the world hunger situation would surely be much worse than it is. However, environmentalists and health experts have warned of the dangerous effects of such chemicals. Many chemicals have been banned or weakened after it was proved that they posed threats to human safety or to the ecological balance in nature. THE CONTINUING debate about the use of these chemicals recently has arisen in four south-central Kansas counties. During the spring, wheat farmers there resorted to large-scale aerial crop spraying to control a damaging attack of army cutworms and greenbugs. The Kansas Department of Agriculture estimates that pesticides were applied to 1.4 million acres there, about $20 million worth of wheat to be saved. Yet, because of the carelessness or stupidity of a few of the fliers who applied the spray, yet a higher price may have been paid for that wheat. IN THEIR rush to save the crops, some sprayers forgot basic instructions for the chemicals' use. Many used too much chemical on each acre. (One chemical widely used, called parathion, is so toxic that a teaspoonful absorbed through the skin can kill a person.) The sprayers employed the chemicals, and others sprayed in high winds, causing the spray to drift to inhabited areas or farm ponds. The result was a great deal of damage in the four-county area. There were animal deaths, losses of hundreds of thousands of fish, and reports of human illnesses caused by the spray. The event was covered by the copyrighted story that there were more than 100 instances of people being sprayed while at work in open areas, in cars on highways and, in one case, in a loaded school bus on its way from school. Fortunately, no one received a lethal dose of the spray, even though a few people required medical attention. INVESTIGATORS say the damage can't be measured accurately in dollars. The loss of a private fishing pond or one's favorite dog is hard to put a price tag on, as are one's fears and concerns with asthma hazards that the spray can cause. The Star reported that some federal and state officials have accused the state department of agriculture of trying to whitewash an investigation of the damage. Department officials deny the charge and say many of the damage claims are exaggerated. The department also has said it does not have the necessary legal authority to deal with pesticide misuse, although it licenses spravers. One federal investigator said the department almost has a built-in conflict of interest because it serves both as an enforcement officer and as the enforcer of pesticide rules. WHAT IS clear is that if the department of agriculture has no authority to punish those responsible for the damage, then it or some other department should be granted authority immediately. The whitewash charge should be thoroughly investigated and, if proved true, there should be some major changes in the department. Farmers need pesticides, which have been proven safe if used correctly. The same chemicals that caused so much harm last spring recently have been applied to the same areas with no reports of damage. But the public also needs protection from foolhardy or careless application of chemicals. Strong legislation followed by vigorous enforcement is needed to prevent such unnecessary and harmful situations from occurring again. By John Fuller Contributing Writer There is a large, glossy pamphlet out that tells you how to get taxpayer money to mess around with other people's children. Put out by the National Youth Alternatives Project, this publication is called "Stalking the Large Green Grant: A Fund Baising Opportunities Agencies," and on its cover there is a blowup of part of a Federal Reserve note. THE YOUTH Alternative Project centers its attention on runaways and works with shelters which have been established for them. With names like Yellow Brick Road, Grey Street and Looking Glass Family Crisis Intervention Center, they conjure up a vision of a dreadful melange of the viler sor of ordained youth worker: charlatans from the (ugh) human potential movement, the more wildess sort of social drug addicts who can't throw off the juvenilia of the 1960s. Like many of the earlier entrepreneurs in social work, the people building up this new industry are honest by their lights and oblivious to the objectives that ought to be raised. The people who do not accept money for these purposes. After all, running away from home isn't a serious problem unless the rest of us make it one. If minimum wage and health, safety and other standards are not employed, it's difficult to see why the state (that is, the government) should be concerned about runaways, at least those over a certain age. What's important is that runaways, with clergy stocked to stop their schooling, receive a practical way to resume their studies after they've had their fun and their flair. A system of shelters, stocked with clergymen, various species of animals and social workers, most likely acts to encourage runaways. THE ALARMING thing about Stalking the Large Green Grant Youth agencies criticized Carter pardon incomplete Some might argue against such a pardon right away, saying it would end Carter's honeymon and divide the country. However, it is important that Carter act appropriately if he doesn't deliver in him certainly be lost if he does not deliver on the one promise he can keep. After all, it isn't going to be easy to reduce inflation and unemployment to 3 or 4 per cent and balance the budget. Referencing the Fed's latest report, it will be a quite trick. Making detente a two-way street while cutting the defense budget will require another good amount of sleight of hand. WE SHOULD be patient while waiting for this magic act to materialize. But there is one promised Carter trick we shouldn't have to wait on. One of the big questions these days is whether Jimmy Carter can deliver on his promises, and, if so, how soon. He did such a good job of promising things that it would be almost unfair to expect him to do everything he said he would. Carter has said he will pardon the estimated 4,000 draft resisters who still live in Canada and other foreign countries. That won't take any secret powers. As soon as you go to a new state, January, he need only say the word (and sign a document) and the deed will be done. that his pardon of Richard Nixon was justified because he put Watergate behind us in the water. I am not sure that those who resisted the draft or who deserved their units once drafted did the right thing. But I am sure that the leaders who sent more and more people to the war effort in Cambodia did the wrong thing. No one has forced those leaders to exile themselves. MOREOVER, it is long past time that America finished the Vietnam story. The United States will never forget it. True, the resisters and deserters broke the law, the leaders, in most cases, didn't. But if a terrorist wanted to attack a city, the law, not unlike Richard Nixon, suffered enough? Greg Hack Contributing Writer SOME PEOPLE can't see it that way. Many fathers who served during World War II and Korea can't understand why those who said so to Vietnam service should be "taken back." Mothers who waited for their sons to come back from war, and for their sons to come back from Vietnam, may wonder why resisters and deserters should be hardened. But there are also parents and brothers and sisters who wish that their relatives—who couldn't bring themselves to fight in a war—can come home again. Many Vietnam veterans wonder just what they were fighting for and don't blame those who didn't fight. Are those who violated draft and service laws during Vietnam really worse than those who did so during World War I and World War II? If anything, the Vietnam violators are better, for their war was at best questionable, unlike the world wars. THE RESISTERS of the world wars were given amnesty. Is America now less cruel? Are these people really less deserving of a pardon? They are the people who didn't have the money and education to leave the country, the people who weren't afraid of their consequences of their actions, the people who at least tried to fight—being human—crashed. Besides the 4,000 overseas to whom Carter has promised pardons, there are almost 800,000 Vietnam veterans with bad discharges, a million men who could be indicted for not registering for the draft, 12,000 overt resisters in the United States and countless deserters. To them Carter has promised only a case-by-case review. TO SHOW true compassion and leadership, Carter should keep his promise to pardon those overseas, and he should go a step further by giving an equal break to the almost two million others who violated laws concerning Vietnam. We shouldn't forget Vietnam, lest its mistakes be repeated, and forgiveness is needed. is the number, variety and nature of the federal giveaway programs aimed toward youth. It is important that the federal government buries names like the Office of Youth Development, it is hard to foresee any limit to the information functions in the relationships which was once a state of life through which most of us go in our journeys to the grave, has made the pathological condition with its programs—medical, social workcal and psychological. The pathologicalization of the human race vanished, and you think I么m Nicholas Von Hoffman (c) 1974 King Features Syndicate between older children and their families. Take the Michigan Coalition of Runaway Services, an entity that didn't exist four years ago and now has a director, an assistant director, a technical assistant specialist, a part-time training specialist and another individual along with a budget that has moved up from zero to close to half a million dollars. Stalking the Large Green Grant tells us, "The coalition members have recently decided that providing runaway services should be seen as only part of its function, and the coalfaction should be more intrusive by young people's problems and needs in general." THE CLASSIC way for hungry social workers and others engaged in the taxation process is pathologize the victims—that is the "clients" or recipients of these services. Thus, old age, engaging in hyperbole, I cite the case of James, a school boy sentenced to drug medication for hyperkinesia although he displayed none of the symptoms of the disease. How is this case represented as a quote from the report of the chief审察 who examined James. The agency began making diagnoses of the kids who came there to play basketball, even in, the words of a social worker who tried to stop what was going on, "No client had been advised of the agency's intention to play basketball" of the agency's intention of 'cooperating' with the appropriate city and state agency by sending in diagnoses. Since the kids came here for recreation it was unfair for them to be diagnosed. When I send my own kid to camp or to the "N" to swim, etc. I would be asked to be informed about the existence of such a file on people who come and use services innocently, and then have a folder made up on them that can be damaging to them in later life." "James showed no hyperactivity either in my office or in the waiting room. He was not restless or fidgety. His attention and concentration were good, and he wasn't distractable. There was no thought or affect disorder. Recommendation: acceptance for treatment; program as well as pharmacotherapeutic treatment based on the diagnosis of hyperkinetic reaction of childhood." THIS CASE is cited by Richard A. Cloward and Frances Fox Piven in a recently published book called "Radical Children," which costs $2.95 paperback. They also included an example of a social agency, originally set up to provide recreation for kids, deciding it could get more funding for children to health a huge growth industry. No symptoms, no clinical No reason to think the child had the need for therapy and on medication and on neurologist and a psychologist who also examined James came to the same conclusion, namely that the boy displayed no sign of hyperkinesis; they also recommended him for treatment. FIRST YOU rearrange a society to make it difficult for the family to carry out its traditional job. Then you further incapacitate it by encouraging family members to look to institutions, outside, and your own to perform the family's functions, and you tax the family to pay for it. But it doesn't work because in our stage of history, our big institutions are only able to weaken traditional relationships, not substitute for them. "The goal," he says, "to mothe HEW made famous: 'No service for every need, no need for every service.'" WHEN IT isn't immediately possible to convince people that what was once normal, ordinary and usual—i.e., childhood, youth, old age—is now pathological, it is done by diagnosing someone and giving them the shadow of institutional and governmental supervision the rest of his life. It is certainly true that parents have never felt less able to do for their children, to provide a cocoon and an environment in which their children will grow up absorbing their values and emulating their behavior. Government action of these kinds accelerates the development of community as the primary means of training and controlling the young. MARIONETTE 1234567890 Letters To the Editor: HOPE credibility waning I would like to congratulate Professor Turk for winning the 1978 HOPE award. He was selected from an excellent field of deserving candidates, a fact that I think adds a tremendous amount of credibility to this distinguished award. But as I look at the past two years, I see a trend developing that may hurt this standard of credibility. That is that a journalism professor was again selected winner. It is not the fact that the Voting is done in the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard, directly in Front of the building. The system provides easy access for journalism seniors to vote and hinders the chances of a business, law, physical science or computer science professor receiving the votes. Summerfield, Green Robinson or Blake and don't have the accessibility to the voting booth the journalism seniors have. The seniors in these schools spend most of their time in I also think it is easier for journalism seniors to generate more votes because the booth is in front of Flint Hall. I don't think this is a healthy situation. I would like to see an alternate method of voting in the future to keep one school on campus from dominating this prestigious award. Corky Trewin Redmond. Wash.. senior pros in a hurry—maybe even sooner than Butler himself plans to make it. Corky Trewin Vice reported in Last Thursday's Kansasan that Butler has compiled impressive statistics this year against All-Americans from both teams, Kentucky, Mike Vaughn of Oklahoma and Dennis Luck of Wisconsin. There is no disputing Butler's prowess against these three players. But an incongruity develops. To compile impressive statistics against Lick this year, Butler must have flown to Chicago some week when I was not watching. Student government apathy rife Bv JEFF LATZ Guest Writer Dennis Lick was theırround pick of the Chicago Bearsin in the 1976 National Football League draft. Is student government a faece? Just how many of the 20,000 students at the University of Kansas care about their student government, or care about what their student government functionaries do for their constituents? FARBER said that this type of government might be worth supporting if it was willing to catch bell from the students until they "what you’re more likely to get is bigger homecomings and maybe an extra wing on the student union, with more bowling ales and so on to keep the children occupied. In 1967, Jerry Farber said in his book, "The Student as Nigger," that student government should throw college or university system. He said student governments should throw off the trappings of the whole "pompon-waste" economy and spend money in meaningful ways." Do student governments give all college students a means to effectively participate in a representative and educative democratic model? CERTAINLY we would be a poor democracy if we did not educate our citizenry about its governmental methods and procedures of operation. Although many student senators, and even students, may not know it, the University of Kansas Student Senate emulates the American system of government to a degree. Most of these schools have their student governments fairly well defined on paper, but they all seem to be getting students to participate. It has an executive branch, a legislative branch and a somewhat furzzy, but existing, judicial system. The student governments at Kansas State University and Emporia State College have the three systems well defined in their constitutions. SIXTEEN PER cent of the KU students voted in the Senate election last February—a rather surprising Of those four Kansas schools, Kansas State University had the highest voter participation for the 1976 election year. Of those four Kansas students, approximately 14,000 KSU students voted PITTSBURG STATE has only executive and legislative branches in its student government. turnout when you consider that the Senate has a fiscal budget for 1976 of $446,897. But college students, because they supposedly make up some of the "cream" of the great American population, are more interest in their government. Student senates seem to be plagued by the same problem of getting voters to the polls that exist in regular local, state and federal elections. That sort of thing happens because most college faculty, students and WOODWARD AND Berstein said in "All the President's Men" that Segrette, Chapin and some others implicated in the Watergate affair belonged to the University of Southern California student political "mafia." There they learned how to stuff balloons, send out subversive and bogus campaign material and, in general, sabotage an election in their favor. They also examined a form of how an educative, democratic model should not be run. When they don't, they let such people as Donald Segretti; subvert government for their own purposes. Tom Schaffner Clarendon Hills, Ill. senior administrators are disinterested in student government. As long as a student senate does not make any real "waves," college administrators are content to leave it alone. STUDENT SENATORS, supposedly the backbone of the student government, also have problems. They are not paid, receive no academic credit and achieve little glory for what can sometimes turn into a boring, tedious job. All they get is committee work and a slap on the back if they do well. Then, if they are lucky—after putting up with this slavery for two or three years, they can campaign for one of the Senate's aid jobs. At KU and most universities, only one senate job pays well, and that is the position of student body president. The ordinary student senators, who also had to campaign and face the electorate, usually get only the satisfaction of having won a seat and the expectation of becoming an member of the student government. Because of the seeming lack of interest in student government on the part of college administrators, students and professors, perhaps its usefulness should be reevaluated. If American college students are not motivated to participate in, or actively learn about, the American government by having realistic, meaningful educational models, why have them at all? Essentially, a better system of student government could be established that would motivate the majority of students to participate and could also manage students, faculty and administrators matters government studies of student government. Butler not yet pro To the Editor: Gary Vice, this fall's assistant sports editor for the Karsan, really wants KU football star Mike Butler to make it to the MORE THOUGHT could be given on how to motivate students to be senators. Possibly they could receive much more attention well done tuition reductions or pay Perhaps the departments of history, sociology and political science could take more interest to help formulate a student government worth summoning. Jeff Latz is journalism education graduate student. This sort of improvement program for workers in student government might mobilize them to have more than one attitude toward their governments. Stp Lawn city street commit the Ur chitect possibly Lawyer The and more new ci proposes city per cerem A do Comm attende The a nun structe last 2 profes. said. preser. THE propos depart selecte Lawre at the The to be Massa do,ho buildi comm Water THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 16, 2018. Please visit www.kansas.edu/about-us/june and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. 66044 Subscriptions by mail are $8 a semester or $14 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. appropropose Massasad hadstuders Barik sideress Massas thecity'sKansas Clan comm Massa likely they s buildi Wat defini to put stude ideas. THE varie for a resta of the stude Co police Editor O TO be th sored 12:30 12:50 TO ORG. Chap Sigm Robir Math 119 S Editors in Editon Yael Abu哈狄哈 Yael Abu哈狄哈 Campus Editor Stewart Braun Associate Campus Editors Sherr Bailaway Photo Editor Chuck Decker Photo Editor Stuff Photographers George Miller, An Keck Sports Editor Steve Schontellett Associate Sports Editor Brent Anderson Entertainment Editor Alvin Clover Photo Editor Staff Photographer TOI CULT the O film Wesc p.m. Eu Business Manager Termination Assistant Business Manager — Carolie Rosenkoetter Advertising Manager — Jace Gillespie Marketing Manager — Sarah McAnally Classified Manager — Sarah McAnally Assistant Classified Manager — Timothy O'Shea University Daily Kansan Tuesday. November 9.1976 5 mediately that main, or- al—i—e., age—by done by and in the main and the eae that able scees able ten, to an en- their osoroshing their oling their il action the like lily and primary and con because in our big table to relation- them. "No need: "No mus." ange a acult for out its vou fur- by en- tablers to outside family's sax the MANYWEEKS FEATURES Students, city discuss possible new city hall Staff Writer Bv JOHN MUELLER be even himself firstgo Bears Football Butler's e three nongruity tile im- lame Lick st hast wee week g. taller has statistics americans n Kentucky, orna and sin. 1. senior Lawrence moved closer to building a new city hall in the 600 block of Massachusetts City City commissioners meet with 15 students at the University of Kansas School of Architecture and Urban Design to discuss urban development, building north of the Lawrence, National Bank. A dozen members of the Chamber of Commerce Downtown Committee also attend meetings. The architecture students showed slides and models of their recommendations for a new city office building. The student's proposals varied, but they agreed that the city should increase its office space by 70 per cent, to about 23,600 square feet. THE STUDENTS arrived at their proposals after surveying heads of city departments and talking with 60 people selected at random on the streets of Lawrence, according to one of the students at the meeting. The students also examined site plans for a number of city office buildings constructed throughout the United States in the last 20 years, Robert Gould, assistant project manager at Merrill Lynch, said. Gould directed the students' presentation and supervised their research. The student proposals don't bind the city to building a new city hall at the Massachusetts Street location. The plans do, however, indicate that other sites for the city's headquarters are excluded from commissioners' consideration by Baldor Waton, city manager. GOULD SAID that Watson had recently approached him about getting student proposals for a building in the Massachusetts Streetarea. Watson, he said, had eliminated other locations from the students' research. Barkley Clark, city commissioner, asked Watson why other sites hadn't been considered. Watson then called the Massachusetts Street site "the front door to the city," and he said its nearness to both the city's business district and to the new Kansas River bridge. Clark and Marine Argersinger, city commissioner, later agreed that the Massachusetts Street site was the most likely spot for the new building. However, they said that financing construction of the building was still highly speculative. Watson said that he planned to release a definite report within two weeks on where to put the building and that he would use suggestions in forming his final ideas. THE SPECIFIC student suggestions varied widely. Most of them included plans for a six-story building that would contain a restaurant and an auditorium, but the shape of the building was different in each student's proposal. Commissioners said they realized political problems could result from putting a restaurant in city hall. As Clark sam, "Maybe well have liquor by the drink by the door." On Campus The new building, students said, should include a room that could accommodate 300 students. TODAY: GOV. ROBERT BENNett will be the featured speaker at a forum sponsored by the KU Student Bar Association at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green Hall. The students also favored eliminating the Bowersock Mills, now unoccupied, which stands across the street from where the new city hall would be built. **TONIGHT:** The CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION meets at 6:30 in Danforth Chapel. BALLET will be taught at Tau Sigma's dance ensemble meeting at 7 in 220 EPSILON, Honorary Mathematics Fraternity, meets at 7:30 in 119 Strong Hall. Events THE FREE STATE Opera House building, now used by the disobquee building, should stay, students agreed. They say that the building was structurally sound. TOMORROW: THE THIRD ANNUAL CULTURAL ENRICHMENT PROGRAM of the office of Minority Affairs will show a film titled "Claudine," at 7:30 p.m. in 3140 Wescow Hall. KU DAMES will meet at 8 p.m. in the Union's Walls Room. higher increases were available because some faculty members receiving higher salaries were replaced with lower-salaried employees. Martin Jones, associate vice chancellor for business affairs, said yesterday that increases were spread evenly among members in the schools and departments. From page one A study now is being done by the Office of Instructional Research and Planning to determine whether any discrepancies exist in past merit increases given to men and Salary increases Philosopher says health responsibility of everyone Along with differences in faculty titles, there are also differences in base pay. Culturally, clinically and socially, a patient's ability to collaborate in and understand his health care has been reduced and professional developments. May said. AVERAGE FIGURES from the Regents' By PAUL ADDISON In the field of health care, America needs to develop a sense of social organization that gives equal benefit to professionals, experts and the entire community of amateurs, a leading social philosopher and researcher on medical ethics said yesterday. Staff Writer The social philosopher, William Mays, chairman of the department of religious studies at Indiana University, told about 150 people at a conference on Health Care and Human Values in the Kansan Union that health care problems were the responsibility of all people and shouldn't be the sole preserve of professionals. "THERE are values and benefits that can be offered to society only by professionals and experts," May said. That isn't enough. We have to develop, program, train and support the communities of amateurs in the context of families, the church and in towns." "We have increasingly discovered that those very powers which technology uses to destructive medium in them," be said. We need for instance, that X rays can batter skin tissues, and about the traumas of intensive care." Technology, he said, has a tendency to reinforce the passive and negative role of the patient and likewise to enlarge the role of the physician. TWO THEORETICALLY conflicting concepts prevail about the value of health and well-being. "One assumes sickness results from the withdrawal of vital life-giving forces and the other that sickness results from the invasion of destructive negative power. Today, our perceptions have taken a rather pessimistic turn," he said. According to Mays, most things that were thought of in the past as good and healthy forces have some destructive impacts. The sun, he said, could lead to skin cancer, but it could lead to a high cholesterol content. The food breakfast also could have harmful effects. Also at the conference, Ray Davis, assistant professor of political science; Tim Miller, assistant professor of religion; Rita Napier, assistant professor of history; and John Nablandian, assistant professor of political science, conducted small group discussions on facets of health planning and care. The conference was sponsored by the Alumni Association for Health Care and funded by a grant from the Kansas Committee of the Humanities. A 5 per cent increase would raise the above salaries by $1,213, $912, $755 and $744 respectively. The proposed 7 per cent increment would raise the 6,198, $1,277, $1,057 and $804. budget show that a full professor at KU received $24,237 for a nine-month appointment, an associate professor, $18,249, a junior professor, $15,166, and an instructor, $11,490. A Karen's Bridal Shoppe private showings only 128 Minnesota Ph. 842-0056 Lawrence, Kansas Karen's makes beautiful Now... more than ever, --things happen. Wedding Gowns - Attendants' Dresses - Formals - Formals Positions and pay increases are based on education, teaching experience and faculty recommendations, June Michal, assistant vice censorian of academic affairs, said. Cultural Enrichment Program Wednesday, November 10, 1976 3140 Wescoe Minority Affairs "CLAUDINE" — Starring: Diahann Carroll and James Earl Jones Friday, November 12, 1976 3140 Wescoe "FLAP" — Starring: Anthony Quinn, NO ADMISSION CHARGE Shelley Winters and Claude Akins For more information, call 864-4353 6th Anniversary SALE MASS STREET DELI Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye. REUBEN SANDWICH 50° OFF with this Coupon $ 75 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 The Bull & Boar with this Coupon 11 W. 9th Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH Instructors usually have a master's degree, she said, but they haven't been in school in their job. Those who've just finished a Ph.D. degree are initially appointed as assistant professors. After four to six years, their department can recommend them for a full professor. In five or six years, recommendation to a full professorship is possible. Reg. Price $2.10 CLASSICAL SERIES Reg. $2.00 PROMOTION RECOMMENDATIONS are initiated by departments, then reviewed NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. $1.00 OFF—with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA 'The original thick crust pizza' Expires Nov. 20, 1974 SUA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 THE CRIME OF M. LANGE (1935) Dir. Jean Renoir, with Rene LeFevre and Florentle plus La Petite L魔奴 (1938) La Petite Marchand D'Allemattes with Jean Renoir and Tedeschi and Jean Renoir on Wed. Wed., Nov. 10; 7:30, 75c Coors SUA FILMS Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day FILM SOCIETY Films of John Waters: MONDO TRASO1 (1971) and MULTIPLE MANIACS (1970) Films of John Waters, with Divine, David Lochary and Mink Stone X-rated $1 both films—25c for one with this coupon Expires Nov. 30,1976 $1 both films----75c for one Thurs.. Nov. 11, 7:30 POPULAR FILMS NASHVILLE (1975) Dir. Robert Alfman, with Henry Gibson, Ronee Blakely, Lily Tolmin. Fri. Nov. 12 and Sat., Nov. 13 3:30; 7:00; 10:00, $1 Woodruff Auditorium by school or college committees and the University committee on promotion and tenure. Shankel and Chancellor Archie Dykes also review the recommendation; he approves the promotion, (usually a routine) to the促它 to it for be necessary the next academic year. Visiting professors are paid according to their rank and title at their university. GODSPQLK NOV. 12 Room to rent? 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Above rates include insurance ($100 Deductible) Must be 21 (Insurance) 843-2931 SEE: Susan or Paul ADMIRAL LEASING & RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA LAWRENCE SAKONA 66044 843-2931 6 Tuesday, November 9, 1976 University Dally Kansan Sports KANSAS Junior college transfer Douglas could be starter KU seeks volleyball win KU's volleyball team need only win one of games in tonight's conference match at Wichita State University to qualify for the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Region Six tournament. Coach Bob Hewlett, however, wants to win both games. Wichita State, Kansas State and KU will face-off tonight in the second round of conference matches to qualify teams for the regional tournament. In the first meeting, KU defeated both teams, KState won one and lost one and Wichita State led two. The top two teams will go to the regional Pittsburgh gets top spot in poll The University of Pittsburgh Panthers replaced Michigan as the No.1 team in the Associated Press poll of 61 sports writers and broadcasters released yesterday. After occupying the No. 2 spot in the poll behind Michigan for six straight weeks, Pittsburgh moved into the top spot after Saturday's trouncing of Army, 37-7. Michigan was beaten by Purdue, 16-14, and dropped to fourth. Stancliff said that if both KU and K-State ended up with a 3:4 record, a playoff would determine who would be top ranked at the regional tournament. tourney, so a 3-1 record would qualify the Jayhawks for the meet. However, Stancliff wants to finish the conference matches with a 4-0 record to show that KU is the better team. "We want to win both games," he said. "We want to go as the best team." Stancliff said that nearly anything could happen during the match, but that KU was not going to play. Here are the top 20 teams. First place votes are in parenthesis: "We're in a pretty good position being 2-0," he said. "I wouldn't trade that for another 1." Tonight's matches begin at 6:30 at Wichita State. The regional tournament will be held in Wichita on Tuesday. INDUSTRIAL ENTREES 1. Pittsburgh (89) 8-0-1 1,226 2. UCLA (7) 8-0-1 1,093 3. Southern Cal (1) 8-0-1 816 4. Michigan (2) 8-1-0 816 5. Texas Tech (1) 8-1-0 777 6. Georgia 8-1-0 667 7. Georgia 8-1-0 620 8. Ohio State 8-1-1 504 9. Nebraska 8-1-1 503 10. Arkansas 7-1-1 270 11. Missouri 8-1-0 318 12. Houston 8-1-0 285 13. Arizona 8-1-1 178 14. Oklahoma 6-1-1 137 15. Florida 6-1-1 134 16. Texas A&M 8-1-0 75 17. Oklahoma 8-1-0 75 18. Notre Dame 8-1-0 31 19. Connecticut 8-2-0 22 20. South Carolina 8-2-0 17 Miranda sees improvement in team Bv ERIC MARTINCICH The first three weeks of basketball practice at the University of Kansas have impressed several people, including assistant coach Sam Miranda. Sports Writer "Overall, it's gone well," Miranda said yesterday. "The total organization up to date." Miranda mentioned several areas of play in which the Jawhaws had improved. At forward, the battle for the starting position goes on. Ken Koenig and Herb Nobles, last year's starters, appear to have the insack track. However, Chris Barkhous Both Mokeski and Von Worc have been plagued in the past with injuries. Von Worc sat out all of last season with pneumonia, and Mokeski was hampered throughout the season with a pulled harmsstring. Both, as well as many others, strength, according to the coaching staff. AT THIS point, the Kansas coaching staff has yet to name its starting team for the coming season; this might be done by the of the week or early next week, Miranda said. "Our defensive rebounding is better," he said, "our passing on the fast break also improved. Certainly, getting the ball in and out is better than it was this time last year." "The post position right now is not settled," Miranda said. "If we had to start the season tomorrow, it would be a toss-up for Paul Makeski and Donnie Von Moore." "One of the features of practice has been that John Douglas has come along so fast." "He's got a boot2 junior college transfer." "He's a good fit, he has adapted very well to a new system." "WEVE GOT a good front line as far as the starters are concerned, and we're in pretty good shape with our back-up men," Miranda said. Bill Lundberg wins cross country race Clint Johnson, Mit Gibson and Hasan Houston are the primary candidates for the governor of Alabama. In the backcourt, there is still competition or a starting berth. Scott Anderson and Max Stallcup are providing ample competition for the job. He said that John Douglas and Brad Sanders were two players who had been on the roster. Former and current KU runners had a strong showing at the Missouri Valley Cross Country Championships Sunday at Haskell Indian Junior College. In the open men's division, Bill Landberg, a former Jayhawk win, the race with a pace of 12.76. Another ex-Jayhawk, Tom Kopkes placed fifth with a time of 24:57. Bob Garven, a current member of the KU team, placed 14 at 28:24. Vicendese now top QB; Boyer to miss final games Sophomore quarterback Mark Vicendee will start for KU Saturday when the Jayhawks line up against Colorado at Bullder, coach Bud Moore said yesterday. "We've got some pretty sore people," Moore said, "but most of them should be able to play if they get in enough practice time this week." Moore said he had hoped to avoid using incendise this season to give him an added benefit, but it is not a good option. Vicenteedge played in last Saturday's 31-17 loss to Iowa State, despite Moore's intention to red-shirt him this season. After watching the films of Vicenteedge's performance, Moore said he thought Vicenteedhe performed well enough to beat out senior Scott McMichael and sophomore Mark Lissak for the No. 1 quarterback spot. Moore also announced that junior linebacker Mark Boyer would miss the season's last two games because of a knee injury he received in the Iowa State game. Although several other Jayhawks missed yesterday's practice because of injuries, Moore said he thought most would be able to play against Colorado. KU's field hockey team travels to Lamoni, Iowa, today to meet Graceland College in a warm-up match for the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Region Six tournament this weekend. The Jayhawks, who play Graceland at 4 p.m., will begin action in the regional tournament Thursday. GODSPQLK NOV. 12 Lissak seemingly couldn't move the team, Moore said he decided Vicendecide would Hockey team in Iowa "I felt kind of stupid追敌 to do it so late," he said. "I could see him improving every day. He got better and tougher physically." Moore said he was pleased with the Jahywhak's practice yesterday. Though KU is out of the conference race, a win against Colorado is important, he said. "What we've got to do now is practice and refine what we've been working on. The big thing now is to be able to execute well against competition," he said. "It still a must situation," he said. "We need a win for winner's sake. It helps our team." The Crismon and Blue game is Nov. 17, and the opening game with Montana State is just 10 days later. Miranda knows that there is still work to do. Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358. Joint subcommittee for Academic Affairs and Student Rights announces: Seminar on 20% Student Representation Speakers Will Be: Jung K. Lee, professor of chemistry Clifford Griffin, professor of history Ronald Calgaard, Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs James Carruthers, assistant professor of English Dennis Embry, assistant instructor of Western Civ. Seminar to be held, November 9, 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room—Kansas Union The public is invited. Funded by the Student Senate westside greenhouse & lawns unlimited --- THE BETTER BARGAHN TOYOTA AT LOW '76 PRICES TORNADO Lawrence Toyota has all the Better Bargain Toyotas Now is the time to buy a great small car at those low '76 prices. This is the last year the Toyota will burn regular gas. Plus! Right now, Lawrence Toyota is offering a free car stereo or '200 OFF any '76 Corolla in stock! And '300 OFF any '76 Corona in stock! So Come & See The Better Bargain Toyota At: AWRENCE Lawrence Auto Plaza 440 Florida 842-0039 Phone 842-2191 OYOTA SHERIFF 7th and Mass. SHERIFF SAM'S ★ We'll bring our quality sound system to your party. We have lots of prizes, plus all the hits. 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Need mo w Male Furnis kitchei $100 e Tuesday, November 9, 1976 ad 7 Let your fingers do the talking By BETH GREENWALD Staff Writer To say "school," clap your hands twice, a twirl of the finger means "only." Scratch the sides of your torso with your thumbs, and you've said "ape." Those are three of the words learned by University of Kansas students who attend the sign language class offered by the department of occupational therapy. Linda Lindholm, instructor of the non-credit class, said yesterday that response to the class was good. Usually 15 to 20 students are there and they are in occupational therow, she said. The class is now in its second week. LINDHOLM TEACHES American Sienn Language, which is more conversational than other sign language systems. She said it was the method used by the deaf on a day-to-day basis. The other system that is often used is called C Signing. This method, usually used in schools, translates verbatim what is written into verb form for verbs ending such as "ed" and "ing." Students are taught that speaking in sign language is very similar to talking. IN AMERICAN sign language, to avoid "signing" in a monotone, the face and the body must reflect what is being signed. The same technique is used in a more physically vigorous juggler. Lindholm said students also must articulate the signs coarsely or they would be misunderstood. Like the spoken word, signs resemble each other, a slip of the finger means something entirely different. Lindholm encourages students to say the words as they sign them to avoid any misunderstanding. Speaking the words offers a clue, she said. The deaf person also can tell which meaning of the sign is being used by its speaker. TO AVOID confusion, "it" or "them" is never used in sign language. Lindholm said the noun being referred to was used instead to make the sentence clearer. In sign language some words are understood without signing, such as "to" and "I have you ever seen such a sight in your life, would be signed 'Finish happen see it'." “am.” Lindhahn said this made signing shorter and faster than speaking. Words in sign language are sometimes signed by using a combination of signs. "Husband is signed with the symbols person and person's man." A farmer is a "farm person." To sign a name, the first letter of a name is combined with a sign that represents that particular person, Lindholm said. In other words, if someone is fond of horses, they will make the sign for horse along with the sign for their first initial. "I LIKE ORIENTAL accent pieces." Mrs. Dykes said. "I've always had some Oriental pieces in the homes I lived in before." the first parlor just right of the foyer. Two Japanese vases rest on the fireplace mantel, above which hangs a western painting by Peter Hend. White House . . . Adjacent to the den is the master An Oriental rug, which had been restored by a woman in Kansas City, lies in the foyer. Mrs. Dykes said all art pieces, paintings, and rugs were on loan from Stooner Museum. On the second floor at the top of the stairs is a den, which Mrs. Dykes was said to have rented. bedroom, bathroom and dressing room. Mrs. Dykes said she and her husband spent most of their free time reading and relaxing in the master bedroom. Tom Dykes, the Dykes'es younger son, had a room next to his parents' room, but was not allowed into the living area. MRS. DYKES SAID SHE paid her bills and wrote letters and invitations in her office behind the stairs on the west end. The house was occupied when the Chaloner occupied the home. The living room on the northwest corner of the second floor is used primarily as an ornamental feature. Another bedroom on the second floor is kept for the Dykesens' son, John, a senior at Rice University in Houston, when he comes home on vacations. Mrs. Dykes said Chancellor W. Clarke Waceco's mother-in-law once lived on the third floor. It is now used for storage and equipment, and it is conditioning equipment, Mrs. Dykes said. MRS. DYKES, WHO has lived at two chancellors' residences at the universities of Tennessee at Martin and Knoxville, said she was happy with the house at KU because of its flexibility for both living and entertainment. "This house serves both purposes," Dykes said. "I have seen some chancellors' homes that really serve neither purpose well." 1977 HONDA EXPRESS Only Architect to speak here it's automatic, gets ap- plained for and is almost maintenance free. Stop by and learn to ride with no fee at Horizon Honda; 1811 W 39th St. Stanley Tigerman, the Chicago architect who created a house shaped like a hot dog, will lecture on "Wit in Architecture" at 7:30 in the Room for Forum of the Kansas Union. Tergerman also has designed a house in the shape of a phalus for the former owner of a building. Newsweek Magazine has described Tigerman as an architect who "makes houses with a sense of humor bordering on farce." Tigerman's talk is one of a series or lectures sponsored by the KU School of Architecture and Urban Design. Besides being a fellow of the American Institute of Architects, Tigerman was a professor of architecture at the University of Illinois-Chicago Circle Campus until 1971. He is on the advisory committee of the School of Architecture at Yale University and is a former president of the Yale Arts Association. TREAT YOURSELF TO DELICIOUS HOT CORNDOGS $ ^{\text{O N L Y}} $34¢ Reg. 45c THIS WEEK TUES. & WED. at the Vista RESTAURANT 1527 West 6th KANSAN WANT ADS Lawrence, Ks. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kannan are offered at the University of Washington or national origin. PLEASE BREAT ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES Ph. 842-4311 AD DEADLINES one two three four five six seven eight nine 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.75 $3.80 Each additional .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 to run Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Fletch Hall Employment Opportunities Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These add can be placed in person or taken to the UK business office at 864-1538. BOKONON Paraphernula for the conuslouis. diameter of bongs and pipes. 12 East Sath 841-3600 ENTERTAINMENT Coming. Now, 12 iLive performances of "Godadelph" Amen. Come eat with us! admission $1.00 *YouTube* MUSICIANSL: Part-time jobs for band members. Contact: Joe S. to reserve band in late 12; 1851, 2104 Iowa FOR RENT subbasement bathroom, near shopping center for subbasement kitchen, near shopping center. Fully equipped kitchen. Call 841-7687. 11-9 Need to submit two-bedroom Jayhawk Towers Kitchen, plus as well of December 20, 11th 841-6499. 841-6499. Sublease—2 bedroom unfurnished apt. at Frontier Ridge, $155 per sq. ft., 7140. Male studenti Furnished room available now. Male studenti Privatized room available now. kitchen, privatised CA On-board from campus, international. Cars available from campus. To need to substitute Jayhawer Tower apt. $313. mo wutilities Call 831-107 or 107. phone: 831-107/107. ROY'S CREATIVE FRAMING AT CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE • DRYMOUNTING • METAL FRAMES • WOOD BOARD FRAMING Cross Reference Bookstore 847 1533 Mailshopping Center Sublase-2 bedroom furnished aft, for 2nd seerem. Call 1687 after 11. 6 2 male or female roommate need to share air room. 1 female, Jan. 1—25 ft. ceiling, 2 car garage, 2 cell garage. DW, pool, ete — bus route or walk to campuses — rooms. 1/3 utilities — call 841-111 841-1290, 841-3090 Sublime furnished 1-bedroom apt. air, cond. electric furnit. heat, carpet, ceramic bath. $82-$357 Kitchen & Bathroom. $499-$650 Sublime 1 bdmr, ap1 at Mondbrook for 2nd anniversary. Available at 12/15-76; Call Mary. Namaste. Ungsetst炉 for rent. Clean, quiet, reasonable. Kitchen sink & kitchen hutch. 12-12 843-2914 after 0900. FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists. BALERT AUCTIONS. 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W-13490, W-13500, W-13510, W-13520, W-13530, W-13540, W-13550, W-13560, W-13570, W-13580, W-13590, W-13600, W-13610, W-13620, W-13630, W-13640, W-13650, W-13660, W-13670, W-13680, W-13690, W-13700, W-13710, W-13720, W-13730, W-13740, W-13750, W-13760, W-13770, W-13780, W-13790, W-13800, W-13810, W-13820, W-13830, W-13840, W-13850, W-13860, W-13870, W-13880, W-13890, W-13900, W-13910, W-13920, W-13930, W-13940, W-13950, W-13960, W-13970, W-13980, W-13990, W-14000, W-14010, W-14020, W-14030, W-14040, W-14050, W-14060, W-14070, W-14080, W-14090, W-14100, W-14110, W-14120, W-14130, W-14140, W-14150, W-14160, W-14170, W-14180, W-14190, W-14200, W-14210, W-14220, W-14230, W-14240, W-14250, W-14260, W-14270, W-14280, W-14290, W-14300, W-14310, W-14320, W-14330, W-14340, W-14350, W-14360, W-14370, W-14380, W-14390, W-14400, W-14410, W-14420, W-14430, W-14440, W-14450, W-14460, W-14470, W-14480, W-14490, W-14500, W-14510, W-14520, W-14530, W-14540, W-14550, W-14560, W-14570, W-14580, W-14590, W-14600, W-14610, W-14620, W-14630, W-14640, W-14650, W-14660, W-14670, W-14680, W-14690, W-14700, W-14710, W-14720, W-14730, W-14740, W-14750, W-14760, W-14770, W-14780, W-14790, W-14800, W-14810, W-14820, W-14830, W-14840, W-14850, W-14860, W-14870, W-14880, W-14890, W-14900, W-14910, W-14920, W-14930, W-14940, W-14950, W-14960, W-14970, W-14980, W-14990, W-15000, W-15010, W-15020, W-15030, W-15040, W-15050, W-15060, W-15070, W-15080, W-15090, W-15100, W-15110, W-15120, W-15130, W-15140, W-15150, W-15160, W-15170, W-15180, W-15190, W-15200, W-15210, W-15220, W-15230, W-15240, W-15250, W-15260, W-15270, W-15280, W-15290, W-15300, W-15310, W-15320, W-15330, W-15340, W-15350, W-15360, W-15370, W-15380, W-15390, W-15400, W-15410, W-15420, W-15430, W-15440, W-15450, W-15460, W-15470, W-15480, W-15490, W-15500, W-15510, W-15520, W-15530, W-15540, W-15550, W-15560, W-15570, W-15580, W-15590, W-15600, W-15610, W-15620, W-15630, W-15640, W-15650, W-15660, W-15670, W-15680, W-15690, W-15700, W-15710, W-15720, W-15730, W-15740, W-15750, W-15760, W-15770, W-15780, W-15790, W-15800, W-15810, W-15820, W-15830, W-15840, W-15850, W-15860, W-15870, W-15880, W-15890, W-15900, W-15910, W-15920, W-15930, W-15940, W-15950, W-15960, W-15970, W-15980, W-15990, W-16000, W-16010, W-16020, W-16030, W-16040, W-16050, W-16060, W-16070, W-16080, W-16090, W-16100, W-16110, W-16120, W-16130, W-16140, W-16150, W-16160, W-16170, W-16180, W-16190, W-16200, W-16210, W-16220, W-16230, W-16240, W-16250, W-16260, W-16270, W-16280, W-16290, W-16300, W-16310, W-16320, W-16330, W-16340, W-16350, W-16360, W-16370, W-16380, W-16390, W-16400, W-16410, W-16420, W-16430, W-16440, W-16450, W-16460, W-16470, W-16480, W-16490, W-16500, W-16510, W-16520, W-16530, W-16540, W-16550, W-16560, W-16570, W-16580, W-16590, W-16600, W-16610, W-16620, W-16630, W-16640, W-16650, W-16660, W-16670, W-16680, W-16690, W-16700, W-16710, W-16720, W-16730, W-16740, W-16750, W-1676 CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermals. Uniforms, etc. Made from bone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3883. STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on popular hill equipment, we can supply the product you will pay the least and get the most at the GRAHAMFONI SHOP at KIEFS. ¢ **Western Computer Technology** **Western Civilization Network - Ncw on台 Salle-Make** **Western Computer Network - Ncw on台 Salle-Make** Excelled selection of new and used furniture trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704-653- 9285. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. **tf** 40% - 25% off an warm-up suit, dresses man- hattan, Swim Club Bare, 4 (west on 32rd; 847-766) or Swim Club Bare, 4 (west on 32rd; 847-766) Excelent solution of used furniture, refrigerator, dishwasher, etc. 10254 ad, Gibb, Paxley, KY 423-618-4791, 10255 ad Gibb, Paxley, KY 423-618-4791. For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call the Burger Bell at 841-8488 or 11-846-1837. Complete Companion Stereo, BSR turbiltable, large speaker with an auxiliary cassette to deck, large dial speaker, high-resolution 1971 Toyota Mark II 4, speed AC, new tires, engine oil 30, engine call: 842-651-119 -11-9 VW 412 station-wagon. Clean and good condition. Automatic transmission, air conditioners. Good used 10 speeds and single speed. Lawn fence. 3-4 ft. 4-6 foot. Thrue. 110 ft. 350- 1-4, 1-80 ft. 2-120 ft. * Storrie-Orko T22 X20 AM-FM. Receiver. Technologies Inc. 190 sparks apers 198 sparks. Jan 61-94 2012. 11-10 198 sparks apers. Jan 61-94 2012. Pair of Pioneer 630X speakers, Retail $60. Will buy for $250. 814-835. 11-10 STEREO SYSTEM: Nikko receiver, glenium Nikon SYSTEM: Nice receiver. Nite eye. I hear it. Bust 841-2600. Virtually indestructible Dog House, 25 Choice of colors. 843-1085. 11-11 Porsche 914, 970 model, must sell immediately, if available. 939 or 1-237-7921, m. and jennings. 11-19 98 Cameron, Yellow. 57,000 miles, excellent condition. Call 845-322-322. Tongxiao. 11-10 Women's black leather coat, size 8, $109 or best offer. 841-5686 11-11 CAMERA: Exakta RTL 1000, 50 mm lens, excellent condition. 842-326. Keep crying. 11-12 Excellent reats for 13. Manfred Mann concan Call. Dan. 864-6132. 11-12 Realistic 44 BSR turntable. Never used. Call 814-301-90 after 5 p.m. **11.5** Original handmade cord and "turquoise bracelet" and sterling silver. Best Offer. Call 817-629-5624. Paula HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing • Furniture • Antiques • Imported Clothing 730 Mass. 841-7070 1927 Dodge Van. car and paneled, loaded with extruded Must. well-bet. bed. Baldwin. 1-594-362-562 **54 Pac 2.4 ton truck equipped with 68-290 auto- mount;-$960** 700 lb. capacity, 6 g/cm³ $1200; $1800; $2600 good cond. low mileage; $790; Moldemore 10 ap. $130; Moldemore 15 ap. $150; Some cars come on adresses at 255 No. Mich. N 24, 26, 28, 30, 32. Come on! Want to have money? Buy your used car from a licensed dealer or an independent expert condition. All services available online. Corvette 76 Loaded, 450 miles, 5,000 km; $8500. Warranty, 272-1314, Toppera 11-15 BICYCLE: Swiss Monda Special, Campy BIGLEE: For racing, 4ft 11in. BIGLEE 648-8628 BIGLEE 648-8628 **Realistic Stereo System. Speaker 1000. amps** **Realistic Stereo System. Speaker 1000. amps** AM-FM 520 or best offer. 841-528. 11:15 AM-FM 720 or best offer. 841-528. 11:15 7.52 AAB9 New clutch. Michinel white. Tires- 141-6490 before the repair heater repair only 614-6490 after the P MM 11-15 HELP WANTED Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, designing research methods, assisting in research social science back-office and assisting in research Social science back-office McKenzie Dept. of Human Development 111 broward St. Miami FL 33627 to 3 x an Equal Opportunity Employer. Qualified candidates must have a Master's degree or 3 x an Equal Opportunity Employer. HENRY drive in is in the process of remodeling and are now taking applications for employment. Please fill out an application online or visit. Must work at least 20 hours per week and have a bachelor's degree in computer science, pay $2.35/hour, 6th and Missouri. State: 11-9 OVERSEAS JOBS - summer year-round, Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia. All, etc. Fields. $100-$200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free discounts on airfare to Europe. Box A, K400,箱 A, Kerau 9740. 11-11 BROADCAST ENGINEER KANU needs a Broadcast engineer immediately. Pronto must have previous experience in the field of broadcasting and an AES-16Kbit/4Kbit video information, contact Brad Dick at KAU8_1340. 13-9 LOST AND FOUND Weekend walk in the Sandhill Shore to Shoppe, where Walter Watts/Bartleson of West Spur, must be accompanied by his wife and children. Part-time fountain work Neous and Evangee. Apply in person at the Vista Drive In. 13-11-11 TEACHERS at all levels Foreign and Domestic Teachers, Box 1083 Cambridge, wa. 96006, 15-10 Box 1083 Boston, wa. 96006, 15-10 KC STAR ROTATE carrier 2 AAM daily-7 days KC STAR ROTATE economical carousel. For妒 19-19 驾位 842-304-965 L OVER. One "Jubilee" watch, golden gold, hand- set. $7 in or around Murray, Sumnerland or $8 in or around Kemp, Sumnerland or $10 in or around Tulsa. AVON - Earn extra money on your own time. Avon - Full-time. Anytime. Mrs. Selph, 842-812-892. Wait, the word "anytime" is actually in parentheses. It's "Full-time. Anytime." The comma is after "Anytime." Let's re-read the first line. "AVON - Earn extra money on your own time." Yes, it's "AVON - Earn extra money on your own time." And the second line: "Mrs. Selph, 842-812-892." Yes, it's "Mrs. Selph, 842-812-892." Found: Textbook outside Flint. 842-2145. 11-9 Lost. AH Hoch Auud after Louis Falcone concert, 10 p.m., 38th Street, 56th Avenue, 11-10 ed. etc. Reward. 841-9895. Found. Calculator on 19th & 19th Street Bus. Call 842-3142 to reach Undergraduate teaching assistants in chemistry under Spring, Fall and summer grading in Chemistry 184, 185, 625-625 or 626-627. Salary and hourly $60 for 1 time, 10 hr. per week. Require extensive knowledge of curriculum, previous teaching experience, or grades earned, previous teaching experience, or recommendation. Apply to 242 Mahalor. De. of Chemistry is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer and members of minority groups. 11-10 women and members of minority groups. Found. Salvation Army plastic key chain with foundation. Found in the Library. Claim at Sociology Department, 7th Floor Fraser Found: young black female cat at Irving Hill wearing red collar. 834-716 after 11-10 Found: set of car keys in 311 Summerfield for Ford. Car映 at 864-3256. 11-10 Lost: trumpet in o-Zune Park hosting 1-344-707-6985. Col call object 11-10 HALF AS MUCH Lotton, Brown framed glasses—in the vicinity of 14th at Catton. Neward *Please call* 842-1685-11-18 Lost: Black cat with white paws & stomach Call 814-392-5020. Reward: 11-12 Found: Woman writes watch found, 20th and Oundahl: Woman calls 782-7384, 11-11 Found: Calculator—1400 block Tern. Call 842-11-12 4675. Aztec Inn Found. St. Joseph's High School Cisla Ring. main desk at the Union and claim. 11-15 Mexican Food American and Mexican Food HORIZONS HONDA Sales. Parts. Service SALES FURY SERVICE All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates MISCELLANEOUS 807 Vermont 842-9455 1811 W. 6th Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4 PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with lattice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday- saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. NOTICE Country Store Craft Sale. Pottery,玩具, toys, Christmas ornaments, and more local crafts. Wednesday, 10 to 4. Lawrence Community Nursery School, 445 Alabama. 11-12 PERSONAL Redecree Lutheran Church, 30th and Haskell, invites all students and faculty to our Sunday Study at 10:15 a.m. Study at 10:15 a.m. We have an active college age group: Transformation will be provided if you are interested. POETRY WANTED for Anthropology. Include: - A PhD in Anthropology - P.O. Box 26462, San Francisco, California CASHIER CAFE- Good food from scratch. Lunch 10:30 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Mass. Please have breakfast, 10:30 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Mass. Please have breakfast, Ship Shop, 269 Mali. Used furniture, dishes, pumpkins, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12- 5. FIND OUT WHY GAY DANCES ARE THE BEST DANCES ON CAMPAIGN. Dee Dance Saturday, September 13th at 7 p.m., sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas. This will be the lad dance event in Kansas. Attendance calls: 845-920-1598 The Drive Vinthe Ir- 1527 W. 6th. Open daily until 1 A.M., Fri.- Sat. until 2 A.M. 11-11 Have a Happy high birthday, Woo Woo (allaconda love and kiss, knaw Knaw A11-9 11-9) and have the opportunity to play organ, piano or other instruments. Convenient lesson times available. Row Keyboard Studio 301. GAY RAP GROUP: Thursday, Nov. 11, 832 11-11 3: 7, P.M. 3-PH DE, SKILLET assay were not the授权 LIGOR DE, SKILLET assay were not the授权 LIGOR Here have been assayed. Drop in samples 85-$119, 85-$126, 85-$127, 85-$128, 85-$136, 85-$140, 85-$141, 85-$142, 85-$143, Gilda told us of the three Rex (Reading, *Ritting and* *Riting*) and of the two Rex (Reading, *Ritting and* *R Roger). For further information, call 463-850-3900. SERVICES OFFERED Math. Tutoring-completed, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 105, 106, 108, 109, 110, 114, 117, 119, 120, 150, 158, 159, 160 or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681. FELDS COMPLETE WATERED SYSTEMS FIELDS COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS Mattresses - Liners Heaters - Frames Bedspreads - Fitted Sheets WATERBEDS 712Mass.St. Downtown Lawrence 842-7197 Downtown Lawrence 842-7187 Not happy with your biket. Maybe you need a new biket, clean up an area, and your entire biket, lubricate both wheels, adjust your brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your accessories bought at time of "turn-up". Rates: 10 speed $15.00, 5 speed $15.00, single speed $15.00, double speed $15.00, complete professional $15.00, single speed $60. Complete professional ACADEMIC R RESEARCH FAPERS Thousands on campus 1122 S. 10th St. N. 368, Los Angeles 1122 S. 10th Ave. N. 368, Huntington Beach Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer. New Bicycles Lawrence Schwimtier Cycle- 9 - Mon-Sat., Thurs, lawrence Swimtier Cycle- 9 - Mon-Sat., Thurs, lawrence Swimtier Cycle- 9 - Mon-Sat., 842-6353. *Can't See?* See me for all your sewing needs: all types of machines, all types of materials, 743-676 between 11:17 TYPING Special, Intermediate German. Anyone interested in working as a sales representative or Business Engineer. Build your special powerpoint work using monospaced dictionaries and reference materials, with strong damage interests. Call Porter at (800) 456-2929. BIOLOGY TUTOR. Experienced阅科-Graduate Program. 800-712-4153 or 800-712-6884 or 743 Reasonable Employment History. Experienced typal -term papers, theses, misc. Materials, bibliographies, spellings, spell corrected, 833-954, Mrs. Wright. Need an experienced typist? IIBM Selectite LT carbon (rubber); Paul Nairn at 467-789-2100. THEISM BINDING COPYING. The House of Uther's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrentee. Let us know if you are in Manhattan or phone 843-729-1151. Thank you. The Lounge - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Feos-Ball Ghost Writers. Must have creative ability plus journalistic background. Write Box 20, 111 Flint University of Kansas, enclosing a resume. Replies are confidential and will be answered. EXPERT TYPING. Fast and accurate, reasonable rate, proofreading and minor grammatical errors. utilities included. Call Bath, 841-7445. 11-12 wanted-female grad student to share house w/ 2 students grad student alone to KU $60 + 1/3 utilities $83-1090 11-9 WANTED Need roommate for spring to share 3 bdm. Roommate will book $6 1/2 see cal. and meal. Call 844-759-2063 Email us at roommate@mcc.edu I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4470. New address. Typist/editor. IBM Pica/cille, Quality work. Typist editor. Thesis, dissertations welcome. Mails: 48-1029. 2 studious females needed to share furnished uniforms. Call Rathb, 841-7449. 11-12 TRY HILLCREST BILLIARDS Two rooms wanted to share 2 bedroom Townhouse. $90/mo. + utilities. **643-8198** * "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." Bud on Tap - Pinball 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 days a week One Under 18 Admitted Two female rooms to be furnished Tow- kens $104 rent included all meals Calls 842-755-3600 11:18 Calls 842-755-3600 Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl - Feosball Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday - Pool Home of - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL BUDDED 15 East 8th, 641-2456 10-5 Monday-Saturday The Chalk Hawk in the summer. Keep your car healthy Use the student discounts AUTO SUPPLY at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 smiley face 8 Tuesday, November 9, 1976 University Daily Kansan FALLEY'S V U. S.D.A. Grade A Whole 2525 Iowa Next Door to Gibson's Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days Prices Good Wednesday through Sunday Nov.10 thru Nov.14 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES Swift Premium Sizzlean...12 oz. $1 ^{29}$ Armour Grill Dogs...Jb. $79^{c}$ Wilson Braunschweiger...By the Piece lb. $69^{c}$ Van De Kamp Fish & Chips...lb. $1 ^{19}$ Fryers...39c lb. Ohse - 12 oz. pkg. Wieners. 49c Ohse Luncheon Meats...5 Varieties 12 oz. 69¢ Ohse Economy Polish Sausage...lb. 99¢ Ohse BolognaBeef, Regular All Meat, Thick and Garlic. lb. 89¢ Ohse "Big T" Boneless Hams.Half or Whole$1⁶⁹ FALLEY'S - HERSHEY BAKING & CHOCOLATE SALE Hershey's Hot Cocoa Mix 12 pk. $69c Hershey's Chocolate Syrup 39c 16 oz. 12 pk. 69c 16 oz. 39c Hershey Cocoa...8 oz. $69^{\circ}$ Hershey Baking Chocolate...8 oz. $88^{\circ}$ Hershey Miniatures...9 oz. $97^{\circ}$ Hershey Miniatures...14 oz. $1^{39}$ Hershey Red, Green & Silver Kisses...9 oz. $97^{\circ}$ Reese's Peanut Butter Cups...7.5 oz. $77^{\circ}$ Botty Crocker Layer Cake Mix Hershey's Milk Chocolate Chips 88c 11½ oz. Hershey Instant (Real Chocolate Flavor) $1.49 32 oz. Hershey Cocoa $1.29 16 oz. $149 32 oz. 49c Kellogg's Rice Krispies...13 oz. 79° Taster's Choice Coffee...4 oz. $1^99 Nabisco Chocolate Pinwheel or Chips Ahoy Cookies...12 oz. 79° Nabisco Ritz Crackers...16 oz. 79° Our Own Brand Ice Cream...½ gallon 89° Crisco 3 pound Can'c 49c With purchase of 4 light bulbs All Purpose Russet Potatoes California Sunkist ORANGES or Zipperskin TANGERINES 15 for $1 California Avocados...4 for $1 Washington Red or Golden Delicious Apples...10 for 99° Snow-White Mushrooms...8 oz. pkg. 69° Red Radishes or Green Onions...6 pkgs. $1 Golden Sweet Potatoes...5 pounds $1 All Purpose Russet Potatoes $1.29 20 lb. Falley's Homogenized Whole Milk $1.29 Gallon Delta Bathroom Tissue 4 roll Pkg. 49c Shurfine Mandarin Oranges...11 oz. 3 for $1 Shurfine Cranberry Sauce...16 oz. 3 for $1 Shurfine Whole or Sliced Potatoes...16 oz. 4 for $1 Keebler—Zosta Saltine Crackers 32 oz. 99¢ Box Delta Bathroom Tissue 4 roll Pkg. 49¢ Dark Flavored Chocolate Chips...12 oz. 69° Hershey Mini Chocolate Flavored Chips...12 oz. 69° Shurfresh Margarine FALLEY'S SAVE $214 Shurfresh Margarine 3 16 oz. Pkgs. Quarters $1 FALLEY'S $214 SAVE Over Falley's Low Discount Prices with Those Valuable Coupons FALLEY'S Regular 95c BETTY CROCKER POTATO BUDS 40 serving Size 69c Limit 1 with coupon Shurfresh Frozen Orange Juice 6 oz $1 Cans Shurfresh Frozen Orange Juice 6 6 oz. $1 Cans Shurfine Early Harvest Peas...17 oz. 3 for $1 Shurfine Whole Tomatoes...16 oz. 3 for $1 Shurfine Mushrooms...Pieces & Stems 4 oz. 49¢ FALLEY'S Regular 95c BETTY CROCKER POTATO BUDS Shurfine Early Harvest Peas...17 oz. 3 for $1 Shurfine Whole Tomatoes...16 oz. 3 for $1 Shurfine Mushrooms...Pieces & Stems 4 oz. 49c Shurfine Cut Green Beans 4 16 oz. $1 Cans Coca-Cola 16 oz. Bottles 8 pack 99c Plus Deposit 16 oz. Bottles 99c Plus 8 pack Deposit FALLEY'S Regular 65c KIX CEREAL 9 oz. 57¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 65c 4 16 oz. $1 Cans Coca-Cola 16 oz. Bottles 8 pack 99c Plus Deposit Coca-Cola Shurfine Cut Green Beans FALLEY'S Regular $1.19 FALLEY'S KARO CRYSTAL SYRUP qt. 99c FALLEY $1.19 KARO CRYSTAL SYRUP qt. 99¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular $1.29 DAWN LIQUID DETERGENT 32 oz. 99¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 79c GRAPE JELLY 18 oz. 59¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 79c HERSHEY FUDGE TOPPING 16 oz. 69¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S HERSHEY MILK CHOCOLATE BAR 8 oz. 59¢ Regular 79c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S HERSHEY ALMOND BAR 8 oz. 59¢ Regular 79c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S HERSHEY MILK CHOCOLATE MILK CHOCOLATE BAR 8 oz. 59¢ Regular 79c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S HERSHEY HERSHEY'S WESTERN AMERICA ALMOND BAR 8 oz. 59¢ Regular 79c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S krackel HERSHEY KRACKEL BAR 8 oz. 59¢ Regular 79c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S HERSHEY mr. Goodbar MR. GOODBAR 8 oz. 59¢ Regular 79c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 79c HERSHEY SPECIAL DARK BAR 59c 8 oz. Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 14 COUPON I WHEREVER YOU GO, I WILL BE WITH YOU. Prauina for a number Staff photo by JAY KOELZER maybe a little prayer helped Jackie Rinke, a sophomore at Lawrence High, in the early going, but it's help was lacking when the big payoff came. Rinke won two of the smaller bingo, but came up short on the big bingo, which netted the $23. The bingo games were at the Knights of Columbus Hall, 226 E. 23rd St. Luck adds drama to bingo contests Staff Writer By CAROL LUMAN Jimmy Carter's famous smile is no match for the grin displayed by bingo player Darrell Long as he looked at the check he had just won on number N45. "This is unbelievable," he said, almost in a daze. Long, 3029 Iowa St., looked at his wife and said, "Would you believe when I got home from work I wasn't even going to come—but she made me!" "Now I won't be able to keep him away," his wife said, laughing. During the 24 bingo games before Long's winning jackpot, the last game of the evening, the crowd **s** at long tables in the Knights of Columnus Hall, 2206 E. 23rd S., watching hei; cards, listening attentively to the caller. WITH MANY of the people playing as many as 15 or 20 cards, the quiet was broken only occasionally by cries of "Bingo!" and by neighbors commenting to each other about their luck—or lack of it. A lighted board at the front of the room showed what numbers had been called. The caller, microphone in hand,sat on a raised platform watching over the crowd, ready to direct workers to each game's winner. From their pockets the workers drew wads of bills, peeling off ones, fives and tens to pay the winners. Meanwhile, players cleared their game boards and took a breather, but quickly returned their attention to each new game. As each number was called, the players' hands and eyes surveyed their boards, ready to close the red shutters that blocked out the called numbers. ONE MAN, playing only a few cards, leaned back with his pipe and studied his cards. When one of his numbers was called, he leared forward calmly to close his mouth. The snack bar did a booming business throughout the evening. "People like to sip and munch and crush and smoke while they play." Gene Rinke, game manager, said. Before long the basement room was filled with smoke as nervous players lit one cigarette after another. "It's kind of a nervous thing." "It does get kind of smokey in here," Wednesday. November 10. 1976 See BINGO page eight THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Vol.87 No.57 Two frats lose 30 parking spaces By JOHN MUELLER Members of two university of Kansas fraternities lost 30 parking spaces last night as a result of action by city commissioners, who changed an earlier decision to allow parking on the east side of Louisiana Street for a 90-day trial period. Commissioners had promised the Louisiana Street parking spaces to the Phi Delta Theta and Phi Kappa Sigma fraternities, located in the 1600 block of North Park Boulevard for the city's decision to remove 24 parking spaces from the Edgehill Road block. The removal was urged by firemen, who said they wouldn't be able to fit one of their large trucks into the spaces at the Edgehill curb if a fire broke out. THE LOUISIANA Street parking wouldn't have been part of an ordinance, but two weeks ago commissioners publicly and privately assured fraternity members that they could use the Louisiana spaces for 90 days, effective today. Last night's action retained the parking space removal while taking away the additional spaces. Commissioners approved an ordinance that removes the Edgehill Road parking area without including any reference to Louisiana Street parking. Commissioners said that Louisiana Street wasn't wide enough to accommodate parking on both sides. Commissioner Carl Anderson told him "I dumb idea" and, "a danger experiment." Bayer said his fraternity members now had pothouses for their parking. Jeb Bayer, president of Phil Delta Theta, said early today that the city hadn't told the governor to keep paying. "The last thing I knew, we were going to get the Louisiana parking." Bayer said. "I don't want to walk three blocks—hell if I know what we're going to do." THE FRERATNITY'S corporation board had recently considered building a parking lot for the headquarters. "It's not feasible." Bayer said. "The Phi Kappa Sigma leaders weren't available for comment this morning. architects said it would cost $6,000 to $7,000 a space." Several persons who live on Louisiana Street said last night that the street was already unsafe because of its narness and would get worse in winter. George Wedge, associate professor of English, 1644 Louisiana St., said, "You're doubling your jeopardy in the number of jobs if you have parking on both sides." IN OTHER BUSINESS, commissioners voted 3-2 to revise a Planned Unit Development (PUD) in the Alvamar area between West 15th and 23rd streets, west of Kasold Drive. Commissioners Donald Binns and Marine Argeringer opposed the change, which allows Alvarnar developers to put 14 single-family lots and open space buildings. The 2-3 vote isn't final, however. If opponents of the change get five more signatures on a petition against it by this afternoon, state law requires commissioners to approve the change by a 4-1 margin for it to pass. The law says that PUID changes protested by 40 per cent of the people living in a PUD in the area where the protest took place. Sam Dixon, 2002 Camelback Drive, said last night that he and other Alvamar residents opposed to the change needed only to change signatures to have the necessary 40 per cent. BUFORD WATSON, city manager, said that petitions bearing the signatures had to be delivered to city offices by this afternoon. The deadline is today because it has been two weeks since the Lawrence-environment commission unanimously recommended the change. Dixon said he objected to the PUD changes because they would cause more traffic in the Alvynm area and would present residents' view of the golf course. Dixon and other opponents of the change also said they had been misled by Alvaram Inc., which they said had promised them an $10 million golf course in the company's brochures. Commissioners postponed action on a request from Four Seasons Corp. to rezone 42.9 acres of land at the southwest and northwest corners. See FRATS page two Bennett analyzes GOP's showing By MICHAEL KING Gov. Robert Bennett said yesterday he believed the Republicans would eventually regain the seats in the Kansas House of Representatives lost to Democrats in the recent election. Speaking to about 75 people at the University of Kansas law school, Bennett blamed Republicans who took the fact that Kansas was a Republican state for granted and didn't do the necessary work to win elections. BENNETT, WHOSE appearance was sponsored by the Student Star Association, a national student group. In many cases, he said, the Democratic candidates were better qualified than the Republican candidates and also better organized. The retirement of some Republicans also had an effect on the elections, Bennett said. The candidates who ran for those seats were known as the retiring members, he said. against "a rather bleak fiscal backdrop" that affect both Democrats and Republicans. He said that he didn't know how the higher education budget would fare this year, but that it would probably have to be restricted to an increase of no more than five per cent. This budget limitation will likely jeopardize all new programs, he added. Bennett said that the state could no longer afford costly duplication of educational programs, so he started prioritizing these programs. The possibility was being explored, he continued, "of trading some things with our neighbors," and the way we're already doing with dentistry. Bennett has recommended that the death penalty be reimposed for certain crimes BENNETT ALSO discussed the death penalty and a proposed medium security prison. "We've asked that it be reimposed through a trial that consists of two phases," he said. The first phase would merely determine guilt, and the second would set the penalty. The state is badly in need of a new medium security prison and of renovation projects. "Some want new no jails. They want to put the criminals back into the home court." "OTHERS WANT a small cell where we pipe them in air and soap once a day." Staff Writer The cost of the proposed facility is projected at $12 million and the statewide prison renovation program is estimated at $20 million. Markley's cider a homemade job The leadership of President Gerald Ford, Bennett said, has been a boon to the Republican party after the Nixon era. And it will be good for the Republican party, he added. "After all, the Democrats were only able to close ranks because they'd been out of power for eight years and they'd lost all that patronage." Bv DOUG LAMBORN When you buy homemade cider from J.E. Markley, you don't just buy cider. You also get to meet one of the few men who still make their own. As Markley walks past his shed to where he keeps his cinder press, he hobbles slowly with the help of his cane; a short, smoothly rounded Mary. Markley became 86 years old in August. "I've got a bucket to grind," he says, not wasting any words. The press -bought for $5- stands amid piles of stacked firewood. Overload, ripe orange persimmons hang from a tree striped of its leaves. "I CAN'T work as much as I used to," he says. Some of the small apples in the bucket are starting to rot. He says the apples he uses aren't good enough to be sold as eating apples. They all come from his two dozen The press vibrates and chatters as he slowly turns the crank. A revolving wooden drum, studded with metal teeth, catches the apples at the bottom of the hopper and Markley dumps the apples into a square, wooden hopper. He reaches down and starts pulling them in. paluperizes them when they are forced through a small opening. THE SMALL BUTS of apple pile into a thick dough with burlap. They give a sweet sushi. By the time he peeks over the top of the basket to find all the apples gone, Markley is one step ahead. He moves the bucket to the other end of the press and places it under a round wooden plate, which has the same diameter as the base. The bucket is at the end of a yard-long turncrew. "I just can't do it any more," he says. "I've got too many years on me." REFUSING ANY help, Markley slowly turns the screw. The plate pushes into the bucket against the pile of apple bits. With every turn, juice runs down the trough to fill it, until the water is set on the ground. He makes the last turn of the screw with the leverage of a stick. As he works, Markley talks about his life. He says he has lived in Douglas County all his life, except when he went out to Colorado in 1910 and staked a claim for a few years. KU team leaves for Pole By ROBERT MACKEY Staff Writer His grandparents settled on a farm, Lone Star Lake in 1864 after coming from Ohio. He had a farm out there once but sold it to the 20 years ago and moved to Lawrence. The South Pole might hold the key to solving the problem of nuclear waste disposal, according to a University of Kansas professor. Edward Zeller, professor of geology, physics and astronomy, is leaving with a team of researchers tomorrow to investigate that possibility. However, that is only part of the team's purpose in going there. Zeller said yesterday that the National Science General Mineral Resources survey to determine what minerals were locked beneath the ice-covered surface. Student's classes won't be affected. Most city businesses and offices, necessary post offices, will be open. Banks and county offices will be closed. Offices close Veterans Day University offices, with the exception of those in the Kansas Union and the Office of Admissions and Records, will be closed tomorrow because classified state employees have Veterans Day off. The risk of widespread contamination is too great, Zeller said, because the water picks up radiation and circulates, carrying radioactive material away from the original storage container. THE TWO-AND-AHALF month expedition will take them to the mountainous regions of Victoriaialland, near the Reiss Ice Shelf. With him on the trip will be Kent Crisler, Wellington junior, Franz Tesserson, a member of the German federal archdiocese and Oracle Debrah Scharf, research associate at the KU Space Technology Center and the first woman from KU to make a trip to Antarctica. "We're looking for Uranium, of course, but also for gas and coal," Zeller said. Although it's only a small part of the reason for the trip, Keller said, he and Dreschoff will explore the possibility of moving from its glacier into the sides of exposed mountain peaks. Other reasons Zeller cited for his proposal to bury the waste were the small problem of a broken roof. ORIGINALLY, they proposed burying the waste under the ice cap, where it would melt down through the ice until it reached solid rock. That plan was abandoned when it was discovered that some areas contained liquid water at the rock level. The team will live in tests during its stay. The survey will be taken with sophisticated equipment carried either on backpacks or a board helicopter flown by Crasler. size of the United States and Canada; the annual yearly temperature of minus 60 degrees Fahrenheit; and the lack of animal or plant life. Apparently the U.S. government approves of Zeller's idea because it is included in a broad-scale report of nuclear waste disposal alternatives that includes shooting the waste into the sun. That plan, Zeller said, would cost about $10,000 a kilogram, but his would cost $-$40 a kilogram. A kilogram is about 2.2 pounds. ZELLER, WHO said he liked cold weather, will leave with his team and equipment at 3 p.m. from Nichols Hall. They will travel to New Zealand, then to the McMurdo Station in Antarctica. From there, they will set up bases, some as large as 10 feet by 10 feet, for McMurdo, maintaining communication with the outside world at all times. The expedition is being financed by a $250,000 grant from NSF, $93,000 of which is being used solely for equipment. Zeller said that this was the first time the expedition had gone into the field and that it would be financed for at least three years. "It looks as though this is a long-term project," Zeller said. "Maybe for the next Whatever the team finds, it must be there in large quantities, he said. Because Antarctica is considered international territory, some kind of international agreement would have to be made on the use of those resources found. He now lives in a small trailer behind a house he rents to others. Markley was married twice and separated twice, and has 18 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. He's been alone since 1945. ROUGH, UNEVEN stitches in his worn denim jacket and denim trousers indicate that he has learned to do his own sewing. He can't sell clothes because says, because he is getting a sifier. Although the appearance of his guarded hands allow his age, his eyes are still clear. He looks very young. COOPER Cider and a smile By now, Markley has forced the last drop of juice from the broken apples. He undoes the screw, picks up the bucket and dumps the remains in a wheelbarrow already full of apple remains. To fill his customer's empty jug with cider with it, he puts the juice into the butt, but to strain out bits of pulp all in the cider. He fills the out汁 until it overflows. A perennial fixture in North Lawrence, J. E. Marley is one of the last men in the area to make his own ankle cider. Marley is 85 years old and lives alone. ABOUT A BUSHEL of apples are needed, he says, to make one gallon of sweet cider. Hard cider is made when it's left to ferment. He uses a blend of apples, and several varieties, so the taste won't change from batch to batch. Markley learned how to make cider as a child when his parents would make three barrels of it to last each winter. He says his mother and grandmother, and oranges to keep it from fermenting. MARKLEY DOESN'T *tell* all cider, but vegetables or fruit as well, when they're in season. Markley says he doesn't know of anyone else who sells homemade cider. He sells it for a $1 gallon—less than half the price of a bottle, and that's different because of preservatives, he says. because so many people already know about him. Rich, river-depended soil in North winter, makes him successful in growing hearts. "I've got the best corn that ever grew!" "Sometimes he thinks the soil is too good, he says, because the apple trees grow so they need more sunlight to get to the treets to pick or to spray." But, despite the difficulties, Markley says he doesn't want to stop working. "I won't go on relief. I'll work as long as I can. I figure I'm here today, and if I'm here tomorrow, I'll do my work. If not, I just won't be here." Before his visitors leave, he accepts their help in pushing the wheelbarrow full of apple remains out to the garden where he uses them for fertilizer. He himself couldn't push the wheelbarrow and walk at the same time, but had to pit it between steps. (2) After depositing the remains, Markley visits the visitors and hobbles back to his small train. 9 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press U.S. Vietnam to meet WASHINGTON—The United States and Vietnam will open preliminary talks Friday in Paris on the possibility of beginning normal relations, American officials The talks will be the first between the two countries since the Paris peace agreement was signed almost four years ago. In a related development, Vietnamese officials said an application by Hanoi for admission to the United Nations will come up in the U.N. Security Council Friday. The Paris talks are aimed at finding out whether there is any basis for substantive negotiations on normalizing relations. The Ford administration has said it will vet the Vietnamese application if there is no substantial progress toward obtaining an accounting of the 800 Americans. WASHINGTON—The original Smokey Bear, a symbol of forest fire prevention for 25 years, died yesterday of infirmities and old age at the National Zoo. As provided by Congress, Smokey's remains were being shipped back to his original forest home in New Mexico. He will be buried at Sm. Yey Bear Historical State, Park near Capitan, N.M., within sight of Capitan Mountain, where he was found in 1950. Smokey officially retired as the nation's forest fire prevention symbol in May 1975 and was replaced by another bear, now called Smokey. But for 25 years after he was found as a badly burned cub after a fire in New Mexico's Lincoln National Forest, the old Smoker was top bear for a generation of children and adults who came to recognize his familiar hat and bulky figure as the symbol of fire prevention. Court lets gas costs rise WASHINGTON—A federal judge rulings yesterday that natural gas producers can contract under new rules as long as they make payments to the capitals are later ruled. The decision could mean increased costs of $15 to $18 a year on the average residential gas bill. The Federal Energy Administration, meanwhile, reported that the nation in general should have enough fuel to make up for expected natural gas shortages. But it did not report on whether there would be any. Proposals would broaden faculty reps in 2 groups Staff Writer By DEB MILLER To broaden faculty representation on SenEx and the University Council, the University Committee on Organization and Administration has proposed two amendments to the Senate Code that, if approved, would change the composition of both groups. Peg Byrne, chairman of the committee, said Monday that all SenEx faculty members except one were from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. TO RECTIFY THIS, the committee's proposed amendment states that Faculty should have a choice of formatting. "This is the first time this has happened," Byrne said. "Usually we have SenEx members from a wide range of schools." He added, "Our executive committee of University Senate, comprises six faculty members elected from the University Council and three student members elected from the Council. Now, there is no stipulation in the Senate Code concerning which schools the faculty representatives must be from. Club funding on agenda for Senate Three pieces of legislation will be presented to the Student Senate at its 6:30 meeting tonight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Separate bills to provide supplemental funding for the International Club and the KU Ice Hockey Club will be considered for final approval by the Senate. The International Club requested $6,741, and the KU Ice Hockey Club requested $1,081. Both budget requests have been approved by Senate Finance and Auditing Committee. A third item on the Senate's agenda is a resolution that would authorize the Senate Student Services Committee to collect students' fees and be being stored by various KU departments. The resolution is a result of recent hearings conducted by the Services Committee concerning the problems of lost and found departments on campus and is designed to alleviate storage problems caused by unclaimed lost items. schools, or two schools and the University's libraries, would be elected. Also, no more than three members from any one of the or from the libraries could be elected. Byrne said the amendment was a precautionary measure to insure equal representation of faculty members in SENEx. If a member chosen by the usual election doesn't fill the requirements made by the amendment, then the nominee with the lowest score fits the requirements would be elected. THE OTHER amendment proposed by the committee concerns the composition of the Byrne said that the committee had conducted a survey of schools and departments within the University, and found that the faculty in some schools wanted greater representation on the Council. The Senate Code now states that the Council shall include at least one member of the Faculty Senate from each school of the University and from the libraries. The proposed amendment states that the Council shall include at all times at least two members of the Faculty Senate from each of the University and two from the libraries. The Council comprises 39 elected members from the Faculty Senate, 12 members elected from the Student Senate, 6 members elected and the student body president. LAST WEEK, SemEx discussed the possibility of choosing the number of faculty representatives from each school to form a new faculty member group of faculty members from each school. However, Byrne said, this plan wouldn't work because Council members are elected for the district. 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. student discount Sunday and Tuesday baircourt discount days. Call 842-8600 for appointment. Joel Gold, presiding officer of the Council, said he wasn't sure whether the council wanted him to attend. The Hair Suite BUT, HE SAID, he thought SenEx and the council could be made more representative. Another committee member, Rex Martin, professor of philosophy, said he thought there would be little opposition to the amendments. Also, the number of faculty members in each school changes from year to year, Byrne said, making it difficult to predict many faculty members a school would have The Council will consider the proposed amendments tomorrow and, if they are passed, they will go to the University Senate for possible final approval in December. Our triparti Face Katie Ainsworth—Owner Stylist Thelm Wright—Manager-Stylist Diana Mott—Stylist Beth Cote—Stylist Formerly Ramada Inn Beauty Salon Our friendly Face 6th & Iowa Free Parking Call Now Shed some light on your future But a two-year Air Force ROTC scholarship can help provide the students of the program get you an Air Force Reserve pilot or an excellent starting salary, challenging job promotion opportunities in a modern Air Force. If you have two academic years remaining, apply for an Air Force ROTC Scholarship and pay your country and a great price to help pay for your college educa- After college, what will I do? That's a question a lot of young people ask themselves these days. After college, what will I do? TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday granted Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. less one-fourth of a $28-million rate increase that would allow the company to permit the company to raise fees on business residential and business phone services. The bulk of the increase will come on special telephone services used mostly by business and industry-WATTS, PBX, key telephones, key telephones and answering services. KCC Chairman G. T. Van贝ber told a news conference that allowing $7.5 million of the $28 million request would permit Bell to earn up to an 8.9 per cent return on its Kansas investment, and shouldn't require the firm to cut its service in the state. Telephone rate increase request cut by 75% HOWEVER, STANLEY Clow, vice president and general manager of Bell in Kansas, told another news conference that he was "completely stunned" by the decision, that Bell would have to reduce both present service and planned expansion, and that hinted the company might take its fight for higher rates to court. Sophomores interested in the 7-year Program should contact Capt. John E. Macke, Military Science Blog, during November or December. Air Force ROTC He said the company would have to weigh the prospect of winning in court against accepting the $5.7 million and having that much more revenue available immediately. Bell can't put the higher rates into effect during litigation. "WE WOULD BE derelict in our responsibility to the people of Kansas if we did not also take new steps to obtain additional revenue. These steps might include a request for a rehearing, another meeting with the council or a combination of these measures." "It can mean only one thing—a further cutback in expenses and a drastic review of our plans to invest new capital and hire additional people in the state," Clow said. The chief executive officer of Bell in Kansas also said he thought "the politics of consumerism is certainly high in their hands," a statement from the firm's requests for greater revenue. Southwestern Belt requested nearly $21 million in additional revenue in 1975 but cut it down to about $80 million. Frats lose parking . . . From nage one northwest corners of 23rd and Kasold streets. The land is zoned residential and would be rezoned commercial by the construction of a large shopping center. COMMISSIONERS SAID they wanted more time and research before they decided on the change, which would probably affect Lawrence's downtown business district. "This is a critical decision," Clark said. "This area is half again as big as the downtown area, and what are we going to do with the downtown?" Four Seasons representatives said they couldn't predict what kind of shopping center would be built in the Kas阳 location, nor could they say when a center might be built. They said they wanted the zoning change because Kas阳 and 23rd streets were already a federal city, and the surrounding land was ideally suited to commercial uses. Commissioners also approved a site plan for Breaker's Drive In Restaurant, east of Iowa Street and north of 26th Street, and accepted appraiser's reports for public comments. The office is for street paving and sidewalks, sanitary sewer and storm sewer improvements in the Pioneer Ridge, Alvamar and Deerfield Park districts of northwest Burns claim 2nd victim of Oct. fire The meeting, a five-hour marathon, concluded with the commissioners' postponing of a decision on a request to withdraw the Orchards area of Lawrence from the county. The Orchards area is east of Kasold Drive between West Bid Street and Harvard Road. A young woman, whose baby daughter is in a Lawrence fire last month, died Monday. died in a Lawrenire fire last month, died Monday of injury she received in the fire. Shirley Drouillard, a 22-year-old Haskell Indian Junior College student from Cass Lake, Minn., died Monday night at the KU Medical Center. Her 10-month-old child was pronounced dead at the scene of the Oct. 30 fire in a two-story home at 2085 Haskell Ave. Doulard had run back into the fire to rescue the child. Both were found upstairs unconscious. Authorities believe the fire came when a french-fry cooker overheated. - the emotional challenges "FLYING SOLO". . . a workshop for THE WOMAN ALONE Saturday, November 20,1976 - 9:00 a.m.—12:00 noon *the practical challenges (credit, taxes, self defense, educational opportunities, etc.)* How to cope with: Cost: $20.00 per person 1:30 p.m.—4:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Adult Life Resource Center, Division of Continuing Education, University of Kansas Phone: 864-4794 CLOW SAID THE company estimated it was earning a rate of return on its Kansas investment of "right at 7 per cent," and predicted that the increase wouldn't permit Bell to realize the 8.9 per cent return projected by the KCC and would result in the rate dropping below 7 per cent within a year. "That's not even in the realm of reasonable dispute or argument," Clow said. "It does put us in a severe financial position." IT'S A RIOT! "Splendiferously Funny." The KCC staff figured Bell was earning an 8.44 per cent return, and the $7.57 million new revenue would push it to somewhere between 8.75 and 9.9 per cent. MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN The New Yorker The New Yorker THE RIZZ . Your key to identity "It's a ball of a brawl!" —Judith Crist EVE. 7:40, 9:30 R OCCUPATION Athriller Hillcrest DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLIVER ROY SCHEIDER Every Evening 7:30; 9:45 Saturday, Sunday 2:30 The basic disagreement is over computing Bell's revenue and expenses in the same way. Walt Disney's SnowWhite and the Seven Dwarfs WALT DISNEY'S FIRST FULL LP PLUS "No Deposit. ALT DISNEY'S FIRST FULL LENGTH ANIMATED FEATURE! Bell works out its expenses and revenue on what it actually spent and took in. c EVENINGS "S.W." 7-10 & 10:45 "N.D." 8-45 Granada Tel. (02) 349-7560 | e-mail: info@granada.com 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWO MINUTE WARNING STARTS FRIDAY! The commissioners said the highest rate of return any utility was receiving in Kansas was "around 9 per cent," so Bell's projected rate wasn't far from that. A wine and a wine logo MARTIN BALSAM - BEAU BRIDGES - MARILYN HASSett DAVID JANSSEN - JACK KLUGMAN - WALTER PIDGEON - GEMA RDWLANDS - BROCK STATE - SAVIO VARGAS - AMYTHOR DAVIES CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASSAVETES "TWO-MINUTE WARNING" STARTS FRIDAY at of unusual quality VAN BEEBER said the commission's position permitted Bell to count all the money it spent on expanding its service during the year, then it should figure the potential revenue from that expansion and actual revenue from the previous year. Van Bebber said the commission's decision was based on "the rate of return we found to be appropriate for them, the rate we were appropriate and our staff adjustments." The KCC staff figures the expenses the same, but computes the firm's revenue on the basis of what the service in use as of last month is of the year—would produce in revenue. Hillcrest 'SPANISH FLY' the comedy, aphrodisiac. Eve 7:30, 8:00, Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:10 FRIDAY "FUTUREWORLD" R 7:30 SUNDAY "THE HARRAD EXPERIMENT" 9:30 SUNDAY Hillcrest Sunset Join a Wild Life - Wildlife Club BACKPACKING CLUB Meeting Tonight 7:30 in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union Everyone Welcome Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Program Cultural Enrichment Program Wednesday, November 10, 1976 3140 Wescoe "CLAUDINE" — Starring: Diahann Carroll and James Earl Jones Friday, November 12, 1976 3140 Wescoe "FLAP" — Starring: Anthony Quinn, Shelley Winters and Claude Akins L NO ADMISSION CHARGE For more information, call 864-4353 Limited Orders Only FROM INDIA A h feudin houses preser things night. Manuscripts handwritten in Hindu script with English translation. Some 70 pages long. At last, Astrology at its finest comes to the USA. Learn more about yourself from this ancient system of deeper understanding. All work done in India. For complete catalog, send $1 (one dollar) to Hermit Enterprizes, Inc., 1934 Lincoln, Topeka, Ks. 66040. Stan Archit has de Forum the Se Design Tige archite preser archite infallit Super Scoop! SPECIAL th "I'm most a" "I've evero" "Tiger was a bande" "irratic" "wheel length" "corner" "I fi wings, this be time." "I 'w (Wed.—Thurs.—Fri.—Sat.) Coats & Jackets Drastically Reduced 4 Days Only Wools, Fur Trimmed Leather Suedes, Rabbit & Fur Bands 1/3 off ALL SALES FINAL the VILLAGE SET 922 Mass. Open Thurs. evening 'til 8:30 Wednesday, November 10, 1976 3 uses the revenue on s of last would ission's all the service secure the vision and com the ission's turn we the rate our staff --- rest rate living in to Bell's it. Designer bares porno wit By STEVE FRAZIER Staff Writer A house designed to help separate a feuding couple and two "pornographic" houses are examples of buildings that present a "raucous horselaugh about the things we do," a Chicago architect said last night. Stanley Tigerman, speaking on "the in- Architecture," showed slides of buildings he has designed to about 150 people in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union as part of the School of Architecture and Urban Design's lecture series. Tigerman said that although modern architecture had failed to solve problems presented by decaying cities, most architects still thought of themselves as infallible. "I'M DIFFERENT—I'm not perfect, and most architects are," he said. "I've learned to laugh at myself-- everyone else does." Digerman said one of his favorite projects is the library for the blind and physically handicapped. He said the building was a study in irrationality, because "blindness is irrational." Special features include a wheelchair-high window that runs the length of the building and rounded, "soft" corners. "I finally decided to do something that works," Tigerman said. "Frankly, I love this building. It represents things close to time." "I was really touched by the situation. There I was, an architect, one who had spent his whole life dealing with sights and shapes, designing a building for the sightless." TIGERMAN HAS designed only one library, but he said his two pornographic houses had enabled him to "corner the market on plywood storefronts for adult users." The first of the two projects was a plaillou- shaped house, now under construction in "He's a very vulgar man, but so am I," Tigerman said. Tigerman said he designed the house for Walter Daisy, a terminal cancer victim who was diagnosed with a brain tumor. "Besides looking like a penis, from one angle the house is also meant to look like the Alamo—which says something about the view." The man made him love *f* to *love even more*. TIGERMAN'S SECOND pornographic project was the "Zipper House," a townhouse in Evanston, Ill., that resembles male genitals protruding from a partially opened zipper. He also designed a house in Hollywood for a vice president of ABC television who wanted to be a teacher. "They don't get along too well," Tygerman said. "The program there was to design a house to further polarize them so they would do get together, there's a reason for it." He said the Hollywood house was four stories high, but was sectioned to look eight stories high. A surrealist sculptor is making a statue for the yard, which will enhance the effect. "It's all metal and glass, and all electric and computerized," Tigerman said. "The Another house designed by Tigerman was a study in modern coniclets and curves. "You can walk into a room and say lights' and the lights come on. The funny thing is, you can't say the computer is programmed, you can't say shift and the same thing will happen." Officers of IFC chosen for 1977 The 1977 officers of the Interfraternity Council were elected last night during an IFC meeting at the Sigma Nu fraternity house. affairs, Monte Nightwishger, Hill City junior, Delta Upsilion; vice president of membership Jack Barker, Kirkville, Mo., sophomore. Triangle; secretary, Tom Schoenberg. Senior, Kapua Kappa Lamba; and treasurer, Ed Duckers, Salina sophomore, Sigma Nu. The new officers are: president, Tim Metzel Shawnes Mission Junior Beta Squad PUBLIC LECTURES ON ETHICS AND BUSINESS "IS FREE ENTERPRISE COMPATIBLE WITH SOCIAL JUSTICE?" Three views: MICHAEL HARRINGTON, Editorial Board,Dissent Fri., Nov. 12, 1:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium IRVING KRISTOL, Editor, The Public Interest Fri., Nov. 12, 8:00 p.m., Forum Room JOHN HOSPERS, Presidential Candidate, Libertarian Party, 1972 Sat. Nov. 13. 1:30 p.m. Forum Room Kansas Union Free Admission sponsored by the School of Business & Dept. of Philosophy Bunny Blacks Royal by Frye Let us BOOT you University Daily Kansan right out of our store!!! College Shop Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street An estimated $500 worth of personal items were taken from the home of Mike Hermarkm and Lauren Ave, yesterday at The Campus Store. It destroyed a film of KU football highlights. Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street Thief gets film,coins removed the roll of film from Hermark's refrigerator and exposed it. He also went through the rest of the house, taking coins, a watch and a ring, police said. Herzmack is director of photography for the KU Athletic Corporation. According to police reports, the burglar The burglar entered Herzmark's house by opening an unlocked window in the rear of the building and then unlocking the back door, police said. TACO GRANDE Brings Back The 25¢ TACO Help Fight Inflation at Taco Grande 9th & Indiana and 1720 W. 23rd Elly Ameling Stunning Dutch Soprano in her Midwestern Debut presented by THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Concert Series HER TONE AND TECHNIQUE VIRTUALLY UNBELIEVABLE! AMELING'S ARTIST PERFECTION ITSELF! DELIGHTFUL DUTCH SINGER HAS A VOICE OF MAGIC SUPERBI SEIZE THE CHANCE-DON'T MISS HER BEST OF THE MONTH TREASURABLE THE MOST BEAUTIFUL VOICE IN THE WORLD ASTONISHING THE MUSIC WORLD Sunday, November 14, 3:30 p.m. University Theatre Tickets on sale Murphy Hall Box Office KU Students pick up free ticket at Box Office with I.D. 4 Wednesday, November 10, 1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. The baptism of fire The Rev. Clennon King, a black minister with a questionable background, again has gone a-tappin' on the door of the Plains, Baptist Church. For the second Sunday in a row, he has been barred by the church, which has a policy of not admitting "Negroes and civil rights activists." JIMMY CARTER, who voted against the policy excluding blacks in 1965, has said he would meet with the church's pastor and several members of the board of deacons to reconsider the church's segregationist policy. Meanwhile the Rev. Mr. King, whose background includes failure to pay child support and other violations of the law, has said that he would stay away from the church next Sunday until Carter meets with the elders. It is fortunate that a man like the Rev. Mr. King, a Republican who ran against Carter for the governorship of Georgia in 1970, was the one to make an issue of the church's white-only policy, whose character and motivation were often used when been refused admittance to the church, then the issue would be clearer. BUT WHATEVER the Rev. Mr. King is, he made a point. Jimmy Carter, who received about 80 per cent of the black vote, belongs to a minority group. A church may limit its membership to whatever groups it likes, according to the law. I find the white-only policy of the Plains church to be immoral, but if that's the way they want it, it's their right. CARTER'S affiliation with such a church is questionable, however. Carter has a duty to the moral, as well as the executive leader of this county. If the Plains Baptist Church sticks with its policy of barring blacks, and if Carter remains a member of the church, his back on the blacks that voted for him. HE WILL be saying thanks to blacks—just stay outside. It would be another case of Carter's consistent inconsistency. The best answer for the Plains church is to admit blacks. That would be a man who would reassure the American people that Jim Carter is a man of high principles. By Carl Young Contributing Writer Letters B1 bombers wasteful To the Editor: The clarification of the estimate of the B1 bomber by Col. Wondrack may possibly be correct, but I don't believe cost is the question. Is the B1 bomber necessary? I believe the effectiveness of our military program is lacking, because of waste. Aircraft such as the B1 and other models I have seen are wasteful. I have been in the Air Force. I have seen the way aircraft I have been missed, pilots crashing multimillion dollar aircraft that we, the taxpayers, must pay for. B1 is unnecessary. I would like to see it stopped. Norman Kinney McLouth sophomor The defense department now is getting about one third of our government's revenue. Agreeing with President-elect Carter, I believe the military and some rather large cubbacks, deficiency is the defense department's best talent. What about our BS2 stratofortresses? Will these expensive planes be bunked? If so, is this not more wasteful? If not, why build the B1? Modify the BS2 is cheaper. GM hears students To Carl Young, contributing writer: The money being spent on the General Motors was concerned by comments in your editorial "GM talked but didn't listen" (Kannan, November 3). Let us look at the responses. I talked, but listened and learned from our experiences at KU. This was an experimental model—a first-time event—that we used to investigate communication between students and a major corporation. We do not and will not apologize for that attempt, which we sincerely regret. As you point out, more than 1.00 students took time to visit the university's developments in automotive technology in Learned Hall (which, I'm sure you'll agree, is described as centrally located). Of particular benefit to GM was the free and open exchange that took place in Hoch Auditorium. About 200 students took advantage of this opportunity to ask questions on every subject. No questions were ducked and none were left purposely unanswered. You might be interested to know that the group distributing materials on South Africa was specially invited inside and declined the invitation. We were prepared to discuss in detail questions on our South African position—thus the need for a fact book, because it is virtually impossible to obtain all details such as a complicated mindset. As we always strive to give accurate and honest answers, it isn't uncommon to bring reference materials. This is necessary in the event a statistic, emission standard or other pertinent matter about an organization as a General Motors slips the mind. The entire session at Hoch was recorded and taken back to Detroit where it will be transcribed. The students will distribution in the organization. After years of hearing cries that American business hides under a "corporate umbrella," it will be reubenced for our candor. James Hughes Midwest Regional Manager GM Public Relations I THOUGHT YOU SAID HE WASN'T VINDICTIVE! USA 1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES In October the New York Times News Service reported that such a study had been conducted and that its findings diluted the claims alarmists had brought to light. The study, done by an international team of economists headed by Nobel AT FIRST, we reacted to such reports with disbelief think only crackots could have concocted such science fiction. Then, we began to consider the validity of such predictions, and we realized that they shouldn't begin to prepare for vague, but imminent, danger. But because such preparation dumfounded us, we turned our backs to the predictions, forgot their gravity and began to look that would retake the fatalism expressed in initial reports. Shades of past will color future Man, that optimistic creature who too often believes there truly is a pot of gold at the end of a rainbow, may be naive enough to believe the world isn't for doom around the year 2000. For years, we have heard that the world cannot continue to produce enough food or natural resources for burgeoning population. The 20th century has been one in which countless researchers have predicted ensuing disaster and the behavior of mankind worldwide. prize winner Wassily Leifont for the United Nations, purported that world resources would be sufficient to support a growing population with higher living standards without inevitable environmental damage. THE LIMITS to growth, so the study said, aren't physical. BUT IS it possible that one study can totally refute the findings of so many that preceded it? I find it curious that many noted researchers, and especially the United Nations, would react with such optimism to one study. Is this a situation wherein one study has the empirical evidence to Mary Ann Daugherty Contributing Writer Rather, they are political and institutional, most evident in the disorder of developing institutions, institutional flaws, the study continued, can be smoothed out by reforming relations between developed and developing to encourage economic growth. The suggestion that brought nearly worldwide acclaim and approval for the U.S. study was that mankind, by his very being, wasn't responsible for the lack of food and resources but that the way he lives, especially through his political and institutional structures, and institutional structures, to many, this was the raid of lightly-occupied those who believe man can make up for his inadequacies and blunders. Before, most reports grimly suggested man had little chance for survival beyond the year 2000. years Unfortunately, the world's noted researchers have yet to discuss them in much detail. The study, which said we can correct our deficiencies through diligent struggles to overcome present life styles, has drawn many statements of hope for the future. But that's about all. If the recent U.N. study is valid, it contains many crucial guidelines for structuring society during the next few Few have stopped to consider how diligent those struggles must be. Granted, the report said we could find solutions, but it also said we must reform our current worldwide society. Nations must, among other things, reach zero population growth, conserve energy and share resources. outweigh all others? Or is this a situation wherein man simply finds it less painful to subscribe to an optimistic rather than a pessimistic prediction regarding his survival? PERHAPS nations could educate their populaces, overcome their longstanding political prejudices and take on a humanitarian benevolence, which, for many nations, would be historically out of character, in order to thwart impending doom. But such changes would have to evolve during many years. In the world can, even now, move quickly enough to restructure society by the year 2000. What is needed, then, are shades of the past. We need the sense of immediacy present in those days when everyone feared we wouldn't live out the century. But we need to go by beyond those days to a point where we can restructuring his world. No matter whose study is in vogue, the crux of the problem remains of deadly importance. The year 2000 isn't that far away. YOU KNOW, I REALLY THINK IT'S AN AWFUL SHAME. DURING HIS TERM, A VICE PRESIDENT HAS POWER, HONOR, AND PRESTIGE, BUT AFTER WARDS, WHAT HAPPENS TO HIM WHEN ALL THAT POMP AND GRANDEUR IS GONE? LIFE'S ROUGH, NELSON. WEST JOHN Some hopeful and optimistic things can be said, and I mean to say them in a moment, but I don't want to have the first of all. We got clobbered. There is no point in attempting to paper over the damage. As the returns trickled in last week, Republican observers knew the anguish of MacDuff. Ford defeated, Buckey lost, Ford lost. They had pretty ones! All our pretty chickens at one fell swoop! What happens now to the Republican party? What now becomes of the conservative cause? Conservatism suffers when Democrats gain IT WAS bloody carnage. To lose the White house is to lose the greatest prize of all, but loss of the presidency was merely the first and worst of the republican recesses. The president's house representatives will be felt almost as keenly. At this writing, it appears that the GOP made no net gain in the House whatever. The 43 seats that were lost in 1974, for the most part, were lost again a week ago. It is a freshman's first chance to win the term representatives have an easier time thereafter. A few weeks will elapse before a comprehensive picture can be drawn of political changes at the state and local levels. Preliminary figures indicate that Republican Governors Conference could barely make up three tables of bridge; the Republicans held 13 governorships. Now the conference is taking shape, with three tables of bridge; the Republicans are down to 12. ONE LOSS in particular will be grievous felt. In the defeat of New York's Senator James Buckley, conservatives lost their best and brightest prospect for 1980. In his first term, Buckley had won the Republican nomination with colleagues on both sides of the aisle. He remains a man of high principle and great capacity for public service—but he is now a man without a forum. He got licked. In this wound, the party suffers the unkindest cut of all. And yet, and yet . . . Without playing Pollyma or sucking on sour grapes, it is possible to find a brighter side. No election that dumps Tunisia of California and Hartke of Indiana can be seen as wholly bad. The Senate that meets in January may even be a James J. Kilpatrick ( c ) 1976 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. tad more conservative than the Senate of the past two years. The protection afforded the minority by the filibuster rule isn't likely to be further weakened. THE REPUBLICAN party will survive, and in the absence of bold leadership under another label, it probably will survive. The defeat of Gerald Ford ought to put Watergate finally to rest. The ugliest spectres now have been exorcised. A new Republican generation will be president in Congress and in the states. Because of the overwhelming Democratic majorities, liberal in both chambers, Carter presumably will get most of the bad bills he wants—bills that Ford had vetoed. During a year in which he likely to see a federal makework jobs bill, a bill to repeal the right-to-work authorization in Taft-Hartley, a consumer advocacy agency, and so on. But a Democratic president would like the role of the executive and legislative responsibility may suddenly discover some virtues in fiscal prudence. Last week's returns can't rationally be read as a repudiation of conservatism for the reason race was too close to provide a liberal "mandate." Most of the House elections turned more on personalities and local issues than discussions of political philosophy. And to wind up on a cheerful note: There is something pleasantly refreshing about the shedding of heavy responsibility. With Ford's defeat, Republicans lay their burden upon Mr. Trump and the Democratic party will have it all. If the Democrats' programs work—if their efforts produce peace, prosperity, public contentment, an end to inflation, greater personal freedom—the Democrats will be entitled to all the credit. If they don't, they can have all the blame. L Stud commi have t but the Nettle repres Nett subcob which most uninfo intim*) But studenby THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Acce each require memb Published at the University of Kansas daily. A student who left campus on June 26, 2015 and June Jude except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday, is now a graduate of the University of Kansas. Subscriptions by mail to my email or $14.95 direct deposit to my email. A year outside the county. Student abstinence are required. A year outside the county. Student abstinence are required. P ir The varies govern for accthe Bi Editor Debbie Curren Managing Editor Yan boohakah Journal Editor Editorial Editor Vassai Boothakah Campaign Editor Stewart Brann Associate Campus Editor Bill Sniffen Associate Campus Editors Sheila Burke Chuck Alexander Date Editor In th Huete mood, "soft said meeti the or Poet gathe aftern Union. rhythm count listen In tl read summr Befor Business Manager Terry Hanson Assistant Business Manager Carole Rosenkoster Advertising Manager Janie Clementes Assistant Advertising Manager Jude Jarilla Assistant Sales Manager Kurt G. Schiff Assistant Classified Manager University Daily Kansan --- Wednesday, November 10, 1976 5 HOT WEEK MAGAZINE FEATURES tlk take on evoleon, ns, would, character, impending wies would the world e quickly society by , are need the present in everyone e out the point to a go a point deed with World. No in vogue, remains The year they N party absence under banner, d banner, o d ought to rest. now have A new will in and in mas can't i as a d-Darter d-Darter provide a of the most on al issues of *issues* of cheerful something about the respon- defat, ur years, will have mcmorats' air efforts spersperity, in end to personal apologies, they he credit, have all Limits of student clout discussed Student representation on policy-making committees is one of the only ways students have to affect University of Kansas policy, but they often waste the chance, John Nettles said at a seminar on student representation last night. Nettles, chairman of the Student Senate subcommittee on student representation, which organized the seminar, said that most representatives were either uninformed of their responsibilities or were intimidated by committee proceedings. According to the University Senate Code, each policy-making committee at KU is required to have at least 20 per cent student membership. The type of student representation varies with the level of University governance. Ron Calgard, vice chancellor for academic research, Head of the Kgemsra Union, HE SAID THAT at the University level, student representation was most effective because the representatives were chosen by the Senate. But at the department level, where student representatives were often chosen, students are generally better at learning. representatives tended to be ineffective, he said. That type of selection "results in a student who for the most part sits and listens, never opens his mouth and never offers an opinion," Calgaard said. Clifford Griffin, professor of history, said that departmental chairman tended to select students who were considered "safe" by the department. "When you joi": committee you join the bureacracy, "Griffa said. "Bureacracies force members to adapt themselves to the bureacracy." He said the required 20 per cent representation allowed 80 percent of the computing "It's impossible to reform a bureaucracy from within. If you want to change a bureaucracy you have to attack it from the bottom, or commitment for the bureaucracy itself." HE TOLD THE group that the way to change policy wasn't through the committee but by taking a cause "to the corridors and classrooms." Calgaard told the Senate that the first step in making representatives more Poet reflects her life in sound and rhythm Poe Daintree Hueter read her works to a gathering of eight persons yesterday afternoon in the Oread Room in the Kansas Union. Hueter, a KU student, divided her program into two parts, first reading poems about her childhood in Seattle and images life—the sea, lakes and grandmother们. In the poem "Nanna's Music Box," which Hueret said she wrote while in a homeick mood, she called Nanna, her grandmother, "soft as old quilts, sweet as iliacs." Hueret said she thought of the comparison after hearing the music she liked like the one her grandmother had owned. In the second half of her program, Huetter read a sequence of poems, written the summer of 1975, entitled "Kansas Just Before Sleep." The poems are full of the sounds and rhythms of summer in the Kansas countryside. Huezer asked her audience to listen for these sounds in her poems and CLASSICAL SERIES THE CRIME OF M. LANGE (1925) Dir. Jean Renoir, with Rene LeFevre and Françoise Maurié MARIA GIRL (1928) La Petite Marchand D'Alumettes with Jean Renoir and Jean Tedese Wed., Nov. 10; 7 to 30, 75c compare them to insect noises heard during summer in the country. effective was up to them. He said the Senate should organize elections of student representatives and also should brief students on how to serve on once they had been elected. "Josie's Poem," a little girl's plea for the mother to join her playing by a pond that they can 'crawl like snakes through the mud and sit like frogs on their backs' is a sample of the hominess of the country Huter described in "Kansas Just before Sleep." SUA FILMS The student representation subcommittee selected members of three departments to present ideas used in their departments at the seminar. Huerer's poems have appeared in two booklets, "One Summer" and "Other Masses," both published in Review," a book sponsored by an organization, and an antology of the national诗歌. Films of John Waters; AND MULTIPLE MANIACS (1970) Dr. John Waters, with Divine, Charycty and Mink Stale X-rated FILM SOCIETY NASHVILLE (1975) Dir. Robert Alfman, with Henry Gibson, Ronee Blakely, Lily Tomlin. Fri. Nov. 12 and Sat., Nov. 13 3:30; 7:00; 10:00; $1 Jung Lee, professor of chemistry, discussed the criteria used in the chemistry department for graduation with honors; Carolores, assistant professor of English; the School of Chemistry department's method of training teachers' aides and assistant instructors; and Dennis Embry. Lawrence graduate student, discussed a program of teacher training he designed to emphasize that graduates develop teaching as well as research skills. POPULAR FILMS $1 both films—75c for one Thurs., Nov. 11, 7:30 The committee also approved the re reinstatement of Julia Riggs, Prairie Village sophomore to the senate roster. She is the only woman because she had two unexcused absences. Studex decides expense, appeal Senate Rules and Regulations state that senators will be suspended from the Senate after receiving two unexcused absences. An appointee is filed within a week following his removal and then approved by StudEx, the senator will be removed from the Senate roster. Volunteer Clearing House was previously allotted money for purchase of the typewriter, but the cost was $14 more than was allotted. The executive committee approved payment of £25 for travel expenses for two representatives to last week's forum on climate change. The clearance House's purchase of a twoposter Money matters and reinstatement of a student senator were the main orders of the Senate in 1974. Woodruff Auditorium university of Kansas Theatre presents RASHOMON a dramatization from a famous-Japanese film with traditional theatre acting techniques NOVEMBER 12.13.19.20 at 8:00 p.m. 21 at 2:30 p.m. for information call The University Theatre Box Office 864-3982 Kids American College Theatre Festival entry Partially funded by the Student Activity Fee POLICE Our College Insurance Plan offers more Benefits...and service in every state after you have graduated You need the broad coverage offered by American General's College Insurance Plan—and you need the service to go with it. You'll find an American General office always convenient close in each of our countries. Ask your campus representative today about American General's full coverage and full service. Raymond Poteet 901 Tennessee 841-3464 A. M. Julio C. Meade District Manager 901 Tennessee 841-3464 Military service, a career, family and possibly extensive travel await you after graduation. 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He has also become KU's 1. no punt, and has punted 28 times for U90 vards, a 37.7-vard average. Hubach is from Cleveland, where he was a three-time all-state selection because of his ability to play soccer. He went to West Virginia and then to Ohio, where he is consistently one of the best in Ohio. HUBACH, HOWEVER, not only was a star on his high school soccer team, but on his football team as well. Hubach said West Tech needed a kicker, so the football coach consulted the soccer coach about finding a kicker, job, and an arrangement was worked out. Then he would practice soccer four days a week and football once a week. "On Thursday, the football team would work on their specialty plays," Hubaed said yesterday. "I would come and work on my kicking, then play in the games." Hubach was good enough at kicking footballsb to be the first kicker ever named to his all-conference team. He averaged 43.5 yards a punt his senior year and kicked nine field goals and 16 of 17 extra points to lead his team in scoring. "THERE'S NO DOUBT that soccer is my first love," he said, "but I had I need opportunities to come up with a face I come like I'm missing something, but I guess that's only natural." Besides being an all-state soccer selection, Hubach received Mid-Westrd Regional football recognition and was a nominee for high school All-American Fibach said he planned to play soccer in Ohio during semester break and again during the summer. But football will also be on his mind. "I'm going to play spring ball," he said, "and will be working out in the summer. I'm going to try to improve as much as I can." At 5 feet 11, 190 pounds, with a strong leg, Hubach could have a shot at playing pro football. He still has three years of college football experience on hisself to be good enough to play in the pros. "THAT'S SOMETHING I thought about after I got a scholarship," he said. "I'm going to work at it, and if things work out, that's fine." Hubach said, however, that it was possible to "kick your leg out," to practice so much that it becomes more difficult to kick or nunt effectively. Before games, Hubach said, it is sometimes very tiring to warm up. After a few kickoffs, placekicks and puns in a short amount of time, his lee can get tired. "But that doesn't happen too often," he said. Hubach said the transition from Cleveland to a college town like Lawrence hadn't been difficult, although at first he wasn't sure exactly how to handle it. "I didn't know what to do when I first got here," he said. "I'm starting to get used." There's another thing Hubach said he measured. Mom's home cookin'. Don't we all. Volleyball wins league now headed for regionals Although KU didn't finish the conference matches with an undefeated record, the Jayhawks' volleyball team still will enter the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Region Six tournament next week, the team with the best record in Kansas. The Jayhawks defeated Wichita State and lost to Kansas State last year, night to finish the conference season with a 41-2 record. That was not the case for the Pepsi-colored, Mum., for the regional November 18. K-State finished second in the conference with a 2-average, and WSU was third at 13.4. The top two teams from Kansas were eligible to go to the regionals, but K-State decided not to send its team because of the wildcat never, WSU will go in the Wildcats place. KU defeated WSU in the first match last night, 15-12, 15-8. WSU then came back to beat K-State in three games, 15-10, 10-15, 15-8. In the final game, the Wildcats beat the Jayhawks for the first time this season, 6-15. "I thought the girls let down in the second game because they saw they had won it when K-State lost to Wichita," KU coach Bob Stancill said. O The Transcendental Meditation Program Free Public Lecture Tonight, Nov. 10 7:00 Kansas Union—Regionalist Rm. The 'Hawks now have a 9-0 match record and will be hosting a United States Volleyball Association tournament this weekend in Robinson Gymnasium. Meetings to begin Plans are being made to start a series of public meetings between KU students and faculty members. Walker said Monday, that he would' be glad to have open meetings with students to discuss the University of Kansas /athletic Corporation (KUAC). He said some members of the Student Senate Sports Committee recently had asked him to have the open meetings, which are to be set up by the committee. "We're trying to dispel any negative attitude toward the KUAC," Mike Harper, the sports committee member assigned to arrange the meetings, said. "We want the students to feel they have access to Walker and the KUAC." Walker began holding regular open meetings until she became KU's sixth president. He said then that he had heard many comments that students never had the opportunity to talk to anyone from the athletic department. REMINDER: The KU Backgammon Club meets every day. at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room, Kansas Union. Be there before BRING YOUR BOARDS Union. Be here before 7:00 to play in the tournament Should You Consider a Law School in Southern California? WSU has a Whole Person Admissions Policy - applicants are screened for academic background, personal aptitude, general experience, maturity and motivation. WSU offers several ways in which you can enter the legal profession — Full-Time Students graduate in $2\frac{1}{2}$ to $3\frac{1}{2}$ years; Part-Time Students graduate in $3\frac{1}{2}$ to 4 years; earning a Juris Doctor (D). Degree and qualifying for the California Bar Examination. Classes are offered days, evenings and weekends. Spring semester starts January 17. To obtain catalog fill out and mail advertisement to either of our two campuses. Many have done so. Successfully! Students, business people, professionals and those seeking a new and better way of life have come to Western State University College of Law and started upon a course of study leading to a place in the legal profession. Western State University College of Law, Dept. 139 11111 N. State College Blvd. 1331 Front Street Fullleron, CA 92831 Phone (714) 993-7600 Phone (714) 123-6506 With two campuses in Southern California — one in San Diego and the other in Fresno (near Los Angeles) — WSU offers its students a wide range of opportunities. Although the cost of professional education continues to spiral at WSJ remains among the most nudative in the nation. Western State University College of Law Fully accredited by the State Bar of California and by the Students eligible for Federal Insured Student Loan Col students eligible for Federally Insured Student Loan 41 Staff photo by GEORGE MILLEN® Mike Hubach trades soccer shoes for football cleats Field hockey wins; regionals next KU's field hockey team ended its regular season yesterday with a 30 victory over Graceland College in Lamoni, Iowa. Anne Nevinchon scored two goals for the Jawhavas, and Peggy Hatfield scored one. KU will take a 10-5 record into the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Region Six tournament, which begins tomorrow. Peter Jan Peter Pan November 10th thru November 13th HAMBURGER, FRENCH FRIES, and a REG. Coca-Cola "AN ENTIRE MEAL" REG. 99¢ 69¢ Burger BANANA FURGE ROYALE 79¢ REG. $1.10 A WHILE MANNA RAMA SCORE SUBROUTINE FOR HAPPY TWO CHOCOLATE FOOTPRINTS, HOT CHOCOLATE FOOTPRINTED WITH HAPPY TWOPHED CHOCOLATE NUTS AND A CHERRY BREAD. Peter Pan ICE CREAM 50 W 120 V 3.8 A www.peterpan.com ICECREAM MOST OF OUR STORES FEATURE THESE FLAVORS PLUS MANY MORE NEPOLTAN * VANILLA * STRAWBERRY INDULGENCE * PEPPERMINT * CHALK CHERRY COFFEE BRIEFS * TEXAS PEA * CHOCOLATE ALMOND CHOCOLATE * CHODLATE * CHALK WALNUT CHEWS * CHEWING MILK* 99c Half Gallons Freezer Pak 4 Half Gallons FUDGSICLES 6 PK. 49c • COMPLETE LINE OF GRADE "A" DAIRY PRODUCTS Peter Pan THERE' --l or to be Miarm But nation four view excep Excel Miner FUDGSICLES 6 PK. 49¢ THICK & CREAMY MALT OR SHAKE REG. 85¢ 59¢ • COMPLETE LINE OF GRADE "A" DAIRY PRODUCTS THERE IS A PETER PAN ICE CREAM STORE NEAR YOU. 1013 W. 6th 521 W. 23rd STATELINE THICK & CREAMY MALT OR SHAKE REG. 65¢ 59¢ Kroger KU SUPER **COMPILEMENT 132** **WE HAVE WHAT WE ADVERTIZE AT all possible.** If due to conditions beyond our control, we run a risk of not having the appropriate equipment or comparable brand at a similar senior level for a RAIN CHECK on the advertised special at the store for 30 days. **WE GUARANTEE WHAT WE SELL.** If you want us to dishisease an Kruger purchase, we will replace your item or return it. SUPER SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT Effective Nov. 10-14 FREE Qt. Bottle Coca Cola 8 With the purchase of 8 pc. of Fried Chicken $199 FREE 4 oz. Right Guard With the purchase of one at regular price New for You! Peanut Butter Machine Grind your own peanut butter from our fresh roasted peanuts. Only at Kroger New for You! Pe Falstaff Beer B 12 - 12 oz. $217 Bottles Mix or Match TH bowls candi mark after But for proclaim the n oppose play' the st Wit game State, the c deter Soone six di confe BO' invita still i Orang positi Red Grapefruit Red Delicious Apples Sunkist Oranges Tangerines Tangelos 9c Each Suc decid play i preve decisi tear Anc tossuj most play i the c ticipa butthed bulb goes ORES simil final state race most mest schen she slew case case case desire desir to the tract Panti to E A the p will Socia and Mi Colle whos spark p.m. Kam chair Unite Wednesday, November 10, 1976 RADIO SHORTS 7 Sports Scene Gary Vice Assistant Sports Editor Big 8 bowl picture fuzzy For many dayhawk football fans, this was to be a time of preparing travel plans to see the teams. It was also a time of excitement. But since KU's fast 4-0 start and No. 8 national ranking, the Jayhawks have lost four of their last five and have faded from view of the various bowl committees, contingency from Excelsior Springs, Mo., representing the Mineral Water Bow. THE BIG Eight, which had four teams in bowls last season, is unlikely to place all six candidates in bowl games because its last game was against a couple after a couple teams have been selected. And, more important, bowl committee might be hesitant to extend an invitation to a Big Eight team still locked in a battle for the conference championship and a trip to the more prestigious Orange Bowl in Miami New Year's night. But the season hasn't gone down the tubes for everyone in the Big Eight, the self-proclaimed toughest football conference in the nation. Six teams have reasonable opportunities to be invited to play season games, and evidence teams not from the state of Kansas. With Nebraska holding a vulnerable one game lead over Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Iowa State, Colorado and Missouri, the conference champion might not be determined until after the Cornhuskers and Sooners face off Nov. 26, in Lincoln, Neb., six days after the completion of the other conference games. Such Big Eight schools would have to decide whether to accept an invitation to play in a bowl other than the Orange Bowlet to prevent spending the holidays at home. A decision to accept a bid would forfeit the team's chances of going to Miami. BOWL COMMITTEES are free to offer invitations Nov. 20, and Big Eight schools still in contention after that for the richer Orange Bowl would be in a precarious And with the conference race such a tossup, it could easily end up in a tie and most schools would like to remain eligible to play in the Sunkist classic at that time when the committee is free to choose its participant. But in any case, it looks to be a highly profitable firm for the Big Eight as it would for clamshells. ORANGE BOWL: Nebraska could simplify much of the problem by winning its final two conference games against Iowa State in Ames and against Oklahoma in Lincoln, if the Cornishers fail and the Nebraska falcon's offense falls the most likely team to profit. The Buffers appear to have the easiest schedule remaining, having to face only 10 minutes of media coverage is unlikely the Orange Board committee would select anyone other than Nebraska in case of a tie. Colorado would be more likely to join the committees of the other major bowls. To fill out the Orange Bowl drawing card, the committee would no doubt relish attracting the No. 1 ranked Pittsburgh team to play against a Big Eight team if that team isn't highly ranked, hoping instead to play an opponent worthy of a national championship game. Nebraska, which was ranked No. 1 in preseason polls, is currently ninth, having lost one and tied one. No. 6 Maryland would be a likely replacement should Pitt accept a Sugar or Cotton bowl bid. ROSE BOW IT. It should be either No. 2 UCLA or No. 3 USC against No. 4 Michigan or No. 8 Ohio State, meaning that the annual Big ten vs. Pacific Eight battle might have the national championship spotlight on it again. All four contenders have yet to square off against each other in conference play, which will most likely determine who the win will be. The Northern Southern Cal travels to L.A., to face the Bruins while Michigan heads to Columbus, Ohio, to face the Buckeyes. Whoever loses the Buckeyes and the Rose Bowl would be likely candidates for either the Sugar or Cotton bowls. COTTON BOWL: The Southwest Conference championship should become evident after the Nov. 27 battle between two 5 Texas Tech and No. 13 Arkansas. After that is decided and the Cotton Bowl committee secures one representative, there is to find another to mar with the Sugar Bowl to find another top player. Content presumably would be those teams that were runners-up in the Big Ten, Big Eight or Pac Eight conferences. SUGAR BOWL: Look for No. 10 Alabama or No. 7 Georgia to be pitted against whoever the Sugar Bowl committee can yank away from other bowls. Alabama would appear to be the most doubtful entrant at this time because they still have to win games remaining against No. 18 Notre Dame and Auburn. ASTRO-BLOBENONET BOWL: No. 12 Houston would be a welcome participant in this game, which is played in Houston. Look for a Big Eight team to onpose them. SUN BOWL: The Big Eight has been represented in El Paso in two of the last three years and the Sun Bowl officials are likely to again choose a Big Eight team. However losses out for the Southwest Conference would also be a natural selection. FIESTA BOWL: The Western Athletic Conference champion, most likely Wyoming, receives an automatic ticket to Tempo, Artez. to play in the FIesta Bowl, Team A. to play in the recent schools in recent years, but night also be considering a Pac Eiigh team this year. LIBERTY BOWL: Another possibility for the Big Eight is in gaining a berth for the Liberty Bowl in Memphis, Tenn. A Southeastern Conference representative will face Florida in making either Florida, Georgia and Alabama strong contenders for this bowl. GATOR BOWL: Gator Bowls officials will be seeking the strongest regional team available and they would undoubtedly be thrilled to attract the 59th-ranked Florida Gators No. 28 South Carolina are strong candidates to oppose the hometown favorites. Ethics leaders to confer A symposium on ethics in business and the professions, to be Friday and Saturday, will feature key speakers including a former president of the values and a former presidential candidate. Michael Harrington, a teacher at Queens College of the City University of New York, whose book "The Other America" helped spark the war on poverty, will speak at 1 p.m. Friday in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Harrington is former chairman of the Socialist Party of the United States. Ivring Kristal, professor of urban values at New York University, will speak at p. 8 p.m. Friday in Woodruff Auditorium. John Hospers, professor of philosophy at the University of Southern California, will speak at 1:30 p.m. Saturday in Woodruff GDDSPqkk NOV. 12 SUA JOBS in journalism **JOBS in journalism** We now own a jobboard dedicated to learn about job openings in C & A all parts of the country. Over 150 jobs appear weekly. Special offers apply. Send £220 for each 2-month subscription. Please email: careers@alquino.com or call: (877) 324-6898. SFCP: NOV/DEC. MAKE CHECK PAYABLE TO Aquinas Associates KU BILLIARDS TOURNAMENT Sun., Nov. 14 1:30 Jay Bowl一Kansas Union Trophies for 1st and 2nd place. Entry Fee $2.00 Sign up in the Jay Bowl by 4:00 p.m.Friday, Nov.12. First place winner qualifies for the Region XI Tournament in Cape Girardeau, Mo., Feb. 10-12 When the KU men's swimming team enters the pool Friday in Boulder, Colo., they may feel a little different than they have in the past years. For the first time in nine years, KU won't be going into the first meet of the season as a member of the conference. Reason will get a good indication of whether his blinking paid off in the season after all. "I can speak for myself certainly, and for a number of the team members when I say we were very disappointed to finish third," she said. "I am not thinking about them, are in which I've done a lot of thinking." Bv KEN DAVIS For more information call the SUA office or Jay Bowl. Sports Writer Swimmers begin year in new role "We can't rely on that," head coach Dick Reasonam said. "That's not our rallying cry for this year. The winning streak is a thing of the past. The future is really what it's all about now. It's nice to have a winning streak, but that isn't going to carry you." "I think that we should be in midseason form. I sometimes expect more than is really necessary," said Reamon, who is in his 15th year at KU. THE JAYHAWKS FINISHED third in the Big Eight last year, behind Iowa State and Alabama. KU HAS a 26-member team and 20 are freshmen and sophomores. In the past two years, Reamon has lost 11 swimmers to graduation. "Probably 16 of our top 20 kids are freshmen or sophomores and the breakdown on our traveling team will be very close to that." Construction started on new KU hospital Among the swimmers lost to graduation have been some great individual leaders such as Gary Kempf and Tom Compton. Reamon said the fact that there were no great stand-outs on this year's squad could be an advantage. "I think it's obvious that we lack experience. I think we have pretty good talent, but I'm concerned about momentum that we can get from within. I'm more concerned about what we do to ourselves than what the other guy does to us." "EVERYONE ON the squad can see the importance of not only helping himself but of helping others. This is really the way I'm going to have to have a contribution from everyone." Construction has begun on the $47-million University of Kansas Memorial Hospital. Reamon said that there were three events that could cause problems for the squad. He said he was unaware about the depth and width of the 200-meter freestyle and 200-meter backstroke. "The hospital is the largest project the state of Kansas has ever undertaken," Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor, said Monday. When the initial seven-month concrete enclosure phase is complete, 200,000 square feet of precast concrete will form the building's skin. Each floor of the six-story structure will have more than 48,000 square feet of space. THE HOSPITAL will become the center of all patient services, increasing the number of beds from 338 to 782. Facilities will include clinical support laboratories, diagnostic and treatment areas and a new emergency area with high-speed elevators to provide direct access to surgery, X-ray and intensive care units. Scheduled for completion in October 1978, the building will add 480,000 square feet to the basement. Lucas said a staging committee already was planning the complicated move to the state capital. departments will curtail operations for the move. The third floor will house major mechanical equipment. Six-foot-hall walk spaces between each floor will contain electrical and air conditioning systems. LUCAS SAID a final decision on floor space planning would be put off as long as padded "We have to be flexible so we can adjust to the latest medical technology," he said. According to Russell Miller, vice chairman for Med Center administration, located facilities will be turned into classrooms, faculty offices and research space. Miller said there would be at least 1,500 new employees when the hospital was fully occupied. He said that within five years, the Med Center probably would employ 6,000 people, making it one of the largest employers in the Kansas City area. The new hospital is being financed by a $30,164,238 appropriation from the Kansas Legislature; the balance is being met by revenue bonds. 1. 望雪 FAST FREE DELIVERY! 841-3100 today's special FAST FREE DELIVERY! 841-3100 today's special $1.00 off any large pizza with 2 toppings or more ASK FOR ONE THREE BOUNDARY SIMILE WHAT TO SUPPLY OR REQUEST WHITE CRUST! HEAVY EDDYS Pizza At the Wheel 507 w.14th Sun.-Thurs. - 4:30 PM to 1:00 Meatball Grinders & Friday & Saturday until 2:00 AM ASK FOR ONE OR MORE WORD WHILE WE'RE COLOST OR REGULAR WHITE CASTLE HEAVY EDDYS At the Wheel 507 w.14th Pizza 1 --at the National Junior Olympics in the senior division this summer, setting a 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 Ramon gets very excited when he talks about two of his freshmen recruits. Peter Bakker-Arkema, from Okeamas, Mich., was high school state champ in the 200-meter freestyle. Pete Velosco from San Antonio was a standout in the 200-meter butterfly. SENIORS AND COCAPTAINS Mike Alley and Ben Wagoner are expected to perform well for the Jayhawks. Alley's specialties are the 500- and 1000-meter freestyles and Wagoner's forte is the 200 individual medley and the 200-meter breaststroke. Reamon also is expecting good seasons from freshmen Griff Docking and Doug Smith. David Estes, who Reamon said was in top condition, won the 200 meter butterfly Leading the divers are Mark Hill and Tom Anagnos, who finished second and third, respectively, in the Big Eight last year. Another diver, Kurt Anselmi, Shawnee Mission freshman, is the Kansas high school record holder in one-meter diving. Reamon said he thought the conference race would be between five teams, "I'm not comfortable be third in the conference," Reamon said. And he probably won't let his swimmers be satisfied with that either. WHAT ARE YOUR CHANGES FOR LAW SCHOOL? AIDES, Box 13492, University Station, Gainesville, FL 32804 Our Systems Analysts will estimate your chances of being accepted into law schools of your choice plus schools scientifically selected to match your profile. Cost? $12. Send now for information. Address_ MALAYSIA POTION PARLOR fine gifts for head and home, collectibles paraprenalia, imported and recycled clothing BOKONON .841-3600. 12e. & th street SUA Indoor Rec- Table Tennis TOURNAMENT IT'S A TARGET! Sun., Nov. 14 2:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom $1.50 Entry Fee 1st and 2nd place trephios DOUBLE ELIMINATION 1st and 2nd place winners go to Cape Girardeau, Mo. from Region XI Tournament Sign up in SUA office by Fri., Nov. 12 Jimmy Spheeris Is returning to Lawrence after a sellout performance in Kansas City for a concert in Hoch Auditorium. Friday, 8:30 p.m., Nov. 12 Tickets are: $5.00 in advance General Admission $6.00 day of Show Presented by SUA 8 Wednesdav. November 10. 1976 University Daily Kansan Area swine flu clinics set Need a shot in the arm? People ages 18 through 44 will be able to receive swine flu vaccinations at several locations in Douglas County. Thus far 5,397 swine fh shots have been in given Douglas County, Key Kent, director of the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, said Monday. Clinics at Watkins Memorial Hospital will be open from 2 to 7:30 m., Nov. 18, 19 and 22, and from 1 to 5:05 m., Nov. 20. Kent said that clinics also would be open in the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th St, from 4 to 8 p.m., Nov. 15, and from noon to 5 p.m., Nov. 21. Other clinics in Douglas County will be noon to 5 p.m., Nov. 14, in Baldwin at the American Legion building; 4 to 6 p.m., Nov. 17, in Eudora at the city hall; and 4 to Bingo luck dramatic . . . From page one AT HALFTIME, as before the games, that held the, several hundred bingo cards. Rinke said with a laugh, lightning up another cigarette himself. "We've thought about using some of the profits to improve the system, but those things take time." They picked through the pile carefully, searching for cards with numbers in certain places, or cards with numbers that had been paving off during the evening. "We keep track of numbers that are on winning cards," Rinke said, "and a lot of people like cards with numbers in certain or people. People like 78's and 13's in the corners." "There's one lady," Rinke's coworker said, "who likes to get a card with the month and the day of the year on it. Two other ladies come in and get the same number of cards each week—one gets 15 cards, the other 14." BUT, BOTH MEN said, those cards don't avail any more than any man there. "It's just the wind the wind blows the ball," one man said, referring to the machine that held the multi-colored, numbered Pong-Pong balls. Over half of the more than 120 people there last night were regulars, Rikke said, but some showed up only because two large jackpots were up for grabs. One was the game Long won; the other wasn't won so the pot will be increased next The "specials," or jackpot games, are set up as that players have only a certain amount of money. IF NO one covers his card in that number of calls, the jackpot is increased by $25 and carried over until the next week, until it reaches $100. The jackpot, the law allows for a special game. p. m., Nov. 23, in Lecompton at the United Methodist Church. However, the game continues until someone blocks out his card. That winner wins the game. The maximum winning allowed by law for a regular game is $0, Kine said, and the maximum losing amount is $12. The types of bingo played varied with the navoff. These are monovalent clinics, which are for people ages 18-44. Blind clinics are for people ages 45 and up. Variety vary from straight bingo-five across, five down or five from corner to corner, to postage stamp bingo, where the numbers are numbered in one of the corners of the card. EVEN IF both jackpots had been won last they said the total wouldn't have surpassed $100,000. An average night's payoff varies from $100 to $600, Rink said, but can go to a maxximum of $200. Monovalent clinics give only swine flu vaccinations. Bivalent clinics give both swine flu vaccinations and shots for other diseases prevalent in certain age groups. "But without the games," a coworker said, "we couldn't hardly give anything at all, and it's sure not hard to find somebody who could use the money." Profits from the games, which are played every Sunday and Tuesday night, go to charitable organizations and athletic teams. Rinke said. The games probably will go for a long time, but sure, it's just for fun, a kind of entertainment. He declined to set an amount on the profits but said they weren't very sub- And, as one woman player said, "If you win once, you'll be back every week." Kent said that the health department hoped to have another bivalent clinic in conjunction with immunization for the high risk group. The high risk group is people younger than 18 who could easily contract the flu. COFFEE BAR *Additional clinical use for these two groups it isn't available yet, but we're hoping to have some results.* The time and place of the clinic will be announced when the vaccine is available. No calls concerning major side effects have been received at the health department office from people receiving the shot, Kent said. Minor side effects such as a light fever, headaches and muscle aches, can occur after a stroke. Thanks to the donated time and effort of members of the Lawrence Plumbers and Pipitiers Local 783, an elderly Lawrence plumber, plumbing in their East Lawn home. When funds for rehabilitation the house "hit the bottom line, so to speak, we called the plumbers and pipefitters and asked for help." Gene Shaughnessy, housing and rehabilitation specialist for the city, said Sunday. Union members donated time on two Saturdays last month to finish the project, which was started by the Lawrence Community Development Department Shaughnessy said the couple whose home was rehabilitated had asked not to be The Community Development Department付 all $5,000 to each housing rehabilitation project. The department had paid $15,000 for the project were depleted, Shahraadsey said. TONIGHT: STUDENT SENATE meets at 8:30 in the Union's Big Eight Room. CAMPUS CHRISTIANS meet at 7 in the Union's Jahaywak Room. The SUA MARCHING ENGINEERS meet at 9:30 in the Cultural ENRICHMENT PROGRAM of the Office of Minority Affairs is to show a film titled "Claudine," at 7:140 in KWUE. KU DAMES meets at 7:30 in the Union's Watkins Room. Married women students and the wives of students are invited. An annual fall HONOR RECITAL begins at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall. TODAY: A SOCILOGY COLLQUIUM at 3:00 p.m. in the Kansas Union's campus. Donald Loch, program director of sociology at the National Science Foundation. Union members installed bathroom fixtures, pipe and a sewer line from the Without the donated time of the union members, the project probably would have taken longer. On Campus Group to inform students TOMORROW: A FRENCH AND ITALIAN COLLOQUIUM at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Pine Room features Norris Lacy, professor of French and Italian, who lecture on "Space in Literature." *DARYLE BUISH, professor of chemistry at Ohio State University*, will speak at 4 p.m. in 124 Malott Hall. An INTERFRATERNITY GROUP, consisting of the American Museum of Natural History MECHA meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Wahun Roat. KU SAILING CLUB meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Parlor C. The THIRD ANNUAL CULTURAL ENRICHMENT PROGRAM of the Office of Minority Affairs is to show a film titled "Flap," at 7:30 p.m. in 3140 Wescoe. An ANTHROPOLOGY COLLOQUIUM entitled "Kansas Festivals 1976: Anthropology and the Public Domain," is at 7:30 p.m. in 3140 Wescoe. An ANTHROPOLOGY COLLOQUIUM entitled "Nobody Walks Bob Day" at 4 p.m. in the Union's Jawhawk Room. Day will read from his about-to-be published book, "The Last Cattle Drive," a comic collection of cranky Western Kansas cattlemen. A new College Assembly undergraduate steering committee plans to inform University students about the Assembly and its five standing committees. Plumbers help out needy couple The steering committee, which had its first meeting yesterday, comprises 13 undergraduate students who serve on the five standing Assembly committees. The steering committee and the committee it established aren't standing committees. The committee was formed last week as a result of a student proposal made after the meeting. The committee set up a public relations committee, which will organize a campaign to make students aware that the Assembly decisions, such as policies on class withdrawal and student advising, affect the student body. The public relations committee will also make sure that student representatives understand their responsibilities to the and to the students they represent. At the same time, the steering committee also set up an election committee to make guidelines that will determine representation on the Assembly and its committees, and an operational guidelines committee to write a document defining the goals and purposes of the steering committees. A steering committee existed two years ago but it wasn't effective, Pohl Kaufman, a co-founder of GODSPQLK NOV. 12 "They just had a bucket sitting under the sink to catch the waste water," she said. "Some don't have any inside plumbing. They can't be a city sewer line running to their property." house to the property line. The house did have running water, but there were no lines to the house. "From that point on is when the plumbers took over," Shughnessy said. "They laid the sewer line from the house to the city sewer." The city had to contract to have the sewer extended 110 feet to meet the couple's property. Wayne Urdred Ditching and Excavating donated the trenching work for the swer Besides donating their time, the union members also arranged for the city to buy bathroom fixtures and supplies at cost from Huxtable and Associates, Inc. REEL TO REEL: A Festival of Women's Films Nov.13 & 14 Dyche Aud. SATURDAY --also offers name brand merchandise from HEAD NO. 1, SUN, ANBA, INNSBRUCK, PROFILE, GERRY AND WHITE STAG 12 NOON THE OTHER HALF OF THE SKY: A CHINA MEMOIR, Shirley Maclaine/Claudia Weil REFLECTIONS, Shannon Green I MAKE-UP, Pam Hopkins MAXA, Martha Dunn MAYA, Martha Dunn GWEN/MIME, Pam Hopkins/ Martha Dunn ALL DAY SUCKER; CHICKEN DELIGHT, Mary Bondurant RAPE PREVENTION: NO PAT ANSWER, Polly Pettit 3 PM WOMAN TO WOMAN, Donna Dietch clouds with rainbow SANDY AND MADELINES FAMILY, Sherrie Farrell (1973) 28 min. HOME MOVIE, Jan Oxenberg SUNDAY 12 NOON MESHES OF THE AFTERNOON, Maya Deren There IS a difference!!! MCAT *DAT* LSAT *SAT* GRE *MAT* OCAT *VAT* Check 30 pages of your account statement. Access the My Account section to view all transactions, and check for any errors. For more information, visit www.mcat.com or call (800) 279-1546. Events 3 P M WOMEN'S HAPPY TIME COM- MUNE, Sheila Paige Sponsored by Women's Coalition/Funded by Student Activity Fee BROTHER CARL, Susan Sontag NEVER GIVE UP: IMMOGENE CUNNINGHAM, Ann Hershey ECFMG • FLEX NAT'L MEDICAL & DENTAL BOARDS TUB FILM, Mary Beams. Our broad range of programs offers: Master's in Computer Science Bachelor's in Computer Science improving the computer system 513.769.8000 513.769.8000 Serving Business and Consultants Supporting Corporate Operations Individualized Mailing Options Address: 800-221-8949 Cell Phone: 800-221-8949 Stanley H KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 KELLY BACKPACK MAC KELTY BACK PACK MAC GRAND CANYON BACKPACKING - ACCOMMODATIONS DURING TRAVEL $ 135^{00} SALE Dec.27-Jan.4 - TRANSPORTATION Inquire at SUA office 864-3477 THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY 20 to 30% Off - MEALS FOR 5 DAYS Kombi leather, nylon down and fiber filled skiing downhill first serve first serve Open 'til 8:30 on Thursdays first serve TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE II9 MASSACHUSETTS 842-BB45 General Meeting Campus Veterans The bylaws of the Campus Veterans will be ratified at the meeting. Rough drafts of the bylaws are available at the Campus Veterans Office (Room 118B Kansas Union) and will be available at the meeting. All members are strongly urged to attend. Friday, Nov. 12, 3:30 p.m. in the Union, Sunflower Room, 3rd Floor Free beer while it lasts to be served at conclusion of business. If you have any questions call 864-4478 or stop by Room 118B in the Kansas Union. The Dexter Boot McCall's 'Put Yourself in our Shoes' Downtown In Men's and Women's Sizes Sitka SITKA A. Back stay reinforced for additional durability. B. 100% Net thread used all over helps. Resist resist and decy from B. 100% Nylon thread used all over shoes. Helps resist wear and decay from moisture and precipitation. C. Heavy reinforced weather-guard counter for superior strength and heat probation. D. Do you have middle of leather and full cushioned Micro Lite give extra firm support and rigidity. E. Vibram bug solu and heat with yellow label. F. Huawei reinforced door of firm, flexible Surfly™ to last F. Heavy reinforced steel made of firm, flexible silicon™ to last a long time. The reinforced steel dischale is extra durable, extra for full use **Instructions** G. Reinforce spring steel shank is unbreakable, extra long for full support on the arboreal. The arabic text is provided in LaTeX format to ensure readability. under the arch. H. Leather quarter lining plus periphery absorber for added support and CLAS comfort within the foot. 1. Ankle pad. Both sides of ankle are cushioned and protected by % inch of padding. 1. Heavy duty umbrella. Includes hoops to provide structural strength, support, and comfortable wear. 1. Rubber J. Heavy duty rubber. Includes an attached rib to provide maximum moisture and comfort wear. M. Box toe is heavy duty to provide safety and help maintain the form of the hoof. N. Box toe is a hard shell that should not slide under the foot. the both N: the both **dips** with rough nickel plated double rint hooks have fast laxion and added protection. K. Vamp lined with leather to provide add support and inside foot comfort. L. Good wearway Construction. For a strong, durable, and waterpumped floor. O. Leather upper of extra heavy leather does away with unnecessary stitching, and support long and warm. Si flap closure keeps out dirt. Q. Velcro fasten. Keep tongue in place during effluent use. R. Velcro fasten. Formatted and shaped fit the natural curve. --- S. Stretch erase top, leather covered foam rubber padding cushions the Addition teardrop for an uncomfortable fit. Sitka R S O P A B N C D M E F L K J I H G MUSIC Contact rence. BOKON New al 841-360 Need 1 mo. w --- Male Furnis kitchen $100 e 1 Bedr sublear 6841. Farm shag c on pav STERI of any other you w at the CUSTE work Mini- cal 144.50 "New now s University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 10. 1976 e 9 KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered to students of the College or national origin FLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAUNT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES time times times times time 15 words or Ever additional word .01 .02 .03 .04 $2.00 $2.25 $2.75 $3.00 .01 .02 .03 .04 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These items can be placed in person or by calling the UDR business office at 864-5354. 864-4358 Employment Opportunities MUSICIANS: Part-time work for band members. Contact Amber at Army Reserve band in La 12-483-1651. ENTERTAINMENT BOKONOY Paraphernialia for the comosusace of bonges and pipes. 12 Easht 841- 843-300. FOR RENT Need to sublease Jiahawkower towers apt. $313/ mw utilities Call 841-107 or 912. 826-9800 www.jiahawkower.com Subleane- 2 bedroom床援 apt. for 2nd sem- tenant. Call 1867 after 6. Make students furnished room, available now for admission. Instruct in cooking, kitchen, prattling CA. One block from campus. Students must have 2 years of college exp. 2 male or female roommates should share a bed. 1 female roommate, 2 sleeping cubes, 2 ceiling. 3 air conditioners, 2 full bathroom. patio. AC, DW. pool, etc.-bus route to camp and to campus. 1 student, 1-3 students -call us: 842-390-182 842-390-182 11-11 One bedroom apt. available mid-December. Call 841-2504 after 3 p.m. 11-12 Subbase 1 bdmr ap1 at Wednesboro for 266. Subbase 2 bdmr ap1 at 17,15: 76. Call Mary 2266. Uptown patrion for rest: Clean, guild, reassurance Uptown patrion: Share kitchen and baths 11-12 841-381-2000 at 9:00. One bedroom furnished apartment; walk to campus. $10 per month, includes meals 8-420-9008 11-12 Two bedroom apartment, part furnished, near downtown and los. $135 monthly. Call 844-796-0261. Farm for rent. New mobile home, 2 bedrooms, garage, carpet, enclosed, short distance to Lawrence and Leavenworth. 1 Bedroom furnished 0 apt available 1 Jan 1粥 8641. Gaslight Apartment 11-16 8641. FOR SALE Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties. Battery. Battery charger. BELL AUF ELECTRIC, 833-3600, 9300, W 60H, 120V, 450W. CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermals. Unicorns. etc. Stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-8838. STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment that factors dampness or out-of-products, the GE 1200 series is one of the best at the GHAMOPHONE SHOP at KIFES®. tf Excellent selection or now and used furniture Equipment, equipment, and Appliance Center, 704 North Main, 843-6721 Western Civilization Note→New on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Make sure out of Western Civilization! 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available at now at Town Crier Stores. tf Imported car service problems? TONY'S IMPORTS- DATSUN 500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444 SEE ... VISIONS 40% - 75% off on warm up suits, dresses, man's pants. 85% - 100% off on Swim Suits. Chub Club. Rt. 4 (west side) 842-779-6877 Rt. 3 (north side) 842-779-6877 Excellent selection of used furniture, retiratory beds, recliners, mattresses, towels, a 1 a.m.-6 a.m. floor. 1252 Main St., Tampa, FL 33607. (855) 421-9999 For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call or visit Btu. Call buses at 841-5448 or 11-18 at 844-1347. has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 Stereo-Onkyo X28 220 AM-FM Receiver. Technologies Directed to the following linear 100 speakers. Call Juni 641-8232. 11-50 Pair of Pioneer 630X speakers. Retail $600. Will sell for $250. 814-4835. 11-10 STEREO SYSTEM: Nikko receiver, glamburn turntable with 841-5946. Nice system for up to 841-5946. Virtually indestructible Dog Houses, $25. 11-11 colors. 483-1085. Women's black leather coat, size 8, $100 or best offer. 841-568. 11-11 69 Cameroon, Yellow, 57,000 miles, excellent condition. Call 845-322-308. Tongxiao. 11-10 Porsche 914, 1970 model, must sell immediately. Portech 892, 1973 model, or 1-253-789. p.m. and weekend. 11-19 CAMERA: Exakta RTL 1000, 50 mm lens, excellent condition: 842-3683. Keep哭. 11-12 Excellent seats for Nov. 13 Manfred Mann concert Call Dan. 864-6132. 11-12 Realistic 44 BSR turntable. Never used. $5, Call 841-3010 after 5 p.m. 11:12 Original handmade bracelet and turquois bracelet suitable for wearing silver. Best offer. Call 11-12- 8622. Fax 11-12-8622. 1927 Dodge Van. carpet and parceled, loaded with extra Maut sell-bell set. Baldwin, 15wm. 11-12 11-12 Want to save money? Buy your used car from an independent dealership. An excellent condition condition All service records available "86 Ford 3.4 L truck equipped with 68 200 auto * 96 Ford 3.4 L truck equipped with 68 200 auto, winterized, $1200 1000 Motogear 104 ac, winterized, $1200 1000 Motogear 104 ac, $100, Furniture, rugs, blinds, tables, $100, Furniture, rugs, blinds, tables, stores Come and see at 255 No. Mch. No. 722, Streeterville Ave, 1300-255-722 For Sale 171. Super-Bee-At, For Sale 191. Super-Bee-At, Must sell-High-lift-Bee-At, Must sell-High-lift-Bee-At, 842-805-6968, 842-805-6968 Corvette 76 L loaded, 5,000 miles, $550, Warranty, 272-1314, Toppeca, 11-15 Realistic Sterile System, Speaker MC 1000 amps, 5x8" rack mount, 4x16" stereo amplifier, AM-FM + best offer, #84-3234. 11-15 days. (Call for details.) BICYCLE: Swiss, Mondea Special, Campy BOOKS: for racing, 49, 11-11, Borse 842-6822 Borse 842-6823 72 SAAB 99 New clutch, motor white. Twelve 141-690 before repair meet recondition 141-690 after 3 PM 11-15 Chrystal "20" good condition, $60 or best offer. Woodcrest Apts. Bldg. # 50 M 34 841-3743 **Fine** CAR STEREO SPECIAL *NOTICE* you know that the car stereo in the Nissan—we call it WARNANTY car stereo, buy into it—the one which represent many years of experience in the business, but not performance in real savings value performance in real savings value THE ADVENT STEREO RECEIVER is the most advanced and versatile audio receiver—manufacturing design and production write-in capabilities that before this one is real and refreshing—all while being easy to use with SAY AUDIO 18 x 9th. Stereo Consolition How about a Pioneer SX 450 receiver for $170 and how much hurry you don't want to walk by. The way you know we hurry is by the consistent day-to-day $33 saving order service. Stop in and install or RCA AVR (DJ) $33. We are open 24/7. Call 866-252-9411 (DJ 13). Pioneer KP-250 FM stereo cass. under dash is now on sale. You never thought you could have so much car stereo for so little. Little Hat! Little Car! You can find and in find out 11-16 AUDIO, I E. 3.8 H. Have you ever found yourself in what you know, or are you still learning to realize your pain is down around your ankles? You realize your pain is down around your ankles on your wall. Well we not like that! We're not like you! AUDIO 13, E 8th. Stereo Consulting Specialist We have a stereo system that will really amaze you. You can listen to the music and let us show you how to save well over $100 or more and get better, really pleasing professional performance. RAY AUDIO, 15 E. 8th. Stereo Con 67 Pontine Bonneville, automatic, power air, must Sell=250, 841-849 after 5. 11-16 Volkswagen 1967 Bug, dependable, 74,000 miles $500, 841-6233, 11-12 Phone 842-4888 or 842-5605. $800. 11-16 Four tickets to Colorado game. Call 841-1765 11-11 One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Rock Keyboard. Professional sound systems, guitar's, amp's, drums, specifcally bass and drums. Recorded by Rock Keyboard. 11-16 lb. 1420, W. 329, 843-3007. sPORT PICKENS AUTO PARTS Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents We service all makes of cars 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 & SUPPLIES HELP WANTED Casette tape player and new heads. $290. Tape recorder. $495. Technol- SL-1300 turntable, full warranty, $199. Lithium-Ion battery. $169. Part-time fountain work No Neons and Kevings Apply in person at the Drive In Drive. 12-11-11 26th & Iowa 843-1353 Weekend walk is the *Bandwash Shoppe* to Wednesday. The shopping center offers a many waitresses/Bartenders at 7:30, Spirit, must be arrived by 7:15. The bar has a menu of drinks. Job opening for Research Assistant 80% time, providing administrative support and assisting in research. Social science bureau and assisting in research. McKibbets, Dept. of Human Development, 113 Washington St., 3rd Floor, 3 to 6 am. Equal Opportunity Employer. Qualification: Bachelor's degree in CS or related field. AVON-Earn extra money on your own time. AVON-Take full-time. Full-time. Anytime 11-20. Mrs. Selia. MRS. Selia. Undergraduate teaching assistantships in chemistry, mathematics, physics, biology, supervision and grading in Chemistry 184, 188, 196, 205, 309, 310, 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, 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, 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, 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, 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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, 209 OVERSEAS JOBS - nummer/year/round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500- $1200 monthly. Expenses paid, aighteenth. Free bachelor's degree. Residency. KA, Baxter 440, Kentucky. KA, Baxter 440, Kentucky. CA 97047. 11-11 LOST AND FOUND TEACHERS at all levels Foreign and Domestic Teachers, Box 1063 Monaco, wa. 98600. 11-10 www.box1063.com Found: set of car keys in 311 Summerfield for Ford. Car claim at 864-5538. 11-10 Security wants person to wash ewenoting pots and pans in exchange for evening meal. 843-6650 Found: young black female cat at. living H11 worn red collar: 841-716 after 31 Lust: AH Hoch Aud. after Louis Falcone concert, 21 October 2013, 11:45 am. birds in bed, 11:40 am. etc. reward. 841-988. **found:** an AR 50 calculator in Learned Hall. **surmised** and claim from Mubenee. 864-002-91 **died:** in Hoboken, NJ on October 30, 2017. Litter Brown framed plaque in the vicinity of, a large window. Black cat with white paws & stomach. Black cat with black ears. Found: Womens wrist, watch found, 24th and Oustahl: B41 - 782-543 11-11 Lost trumpet with case in O-Zone parking lost 1-343-706-2848 Call collect Found. Calculator—1600 block Term. Call 842-11 4675. Found st. St.Joseph's High School Class Ring. Call main rack at the union and claim. 11-15 Found: Brenda Lea Burrow, I found your checkbook. Call 814-3509 and identify. 11-12 Lost: Turquise and silver bracelet on Sat. Nov. 6266 Generous reward offered on Mon. 6266 11-12 Found: hide-a-key case with two keys. Sat. in X-lot. Claim in 111 Flint Hall. 11-12 Found: eyeglasses West 12th between Kentucky & Vermont; 847-459, for马克 v. 11-12 Least: Light brown breeze and contents on 2nd wall. Reason: Call Answer: at 8:11 evenings. MISCELLANEOUS 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 a.m. Monday through 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. Rededeme Lutheran Church, 30th and Haskell. Provide student use of the Bible in morning worship at 9:50 a.m. and Bible Study at 10:15 a.m. We have an active college library and many academic resources needed. Contact Church Office, 832-848-12-18 NOTICE CASSIAH CAFE- Good food from serach. Lunch M-F; 11-30. Dinners M-2 10:30-5:30. Saturday Brunch 10:30-5:30. 603 Mass. Please use backpack evenshows for intimate related dining. 648-590. If you need a car, call 718-363-7020. Swap shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishens, snap kits, clamps, televisions, digital open daily 12-8. Presently offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1977. 1 and 2 bedroom units, furnished and unfinished. Rough stones and slab. Kingman, Kingman R. Turquiose店, 1828 Mass. 442-4646. 11-11 Country Store Craft Sale. Pottery, jewelry, toys, Christmas ornaments, and more by local craftsmen. Clder, popcorn, and baked goods. Sutliff, Nursery School. 645 Alabama. 11-12 Nursery School, 645 Alabama. GRAY RAP GROUP: Thursday, Nov. 11, 823 K凄KAYPT, Apt. 3, 7:3 P.M. 11-11 2410 W 25th Park 25 842-1455 Commission on the Status of Women: Issues in Japan 1976/78 1976/78 Jawahir Rao, Korea - Kansai Union POETHY WANTED for Antibody, Include Antibodies: P.O. Box 1605, San Francisco, California FIND OUT WHY GAY DANCES ARE THE BEST Saturday, November 20, 8 to 1, Kansas Union Bank, Sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas. This will begin on Friday, November 23, with socializing activities, call 945-832-169. DOG12 BOYD, author of *Rolling Thunder*, 15th Nov. at 7 p.m. on *Adrienne* at 1200 Spartan Drive, New York City. - Pin-Ball MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE Barsan—hand-made stoneware pottery and bat- tles, glazed in gold, green, red and black, and gifts and decorations. Thirteen 10-mm. p-3m. p-5m. p-8m. p-10m. p-12m. p-14m. p-16m. p-18m. DK SKILLET says we've not the new LQUOR with his left hand. We have a LQUOR in both. With his left hand. Trug in and Iug in. With his left hand. Trug in and Iug in. Air Hockey Many at Special Discounts UNLESS YOU LOVE SOMEONE, NOTHING ELSE will be held in the meeting. Nov. 16, Regional Room of the Union. Socalizing hour will follow a short business meeting. Gay community encourages 11-16 The Vind Drive-In-1, 127 W. 5th, open daily until 1 A.M. Fri. + Sat. until 2 A.M. 11-11 ADVENTURE a bookstore SELECTION OF BEER - Foos-Ball PERSONAL Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and Iowa -West of Hillcrest Bowl Snooker Ping Pong Girls riled at the three RVs (Reading, "Riting and Raging") and sent them to Roger, (Roger). For further information call 843-6530. Another rate increase? JKHJ FM 91 will help answer your questions concerning KHJ's recent activity. Please visit khjfm.com at night at 7:30 with People's Energy Project. To see more about the project, visit your question, 864-4747. They will be answered! For your next party, function, T.G.L.F., or friendly gathering—let the Olympia beer help make it a bus trip. Money ($20) kegs or $42-12 hours for complete information and service. Jerry. Experienced plotwant volunteer co-plot w-that student. Student must be a college student or staff member preferred. Duties include observation, man reading & ct. No experience required. Wired interested parties 15 yrs. exp. Phone: 843-6424 Thinking you'd want to put in 8 hrs, and try to win a prize, you could be a superhero needed. You might be an adult or superboy needed. You might be an adult or superboy needed, with interesting career possibilities. You could be a pictures of yourself. You could be a pictures of yourself. You could be a pictures of yourself. You could be a pictures of yourself. Is your neck tense? Would you like a faulty hair design? Would you like a facial hair Hair Designs for massage for relief of tense hands? Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals. SERVICES OFFERED 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, 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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, 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, 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, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 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, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052 ACADEMIC RESEARCH FAPERS. Thousands on catalog, cataloging, and research requests to 360 B, Los Angeles, CA. Mail resume to: BACREsearch@bacresearch.org. *Don't Save?* See me for all your sewing needs: 84-766 between 10-3. 84-766 between 11-7. Cedarwood Apartments Now offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1977 1 & 2. bedroom only. 2414 Ousdahl 843-1116 --in the summer. CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE ING DRYMOUNTING Cross Reference Bookstore 847 1553 Mallis Shopping Center - DRYMOUNTING * STITCHERY * METAL FRAMES * RESTORATION TYPING Mattresses • Liners Heaters • Frames Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets Special. Interested German. Anyone interested in Business or Information Technology, build your special workbook using non-special deflectives and reference materials. Strong旁强 interests. Call Post-Office (310) 284-5500. Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a bike rack. 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Aztec Inn CHINA STATE FUND 50 YEARS OF INVESTMENT All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont Call Ottis Vann! Turner Chevrolet 9th and Iowa I do damned good typing. 862-4476. New address. Ifg - Foosball EXPERT TYPING. Fast and secure, reasonable rate, proofreading and minor grammar corrections. WANTED Open Daily 10 a.m.-midnight Except Sunday - 2 studies females needed to be furnished for the study. * 3 studies males required all utilities included. Call Bkh. 841-7440. 11-42 Two female roommates to share furnished toilet. Grantment: $148, included all usual room amenities. Female to sublease Gatehouse Apt. Take over payment January 841-4523 11-16 *FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS* BOWTIE HATS JEANS 843-7700 Need roommate for $35m, to share 10 beds. Need bedroombrook $80, =$1.73 sheet, and plush $43. Roommate needed immediately for nice house computer. Own room $88.75 ms, pla 14 ua comply with terms and conditions. I and my well-mannered dog need a place to live. Jackie. 842-1067. 11-16 Ghost, Writers. Must have creative ability plus journalistic background. Write Box 20, 111 Flint Hall. University of Kansas, enclosing a full book of sketches, xplores are confidential and will be answered. Female roommate needed for spring semester, for first year of college, plus 1% ebc. Call LtA 841-5884. Keep Very Clear! Looking for married couple who plan to be in Lawrences, couple of years away weekend man in NYC. No job required. Need two tickets to KU-MU game. Call Tues. or Thurs. 814-7549 11-11 SUBLASE-Villa Square apartment. $66.33 per room; 3/4 units. own bedroom. $80. or $48-15. own bathrooms. X - Pool For new Chevrolets and used cars at Home of Phone 813-1211 KU Union Lobby 209 W Bldg 842-621-6375 BankAmericard Mastercharge Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDLE SNOP [WORK] W X A m o n t e & p r o j 842 8413 Mastercharge For the Do-It-Yourself we offer: 1. Special Prices - Bud on Tap Auto Parts N.A.P.A. 2. Open 7 days and nights 3. We have it or can get it overnight 4. Machine shop service 5. Two stores 817 Vermont 843-9365 Goods • Vintage Clothing AIRPLANE 2300 Haskell 843-6960 Selected Secondhand HALF AS MUCH - Furniture - Antiques - Imported Clothing at 730Mass.841-7O7O SUA Maupintour travel service 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. Keep your car healthy Use the student discounts LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 Happy Car KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU 10 Wednesday, November 10, 1976 University Daily Kansan Composers to pool ideas The music of 12 contemporary American composers will be featured at the University of Kansas this weekend when the composers gather in Murphy Hall for a conference of Region VI of the American Society of University Composers. laward, Mattia, professor of music theory and composition, and cochairman of Region VI, said Monday that the meeting would be the first time that KU sponsored a conference that brought so many composers together. Region VI of the society comprises Kansas, Arkansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Texas. The conference will begin Friday evening and continue through Saturday evening with free musical programs that are open to the public. FRIDAY NIGHT there will be a recital featuring the works of the composers, Saturday, forums, lectures and demonstrations during the day and another recital in the evening will be presented. Students and faculty members of the School of Arts will perform at the recitals, which are at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Also performing at the recitals will be George Eason, a composer from West Texas State University, who will play an original piano composition. Two visiting musicians from the University of Houston, Jeffrey Lerner, clarinet player, and James Strand, organist, will also perform at the recitals. SATURDAY the composers will give a series of presentations in the music lounge of Murphy Hall. These will include a forum on "Problems and Resolutions of Live Electronic Performance" at 10 a.m., and a tape session at 2:30 p.m. at the tape session, the composers will play tapes of their compositions and discuss them. Mattila, coachairman of the conference with Michael Horvitt, a composer from the University of Houston, said that the conference was for composers who were professors of music theory and composition at universities and colleges in Region VI. He said that this year's conference will be organized by the American Society of University Composers, would also attend. Bialsoy is from California State College at Dominguez Hills. Two other composers who will participate in the conference are James Winkle, Southeastern Oklahoma State University; Thomas Benjamin, University of Houston; Barton, Priscilla McClean, Karle Korte and Donald Granatham, all from the University of Texas at Austin; and Charles Hoag and Stanley Shumway from KU. More information about the conference can be obtained by calling the fine arts division. Directories finally ready The University of Kansas student directories have arrived. Robin Eversole, director of publications, said yesterday that the directories had been delivered to the University housing office. They will be distributed to the dormitories and sent to KU offices by campus mail, Eversole said. Additional copies of the directories will be sold in the Kansas Union bookstores beginning Monday. The cost of the directories hasn't been set. 6th Anniversary SALE MASS. STREET DELI MASTACHUSETTS ST. 50c OFF — with this Coupon REUBEN SANDWICH Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye. Reg. $2.00 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 The Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th $1.75 with this Coupon Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Reg. Price $2.10 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. $1.00 OFF — with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 New Delivery Hours To Give The Students FASTER DELIVERY SERVICE THE GREEN PEPPER is now delivering to Campus only. The delivery area includes All University Housing, Fraternities and Sororities, Jayhawk Towers, and Naismith Hall. Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 5 p.m.-12:30 p.m. Sun. 4 p.m.-11 p.m. The University Council will consider several proposals and will hear a report from Del Shankel, executive vice president of the university at midnight on its regular monthly meeting. guidelines listing what each school and department expected from its faculty members in service activities, such as training or working in professional organizations. The other committee report proposes changes in University Council and SenEx composition that would provide more representation for KU faculty. Stankel will discuss potential problems of possible declining enrollments at RU and CAL. 544 W.23rd 842-9003 The Council will consider two reports from the Advisory Committee on Organization and Administration. The first is a policy statement concerning the role of service in considering faculty members for promotions, tenure or merit salary raises. Enrollment for council on agenda The policy, if adopted, would set GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER 2525 Iowa, Lawrence, Kansas Prices Good Through Sunday, Nov.14th This year, KU's faculty salary increases might not be as large as those given the past two years, something that has resulted in a renewed interest in fringe benefits for faculty members. Our Regular $4'97 Albums Now $3'99 Our Regular $6'77 Tapes Now $4'99 Gobble Up These Bargains MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM NADIA'S THEME The Youth And The Realities THE MONHOLDER Transfer COMING OUT RINGO'S AUTOGRAPHIRE STANLEY CLA SCHOOL DAY OZARK MOUNTAIN DAREDEW HOT CHOCOLATE MAN TO MAN TED NUGENT FREE FOR ALL including Dog Ear Dog Memorabilia Writing On The Wall Street Music Turn It Up ABBA GREATER Burton Cummings PREFALL On Columbia Records and Tapes. McDonald's Fans' Favorite Football Facts Game. It's almost as much fun to play as it is to win. If you think you know a lot about football, we're going to give you a chance to win. You can also win to gain a free large fries... Every time you buy a "Quarter Pounder" or a Quarter Pounder with Cheese between Nov. 5 and Nov. 12, you will receive a Football Jacket and a Football Jacket Rub and Win Game card. You can use the card to challenge your football IQ. First, tub off the silver area covering the question. Then select the answer you think is correct and nib off the silver oval next to that answer. It the letters "TD" appear under the silver oval, you win! Come into participating McDonald's to complete details and play our Fans' Favorite Football Facts Game. And see if you really do know as much about football as you think you do. We do it all for you McDonald's 901 W. 23rd St. Favorite Football Facts "Say, do you remember who lost the Super Bowl in 1973?" oposes SenEx more EAGLE BOX includes a faculty. increases the past used in a蚊s for THE UNIVERSITY DAILY COLDER KANSAN Freelancer has own newspapers The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, November 11, 1976 Vol. 87 No.58 See story page seven 1978 Staff photo by DAVE REGIER Occupational pottery Melissa Fast came from New York as a special student in occupational therapy, not knowing that a ceramics course would be part of the curriculum. Yesterday, however, she worked in Flint Hall on one of the five six-inch cylinders she has to make for the course. Frats uncertain of future parking By JOHN MUELLER Presidents of two university of Kansas fraternities, Phi Delta Theta and Phi Kappa Sigma, said yesterday they had no idea where they were going to park their cars now that city commissioners won't let them park in the 1600 block of Edgehill Road. Jeb Bayer, Phi Delta Theta president, said. "The whole house is pretty upset. There's not really that much that we can do." The commissioners voted Tuesday to remove 24 parking spaces from the block where Phi Delta Theta and Phi Kappaappa Internity members have parked in the past. FIREMEN HAD URGED the removal, saying that they wouldn't be able to fit one of their large trucks into the spaces at the Edgehill curb if a fire broke out. The fraternities also were denied 30 parking spaces on Louisiana Street's east side, where commissioners earlier had told them not to park and could play during a 90-day trial period. Ed Hite, Phi Kappa Sigma president, saddit commissioners had kept their hands on the committee. "I think they put it put off until the last meeting to catch us off guard." Hite said. "It was a mistake." ACCORDING TO BAYER, 60 of the 80 members of the Phi Delta Theta House own cars. The parking shortage will hit the house's 20 freshmen especially hard, because they aren't assured parking space in the house lot. Student-writer from novel family Bayer said that Phi Delta Theta's corporation board, which owns the house, had talked about replacements for Edgellhair park at the board's last meeting. The commissioners reversed on Louisiana Street parking, Bayer said. "We talked about taking the lot at Louisiana and 17th and putting parking there," Bayer said. "But it's not a realistic alternative. The architect said that the whole lot would take $20,000 to $30,000 to develop." THE CORPORATION BOARD architect, Stan Steats of Kansas City, Kan., said yesterday "it's not economically feasible and it's out of reason to build a new lot of retail stores in alcove, so we need retaining walls." I don't know that those guys can do. Bayer said he didn't know, either. "The only thing we can do would be to take out our north yard, and that would cost a little more money." Staff Writer By PAUL ADDISON ANOTHER UNCLE, Jack Sher, who wrote the film scripts for the movies Melissa Fast leaks back on a chair in the barren kitchen of her Kentucky Street apartment and flings her hands through the air. "Body Language," she says with a smile, "has taught me a lot and altered the life style of our family. My father's always been a writer. It's just that this one book was a best seller and it has enabled us to live better financially." Fast, a New York City special student, comes from a family of writers. Her father, Julius Fail, has written "The Pleasure Book," "The Beatles—the Real Story," "Body Language," "Bisexual Living," and a number of moderately successful nonfiction novels. Her uncle, Howard Fast, was also a writer. "Spartacus," "April Morning" and the Emmy award winning television play, "Ben Franklin." "Shane" and "Kabu O." is currently writing a new television comedy. "Holmes Her mother, Barbara Fast, will be her first major book, "Intimacy", published in the year 2013. "I living in a family of writers has definitely made me more ambitious." Melissa says. "You see that it's possible to get things done, did it on. There always seems to be pressure." "IT'S A WEIRD feeling, although today most people know the book rather than the name. They're surprised when they find out." "When 'Body Language' became successful, I was a bit embarrassed but proud of my father. He was on TV a lot and people kept asking me, 'Is that your father?' "I'm currently writing a book about the Bronte family. I have a real fascination for them all. We all are so creative and they inspire me," she said, before but maybe there's a common bond. Melissa came to KJ in early 1975 to study occupational therapy after completing a nursing degree. She attended College, in New York. She loves her field of study, she says, but at the same time has both the fever to write and the fervor to get published. "WRITING IS A ROMANTIC occupation. But at the same time it's one of the toughest fields to break into. Once you're it's not so hard to continue, but to start you have to know what to write. More important, however, you have to know how to write. "Today, the subject matter of many of my father's books is determined by the publisher who then commissiones him to develop a basic idea. He then spends six months building a well communicated book, working on it every day. It isn't a nine-take job. A writer is always writing. You never know when something you say might end up in a book." FOR MELISSA, coming to KU has helped SEE WRITER page seven See WRITER page seven Marnie Arargsinger, city commissioner, said last night that the fraternities hadn't been notified of the change, adding, "I will be here tomorrow," on Louisiana parking in the first place. BUT ARGERSINGER DEFINED the change, saying, "I don't have any authority to do that," expect the street to provide the damn parking. Streets are for traffic, not for parking." Hite said that commissioners had asked the two fraternities for suggestions on where to park after the Edgehill spaces were removed. The Louisiana Street suggestion had been both fraternities' 'top suggestion, according to Hite. LOUISIAN STREET'S west side has enough parking spaces for the fraternities, and the street is also safe. also park there because the spaces are close to campus. The only option Hitler saw for his fraternity was for the members to pull down a fence in front of the house and then park up on the adjacent land. But the fence is privately owned, he said, and the city might not go along with the idea. Arsinger was the fraternity members should walk more. "The automobile isn't a "Those guys don't realize we took the parking off to save their lives in case of fire. After Baker, they should be grateful." Argersinger said, referring to a fire that killed five fraternity men at the Kappa Sigma house at Baker University in August. MAYOR FRED PENCE said last night that he didn't know whether the fraternities had been notified of the Louisiana Street change. "I don't know if it's even the city's responsibility to provide parking for them." responsibility to prevent parking be trained." " affects all of us in the house. It's really irritating. We'll just have to go down to the next commission meeting." The Tuesday meeting will be the second reading of the ordinance that removes the last road. It will be the last chance fraternity members have to argue their case. BOTH HITE AND BAYER said they planned to talk with commissioners before the start of the walkout to discuss the parking problem with members of their houses within the next few days. State prepares for check By MARTIN ZIMMERMAN Hard Drive The state fire marshal's office said yesterday that it would begin interviewing prospective fire inspectors next week in preparation for safety inspections of Lawrence apartment houses and complexes. Paul Markley, state fire protection technical adviser, said the inspections "We want to get started on this as soon as we get the new men lined up," he said. "I think 30 days is a good ballpark guess for him to be able to win." The month-long interval, Markley said, was needed to hire and train the three additional permanent inspectors required for the inspections. The exact timetable for the tours will depend on how much training the new personnel need, he said. MARKLEY'S STATEMENT comes in the MARKLEY-Black Monday of a young woman who was kidnapped. Oct. 30 at her home in East Lawrence. The woman's 10-month-old daughter also died in Veterans to discuss fairness of election Markley originally outlined the apartment inspection program late last month while he was in Lawrence completing a series of fire inspections at KU fraternities and sororites. That announcement came shortly after a $50,000 fire at the Park 25 apartment complex on south Iowa Street. By STEVE LEBEN Charges of election irregularities will be the major topic of discussion at a general meeting of Campus Veterans and National Guard members asking that new elections be held. Mike Dixon, Lawrence senior, and Claire McChristy, Lawrence sophomore, circulated the petition, which asks for a new policy for law enforcement officers by the end of this month. "It's not ouster proceedings or anything else," Dixon said. "All we want to see is a good, clean election." Bill Evans, Lawrence senior, defeated Dixon by two votes last May for president. DIXON SAID THAT ballots hadn't been prepared by the time voting was to begin last May. 5 When he came to the house in March that day, he said, he typed a up ballot. Dixon's bailout listed the candidates in alphabetical order with Dixon's name above them. "That afternoon, the old administration came in and retyped the ballot with Evans' name first. They went ahead and counted ballots one through nine, which were my ballots, and the others, which were theirs," Dixon said. "But when you look back through the ballots, ballot number five, which should have looked like my ballots, was like theirs," he said. Dixon said that Evans was then a member of the executive council, which EVANS SAID THE election committee had failed to meet last semester as it was scheduled to, so the administration was forced to handle the elections itself. Evans said he was in the room at the time, but wasn't involved in actually counting the votes. McChristy said the petition was designed to show that more than just one or two veterans were upset with the way the organization was being run. "Bill Evans wrote me on Campus Veterans stationery, simply stating that they believe me to be just one individual who isn't satisfied," McChris said. DIXON WOULDN'T SAY exactly how many veterans had signed the petition, but the vote has been a big success. There are about 1,000 veterans at KU who receive GI benefit checks from the federal government. Fewer than 40 veterans cast ballots in the last election. Several other topics will be discussed at Friday's meeting, which starts at 3:30 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. The only scheduled business, Evans said, is a proposed ratification of anew set of Campus Vetans bylaws. HE SAID THAT THERE were no major changes being made in the bylaws, but that items such as quorum requirements would be revised. Evans said he would probably ask those who attend the meeting to help raise money for a veterans' scholarship, which the group is trying to start. About $300 has been raised so far, he said, is a proposed ratification of a new set of Campus Veterans by laws. Evans, Dixon and McChristy all said they hoped for a large turnout at Friday's general meeting. Under Campus Veterans rules, all KU students who are veterans are automatically members of the organization. Once the inspections begin, Markley said, they will be limited to apartment houses and complexes that are three or more stories. Proper exits and fire extinguishers in the hallways will be among items checked, he said. MARKLEY SAID HIS inspectors would have the authority to inspect only areas of apartment buildings that were considered public access areas, such as stairwalls, corridors and laundry rooms. The inspectors must receive the permission of the resident before they can inspect the inside of an apartment, he said. John Kasberger, Lawrence fire chief, said his department's three inspectors would work with the state inspectors during the tours. "I don't think the fire marshal can speed up any more than he has," Kasberger said. "Since the Baldwin tragedy, all of his men are dead and they should be educated the educational facilities in the state." KASBERGER REFERED to a fire Aug. 29 at the Kappa Sigma fraternity house at Baker University that killed five men. Baker is in Badwin. Markley said the inspection of apartment buildings for fire safety formerly had been See FIRE page 10 Student Senate votes $9,652 for two groups Last night the Student Senate approved supplemental budget requests of $6,741 for the international Club and $2,911 for the KU ice Hockey Club. By BARRY MASSE Staff Writer The Senate 25 passed two resolutions calling for measures to insure student representation on various promotion and committee positions at the University of Kansas. After lengthy discussions concerning ea.h of the requests, the Senate approved the two clubs' budget requests without cuts in their allocations. See SENATE page 12 By DAVID JOHNSON When she talks, Carole Tyson's background reveals itself in every word she speaks. Her slow, drawing脏 peg her origin somewhere south of the Mason Dixon line—specifically Atlanta, Ga. Carole likes to read, has recently learned to bowl, and is eagerly looking forward to attending school again. She'll enroll in the University of Kansas School of Engineering in January. Carole has petit mal epilepsy, which is characterized by less severe seizures than occur in grand mal epilepsy. The petit mal seizures can be largely treated with antiseizure drugs, while epileptics have full or partial control of the disease. Unlike some other diseases, epilepsy is only obvious when the victim has a seizure. A seizure can be a lapse of consciousness for a few seconds, or can be a minimal minutes of blockouts or general convulsions. After talking with her, you know many things about Carole Tyson. However, you won't know one about the director. people in the United States have some form of epilepsy. Because epilepsy isn't a readily apparent disease and can often be controlled, Carole and her husband, Wilson, believe many epileptics won't admit they have it. "The biggest problem is everyone feels he is the only one who has it." Wilson said. But an epileptic is far from alone. The Epilepsy Foundation of America estimates that four million Among the well-known people thought to have had epilepsy were Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, St. Paul, Budda, Napoleon, Handel, Dante, Socrates, Techikovsky and Alfred Nobel. Singer Neil Young, formerly of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, is also an epileptic. "The business manager of the local dealer said Carole was fired because 'you couldn't read her writing.' " suspicion of epileptics" might cause the epileptic to deny he had the disease. Ellas Chedik, a Lawrence psychiatrist who some epileptic patients, said epileptics sometimes experienced social withdrawal or depression and may be able to overcome even to themselves that they have the disease. RICHARD RUNDQIST, director of the University Counseling Center, said a "sociali MARTIN WOLLMANN, director of Student Health Services, said cases of epileptics going off their medicine were "much rarer now than they were five or 10 years ago." about epilepsy, thereby alleviating some of the stigma attached to epileptics. In addition to coping with the real or imagined social stigma, many epileptics -42.1 per cent in a survey taken by the Epilepsy Foundation of India and the University of Kerala who worked for 12 years with the Internal Revenue Service in Atlanta, has been employed only once since moving to Kansas. Wollmann said the public was now more educated Carole said she had been clerk for two days at a Lawrence car dealership. On the afternoon of her second day, she had a petit mal seizure at work. She was wearing a mask for un-satisfactory performance of her duties. HER STAY at the job was short. A suit filed by the Tysons to the State Civil Rights Commission was dismissed. The business manager of the local dealer said Carole was fired because "you couldn't read her name." The boss asked first, "What was the first day, she said, and had aired a replacement "three or four hours" before Carole had her seizure. WHERE SHE APPLIED for a clerical jc in Kansas City that didn't involve meeting the public, Carole explained that she might have an occasional seizure. She wasn't hired. A recent high school graduate was, she said, despite Carole's 12-year experience with IRS. "Thempier doesn't want to experiment or overcome his misconceptions," Carole said. Finding employment isn't the only obstacle an epileptic must face. In Kansas, an epileptic can't get a driver's license unless a doctor certifies that he has been seizure-free for one year. However, epilepsy hasn't hindered the Tyson's other activities. the person who walks around on crutches from football. People need to be more open-minded. "Really we're just like everyone else . . . People need to be more open-minded about us." WILSON IS THE staff photographer for the Campus Veterans' newspaper and Carole will enter the School of Engineering in January. "Really we're just like everyone else," Carole said. "I don't feel I'm any more handicapped than Among the common misconceptions about epilepsy that the Tysons often encounter is the belief that it's contagious. Epilepsy may be caused by a birth defect, a head injury, a certain illness or a prolonged lack of adequate nutrition, but not by contact with someone who has it. Carole was one of two persons who survived an epidemic of spinal meningitis 25 years ago in Atlanta. Shortly after recovering from a high fever, she had her first seizure. EPILEPSY IS DIAGNOSED through many methods including spinal tapes and neurological examinations. But the most common tool is the electroencephalogram (EEG), which measures the electrical impulses to the brain and records them on a graph. Carole explained that the epileptic seizure was caused by a storm of uncontrolled electrical discharges from neurons in the brain. During her research, she was conscious but couldn't control her movements. Either because of ignorance or fear, most people won't help an epileptic have a *n* seizure. Wilson DON'T RESTRAIN the victim but clear the area so he doesn't injure himself. the Epilepsy Foundation of America a divies that prevents to prevent injury to the malleus during seizure; If the victim's mouth is open, place a soft object like a handkerchief between his teeth to prevent hurt. —Turn the victim on his side to allow saliva to flow from his mouth. —If the seizure lasts for more than 10 minutes, call a doctor. After the seizure, allow the victim to rest. 2 Thursday, November 11, 1976 University Daily Kansar News Digest From the Associated Press Transition still up in air GENEVA—Rhodianese black nationalists declared yesterday that they would continue to trust upon achieving full independence under black majority rule The Washington sources, who have behind-the-scenes contact with both white and black Rhodinger negotiators, said neither side wished to see the conference conclude. But diplomatic sources in Washington said most of the black leaders privately were prepared to accept a transition period of 18 months as a compromise to break down relations with the South. Vietnam stand unchanged The sources, well-placed diplomats, said that in a preliminary poll of council members the United States was the lone dissenter to the idea of recommending the extension. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—The United States told other members of the Securities Council yesterday it could not "acquire" a tax to U.N. use of the funds. Carter urged to act fast WASHINGTON — Rep. Morris Oral says Jimmy Carter could get off to a quick start in the presidency by pushing for passage of some of bills that were already on the agenda. Udall, who was runner-up to Carter in the race for the Democratic nomination, said Carter's relationship with Congress wasn't yet clear. The consumer groups believe he is on their side and many business people supported him because they believed he would back their side, Udall said. Wichita reporter harassed WICHTHA-An eight-foot wooden cross was burned Tuesday night on the lawn of the Kukushka and Beacon reporter Bob Hasten, who has written about the Kukushka. The Eagle-Beacon reporter infiltrated the Klan last year and wrote a series of articles on the group's secret ceremonies, recruiting efforts and other activities. The Klan was ousted from Kansas by a state Supreme Court order in 1925 but reorganized in Wichita last year. Mondale replacement set ST. PAUL, Mim.-Democratic Gov. Wendell Anderson said yesterday he would resign and have himself appointed to the U.S. Senate, succeeding Vice President Anderson said in a statement that his resignation would elevate L.A. Gov. Rudy Perkitt to the state's highest office and Appell, in turn, would appoint him to the Senate. Anderson, 43, would face election in 1978, when Mondale's term expires. Syrian forces take over Beirut without opposition BEIRUT (AP) - Syrian tanks and troops descended on embattled Beirut from three directions yesterday, in a swift occupation designed to extinguish the 19-month-old civil war. Housewives and shopkeepers open balconies and cheered from open windows. "If they're coming to help our country, then we welcome them 100 times," said Joseph Salloum, a grocer in a Christian quarter on the southeastern edge of the city, as Syrian T62 and T44 tanks clanked into the capital in a display of power. Shelling between the Moslem and Christian sections of the city continued right up until the arrival of the Syrians, now protecting an guard of a pan-Arab leaping force. In southern Lebanon, the leftist Lebanese Arab Army said that six Israeli tanks and personnel carriers attacked the town of Bint Jebel, three miles north of the border, and were repelled after an hourlong battle. In Tel Aviv, an Israeli military command spokesman called the report of a border crossing nonsense, but refused to comment further. Israel has repeatedly denied any direct involvement in the Lebanese civil war, but said it might take action if there was a military threat inside an unspecified “red” area. That line is believed to be 10 miles from the ‘srail-Lebanese border. 1977 HONDA EXPRESS Only 299¢ SALT LAKE CITY (AP)—The Utah Supreme Court reversed itself yesterday, and granted a request of convicted murderer Gary Mark Glimore that he be allowed to face a firing squad next Monday rather than spend the rest of his life in prison. The unopposed Syrian takeover of Beirut marked the first time the Lebanese capital has been occupied by a foreign power since 1983 and here in 1883 to stop another civil war. The Utah justice voted, 4-1, in favor of Glimore's response after a hearing in which he personally appeared to ask that he be allowed to die "like a man." Convict asks to die; court grants execution it's automatic, gets a patrol car and is almost maintenance free. Stop by and learn to ride with an objection. See it at Horizon's office. However, there remained a possibility of intervention by other parties to attempt to change the course. Court observers said it was the first time in memory a defendant had been allowed to plead before the court, rather than have attorneys appear for him. No one has been executed in the United States since 1967. The justices Monday postponed Glimore's execution by a 3-2 decision. Their two-paragraph decision yesterday granted a motion by Glimore's new attorney to "The stay of execution heretogranted is withdrawn and vacated and any appeal filed on behalf of Gary Glmore is dismissed forthwith," the court said. withdraw an appeal filed by two court- appointed attorneys Gilmore had fired. The American Civil Liberties Union of Tahoe has indicated it might take court action. In a dissenting opinion, Justice P. Frank Wilkins said legal problems remained to be addressed. A local director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has suggested consider action. Although Glume is white, the NAACP local director, James Dooley, expressed concern about how white and black members' roars would be affected by an execution. the earlier appeal, Craig Snyder, spoke briefly and told the court it ought not to rule on such substantial questions without first looking at the record. He said the decision Glmore made that "proposed unremounted damages" in any way acted involuntarily in such a case, he said. "What Mr. Gilmore is doing in this case is tantamount to suicide," Snyder said. George Latimer, chairman of the Utah Board of Pardons, said it was up to Gov. Calvin Rampton to grant any reprise until he can figure out a possibility of reducing the sentence. Gilmore appeared in handcuffs and a white prison uniform and told the blackrobe jaws, "I believe I was given a fair trial, and I think the sentence was proper, and I'm willing to accept it like a man and wish it to be carried out without delay." Gilmore's attorney, Dennis Boaz, and Deputy Atty. Gen. Robert Hansen, who argued for the state, both urged that the governor be a 8 a.m. Monday as originally scheduled. "it is unique and ironic that the attorney general's office and my agent take the same course." Boz said after the hearing that he had come to Utah as a freelance writer and was able to see Glmore at the prison only when he said he wanted to act as his attorney. He then went to the court as a former county prosecutor in the California, declined to say where he lived. He said it was "not a case where my client has some kind of suicide pact with the state, or perverse death wish, or is in an irrational state of mind." Gulmore, 35, was convicted of first-degree murder in the death of a Provo mollest driver. The Pennsylvania American Legion used the Bellevue as its convention headquarters this summer. Most of the 3,000 Legion members have their wives, checked into the Hotel July 21. One of the two fired attorneys who filed Bellevue Hotel last victim of 'legionnaires disease' PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- The Bellevue-Straftford Hotel, a stately inn that for 72 years pampered Du Ponts and Vanderbiltbells, was built with the final victim of "legionnaires' disease." "She's a grand dame, and she will be sorely missed," Mayor Frank Rizzo said yesterday, moments before the hotel's owners formally announced that the phantom illness had proved fatal to the 19-story hotel. "The Bellevue-Stafford has found it impossible any longer to withstand the economic impact of the worldwide, adverse publicity which has been associated with the 'legionaires' disease." William T. Collins, the hotel's vice president, told reporters. "Despite the lack of credible evidence that any causal factor existed, the continual public reports linking the hotel to reports of thefts were been rumored to its business," he said. Four days later they checked out. Within a week a dozen were dead, felled by the mysterious alient that so far has stumped doctors and scientists. Other 17 persons Parts for All Imports Student Discounts JAMES GANG FOREIGN AUTO PARTS BankAmericard welcome here master charge AUTHORIZED Mon.-Fri., 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 843-8080 304 Locust Within a month, the hotel's occupancy rate had fallen from 84 per cent Chadwick estimated losses at $10,000 a downthe and efforts to save the hotel proved failure. Federal health officials set as a criterion for contracting the illness a visit to the hospital. would later die and 151 others would be hospitalized with the flu-like disease. "I guess it was only a matter of time," and Joe Pieganeta, a bellhop with 47 years experience, said. Rizzo said the city intended to buy the hotel, then demolish it and offer it to developers for the construction of a modern convention facility. MEET ME AT THE MARKET PLACE The Frame Up Leather Limited The Shooting Gallery Dirty Thirties & Earlier Deja Vu 8th and New Hampshire Bokonon "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Native American Artists Ltd. The Gallery The Armadillo Bead Co. Su Casa Graphic Arts Inc. The Harvest "Then said jesus unith them, you is not yet come; but your time is always ready. The world cannot hate you: 'BUT ME I HATE HATEN, BECAUSE I TESTIFY OF IT, THAT THE WORKS THEREOF ARE EVIL, FOR MY METHOD IS NOT YET EVIL, COMMON.'" John 7:1-10. "Jesus answered him IF I WASH THEE NOT, THOU HAST NO PART WITH MEI" JAHN 13:8. Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25 PUFF'S FRAGRANT WEEDS "Examine yourself, whether ye be in the faith; prove your own selves." 2nd Cointhians 13.5: I will are indifferent to sin, evil and any one or more of God's broken Commandments, is our love for Christ genuine? One terrible affliction and spiritual disease making the Church unclean is "Apoptosis". In 1st Corinthians 11:31 The Spirit of God tells us: "FOR IF WE WOULD JUDGE OURSELVES WE SHOULD NOT BE JUDGED!" "Apostacy" is foraking or abandonment of what hitherto has been professed and adhered to, as faith, principle, party. In order to be required to adhere to this profession, you must join you the Church, or hitherto, you professed or adhered to Thr Faith, that The Bible is the Intelligible Word of God Almighty, and the only rule to direct us how to Honor and Glorify God. Or, did we once take the Bible as our guide to believing in God? Babaeh day to keep it Holy," believing that man should do no work on that Da'y unless work of necessity and mercy, and the Day should be spent with the aim of increasing our knowledge of God and seeking His Honor and Pleasure rather than our own — see Isaiah 58:13, 14. We have forsaken and abandoned these doctrines, then so far as they are concerned we are apostate. (That great man of God, John Bumyan tells us that he was a person who had been signed on him saying 'dammable apostate'). There are many other, besides these two ways, one may 'judge self' regarding the terrible sin of "apostacy"? If there be any such thing as "honorable apostacy" maybe we can obtain that honor by asking the Church to教 our name from its roll! BETTER, HOWEVER, REPENT, AND PRAY TO CHRIST AS PETER MAY GET MY FEY ONLY, BUT also MY HANDS AND HEAD!" John 13:9. Get yourselves a Bible, Keep it with you. Read in all the days of your life that you may learn to "Fear the Lord Your God!" To keep pride out of your heart lifting you up to think you are better than your brethren, and to keep you from turning to the right or left hand from obedience to the word of God byBASTARING the Lord your God might live a long and blessed life on the land God gives you Deuteronomy 17:18-20. P, O, BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031 the GRAMOPHONE shop 842-1811...Ask for Station No.6 Chevroots! Werzesthausen! Price Roots! PIPES OF PEACE George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. Politicians' Stumps constantly on hand. BEST OF LEON Best Of Leon The very best from music's perennial superstar, including "Delta Lady," "Lady Blue," "A Song For You" and "Roll Away The Stone." EW.inc. Reg& Objct REVOX Kief's discount price $ reg. '698 PIONEER THORESEN TEAC KOSS PICKERING TEAMWARE Nintendo Game Boy Advance TDK MARIO audio technology SONY JBL KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-913-842-1544 1 TACO GRANDE Brings Back The 25c TACO Help Fight Inflation at Taco Grande M The film, claim produce with height tale. Men Assoc collec protec and I stude The almos and follow Tuesd stude 9th & Indiana and 1720 W. 23rd The charg shoot the I respon that were the I --- ier, spoke not to rule without first see decision tremendous might actraid. this case is said. nat he had er and was only when s attorney. s a former declined to first-degree notel clerk. DEWBERS FACIAL OSS BRINGER General TDK Meredith BOOKS Those familiar with Akira Kurosawa's film, "Rashomon," internationally acclaimed 25 years ago, will find KU's theater production of "Rashomon" embellished with traditional acting techniques that hint the mystery of a classic Japanese tale. Mystery of 'Rashomon' emphasized by acting "Rashomon" will be presented at 8 p.m. Nov. 13, 13 and 26, and at 8:30 p.m. Nov. 21. Tickets are available at the University Theatre box office in Murphy Hall. Andrew Tasaki, associate professor of theater and "Rashomon" director, uses the highly stylized movements and voice characteristic characterize Kabuki and Noh-Kyo drama. Tasuki's stage is divided into two sections. The great Rashomon gate stands on French arrests protested Members of the KU Iranian Students Association began distributing leaflets and collecting signatures on a petition today to protest recent actions of the United States and French governments against Iranian students. The Associated Press reported that almost 100 Iranian students were arrested and charged with disorderly conduct following a demonstration in Houston Tuesday to protest the arrest of six Iranian students in France last week. Thursday, November 11, 1976 The Iranian students in France were charged in connection with the Nov. 2 shooting of an Iranian diplomat, although the New York Times reported that an organization named Rena Real had taken charge of the attack, saying that a police spokesman said the students were "not suspects, but simply opponents of the Iranian regime." To protest the actions taken against The petition supported by the ISA calls for the immediate release of students arrested in Paris, an end to French deportation of Iranian students, and a cessation of French and American harassment of Iranian students. ISA officers said the petition would be sent to the Human Rights Council to investigate the nestsy International, French President Valery Giccard d'Estailing and the French ministries of justice and the interior. irianian students, KU ISA members said they would rally in担心 at the owrcation at the University in Kansas. The ISA's petition drive is based on a recent similar effort, in which the ISA said it collected the signatures of 23,000 American citizens to protest the arrest of 27 officers involved in an officer-involved Jefferson City, Mo. IsA spokesmen said that the signatures collected helped draw attention to the trial, which ended in dismissal of charges against the Iranians. one side, representing the real world. On the other side is a bamboo forest bathed in sunlight. It is here that actors relive in this place the adventures backs frequently used throughout the story. The play opens with a cold and dreary scene in medieval Japan. Three men have gathered around a fire below the gate to find shelter from the rain. Two of them recall the day before, when they saw the day before, of a bandit charged with a woman's rape and her husband's murder. The bandit, Tajmani, appears on a platform in the orchestra and addresses the audience to disclaim responsibility for the crimes he is accused of. He steps into the forest and recounts the events that happened there. Director Tsubaki uses symbolic movements and various sound effects to suggest a different level of reality. He explains his approach to "Rashomon" as: sylization for what Brechian scholars call the 'distancing effect.' I use it to remind the audience that this is an interpretation. The audience has to make up its own mind. It has to be a fifth interpreter of the incident." Tsukabi, who grew up in Japan but has been in the United States since 1968, seems himself as an interpreter of Japanese culture for Americans. During the 1974-75 winter, he returned to Japan to study Kabuki and to teach at Nagata, Japanese classical dance. He said that stylized movements, characteristic of Japanese theatrical forms, added a unique element to Western theater: "I SAW THE POSSIBILITY of applying "THE STYLIZATION intensifies. It allows the actor to play with emotion in a manner that he would not normally think of, using very streamlined, economized movements. He portrays life bigger than reality." University Daily Kansan I will do this for you. SALE THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY 20 to 30% Off Kombi leather, nylon down and fiber filled ski gloves, mittens and suspenders first serve also offers name brand merchandise from HEAD NO. 1, SUN, ANBA, INNSBRUCK, PROFILE, GERRY AND WHITE STAG Open 'till 8:30 on Thursdays first serve TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE IIII MASSACHUSETTS 842-8845 UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT presents GODSPELL a musical based on the Gospel LIVE CAST FROM THE KING'S VILLAGE DINNER THEATER, DALLAS FRIDAY NOV. 12 8 PM UNITED MINISTRIES CENTER 1204 OREAD AVE, LAWRENCE Admission $1.00 • advance tickets call 843-4933 • available also at the door. first serve first serve TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE 118 MASSACHUSETTS 842-8845 first serve TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE 119 MASSACHUSETTS 842-8845 UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT presents GODSPELL a musical based on the Gospel LIVE CAST FROM THE KING'S VILLAGE DINNER THEATER, DALLAS FRIDAY NOV. 12 8 PM UNITED MINISTRIES CENTER 1204 OREAD AVE, LAWRENCE Admission $1.00 • advance tickets, call 843-4933 UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT presents GODSPELK a musical based on the Gospel GODSPARK a musical based on the Gospel SUPERMAN 842-1811...Ask for Station No. 6 GRAMOPHONE --reg. $6.98 J.J. 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We cater in churches, homes, the TeePee, or anywhere else. 4 Thursday, November 11, 1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. Pay raise overdue The 1976 election is over, which means that the real business of government is about to begin. Nationally, Jimmy Carter is getting ready to occupy the White House and Gerald Ford is preparing to retire as President. IN KANSAS, and in many other states, state governments are getting ready to organize. Most of them will have basically the same political makeup as before the election, but here in Kansas the politicians are getting ready for a Democratic House, a Republican governor and possibly a Democratic Senate. For what was once called the most Republican state in the union, the rise of the Democrats is surprising. The University of Kansas must now deal with a divided state government. It's going to be tough for the government to get anything done during this session of the legislature, and the funding of KU could become a target of a headline-grabbing politician, as it has in the past. What the University is asking for is reasonable. The most controversial thing to be requested, and one of the most important, is a 10 per cent increase in faculty salaries. THE UNIVERSITY requested the increase, and the Board of Regents approved a 7 per cent request. Governor Robert Bennett looked at the request and chopped it in half. If the legislature does again what it did last year, it will wach Bennett's request by a per cent or two. Although something is better than nothing, an increase of 3 or 4 per cent won't even keep the salaries of KU professors ahead of inflation. KU ranks 12th in faculty salaries out of the 14 Midwestern state schools that are rated alongside it. That's the pay equivalent of finishing number seven in the Big Eight. I DON'T think number 12 (or for that matter, number seven) is a good place for KU to rank. The students of Kansas need a good school to attend, and a lower division school can't expect to keep or hire good faculty members. The legislature has made some progress in improving faculty pay. They approved increases of 10 per cent two and three years ago, although they trimmed another 10 per cent increase last year to 8 per cent. The University of Kansas and the other state schools need a substantial increase in pay for faculty members this year. Without the increase, KU and the other schools have no place to go but down. By Carl Young Contributing Writer amy's lemonade $1.00 1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES Politics can mean life or death Americans, as we've all heard this election year, live in a land where the great majority of citizens have the luxury of ignoring politics if they wish. As a matter of fact, it's so easy to do that it becomes equally easy to see politics everywhere as a part of our lives. A part of a few professional politicians that has little to do SWINE FLU INGULATIONS © 1978 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES with the daily lives of most citizens. BEING ABLE to have that luxury might be testimony to the greatness of our system. It also could be a sign of its decay. Whatever the case, it's a luxury that many people in countries around the world can ill afford. There, in such places as Angola, Lebanon or South Africa, politics is still a matter of life and death, hunger or enslavement, hunger or fulfillment. This reality was driven home to me Monday evening when I attended a conference on the Palestinian Revolution and the movement of Palestinians. Movement sponsored by the IranianStudent Association and the Organization of Arab Students in the United States and Canada. The conference focused on the relationship of the two groups with the Palestinian Revolution. It was intended to help the American people understand the situation in Lebanon and the extent of involvement there. Natural science few Americans showed up. I HAVE no intention of taking sides in this column on the Palestinian question or the Arab-Israeli conflict in general. As I LF. Stone once suggested, if Israel had undoubtedly died from trying to untangle the origins of the Middle East conflict, Even Fawaz Turk, the passionately pro-Palestinian speaker at the conference, admits, one of his most important experiences, diligence, partisan historians on both sides can come up with perfectly valid, though Q. For a network that spent a half- The murmuring about NBC black network news stars, or the absence of them, has begun again. Not that the other two networks are overloaded with black news content, but some reason the National Biscuit network gets blamed more than the others. Blacks vet to be newscasters That may be because only NBC bothers to reply to complaints about the matter, such as the one made by Ken Dean, the President of NBC's Jackson, Miss, affiliate WLBT-W. Richard Wald, president of NBC News, was quoted by Broadcast magazine as saying Dean "was covering the Democratic National Convention last summer was 'unfortunate part right.'" Not long ago, Variety, the show biz magazine that probably covers TV news better than any other publication, asked the public to identify who judge had dismissed a libel suit against a television news program on the grounds that everybody knows television news is entertainment, that it isn't intended to be a representation of fact, and so it couldn't label anyone any more than Robert Louis Stevenson, certainly unbelievable tell of tall tales. Q. There must be one black reporter talented enough to be featured on network news. Yet there isn't. (L张 people do occasionally hold microphones on the Chancellor-Brinkley Hour of power, usually Caroline Simpson, who is best known for doing wildlife stories and pieces about wild animals at the National Zoo.) A. Believe me, it is not for want of looking. We are scouring the country. Women lite suit against us. The National Broadcasting Company is a profit-producing company concerned with its image. And they have not been able to solve this problem. LET'S NOT humilate the creature and put "a poor unqualified black" on the air. Lord, lordly, no? No, but what we will do instead is make Miss Teenage America an anchor person. You don't even have to know how to read without moving your lips because you're reading out loud. Index fingers are vortexed then. million on a logo, it's incredible that you cannot discover a single black button A. If we'd taken the logo money and used it for a minority talent office, I'm not sure that we could have found them because I won't certain they exist. On a IF TELEVISION news is primarily entertainment, a conclusion only THERE ARE well-reed, studious and skilled people in TV journalism, but they don't use those qualities in the performance of their work. If ABC can take John Lindsay or David Hartman and turn them into newspapers, if NBC can call Tom Snyder, the first man to show Siamese twins committing an acid attack on a journalist, then it is palpably ridiculous to speculate that similar black talent doesn't exist. If NBC can make a star out of a white woman with a speech LAST SPRING John Chancellor, in an interview with Philip Nobile of more magazine, talked about these questions, and he said that it was for an old pal of his to have to repeat network level, they are extremely hard to locate. What NBC refuses to do, unlike local stations around the country, is put some poor unqualified black on the air and then say privately that so-and-so is terrible but we've got to have him or her Nicholas Von Hoffman (c) 1974 King Features Syndicate impediment, it can call up central casting and find a glamorous person of the black or Mexican persuasion to share NBC news update with Torn Snyder. Can't find a person qualified to do that? What about looking in the typing pool? Jack Chancellor is a dear man, personally, and an excellent journalist, professionally, but his considerable talents aren't tested in his present position. TV newsing doesn't require the skills we ordinarily associate with journalism: an ability to write well, quickly and concisely; a capacity to organize complicated and technical subjects rapidly and lucidly so that viewers can understand; a knowledge of history, philosophy; etc. Last summer on coast-to-coast TV, Jimmy Carter's mother had to explain to Walt Crankite who Tom Watson, a major figure in southern and national history, was disputed by people in television news, why can't the dear old Biscuit Company find a few black stars? Baseball, football, basketball are all on the branch of the entertainment industry has been able to discover a pleid of black stars. These folks sing and dance as well as watch and if you work with em' a bit, some of them share their fingers and keep prettie good time. diametrically opposed, views of the long and bloody conflict. The long history of resolutions, treaties and wars in that part of the world is like a Gordian knot that can contract into an even hacked apart. Politics there would seem therefore more futile and repugnant than here, when people are born John Fuller Contributing Writer and live their lives in refugee camps, when school children are massacred on both sides and when the bombs explode on innocent streets and villages, politics should seem totally devoid of any solutions to the problems in the Middle East. TURKI SAID in his speech that it was in fact a Draconian task for an Arab revolutionary movement to succeed now. He said he had been forced forces acting against the revolutionary forces there. A few anchor people do some writing for their shows, but for the most part shows are written and assembled by others. The anchor person is to the news desk, assisting in writing and disseminating chain as the display screen is to the computer. The work isn't that hard. Mostly what you need for it is presentable looks and the gift of gag. He or she who can wave his or her mouth around so as to extrude a seamless flow of dimmed out, conventional vacuities should do admirably. There are some well-reduced graphs which it's not a jobification. You don't need to do very much or have the kind of information that is the basis for good judgment because other people do that for you. IN VIEW of the fact that news anchor people are of such large symbolic importance in our society—vide the fuss over the arrival of La Walters at the pinnacle of evening news—it's important that each network have one who is black. The ultimate in tokenism, True, but the difference between faithless gestures and sympathetic promises is to take fine to the Blistar Company and the role of them, including non commercial TV, which is the worst of the four networks in this regard, should get on the case fast. Otherwise fellas, how about Chrysan black face? "We must fight against not only imperialism, but against Arab reactionism and Islam," said it."If we become a titan," said it. Those who are involved in an armed and bitter struggle can't play it safe. The issues they are dealing with are at a much more of a gut level than say infiltration, government spending or the sex lives of our august representatives in Washington. "Coronam sense!" Turki retreated indigently. "You live on the West Bank for five days—just five days. If you aren't filled with rage enough to want to strike back, then come back and tell me about common sense!" SOME WOULD dismiss this as strident radical rhetoric, but they are those who have forgotten that such rhetoric is necessary and vital in some situations. Despite the odds that the revolutionaries and their sympathizers here and abroad face in their struggle, I saw no room for them to weaken of resolve. There were instead strong signs of commitment and patriotic fervor. Politics may have given the parties a chance that exist in the Middle East but most of those at the conference, I think, have realized that turning away from politics in self-interest is a sin when so many of their people are suffering. walls of the meeting room reflected that commitment and perhaps a shade of franticism. "Long live the Palestinian Protestant Movement and Lebanese Progresion Movement," Oppose U.S. backed Syrian invasion, "read two of the large hand-painted signs. Perhaps the most effective was a color print of three solemn-faced machine girls standing with machine guns crouled in their arms. During the conference, I reflected on the difference between American political rhetoric and debate and that of those engaged in a drastically different political arena. The candidates played "playing it safe" above all else. Both candidates played it so safely, avoiding emotion and candor as much as possible, that the public was hard pressed to win the winner. Too many of our political debate is like that. TURKI WAS asked what was to be done about such things as inflation and the quality of ination in the Palestinian world. "We can't address ourselves to inflation and education until after we overthrow these regimes that have stolen our lives. If we have to die by the gun, we have to live by the gun!" SIGNS AND posters on the Substitute Israeli for Palestinian and you have what the Israelis are also fighting for. Both sides of this particular conflict have just causes. Both sides want their world is incapable and pervasive. Politics there means the loss of a home, a stray bullet in the back or the inability to have any true peace of mind. It also means a struggle for peace to call home, and freedom. There are still people fighting for the things that most Americans take for granted. Turki reflected in his book on his experiences as a Palestinian refugee. One American student said that it showed more common sense to try to resolve the conflict without guns. That's something to think about the next time someone says to you that politics is meaningless or ridiculous. That means you should not burden them and our complacent nation then it does about politics. Perhaps he is really describing why politics exists. "Mine is an existential problem," he said, "having to do with the yearning for my homeland, with being part of a culture, with winning the battle against it, as a Palestinian belonging to a people with a Palestinian consciousness." M Som dance this v musec Org during at 4 Massa by A sororit Kapp Voting spot defended Letters Abo Jimrr in Ho conce To the Editor: In response to the Nov. 9 letter criticizing the location of the HOPE voting, we the undersigned feel that a valid point was made. However, this problem did not arise and it was decided to continue the voting at the information booth. both ends of campus. Also, the information booth isn't in any particular building. If it were in Summerfield, Green, Robinson or Blake, there would be a definite bias. The closeness of students to the administration Steger indicates that the seniors in schools housed in those halls have just as far to go to vote as a journalism student. S The information booth is the most centrally located spot on campus. This allows for a balanced flow of traffic from Of the past 19 years, the journalism school has won the HPOE award only three times. There have been 16 award winners in other schools. This indicates that the interest has Bill French, Senior Class President Steffen Van Keppel, Senior Class President Dorothy Schloerb, Senior Class Treasurer Marianne Maurin Senior Class Secretary Carol Kennedy; Committee Chairman Randy Brown HOPE Committee Chairman been there before and if a senior feels that one of his instructors is worthy of a vote he should make the effort. 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 message must be maintained. Must be provided KU students must 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 17, 2014 Subscriptions to KU Mail June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Halloween. Subscription by mail $2 a semester or $18 a year outside the county. State student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Editor Debbie Gung Managing Editor Malakah Campus Editor Camus Editor Stewart Branen Business Manager Terry Hanson Assistant Business Manager - Carole Roencker Advertising Manager - Joseph Mayer Marketing Manager - Joey Farran Thursday, November 11, 1976 5 MANNEINVERSO AL FEATURES Turki "You live dives-five days. you aren't high to want come back t common mismiss this rhetoric, but who have rhetoric is in some ple fighting that most r granted. is book on Palestinian is really exists. ites exists. **eel for** have what lighting for particular. muscles. Both apparable and appable and there means stray ballet inability to of mind. It **frog for** call home. g to think someone politics isiculous. That about them nation than others. d d if a senior instructors be should lendent h. President curer tary Chairman + Chairman Some of the sweet, pain and glory of 1898s dance marches will come to Lawrence this weekend in a benefit马拉逊 for muscular dystrophy. Muscular dystrophy marathon this weekend Organizers say they hope to raise $5,000 during the 24-hour marathon which begins at 4 p.m. tomorrow at Bugsy's, 644 Massachusetts St. The event is sponsored Alpha Delta and Delta Gamma Museum and Delta Delta and Phi Kappa Tha fraternity. "It'll be pretty tough to last 24 hours," Tom Quillen, Delta freshman, who will represent Delta Tau Delta, said yesterday. "I'm trying to catch up on a little sleep, and I may have to take my ankle," he said. "I may have to tape my ankies," he said. Donors will pledge money for each hour paused by a particular person, Ann Baker, Pamela Cook and coordinator for Alpha Delta Pi, said. Prizes donated by Lawrence merchants will be given to couples who raise the most money, last the entire 24 hours, or both, she says. The dancers are scheduled to take Spheeris ticket sales OK About 1,000 tickets have been sold for Jimmy Sheeris' tomorrow night's concert in Hoe Andorium, Thornton Mason, SUA concerts chairman, said yesterday. "We're doing as well as we expected in ticket sales," he said. "Spheres gave two sell-out performances last week in Kansas City; we're drawing no one from there." Mason said he would be satisfied if 2,000 tickets were sold. test some new activities this semester, Mason said, like Jimmie Walker's comedy show Saturday night. He said a vaudeville show was also a possibility. Mason said that Spheeris' regular appearances in Lawrence usually drew criticism. The SUA concerts committee is trying to "This is his part of the country. His entire following is in the Midwest." Tickets are selling at the SUA office for $2. They will be $6 the day of the show. University Daily Kansan the University of Kansas Theatre presents RASHOMON a dramatization from a famous Japanese film with traditional theatre acting techniques NOVEMBER 12,13.19,20 at 8:00 p.m. 21 at 2:30 p.m. for information call The University Theatre Box Office 864-3982 KNU American College Theatre Festival entry PenthiPhi funded by the Student Activiti Fee SUA POPULAR FILMS NASHVILLE SUA half-hour breaks every four hours, Baker said. A. PARMAUMOINT *ABC, AND ENTERTAINMENT* PRESENTS A **HARRY WENRUAN** DRAWING OF THE MONSTER OF TOTAL HEAVEN BARRADE BARRAY *BETTY* AND BRADY. KAREN BLACK *KOREN BOXLEY* MIBROWN *KEITH CARRAGEIN* GERALDINE CHAPLIN *RIBERT DOOS* SLEWEL DIVELY • ALEN KEITH CARRAGEIN *MICHAEL HARRIS* ANALYCHILS *DAVID GREEEN* RAMPER *MACHIRUL MOHCHEM* ANALYCHILS *ALLAN NOLCHOLS* GREY DREE - PRESENTS A **RAMIE BARTER** STARER AND JEFFERY ALLMAN *WARNER BY JANE JOEWSKI* DRENDED BY JEFFERY ALLMAN *MUSIC ARRANGED AND SUPERVISED BY RICHARD BASKIN* Friday, Nov. 12 and Saturday, Nov. 13 7:00 and 10:00 p.m. 3:30 Matinee Fri. and Sat. Woodruff Aud.—Kansas Union '100 Tickets Available at SUA office The marathon is open to anyone who completes a registration form before the dancing starts. Forms are available at any of the sponsoring houses. Tim Grimm, manager of Buggy's, said he would contribute 50 cents of each $1.50 cover charge collected between 7 p.m. and midnight to the muscular dystrophy fund. He said that there would probably be no cover charge for the rest of the marathon. SUMMARY OF THE BOOK Larry's Auto Supply Full line of foreign and domestic parts Student discount 25%-45% 1502 W. 23rd WE HAVE NO RESERVATIONS . . . ABOUT TAKING YOUR RESERVATIONS. our total dining area has been exp- panded through the years to accom- date 130 persons in three separate dining areas. Call 843-9111 to enjoy the atmosphere that has made the Campus Hideaway famous . . . or stop in 106 N. Park tonight . Open 11 a.m.—1 a.m. 11 a.m.—2 a.m. Fri. & Sat. EST. 1957 106 N. 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WE'RE OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here 4 Thursday, November 11, 1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. Pay raise overdue The 1976 election is over, which means that the real business of government is about to begin. Nationally, Jimmy Carter is getting ready to occupy the White House and Gerald Ford is preparing to retire as President. IN KANSAS, and in many other states, state governments are getting ready to organize. Most of them will have basically the same political makeup as before the election, but here in Kansas the politicians are getting ready for a Democratic House, a Republican governor and possibly a Democratic Senate. For what was once called the most Republican state in the union, the rise of the Democrats is surprising. The University of Kansas must now deal with a divided state government. It's going to be tough for the government to get anything done during this session of the legislature, and the funding of KU could become a target of a headline-grabbing politician, as it has in the past. What the University is asking for is reasonable. The most controversial thing to be requested, and one of the most important, is a 10 per cent increase in faculty salaries. THE UNIVERSITY requested the increase, and the Board of Regents approved a 7 per cent request. Governor Robert Bennett looked at the request and chopped it in half. If the legislature does again what it did last year, it will whack Bennett's request by a per cent or two. Although something is better than nothing, an increase of 3 or 4 per cent won't even keep the salaries of KU professors ahead of inflation. KU ranks 12th in faculty salaries out of the 14 Midwestern state schools that are rated alongside it. That's the pay equivalent of finishing number seven in the Big Eight. I DON'T think number 12 (or for that matter, number seven) is a good place for KU to rank. The students of Kansas need a good school to attend, and a lower division school can't expect to keep or hire good faculty members. The legislature has made some progress in improving faculty pay. They approved increases of 10 per cent two and three years ago, although they trimmed another 10 per cent increase last year to 8 per cent. The University of Kansas and the other state schools need a substantial increase in pay for faculty members this year. Without the increase, KU and the other schools have no place to go but down. By Carl Young Contributing Writer amy's lemonade $1.00 1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES Politics can mean life or death Americans, as we've heard this election year, live in a land where the great majority of citizens have the luxury of ignoring politics if they wish. As a matter of fact, it's so easy to do that it becomes equally easy to see politics everywhere as a part of a few professional politics that has little to do SWINE FLU INOCULATIONS with the daily lives of most citizens. BEING ABLE to have that luxury might be testimony to the greatness of our system. It also could be a sign of its decay. Whatever the case, it's a luxury that many peoples in countries around the world can ill afford. There, in such places as Angola, Lebanon or South Africa, people with a desire of life and death, liberty or enslavement, hunger or fulfillment. This reality was driven home to me Monday evening when I attended a conference on the Palestinian Revolution and the movement of the Movement sponsored by the IranianStudent Association and the Organization of Arab Students in the United States and Canada. The conference also involved the two groups with the Palestinian Revolution. It was intended to help the American people understand the situation in Lebanon and the extent of the movement there. Naturally, few Americans showed up. I HAVE no intention of taking sides in this column on the Palestinian question or the Arab-Israeli conflict in general. As L.F. Stone once suggested, if one of our tribal communities undoubtedly died from trying to untangle the origins of the Middle East conflict. Even Fawaz Turk, the passionately pro-Palestinian speaker at the conference, admits in one of his books that the "diligence, partisan historians on both sides can come up with perfectly valid, though The murmuring about NBC black network news stars, or the absence of them, has begun again. Not that the other two networks are overloaded with black news content, but some reason the National Biscuit network gets blamed more than the others. That may be because only NBC bothers to reply to complaints about the matter, such as the one made by Ken Dean, the President of NBC's Jackson, Miss., affiliate WLBT-W. Richard Walid, president of NBC News, was quoted by president Obama as saying Dean Cain criticizes about the lack of coverage the Democratic National Convention last summer was "unfortunately part right." Blacks vet to be newscasters Q. There must be one black reporter talented enough to be featured on network news. Yet there isn't. (B laugh) people do occasionally hold microphones on the Chancellor-Brinkley Hour of Power, usually Carol Simpson, who is also doing wildlife stories and places about cuddly animals at the National Zoo. Q. For a network that spent a half- A. Believe me, it is not for want of looking. We are scouring the country. Women's file suit against us. The National Broadcasting Company is a profit-taking company with its image. And they have not been able to solve this problem. million on a logo, it's incredible that you cannot discover a single black correspondent. and a. If we'd taken the logo money and used it for a minor talent office, I'm not sure that we could found them because I'm not certain they exist. On a LAST SPRING John Chancellor, in an interview with Philip Nobile of More magazine, talked about these questions, and he was the author for an old pal of his to have to reprint. LET'S NOT humiliate the creature and put "a poor unqualified black" on the air. Lord, lordy, no! But what we will do instead is make Miss Teenage America an anchor person. You don't even have to know how to read without moving your lips because you're reading out loud. Index fingers are verboten though. Not long ago, Variety, the show biz magazine that probably covers TV news better than any other publication, carried an item that said a New York television news program and the grounded that everybody knows television news is entertainment, that it isn't intended to be a representation of fact, and so it couldn't anyone any more than Robert Louis Steele. But currently unbelievable tell of tall tales. THERE ARE well-read, studious and skilled people in TV journalism, but they don't use those qualities in the performance of their work. If ABC can take John Lindsay or David Hartman and turn them into newspapers, if NBC can call Tom Snyder, the first man to win an award for his natural act on network TV, a journalist, then it is paliably ridiculous to speculate that similar black talent doesn't exist. If NBC can make a star out of a white woman with a speech network level, they are extremely hard to locate. What NBC refuses to do, unlike local stations around the country, is put some poor unqualified black on the air and then say privately that so-and-so is terrible but we have to get him or her Nicholas Von Hoffman (c) 1974 King Features Syndicate IF TELEVISION news is primarily entertainment, a conclusion only impediment, it can call up central casting and find a glamorous person of the black or Mexican persuasion to share the nBC news update with Torn Snyder. Can't find a person qualified to do that? What about looking in the living pool? The long history of resolutions, treaties and wars in that part of the world is like a Gordian knot that can seemly never be undone or dead. If there were more events there would seem therefore even more futile and repugnant than here, when people are born diametrically opposed, views at the long and bloody conflict and live their lives in refugee camps, when school children are massacred on both sides and when the bombs explode on innocent streets and villages, politics should seem totally corrupted and devoid of any solutions or problems in the Middle East. disputed by people in television news, why can't the dear old Biscuit Company find a few black stars? Baseball, football, basketball. These are the branch of the entertainment industry has been able to discover a pleid of black stars. These folks sing and dance as well as white men, and, if you work with 'em a little bit, you'll be their fingers and keep pretty good time. The work isn't that hard. Mostly what you need for it is presentable looks and the gift of gag. He or she who can wave his or her mouth around so as to extrude a seamless flow of dimmed out, conventional vacuities should do admirably. There are some well-educated anchor people, but it isn't an job you can afford. You wouldn't need very much or have the kind of information that is the basis for good judgment because other people do that for you. A few anchor people do some writing for their shows, but for the most part shows are written and assembled by others. The anchor person is to the news desk, cutting and disseminating chain as the display screen is to the computer. John Fuller Contributing Writer Jack Chancellor is a dear man, personally, and an excellent journalist, professionally, but his considerable talents aren't tested in his present position. TV newsing doesn't require the skills we ordinarily associate with journalism: an ability to write well, quickly and concisely; a capacity to organize complicated and technical information; and soothe people not familiar with them can understand: a knowledge of history, philosophy; etc. Last summer on coast-to-coast TV, Jimmy Carter's mother had to explain to Waltron Cricktean who Tom Watson, a major figure in southern and national history, was. TURKI SAID in his speech that it was in fact a Draconian task for an Arab revolutionary movement to succeed now. He says the many forces acting against the revolutionary forces there. IN VIEW of the fact that news anchor people are of such large symbolic importance in our society—vide the fuss over the arrival of La Walters at the pinnacle of evening news—it's important that each network have one who is black. The ultimate in tokenism. True, but the difference between faithless gestures and symbolic promises is too fine to distinguish. Company is a part of them, including noncommercial TV, which is the worst of the four networks in this regard, should get on the case fast. Otherwise fellas, how about Chevy Chase in black face? "We must fight against not only imperialism, but against Arab reactionism and Islam," the speaker said. "It's a bloomer it is." Those who are involved in an armed and bitter struggle can't play it safe. The issues they are dealing with are at more much of a gullet level than say inflation, government spending or the sex lives of our august representatives in Washington. During the conference, I reflected on the difference between American political rhetoric and debate and that of those engaged in a drastically different arena. The presidential debates, for example, stressed "playing it safe" above all else. Both candidates played it so safely, avoiding emotion and candor as much as possible, that the majority decide on the winner. Too much of our political debate is like that. Despite the odds that the revolutionaries and their sympathizers and their abroad face in their struggle, I saw no difference between weakening of resolve. There were instead strong signs of commitment and patriotic fervor. Politics may have been unworkable, but that exist in the Middle East but most of those at the conference, I think, have realized that turning away from politics in Israel is a sin when so many of their people are suffering. TURKI WAS asked what was to be done about such things as inflation and the quality of information in the Palestinian world. "We can't address ourselves to inflation and education until after we overthrow these regimes that have stolen our blood," he said. If we have to die by the gun, we have to die by the bunn!" "common sense!" Turk retorted indigently. "You live on the West Bank for five days—just five days. If you aren't filled with rage enough to want to strike back, then come back and tell me about common sense!" walls of the meeting room reflected that commitment and perhaps a shade of fanaticism. "Long live the Palestinian Revolution and Lebanese Republic," she said. "Oppose U.S. backed Syrian invasion," read two of the large hand-painted signs. Perhaps the most effective was a color print solemnly faced Palestinian girls standing with machine guns crudled in their arms. SIGNS AND posters on the Perhaps he is really describing why politics exists. Substitute Israeli for Palestinian and you have what the Israelis are also fighting for. Both sides of this particular conflict have suffered. Sides have suffered. Politics in their world is inescapable and pervasive. Politics there means the loss of a home, a stray bullet in the back or the inability to have any true peace of mind. It has a struggle for survival, a place to call home, and freedom. One American student said that it showed more common sense to try to resolve the conflict without guns. SOME WOULD dismiss this as strident radical rhetoric, but they are those who have forgotten that such rhetoric is necessary and vital in some situations. There are still people fighting for the things that most Americans take for granted. Turki reflected in his book on his experiences as a Palestinian refugee. "Wine is an existential problem," he said, "having to do with the yearning for my homeland, with being part of a culture, with winning the battle against it." The Palestinian belonging to a people with a Palestinian consciousness." That's something to think about the next time someone says to you that politics is meaningless or ridiculous. That doesn't matter to them and our complacent nation than it does about politics. M Sondance this musc S Org durin at 4 Mass by A soror Kapp Letters Ab Jimn in Ho cone Voting spot defended m response to the Nov. 9 letter criticizing the location of the HOPE voting, we the undersigned feel that a valid point was made. However, this problem was considered more difficult and decided to continue the voting at the information booth. To the Editor: ticke sell City both ends of campus. Also, the information booth isn't in any particular building. If it were in Summerfield, Green, Robinson or Blake, there would be a definite bias. The closeness of students to the Green Street indicates that the seniors in schools housed in those halls have just as far to go to vote as a journalism student. The information booth is the most centrally located spot on campus. This allows for a balanced flow of traffic from on the past 19 years, the journalism school has won the HOPE award only three times. There have been 16 award winners in other schools. This indicates that the interest has been there before and if a senior feels that one of his instructors is worthy of a vote he should make the effort. Bill French, Senior Class President Steffen Van Kepel, Senior Class Vice-President Sheila Moore, Senior Class Treasurer Mariane Maurin Senior Class Secretary Carol Kennedy, HOPE Committee Chairman HOPE, Committee Chairman HOPE, Committee Chairman 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 submitted to all students must 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 14, 2006 www.ku.edu/ku_news/events/June-and-July-event-saturday-Sunday-and-Holiday-September-2006/66444. Subscribers by mail may be a samer or $18 fee a year outside the county. State students subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions Business Manager Terms Manage Double Gump Jimmy Managing Editor Editorial Editor Mark Kidman Edith Campaign Editor Stewart Campaign Editor - assistant Business Manager * Carole Roemkeroetel * assistant Advertising Manager * Jardine Jarmile * assistant Marketing Manager Thursday, November 11, 1976 7 MANHATTAN CIAL FEATURES Turki "You live five days, you aren't hight to want come back it common dismiss this rhetoric, but who have rhetoric is al in some people fighting that most or granted. this book on Palestinian existential 'having to sing for my ng part of a ug the battle as as a winging to a Palestinian is really exists. **resilient** for what have we what fighting for. **particular** in Poor Brazil in capable and there means stray bullet inability to of mind. R struggle for call home. ing to think one someone politics is culous. That about them nation thanics. d and if a senior s instructors te be should dent el. President eurer tary e Chairman e Chairman Some of the sweat, pain and glory of 1930s dance marathons will come to Lawrence this weekend in a benefit marathon for muscular dystrophy. Muscular dystrophy marathon this weekend Organizers say they hope to raise $5,000 during the 24-hour marathon which begins at 4 p.m. tomorrow at Bugsy's, 644 Massachusetts St. The event is sponsored by Delta Tau Delta Gamma sororites, and Delta Tau Delta Phi Kappa Theta fraternities. "It'll be pretty tough to last 24 hours," Tom Quillen, Wichita freshman, who will represent Delta Tau Delta, said yesterday. and I may have to tape my ankles," he said. Donors will pledge money for each hour danced by a particular couple, Ann Baker, Peebody junior and coordinator for Alpha Dance. Prizes donated by Lawrence merchants will be given to couples who raise the most money, last the entire 24 hours, or both, said. The dancers are scheduled to take Spheeris ticket sales OK About 1000 tickets have been sold for Jimmy Speheris' tomorrow night's concert in Hoe Auditorium, Thornton Mason, SUA concerts chairman, said yesterday. "We're doing as well as we expected in ticket sales," he said. "Spheres gave two sell-out performances last week in Kansas City; we're drawing one from there." Mason said he would be satisfied if 2,000 tickets were sold. The SUA concerts committee is trying to test some new activities this semester, Mason said, like Jimmie Walker's comedy show Saturday night. He said a vaudeville show was also a possibility. Mason said that Spherie' regular appearances in Lawrence usually drew him to her. "This is his part of the country. His entire following is in the Midwest." Tickets are selling at the SUA office for $3. They will be $6 the day of the show. The University of Kansas Theatre presents RASHOMON University Daily Kansan a dramatization from a famous Japanese film with traditional theatre techniques NOVEMBER 12.13.19.20 at 8:00 p.m. 21 at 2:30 p.m. The University Theatre Box Office 864-3982 KIDS American College Theatre Festival entry Penthitu hundred by the Student Activity Fee for information call SUA POPULAR FILMS NASHVILLE A PARAMOURT POINT, ABB. ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS A JERRY WENTRUAH CARRIAGE AND BREATH. A MANEK JACK ON BOOKLET ROBIN BLAKEH. TIMBROW GRAY BARRA BARRAY AND BEATRY. A NANCY KACK ON BOOKLET ROBIN BLAKEH. TIMBROW GRAY KETH CARRIAGE. GERALDINE CHAPLAU. ROBERT DOUG. SHELLEY DIVALE. ALLEN BARNABY MACHULF. ALAN WILSON GAVE GREEN PEEL. MICHAEL RANSING-BAIR. MACHERHUY MICHAEL ANLAN WILSON GAVE GREEN PEEL. MICHAEL RANSING-BAIR. STAREND and JERRY WENTRUAH WRITEN BY JANE TWESBURY. PROCEDURE AND DIRECTED BY JERRY ALMAN. ARMS ADJUSTED AND SUPERVISED BY ROBARD BARRAY. SUA half hour breaks every four hours, Baker said. Friday, Nov. 12 and Saturday, Nov. 13 7:00 and 10:00 p.m. 3:30 Matinee Fri. and Sat. Woodruff Aud.—Kansas Union $^{10}$ Tickets Available at SUA office Tim Grimm, manager of Bugsy's, said he would contribute 50 cents of each $1.50 cover charge collected between 7 p.m. and midnight to the muscular dystrophy fund. He said that there would probably be no cover charge for the rest of the marathon. The marathon is open to anyone who completes a registration form before the dancing starts. Forms are available at any of the sponsoring houses. Larry's Auto Supply 842-4152 Full line of foreign and domestic parts Student discount 25%-45% 嘟嘟 1502 W. 23rd WE HAVE NO RESERVATIONS... ABOUT TAKING YOUR RESERVATIONS. our total dining area has been expanded through the years to accommodate 130 persons in three separate dining areas. Call 843-9111 to enjoy the atmosphere that has made the Campus Hideaway famous . . . or stop in 106 N. Park night ... Open 11 a.m.—1 a.m. 11 a.m. - 2 a.m. Frl. & Sat. 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WE'RE OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS your BANKAMERICARD welcome to us 6 Thursday, November 11, 1976 University Daily Kansan KU-Haskell interaction assessed By PAUL ADDISON Mickey Davis, a student at Haskell Indian Junior College, says that in his two years in Lawrence, he hasn't had contact with more students. He handful of University of Kansas students. Davis' case isn't unique. According to other students and administrators at both institutions, the interaction between Haskell College and KU exists only on a very low level, and more joint courses and initiatives on the part of KU are needed to bring closer communication. "Maybe it's just that we're Indians down here and they're white people up there," Davis said recently. "Whatatever it is, everything in this town's dominated by KU and I don't think they care too much about Haskell." HASKELL INDIAN Junior College is a federally-funded school of about 1,000 students whose enrollment is restricted to Americans of Indian descent. Its 325-airy campus is located in southeast Lawrence off route K-10. "Someone has to get involved in organizing at Haskell for KU and at KU for Haskell," H. E. Llewellyn, director of student activities at Haskell, said. "It would be really good if we could do things together. We've done a number of things in the past, but there are fewer this year than any other year. "It's a bad thing from the standpoint of being in the same community." Liewleyn said that social involvement had never been great between the two schools, but that a few events, such as joint canoe trips and occasional dinners, were important to his life. He played football and basketball games also were played last year between the schools. Some University of Kansas faculty members gave conflicting opinions this week about their current salaries and the 5 percent proposed salary increase for fiscal 1978. A music professor, who wished to remain unidentified, said, "The state of Kansas is getting a bargain for the money it spends. It is getting better; keeps me here is the tight job market." ANOTHER MUSIC professor who asked to remain anonymous agreed with his colleague about the low salaries, but added that the situation wasn't unique at KU. "I didn't care about salary when I was looking for a job," Anthony Marino, assistant professor of economics, said. "I think nonmonomythic factors, such as the work with and the quality of students at a university, are more important." "WE HAVE, OF course, a standing invitation to KU students to attend all events on our campus," Llewellyn said. "We don't, however, have anyone who has much time to give his energies to organize on a social level." Faculty views differ on wages, pay raises Academically, KU and Haskell have never had joint programs, although there have been occasional faculty and student exchanges between the two schools, according to Jack Naylor, acting dean of instruction at Haskell. In a Kansan survey of 12 faculty in the professional field, varying ideas about the high school math "Fine arts is one of the poorest paid firms in the United States," he said. he lives in the United States," he said. The salaries for professors of music range from $17,250 to $27,100. The average salary for a professor at KU is $24,267. WILLIAM DOUGLAS JR., associate professor of civil engineering, said, "I spent 20 years in industry and I've buddied to offer to live up to my teaching and I want to live in Lawrence." David Darwin, assistant professor of civil engineering, said that although the pay scales for engineering were high in the US, in India they are low in research and the quality of life at KU. "If I got a comparable salary and more professional opportunities elsewhere," Richard Eversole, assistant professor of English, said, "I would consider moving. The professional opportunities are more important than money." This information was published in a report from the KU Office of Institutional Research. Two faculty members discussed the consequences of KU's low-tanked salaries and how to improve them. "I don't think there is any lack of responsibility," Naylor said. "There's always been a willingness there. KU has been a productive time when we wanted questions answered." KU now ranks 12th among 14 state-supported, Midwestern universities in salaries for professors, associate professors and assistant professors. MALCOL BURNS, assistant professor of economics, said, "I think the legislature ought to know that if it doesn't pay the market rate, KU will lose its best people." Edward Ruhe, professor of English, said, "Discontentment over inadequate salaries makes a department lose its most able faculty." Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs at KU, acts as liaison officer between Haskell and KU. He said that although some interaction had taken place between the two schools, there was room for improvement. "WE'RE SORT OF scared because we don't know much about the place or the city," she explained. "There's a lack of communication between us. You hardly ever see anybody from KU around here, and townpeople don't come." "As an economist, I think salaries are determined by supply and demand," determined. The salaries for professors of English range from $18,200 to $25,000. Two professors who were interviewed agreed on salary determination "I'd like to do courses up there," Monte Daney of Kansas City, Mo., a Haskell freshman, said. "Oururs are here and I want to eventually go into law school." Bonita Antone, Haskell freshman, agreed. Rita Napier, KU assistant professor of history who teaches a course on American Indian history, said: "It's a big step coming to KU and it's going to Haskell. To come to KU is even greater." The salaries for assistant professors of economics range from $15,000 to $18,888. The average salary for an assistant professor at KU is $15,106. RUHE SAID THE LAW of supply and demand had been applied against the deceased. Napier said that a system of joint classes would be beneficial for both colleges, because it would provide familiarity that would help integration and show Indians they were welcome members of the community. they would welcome the opportunity to study at KU. Darwin said that a 5 per cent salary increase was low. The majority of professors interviewed agreed that a 5 to 10 per cent salary increase the psychology of a pay raise is extreme importance. Like a pass at the gate of confidence Rube said he wasn't satisfied with past salary increases because they hadn't kept him. "MY MAIN CONCERN in terms of liaison is a concern for our faculty and students who wish to go there for teaching and research." he said. Eversole said he wasn't satisfied with salary increases because the English department had such a low salary base to begin with. Naylor said that a planned architecture course for Haskell students at KU had drawn little response, but that he was working with William Hogan, assistant professor of electrical engineering, to develop an interest in science and engineering. One of the music professors said that a $ per cent salary increase for fine arts teachers is worthwhile. THE OTHER MUSIC PROFESSOR SAID that a salary increase of 7 per cent wouldn't bring KU up to the average of its peer institutions. A 7 per cent salary increase was recommended by the Kansas Board of Regents, and a 5 per cent increase was suggested by Gov. Robert Bennett. DESPITE THE PROBLEMS outlined by Navlor, a number of Haskell students said The KU budget will be presented to the legislature, which meets in January. Boyt Ippson, Haskell student counselor, said that the college relationship had improved over the years, but that there was an increase in information in the community against Indians. "LOTS OF INDIANS have trouble getting apartments," he said. "If a white person is living in an apartment, it's not a big deal." "If they'd look at Indians as individuals, they wouldn't assume all Indians would be black." Flu shots to be given at Babcock A swine flu vaccination clinic for people 45 years of age and older and those persons with chronic illnesses will be opened from 10am on Saturday, 16 at Babcock Place, 710 Massachusetts. People attending the clinic should use the New Hampshire St. entrance. The clinic will be in the Community Meeting Room, Brenda Rosencranzt, spokesman for the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, said yesterday. Roscnerrant encouraged people to use this clinic because it was the first bivalent vaccine. Bivalent clinics give both swine flu vaccinations and shots for other diseases prevalent among certain age groups. For example, 44 have been vaccinated through 44, 4 only swine flu vaccinations. — Patrys Kempthorne, coordinator of the cystic fibrosis bike-a-thon in September said yesterday that $4,452 of the money he raised from that. That's $1,600 less than expected, she said. —Acacia fraternity members and DeltaGamma sorority members have collected $10,200 of their $2,000 goal for their ProjectSakura, a marathon spades game in October. Fund raising goals fall short this year Although there have been an abundance of fund raising projects for various charities this fall, procrastination of sponsors, the lack of effort from funders and for most of their efforts, coordinators say. "One of the difficult things is not to get the people to contribute but to get them to contribute within the time period." Bob Campaign, said yesterday. Six days before the Lawrence United Fund drive is scheduled to end, only about half of the $27,400 goal has been reached. The remaining UF goals of $4,250 have been collected. The timing of the fund drives also affected the response to them, organizers said. a fraternity-sponsored dance marathon tomorrow night at Bugsy's, 644 Massachusetts St. will attempt to raise money for muscular dystrophy. Kemphora said the bike riders hadn't had the time to keep calling people to collect them. FINDING PEOPLE WHO have the time to make repeated calls for promised money poses an additional problem to fund-raising projects. Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Program Doris Willis, Kansas City area director for muscular dystrophy, said she doesn't expect any collection problems because in her practice she has never contributed don't honor their pledges. Carolyn Wooding, residential chairman for the UF campaign, said that door-to-door collectors usually went around Oct. 25-26. The UF campaign said many and many potential collectors were sick. It was also near Halloween and the elections, she said, and people were donating their time and money to the holiday. "IN SPECIAL EVENTS, we usually get pretty close to the goal," she said. 3140 Wescoe Friday, November 12, 1976 7:30 "FLAP" — Starring: Anthony Quinn, Shelley Winters and Claude Akins NO ADMISSION CHARGE For more information, call 864-4353 Sweaters Sweaters Sweaters Sweaters Sweaters Sweaters Sweaters Sweaters Sweaters Sweaters find them at janell's 9th & Mass. the bus stop corner 10% off with KUID FROM INDIA Limited Orders Only At last, Astrology at its finest comes to the USA. Learn more about yourself from this ancient system of deeper understanding. All work done in India. Manuscripts handwritten in Hindu script with English translation. Some 70 pages long. For complete catalog, send $1 (one dollar) to Hermit Enterprizes, Inc., 1934 Lincoln, Topeka, Ks. 66604. Welcome Back, Classic You'll welcome this handsome pump with open arms. Sleek, classic lines look so right with every skirt and dress you own. And we've added a touch of stitch detailing to make an old friend look even better! tan or black connie Arensberg's = Shoes Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen 5 EDUCATIONAL PLACEMENT BUREAU 223 Carruth O'Leary GRADUATE STUDENTS SEEKING POSITIONS IN Schools, Colleges, and Universities Needing Information about Credential Preparation Vacancy Bulletins On-Campus Interviews Career Planning Schedule of Informational Meetings November 15, 1976, Forum Room, 4:30 p.m., Student Union Ar news can his November 17, 1976, 7:30 p.m. Linwood Center, 9900 Mission Road Shawnee Mission, Kansas, Room 133 November 18, 1976, 7:30 p.m., Medical Center, 32th and Rainbow Room 415 UAF PREPARATION FOR COMPETITION IN TODAY'S JOB MARKET 8 Thursday, November 11, 1976 University Dally Kansan Sports Scene Steve Schoenfeld Sports Editor Sports Editor There are those in the news media who believe any time an event is held it should be open to the press, Evil, sinister thoughts or evil intentions. In fact, the juicies story that would be possible. Those who close the doors to the media are then breaking one of the Ten Commandments. The ghosts of Woodward and Bernstein hover over their heads. I for one don't think everything should be opne. There are certain events and activities where the press has no business being. BUT TALKING to members of a football team after they've just lost isn't one of them. If the Jayhawks upset Colorado Saturday, there won't be any notes 'n' quotes from the Buffs or rookie room. So it's good to have a scripted note to write CU coach Bill. Mallory a note on the Colorado locker-room door. Mallory doesn't let reporters talk to his team after a loss. "I know the press and I don't see eye-eye on this matter." Mallory has been quoted as saying "But I've had bad experiences in the past where they off and said things that were inappropriate and said something they didn't intend to serve." THE LAST TIME the press had the privilege of talking to the Colorado players after a loss was two years ago when the Buffs were beaten by Kansas State. "As long as I'm the head coach at Colorado, I will continue to close the locker room after a defeat. That's just the way it's going to be." KU head coach Bud Moore and the rest of the Big Eight coaches allow reporters to talk to their players, win or lose. Moore, however, is sympathetic with Mallory's reasons for applying the "if we lose, sorry Charlie" gag rule. "I can't be critical of that," Moore said yesterday. "I might be doing that same thing myself someday. I can see where it's unjustifiable. "YOU GO OUT there and get beat. Guys are upset, we hurt them, they pop off with something they really don't mean or don't know what they're saying. If that happens, it's embarrassing to a youngster, squad and the university." Mallory justifies his policy by referring to one bad incident he was involved in when a reporter questioned a player who had been accused of making a foolish decision would never let that situation happen again. "The important thing, as far as I'm concerned, is the morale of the team," he said. "I feel that in that kind of a situation (after a loss), I do the talking. I'll do the best I can, although I'm not saying I always save the right thing either." HORSEFEATHERS. Sure the no interview after a loss policy makes it tough—awfully tough—on a reporter who's to write a locker-room story. How can he do so when the gates are shut? But that's not where the problems lie. You are further extending a "win or else" society. What Mallory says is as simple as this: "If we win, you can talk to guys because they did a good job. But if something should go wrong and we lose (it's the worst case) this year then no player interviews." There should not be a double standard. Why is the press being rewarded by getting the public to believe that it is in their best interest. I SUME THE CU players have plenty of interesting things to say after a loss. The readers—yes, Bill, those fans who pay attention to the hitters' statistics—and chance to read what the Buffs have to say. If everyone who left refused to grant interviews or allow others to be interviewed, the world would be a very surrealistic place. Everything isn't peaches have both winners and losers, and games have both winners and losers. The fans deserve to hear from both. But there's one thing Mallory doesn't explain. What happens if Colorado doesn't have a police officer? Do the players get to be interviewed? Or does only half of the press corps—those Mallory likes—get beyond the locker room door? Kansas passing improving CU coach Bill Mallory C Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358 KU did lose one player for the rest of the season when freshman offensive tackel Mike Gay suffered a fractured leg in a game practice. Gay had been running second team. With Lott gaining 195 yards on the ground, Oklahoma gained 436 yards to move on top.OU is averaging 304.9 yards a game, while the Jawhawks have 288.1. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—The Oklahoma Sooners, with a record performance by sophomore quarterback Thomas Lott against Kansas State, have taken the lead from KU in team rushing in the Bie Eight Conference. KU loses rushing offense lead; Nebraska still has best defense And Nebraska has seized the top spot in passing. Nebrausk, behind Vince Ferragno, overtook Iowa State in passing. The Cornhuskers are averaging 187.4 yards a game through the air and the Cyclones 177. 177. The Cornhuskers lead the conference in trios of four defensive categories. In rugby union, Australia leads in scoring. Iowa State maintained its lead in total offense and scoring. The Cyclones, through nine games, are averaging 448.3 yards. Runner-up Nebraska has a 403.9 average. Iowa State is scoring an average of 34.6 points a game, and Nebraska is second at 27.4. opponents to 125.3 yards a game. Oklahoma is second at 153.6. TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA DEMO SALE Save Up To $800 on a good selection of TOYOTA DEMOS. Corona 5-Door Wagon Corolla Wagon Corolla Liftback Deluxe LAWRENCE TOYOTA In toptal defense, it's Nebraska by a wide margin with an average yield of 237.7 vards AUTO CARS Nebraska has allowed opponents an average of 10.8 points a game. each game. Oklahoma is again second with an up, 202.8. 1172 Something unique... childrens theatre for adults! OFF THE WALLHALL & THE SHEM TO BE PLAYERS PRESENT Ph.842-2191 ON THURSDAY NOVEMBER 11TH Remember all those wobly dying quails you see in the Kansas Yachawks throw the weather. Pelican 3 PLAYS! WILD BOOK 201 the WILD DUCK BOY Several players have the usual bumps and bruises, but Moore said he expected all of the walking wounded to play against the Buffaloes. The secret to the Jayhawks' passing success could rest on the arm of sophomore There haven't been many dead birds thrown this week. KU's much-maligned passing attack has looked sharp all week long. AWRENCE SPIDER and the FLY "Our passing game has looked better than it has all year long," KU football coach Bud Moore said. "The quarterbacks are the big ones, and the receivers are catching the ball." 8:30 SAM the BUG "He's thrown the ball extremely well." Moore said. "He's looked sharp this week. "We practiced in sweats today to give our injured players an opportunity to get some work in today." Moore said. "Had we not done that, we would have paid, they couldn't have gone full speed." Off the Wall Hall. Lawrence Auto Plaza 1970 $2.00 children FREE The Jayhawks worked out in sweat clothes yesterday because of the number of minor injuries the team suffered in the Iowa State game. 737 NewHampshire Mark Vincentde, who was being red-shirted before playing in the Jahayhaws' 31-17 loss to Iowa State last Saturday. He'll start Saturday at Colorado. OB Mark Vicendese General Meeting Campus Veterans The bylaws of the Campus Veterans will be ratified at the meeting. Rough drafts of the bylaws are available at the Campus Veterans Office (Room 118B Kansas Union) and will be available at the meeting. All members are strongly urged to attend. If you have any questions call 864-4478 or stop by Room 118B in the Kansas Union. Free beer while it lasts to be served at conclusion of business. Friday, Nov. 12, 3:30 p.m. in the Union, Sunflower Room, 3rd Floor FREE! Get a 100% Cotton "T" Shirt By "You Babes" $ 6^{00} $ Value We clothes 'til 8:30 Thurs. JEANS or PANTS Buy A Pair Of... OFFER GOOD WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. THE ATTIC 927 Mass 927 Mass. HAPPY LEGS PRIDES CROSSING ROSE HIPS GOTCHA COVERED FADED GLORY LEVI JAZZ JAZZ Tonite Jazz Jam Session No Cover, good sounds only at JAZZ Paul Gray's Jazz Place Friday (sold out) Saturday EMIL ORTH the leading Dixieland Trombone player in the South Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 Opens at 8:00. Music at 9:00 Admission $4.00 includes all the beer & popcorn you can consume. Announcing . . . The Pizza Inn GIANT PIZZA SPECIAL A GIANT PIZZA, A PITCHER OF SOFT DRINK, AND ALL THE SALAD YOU CAN EAT — FOR ONLY Thursdays $5.95 5 p.m. to Midnight Pizza inn. In the Hillcrest Shops J Pi Pizza inn. In the Hillcrest Shopping Center Dial 841-2629 (Next to the Theatres) Thursday, November, 11, 1976 pond with ents and e. 9 University Daily Kansan 58. 9:00. I That student is a coach By ERIC MARTINCICH Sports Writer He is no ordinary student. Sure, he takes 14 hours and has to study nightly, but how many students at the University of Kansas have played professional basketball for a living? After nine years in the Natoma Basketball Association, Wesley returned to KU this semester to complete work on his senior year in physical education. He is a senior. "TEN YEARS is a long time to be away from school," Wesley said yesterday. "It's been a long time since I've put down in class to take notes." Wesley is also different from other students in another way. He is an assistant basketball coach to Ted Owens. From that point on, he might as well have lived out of a suitcase. In nine years in the NBA he played for eight teams. AFTER PLAYING for the Royals, he was traced to Chicago. After one brief walk toward home, he was the expansion draft by the Cleveland Cavaliers, where he had his two best years. In a game against the Royals, Wesley scored 50 points, a personal record. "After talking to Ted (earlier this summer) and finding that I could still be associated with basketball, not as a player but as someone to come down for Kaysa," he said. His name isn't unfamiliar to KU basketball fans. As a player here from 1964 through 1966, Wesley proved basketball to be his game. HE LEED The Big Eight in scoring in 1965 and was named to the all-conference team his junior and senior years. The 6 feet 11 center, together with Jo WO. John, let the Jayhawks to the finals of the NCAA tournament during his final year at Kansas. Then, it was back to school to continue studying and possibly to begin a new career in coaching. Don’t think that the pro scouts weren’t impressed, either. Wesley was drafted in the first round of the NBA draft by the Kansas Royals (now the Kansas City Knicks). After Cleveland, it was on to Phoenix, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, Milwaukee and, finally, Los Angeles, where he was released last fall. "I want to stay within the realm of basketball," he said. "When I get through with school I would like to do some coaching of my own." RIGHT NOW, though, his thoughts are on practice and the upcoming season. "The club is coming along; it's improving," he said. "With the new moving offense, I think we might see a little more individuality this season." Wesley has been around long enough to know that you really can't determine how successful a team will be by merely watching preseason practices. "The ultimate test is the game situation. When you come out of KANSAS AS Wesley, back, coaches on the court he used to play on scrimage, you can look great or you can look bad. What it all comes down to is getting it all together for the actual game." the jayhawks face their first test at 7:30 in the annual Crimson and Blue game. Coach Wesley will be watching when Once the game's over, though, Wesley the student will go back to the classroom. Mark Littell named Royals' top pitcher KANSAS CITY, MO. (AP) - Relief pitcher Mark Littell, who had an 8-3 record and 16 saves in 1976, was named the pitcher of the year by the Kansas City Royals yesterday. Littell, 23, was selected the Royals' top pitcher by the Kansas City Chapter of the Baseball Writers Association of America. He is the first relief pitcher to be selected "Without Mark Littell, we never would have made it as far as we did," Manager Whitey Herzog said. "He is the first relief pitcher in Royals' history who was consistently able to come in and really slam the door." Littell, whose 2.06 earned average was the best among American League pitchers with a minimum of 75 innings of work, attributed his success to confidence. "I really developed it about halfway through the season and things got easier for me." Littell will receive the award at a baseball awards dinner in Kansas City Jan. 28. Winners in previous years have been Dennis Spiittorz, Splitorz, Roger Nelson and Dragg R. REEL TO REEL: A Festival of Women's Films Nov. 13 & 14 Dyche Aud. SATURDAY 12 NOON THE OTHER HALF OF THE SKY: A CHINA MEMOIR, Shirley Maclaine/Claudia Weil REFLECTIONS, Shannon Green ALL DAY SUCKER; CHICKEN DELIGHT, Mary Bondurant GWEN/MIME, Pam Hopkins/ Martha Dunn I MAKE-UP, Pam Hopkins RAPE PREVENTION: NO PAT ANSWER, Polly Pettit MAYA, Martha Dunn 3 PM WOMAN TO WOMAN, Donna Dietcn SANDY AND MADELINES FAMILY, Sherrie Farrell (1973) 28 min. HOME MOVIE, Jan Oxenberg SUNDAY 12 NOON MESHES OF THE AFTERNOON Maya Deren BROTHER CARL, Susan Sontag 2 PM WOMEN'S HAPPY TIME COM MUNE, Sheila Paige NEVER GIVE UP: IMMOGENE CUNNINGHAM, Ann Hershey Sponsored by Women's Coalition/Funded by Student Activity Fee THE LADY AND THE MAN TUB FILM, Mary Beams SHERIFF SAM'S TRAVELING DJ SERVICE ★ We'll bring our quality sound system to your party. ★ We have lots of prizes, plus all the hits. ★ Call 841-4666 to reserve your party after Jan. 1, 1977. SHERIFF SAM JONES 7th and Mass. Each school will play two games today and one game tomorrow morning. Besides Southwest Missouri State, KU will play football and Bendiji State at 9:30 a.m., tomorrow. The teams were split into two pools and the winner and second place teams in each pool will advance to the playoff games tomorrow afternoon and Saturday morning. THE SCHOOLS play in the tournament are: Bemidji State College, Bemidji; Minn.; Southwest Missouri State; KU; Graceland College, Laramie; Iowa; Central Missouri State; Carleton College, Northfield; Minn.; Alabama University; and Nebraska University. AT 3:30 P.M. tomorrow, the winner of the first pool will play the second-place finish of the second pool, while the winner of the first pool will play the second-place team of the first pool. Field hockey begins regional play The Jayshaws opened the Association of intercollegiate Athletics for Women Region (ICARW) in 2014. Downstairs at the Eldridge By DAN BOWERMAN Damna Beebe isn't talking about first, second or third place. The only the KU field hockey coach is hoping for that is her team's southeast Missouri State this morning. "The whole key is the first game," Beebe said yesterday. "If we can beat Southwest Missouri, we have a very good chance of taking second in the tournament." Eight schools from six states are participating in the tournament, which began today and will finish Saturday. The tournament is being hosted by William Jewell College and played on the Barstow High School fields in Kansas City, Mo. The losers of those two games will play for third place at 10 a.m. Saturday, and the winners will play at 11:30 for the right to go to the AIAW national tournament at the Valley Forge Military Academy in Wayne, Pa. The Jayhawks have played four of the teams in the tourney and have beaten two and lost to two, KU beat Graceland once and Nebraska twice, and lost to Southwest Missouri State and Central Missouri State once each. TWO OF THOSE teams are in KU's pool-Graceland and Southwest Missouri. Beeeb said that the Jayhawks should be able to beat Graceland, who they beat earlier this week, 3-0, and that she is hopeful of beating SMS, who beat KU, 3-1, on Oct. 8. Bebe also said that Bemidji State—the other team in KU's pool—was the defending champion of Region Six and placed seventh in the division. The game ended when the State lost to Nebraska, 1-0, in earlier year. KU tied with Nebrasha, 2-2, on Oct. 2, when Jaywahs won the game on perusal. BREBE SAID she thought KU would be able to rest in its pool, but she want's not yet. T KU fullback Marcelle Gober,left,works hard on defense Beebe said that since the tournament was count anybody out," she said. "Southwest Missouri, Central Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska and Graceland have all had their ups and downs this season. It just depends on who has it on Thursday, Friday and Saturday." She said if the forecasts prove right and it snows, the northern schools would have the advantage, but if it's hot the southern schools would have the advantage. "Field hockey is a sport where you can't being played on a neutral field, the only team in the team would have would be with the weather. BILLIARDS TOURNAMENT SUA KU Sun., Nov. 14 1:30 Jay Bowl一Kansas Union Trophies for 1st and 2nd place. Entry Fee $2.00 Sign up in the Jay Bowl by 4:00 p.m.Friday, Nov.12. First place winner qualifies for the Region XI Tournament in Cape Girardeau, Mo., Feb. 10-12 For more information call the SUA office or Jay Bowl. To Give The Students FASTER DELIVERY SERVICE THE GREEN PEPPER is now delivering to Campus only. The delivery area includes All University Housing, Fraternities and Sororities, Jayhawk Towers, and Naismith Hall. New Delivery Hours Mon.-Thurs. 5 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 5 p.m.-12:30 p.m. Sun. 4 p.m.-11 p.m. 544 W.23rd 842-9003 10 Thursday, November 11, 1976 University Daily Kansan Students to help replace Balfour In compliance with the policy of 20 per cent student representation on University of Kansas policy making committees, three committees are established. A new vice chancellor for student affairs. The search opened after William Balfour resigned in May as vice chancellor for student affairs. Donald Alderson, dean of men, became head of the five candidates being considered for the job are being conducted and are expected to end in December. Names of candidates are kept confidential because of the chance to jeopardize positions the applicants now hold. ON THE SEARCH committee with eight University faculty members and employees, the three students are given an equal vote in the recommendation of Balfour's replacement. That recommendation will be reviewed by Dykes, who will make the final decision. Teddie Tashoff, student body president and a member of the search committee, said yesterday. "This is the most important vice chancellor for students in many ways." THE VICE CHANELLOR for student affairs oversees the functions of the deans of men, women and foreign students; the finance office provides financial aid and housing; the Guidance The search committee is looking for someone who will be an advocate of students and will work well with other staff members, Tasheff said. Bureau; the Student Health Service; and the Kansas Union. All committee members interview a candidate at a dinner. The three student members also interview the candidate for a part from the rest of the committee. DURING THESE FOUR HOURS, other KU students are invited to talk with the candidate and discuss their reactions to the candidate and a written evaluation of the candidate. banded by the Food Service and Lodging Division of the State Department of Health. This authority, however, was taken away by the legislature four years ago. Fire... From nage one HOWEVER, HE SAID that Floyd Dibbern, who has been fire marshal since July 1975, had been working to upgrade the office's fire inspection program. Since that time, the fire marshal's office hasn't had the manpower needed for a comprehensive apartment inspection program, Markley said. "There've been quite new changes here in the last few months," Markley said. "But it seems the staff hasn't." Contributors of all sizes attracted by Endowment Whitson is director of the Greater University Fund (GUF), which seeks private support for KU through small contributions and service projects. "The idea is to encourage modest gifts from a broad base of support," Whitson said yesterday. "We try to get everyone to contribute a little bit." GUF's major fund raising efforts involve participation by the alumni themselves. Whitson coordinates the Telefunk program, in which he goes to Kansas communities and, with the help of local alumni, telephones other alumni for pledges. The Kansas University Endowment the University doesn't spend all its time going after the big fundraiser. WHITSON SAID that a list of 100, usually 30 mm would be contacted and 35 would not. The Greater University Fund also mails general reports three times a year to all alumni. Each report contains an appeal for changes in the course with no restrictions attached, Whitson said. Donations come in a variety of sizes and stipulations. Whitson said the average gift was $35, but he once received a donation from a man for two cents. Wittson said the most frequent gifts GUF received were earmarked for scholarships Gulf Oil match contributions given by emplovers. Of the contributions received, Whitson said, about two cents of each dollar is spent on the GUF's administration. Whitson's staff comprises himself and a secretary, but much of the fund-raising work is done by volunteers. "I don't think he was playing with a full deck," Whitson said. FILM SOCIETY Flims of John Waters; MONDO TRASHO (1971) and MULTIPLE MANIACS (1970) and John Waters, with Divine, David Lochary and Mink Stone X-rated $1 both films—75c for one GUF received more than $900,000 in contributions from 20,000 donors last year, an increase of $100,000 over the 1974-75 campaign. WHEN ARCHIE DYKES became chancellor in 1973, Whitson said, a lady who had experienced the disorientation of young students to buy flowers for Mrs. Nancy Dykes. NASHVILLE (1975) wins the game with Henry Gibson, Ronee Blackley, Lily Tomlin and Sal and Sat., Nov. 13 3:30, 7:00, 10:00, 81 POPULAR FILMS Engineers Wanted New for New International Projects WHITSON SAID the support the Endowment Association received from corporations was valuable, however, because of the matching gift programs. He said 91 corporations, including General Electric, Exxon, Phillips Petroleum and Although many Ivy League schools and larger institutions rely on donations from parents of students and corporations, Whitson said, the Endowment Association receives enough support from alumni moving as strongly into these other areas. $1 both films—75c for one Thurs., Nov. 11, 7:30 SCIENCE FICTION SERIES Much of KU's success in alumni support is a result of the in-service teaching programs offered at schools, Whiston said. The Schools of Education and Law offer programs covering new methods and issues in their fields which keep the graduates' ties to the school. JUST IMAGINE (1930) Dir. David Butler, with Ginnie Garland D. Brendel and John S. Lennard. Mon., Nov. 15; 7:30, 75 Get right into challenging responsibility by help construct new towns, roads, streets and schools in your projects. See the impact of your skills by working in a country of your Africa, Asia, Latin America, or the S. Pacific as a car mechanic, a dental care, a dental care living allowance, 48 days pdr, $3000 term pay, pay 2 yrs. service must be citizen. SIGN UP FOR INTERMUST be NEW. RECRUITERS ON CAMPAUS AT ENG. placement office on Wed., Nov. 18. Woodruff Auditorium Whitson became director of GUF in 1971. Last July, GUF won the U.S. Steel Alumni Guild Incentive Award for the third time in its 23-year history. HEAD FOR HENRY'S At THE NEST this Fri. and Sat. Nite Lawrence's popular dance band "ON TAP" the nest Doors open 8:30 Entertainment starts at 9:00 Level 2, Union HENRY'S DRIVE INN nest We are in the process of remodeling and are taking applications for part-time help. Must apply in person for an interview. Call 843-2139.Must be able to work at least 20 hrs.a week and at least two weekend days or nights. Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. CHEMISTRY Now comes Miller time. milton ©1976 The Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis 15 A Ease w AD AP Mute Tue Tues ENI Tues F0I F0I F0I UD UD --- University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 11, 1976 11 A Greene County Sport Parachute Center Wellsville, Kansas Student Training Classes 10:00 Open 7 Days Week Dawn to Dusk First Jump Course $41.00 Groups of 5 or More— Only 51 of them Price Includes: Logbook, All Training. All Equipment, First Jump and Dummy Ripcord Located 4 Miles West of Wellsville on the Carl Coffman Farm On line Call Corman Farm For Further Information Call 1-912-883-2344 Students Required to Show TVL Located 4 Miles West of Wellsville LEGACY 7m 35s 1-35 Ford ADMIRAL LEASING AND RENTAL Call 843-2931 23rd and Alabama KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kamanian News on Thursday, May 14 (color, cedar, or national origin). PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FILTH HALT CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. 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 UDR business office at 864-3538. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Employment Opportunities ENTERTAINMENT MUSICIANS. Part-time jobs for band members. MUSICIANS. 823-1015, Iowa 14-12 823-1015, Iowa 10-10 BORONOK Paraphernula for the comissure: dongs of bongs and pipes. 12-15 841-3600 FOR RENT Male students. Furnished room available now for kitchen, privileges CA. One black box campus kitchen, privileges CA. One black box campus poi poi poi 493-4873. Sublease:二炉床 28168 age for E. Engl 1687 age after 1676 Need to nlebaca: Jahyawker Towers apt. $315/ mw/witzels Call 845-1107 or (913) 286-8800 2 male or female roommates need to share ex- cellence; a large bedroom apt. 16, a studio apt. 2 bedrooms, patio, ac. CLOSET, pool, ect.- bus route or walk to campus $125/hr, 1/3 utility- call us 11-11 841-329-2000 11-11 Upstairs room for rest. Clean, quiet, reasonable. Upstairs. Share kitchen and bath, Call 841-3291 or 841-3290. One bedroom, apt. available mid-December. Call 841-2540 after 3 p.m. 11-12 Subluele 1 bdmr, apil at Medwodbrø for swemer sænwerat 1篮/15/17, Call Mari. 11-12 One bedroom furnished apartment; walk to cam- sroom. stores $130 per month, includes 11-12 822-695-4711 Two bedroom apartment, part furnished, near downtown and bus $135 monthly. Call 843-2856. 1 Bedroom furnished apt. available Jan. 1. brush brush contract. Gaslight Apartment C48. Bathroom. Farm for rent. New mobile home, 2 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, short distance to Lawrence on payoff. Certified by CDA. $199k. One bedroom apartment, furnished, fully equipped, bathroom, kitchen, laundry, balcony. Tenure contract 18/1 month, gas, electric. Cell 604-253- 2225. ROY'S CREATIVE FRAMING CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE • DRYMOWITUNG • STICCHERY • METAL FRAMES • RESTORATION • BARN BOARD FRAMING Cross Reference Bookstore 440 1130 Maths Studying Center Sublease 3 bedroom partially furnished house fire. Placeage. Dec. Int. Call 843-4433. 11-17 One 2-bedroom spat. at Jayhawk Towers. Sublease for second seconder. 841-5689. Ask for Mike. FOR SALE STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on popular hijack equipment, you can factor in a cheaper or less product you will purchase least and buy more if the GAMPIOMHORE SHOP AT KIFES CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermalts. Unicorns, etc. Stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3833. Alternator, stater, and generator. Specialists. Altimeter, barometer, and altimeter. BEL AUTOS *FETCHIC*, 843-509-900, 901. bch. *HAMSTER*, 843-509-900, 901. bch. Excellent selection of new and used furniture trades. The Furniture and Appliance Center, TWK Trade. Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! makes sense out of Western Civilization! 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation 3) for exam preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. tt Excelcell selection of used furniture, refrigerator, cooktop, microwave, toaster, Tork, Kiel, m.p. - 6 p.m. 1925 ear 4380 Toothpick Kiel Tork Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel Kiel on an warm-up suit, dresses man, sports and swim. They go to the & Swim Club. 4 (west on 23rd) 842-776-160 For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call the TV Caller 814-548-143 or 814-134-178. STEREO SYSTEM: Nikko receiver, glenburn SYSTEM: Nikko receiver, Nixie system. Hauil it. ilent 841, 854, 855. Hauil ilent 841, 854, 855. Virtually indestructible Dog Houses, $25. 11-11 colors, #843-108S. Women's black leather coat, size 8, $100 or best offer. 841.5568 11:11 Porsche 914 1970 model, must sell immediately. Porsche 914 1970 model, or 1-233-707 or p.m. and weekday. 11-10 CAMERA: Exakta RTL100, 50 mm lens. excel- tion number: 842-3236. Keep窥. 11-12 Realistic 44 BSR turntable. Never used. $$$ Call 181-301-20 per 5 p.m. 1972 Dodge Van; car seat and panelled, loaded with extra Must sell-bet offer. Baldwin, 1-804-3562-562 38 Ford 3.4 t motor truck equipped with 80 380 engine, 71 HP (62 kW), low mileage, 6 g/11 mi, fuel consumption $1200; payload $1900; good cond, low mileage $750; Mobilityhouse 10 mph, excellent condition at $250 No. Mesh: NM-2010 Corvette; Carrier at $255 No. Mesh: NM-2010 Camaro For Sale 1911 Super-Beetle. 55,000 miles. Mint highest-offer! Call Aft. 430-842-1659. Corvette 75 Loaded. 14,000. 5,000 miles. $850. Warranty. 721-314. Topeka. 11-15 BICYCLE: Swims Monta Special, Campy BICYCLE: Wins for racing, 4'11" BICYCLE: Steve 843-6823, Frame 11-11 Realistic Stereo System. Speaker MC 1000, amp AM-FM 400, or best offer, AM-FM 450, AM-FM 150, or best offer, AM-FM 11-12 THE ADVENT STEREO RECEIVER is the most advanced stereo receiver in the industry—manufacturing design and production we've developed that before-this one is real and refreshing-all with high definition, four-channel soft HAY AUDIO 16 e. 8th St. Consulant Alton CAR STEREO SPECIAL -NOTICE -you know, WARRANTY car stereo buy in the Midwest - which represent many yrs of experience. They represent nearly 95% of sales -after offer BAY AUDIO, at real $2 saving value BAY AUDIO, at real $2 saving value Chrysler '02' good condition; $500 or best off Woodwardek W3, Bldg. 6 N 24 841-7473. 16 --is your neck tester? You would like you be faceless. Design a face for your new designer. How designs for massage for relief of tension, back pain, and arthritis. 72 SAAB 99 New clutch, Michelin tires. White- 141-6400 heat repair only 11-15 141-6400 after P 8M 11-15 FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Close 8:30 Thursday The Lounge I How about a Pioneer XS $40 receiver for $170 or hurtry—hurry! By the Way. by you—we know you hurry—hurry! By the Way. by you—we know you hurry—hurry! By the Way. by you—we know consistent day-to-day $35 saving order and stop in and out with your BUDGET. We are spreepled with BUDGET. BUDGET. BUDGET. Have you ever found yourself in what you thought would be your room, realizing your pairs are down around the ankles on in your bed? Well, we're not like that. We had to go out and see our straight ahead RAUY AUDIO 2, 5-7-10-13-16-19-22. Want to save money? Pay you used car from them. They charge $25 for every service. Please confirm all Service records available. Planner KP-50™ FM stereo, oak under dash bin 8" 2.4GHz WiFi 4GB memory, camcorder, GPS, remote control and combo view. BAY 500 WIRELESS TV AND HDTV. We have a stereo system that will really amuse you for $850. Come see our super special deal. Enjoy full audio and live performance, more and get better. really pleasing professional performance. RAY AUDIO, 12th, 8th St. Concert Center, New York, NY 10019. (800) 643-7550. 67 Pontville Bonneville, automatic, power, air- must胜250-521 841-860 after 5. 11,16 1850 Voltage, reliable and good runner. $299. Plugs #868 or #876 on 850-483. "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." Four tickets to Colorado game. Call 841-1768. Volkswagen 1967 Bug, dependable, 74,000 miles $500.81-623.65 11-12 Casette pipe and tape, large, new hoses, $30. Casette pipe and tape, small, new hoses, $25. Technizes LR-130 turntable, full warranty, $89. AVON- Earn extra money on your own time. AVON- Full-time, All-time. Time-11:30 Mrs. Sinclair. 842-812-81. 11-30 E 8AMS MODERN DINING CHAIRS. Birch dinner; 50% value $30, only the only $100 value $20. HELP WANTED 28. 3-speed Huffy, like new, $45. Typwriter- line, 16-inch cord, good cord, cost $4.95. K1C, K-1C. 15-17 inch Part-time fountain work Nouns and Evengns Apply in person at the Vista Drive. In, 11-11-11 DANCERS-class B private club in Johnson County. Pay budget 1913, 684-724; 12:15 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Now taking applications for salmen or salesmen for Christmas selling. Experience preferred, also necessary to in Lawn意境 with an Accountant, Mr. Finlay at Weaver's dept. store, 901 Max. 11-17 - Pinball 1963 WW—run good-bodied. As is $150 2002 Arkanas. 843-648. 11-17 Security want person to wash evening pot and pans in exchange for evening meal 11-12 Weekend waitlists in the Sandwich Shop, topeka, waits for Waltness-Bartender and Walt Sgirr. must be added by 10/27/14. Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, offered in NYC. Provide assistance and assisting in research. Social science budget of $120,000 per year. McKenzie, Dott. of Human Development 111 to 3:00 p.m. an Armament Opportunity Employer. Qualification required is a Bachelor's degree in Science or a 3:00 p.m. an Armament Opportunity Employer. Qualification required is a Bachelor's degree in Science or a 3:00 p.m. an Armament Opportunity Employer. OVERSEAS JOBS - summer-year-round, Europe: S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All Selsd. $200- $300 per week. Expand job search. Lightning-free. inform - info, Internship, Job Search. KA, Box 490, Berkley, CA 91704. 11-11 LOST AND FOUND - Feosball 9th and Iowa Lost: Brown framed glass—in the vicinity of Nixon, Tenn. Reward: Call 642-108-158. 108-158 Lost: Black cat with white paws & stomach. Call 841-3512. Reward. 11-12 Found: Womens wrist watch found, 24th and Doudschall. Bkp-829-7344 11411 Found: an SR 50 calculator in Learned Hall 864-100-7259; a SR 640 calculator 864-100-7259; leave a message at 864-100-7259. Found: Calculator—1400 block Term. Call 842- 4675. 0537812 Open Barry 10:41:11-11:41:11 Encapsulated DOS DELUXE QUALITY AND EXCELLENCE BOB'S Mass Lawrence, MA Found: a red-banded Timer watch in the park. Baited by a batee. As by the Halloween 11-13 Calls Boilers. 841-298-6750 Found: St. Joseph's High School Class Ring. Main desk at the Union and claim. 11-15 Lost! Turquoise and silver bracelet on Sat. Nov. Keepake Gonore reward offered. Carrier: 11-11-12 Found: Trecola Bail Burrows. I found your checkbook. Call: 841-3509 and identify 11-12 Found: hide-a-key case with two keys. Sat. in X-lot. Claim in 111 Firt Hall. 11-12 Found: eyeglasses. West 13th between Kentucky & Vermont. A82-4509, for Marvin 11. Lost: Light brown brieffee and contents on 2nd floor. Strong Reward! Call Janice at 664-851-7311. MISCELLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uait / Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday-2 p.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass. NOTICE CASHRAC CAFE- Good food from sarcophil, Lunch 10:30-2:30 Md. Mass. Please use backpack. 10:30-2:30 Md. Mass. Please use backpack. Swap Snap, 202. Mass. Used furniture, dining houses, clocks, televisions. Open daily 18-5. 9AM - 6PM. Redeemer Lutheran Church, 30th and Hassell, will all students and faculty to our Sunday study. We will meet at 10:15 a.m. We have an active college library and we need contact Office B484, 11-12 needed. Contact Bureau 848, 11-12 The Vita Drive-In, 1527 W. 6th. Open daily until 11:11 Vita. Fri. + Trt. until 2 A.M. DE SKILLET apps we've put the new LEGOQR DE SKILLET app we've put the new LEGOQR app we've put the new LEGOQR POETRY WANTED FOR Anthology Institute P.O. Box 8642, San Francisco, California FIND OUT WHY GAY DANCES ARE THE BEST DEVELOPMENTS TO FOLLOW! Nov. 20 to 8 to 1 Kansas Union Bank, $15. Sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas. This will provide an opportunity for girls and boys to socialize signaling, activities, call 643-929-182. Country Store Craft Sale. Pottery, jewelry, toys, Christmas animals, and more by local craftsmen. Cider, popcorn, and baked goods. Saturday, 10 a.m., Nursery School. Nursery School, 645 Alabama. 11-12 Commission on the Status of Women: Issues in KU Women's Athletics, November 19, 1967. 7:30 a.m. GRAF RAP GROUP: Thursday, Nov. 11, 823 KUENY APT, 4, 3: 7 P.M. Rough stones and slab. Kingman Mgauzer. The Turquiose hill. 1828 Mass. 842-4646. 11-11 UNLESS YOU LOVE SOMEONE, NOTHING ELSE Bazaar - hand-made stoneware pottery, and bot- tle gifts and decorations. *Tours* 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Fri. and Saturdays. **20% off** on all items. DOUG BOYD, author of *Rolling Thunder*, is depicted in a scene on Saturday, Nov. 13, 7:39 p.m. at Admission 1250 Spray, City Center, 1040 West 27th Street. Students: If you would be interested in taking a songwriter workshop for credit next semester, contact me. HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing - Furniture · Antiques Lodge: in 1d floor, women's restroom>-Strong, 2 Lots: please call 844-6422, ask for Kathy, 11-739 Found: 2 taps in girls' restroom in Strong. Call and identify at 846-6739. 11-15 Raggar blue-flowered旅陶 Tuesday between Y- Raggar blue-flowered旅陶 Tuesday between Y- 64586 collect after 11:12 11-12 Found high school class ring Phone 842-9072 31.15 - Imported Clothing EUROPE ISRAEL AFRICA ASIA SOUTH CARibbean Israel Brazil France United States First Avenue, Capitol Gate GA 800-241-6990 PERSONAL Think you'd want to put in 8 hrs. and try to win that title? Think about the superb skills or superb body that you can apply to be 18 at age centered with interesting career possibilities, with interesting career possibilities, with interesting pictures of yourself. Talk to your mentor with pictures of yourself. Experienced plot wish volunteer co-plot for an observation of students' reading abilities, male student or staff member preferred, Dubs include observation, map reading, & e. No experience required. Wired interested parties should contact us. Gay Connelly Service: call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals Excellent instruction in guitar, baroque, organ, and guitar bass. Rose Keyboard Studies. 1420 W 23rd St. W 6th Flr. New York, NY 10027. Help wanted in Macro. Req. 322. For details call 814-4500 between 5-7. 11-16 SUA is sponsoring a backpack trip to the Grand Canyon from Dec. 27 to January 4. No experience is necessary. Inquire at SUA, **11-12** **308-564-3333**. RFK PRF 91 will answer your questions concerning KP&L's recent request for a rate increase. Panel discussion with SUA representatives on your questions, 864-747. They will be answered. SERVICES OFFERED - Bud on Tap Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 601, 012, 102, 103, 104, 111, 112, 116, 140, 142, 124, 124 Not happy with your bike! Maybe you need a new one. You can buy an entire bike, lubricate and adjust your delerators, brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your rear wheel and pedal. All accessories bought at time of "time-up". Rates: 10 speed $35.00, 15 speed $15.25, single speed $15.00, double speed $15.15, single speed $69. Complete professional service. Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer. CycleLab, 405 E. 76th St., Lawrence, Swainville Schwimm Schwanmil. 4-6 Mon-Sat. Thurs. 11:30, Sun. 14:20, 18:30 W. 6th, 842-6353. *Can't Sew?* See me for all your sewing needs: 11-574 766-895 all types of sewing 11-57-17 *ASTROLOGY*-Your own personal hygiene $20. Beginners classes in astrology by arrangement 11-574 766-895 YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 19-5 Monday-Saturday 730Mass.841-7070 HORIZONS HONDA - Pool Sales, Parts, Service TYPING Need an experienced typist? IBM Selectric Lite pan and interface cable. Carbon tap. Cable Call at Samantha Gosnell 340-521-9887 Experienced typed—term paper, tests, mice, rats. Experienced proofreading, spelling, corrections. 843-5256, Mrs. Wright 1811 W. 6th Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4 THRESIS BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. List in this book $85 Massachusetts or phone 842-3657 Thank you. Typhl editor / IBM Pcafile/ cider. Quality work. Please send your dissertations welcome to: 842-913-8219. Experimented Loyalty THESES ONLY. Will type problems for the following systems: Kramer of 864-8311 day 471-8480 readings and messy numbers of 864-8311 day 471-8480 readings ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thanon son counselor, 1325 Hancock Ave. N. 968. HL Los Angele dator, 1325 Hancock Ave. N. 968. HL Los Angele BIOLOGY TUTOR. Experimented further—Graduate Program. 651-234-8000, 651-234-7900, 651-234- 415, 416-235, 688, 684 or 74. Reasonable choice. WANTED Typing on elite electric typewriter, Proofreading, prompt service. No these please. Mr Haines 11-12-23 EXPERT TYPING Fast and accurate, reasonable speed for minor grammatical reap- tition. 642-85290 I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. New address. 2 studious females needed to share furnished studios. 48 female students required utilities utilities include Call Bath: 841-7443. 10-12 Need roommate for spring sem. to share 3 bmbs. Need bedrockbook $96 + 1/3 e/b, and phone Call 845-782-4280 Two female roommates to share furnished Towels apartment $104 rent all 11-15 Looking for married couple who plan to be in Lawrences a couple in partnership with weekend managment offers 80% off 488. Female to sublease Gatehouse Akt. Take over payments January. 841-452. 11-16 Roommate needed immediately for nixe house Oven room 687.50 mei. plus 11-16 641-818-3200 Female roommate needed for spring semester. Call Ph. 713-545-3920, ph. 713-545-3920, call Eileen Liam, 811-5881. Keep trying. Need two tickets to KU-MU game. Call Tues, or **NUBLASE-Wilma Square apartment** $66.33 per unit, 71% utilities. Own bedroom. Bathroom. or 485-825. Female roommate wants for Spring semester to share Jay Hawkeye Towers apartment. 842-7104 Female roommate wanted to share 5 bdrm house: 460 acre. 842-692-1140. Tennessee. 11-172 Mattresssee · Liners Heaters · Frames Bedspreads · Flatted Sheets FELDS WATERBEDS 712Mass.St. COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS Downtown Lawrence 842-7187 THE WORLD FOOTBALL CUP Aztec Inn ● Pin-Ball ● Air Hockey ● Foos-Ball American and Mexican Food - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong The Chalk Hawk Ping Pong 9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 days a Week - No One Under 18 Admitted ELECTION OF BEER All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates Christmas Flights are filling fast Make reservations now! AIRLINES No extra cost for our services. SUA Maupintour travel service Phone 843-1211 KU Union Lobby 12 Thursday. November 11, 1976 University Daily Kansan --- Senate approves . . . From nage one For nearly two hours the Senate debated the $6,741 request made by the International Club; opponents of the original request called for cuts totalling nearly $3,100. THE INTERNATIONAL Club is a mother organization for 12 separate foreign student associations at KU. The money allocated to the club would be made in a block grant and an executive committee of the International Club would oversee distribution of the money to the individual student associations. The club's budget provides $6,601 for supplies and expenses such as postage, printing, advertising, film rental, office supplies, and other expenses. Their budget also provides $140 for equipment, library supplies, books and magazines. The supplemental funds would be in addition to $1,719 previously allocated to the club in last spring's budget hearings for fiscal 1977. ON TWO SEPARATE occasions during the meeting, amendments were introduced that would have cut the International Club's net income by $757, 757, but both amendments were defeated. Handy McKernan, chairman of the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee, which had given its preliminary approval of the International Club's budget request, said that he thought the committee believed that amount allowed for too much duplication of services. He said after introducing an amendment to cut the original request, "I feel that the word 'original' should be included." EACH OF THE individual student associations publishes its own newsletter, be said, and they request funds for many similar programs. Defenders of the $6,741 request said that the request should be approved because it had already been approved by both the Senate Cultural Assembly and the Auditing Committee. They said that because the committees had studied the requests and found them just because no was reason not to approve in bodies. After considerable discussion by the Senate concerning the International Club's request, Tedde Tashseff, student body president, said, "What's the beef—I haven't heard any substantial reasons why they shouldn't get this money." THE $64,750 ALLOCATION will be made from student activity fee in fiscal 1976, the cost of a new class. Although there was some opposition to the $2,911 budget request made by the KU Ice Hockey Club, no amendments to that figure were introduced. During the club's budget presentation, McKernan said that if the Senate funded the club for three years, then it would be very possible that the club would become self-sufficient after that time. The past fiscal year, the Senate allocate the club $3,861. MCKERNAN ALSO SAID that continued Senate funding would help the club in its efforts to possibly get an ice rink built in the basement. The club now rents an ice rink in Overland Park. The president of the Ice Hockey Club, Tom Hansen, said that although a number of private developers had been contacted by the NHL, no definite commitments had been made. He said that with the continued financial backing of the Senate, the club had a better bargaining position in its talks with developers. The club's $2,911 budget provides funding for postage, advertising, long distance telephone, wages for officials, equipment and ice rink rental. AFTER SUSPENDING Senate rules, Tashaeff introduced a resolution that called for student representation on departmental and school promotion and tenure The resolution calls for steps to be taken by departments and schools to insure 20 per cent of the workforce. that consider promotion and tenure of faculty members. "This resolution would allow us to start on the ground level and get students involved in the quality of classroom teaching." Tasheff said. Although there was some concern that students might not be qualified or responsible enough to serve on the committee, Tasheff said that a Senate resolution was only an expression of student confidence in the Senate had no actual power of enforcement. "THE RESOLUTION WILL allow the departments and schools to decide for themselves whether students are represented on the committee," she said. A somewhat similar resolution concerning the College Assembly also was passed by the Senate. The resolution provides for Senate endorsement of any proposal made by the College Assembly that would provide similar representation taking rights on the College Assembly's Promotion and Tenure Committee. Haskell Indian Junior College officials hope that the new residence hall under construction will be ready in February to accommodate our crowded conditions in student housing. That committee has the power of approval over any decisions made by departmental promotion and tenure committees. Frank Quiring, de. of students, said Tuesday that if construction remained on schedule, students would be able to move in during February. However if construction work on the $2.3 million ballast extends into March, Quiring said, students wouldn't move in until the fall semester. He said that having students move that late in the semester wouldn't be worth the trouble. "I believe that the hall is one of the finest. I've had the opportunity to see," he said. "It provides enough privacy and individuality but at the same time you get the sense of a living group. It offers an incentive to students." QUIRING SAID THAT the money for the hall had been appropriated through the Bureau of Indian Affairs and that the Bureau's plant facilities and design office in Albuquerque, N.M., help design the hall. The new building the new hall would be helpful to the students. THERE IS STILL overcrowding in the six residence hills despite the fact that FAST FREE DELIVERY! 841-3100 today's special $1.00 off any large BigBlueSpecial ASK FOR OUR STORE ADDRESS UNLEAVED AND CALIDT. OR BOOK AN LIMIT CLOSIT. HEAVY EDDYS At the Wheel 507 w.14th Pizza Sun.-Thurs. - 4:30 PM to 1:00 Meatball Grinders & Submarine Sandwiches,too presents "KID DYNAMITE" JIMMY WALKER Star of "Good Times" Haskell easing housing shortage SATURDAY, NOV. 13 8 p.m. Union Ballroom Tickets $4 General admission Under 16 not admitted Question & Answer Session after Show Tickets available at the SUA box office enrollment is down this year, Last year's enrollment was 1.186 compared with 1.015 The halls, two women's and four men's, were designed to house about 545 people. The halls now hold 627 students, Quring said. SUA The rooms in one woman's hall were built to house two students, he said, but some now work on the building. Haskell officials are now trying to obtain money for a second new residence hall, he return to school, most of the off-campus housing is spoken for," Quiring said. The New Yorker THE RITZ "Just Key to Harmony" "It's a ball of a brawl!" -Judith Crist Eve. 7:48, 9:2 Sat. Sun., 2:0 Hillport MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN Laverne Parker, secretary to the president, said that Kansas Sen. James Pearson's office was trying to get money appropriated for the second hall. Parker she didn't think Haskell would get the money until fiscal 1978. IT'S A RIOT! "Splendiferously Funny." The New Yorker THE RIZZ Junior League of Huntington "It's a ball of a brawl!" —Audith Cree Eve. 7:40. 1:30 Sat. Sun. 2:00 Hillcrest MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN A thriller DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLIVIER ROY SCHEIDER Every Evening 7:30, 9:45 Saturday, Sunday 2:30 QURING SAID THAT the second hall was needed because there was 'no way we can serve the students by overcrowding our halls.' Parker said that the student senate would decide whether the new hall under construction would be for men, women or both. A fire last fall in one of the halls made the situation worse, he said. Students from the damaged rooms were relocated in other rooms in the hall. OFF-CAMPU HOUSING has also been a problem for Haskell students, Quiring said. Many students were from out-of-state and in the country to attend the middle of summer to look for housing; be sure Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs WALT DISNEY'S FIRST FULL LENGTH ANIMATED FEATURE! EVENINGS 5 W. W. 7:30 a.m. to 10:45 Granada STARTS FRIDAY By the middle of August, when students A wine 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWO-MINUTE WARNING CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASSAVEETES "TWO-MINUTE WARNING" MARTIN BALSAM • BEAU BRIDGES • MARILYN HASSETT DAVID JANSSEN • JACK KLUGMAN • WALTER PIDGEON GENA ROWLANDS BROOK PETERS • DAVID GORDON • ANTHONY GRIES • JOSÉ KAPP R A wine of unusual quality "SPANISH FLY" the comedy aphrodiasiac ... Eve 7:30-9:00, Sat-Sun, Mat. 2:05 STARRY EARLY Hillcrest! V.S.C.F. Levi's Movin'On Jeans With European Accents These Levi's Jeans have the lean European fit and moderately flared leg you want. But they've also got styling details that set them apart from the pack. Like a curved-stitched saddle seat. A continental waistband with a contrast-fabric insert. And J-pockets piped with the same contrast fabric. master charge FOR INVERSEED CARD from BANKAMERICARD artists box levi's LITWIN'S 831 Mass. Free Parking in Rear ANTIQUE CAR SHOW 1:00 to 5 SATURDAY NOV. 13 and NOV. 14 1:00 to 5 SUNDAY Free 20 Antique Cars In cooperation with the Lawrence Antique Auto Club AND Hot Dogs Pepsi Cola Bubble Gum T-BIRD LTD II and the Fill Size—Family Size The Fiats X-19 Spider Convertible 131 Sedan and Wagons 128 Sedan and Wagons ALL IN OUR HUGE SERVICE DEPARTMENT—RAIN OR SHINE Come...See the Old...and the New FORD John Haddock Ford FIAT John Haddock Imports 23rd and Alabama Ph. 843-3500 e ff-campus said. to obtain e hall, he to the en. James get money ill. Parker could get the second hall no way we widing our mate would all under women or Petition-carrying citizens seek By CAROL LUMAN At least one resident would rather see a telephone pole be elected city commissioner than live with the mayor. "Right now we have an elitist form of government that eliminates a lot of qualified people from running the country, and we need a group of men carrying petitions to change the form of government in Lawrence, said Wednesday. we snoon open up the game and let everybody run-let the people decide who's qualified. If the people wanted to let a telephone pole be a commissioner, then it's their decision—let them." Changing the local form of government and getting more people involved are the aims of the "WE WANT TO make it a grass roots issue." Kaplan said. "We want people to know who is in charge of city government and to realize who it responds and doesn't respond to." If the petition drive can gather enough signatures, the question of changing the Lawrence government The group needs about 2,800 valid signatures by the end of December to get the question on the city's map. (The next day is Wednesday.) from the commission-city management form now used to a mayor-city council form will be put to a vote State law says a petition must have signatures totaling 10 per cent of the number of registered voters in the most recent election before the petition drive started. That was the 1972 election in this case, when about 29,000 voters were registered in Lawrence. THUS FAR PATTI petition carriers have gathered an offer to purchase the瞒ask said. He estimated they would withhold $500,000. In effect, a change to the mayor-city council form of government would mean the elimination of the mayor. The city administration would comprise a full-time mayor elected by the city at large and a council of at least eight persons elected from at least four wards. Although Kaplan said the group's pristine objective was to inquire people in their government, he also said the trend of the city toward expansion and growth was a concern. "Lawrence is rapidly turning into a suburb of greater Kansas City," he said, "the improvement of K-10 highways and the proposed airport at Kansas City's efforts to attract industry and big business. "Do people in Lawrence want more industry? It will just boom the town, making it bigger and bigger. It will completely destroy the character of Lawrence." And then the thing that many people love about Lawrence. THE CURRENT form of government is destroying the small town atmosphere, Kaplan said. That will create debates, he said, and give the people a chance to talk about the issue. "People raising the issue is almost a victory in itself," he said. "That makes it worthwhile, and it makes us even more hopeful." People tend to participate more when they have people from their district representing them," he said. "It also makes the representatives more comfortable." The argument that district representation would lead to biosafety and ward politics doesn't hold water. "THE THAT KIND of comment doesn't deserve a response," he said. "This isn't Chicago—it's Lawrence. People here know each other; it's a small town." government change Marnie Argersinger, city commissioner, disreared "I think the other commissioners are responsive to the people of Lawrence, and I think I'm happy." "The idea of geographical representation is a big, bad mistake," she said. "It would just lead to the councilmen bickering over regional votes, and I would hate to see that." Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, agreed with Argersinger. "Right now the commissioners look at what's best for the whole city," he said. "But with districts you would have that 'T'll scratch your back and you scratch mine' business. "I don't think that's necessarily good for a city rule size. You may also end up losing the city." THE CHAIN OF AUTHORITY in city government is too long, Kaplan said, and is far removed from the realities of life. "Right now most people don't even know where the city government is," he said. "They don't know city offices are in the First National Bank building, and because they have to go there to pay their water bills." Selecting a mayor with the expertise to run a city the size of Lawrence isn't an issue as far as Kaplan THE UNIVERSITY DAILY However, the question of electing a qualified mayor is central in the opposition arguments of mayoral candidates. COLD "YOU NEED an administrator, someone who can operate the city efficiently." Bufford Watson, city manager, said. "You have to realize that this is See CITY page three KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Vol.87 No.59 drift raft Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER Lvnn Stoneback. Lawrence senior. instructs a 25-member first grade class at Centennial elementary school, 2145 Louisiana. Stoneback is student teaching the class, which is normally taught by Helen Kelcher. Fridav. November 12, 1976 Makina her point Teaching viewed from other side By DAYNA HEIDRICH Finally the day arrives Not all pupils think hand-drawn pictures are appropriate gifts for student teachers, teachers' unions and politicians. One KU student who taught at a high school discovered her students had different tastes. They waited till her back was turned to place the "gift" on her desk. When she faced the class she found a marijuana cigarette with a note attached saying, Paintings pit art against kitsch She said the 6-year-olds were always coming up to her to say "I love you, Miss Stoneback," or bringing their pictures they had drawn. After sitting behind a desk for 16 years, the tables are turned and you're the teacher, standing up in front of 25 little people, all waiting for you to tell them what "I'm a mother, a clean-up lady, a nurse." Lynn Stoneback, Lawrence senior, said this week, describing her day teaching 25 first-graders at Centennial Elementary School, 2415 Louisiana St. "I love the kids, I know I know I absolutely want to teach." Pat Schaefer, president of the Interfraternity Council, said that the safety conditions at the fraternities "really aren't that bad," and that the houses were working toward compliance with the fire marshal's guidelines. John Bleazard, who student taught in German at Lawrence High School, 19th and Louisiana streets, said he was surprised "how relatively little high schools had changed since I was in high school in 1960-63. "I didn't expect kids to start yelling back at me. I had interrupted an argument she was having with another kid—they weren't paying attention—and she transferred her "Have a joint." She said she nonchalantly put the knife into the trash without leansing her cool. Pupils surprise their KU student teachers daily. One young man was dumbfounded when a 13-year-old girl started yelling at him. See story page four Turning one's back on the class seemed to challenge the students to connect a surprise for another student teacher. A junior high school student teacher said that while outlining a geometry problem on the board, "a silt wiped way" *zap* 'right to the board.' were very, very concerned about this we're really worried about it." Schuster We all are working on it!" it fluttered. "I knew what it was by the trajectory," he said. "It was the 'week of the projectile.' One initiated it and it became a catalyst for others, all over the building." Fire officials to outline guidelines Barbara Pankratz, who taught music in Topeka in both elementary and secondary schools, said she was used to the quality of the select vocal groups at the university. "The students don't like sophomore high school choir students couldn't sight read music better. After her first day she was very frustrated. Her cooperating teacher told her she shouldn't expect the same performance from college musicians or sophomores in non selective music class. Do the rewards and experience earned "It was nice - it made me more relaxed. I wore Levis a few times—I was clean and neat, but it's really a switch from my days when we had to wear slacks. In my day it was also highly forbidden to eat candy or chew gum in class." Other student teachers also found it hard to reconcile themselves to the fact that their students share neither enthusiasm for, nor ability in, their classes. "The attitudes are all still the same. I more kids to be more liberal, more progress." Markley, state fire protection technical adviser, told a meeting of about 15 fraternity officers that he and State Fire Marshal Seymour Bodine would work out acceptable programs for meeting safety guidelines made by his office during inspections in September and October. "These inspectors' reports aren't final," Markley said. "If a house thinks that one of the recommendations is really out of line, Dibbern and I will meet with the house and Markley said these personal meetings were the only way his office could adequately answer specific questions about the guidelines. Bleazard had he noticed a more relaxed behavior and dress code, however. the fraternities thought they were unfair. Some confusion could exist, he said, because the inspectors in the field didn't know where to fire the fire marshal considered appropriate. One fraternity member complained that the report his house received from the fire marshal after the inspection didn't agree with his complaint. The inspector or had read in the newspapers. THE MEETING between Markley and the fraternities was prompted by widespread confusion among fraternity leaders because it was required for compliance with its guidelines. "The big fear that everybody has," another fraternity member said, "is that we are going to spend a lot of money on safety improvements and still not meet the requirements." "We aren't out to make it uncomfortable for anybody," Markley said. "I'm not going to stand up here and threaten you. We're going to be reasonable on this." Earlier this week, Markley sent a letter to the fraternities that extended the deadline for submitting correction plans to the fire marshal. The original compliance period for submitting plans was 30 days from the date of inspection. It was extended to the latter part of November or the first part of December. He said his office would reconsider recommendations made by the inspectors if EXPLAINING THE extension, Markley workmanhip to living in a deadline. offset the trials and tribulations of student teaching? "I had doubts about being a high school teacher," Bliazard said. "Student teaching helped me to know I can tolerate what some people consider an intolerable situation. I will enjoy it very much—I'm looking forward to teaching." Council studies 1980s enrollment BY DES MILLER Staff Writer Possibly declining enrollment at the University of Kansas was considered yesterday by the University Council during a report from Del Shankel, executive vice Hankel said a nine-member task force look into the problem and develop solution. The KU enrollment is now 24,372, and the number of pupils now in elementary school indicates that in six years, there will be about 70 per cent of the number of high school graduates that there are now, Shankel said. According to those figures, the number of KU students could drop to 15,000 by 1986. Shankel said, and in the next seven or eight years, that number may fluctuate slightly. THE FACULTY and administration could keep on keeping enrollment up, Shankel said. "Atthough some decline is inevitable, "he said, "we must do all we legitimately can to get it." To stem the decline, KU must continue trying to attract highly qualified high school seniors and serving students already enrolled at KU. Shankel said. Despite declining enrollments nationwide, KU could avoid drastic enrollment decreases, he said, because it is in an area expected to have the greatest population growth in Kansas and because it has several universities with enrollments that wouldn't decline. SHANKEL SAID KU's Outreach program, which provides classes in areas off campus, would continue to supplement KU's enrollment. Rex Martin, University Council member and professor of philosophy, who lives in Mission, said the Outreach program hadn't had much impact. "I feel the program could become more effective if it were sold to faculty members who can teach their students." Another council member, John Michel, professor of speech and drama, suggested cutting Buildings and Grounds personnel instead of laying off faculty members in case of drastic enrollment declines, as one cost-saving measure. SHAKENL SAID that the Outreach program was for students who couldn't reach the KU campus, but that the administration would consider such ideas as busing the students here to use KU facilities. case of drastically declining enrollments," he said. But several council members questioned the need for the Outreach program because it would leave many of the children in their home. In other business, the council endorsed a policy statement providing that all University schools and departments must have a written statement, approved on and file, explaining what that school or institution defines as service to the University. But Shankel said that if cuts were made, they would come from all areas of the University. TEACHING, RESEARCH and service are considered in granting faculty members promotions and tenure. Service includes providing education or serving on professional organizations. The council recommended that the University Committee on Promotions and Tenure, and Ron Calgair, vice chancellor of the department has a service statement on file. The council also decided that statements about teaching and research should be used. "Most schools and departments already have teaching and research statements, but service has always been a gray area," Martin said. THE COUNCIL voted to recess until next Thursday so the Faculty Council could meet Alvamar residents fight city hall over developer's PUD revisions Staff Writer By JOHN MUELLER Lawrence residents may have blocked a city attempt to revise the Alvamar Planned Unit Development (PUD), Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, said yesterday. Wilden said that Sam Dixon, 2002 Camelback Drive, an opponent of the Alvamar PUD, had met a city deadline Wednesday afternoon by presenting the city's budget through signature to show that 40 per cent of Alvamar's residents opposed the revision. Avamar is situated between West 15th and 23rd streets, west of Kasold Drive. City commissioners voted Tuesday to revise the Alvamar PUD by allowing the development of 14 single-family lots and open space around a nearby golf course. Posts open for Kansan Applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester Kansan are available in 105 Flint Hall, the Student Senate Office in room 105B in the Kansas Union, and in the offices of the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women. The application deadline is 5 p.m. Nov. 17. Interviews will begin Nov. 19. App- tions for the time and place of their interviews Wilden said county offices were closed yesterday, so the city couldn't work with county employees to definitely establish the signatures' validity. The signing of petitions by spouses was done by notarized telegram, Wilden said, so the city must determine whether the signers have an agreement to represent the person for whom they signed. BUT THE COMMISSIONERS voted by a 3-2 margin to allow the revision, with Carl Mibbe and Marne Arngersinger opposing. The vote wasn't final because a city organizer denied an intervenent power per cent of the people living in a PUD unit require a 4-1 vote. Wednesday was set as the deadline because it was two weeks after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Department unanimously recommended the change. Power of attorney involves the right to sign a document in the name of a person represented by the signer. A power of attorney is the city must be certain that the power of attorney was invoked Wednesday by all the Alavaram opp- who signed in the name of other persons WILDGEN SAID that even though Dixon had come up with the necessary signatures, the signatures hadn't been validated yet by city officials. Some of the persons who signed petitions Wednesday, he said, signed for their spouses, who were out of town. Dixon told commissioners Tuesday that he and other Alavar residents against the change needed only five signatures to be approved. Dixon then led Clanathan, city-county planning director, then told Dixon to get six signatures by Wednesday afternoon to "be on the safe side," and Dixon got the six signatures to the planning department by 5 p.m. Commissioners previously have gone along with the one vote for each owner idea, but they may take another vote at next meeting. It is the legality of future Alvamar development. Dixon has objected to the PUD changes because, he said, they would increase traffic in the Alvarnar area and would prevent the present residents' view of the golf course. OPPONENTS OF the change have also charged that they were mistreated by Alvamar, Inc., which, they said, had promised them security when they rented houses in Alvamar when they bought houses in Alvamar. "We paid a premium price for our house here to get the view," one opponent said yesterday. "This will just ruin the view—we're much more concerned with that then with the traffic, which isn't really the issue." Spokesman for Alvamar, Inc., denied the claims of the promises alleged by the opponent. 2 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press From the Associated Press Reprieve blocks execution SALT LAKE CITY—Condemned murderer Gary Mark Gilmore's wish to be executed on schedule by a firing squad Monday has been blocked by a reprieve issued by Gov. Calvin Rampton to allow Utah's Board of Pardons to consider the case. Gilmore's attorney, Dennis Boaz, said he was "outraged" by what he termed the "meddling of a lame duck governor." Latimer said that if the board decided the execution should proceed, the trial judge, 4th District Court Judge Robert Bullock, would have to reschedule it. *Meaning of a tattoo judge.* Rumpleton cannot comment sentences or issue pardons, but he can issue pardons well, but he cannot consider cases. Israel criticized by U.S. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—The United States joined a consensus Security Council statement yesterday that "strongly deplored" Israeli policies in occupied Arab territories, terming them "an obstacle to peace." The United States has been Israel's most consistent U.N. ally. The statement, agreed on unanimously by the 15 council members, expressed "grave anxiety and concern over the present serious situation in the occupied Arab territories as a result of the occupying power," to comply strictly with the Geneva agreement governing the administration of occupied territories. Gandhi's power increases NEW DELHI, India—The Indian parliament yesterday completed passage of a historic constitutional amendment stiffening the executive cloak of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's government. As about a dozen opposition members sat out in protest, the upper house voted 191-0 to give the government the sweeping new authority it requested to rule India's 610 million people. The amendment will become law after it receives the expected endorsement of a majority of India's 22 stateamilies. Girl's parents to appeal TOPE-KA - A legislative committee will hear De. 7 from the parents of a 5-year-old Parsons girl who died after an attack by a state institution resident patient. Mr. and Mrs. Gary Janssen have filed a $28,000 claim, contending that the state hospital allowed the patient to escape from Parsons State Hospital and Training Center. Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, chairman of the joint committee on claims against the state, said yesterday that the committee would consider the parents' appeal and decide whether to recommend that the legislature pay. The request includes a petition for $50,000 wrongful death benefit permitted under state law and funeral expenses. Jimmy Spheeris Is returning to Lawrence after a sellout performance in Kansas City for a concert in Hoch Auditorium. TONIGHT AT 8:00 P.M. Tickets are: $5.00 in advance General Admission $6.00 day of Show Presented by SUA god made me god doesn't make junk Millions of children in the rural South and Appalachia are as poor as little Willie. As a Catholic Brother, Sister, or priest, you can help them believe in themselves. And you'll grow in the process. Write for free information—without obligation. Glenmary Missioners, Room J-12 Box 46404, Cincinnati, OH 45246 Name ___ Age___ Address ___ City___ State ___ Zip___ FAST FREE DELIVERY! 841-3100 today's special Free Pepperoni or BlackOlives with any large pizza SAVE FUN, OUR STONE GROUND WHILE WHEAT GOES! OR FRACK AS WHITE COAST! HEAVY EDDYS Pizza At the Wheel 507 w.14th Sun.-Thurs. - 4:30 PM to 1:00 Meatball Grinders & Submarine Sandwiches, too ASK FOR OUR STONE BLAIND WHERE A MONSTER TOUCH OR BREAK A LIMIT HEAVY EDDYS At the Wheel 507 w.14th Pizza General Meeting Campus Veterans Friday, Nov. 12, 3:30 p.m. in the Union, Sunflower Room, 3rd Floor The bylaws of the Campus Veterans will be ratified at the meeting. Rough drafts of the bylaws are available at the Campus Veterans Office (Room 118B Kansas Union) and will be available at the meeting. All members are strongly urged to attend. Free beer while it lasts to be served at conclusion of business. If you have any questions call 864-4478 or stop by Room 118B in the Kansas Union. Vista RESTAURANTS Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. Vista RESTAURANTS — SPECIAL — TODAY ONLY Vistabasket $1.05 Reg. $1.20 1527 W. 6th 842-4311 SUA POPULAR FILMS NASHVILLE A PARAMOUNT PICTURE • ABC ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS A JERRY WENTRAUB PERSONALITY BY K. ROBERT PARAM. K. ROBERT PARENTS • STARRING DANIEL ARNIN KETT CARRADEINE • GERALDINE CHAPLIN • ROBERT DOUGLÉ • SHELBY QUIVAL • ALLEN BARBARA BAXLEY • NED BEATTY • KAREN BLACK • RONNE BLACKLEY • MOTHY BROWN CARLEELD • GREENBURN • SOUTHERN JEFF DOUGLÉ • BARBARA BAXLEY • DAVID HAYWARD • MOISEL MURPHY • ALLAN NOHLLS • DAVE PEEL • CRISTINA RAMES • REMIT RIBERMAN • KY TOLEN • GWIN WILLS • KEVIN LANDER • JOANN SECKSBURY • MARTIN STAGGER • BRIGHTER • WRITTEN BY JOAN TEWKSBRÜYK • PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY PRIEST ALMAN • MUSIC ARRANGED AND SUPERVISIONED BY RICHARD BASKIN JOE Friday, Nov. 12 and Saturday, Nov. 13 7:00 and 10:00 p.m. 3:30 Matinee Fri. and Sat. Woodruff Aud.—Kansas Union *100 Tickets Available at SUA office ANTIQUE CAR SHOW 1:00 to 5 SATURDAY NOV. 13 and NOV. 14 1:00 to 5 SUNDAY Free 20 Antique Cars In cooperation with the Lawrence Antique Auto Club AND Hot Dogs Pepsi Cola Bubble Gum T-BIRD LTD II and the Fill Size— Family Size LTD The Fiats X-19 Spider Convertible 131 Sedan and Wagons 128 Sedan and Wagons ALL IN OUR HUGE SERVICE DEPARTMENT—RAIN OR SHINE Come...See the Old...and the New FORD John Haddock Ford 23rd and Alabama FIAT John Haddock Imports Ph. 843-3500 Z C Friday, November 12, 1976 3 S 311 at. Union Office Zimmerman enjoys budget work By DEB MILLER Staff Writer In only two years, Ward Zimmerman has gone from University of Kansas graduate to director of the budget for the Lawrence campus. "I'm still impressed by the job," City... From page one the second largest business in the city. If you elected a mayor to take over the administrative part of the business, you'd get a good one only by chance." "The city manager type of government is known for its businesslike approach," Wildgen said. "In my opinion, a mayor should have to hire an assistant anyway." "This isn't a part-time job. A businessman couldn't come down here for a few hours in the morning and then go back to his clothing store." "THE CITY'S really like a business and you wouldn't turn that over to a nonprofessional. I really think we need a professional staff to handle it." Another argument used by opponents of the petition drive is that if citizens are allowed to run for city manager it takes only three votes of the city commission to dismiss him. In a mayor-council government, the city would have to hold a recall election or wait until the end of the mayor's term to get rid of him. "I think that's one of this system's greatest advantages," Watson said. "You don't have to change the form of government by changing a personality, it just takes three votes." But Kaplan still contends that representation under the present form of government isn't adequate. Commissioner; are paid $100 a year, he said, 'and the city has spent $100 worth of taxes from them.' Intramurals get policies formal steps to organize KU intramural programs were taken last night by the Recreation Advisory Board of the Student Senate. The board enacted written guidelines to establish policies for disciplinary action, eligibility, protest, tournament orientation and an intramural judicial board. The most controversial item of the night concerned the intramural eligibility policy for women. After some discussion, the board decided that any current or past professional athlete or any varsity athlete from a four-year institution would be ineligible to compete in an intramural sport which he had played as a varsity or professional athlete. They also established a judicial board comprising students who are participating WORLD WRANGER WRANGERS WORK WRANGER WRANGERS Goin' Nuts at 7TH SPIRIT 6 1/2 E. 7th 842-9549 Now open early. Happy Hour 4-6 Max Tenant will play Fri., Nov. 19 Zimmerman, who was hired in July, said "It's a fascinating challenge." 7S TH SPIRIT 6½ E. 7th 842-954 yesterday, "It's a fascinating challenge." In 1974, Zimmerman graduated with a B.A. in political science and a B.A. in chemistry. He received his M.A. from KU in 1975. Zimmerman had been a marketing representative for IBM in Mobile, Ala., when he learned of an "attractive" job offer from a local company. He came back to KU to prepare for that job. BUT WHILE HE WAS HERE, he be said, he burned of another attractive job offer as a teacher in the school. The budget process, he said, is at first a "blue sky" thing. Everyone lists what he will need. Next, the board of Regents votes on the budget and the budget goes to the state legislature. As budget director, Zimmerman helps prepare and present the budget, and he works with other staff to ensure compliance. "It's a very careful process," Zimmerman said. "There are many checks, like the budget hearings with the governor coming up Nov. 18." ZIMMERMAN SAID that he didn't believe the new Democratic-controlled Kansas state of Representatives would have an effect on KU's budget this year. "We've worked under all sorts of arrangements in the legislature," he said. "It all depends on how much money is in our hand and how much money we request." This year, KU has requested a lot of money, but Zimmerman said he was willing to pay. "KU has unique needs, for things like graduate work and research. A biology professor who is doing research can give his students firsthand knowledge, and that's what I need." Once these needs are explained to intelligent men, KU should get what it needs." University Daily Kansan "IM ENJOYING MY JOB, and I haven't had any restrictions. That's important to me," he said. "I'm also getting a lot of support and a lot of training." Zimmerman's wife, Sara, works in Zimmerman at Lowman Elementary School. She is a teacher and computer science tutor. $4 $4 RUSH RUSH TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16 – 8 PM Topeka Municipal Auditorium Tickets $4.00 advance; available at Joe Henry’s Team Electronics and Brothers & Sisters; in Manhattan at Team and in Lawrence at Team. IT’S A RIOT! “Splendiferously Funny.” The New Yorker “It’s a ball of a brawl!” -Judith Cribb Eve. 7:40, 9:30 Sat. Sun., 2:00 Hillcrest MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN A thriller DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLIVIER ROY SCHEIDER Every Evening 7:30, 9:45 Saturday, Sunday 2:30 Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs WALT DISNEY'S FIRST FULL LENGTH ANIMATED FEATURE! EVENINGS S.W. - 7:30 & 10:45 N.D. - 8:45 only GRANADA MAT. SAT.-SUN. 1:30 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWO-MINUTE WARNING CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASSAVETES TWO-MINUTE WARNING MARTIN BALSAM - BEAU BRIDGES - MARILYN HASSETT DAVID JANSSEN - JACK KUUGMAN - WALTER PIDGEON - GENA ROWLANDS BROCK PETERS-DEVIE DORR-NATURNY GAVES-JOE KAPP Hillcrest A wine of unusual quality "SPANISH FLY" the comedy aphrodite... Eve. 7:20 & 9:40 Saf. Sun., 1:50 FRIDAY SATURDAY & SUNDAY "FUTUREWORLD" 7:30 "The HARRAD EXPERIMENT" Sunset We clothe 30 Thurs. The New Yorker THE .RIZZ "your key to hibernation" "It's a ball of a brawl!" -Judith Gritz Eva. 7:40, 9:30 Sat. Sun, 2:00 MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN A thriller R DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLIVIER ROY SCHEIDER Every Evening 7:30, 9:45 Saturday, Sunday 2:30 Varsity Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs' WALT DISNEY'S FIRST FULL LENGTH ANIMATED FEATURE! EVENINGS * W. - 10 & 15 a.m. * N. D. - 8 & 45 only Granada PLUS "No Deposit, No Return"! MAT. SAT.-SUN: 1:30 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWO MINUTE WARNING CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASSAVETES TWO-MINUTE WARNING MARTIN BALSAM • BEAU BRIGGS • MARILYN HASSETT DAVID JANSSEN • KJACK KUGMAN • WALTER PIDGEON GENA ROWLANDS BROCK PETERS • DAVID GRISWOLD • ANTHONY GRAVIS • JEE KAPP Eve. 7:20 & 9:40 Sat. Sun. 1:50 A wine of unusual quality "SPANISH FLY" the comedy aphrodisiac ... Eve. 7:30 & 12:06 Sat. Sun. Mat. 1:05 Hillcrest FRIDAY SATURDAY & SUNDAY "FUTUREWORLD" R 7:30 "The HARRAD EXPERIMENT" 9:30 A wine of unreal quality R Buy A Pair Of . . . JEANS or PANTS Get a 100% Cotton "T" Shirt By "You Babes" 6ºº Value We clothes 'til 8:30 Thurs. FREE! HAPPY LEGS PRIDES CROSSING ROSE HIPS GOTCHA COVERED FADED GLORY LEVI OFFER GOOD WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. THE ATTIC 927 Mass. FREE! We clothe till 8:30 Thurs. Consumer Affairs Association's food survey will be printed in Monday's Kansan. Sandy's OFFER GOOD THURSDAY thru SUNDAY WEEKEND SPECIALS Sandee lovers start here Sesame burger Mixed cheese $1.09 Deluxe Sandee Stirred lettuce Tomato onion picle Seasonal sauce Not just meat, but chopped beef flavor Sandie lovers start here Sesame bun 7 Melted cheese $1.09 Deluxe Sandee Stirred lettuce Tomato onion pickle Secret sauce Hot just meat but chopped beef flask LARGE ORDER FRENCH FRIES DAIRY BAR MEDIUM HOT FUDGE SUNDAE 41¢ Sandy's Sandy's Special Jazz Concert Saturday Nite at Paul Gray's Jazz Place (We're sold out for Friday's show.) (We're sold out for Friday's show.) EMIL ORTH - the leading Dixieland trombone player in the South Don't miss this super entertainer! Admission $4.00—INCLUDES all the beer and popcorn you can consume! Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. Opens 8:00 p.m. Music starts at 9:00 p.m. TACO GRANDE MACHINE 5 Tacos For $1.00 3 DAYS ONLY Friday, Saturday & Sunday November 12,13&14 at TACO GRANDE 9th & Indiana and 1720 W.23rd 4 Fridav. November 12, 1976 University Daily Kansan Painter capitalizes on the fine art of bad taste By LEROY JOHNSTON Kitsch (noun)-artistic or literary material held to be of low quality, often produced to appeal to popular taste. Bustle and dismaliment, in contrast to moralism and alziness. The question that must be answered when viewing Michael Otto's paintings is: Is this a glorification of kitch or is there something more? OTT'S WORK is being exhibited at the gallery, 7E, 7th St., until the end of the month. Clearly the man has seen a lot of kitch. All of us have. Remember those postcards that show a cowboy punching cattle on a horse, and you know where it came from, caption, 'Greetings from Kansas!' Now remember the dog you saw smashed in the middle of the road while you were on a family vacation. You were just a kid then. Your parents may have bought a postcard of a scenic spot you visited later. That dog sure looked strange on that postcard. Mike Okt thinks so, too. He painted it. It's called "dog gone." "That's what artists always leave out of a scene," he said. OTT HAS traveled extensively in the United States and Europe. He seems older than his 30 years, but younger than a chairman of the Kansas Institute of art to be. The vacation theme is central to many of his snapshot-like paintings. In 'Spot on Vacation," an alert munt pokes his head into a Giant Canyon panorama. "I was at the Grand Canyon, watching these people taking pictures," Ott said. "They were taking turns in the picture. Finally it was the dog's turn. It didn't make much of an impression on me at that time." THE PANORAMIC postcard view is altered again in "Sag Movie." A movie screen has been set up across a half-frozen canyon stream. The title explains the rest. "There are a lot of images that stick in my mind that I use over and over. That valley curtain (by Christo) did have a profound effect on me." "Ott combined this image with one from his youth to create "Stag Movie." One grips the humor in Ott's work easily enough, but has Ott succeeded in raising his work above the level of the kltsch it draws from? The question is difficult. "When I was a kid we used to go see stag films in a barn after work," he said. "Art is like a vacation to me," he said. "I don't see any reason to have everyday things on your walls. It should transport you to another place and time, where you can forget about your problems—just like a vacation." WHAT ABOUT "Stag Film"? "If I'd really painted it up, then it would be klick. Like, if I'd put in a stag standing knee-deep in the stream watching the film. I'm not interested so much in the intellectual implications; basically I'm after the dramatic." And so Ollt continues to tread the fine line between kischo and art. His sense of humor, sometimes macabre, is perhaps the clearest element lifting his work out of the realm of illusionism, the idea of beauty be less significant, and their obscurity works against them. MUCH OF both the success and failure of Ot's paintings is due to his slick, tacky painting style, which either works perfectly or not at all. It is difficult to reconcile a striving for both pathos and drama with a kinky sense of humor. Some of Ot's smaller paintings suffer as a result of this flat, rapid paint application. They appear to have been knocked out in a couple of hours—a problem the larger paintings do not nave—and this appearance leads to an occasional loss of credibility. PAINTING as a genre is not without its con-game aspects. All painters have similar problems achieving credibility. A good painting is always a gamble, and should show it. A painting that sets no unique or difficult problem for itself risks losing the emotional response of the viewer—and consequently its power. In Ott's work these issues serve well to separate the meaningful from the less meaningful. Paintings like "Born Free" and "Foodloose," both of them smaller, personal and obscure, fall flat trying to evoke a strong response. OTT HAS carved for himself a unique area of sensibility both in concept and execution. His strength can only fall when he understands the path and lets the resulting indecision show. Arts & Leisure 'Marathon Man' hurt by its script, directing By CHUCK SACK "Marathon Man" is a curiosity shop of a movie. Why it doesn't quite work is less puzzling than why it works at a store. William Goldman's thriller about a Jewish college student who gets sucked into an ex-Nazi's scheme to retrieve his family's palm metal material. But add actor Dustin Hoffman and director John Schlesinger—rewritten for the first time since "Midnight Cowboy"—and you have the opportunity to access that Hollywood dotes on. ACTUALLY, Goldman's script (adapted from his own novel) could have been handed to almost any young actor and hack director. The results have been at least as satisfying. Schlesinger does handle actors well, and with a strong cast that includes Roy Scheider, William Devare, Marvel Keller and Laurence Olivier, he obtains a fine set of performances. Unfortunately, they are larcely wasted. "Marathon Man" hammers Schlesinger because it highlights his weaknesses. The story lacks the sensitive, quirky characters Schlesinger probes well and the plot threads are too entangled for him to keep straight. Worst of all the script action, crisp action scenes, and as the film demonstrates, Schlesinger is a bumbling director with such scenes. THE SCRIPT is so involved with the chaotic international plotline that the actors don't get it. They are in a world of or any time to do the building. Babe Levy (Hoffman), the college student, and his older brother Doc (Scheider) the most complete characters, yet despite five sepi-toned flashbacks by cinematographer Conrad Hall, we don't know what the characters tick. Does Babe have serious aspirations of being a marathon runner? Does Doc Lie to his brother about his true occupation because he's afraid that Babe will reject him? Hoffman and Scheider are resourceful enough to cover some of the holes, but not all. Full-bodied characters single-handedly. IN FACT, the actors who fare best are Olivier and Devane. Olivier plays the role of Szell, the Nazi forced out of hiding, depicting him as the ultimate evil, cardboard figure called for in the script. Somehow he is not known, but he's the villain, so Olivier's tight-lipped, sadistic portrait satisfies our expectations. We don't care any more about the fates of Szell and Janeaway than we do about Babe and Doc. But the crucial difference is that the villains don't ask for sympathy, and we don't have to feel guilty when we can't muster it. Devane, too, gets by with minimal acting because Janeaway, the agent he portrays, is surrounded in mystery. Any attempt to flesh out the character would only heighten his incarceration so that he can on a smooth charm, correctly assuming that we'll learn he knows the answers. IF CHARACTER is sacrificed for plot in "Marathon Man," though, it is a damnable trade. One would expect that, given so little else of interest, Schlesinger and Goldman would keep the story straight. But they don't even manage this. How dare the organization that carries diamonds to war criminals? Does he know that Babe's girlfriend, Elsa Keller), a courier? Why does New York's diamond district when he could find out what he wants to know by using the phone? The story lurches along, leaving the audience to savor the gore left in Seall's wake as a substitute for true suspense. Schlesinger delivers the gore all right, but not with any flourish. He's too tasteful to just watch, but she spatters the screens with blood. In fact, the best violent scenes are those where Schlesinger suggests violence instead of trying to depict it. YET FOR all these faults, "Marathon Man" does provide some entertainment. There's more to it than mostly by default, as one of the box-office hits. But those of us who don't consider ticket sales to be the final arbiter of how it found an audience. The thriller plot idea is good, but this movie isn't very thrilling. The acting is very good, but the cast doesn't get much opportunity to act. The direction is weak where it needs to be firm and strong where it needs to be light, it's that the undercurrent of a political theme exists, but it's nothing that the Dirty Harry films can't do better. Maybe that's the real problem. This Week's Highlights Concerts JIMMY SPHEERIS performs tonight at 8:30 in Hoch Auditorium ELLA FITZGERALD sings tomorrow night at 8 in the Music Hall, Kansas City, Mo. THE UNIVERSITY STRING QUARTET, composed of KU faculty members, performs Monday night at 8 in Swarthwout ELLY AMELING. Dutch theater as part of concert. Concert at 1:30 a.m. Sunday afternoon at 3:10 in the University Theatre, Murphy Nightclubs DAVID WEHR performs his senior recital on the piano Tuesday night at 8 in Swarthout Recital Haji. W O R M W W R A N C H WRANGLERS, a country rock and swing band, play Monday at 7 p.m. and until 2 a.m. at the 7th Spirit. STEPHEN KORT, pianist, performs a faculty recital Thursday night at 8 in Baworth Recruit Hall. RHYTHEM FUNCTION, a Kansas City Reggae band, plays tonight and tomorrow night from 9 to 12am On the Wall PORK AND BEAN BAND plays country rock from 9 to 12 Monday night, and Tuesday is the Hall's Free Folk Night, featuring STEVE CORNMEI and GREG ALLEN. The FREE BLUEGRASS JAM is from 7:30 to 12 Wednesday night at the Hall. SHARI WEELBOW, vocalist and guitar player, plays tomoray night and Thursday at the Rubayat Inn, the Rubayat Inn, Ramada Inn. EMIL ORTH, jazz tombone player from Tennessee plays bass guitar. Paul Gray's Jazz Place, Paul Gray's is Jazz the JAZZ MASSION. TOMMY JOHNSON AND THE EXPERIMENT play tomorrow night from 2 to 11 at the Eldridge House Club. ON TAP plays dance bobo music tonight and tomorrow night from 9 to 12 at the Nest, Kansas Union. Theater THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. 60644 Subscriptions by mail are $1 a semester or $18 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Ana Guevara Debbie Gump David Dary Films "RASHOMON", "a Japanese drama," is performed tonight and tomorrow night at 8 in the University Theatre in Murphy. "GODSPELL," a musical celebration of Christ's life and teachings, is performed tonight at 8 by the University Christian Movement at the United Industries Building, 2104 Orest Ave. JUST IMAGINE-The mating of cinema's weakest genres—the musical and the science fiction film—produced by its offspring Stuart John Garlick and Maureen O'Sullivan. **PRIMATES**=Under the cold eye of cinema verite director Frederick Wiseman, a research center's studies of the behavior of lower primates are brought to the screen in terrifyingly real environments where the animals seem more humane than their keepers. THE KILLING--Stanley Kubrick's third film is a satire of the 1960s taut and very watchable, but lacking the imaginative dimensions of almost all his films. Sterling Hayden stars THE RITZ–*A* 30s madcap comedy comes a '70s twist when the action is set in a gay hotel room, but the characters are "straight," and Rita Moreno does a dizzy fumy as a performer known as "The Pits." Check ads for showtimes I am the poet of the earth. I am the poet of the sky. I am the poet of the stars. I am the poet of the sun. I am the poet of the moon. I am the poet of the wind. I am the poet of the rain. I am the poet of the fire. I am the poet of the water. I am the poet of the air. I am the poet of the earth. I am the poet of the sky. I am the poet of the stars. I am the poet of the sun. I am the poet of the moon. I am the poet of the wind. I am the poet of the rain. I am the poet of the fire. I am the poet of the water. I am the poet of the air. The bandit Taiomaru (played by Peter Miner) after escaping from his bonds in "Rasbomon" East meets West and fails By GREGG HEJNA Fay and Michael Kaini's translation of the play "Rashomon" opens tonight at the University Theatre. The KU production has undertaken the mammoth task of bringing Japanese to Western theater with the stylization of Japanese theater, and has fallen short. "The problem with "Rashomon" is not so much that there are weaknesses in the play but where the weaknesses are. In a complicated plot involving the telling of four "eyewitness" accounts of the murder of a Samurai warrior, Ralph has to roles with a different feeling with each version of the tale—a formidable task in itself, but one that is further complicated by the use of Japanese stylization during parts of the production. Peter Miner's portrayal of Tajmarn, the bandit with a reputation longer than his sword, runs hot and cold—mostly cold. He is at his best only when he is before the unseen judge, telling his version of the tale. The combination of Eastern and Western theater styles presents problems for actors. The two styles have an unbelievable amount of talent or at least a familiarity with both styles could tackle such a difficult role, and, for the most part, this production has neither. His husky voice, which works the character to his advantage, is unusually effective. But he has a great knack for handling the case members, when he is required to enter into the Japanese mode of theater. His movements are too jerky and all too often resemble a defenseless human trying to be killed. He and Clifford Rhaeb, who plays the murdered man, lack the ginesse to carry off their victims' graves, grace and balance that is required by the Kabuki style. gunnard's portraital of the murdered man is memorable only for his recitation from his grave of his version of the tale, a feat accomplished by some excellent sound work, enhancing what is otherwise a mediocre performance. Blair, more than any other person on stage, is able to move with relative ease through the music that her character demands. The only bright spot among the main actors is Rhonda Blair's performance as the murdered man's wife. As the pivotal characters, Yoichi Fukunaga as the priest, Joseph Krause as the woodcutter and Quinn Cloefil as the wigmaster are less than captivating. None of their performance is particularly strong and Cloefil gives a singularly poor performance. His character resembles someone out of 'Fiddler on the Roof' Roof" rather than a 10th-century Japanese play. The two strongest points in the production are Andrew Tuskekul's excellent direction and Barry Bengtsen's set design by Barry Bengtsen. Only Dayna Edwards' role as Blair's mother lends any believability to the minor characters. She is quite good as she pleads the unseen judge. Tsukibai walks the tightrope between too much and too little directing. He knows his craft and displays it well, even though like a complicated jigsaw puzzle Tsukibai fits all the phases of the production "Hashomun" is the KU entry to the American Theater Festival, and one can only hope that its competition is poor so it can retain the honors KU won with "Conponasma" last year. Bengtens's set is an exercise in imagination. The set consists of more than 60 canvases from the Japanese watercolor style. The set is not only artistically beautiful, but also functional, and Bengtens shows that something extraordinary confines of the theater stage. together to become one tight, complete unit. His only flaw is that he expects too much from his actors. "Radio Time Machine," a new KJHK series of half-hour Friday night programs, will feature on air the broadcasts spanning the 1950 to 1960 era. Kicking off the series will be a radio adaptation featuring the show's starring Humphrey Bogart and Sidney Greenstreet. KJHK to revive 'Golden Age' By JEAN BLACKMORE Beginning tonight at 8:30, area listeners will be invited to embark on a weekly nostalgic journey into the Golden Age of Radio—via an audio excursion courtesy of J.K.HK. Staff Write The problem was that entire radio shows used to be owned by single companies, and therefore included commercials for companies that are still active advertisers today, he said. THE "FALCON" and the other broadcasts come from a collection gathered by series host Ted Culberson, Culberson, a KJHK program producer, that he conceived the series last summer but that a legal problem delayed the program's airing this semester. Because KJHK is noncommercial, commercials in the old broadcasts had to be dubbed over with public service announcements. Some of the advertising turned out that it couldn't be edited effectively, Culberson said. Cunerson's show, then, didn't go on—that is, until several weeks ago. educational institution such as KU, copyright laws say you can play most of the infused advertising." In addition to 'Maltese Falcon,' listeners will be treated to a Thanksgiving show featuring Jimmy Durante and Garry Moore Nov. 19, a radio adaptation of the book "Frankenstein" Nov. 28, 1938 and Nov. 16, 1945. Brothers segment D, Dick Wilkinson and Diamond film from the mid-1940s Dec. 10, and a Christmas show featuring "Duffy's Tavern," a situation comedy starring Joan Bennett and Shirley Booth Dec. 17. NEXT SEMESTER'S lineup includes more Marx Brothers shows, a series of Eddie Curtis' The Man Who Thought He Was Robinson,* starting Edward G. Robinson in a dual role, and possibly Orson Welles' version of "Dracula." Culberson said most of the shows in "Radio Time Machine" were prerecorded because of the advent of transcription in the 1940s. However, several of the programs, such as the Maltese Falcon, were recorded before it lived on audience. Audience and KJHK program director Rita Charlton say they hope "Radio Time Machine" will be a success. "I THINK there is a lot of interest in such radio shows, especially in the younger audience that hasn't seen it yet," Culbertson said. "The drama is timeless and the comedy is still funny." Friday, November 12, 1976 5 without its se similar A good id should unique or closing the power—and we well to the less mrn Free" smaller, trying to a unique accept and fail when path and JAY KOELZER 1s one tight, only flaw is much from is an exercise set consists 50 canvases traditional color style. The statistically beau- functional, and that something makes theater stage. the KU entry can Theater can only hope is poor so it konswers KU won as" last year. most of the Audio Time prerecorded a advent of in the 1940s. central of the as such "audio" recorded audio audience and KJHK on and KJHK Rit Altar Charity "Radio Time" be a success. are is a lot of radio shows, sas isn't ever heard "C. Bulsoner is timeless is still funny ing Edward G. dual role, and Velles' version Soprano to make Midwest debut By BILL CALVERT Staff Writer In 1968, Elly Ameling, a Dutch soprano, made her American debut in a concert at the Lincoln Center in New York. She has been married twice and, since, leaving review reviews in her wake. Despite the success of her concertes around the world, Ameling is relatively unknown in the Midwest, which will receive its formal introduction to her when she appears at the University Theatre in Murphy Hall, as part of the University of Kansas Concert Series. "She's the finest lyric soprano in the world," Raymond Stuhl, professor of performance and faculty advisor to the KU Concert Series Committee, said Wednesday. "Having her here enhances the prestige of the University on the cultural and artistic side. It really makes us stand out among the other universities." STUHLSAID that Ken Smith, professor of voice, and Henry Snyder, professor of history, had suggested Ameling perform in the Concert Series. Ameling was born in Rotterdam, Holland, where she studied singing with Jo Bolkampher. Her career began when she won the Grammy Award for Best New Talent and Musique in Geneva. She has also won some of the world's most coveted recording honors: the Grand Prix du Disque, the Edison Prize, the Preis der Deutschen Songs and the Kino Korero Review Record of the Year Award. Ameling has toured extensively in Europe, South Africa and Japan and has performed with the BBC Svmhony Orchestra in London, the Berlin Philharmonic and the English Chamber Orchestra. In North America, she has performed with the Boston Symphony, the Chicago Symphony, the National Association of Osteoporosis Symphony orchestras in San Francisco, Toronto and Cincinnati. Ameling has recorded with several record companies, including Philips, RCA, London, Angel, Odeon, EMI and Harmonic Mundi. "MY WALLS are plastered with Elly Amelong records," Stuhl said. "That's the acid test of a performer—how many records they make." Another test of a performer's talent is the kind of reviews she receives, and reviewers have been kind to Amelia After her performance at Carnegie Hall last year, Speight Jenkins of the New York Post wrote, "It is not too much to suggest that I have been at Carnegie last night to have heard Elmy Aleming sing Schubert. Her basic instrument has a God-given beauty, but Miss Aleming adds to nature a supreme beauty. He has commitment and a bright intellectual." Tickets will be on sale until the time of performance at a cost of $4 for main floor seats, $3.50 for first balcony seats and $3 for second balcony seats with IDs 10 & will be admitted free of charge. --a dramatization from a famous Japanese film with traditional theatre techniques REEL TO REEL: A Festival of Women's Films Nov. 13 & 14 Dyche Aud. SATURDAY 12 NOON THE OTHER HALF OF THE SKY: A CHINA MEMOIR, Shirley Maclaine/Claudia Weill REFLECTIONS, Shannon Green I MAKE-UP, Pam Hopkins MAYA. Martha Dunn GWEN/MIME, Pam Hopkins/ Martha Dunn ALL DAY SUCKER; CHICKEN DELIGHT, Mary Bondurant RAPE PREVENTION: NO PAT ANSWER, Polly Pettit SANDY AND MADELINES FAMILY, Sherrie Farrell (1973) 28 min. 3 PM WOMAN TO WOMAN, Donna Dietch HOME MOVIE, Jan Oxenberg SUNDAY 12 NOON MESHES OF THE AFTERNOON, Maya Deren BROTHER CARL, Susan Sontag 3 PM WOMEN'S HAPPY TIME COM- MUNE, Sheila Paige NEVER GIVE UP: IMMOGENE CUNNINGHAM, Ann Hershey TUB FILM, Mary Beams Sponsored by Women's Coalition/Funded by Student Activity Fee --a dramatization from a famous Japanese film with traditional theatre techniques SUA Indoor Rec-Table Tennis TOURNAMENT STUDENTS Sun., Nov. 14 2:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom $1.50 Entry Fee 1st and 2nd place trophies DOUBLE ELIMINATION 1st and 2nd place winners go to Cape Girardeau, Mo. from Region XI Tournament Sign up in SUA office by Fri., Nov. 12 QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET 811 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas CHARIOT OPEN EVERY SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 842-6616 acme dlingo BRIGADE The boot that's styled right for the times! Men's and Women's styles. Narrow to wide widths. Several styles to choose from. McKenzie shoes 813 Mass. St. V13-2091 MCOS shoes 813 Moss, St. V1 3-2091 FRI. TONITE NOV.12 GODSPELL 8PM FRI. TONITE NOV.12 GODSPELL 8 PM United Ministries Center 12th & Oread $1 LIVE CAST from DALLAS LIVE CAST from The University of Kansas Theatre presents RASHOMON NOVEMBER 12.13.19.20 at 8:00 p.m. 21 at 2:30 p.m. for information call The University Theatre Box Office 864-3982 KU4 American College Theatre Festival entry Partially funded by the Student Activity Fee Go Big Blue HECK & HARDTARFER Realty, Inc. • GENE HARDTARFER EXEC. VICE PRESIDENT 601 Missouri / Lawrence, Kansas 66044 / Office: 843 5522 COLD BEER & WINE Banning's Retail Liquor Store NOW OPEN 9th & New Hampshire located in the downtown area 841-3288 1/4 pounder only 69¢ All-American Special! HEAD FOR HENRY'S —Monday —Sunday —Tuesday Nov. 14-16 Something's Always Going On at HENRY'S We Have a New Series of Glasses We Have a New Series of Glasses --- 842-1811...Ask for Station No. 6 GRAMOPHONE BEST OF LEON BEST OF LEON Best Of Leon The very best from music's perennial superstar, including "Delta Lady," "Lady Blue," "K Song For You" and "Holl Away The Stone." reg. '69 Kief's discount price $399 KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO MALLS SHOHRING CENTER LAWDEEDE KANBAS 012 849 1544 Best Of Leon MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-913-842-1544 Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358 6 Friday, November 12, 1976 University Daily Kansan 'Hawks look to end losing ways By GARY VICE Assistant Sports Editor After losing four of their last five games, the Jayhawks, 5-4, will try to rebound against the Colorado Buffaloes, 6-3, at 2:30 CST in a stadium that hasn't been very friendly to the invading 'Hawks. KU's victory in Colorado was not enough to buff against last 11 games against KU, including a 24-21 contest last year in Lawrence. Folsom Field in Boulder, Colo., isn't the most promising place to try to turn around a nosediving football season, but that's where the Kansas Jawhaws will be tomorrow. The Jayhawk players, however, are far from conceding this one to the Buffs. Senior linebacker Terry Beeson said, "We're as ready to play as we've been all year. We're ready to win and it sure would do us a lot of good." "No one expects us to win again this year, so being the underdogs, we've got everything to gain by winning and nothing to lose." And junior Tom Dinkel offered this reasoning: "I know my yakwha are ready for their leaping trip." Maybe so, but the Jayhawks need a victory tomorrow to prevent KU coach Bud Moore from losing three games in a row for the first time and CU coach Josh Hewitt. The Bakersfield victory. A Kansas win would also preserve its first back-to-back winning seasons since 1961-62. "It's because the last three times we've played them, they've been one of the best teams in the nation and we were only so-so. We're not so-so this year." Whether the Jayhawks are capable of upsetting the thundering herd may become apparent in their first few offensive series. KU's offense, which has been shaggy since the loss of Nolan Cromwell, will be directed to sophomore quarterback Mark Vicentee. Vicenteed, who played for the first time this season in last week's 31-17 loss to Iowa State, will be the Jayhawks' third start in the NFC. He also worked with senior Scott McMichael and sophomore Mark Lissak. Coming in late in the first quarter against in the Cyclones, Vicenteed showed promise of restoring扑克 to KU shoguchi offense by directing it to two touchdowns. Moore, who decided that Vicendease's performance last week earned him the startling role, said. "He looks like he's improved. Everyday he's working out the exercises and running really smart running the offense, and I am anxious to see him in the ballgame." vicenteed, who had hoped to be red-shirted this season, said, "I'm just going to try and go out there and do what I've been working on in practice—try and do my The Buffs will be countering on offense with senior tailback Tony Reed, Reed the Big Eight's second leading rusher, averaging 10.2 yards per game. At quarterback for Colorado will be Jeft From: Worms To: Snakes Having a Great Time in Dallas. Glad You're Not Here Fraternally, Lurck & Burly CHOoseY BEGGAR BEGGAR'S DAY SALE 20% OFF everything FRI. SAT. SUN. MON. CHOOSEY BEGGAR CHOOSEY BEGGAR BEGGAR'S DAY SALE 20% OFF everything FRI. SAT. SUN. MON. CHOOSEY BEGGAR --- Knapple, a sophomore from Boulder who ranks third in the conference in passing, with 830 yards gained. They will face a Jayhawk defense that might see Dinkel, a linebacker for most the season, switched back to the defensive end position he played last year, and replaced by sophomore Tom Allandiekwie. 7619 METCALF Kansan Predictions GAME SCHOENFELD ANDERSON VICE ABOURALEAH Kansas at Colorado 28-10 Kansas 21-17 Colorado 26-10 Colorado 20-10 Oklahoma State at Kansas State Oklahoma State 30-15 Oklahoma State 39-9 Oklahoma State 28-7 Missouri at Oklahoma 28-07 Oklahoma 24-21 Oklahoma 21-19 Missouri 23-14 Nebraska at Iowa State 20-10 Nebraska 26-14 Nebraska 27-24 Nebraska 21-17 Alabama at Notre Dame 20-21 Notre Dame 15-7 Alabama 21-14 Alabama 15-10 Georgia at Alburne 20-7 Georgia 26-10 Georgia 15-14 Georgia 20-15 Florida at Kentucky 17-17 Florida 26-14 Florida 26-10 Florida 28-1 Louisiana State at Mississippi State 14-19 Louisiana State 34-11 Louisiana State 31-10 Prediction Record 49-21 700 46-24 657 33-17 737 31-19 728 Making the Kauai football predictions this fall are Brew Schofield, sports actor; Brendan Anderson, sports actor; Gary Voe, assistant sports actor; Yay Aboutaulou, managing agent and Fall 2016 draft pick. (Jenny McCarthy) Parts for All Imports Student Discounts JAMES GANG FOREIGN AUTO PARTS Your BANKA AMERICARO master charge at your door Mon.-Fri., 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 843-8080 304 Locust master charge THE INTERGRAL CARD --- --- --- MEET ME AT THE MARKET PLACE --- Bokonon The Frame Up Leather Limited The Shooting Gallery Dirty Thirties & Earlier Deja Vu 8th and New Hampshire Native American Artists Ltd. The Gallery The Armadillo Bead Co. Su Casa Graphic Arts Inc. The Harvest SUA presents THE JIMMY WALKER SHOW Star of "Good Times" STAND-UP COMEDY AT ITS BEST ED TOMORROWLIGHT 8 p.m. Upstairs Room Tickets oral admission or $3 if prior to groups of 10 or more. U do not admitted Queue Answer Session after Show Tickets available at the SUA box office For about five hours tomorrow morning, Robinson gymnasium will be overrun with volleyball players. Ten teams will compete in the final national tournament, at 9:30 a.m. varsity squads. The ten teams will be split between the team with the most KU's and will be in the A division. Four courts will be set up in the gym so that four games can be played at once. Each court is 30 feet wide. All teams except KU's are United States Volleyball Association (USVBA) teams and rate themselves as either A or B teams. The KU teams will play at 9:30, 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. KU INDIA CLUB presents DIWALI NIGHT Delicious ten-course Indian dinner followed by exciting cultural show. Tickets are now available at the Dean of Foreign Students Office (Strong Hall) and the SUA Office (at the Kansas Union). Sunday, Nov. 21st 5:30 p.m. Kansas Union For more information call after 5:00: For more information call after 5:00: Usha Patel 841-4841 Pramila Bhatla 841-2873 M. Padmanabhan 843-3596 Partially funded by the Student Senate Bugsys's presents Muscular Dystrophy 24 Hour DANCE MARATHON The dance starts Friday at 4 and ends Saturday at 4. Come out and support the couples who are dancing so others can walk.Saturday Mayor Pence will award prizes to the winning couples. From 4 'til 7 — $ 25^{\circ} $ beer Bugsy will donate 50° from each cover charge to M.D. If you think you know a lot about football, we're going to give you a chance to win a large fries — to win a free large fries Every time you buy a "Quarter Pounder" or a Quarter Pounder with Cheese Now Nov. 29 we'll give you a Football Facts Rub and Win Game card. You can use the card to challenge your football LQ. First, rub off the silver area covering the question. Then select the answer you think is correct and rub off the silver oval next to that answer. It the letters "T0" appear under the silver oval, you win! Come into participating McDonald's for complete details and play our Fans' Favorite Football Facts Game. And see if you really do know as much about football as you think you do We do it all for you. McDonald's 901 W. 23rd St. Favorite Football Facts "Say, do you remember who lost the Super Bowl in 1973?" T Cols Satur Sun C and ch Is I Missad Bu J yes ther bel sal up i Ch Ot H O f qu tu J Bl on m 7 Friday, November 12, 1976 596 --- Field hockey team leads tourney By DAN BOWERMAN Sports Writer Agressive play and dissension among the Southwest Missouri State field football team gave KU two victories and a share of the lead in its pool after the first round of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Region Six tournament. Eight teams are competing in the tournament, for which William Jewell College is the host. It is being played on the Barstow High School fields in Kansas City, Mo. The teams are divided into two pools, and Bumidji State College, Bemidji, Min., are tied for the lead in their pool with 2-0 records. Bemidji and KU met at 9:30 this morning to determine the winner of the pool. Both teams will advance to the play-off rounds this afternoon and tomorrow morning. KU upset Southwest Missouri State, Springfield, Mo., in the first game yesterday. 1-0. Alexis Wagner scored KU's only goal in the first half. Soccer club to play twice The KU Soccer Club travels to Boulder, Colo., to take on the undefeated Buffaloes Saturday, preceding the KU-CU football and will go to Ottawa for a game Sunday. Colorado, undefeated in the spring season, hopes the game will prove that it, and not KU, deserved the Big Eight championship last year. Jayhawk coach Bernie Mullin said yesterday that he didn't view KU's game this weekend against Colorado as a rematch, as the Buffs claim it is. "I THINK that the Colorado coach believes they are going to lose," Mullin said, "so this idea of a championship is this idea just an attempt to payche on his team." KU defended Missouri, 4-2, for the championship. In the spring tournament, Colorado tied Missouri in divisional play, but the Tigers advanced to the finals by outscoring the Buffs in the tournament. Mullin was also confident about KU's chances of winning its 2 p.m. game against Ottawa Sunday. Runners seek NCAA berth Corning off its best performance of the fall, the KU cross country squad hopes to qualify this weekend in Stillwater, Okla., for the NCAA national meet. KU, which placed second in last week's Big Eight championship, will compete for one of two births in the NCAA national meet, Nov. 22 in Denton, Tex. We Write All Risks Automobile Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. SUA FILMS UPOCLAIM FILMS ASHLEE HILLE (1975) Dit Robert Altman, with Henry Gibson, Ronee Blakey, Lily Tomlin. Fri., Nov. 12 and Sat., Nov. 13 3:30; 7:00; 10:00; 5:1 POPULAR FILMS JUST IMAGINE (1930) Dir. David Butler, with E. Brendel, Maureen O'Reilly Mon., Nov 15, 7:30, 7:50 SCIENCE FICTION SERIES "We played a very aggressive game" we said after and kept after them and finally. KU coach Diana Beebe said that the game was hard-fought and physical and that part of SMS' problem was that they had to memorize themselves throughout most of the game. KU defeated Graceland College, Lamoni, Iowa, yesterday afternoon, 4-1. Wagner and Anne Levinson each scored two goals for the Jayhawks. SPECIAL FILM THE SORROW AND THE PITY dire. by Marcel Ophuls. Tuesday, Nov. 16, 7:00; $1 Melton Missouri State, Warrensburg, Mo., leads the other pool. 5-20 Carleton University, St. Louis. CLASSICAL SERIES PRIMATES (1974) Dir. Frederick Wiseman Documentary Wed., Nov. 17, 7:30, 75c All Films shown in Woodruff Auditorium University are 11, and North Dakota University has lost both its games. In KU's pool, Southwest Missouri State and Graceland are both 0-2. The winner of the KU-Bemidji State game will play the second place team of the second pool at 3:30 p.m. today while the loser plays the winner of the second pool. RUGBY "The Kansas Jayhawks Rugby lub will finish up its秋后 season Sunday against the Kansas City Bulls in a game at 1:30 p.m. at Swope Park in Kansas City, Mo. The losers of those games will play for third place at 10 tomorrow morning, and the winners will play at 11:30 a.m. to determine the champion of Region Six. The first and second team teams from the regional will advance to the AIAW national tournament, Nov. 24-27, at Valley Forge Military Academy in Wayne, Pa. Sport Shorts WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY—Three members of the KU women's cross country team will participate this weekend in the team AIAW national championship in Madison, Wis. Michelle Brown, Oklahoma City freshman; Sena Frame, Kinsley freshman; and Nancy Bissel, Elkhar, Ind, freshman, will run in the three-mile race Saturday. All three qualified by betting the AIAW standard of 19:00 for three miles. ISRAEL NIGHT SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14th 5:00 p.m. Panel Discussion on the future of Israel 6:00 p.m. Kosher Delicatessen 7:00 p.m. Free Movie "Sallah" starring Hayim Topol of "Fiddler on the Roof" fame J. C.C. building, 917 Highland Drive (one block east of 9th & Iowa) Sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish Students QUALITY + PRICE = VALUE THE PRINCE TWO MILES QUART PUERTA DEL RICO QUAREZ TEQUILLA CACEROPLASTIC TEXANE BOTTLED MEXICO 94.6% ALC./VOL. 500ML GOLD IMPORTED FROM MEXICO SILVER JUAREZ 80 PROOF TEQUILA WORDS AND TERRA JAMESCO SA SANT LUCAS BY TERRA JAMESCO SA MISSOURI the CRAMOPHONE shop 842-1811...Ask for Station No.6 J. J. Cale Troubadour J.J. Cale Troubadour J.J. Cale The long-awaited new album from one of the scene's tastiest performers. reg. $6.98 Kief's discount $399 YAMAHA Amphitheatre ED.inc. King & Madison REVOX KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO University Dally Kansan JVs confront Kansas State PIONEER THORENS TEAC MUSIC PICKERING KENWOOD on car yoga German TUK hitchell audio technica BBB Sup JBL Following an upset victory over Nebraska two weeks ago, the Kansas junior varsity football squad will go after its second victory when it takes on the Kansas State Wildcats. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE KANSAS 1-913-842-1544 The game, scheduled for 1 p.m. on the practice field west of Allen Field House, will The lone blsemish on K-State's record is a 34-6 trumphed by Nebraska. The Jayhawks edged Nebraska 19-18, for the Cornhuskers' first loss in almost three years. MASS STREET DELI MAKING MASSAQUITA FUN be the season finale for both clubs. KU is 1-2 on the season, and K-State is 3-1. 6th Anniversary SALE 50° OFF with this Coupon REUBEN SANDWICH --- Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye. The Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th $175 with this Coupon Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Reg. $2.00 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Reg. Price $2.10 Expires Nov. 30, 1978 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. with this Coupon $1.00 OFF— ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick, crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Welcome To COMMERCE PLAZA 31st and lowa Self-Service Gas & Mini Mart Open 6 a.m.—11 p.m. November Special 48 oz. Pepsi 40° No limit while supply lasts 31st and Iowa Weekend Special Oors Old Milwaukee $1.60—Six pack 99'-Six pack $6.40 Case $3.96 Case No limit while supplies last Weekend Special No limit while supply lasts Six-Bay Car Wash OPEN 24 HOURS 25' Wash and Wax One Spray Automatic Bay (no brushes) $1.00-4 quarters only, wax 25' extra Five Self-Service Bays Monorail Supervacs for your convenience Come clean with us! 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 8 Friday, November 12, 1976 University Daily Kansas Novelist tells Kansas tale Leo and Spangler meet once outside of Hays, and again in Kelly's Bar in Kansas City's Westport. In the interval between these meetings, Leo and Spangler try to drive a 200-head herd of cattle to Kansas City, ty to camp with their cattle in the Agricultural Fence and move them to Kansas City Police Department, after the cattle after they become scattered throughout the city. Their story is in "The Last Cattle Drive," a new novel by Bob Day, who read selections of his book to about 70 people last night in the Kansas Union. Day, a Kansas University graduate, said his story was a novel of a Kansas, a "comic novel of the false document," and a "misadventure," but he said he hoped readers would be able to see that it had serious characters and a serious story. My publishers were amazed when they found out that all of the towns mentioned in their books had no libraries. Day got the background for his novel while working on a farm one summer and teaching at Fort Hays State College started working on the novel three years He "The Last Cattle Drive" is scheduled to be released in December, and Day said he hoped it would be well received. "The Oread bookstore has gone all out and ordered two copies," he said. Day said KU had changed since he went to Acting troupe gives rendition of 'Godspell' A troupe of professional actors touring the Midwest will perform "Gospell," a musical based on the Gospel of St. Matthew, at 8 tonight in the United Ministries Center. the upper-middle school in the state. In partnership with the BMU Productions, is sponsored by the KU-Y and local religious organizations. MDM Productions gave a series of performances of "Godspell" at King's Village Dinner Theatre in Dallas before going on tour in October. Michael Meece is the director and choreographer of this production of the musical by John-Michael Tebakel and Stephen Schwartz. Meece has previously directed professionally for the 'Boulevard' Theater Center and Lincoln Plaza Dinner Theater, both in Oklahoma City. Tickets for the performance are $1 for adults and are free for children under 12. They may be purchased in advance from a library or online. Baptist Student Union, American Baptist Campus Center, Canterbury House, Haskell Wesley Foundation, St. Lawrence Catholic Student Union, United Ministries Center. Tickets may also be purchased at the door. To Professor Mol Adams from the Retail Class: If you can solve this copy lifting problem, come in and pick up your prize at 12 o'clock a.m. Monday morning in Room 216. Flat Given the following information, what will be the width (in pics) for the copy? Depth of copy is 6 times Copy consist of 2106 characters Use 4 point type with 2 point leading character per pica to 3 three characters per pica Show Your Math . . . How You Arrived at Your Answer "Wesco is丑ly, too," he said, "but it's low and you can't see it. school here—there are more people and "Fraser Hall has gotten uglier." Day is on leave from Washington College in Chestertown, Md., to work on a new novel, which he said would be set in Mexico and deal with marriage and divorce. how you can be seen to "You should continually remind the administration of how ugly Fraser is so they won't build another building like it." "I'm going to usurp John Updike's territory and write about the middle-aged dreary people," he said. Halls sponsor clothing drive A clothing drive sponsored by residents of GSP and Corbin residence hills will help the Ballard Community Center, which assists low-income families in Lawrence. Donations of old clothing will be accepted at the GSP front desk until Nov. 19, acceptance begins on Monday. National resident assistant, Warnell, and children's clothes are especially needed, she said. TACO TICO WEEKEND SPECIAL 3 TACOBURGERS for $1 Good Fri. thru Sun. Glass 25° BEER COORS DRAUGHT Pitcher $1.25 2340 Iowa 841-4218 TACO TICO 23rd St Holiday Inn IOWA SUA BILLIARDS TOURNAMENT Sun., Nov. 14 1:30 KU Jay Bowl一Kansas Union Trophies for 1st and 2nd place. Entry Fee $2.00 Sign up in the Jay Bowl by 4:00 p.m. Friday, Nov. 12. First place winner qualifies for the Region XI Tournament in Cape Girardeau, Mo., Feb. 10-12 For more information call the SUA office or Jay Bowl. Find it in Kansan classified Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. Mon-Sat. 10—6 Thurs. 10—8:30 BRITCHES CORNER 843 Mass. 843-0454 BRITCHES CORNER Is having a SALE ... Everything 15 to 50% off ... Friday, Nov. 12 ONLY 10—6 ... Shop for X-MAS EARLY and put on LAYAWAY! THAI NIGHT BANQUET Dinner & Entertainment (Classical & Folk dances, Thai Boxing, Movie) Nov. 14, 1976 at Kansas Union (5:30-9:00 p.m.) Admission $4.00 Tickets at SUA office or contact any Thai students or Pratin-864-2157 No tickets at the door This advertisement is sponsored by the International Club. LAWRENCE SCHOOL OF BEAUTY 9361/2 Mass. THE NEST FRIDAY & SATURDAY-NOV.12 & 13 Cover only $1.00 Pitchers $1.70 Doors open at 8:30 the nest Level Two Union Patronize Kansan advertisers. Friday, November 12, 1976 University Dally Kansan will appear tonight. Doors open 8:30 performance starts at 9:00 p.m. 9 RKYTHEM FUNCTION mondaynitelast chanceweekend romancedance: Pot County Pork and Bean Band. $1.50 Cover Off the Wall Hall 841-0817 737 New Hampshire At THE NEST this Fri. and Sat. Nite "ON TAP" Doors open 8:30 Lawrence's popular dance band 9:00 Entertainment starts at nest Level 2, Union Friday, November 12, 1976 7:30 3140 Wescoo Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Program "FLAP" — Starring: Anthony Quinn, Shelley Winters and Claude Akins For more information, call 864-4353 NO ADMISSION CHARGE Find it in Kansan classified advertising. Sell it, too. Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, and employment advertisement in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin or background. BIRNING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.60 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional word .02 .02 .03 .04 .05 word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 to run: Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. 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. UNION AVRISID be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office 864-5455 UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Employment Opportunities ENTERTAINMENT MUSICIANS. Part-time jobs for band members. 851-653-7200. Iowa 11-12 851-653-7200. Iowa 11-12 FOR RENT Sublease 1 bdmr. apt. at Mendowbrook for 2nd availability. Available 12/15-76. Call Mary. BOKONON Parathenailia for the caenameliae New adgment of bongs and pipes. 12 East Rush River, Bokonon. Male students! Furnished room available now. Hostel rooms, kitchen, privileges. One block from campus. Upshairs room for rent. Clean, quiet, reasona- ble. Kitchen and bathroom. kitchen and bal- ce 841-391 at 5:00. One bedroom apt. available mid-December. Call 841-2504 after 3 p.m. 11-12 One bedroom furnished apartment; walk to cam- bord; $110 per month, includes kitchen, 842-908-998 11-12 Two bedroom apartment, part furnished, near downtown and bus $135/month. Call 843-768-2000. 11-16 Farm for rent. New mobile home, 2 bedrooms, 1 cai-room, cai-room, short bedroom to Lawrence and Camden. 1 Bedroom furnished apt available Jan 1 thru 2 Contract contract Giant Apartments Call 1-800-355-6744 Two male roommates needed for a nice old house extra special location. Call 841-4360 for more information. DO'S DELUXE BOYS' FRIES LAW PETECH FARM has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 VISIONS Presently offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1977. 1 and 2 bedroom units, furnished and unfurnished. 2410 W. 25th Park 25 842-1455 One bedroom apt. furnished, fully carpeted, furnished, basement, 175 sq ft. gas+ electric. basset contract $179 monthly plus gas. Call 618-234-0822. **Sublace 3 bedroom partially furnished house** *fireplace. Available Dec. Incl. B42 4443-11. 17-17** --round: an SR 20 calculator in Learned Hall ground: from Mabeen, 864-602 or leave on map 13. One 2-bedroom apt. at Jahkw Street. Sublease to second master. 841-6898. Ask for Mike. FOR SALE STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment, we can sell it as a product you will pay the least and most benefit from the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFFS. Subbase for 2nd semester - Unfinished 1 bed- room apt at Frontier Ridge 841-2009 after 6 mo. CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermaid. Unicorns, etc. Stone cutting. Satisfaction guaranteed. 841-3835. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialist. ELECTRIC, 815-869-2000, W. 4th, H4H. ELECTRIC, 815-869-2000, W. 4th, H4H. Excellent selection of new and used furniture trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 701 West 52nd Street, New York, NY 10016. Western Civilization Notice—Now on Make! Make out of Western Civilization Make sure 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation 3) for exam preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available at now Town Clerk Stores. tt Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerators, gas and electric ranges at low prices; 1222 East 6th, Topleka. Kk-11 a.m.-6 p.m. Free delivery. 1-354-828 or 1-327-8228. tf 40%, -25% off on warm-up suits, dresses, man's shoes and skinnies, swater's socks. Alva Navarro Admiral (11) 899-630-7800. For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call Bruece at 841-5484 or Crane at 841-5487. STEREO SYNETM: Nikko receiver, glennair turreted in DXS. Neko receiver, Neko receiver, built-in. 841-545-301. 11-12 Porsche 1914, 1970 model, nut suit immediately. Porch and weekend, 1-233-789. After pam, and weekend, 1-233-789. CAMERA: Exakta RTL 1000, 50 mm lens. excel- tion number: 842-3253. Keepying. 15-12 Excellent seat for 13. Manfred Mann concert Call Dan, 864-6132. 11-12 Realistic 44 BSR turntable. Never used. $35. 841-301 2 per day 5 p.m. 11-12 Original handmade coral and turquise bracelet surrounding silver sriraval. Silver best. Call 1234567890. k6823. Fail. 1972 Dodge Van; carpet and paneled, loaded with extra Mutt x-belt - best offer. Baldwin. 1-844-563-3562 36 Ford 240 truck equipped with 89 200 auto automobile, winter 1,200; 89 250 motorized 74 oil carrier, winter 1,200; 1900 1699 Mogulotzer For Sale 191. Super-Bette, 55,000 miles. Must hail-highest offer. Call A: 430-842-1059. CAR STEREO SPECICAL- SPECIAL you know, like the car stereo on your BMW. WARANTY car store in the Midwest, where we have a store with many cars which represent many years of experience in the industry, and much better performance at real $ savings values much better performance at real $ savings values. Corvette 76. Loaded, 4-speed, 5,000 miles, $850. Warranty, 272-1340, Tupelo. 11-15 Realistic Stereo System. Speaker MC 1000, amps 400-700 watts. Amplifier AM-FM, or best offer. 841-2524. 11-15 72 SAAB II9 New clutch, Michelin tires. White- GI919 interior. Heater repair kit only. 11-15 on p BM. Eyelooker Optics GRAN SPORT DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE RJ Novak Dental 417-635-2800 APPLICATIONS DEPARTMENT U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AUTHORITY ROLE OF OFFICIAL RESPONDER ROLE OF TEMPORARY RESPONDER ROLE OF FINANCIAL STUDENT Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tent 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 THE ADVENT STEREO RECEIVER is the most advanced wireless receiver in manufacturing design and production we've ever had. Before this one is real and refreshed—all you need is a cable. RYAUDIO 16 E, sixth Stereo Consultants self-RAY AUDIO 16 E, sixth Stereo Consultants Chrysler "000"; good condition, $500 or best offer 841-3743-9067, Bldg. 6, Bdge 34, 11-16 How about a Pioneer SX $24 receiver for $170 instead of the regular $27? This week's special edition has been released, and we've have had since 1969 the best, most reliable and powerful sound possible. Stop in and listen to SX, stop in and listen to SX. Stop in and listen to SX. AUDIO: A 15, E 8, 11-16 Want to pay money? Buy your used car from Nissan. Pay cash or credit. All service records available in condition 851-2011. Have you ever found yourself in what you do is a real online first store and understanding that there are more than one online store with a smashing noplot someone's moving in from Comtois and in see our straight deal BAY from Comtois and in see our straight deal BAY We have a stereo system that will really amaze you for $250. See our super open space speaker with 18-inch woofers and 3.5-inch more and get better, really pleasing professional performance. RAU DIO, 18 E. 6th Street. 11-16 Ploner KP-250 FM stereo casc. under dash is now on sale. You never thought you could have so much car stereo for so little. Little Hailer Kit comes in and find it out. AUDIO, 1 E. 8th H. 11-16 Volkswagen 1967 Bug, dependable, 74,000 miles $500.841-6233.11-112 75 Pontiaire Bonneville, automatic, power, air must sell-250, 841-8690 after $ 5. Phone Volkwagen, reliable and good runner $600. Phon 842-4584 or 842-5065. 11-16 Cassette tape platter and paper new head; $90 Mini cassette tape recorder with head; $25 Triconix T1-100 turntable, full warranty; $195 DVD-ROM drive; $29.99 26" *Speed Huff* like new, $45. *Typewritten* *Front Manual*, good cond. cds, **32**-11-17 **12**-11-18 8 EAMES MODERN DINING CHAIRS - Birch, Lime; $20 value; $30 set (each) + $5 dining 1603 WWW—run good--body couch. As it is 15:16 293 Arkansas. 812-648-88 1964 Chevrolet I 10 Trip Van. Ready for you to 1966 Camaro II. See at 153 W. 60th or 1967 Buick Century 81-105 days. ww2.com Car stereo, Plinyer TPC-6000, adjustable in-deck. Car stereo, Plinyer TPC-6000, adjustable in-deck. In great condition. Reg. $150. must sell in great condition. Reg. $150. must sell Chevrolet Malibu 1600. Power steering, autonomic brakes, automatic tail lights, mileage less, far mechanically perfect, priced up to $29,999. One of the largest selections of music instruments in the area at Rock Keyboard. Professional sound systems, guitar, arms, drum, special effects, synthesizers, bass and drums. 1420 W. Ward 23: 843-307-11-15 10 = Student ID discount on all used cars, trucks, vans and buses. Open doors. A+1 Auto Sale. A-2 Credit Discount. A-3 Temporary Discount. Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, and position offered to a Graduate Student and assisting in research, Social science basis, and teaching at McKenzie Roberts, DfS of Human Development 111 and 3 yr. at the University of Texas at Austin to 3 yr at the University of Anual Opportunity Employer. Qualification must be an Associate degree or higher. Now taking applications for salesmen or saleswomen for Christmas selling. Experience preferred, also necessary to be in Lawrence until September 25th. Email: bernard.mcguire@aweersat.com; at Weaver's store, 901 Mass. 11-17 HELP WANTED Phone: 843-6424 - Pinball Order Now For Customer MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE Many at Special Discounts ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center Ph. 800-6104 LOST AND FOUND AVON-KE extra money on your own time. AVON-KE extra money on your own time. Mrs. Sells. 42-102-612 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday Security wants person to wash evening pots and pans in exchange for evening meal. **41-12** DANCERS-C b private club in Johnson County. Pay negotiable. (913)-854-7241 for two weeks. 9th and Iowa "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." Lost: Brown framed glasses—in the vicinity of 16th and Ten Room. Please call 842-1080-11-18 boots and 43-6650. 11-12 --service problems? Found: St. Joseph's High School Class Ring. Call main desk at the Union and claim. 11-15 Lot: Black cut with white paws & stomach. Call: 841-3259. Reward: 11-12 The Lounge Found. 2-red-banded Tornswiler in the part- s of the head. By the Halffyr at the Ckri Rhonda. 841-2898. 11-12 Found: Brenda Lea Burrow. I found your checkbook. Call: 841-359 and identify. 11-12 Lost! Turquoise and silver bracelet on Sal. November 6. Keepcase. General reward offered. Call 11-123-4567. Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl MISCELLANEOUS Found, dide-a-key case with two, Sat. in X-lot, Claim in 111 Flint Hall. 11-12 Lost. 11-9-78, Men's gold & black wedding band. Reward. Call 811-7454 after 5:00. NOTICE Found: cygmus West 13th between Kentucky & Vermont. #82-459, 460-499, for Marvin. 11-2 PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ulrich/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 5 a.m. Monday-Saturday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 9 a.m. Maaan. Pound, Green, black and white stealing sock Lawn between Stadium and Campanile Call 441 760-539-2233 CASSAH CAFE - Good food from scratch. Lunch 10:30-3:30 PM. Mass. Please be backroom. Enjoy the warmth of the sun on your face. Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Made furniture, dishes, clothes, clock television. Open daily 12pm- 5pm. (800) 347-9454. Redeemer Lutheran Church, 201th and Haskel, invites all students and faculty to our Sunday Study at 10 a.m. or 10:15 a.m. We have an active college age group. Transportation will be provided by the Redeemer Lutheran Church. County Store Craft Sale. Pottery, jewelry, toys, Christmas ornaments, and more by local craftsmen. Clder, popcorn, and baked goods. Saturday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Nurture School 645 Alabama 11-12 POETHY WANTED FOR Anthology Include Poet of the Month P.O. Box 30426 San Francisco, California CONTACT LENS WEARERS. Send on your hard or Soft supplies. Send for free sample of your favorite solution. Enclose Rocca for postage and package. Contact us at www.deliverysupplies.com. Supplies, Box 7433, Phoenix, AZ 85011. 11-16 UNLESS YOU LOVE SOMEONE, NOTHING ELSE MAKES ME HAPPY. Make it happen. Near 16. Aug. Room of the Union. Socializing hour will follow a short business meeting Gay community encouraged to userness. ATIVE - DRYMOUNTING • STITCHERY • METAL FRAMES • RESTORATION CREA MING CROSS DEFENCE FRAME CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE Cross Reference Bookstore 842 1532 MailS Shopping Center Imported car DRYMOUNTING SEE . . . TONY'S IMPORTS DATESUN 500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444 Commission on the Status of Women: issues in 1972. Kansas City: KU Press, 1972. 15-200. Jyhawk屋. Kansas University. Found 2 girls in girls' restroom in Strong, Call and identify at 864-6729. 11-15 Lot, in left floor women's roomroom - Strong, 2 Rings. Please call 644-4422, ask for Katie. 11-38 Found: high school class ring 842-9072 11:15 DIGU BOYD, author of *Rolling Thunder*, is now on tour in Canada. Visit: Nov. 13 - 7.30 a.m. Admission $150. Sunday, Nov. 24 - 8:30 a.m. Admission $190. Rangau blue-flowered weardt Toward yeth Rangau blue-flowered weardt Toward yeth 6483 collect after 4. 11:12 PERSONAL Students, if you would be interested in taking a placebo, contact Roger Bain immediately. 843-505-6921 or rbairen@wiley.com Gay Counseling service; call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals. Experienced pilot wants volunteer co-e Pilot for occasional sport flying. Advertiser requests that pilot have knowledge of Dulce includes observation, map reading, & et. No experience required. Wired infield parted in flight. Wallace, You are and always will be my very special friend. I love you and your cure! 11-12 J. HOOD, BOOKSELLER has returned to regular hours on Wednesday and Thursday from 6 p.m. to 5 p.m. Friday & Saturday 6 p.m. Sunday; closed Mondays. Come in and browse, you’re always welcome. 1400 Max. 11-28 SUA is sponsoring a backpack trip to the Grand Palace in Tokyo, Japan. Please visit: Inquire at 864-367-1100 11-12 SERVICES OFFERED --cars Help needed in Macro. Reon. 522. For details call 641-4550 between 5-7. 11-16 Who's got the black bird? Find out tonight at 8:30 when Radio Time Machine gives you the "Tuesday Falcon" (original broadcast of The Beatles' concert) on KFMK-FM. The sound alternative. **11-12** Are you an e-PCV or ex-Vista volunteer? If so do by the KU - B847. 16:16 NOW OPEN - Commerce Plaza 31st and low- way service gas, 6-bay car and mini-rush car parking If you are interested in serving a Peace Corp representative, KU-Y Floor Union, 864-231-71 (representative, KU-Y Floor Union, 864-231-71) Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles available! Offer Bring Riding Cycle Schwinn to trade in! Schwinn Cyclery 9-6 Mon-Sat. Till Ill. 30s. Sun. 1-4月 1/8th, 9th, 84h, 64h-83h Schwinn Cyclery 9-6 Mon-Sat. - Bud on Tap Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a new bike. You can buy a new one online, enjoy bike, lubricate and adjust your derailers, brakes and chains, true both wheels, adjust your hub, crabs and tires. You can buy a bike at bought at time of "hune-up". Rates: 10 speed $150.50 or 3 speed $18.50, single speed $260.50, double speed $320.50, single speed $65.00. Complete professional training. *Don't Sew!* See me for all your sewing needs: dress-making, alterations, all types of sewing materials. Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 003, 012, 015, 016, 017, 122, 124, 129, 366, 358, 624, 627, 641, 642, text preparation, Reasonable rates. Phone: 842-7681. offer: 1. Special Prices We service all makes of - Pool 2. Open 7 days and nights You can open it on weekends. For the Do-It-Yourseleer we 3. We have it or can get it overnight PICKENS AUTO PARTS & SUPPLIES NAPA 2. Open 7 days and nights 3. We have it or can get it 5. Two stores 26th & Iowa 843-1353 4. Machine shop service 817 Vermont 2300 Haske... 843-9365 843-6960 N.A.P.A. TYPING BIOLOGY TUCKER. Experienced tutor - Graduate and Post-graduate level. 105-896-2330 or 742 Respon- sibility. Mail resume to: BIOLOGY TUCKER, 410 WEST AVE., SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94107. ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thanfonce on the use of computerized tomography in circulatory surgery. 1981; 34: 567-576. Citrus dulcis data AO, No. S827, Los Angeles Typist/editor, IBM Pica/itc. Quality work support. Desktops, disentrusts welcome. Born: 84-917-8271 Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mime. Experienced keyboarder—typing, spelling, correcting. *483-509*, Mr. Wright THEISIS BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us bring you $85 Manhassetus or phone 845-276-7941 thank you. Experienced traveler THRESLY ONE (10) winters through the US and Europe, including vacations to Napa, CA; Miami, FL; Miami, FL; Miami, FL EXPERT TYPING. Fast and accurate, reasonable speed. Compatible with Nintendo 64. Call 812-8509 12-8 I do, damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. New address. WANTED 2 studious females needed to share furnished bedrooms. Female required 18-34 years old. Individual required: Calf Broth, 841-7449, 11-12 Two female roommates to share furnished Tow- rers; $104 rent included all utilities. Call 842-1453. 11-15 Need roommate for spring sem to share 3 barm in a shadowbox $96 - 1/3 chec, and plex media. Roommates need immediately for nice house near campus. Own room $88.75 m. 11-16 at 11:45 a.m. Looking for married people who plan to be in Lawrence a couple is typical. 942-843-1450. 942-843-1465. Female to sublease Gatehouse Apt. Take over payments January 841-6523 11-16 Femaleommails needm need for spring semen therapy. (Emergency care. Call Lail, 841-5801. Keep trying.) Call Ottis Vann! BULSEASE-Village Square apartment $6.33 per month plus 1.7 utilities. Own bedroom $8.00 per month. I and my well-mannered dog need a place to live. Jeike, 842-467-20 For new Chevroletts and used cars at female roommate wanted for Spring semester to share Jawacker Towers apartment 481-713-0962 Female roommate wanted to share 5 bdm. house, 860 a month, 842-8932 1140 Tennessee. 11-17 One or two female roommates to share a 2 bed- room apartment for spring semester. **Call** 11-12-13 2414 Ouedahl 843-1116 Female roommate needed immediately for Jay- hawker Towers Apartments. Call 842-264-8841. Turner Chevrolet performance equipments Now offering apartments for 1 & 2 bedrooms only. furnished and unfurnished Home of The Challis Hawks --- 843-7700 HILLCREST - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong BILLIARDS ● Pin-Ball ● Air Hockey - Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Open 7 Days a Week 10 Friday, November 12, 1976 University Daily Kansan On Campus Events TODAY: An ETHICS IN BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS SEMINAR meet all day in the Big Eight and Jayhawk rooms of the Kansas Union. MINORITY AFFAIRS meets at 5 p.m. in the Union's International Room. TONIGHT: THE KURUGBY CLUB meets at 6 in the Uni's Wawat Room. The KU FOLK DANCE CLUB meets at 7:30 in Robinson Gymnasium. An AMERICAN SOCIETY OF UNIVERSITY COMPOSERS concert begins at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall. DELTA SIGMA THETA meets at 9 in the Union's Kansas Room. SATURDAY: An ETHICS IN BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS SEMINAR and a WOMEN'S ENGINEERING WORKSHOP meet all day in the Union. PI LAMBA TRETA THEA Room, "REEL TO REEL," a festival of films, will be presented to the KU Women's Coilation at noon and 3 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium. An AMES SOCIETY OF UNIVERSITY COOPERS concert tickets at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. BYAY: AN SUA POOL AND BILLIARDS TOURNAMENT begins at 1:30 p.m. in the Union's Jay-Bowell. The SUCH CLUSS CLUB meets at 2 p.m. in the Parlors B and C in the Union. KU CONCERT SERIES presents Dutch pronouns Elly Ameling at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theater "REEL TO REEL," a festival of films, is presented by the KU Women's Coalition at noon in Dane DELLA DELTA PI and the department of Spanish sponsor a speech by Osvaldo Dragun, Argentina's leading contemporary dramatist, at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. Corrections In yesterday's Kansas, it was incorrectly reported that Pi Kappa Theta fraternity was one of four fraternities and sororites sponsoring this weekend's *Mater Dei* Dystrophy dance marathon. Instead Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity is helping with the event. WANTED: All Grads with Fluent French for New Peace Corps Projects Fluent French for New Corps Projects Use your knowledge of French to teach new skills in a Francophone country such as the North Coast or Morocco at the experience level living in another culture and helping others. Peace Corps Volunteers get free trav.: health/dentistry, recreation, cleanliness, allow $3000 term. stipend 2 yrs. service. Must be U.S. citizen. SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERNS! Please call LAS placement office on Tues., Nov. 16 & Educ. placement office on Wed., Nov. 17. Jimmie Walker's comedy show Saturday night has been canceled because of poor ticket sales, Thornton Mason, SUA concerts chairman, said yesterday. Jimmy Walker show cut "We sold somewhere under 1,000 tickets—16, to be exact," Mason said. bands to appear in the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union on Friday and Saturday nights, Mason said. SUA isn't losing money by canceling the show, he said, but it will have to pay its own expenses and any that Walker's management may have incurred. Mason said SUA would have lost more money if the show hadn't been canceled. "The idea of the Nest flipped," he said. "No one was interested in live bands. We can't compete with places like Shenanigan's." SUA has also stopped scheduling live next semester the Hawk's Nest will be used occasionally by SUA as a small concert facility instead of being run on a weekly basis, he said, and the band appear more often in the last SUA-sponsored show in the Hawk's Nest this semester. KJHK RADIO TIME MACHINE STARTING FRIDAY, NOV. 12 AT 8:30 PM (AND CONTINUING EACH FRIDAY) THIS WEEK, MALTESE FALCON THE ORIGINAL WITH HUMPHREY BOGART AND SIDNEY GREENSTREET KJHK FM91 THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE The 7TH SPIRIT PRIVATE CLUB 6% E.7th Happy Hr. 4-6 Daily Call 842-9549 NOTICE! Openearly—BestHappyHour in town - Happy Hour, 2 drinks for 1, 4-6 daily - Mon.-Thurs. open at 4; Fri. open at 3; Sat. and Sun. open at 2. — Upcoming Specials — - Max Tenant & Worm Wranch Wranglers, Mon., Nov. 15 - Tommy Johnson Experiment, Sat., Nov. 20 The 7th Spirit is now available for private parties throughout the holiday season. Call 842-6930. Burnside Black Royal College Shop Burnside Twelve Massachusetts Street Your Feet can be Well Padded—even if your Wallet isn't. The Puff from Bass Elly Ameling Stunning Dutch Soprano in her Midwestern Debut presented by THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Concert Series ER TONE AND TECHNIQUE TRUALLY UNBELIEVABLE! RE VIRTUALI AMELING'S ARTIST PERFECTION ITSELFI DELIGHTFUL DUTCH SINGER HAS A VOICE OF MAGIC SUPERBI ST OF THE MONTH SEIZE THE CHANCE-DON'T MISS HER TREASURABLE ASTONISHING THE MUSIC WORLD THE MOST BEAUTIFUL VOICE IN THE WORLD Sunday, November 14, 3:30 p.m. University TheatreTickets on sale Murphy Hall Box OfficeKU Students pick up free ticket at Box Office with I.D. To Give The Students FASTER DELIVERY SERVICE THE GREEN PEPPER is now delivering to Campus only. The delivery area includes All University Housing, Fraternities and Sororities, Jayhawk Towers, and Naismith Hall. New Delivery Hours Mon.-Thurs. 5 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 5 p.m.-12:30 p.m. Sun. 4 p.m.-11 p.m. 544 W.23rd 842-9003 Selling something? Place a want ad.Call 864-4358. Fire ends Indian girl's hopes for a fulfilling life Bv RICK PADDEN Three brown fees three brown faces ... tense—over controlled faces in a colorless and alien world tense-over controlled faces created for a private ritual DON'T of mourning among these strangers. WORLD. heatre The faces were those of three Chippewa Indians from Cass Lake, Minn., as described by William Samuelson, a professor of secondary education at Emporia Kansas State College, who saw them in a .m. They were the faces of Gladys Drouillard and her two sons. Oliver and Gerald. They had gone to the home of Gary and Marilyn Hall in Toreka for a wake Nov. 9. It was the day after Shirley Drouillard, the youngest of their family, died from burns suffered in a fire Oct. 30 that raged through the house she was renting at 2305 Haskell. 58 Shirley lived for nine days after the fire, at the University of Kansas Burn Center in Kansas City, Kan. Her 10-month-old daughter, Dawnis, died at the scene of the Saturday night about 11:30. looking at nothing—seeing everything Five times lioned six dark eyes in constant motion Eyes turned inward shy smile framed in northern sunlight to visions of a clean Shirley was 22. Shirley joined at Haskell Indian University in Lawrence and was majoring in electronics. Gary and Marilyn Hall were Shirley's foster parents. "She came to us in late September of 1974," Martyn said. "She was the most beautiful and pleasant person." do not hear the hum and buzz Pairs of forest-trained ears do not hear the man and t of nearby human voices of nearby human voices Catching instead once more Catching instead once mot the teasing laughter that the world will never bear again. Betty Notat, the manager of Winona Hall, where Shrivel lived in the loss of 1974 before giving birth to Dawni, said, "She was only here a couple months before she decided to go back home to help her mother, but she returned for the spring semester. She was a very quiet person. She'd stay in her room by herself much of the time." 'She wanted to help her mother with her mother. Noth said, 'Her education was so poor.' She said. Notah said Shirley came to Haskell so she could eventually get a good job in Minnesota. Shirley was known for excelling at Indian bedwear, Notaah said, and she spent most of her free time in the summer making necklaces, medallions and key-chains out of beads. This semester she taught a beading class at Winona Hall to earn some extra money. lightly stroke the headwork . . . The woman's fingers a sort of rosary or song as she remembers "There was never any doubt in my mind that Shirley wanted to keep her baby, but she didn't want to marry the father," Marilyn Hall said. "She just didn't think it would work out." "Sirley had mentioned to me that she had a "morayland back in Minnesota," Nolan said. "In '14, I was the head of the club." a small gallery queen endless designs in leather and glass. In early October, arrangements were made for Shirley to stay in a locker home. Then Shirley's life became more complicated. Hall helped deliver the baby at St. Francis Hospital in Topeka, Dec. 7, 1975. Shirley moved back to Lawrence and lived at Winona Hall for a short time before moving to an apartment with a woman from California named Gardenia Varsley. GARY HALL said Shirley would continue with her education even though it would be more difficult. "She thought Dawnla was the most wonderful, beautiful gift she could ever have," Marilyn said. "It was a big surprise." "I took her down to the school in late December to see about getting her back there for the fall semester," Gary said. "She was incredibly excited when she found out she could back to school for Vanley dropped out of school last summer, so Silky looked for a house and rented one at 206 Broadway. the spring semester, which was much sooner than she had expected." FAITH STANDSBLAACK, a PONCA, ORK IN SEATTLE. Haskell moved, in 1903, in September "She was very private," Standblack said. "She rarely said very much to anyone and seldom went down to the Union where people would gather to talk." "Dawns was her whole world. If Dawns got hurt she got hurt." Shirley was trying hard to make things work. Gary Hall said that although Shirley received dozens of donations, the money she had BELIEVE IN YOURSELF. o not many if not few to help the need See FIRE ENDS page eight Weary legs While other couples danced, Cheri Bliss, Shannon Mission freshman, took a breather during a muscular dystrophy benefit dance at Bugsy's. The marathon, which lasted from 4 p.m. Friday until 4 p.m. Saturday, was the second of three Gamma gorilla sorceries and Delta Tau Dell and P1 Kappa Alba fraternities. Psyched-up hoofers pace out marathon Staff Writer By STEVE FRAZIER Customes on the dance floor ignored the marathon dancers. The dancers' friends, sated at tables, watched sympathetically when dancers reached over from the floor for a quick drink of water, their feet constantly moving. "You have to keep your feet moving. You can't dance on your knees. See MARATHON page eight "If you get stomach cramps or headaches, we can't give you medication. If you get muscle cramps, strains or sprains, we have a guy here who worked on a fire truck—he's a paramedic—and he'll help you. "Readv—let's dance." With those words at 4 p.m. Friday, Jim Miller, Kellerton, Iowa, sophomore, started eight couples dancing for the Muscular Dystrophy Dance Marathon, sponsored by Delta Children and Delta Tau Delta and P.I Kappa Alpha fraternities. The marathon was at Bugs's, 642 Massachusetts St. AS PAYING customers filtered in Friday evening, they were met at the door by an empty wheelchair leaning against a cigarette machine, a reminder of the muscular dystroph cause. Six marathon dancers, all clad in T-shirts that read "Help Schick Deef Feet Muscular Dystrophy." The dancers said participation was painful. One couple dropped at 7:30 a.m. Saturday because the woman had a swollen ankle. The seven couples who remained until the end sported a variety of blisters, strains and cramps. TWENTY-FOUR HOURS later, seven couples were still dancing. They had raised $2,939 for the Muscular Dystrophy Association, and Miller, marathon coordinator, said the marathon had been successful. Pat Turner, Bugsy's disc jockey, started the marathon dancing with "You Should be Dancing." Some of the dancers, themselves, cased into their dance steps. They were to take 10-minute breaks each hour, and half-hour breaks every four hours, except from 8 p.m. to 5 p.m., when they was to dance nonton. The music and the dancers stopped for a midnight break. The dancers lay on the floor in silence or sat, taking in the water and drinking ice water or orange juice. Overlooking the marathon dancers and regular customers was a large poster that read: "Help Schick Fight Muscular Dystrophy: Dance For Those Who Can't. Schick Injector, Schick Super II. Schick Double-Edge." clambered onto the stage and danced in unison as the sound system blared "Shake, shake, shake—shake your boote." But as one song stopped and the next began, another difference from the regular customers appeared. No matter how many people joined, one song into the next, regular customers would pause for a few seconds to catch the beat of the new song. The marathon dancers, although equally unsure of how to dance to the music, were able to move and moved into more active dancing after they had heard a few bars. Bill Oster, a muscular dystrophy National Youth Committee representative from Springfield, Mo., explained, "Schick saw the dance parenthood," a good way to get parity, so they supply the posters and the T-shirts. ONE OF THE dancers had unbuttoned the straps of his overalls. They dangled behind him and slapped his jes when he whirled. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol.87 No.60 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Lack of KU help killed bike plan Monday, November 15, 1976 By JOHN MUELLER Lawrence didn't get federal money for its proposed Pedalplan bikway system primarily because it didn't rely on the University of Kansas for help in preparing the plan, a regional official of the U.S. Department of Transportation said Saturday. Staff Writer The official, Terry Isaacson, Kansas City, Kan., said he rejected Lawrence's application for $85,572 in federal funding largely because Manhattan, which will get bakey money, used students from Kansas to help write the city's funding request. Wichita, the other city in Kansas receiving bibway money, did a better job than Lawrence in tying its planned downtown business district, Isaacson said. MILES SCHACHTER, Pedalplan project director and an employee in the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Office, wrote the letter below. The city city manager, have said they don't know why Lawrence was denied its request for federal money. Schachter said last night that he was the only person assigned by the city to work on the report because the city was notified of the report only a month before it was due. CHACHTCHER SAID K-State had offered a course in engineering analysis that related to bikeway planning, and had been better prepared for the availability of federal money camp. The federal money is awarded as part of a $6 million demonstration program under the Federal Highways Act of 1973. Programs began in cities receiving grants will be models for other bikeway programs in the country. Schachter said recently that a regional agency of the U.S. Department of Transportation decided to award bikeway development funds to Wichita, Fort Scott and Manhattan. However, Isaacson said cities setting menu cut from the list of cities setting menu. THE DECISION TO Cut Fort Scott was made at a national level, according to the school board in the nation's 41 demonstration projects. Isaacson said other cities in his region getting money were Kansas City, Mo., Springfield, Mo.; Lincoln, Neb.; and Iowa Isaacson said that Manhattan's funding request was "a whole lot better" than the one written by Schachter. This wasn't because the Lawrence Pedalplan was written, he said, but because Manhattan had used many people to write its report. "I'm a KU graduate myself," Isaacson said. "I favor college towns, and with K-State, they had the whole university in the background of engineering students, studies, the works." MANHATTAN ALSO had committed itself more strongly to investing matching funds, Isaacson said. Federal funds pay for 80 per cent of the city's bilevel development Veterans to investigate election Staff Writer* program, but finding the rest of the money is up to the city. By STEVE LEBEN A committee to investigate alleged irregularities in last May's Campus Veterans election will be formed as a result of a general veterans meeting Friday. Pedalplan was to have included bicycle paths and lanes across Lawrence. It would be difficult to imagine a current bikway system, which has two major routes on two sides of Mt. Orcad, and connected the Deerfield area of northwest Lawrence with the central business district. These charges include: After a 45-minute discussion of charges made by Mike Dixon, Lawrence senior, and Claire McCheney,校对 16-1 to establish a committee to investigate the charges. —That one ballot was changed after voting took place. The project was estimated in the report to cost $230,926. The first phase proposed 8.6 miles of bikeways, costing $106,909, which would have been completed by spring 1978. — That last year's officers, including a candidate in the election, counted the bats. Lawrence's Pedalman, according to a city report, would have comprised five phases. Each phase would have taken no longer than five years to complete, and the entire project was to be completed within 20 years. That voting ended before at least four people could vote. -That one candidate's name was left off the newspaper advertisements announcing THE FIRST four hours of the meeting were spent ratifying a new set of bylaws. The new bylaws didn't specify how new elections would be arranged. McChris presented a petition of 50 signatures as a "partial petition" to request "WHAT ARE your charges?" Evans asked. Lawrence had counted on 80 per cent of the students to attend school without federal funding, Schachter said, Lawrence lacks the $52,572 to start Pedalplan and in the 'inscoring stage' of schooling. Bill Evans, Campus Veterans president, said the newly approved byaws don't allow for a call for new elections. They allow only candidates with more than 50 of officers for specific charges, he said. "There are no charges specified" "Mchristy replied. 'We'll get charged and we're going to pay.'" Skip Liepman, Lawrence junior, asked McChirtt to detail "what concerns him so much" about the lawsuit. After McChristy and Dixon discussed their questions about the May election, Liepman said, "I admit that there are some irregularities present. I like to move that a committee be established of non-work capable to study the election procedures." LIEPMAN SAID work study personnel, Isaacson said that Lawrence was almost, but not quite good enough to get his contract signed. See VETS page eight Posts open for Kansan Applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester Karsan are available in 105 Flint Hall, the Student Senate Office in room 105B in the Kansas Union, and in the offices of the dean of women. The application deadline is 3 p.m. Wednesday. Interviews will begin Friday. Applicants will be notified of the time and place of their interviews. Inventor trying to make life easier By STEVE FRAZIER Staff Writer A world crammed with electric toothbrushes and disposable diapers still has needs that an inventor can fill. "Every now and then. I wake up in the night and yell 1 Bill Bahr Staff photo "Eureka!" Bill Bahr, Hays graduate student, said. "Wad, I don't really feel well, but I do wake up in the night with a headache." Bairn has patented a device for easy home haircuts and Air Bairn, a game that combines characteristics of footwear and gaming. If more of Bahr's other ideas receive patents, the world might also have longer-lasting shoes, new scientific games and a device that would ensure that plants got the proper amount of sunlight. BAHR ALSO has invented things he later discovered weren't really new. "I reinvented the games 'Strategy' and 'Tank Commander', which I didn't know existed," he said. "I was telling a friend of mine who works at Gibson's about my new games, and he said, 'Hey, I sell those down in "Another time, I invented a detachable belt buckle that could be used as a corsetwear, knife or bottle opener. I got all the way to the patent office before I discovered that some old gut bag in 1880 had invented the same thing." INVENTING IS a special sort of creativity, Bahr said, but it's "something anybody can learn." "It all involves in the meeting of two different ideas, then merging them in to one new one," you take. "You have to talk about it." "Whenever I run into a problem, I think, 'Isn't there an easier way to do this?' I try to remember the need for a solution and imprint it on my subconscious, then let my subconscious work on it from there. "THIS IS MY hero," Bahr said as he pointed to a framed drawing of Thomas Edison on his office wall. "I nurture the item by looking through technical catalogs or by just going shopping. I try to see how others have solved similar problems." "My mind moves from thought, then the idea usually comes in a flash." When Bahr gets a good idea, he writes it down in a book that the date notarized to avoid dispairs with other inventors. "Edison would first find a crying need, then to try for something to fill that need. He gathered around him a bunch of really creative people, and when they started tossing arms around, the inventions got to be just like fire." "I've heard that Alexander Graham Bell substantiated his claim to the patent for the telephone with a dated letter to his wife that mentioned his work on the telephone," he said. Bahr's invention for home haircuts consists of a pair of barber's scissors pierced by a threaded shaft, the user spins the scissors along the shaft until he reaches the desired length. The cutter then shaft against his bead and hetns lift and lock a lock of hair. The process is repeated all over the user's head, producing what Bahr called a layer haircut of professional quality. He said he would soon advertise the device in national magazines at $5.95. "OVER A LIFETIME, the amount saved on haircuts would be enough to buy a Cadillac." Bahr claimed. "I showed it to Revlon, Clairel and Gillette, but they're not really getting well on the market and improving them." The Brunswick company, a large manufacturer of co- operative appliances, had been in Ruhr's "Air Ball" era, but said, but hasn't started to do so. "They told me not to feel too bad--after all, air hockey the shelf for five years before they started to deviate." Bahr said he began tinkering in new communications devices when he was a member of the Army Signal Corps, which be entered after graduating from West Point military academy with an engineering degree. HAIR SAID HE left the army to "pursue interests outside of a military environment." He received master's degree in psychology and business from Ball State University, where he is now working on a doctorate in business at KU. After he gets his degree, Bahr said, he would like to expand his inventions business or work for Marvin Glass Co., an inventor "think tank" firm from Chicago. With the company, Bahr said, he would like to help other people's inventions—perhaps occasionally yelling 'Eureka!' and reaching for his idea book. 2 Monday, November 15, 1978 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press Syrians move into Beirut BEIRUT—Syrian troops and tanks moved into the heart of Beirut at dawn today as machine-gun and artillery fire and rocket explosions shook the city. The firing had continued all night, and the Syrians didn't appear to be the target. People lined the sidewalks cheering the peace-keepers on. A man climbed onto a jeep, kissed two young Syrian soldiers and plastered a poster on the jeep's front that said "Welcome to the envoys of peace in Lebanese soil." One report said leftist Moslem and right-wing Christian militiamen were getting off final exchanges before abandoning their mid-city positions to the Syrians. Ford vacation ending PALM SPRINGS, Calif.—President Gerald Ford said yesterday that he was relaxed and was four pounds slimmer after a week's vacation that included daily swimming and golfing here. Ford skipped church yesterday and got in a final round of golf at La Quinta Country Club on his last day in this desert resort. Ford leaves today for Washington. He will resume his Oval Office routine in the White House tomorrow, giving budget matters top priority. Soviet plane shipped home HITACHI, Japan—A Soviet MIG25, once considered a super-secret jet fighter, begins its journey home aboard a Russian freighter today. begin its journey into the United States. Seventy days ago, the pilot of the supersonic craft, L.I. Viktor Ivanovich Belenko, made a surprise landing in northern Japan and asked for asylum in the United States. His request was quickly granted and Japanese and U.S. Air Force experts made a thorough study of the plane, including disarming parts of it. Dole: Economy hurt GOP MIAMI—Public concern about the economy cost President Gerald Ford, the election, his running mate, Sen. Robert Dole, said yesterday as he returned from a post election vacation in South America. post election electoral campaign in a situation "the Economy—when you boil it all down, that was the issue that turned it—the unemployment," Dole said. "The Democrats exploited those issues, as they should have." Those issues brought high numbers of blacks and labor union members to vote for Jimmy Carter, Dole said as he prepared for a short stay in Florida. Sorority exchange chance to see others' lifestyles An exchange program this week among KU's 12 sororites will allow 24 women to get a first-hand look at life in other sororites. The program, called community will live in another house for the week. The exchange program, which began last year, now includes two, rather than one, exchanges a year, and two women, rather than one, from each sorority. Panhelenic college affairs chairman, said the program gave women the opportunity to experience living in other houses and realize their similarities. Maribeth Olson, Salina senior and "After the exchange week, the women realize there are all kinds of people in the houses," she said. "Whether they have an excellent time or a bad time depends on the attitude of the individual and the house they visit." SALT LAKE CITY (AP)—Convicted murderer Gary Mark Gilmore wanted to die before a firing squad at 8 a.m. today. He now awaits a Board of Pardons meeting Wednesday where he will again ask for an early death. Lawyers who oppose the execution because legal questions still exist said yesterday that future legal efforts would depend on the pardon board's decision. V. Jinks Dabney, attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, (ACLU) said representatives from ACLU would attend the Wednesday hearing. The ACLU opposes death sentences as cruel and unusual punishment. Pardon board to debate murderer's death wish Robert Van Scliver, who represents other death row inmates, said he wouldn't attend the hearing. Van Scliver earlier asked for recognition as a friend of the court on the grounds that Glimore's execution could influence his client's appeals. THE EXECUTION of Gilmore, convicted of killing a moteel clerk, was stayed last week by Gov. Calvin Rampton pending a review by the pardons board. Dennis Bozx, Glimmore's attorney, has asked that the stay of execution be lifted so Glimmore could avoid the "lingering death" of waiting. Boaz said Gilmore should be released because the state's failure to execute him left him imprisoned without a legal sentence. Boe said last week that he might give a motion in federal court for the release. because of crowded conditions. However on Saturday, Warden Samuel Smith accused Boas of violating prison rules by allowing a call to London Daily Express reporter. Gilmore, 35, was reported in the Saturday London Daily Express as saying he wanted to marry his girlfriend, Nicole Barlett, in a ceremony on death row. Boz confirmed that Gilmore had mentioned the idea. Boz said, however, that Gilmore hadn't asked prison officials whether a wedding could take place. Mrs. Barrett is in her 20s, a divorcee and a mother of two. Prison of officials said the request would be considered if made. "MR. BOAZ was in a room with Glmore and assumed a non-attorney function of placing a call or providing a call with Glmore to this London paper," Smith said. Prison authorities said Bao Wen was taken away from the prison yesterday until the morning of Monday. Smith must approve *immale marriages*. He said he has "no feelings whatsoever" on the request, but added, "I see no value in such a thing." Boaz acknowledged that he was paid $250 for arranging the interview. Boaz first introduced himself to Glmore as a freelance writer and later became his lawyer, when Glmore fired the court-appointed attorneys who appealed his case. Blacks to be allowed to join Plains church PLAINS, GA. (AP)—The members of president-elect Jimmy Carter's Plains Baptist Church voted yesterday to end a membership, a move long backed by Carter. Carter, leaving the church, stood in the rain and said, "I was proud of my church." The Rev. Clem mon King, a black minister from Albany, Ga., said, "The sun is shinning on the earth." The Rev. Mr. King stirred the controversy about the Plains Baptist Church's racial policy several weeks ago when he announced he would seek membership in the church. He swaited yesterday's verdict while standing in a chilly rain. The Rev. Mr. King can now return to the Sunday and apply for church membership. Carter emerged from the church after a three-hour closed meeting to report that his fellow church members also had voted not to fire their pastor, the Rev. Bruce Edwards and that he was careless of committee to judge the qualification of people desiring to join the church. Asked whether he exerted any influence over the congregation, Carter said "I was just one of the church members. I'm completely satisfied with the church. The pastor is pleased. There will be no exclusion based on race." The official results were announced from the church steps by Georgia State Sen. Bassel E. McDonald. Rosalyn Carter, the President-elect's wife, critically softly as she and her husband tried to reassure him. "The fourth and final motion was to open the doors to all who want to worship Jesus Christ, and that motion passed 120-66," he said. Eleven years ago, the Carters were virtually unrecognizable to church visitors who chanted against blacks. Kansas poet and painter Harley Elliott will read from his poetry at 7:30 in tonight's concert. Elliott is the author of seven books, including "The Resident Stranger," "Animals Stand in Dreams" and "The Tiger's Spots," a children's story. He has two more books scheduled for publication early next year. Kansas writer to give reading Elliott lives in Salina, where he teaches drawing and painting at Marymount College. He is also involved in Kansas" Poet in the Schools program, in which he teaches students in high schools and junior high schools across the state for week-long intervals. Tonight will be the first time Elliott has spoken at KU. He will appear in SUA's *Daily Show*. No admission will be charged. FAST FREE DELIVERY! 847-3100 today's special 5 to 8:30-2free beers of your choice with any large pizza ASK FOR OUR OTHER BOARD WHEAT COAST OR BREAD ARM WHITE GARITZ HEAVY EDDYS At the Wheel 507 w.14th Pizza Thurs - 4:30 PM to 1:00 Meatball Grinders & HEAVY EDDYS At the Wheel 507 w.14th Pizza FAST FREE DELIVERY! 841-3100 Friday & Saturday until 2:00AM Submarine Sandwiches, too WORK WRANGER WRANGERS WORM BRANDER WRANGIERS Goin' Nuts Mon., Nov. 15 11-2 p.m. at 7TH SPIRIT 6½ E. 7th 842-9549 Now open early. Happy Hour 4-6 Max Tenant will play Fri., Nov. 19 WORLD WREAKER WRANGIERS Goin' Nuts Mon., Nov. 15 11-2 p.m. at 7TH SPIRIT 6½ E. 7th 842-9549 Now open early. Happy Hour 4-6 Max Tenant will play Fri., Nov. 19 The Better Bargain Toyota Lawrence Toyota has all the Better Bargain Toyotas Now is the time car at these low to buy a great '76 prices. the last year will burn the Toyota regular gas. Plus! 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See Why Lawrence Toyota is Douglas County # Number 1 Small Car Dealer LAWRENCE TOYOTA Lawrence Auto Plate Phone 842-2191 Toyota Don Chilito's Texas Burrito NOW ONLY 99c reg. $1.59 Offer good Mon., Nov. 15 — Thurs., Nov. 18 1528 W. 23rd across from post office 842-8861 SALE SALE SALE LE SALE SALE 9.99 - 25.99 SWEATER SAVINGS Reg. 18.00 to 34.00. Big doings in sweater savings! Super toppers in cardigan wraps, crew-necks, boat-necks and tabards. 13.99 - 18.99 PANTS & SKIRTS Reg. to 24.00. You'll want a closet full at these prices! Junior fashion pants, some deniums with leather trim, gaberdine, wool and flannel fabrics. Diane SAVVAMEDICARO seventh line CAROUSEL CHARGE master charge manufacturer of dresses SAVIN 19. 99 - 33.99 JUNIOR DRESS VALUES Reg 26.00 to 45.00 Smart about fashion Smart about value? Find them both in our new fall dresses. Long and short dresses plus jumpsuit savings 6. 99 - 11.99 SHIRTS & TOPS Reg. to 15.00. Great news for price watchers! Savings include print shirts, solid T-necks and cow-necks. STORE HOURS Mon. and Thurs. 10-8:30 Tues., Wed., Fri. and Sat. 10-6 MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 23rd & Louisiana carousel Monday, November 15. 1976 3 ish However on with accused by allowingully Express with Glilmore function of a call with Smith said. marriages: "over" on no value in was paid $250 Boaz first 2 as a free- his lawyer, urt-appointed case. University Daily Kansan Wheel w.14th Grinders & twiches, too E S S 0-6 el Ameling recital captivates crowd By MERLE GOLDMAN Elly Amelie didn't plan to become one of the world's greatest singers. "Music chose me. I did not choose this career." she said yesterday after giving a recital to about 800 people in the University Theatre. Arneling said she had always studied voice but had never expected to become a singer. "I found the feeling of singing pleasant," she said. But her teacher didn't think that was enough. She suggested she enter a dance competition. Music in Geneva in which she won first prize. After that, she said, it was one contest after another, and finally a career. AMELING'S RECTITAL was distinguished by the same unassuming attitude with which she had early approached singing. Whenever she sang, she uttered something profound. But when the song was not so profound, it was gratious hostess. Unlike the prima dona who uses songs to show off her voice, An.eling was, first and foremost, an interpreter. She didn't hesitate to talk with her audience. She was willing to do anything needed to communicate the themes of the French and German songs she sang. As she sang, one was struck not only by the clarity and beauty of her voice but also by the intensity of her interpretive vision. She captured the essence of each song, sending it out like a beam of light to startle and fascinate her audience. A HIGH POINT in the recital was her performance of Schubert's "Der Musiker," written by Frans Geothe. When Ameling sang this song, her nimble voice stepped to the dancing rhythms of the song, communicating in an instant as if he ambed through field and forest. Who but Amelie could have spoken of the joy of making "the dull boy and the stuff girl dance to my melody" when all around her she wore a long sleeve dress as if they'd never heard music before. Ameling moved easily through songs that spawned two centuries, tempering each other with laughter. CONVERSELY, when she sang songs from the romantic era, there was never anything extreme or excessive in her presentation. Even when she sang Schubert's "Frauenleben und Leib," a song of love and sobriety emotions of a woman who dedicated her life to her love for a man, she always kept her sense of artistic form. brings to everything she does. When she performed Mozart, her voice had a lyrical quality appropriate for the classical era, but when he used it in the concert for the meaning of the songs falter. In her final section, Ameling sang a group of animated French songs by Eric Satie. Here she once again displayed her intellectual perception as well as her sense of humor. In "La Diva de L'Empire," a song by Michelle Obama, Ameling showed that it was not beneath her to assume a gutsy, carefree style—even if it meant lifting her a wee bit. Dalton Baldwin, who accompanied Ameling, remained sensitive to the singer's interpretations. Together, they gave an interesting and refreshing performance. 'Fire! Fire!' exhibit opens At the entrance to the Kansas Collection in the Spencer Research Library stands a brown case cart from the turn of the century that opened in the library last week. The exhihit, 'Fire! Fire! The Story of the Lawrence Fire Department 1859-1976' contains a comprehensive assortment of photographs of major Lawrence fires, firemen's helmets, a trumpet used by the controller of fire operations and a rope-chain fire escape used at the Eldridge House Hotel at the end of the 19th century. The exhibit also includes logs and journalis dates from 1869, when Lawrence's first fire company, the Head Center Hose Company, was formed. James Helver, curator of graphics in the Kansas Collection, organized the exhibit from material collected and lent by Phil Leonard, fireman, and the Lawrence Fire Department. The exhibit will be open for two months. The building in the foreground is a multi-story industrial structure, likely a factory or warehouse. It features large windows and an antenna on top. The skyline includes several other buildings of varying heights and designs, including a tall tower with a flagpole and a smaller rectangular building with a slanted roof. The layout suggests a bustling urban environment with a mix of residential and commercial spaces. **TOA'DY:** THE NONTRADITIONAL STUDENTS will meet at 11:30 a.m. in Alcove E of the Kansas Union. The SERBO-CROATIAN TABLE will meet at 12:30 p.m. in the Cottonwood Room of the Union. JAN REIFENBERT, a Washington political correspondent for a West German newspaper, will divide West German SHOTS at 3:00 p.m. in the Cottonwood Room of the Union SWINE FLU SHOTS will be given from 8 p.m. in the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th St. TONIGHT: The SUA FINE ARTS REHEARSAL will be at 6 in the Big Eight Room of the Union. The SAUHS CLSS Club will meet at 7 in Parsons B and C of the Union. OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will meet at 7 at 1028 W. 191st PI MU EPSILON, an honorary mathematics societies, will meet at 7:30 in 113 St Paul Hall. ESL LYLIOT will read selections from this meeting in the Big Eight Room of the Union. THE KUBAHLCLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Oread Room of the Union. Events On Campus Parts for All Imports Student Discounts JAMES GANG FOREIGN AUTO PARTS Your BANK AMI RICARD welcome here master charge the only auto repair shop Mon.-Fri., 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 843-8080 304 Locust acme dingo BRIGADE The boot that's styled right for the times! Men's and Women's styles. Narrow to wide widths. Several styles to choose from. McCoy shoes 813 Mass. St. V1 3-2091 CALLING FOR HELP a play by Peter Handke art by MA Big Eight Room Union 12:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. Wed., Nov. 17 translated by Michael Roloff SJA ATTENTION: All Blue Cross and Blue Shield Health Insurance Policy Holders: There will be an open forum concerning the Student Blue Cross and Blue Shield Health Insurance Policy for your comments and to answer your questions. TIME: 7:00 p.m. DATE: Wed., Nov. 17 PLACE: Pine Room, Kansas Union PLEASE ATTEND. Partially funded by the Student Senate Advertise in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. ACTION PEACE CORPS VISTA REPRESENTATIVES will be on Campus for Interviews WED., NOV.17... LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES THURS. NOV.18... ENGINEERING THURS.,NOV.18... BUSINESS All Seniors and Graduate Students are invited to sign up for Interviews 4 Monday, November 15, 1976 University Dally Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer World won't wait Whenever a new man moves into the White House, some people begin to wonder about the status quo. Suddenly, the way the country is being run has changed and bad compared with how things could turn out. Such is the case these days in the foreign affairs arena, where both U.S. State Department officials and foreign diplomats are questioning the fate of longstanding U.S., policies and of political hotbeds where U.S. friendships are, to say the least, shaky. On Jan. 20, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, the U.S. globe-troter chiefly credited with keeping the United States at the apex of progressive international relations, will turn his office over to a yet unnamed successor. So far, spokesman for President-elect Jim Carter say Carter plains no drastic changes in American foreign policy. BUT DIPLOMATS in the United States aren't so sure. They're having trouble understand just what the vague Jimmy Carter by the word "drastic." Since the election, several diplomats have asked to meet with Carter, expressing their interest in knowing just where their countries fit into his blueprint for the future. So far, Carter has declined to meet with them. Certainly, Carter needs time to get his thoughts together after a long and hard-dought campaign. He also needs time to make careful decisions about his future Cabinet and top administrative officials. The stacks of notebooks, papers and briefs supplied by his advisers have been used repeatedly to allow Carter their meaning. At this point, it's doubtful whether Carter himself knows exactly how each U.S. friend and foe will fit into his foreign policy scheme. All that will take time. But is there time, given the delicate nature of foreign policy, to put off questions of U.S. international relations? Can crucial decisions wait until Carter is sown in and sets up house in the White House? Can diplomats be so thoughtfully brushed aside? Kissinger seems to think not, and although he has pledged to do all he can to ease Carter's ascension to the White House he refuses to let years of tedium negotiations disintegrate because of a few weeks of neglect. He wants to meet with Vietnamese officials to discuss postwar concerns, such as the location of U.S. enlisted men missing or thought to be held prisoners in Vietnam. Kissinger also plans to continue working diligently for a smooth takeover of power by blacks in Rhodesia. Portugal recently asked the US to delay the withdrawal of which will initially fall into Kissinger's hands. KISSINGER KNOWS that foreign leaders won't sit back and watch the United States muddle through a transitory period without taking advantage of the U.S. predicament. Events like the 2013 earthquake can go undo or go unchecked. What happens in Africa, Vietnam, Portugal, the Mideast, China and many other countries in the next few months must be carefully monitored by government officials, President-elect, who have well-designed policies and are ready to act in an emergency. Carter won the election by pledging to help the little man. He made his pledge on the basis of what he could do with the domestic problems of inflation and deflation, but now we are facing concerns, but now the more pressing task is to let the world know just how far it can push a Caster administration. Mary Ann Daughterbury STOCK EXCHA A 1/2 U.S. STEEL -3 3/4 AT&T -4 3/4 NCR -2 1/2 GM -3 1/2 DIXIELU GRITS +62 1/4 SHELLOIL -4 1/2 MIL Equality loses out to tradition Tradition was upheld last Thursday when Sachem, the senior men's honor society, voted to retain all-male Funeral homes avoid FTC pall by JAMES KILPATRICK (61) 1974 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. WASHINGTON—It is a venerable custom, dating back to the earliest days of the Congress for its failures. This is a useful custom; it ought never to be abandoned. But now and then the Congress performs and earns a round of applause. Let us hear it, then for a House subcommittee directed by Tom Steed of Oklahoma, to splendid example of what congressional oversight is all about. The subcommittee filed a devastating criticism of a proposal advanced by the Federal Trade Commission for trade of the funeral industry. A WORD about "oversight." In congressional terminology does not mean a kind of indulgence in scrutiny or supervision. And one of the most conspicuous failures of Congress in recent years is its powers of oversight sufficiently. The general rule is for Congress to grant sweeping regulatory powers to some executive agency, and then to forget about the matter. A couple of years ago Congress passed the Magnuson-Moss Act, enlarging the powers of the Federal Trade Commission. Congress then forgot about the law The FTC did not. Within the FTC, the buereaucrats spit on their hands and left the court. For no particular reason, except the subject appealed to him, Arthur R. Angel, a staff attorney, became entranced with the funeral industry and the abuses he saw there. ONE THING led to another. Angel read books and magazine articles. The more he read, the more he concluded—quite happily that a deplorable situation could be relieved only by nationwide Federal regulation. This conclusion led to hearings, expert studies, consultants' fees and buswork. On Aug. 29, 1975, Angel's baby was born—a long, tough, bristling proposal to regulate the daylights out of the nation's 22,000 funeral homes Because 90 per cent of these homes are small business operations of only two or three full-time employees, the proposal attracted the attention Committee on Small Business. In its enthusiasm for regulatory rule, the FTC had attempted to justify its proposal by citing only complaints. On examination, it appeared that fewer than a dozen complaints had been received when the FTC set to investigate the complaint. The FTC could show but 1,000 complaints. There were 10 million funerals in that period. That is a consumer campaign led the subcommittee, of 0001. Turning to the merits of the proposed regulation itself, the subcommittee found the FTC should forbid a medical FTC would forbid funeral directors from "disparaging" inexpensive coffins or simple crematoriums. It was nowhere defined. The FTC would require the funeral homes, in effect, to demean and degrade their own services; they would have to give customers a form "stating what is not required by law for a funeral." THESE AND other proposals, said the subcommittee, are "abhorent to free enterprise." While the industry surely is not free of abuses, the abuses are relatively few and generally are confined to large cities. In sum: "The subcommittee finds no reason to regulate the regulation of the funeral industry, and concludes that the interests of the public and small business will be better served if the funeral industry is regulated by the states." membership. Sachem has honored senior men for service and academic achievement since its beginning in 1910. There are dangers, it should be noted, in the concept of congressional overright. But in the case of the procedure could hamstring executive agencies altogether. But the danger, thus far, has not resided in too little oversight, but in too little. Steed's sub-university report, in which the report, has shown us how the system ought to work. The vote was 8-1, and two members who favor admitting women were absent. There were good reasons for the vote. Sachem is under pressure from Omicron Delta Kappa, the national group it belongs to, to admit women. Last spring, the university received a group receiving 'significant support' from the University because it refused to admit women. ONE REASON many members voted as they did was that they didn't want the ODK telling them what to do. Another reason was that the members wanted Sachem to retain his uniqueness and avoid being toward admitting men and women to groups. Martboroad, formerly a senior women's health center, has hearted effort to admit men at KU for the first time last year. Many Sachem members couldn't see the benefit of Greg Hack Contributing Writer consider women for next year's membership. I think I understand the sentiments of the members, but I didn't agree. having two dual-sex senior honor groups competing for members at KU. I wasn't worried about Sachen lesing its membership DDX which will probably occur if Sachen isn't going to admit women. TRADITION ALSO played a part in the decision. Tradition's tangible benefits perhaps can't be pinned down, but human pride and other emotions are often satisfied by stable industries and Sachen he 86 years as an all-male group behind it. Nevertheless, I questioned the decision, and was the only Sachem member who voted to do with the group's purpose or tradition. Nor did I vote as I did to please bureaucrats armed with Title XI, or to please the high-ranking officials little or nothing for Sacrom. THE GROUP was established to honor outstanding students and provide them with the help. How these goals are better met by honoring just men and having just men in the group to serve the University is beyond imagination. IT WAS SIMPLE a case of my not understanding why Sachem selection should exclude half of the students on an arbitrary half Sachem wouldn't have lost its identity or tradition by admitting women. If being all male would be an element of Sachem's identity, the group is in trouble. Also, being all male really has little to Tradition is a fine thing, but honoring the best, regardless of sex, should be more important. Also, a group with the best students in it will best serve the University. There was an equilibrium when Mortarboard was for women only, but unfortunately they were not involved in Mortarboard should work toward an atmosphere where the groups could merge, or where Mortarboard could go back to be for women only. These are examples of the efforts of equality and of recognition and service to KU. Student Senate defended Guest Writer By STEVE OWENS It is a shame that some college students occasionally slip from within the confines of their own experience to vent their frustrations into subjects with which they are only vaguely familiar. WESTPHAL BUREAUCRACY W5STPHAL 'AWRIGHT YOU, ΔHM THE NEW KING ΔND WE'RE GONNA HAPT Δ SEE EYE-TO-EYE! YΔWL LISTENIN'?' First, the guest writer implied that the Student Senate doesn't spend money in a game of cards. The examples mentioned—bowling allies and pool tables—have nothing to do with the Senate did not deter the writer by making such a flippant comment. THE SENATE finances nearly 70 organizations that benefit virtually every student in Lawrence. Copies of this budget are available at the Senate office. I was particularly distressed by such irresponsible ideas in a Nov. 9 column, "Student government apathy rife." In all fairness to the student body, a number of inaccuracies and misconceptions in the column should be cleared up. I haven't the faintest idea where the writer received his misinformation on the structure of the system. Newpaper coverage of Senate committee meetings and other activities can give the average student an adequate understanding of the relations between senate committees at KU. If this is inadequate, pamphlets printed by the Senate and the Office of Admissions and Records describe the nature of the University Senate Code is available in the Senate office. The writer stated that colleges and universities throughout the state had trouble maintaining participation in student government. I recall, however, that 35 students campaigned for the six Senate seats open in this fall's election. These numbers aren't particularly compatible with the guest writer's observations. As is evident by the poor turnout in the national elections, a democratic government always has trouble insuring voters, unlike the national trend, however, student voting has been increasing in the past three years. The implication that KU students spend their time online to do research is gleefully substagging campaigns isn't only unfounded but is grossly unfair to the large number of decent student candidates who voice pertinent views, the weeks before elections. NEARLY EVERY policy-making committee at KU has at least 20 per cent student approvers, a range range from one that sets the calendar to one that sets policies on financial aid. The idea that these students must be hill raisers to be effective in the Senate also is unsubstantiated. Student participation in administrative work at Kansas is probably better developed than in any other state school. The power that students wield on these committees was the result of a semester at a University Council meeting. A proposal was introduced to nearly double rates for parking permits on campus and the university administration. The student body president, who is a member of the council, had researched the matter and discovered that the university could never justify such a substantial boost in revenue. Had it not been for her efforts, and for the governmental agency to prevent her complaint, students, faculty and staff of the University would all have been paying a great deal more to Amid the writer's flood of criticism, he offered one suggestion, let students pay for the degree in University governance* Aside from the fact that the suggestion is foreign to the idea of student participation, it requires insurmountable problems. IF WE BEGIN to compensate students for their time, should we reward faculty members for our efforts in making an inevitable student whose name appears on a committee roster but who fails to respond to meeting notices? The notion that a student can receive the same treatment as he or she taking part in this government process should be prime motivation factor for students to participate. Believe it or not, some students will experience their student body through activity in the Senate. The mechanism exists for effective stuc't participation in policy decisions at KU. Hundreds of students are enrolled in the Senate Academic Affairs Committee is trying to inform all students about their right to serve on committees of the Senate, University Council and department committees. There are no inherent faults in our present form of student government. THE SOLUTION to any apathy among students lies in the improvement of com-munication. The Senate to the Student body. I invite the Kansan's guest editorialist to learn more about this project and to provide feedback of the Student Senate. His next column on the subject might not contain such bitter cynicism. He will be the student body vice president. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 12, 2014 *Subscriptions* to KU News June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday, May 29, 2014 *Subscription* $69.95 **60644** Subscriptions by mail are $9 a semester or $13 a quarter year outside the county. State subscriptions are a year outside the county. Editor Editor Debble Gump Managing Editor Editorial Editor Yael Abudahak Jim Bates Business Manage Terry Hanson Monday, November 15, 1976 MILC 5 SPECIAL FEATURES MAMMY VIEWS s purpose or is established students University. We better meet them and the group to city is beyond one thing, but regardless of importance. the best best serve the equilibrium rd was for unfortunately should work where should merge, or rd could be for the best the best inter- of recoqui- KU. fact that the sign to the ideaicipation, it cost of inblems. to compensate time, should members for whom the whose name amite roster to respond To the notion learn to be a helpful mental process to motivation parties to parrot or not, some serve body throughinate. m exists for participation at KU. Students are interested in Economic Affairs to inform them their right to sittees of the offices and department. There are no in our present government. ION to any students in ties to the Senate to the Senate to ansan's guest more about and operations anate. His next object might not utter cynicism. student body Speakers at ethics seminar say capitalism short on social justice By MICHAEL KING Hall Writer Staff Writer Free enterprise isn't compatible with social justice, according to the three keynote speakers at last weekend's seminar on Ethics in Business and the Professions. The symposium was sponsored jointly by the University of Kansas School of Business and the department of philosophy, and business science, of academicers and business professionals. Michael Harrington, chairman of the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee, said he didn't think the United States was a free enterprise society. "There may have been free enterprise for five minutes in the 19th century in Great Britain, but I doubt it," he said. "We have never had it in the United States." **IRVING KRISTOL**, a contributing editor of the Wall Street Journal and a professor of urban values at New York University, said he couldn't免 enterprise, but social justice. "The term social justice was invented in order not to be compatible with free enterprise, so social said." Social justice has predeated egalitarian and authoritarian trust. Therefore, since capitalism is neither egalitarian nor authoritarian, they are not committed to it. H Johnsphes, a professor of philosophy at the University of Southern California and a Librarian Party candidate for president, agreed that the term social justice was suspect. University Daily Kansan Ham, pork chop prices highlighted in food survey ITEMS Diners (1.5%), Milk (3 per cent, 1 g), SALB, Coffee-granate, 1 lb, Cottage cheese - 24 oz. Colby cheese - S-1, 1 lb. Butter - 1 lb, sticks Ground beef - rage-1, 1 lb. Bone-in chicken - with bone Chicken - whole fried, 1 lb. Parch fillet - frozen, 1 lb. Orange juice - frozen, 6 oz. Egg cream - frozen, 6 oz. Ice cream - 1 g, SALB, Ginger granulated, 5 lb, SALB, Ginger flour - bleached enriched 5 lb, Flour - bleached enriched 5 lb, Dark Salmon - Dark Salmon, 13 oz. Peanut butter - Skippey, 12 oz. Peanut butter - Rice, 1 lb. Rice - long-grain, 1 lb, Rice - long-grain, 10 oz. Rice - no oil, with deposit Tapioca - Northern, 4 pck. Lettuce - iceberg Potatoes - 1 kg, Carrot - 1 kg, Potatoes - red, 1 kg bar Potatoes - yellow, 1 kg Bananas - lb. DINERS SALE PRICE X indicates item not available NINCIPLES SALE PRICE X indicates item not available 18 DEPTH SURVEY, PORK Pork coast-boneless, 1-lb. 1.19 1.19 1.09 8.9 1.29 1.29 1.16 47 Pork coast-center-lib, 1-lb. 1.30 1.30 1.08 7.5 1.29 1.29 1.14 41 Pork coast-end-lib, 1-lb. 1.30 1.30 1.08 7.5 1.29 1.29 1.12 39 Ham shank-armed, 1-lb. 89 1.09 X 1.09 79 1.09 99 30 Ham shank-armed-center-lib, 1-lb. 1.09 1.19 X 1.09 79 1.09 99 30 Ham-sem-boneless, 1-lb. 1.79 2.09 X 1.09 79 1.09 1.74 41 Ham-boneless, S.B. 1-lb. 1.79 2.09 X 1.09 79 1.09 1.74 41 Ham-center-lib, 1-lb. 2.29 X 1.29 1.69 1.89 1.72 35 Ham-canned, Armour, 1-lb. 1-lb. 3.10 X 1.29 2.83 1.89 1.20 48 Ham-canned, Armour, 1-lb. 1-lb. 3.10 X 1.29 2.83 1.89 1.20 48 "The free enterprise system has provided a level of affluence that reaches even to the well-less-off of our society," he said. "The vast majority of people was overpopulated with 500,000 Indians, because each needed so much space for hunting and fishing." SOCIAL JUSTICE, Hospers said, suggested a kind of "operative socialism." Hospiers said capitalism changed this overpopulation by providing the incentive for the discovery of technology that could address the amounts of food on small amounts of land. Harrington said capitalism had brought enormous benefits to the world and had made it possible for people to earn a living. "SOCIAL CLASSES are an invention of capitalism," he said, "and to capitalism the capitalist casts its eyes." "Capitalism does not extract a surplus by direct force—normally. It uses economic means, based on an unfair contract. Capitalism discovered the social power of people working together. That was its economic invention." On the whole, Harrington said, capitalist technology is very conservative in its technological inventions and its greatest history has been of the social nature of work. Kristol said capitalism had made every female a "lady." "Before capitalism, women were merely sex objects," he said. "Capitalism and humanity enter the world together. All humane movements—criminal reform, the women's movement, the women's movement—were founded by the rising middle class." Capitalist economics of the 19th century had great impacts to socialism, Kristol said. AND BECAUSE improvement of one's condition seemed to be impossible, he said, the only hope seemed to be in the redistribution of wealth. Harrington said the concepts of freedom and democracy must be applied to areas that capitalism never applied them to before. "We should move to democratize work. We should elect for elemen and allow workers to decide how to carry out production techniques," he said. "We need a bureaucratic relations act on the order of the Labor Relations Act. Every university should have a public review board. Where there is bureaucracy there must be appeal, and bureaucrats can't handle a review of themselves." The symposium was made possible by grants from the Kansas Committee for the Humanities; Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Hyman Accountants; and the Westport Fund. To Give The Students FASTER DELIVERY SERVICE THE GREEN PEPPER is now delivering to Campus only. The delivery area includes All University Housing, Fraternities and Sororities, Jayhawk Towers, and Naismith Hall. New Delivery Hours 5 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Mon.—Thurs. Fri. & Sat. Sun. 5 p.m.-12:30 p.m. 4 p.m. - 11 p.m. 544 W.23rd 842-9003 HUF --- Mister Guy's of Lawrence 10th Anniversary Sale 10th 100% luxurious lambswool cabled — crewneck Sweaters reg. $25 Now $1350 A-smile pleated Denim Jeans reg. $1850 Now $1290 Another Group of lambswool crewneck Sweaters reg. $900 Now $1290 Our own Roughrider Khaki Hiking Pants reg. $1850 Now $1290 Long Sleeve Knit Shirts in solid and stripes reg. $1750 Now $12^{90} 1 large selection of 3 piece Suits in the classics, tweeds, chalk stripes & solids all this season's favorites! Values to $16500 Values to $16500 Now $125^{00} Come by and celebrate Mister Guy's birthday and pick up on the savings just in time for the holiday season. Open Thurs. night Q till 8:30 GVG MISTER GUY 920 Mass. 6 Monday, November 15, 1976 University Daily Kansan 19 Staff photo by JAY KOELZER Javhawk defensive end Steve Jones pursues Colorado tailback Tony Reed Kansas gifts help Buffaloes win BySTEVESCHOENFELD Sports Editor BOULDER, Colo. —The holiday spirit is fast, enthusiastic and was in the mood for Saturday—the holiday Saturday. The Jayhawks weren't giving alms to the poor. Instead, they gift-wrapped a 40-17 victory for Colorado by fumbling, throwing the ball in making other mind-buggling mistakes. "It's obvious that we made enough turnovers to give them the game in the first half," KU head coach Bud Moore said about the five fumbles and one interception the Jayhawks had in the first half. "And we did worse in the second half." Offensive tackles Lindsey Mason said, "I feel we gave them the game. Those fumbles didn't put us out of the game, but enough of them add up and you're in trouble. Except for two drives, we gave them their scores. We scored from where we gave them the ball." IT WASN'T just a case of one or two of KU's backs being in a charitable mood. The good will and butter fingers were widespread. we weren't just fumbling when we were getting hit," halfback Laverne Smith said. "We were fumbling the whole game. It was tough, but we're not going to excuse. We should've held onto the ball." Colorado's Folsom Field was indeed wet from snowfall that had fallen Friday. And the heavily overcast skies and 52 degree temperatures didn't help, either. "The ball was slippery; the field was slippery," halfback Bill Campfield said. "That's the only reason Mark (Vincende) had trouble with his pitches and we had trouble catching them. Everything was slippery." Quarterback Vicendese's first start was married by three fumbles, a horrible 1 for 13 day passing, including four interceptions, and several other mental mistakes. His performance left him frustrated. "EVERY TIME WE'd move the ball I'd throw an interception or make a bad pitch," he said. "Some plays were wide open. I had to play really hard." He right back and I would make another. "I was just forcing everything. When I threw, I shouldn't have thrown. When I pitched, I shouldn't have pitched. I'd make a mistake and then we had blown the ball." Nervousness may have been part of the reason for Vicenteed's poor performance. SCORING KANSAS 2 10 0 0 — 17 CLEARIDOR 12 18 0 4 40 C=U Mangallink 3 runs from Knapie ziterberg kick C=U FG Mangallink 42 C=U FG Mangallink 51 C=U Waddy 55 kickoff returns (Mangallink kick) C=U FG Mangallink 61 C=U Kelber 7 run (Mangallink kick) C=U Kelber 7 run (Mangallink kick) C=U Knappe 8 run (kick failed) INDIVIDUAL RU CU first down 62 Huber, yards 87.29 62 Huber, yards 87.29 62 Huber, yards 87.29 62 Pannen 1.134 4.150 Pannen 1.134 4.150 Pannen-lost 8.2 30 Pannen-lost 8.2 30 KC-1, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-2, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-3, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-4, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-5, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-6, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-7, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-8, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-9, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-10, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-11, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-12, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-13, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-14, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-15, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-16, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-17, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-18, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-19, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-20, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-21, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-22, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-23, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-24, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-25, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-26, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-27, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-28, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-29, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-30, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-31, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-32, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-33, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-34, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-35, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-36, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-37, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-38, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-39, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-40, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-41, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-42, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-43, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-44, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-45, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-46, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-47, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-48, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-49, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-50, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-51, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-52, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-53, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-54, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-55, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-56, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-57, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-58, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-59, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-60, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-61, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-62, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-63, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-64, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-65, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-66, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-67, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-68, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-69, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-70, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-71, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-72, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-73, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-74, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-75, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-76, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-77, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-78, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-79, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-80, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-81, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-82, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-83, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-84, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-85, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-86, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-87, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-88, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-89, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-90, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-91, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-92, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-93, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-94, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-95, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-96, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-97, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-98, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-99, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-100, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-101, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-102, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-103, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-104, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-105, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-106, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-107, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-108, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-109, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-110, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-111, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-112, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-113, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-114, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-115, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-116, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-117, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-118, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-119, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-120, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-121, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-122, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-123, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-124, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-125, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-126, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-127, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-128, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-129, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-130, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-131, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-132, South 19.13, Ramsay 17.75, Campbell 44.34 KC-133, 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Fasting KU—Vlcendense 1.13-15 (four interceptions) NI—Nicholas 4.88-8 CU-Moorehead 2-31. Reed 1-21, Waddy 1-6. Punting KU-Hubach 4-147 (36.7 avg.) "On my fumble," said fullback Norris Banks, who gained 75 yards on 17 carries, "I didn't get the ball. He was just a little experience. I sure it had to do with his inexperience." Second-team fullback Dennis Wright said, "When the fallback goes inside, you don't know who is going to get the ball. There's always that moment of indecision. The fullbacks think they've got the ball and the quarterback thinks he's going to pull it back and run around the end. That's when the fumble occurs." THE FUMBLES and interceptions consistently put KU's defense in a hole. With the exception of Colorado hallback Tone Reed, ten of KU's扑ats didn't do that, doesn't mean anything after you've just suffered your fifth loss in the last six games. "We've got to get together as a team," defensive tackle Franklin King said, "Unless we do, we're not going to win. Both the offense and the defense have to play well in order for us to win." We played well because we gave up 40 points. I don't care how they got them." The Bucks got two of their scores as a result of fine kick returns. CU slobback Billy Waddy ran 95 yards for a touchdown on a kick in the second quarter, and fullback May Jumberry ran the opening kick in the second half all the way back KU's 23. Everybody was up at halftime, Campfield said, "but when they took the kick back to the 23, I said to myself, 'Here we go again.'" COLORADO COACH Bill Mallory attributed most of the Jayhawks' offensive mistakes to not having Nolan Cromwell at quarterback. "Sure, he would've made a big dif- Weekend Sports Roundup The KU women's swimming members would have liked it better if the momentum they got going during the second half of their meet Friday against the University of Colorado at Boulder had started a little sooner. Women swimmers fall The women lost to the Buffs, 65-48, but outscored the Colorado team, 38-35, in the Cactus. Coach Gary Kempf said that high altitude wasn't a major factor in the team's loss to Colorado, but that because the KU team was young (mostly freshmen), the women had to be more aggressive of the Colorado team, which rivals Nebraska for top strength in the Big Eight. The standout for KU was Debbie Bunker, Chesterfield, Mo., freshman, who won the 100- and 200-yard freestyle races. She followed these two wins by swimming an exciting catch-up race in the anchor position in the 400-yard freestyle relay. Her efforts gave KU a first-place finish in that event. The Jayhawks, who didn't lose a game in four matches, finished ahead of the second place Wichita Volleyball Club, which had a 3-1 record. KU's羽球ball team overcame the older, more experienced United States Volleyball Association teams to take first in the A Division of its tournament Saturday. "We handled it well and did a helva汗 in the second half," Kempf said. "Eighty percent of our times were better than we've been doing in losing we turned in a good performance." Catley Call, Prairie Village sophonore, turned in a time of 5:37:27 to capture the 600- square-foot building. Wichita YMCA was third at 2-2, Swainson IMA insurance bonds at 1-3 and 1-8 Johnson Cape Cod Insurance. Volleyball team wins The junior varsity Jayhawks didn't fare quite as well in the B Division, posting a 1-3 record and ending in fourth place. The Jewish Community Center from Kansas City, Mo., was second at 3-1, the Topeka Volleyball Club third at 2-2, and the Manhattan Volleyball Club last at 0-4. The four victories increase the Jayhawks' record to 31-9. Their next action will be this Thursday, Friday and Saturday in the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Region Six tournament in Minneapolis, Minn. KU coach Bob Stancill said that the varsity played fairly well, but that the junior varsity had problems because it hadn't had enough chances to play together. Bakken leads Cards LOS ANGELES (AP) -SL Louis cardinal place-kicking specialist Jim Bakken plays golf so he won't "get easily ridden on the football field." A minute is an insignificant length of time. But for the University of Kansas field hockey team Saturday, minute spelled the difference between a trip to a national competition in Pennsylvania next week and an end to the season. The winning field goal was the third of the game for Bakken. But it was the passing of veteran quarterback Jim Hart, who three touchdowns in 300 yards, that made the big difference. In a playoff game that ended in a scoreless loss against Central Missouri State, the Rams went on to win going to the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women national tournament at Valley Force Military Academy by 53 points within the opponent's 25 yardline. you have 1.4 seconds to really get rid of it and that's all it took," Bakk said calmly. "It really has to be perfect—the snap, the placement and the kick." And the 15-year veteran proved his cool Field hockey fourth at regional Bakken said Ramsa` defensive end Jack Bakken uploaded `“something like,” No, not too much.` The victory was the third consecutive close one for the Cardinals, who beat San Francisco 23-20 and Philadelphia 17-14 the previous weeks. ference," Mallory said of the KU senior, who was last for the year Oct. 18 when he suffered torn knee ligaments. "They would've been one of the teams in the cup. They had had been beaten. But young king did kid a good job, but. But he's no Cromwell." Mallory thinks the Buffs deserve to be composed of 15th-ranked berth that has the Big Eight champion. agam yesterday by Bicking a 25-yard field goal with four second legs in the game, which gave his underdog club a 30-28 victory over the Los Angeles Rams. "I hope we're under consideration," he said. "I can't see any reason why we wouldn't be. We've beaten three of the four teams we're tied with." KU opened Friday's matches with a loss to Bemidji State College, Bemidji, Mim., 4-1. Beth Llewleyn scored the lone goal for the 'Hawks against the team that eventually won the tournament for the second consecutive year. in the AIAW Region Six tournament on Friday and Saturday in Kansas City, Mo. "Colorado wasn't that good," he said. "It's just so disappointing. I thought we out hit them, played aggressively and everything. The playoff matches were Friday afternoon, and KU lost to Central Missouri. Benidji State defeated Carleton College, Northfield. Minn. Carleton blasted KU 5-0, in the contest for four place Saturday morning, an Bemidji game. That loss, which ended KU's season, ended the momentum the Jayhawka picked to win. "It's just frustrating to me to line up against another team that isn't better than us and then get beat. We were as good as you and I'm going to get beat, 10-17 that is just embarrassing." "I TOUGHH all along we should be No. 1 in the Big Eight", said Tom Dinkel, who was moved from his linebacking position to defensive end against the Buffers. Colorado dumps fumbling'Hawks Heading into Friday's competition tied for the lead in its pool with a 24 record, the team has had its best start since the 1980s. Both Bennidji and Central Missouri will advance to the national tournament, Nov. 24-27. The Jayhawks finished the season with a 12-8 record. By GARY VICE Assistant Sports Editor Senior free safety Chris Golub, who led the disappointed 'Hawks in tackles with 12, said. "We've got one more game, though, and I know we're not going to go down without a fight. And I hope Missouri feels the same way." BOULDER, Colo.—There remains only one opportunity for the Kansas Jayhawks to prove that they are a winning football team. It is expected of them when the season begins. But many of the Jayhawks think they're fighting now and losing all the same. KANSAS COACH Bud Moore, who has watched his team become mired into seventh place in the conference since Oklahoma's Zac Henderson knocked Nolan Cromwell out for the season, said the 'Hawks didn't merit a better record. Following Saturday's 40-17 loss to the Buffalooids before 47,850 fans in Boulder, KU's fifth loss in the last six games, the Jayhawks' record is 5-5 with the season's final game next week against Missouri. A victory against the Tigers in Columbia, Mo., would give KU its first back-to-back winning seasons since 1961-62. For Colorado, now 73, its victory, coupled with Nebraska's 72-18 loss to Iowa State, virtually assured them of the for Big Eight championship. Should the Bufs win, they would be tied for the West next week, they would be tied with the winners of the Oklahoma State-Iowa State and the Nebraska-Oklahoma games for the conference title. The Orange Bowl committee would then select its Big Eight representative from the two or three team "Not the way we've played we don't," Moore said. "But I don't think any of our players are going to give in. They're all fighters." Losing didn't sit well with offensive guard John Macascreme either. He said, "It's sickening to practice all week and lose. It's getting a crap you can't go to through if you lose." KU FOOTBALL STATE "Nobody's out here to lose," Mascarello's back. Grew Woods added. Coaches Bud Moore and John Levra confer with players On the game's opening kickoff the Buffs got a preview of what was to come as freshman Jimmy it lilled the ball away on three rushes. The Cardinals Kansas fumbled eight times in the game—four in the first quarter—and Colorado recovered six of the fumbles, leaving two to win. Passing proved to be no safer for the Jayhawks as the Buffs intercepted four of quarterback Mark Vicendese's passes. Vicendese, who was making his first start of the season, was able through a 1 for 13 passing performance and gaining only 34 yards rushing on 16 carries. MOORE, HOWEVER, plans to stay with lecdesse, but will quarter-back to see attackers. HE KOULAS "He's the best quarterback we have and we're going to go with him," Moore said. "He's inexperienced and that hurt us today." Statistically, the offensive game was evenly matched. Both teams picked up 19 first downs, but Colorado had a narrow edge in total yardage, 350 to 344. Most of that yardage was netted by two halfbacks from the Laverne Smith and CU's Tory Reed. Reed, playing his final game as a Buff in Folsom Field, rushed for a school record of 168 yards on 35 carries. He now has 1,070 yards on the season and is second in rushing to Oklahoma State's Terry Miller who has 1,229 SMITH, WHO gained only 188 yards in his last four games, darted for 131 yards and two touchdowns on just 19 attempts. Smith now has 828 yards on the season and 3,042 in his career, which ranks him fifth in Big Eight conference history. But whatever Smith, or fullback Norris Bank who had 75 yards rushing, could do to keep the 'Hawks fighting back was quickly undone. Often it was the miffed handoffs or pitches from Vicendeen to his backs, but twice it was the lapses in kickoff coverage that helped the Buffs bury the Jayhawks. On the two kickoffs Colorado chose to on, Billy Waddy waddle loose for a 95-4 yard touch down run and James Mayberry was on the defensive line based on KU's 23-yard线 by Waddell Smith. It was the third consecutive KU-CU game, a return specialist burned KU for six points. Five teams tied for Big 8 lead For years that well-advised caution applied only to the likes of Iowa State and Oklahoma State, which had little trouble with early nonconference foes but came up coughing for air when Big Eight action commenced. But you can finally add the mighty Nebraska Cornhuskers to that list—not to mention the Missouri Tigers. But Nebraska, which contributed six fumitables to the Iowa State conquest, saw its hopes of a trip to the Orange Bowl seriously threatened. The Huskers 7-2-1 overall had been all alone in first place after knocking off Oklahoma State a week earlier. The hard-fought victory gave the Cyclones an 8-2 record overall, equaling the highest season victory total in their history. Iowa State's 4-2 conference record that of Nebraska, Oklahoma State's 6-3 Colorado, all tied for the league top spot. Missouri, ranked No. 11 nationally, also saw its aspirations crippled, as the Tigers came up short against 14th-ranked Oklahoma, 27-20, at Norman. KANAS CITY (AP) - Warning: Playing in KANAS City Conference may be hazardous. Dexter Green darted for two touchdowns, and Lather Blue returned a kickoff 95 yards for another Saturday as Iowa State stumped the ninth-ranked Huskers, 27-18, at Ames and sent the Big Eight race into a five-team deadlock for first place. Cross country team finishes 5th KU's cross country team, which ran so well in the conference championship two weeks ago, ended the 1976 season with a disappointing fifth place finish at the NCAA District 5 Championship in Stillwater, Okla., Saturday. KU scored 105 points to place behind Wichita State, 83, Missouri, 76, Iowa State, 65 and Oklahoma. 54. The Sooners and Cyclones, which both floundered in the Big Eight meet, earned qualifying berths to the NCAA national meeting in Denton, Tex. Other teams competing were Oklahoma State, 109, Southern Illinois, 112, St. Louis University, 216, North Texas State, 233, and Oral Roberts, 274. "We went down there with qualifying for the national meet in mind," Coach Bob Timmons said yesterday, "but we didn't do very well." surprise second place finish in the Big Eight. Although he wasn't making excuses, Timmons suggested that part of the reason he was unhappy was his own behavior. Vernon. Vernon, who placed 43rd in the conference meet, recorded a 29:47 clocking to grab top honors. The individual winner on the 10,000 meter (6.2 mile) course was Oklahoma's Star "From the start of the season we really emphasized the conference meet," Timmons said, "and we ran well there. But yesterday we came up short." Bruce Coldsmith led KU, placing 19th in 30:40. then came George Mason, 22nd in 30:40. John 31st, 20th, Kendall Smith, 38th in 31:35; and Brent Swanson, 42nd in 31:56. The Kansas Jayhawks Rugby Club concluded its fall season yesterday in Kansas City with a 12-0 shutout of the KC Bulls. Captain Doug Gunn said he was happy the season ended on a high note. Ruggers beat Kansas City yvonne press up for the game and we staffery pay us well to the脸和we work with you. wanted to be KU had lost its last three rugby meets. Rick Renflor put KU ahead, 40, with a first half try, but the extra point failed. In the second half, Rodger Walter scored a try and later was taken out of the game knee injury. Paul Diedrich scored the final in the half to put the game out of reach. reach. KU will now prepare for a trip abroad in January, when they will be one of the first American rugby teams to tour England. Mondav. November 15. 1976 7 ks University Daily Kansan live guard said, "It's lose. It's so through scarello's neversense nasasself over to levers led to Colorado. the Buffs as fresh- all on away from d return. Colorado ringing two to er for the died four of s p asses. start of armance and amance and 16 carri es. stay with ck to se e have and foore said. t hurt us game was kicked up 19 arrow edge ost of that backs from and CU's has a Buff in record of w has 1,070 id in rushing who has yards in his yards and smith. Smith and 3,042 in fifth in Big back Norris could do to was quickly doffs or pit- ks, but twice average that hawks. do chose to seize for a 96- Mayberry g tackled on Smith. KU-CU game koff return points. tied ad playing: Playing evidence may be lying. the mighty list—not to caution apva State and little trouble but came up Eight action touchdowns, kickoff 99 yards State stunned , at Ames to a five-team y gave the equaling the their history. coordination. Oklahoma for the league ationally, also as the Tigers 14th-ranked attributed six saw, saw its bowl seriously 1. overall had after knocking earlier. lacing 15th in ason, 22nd in 30:47; Ted Smith, 38th in 42nd in 31:56. d 43rd in the 29:47 clocking City Sports Writer By ROBRAINS JV team beaten by K-State, 24-7 ad, 40-, with a point in defeat. He scored a try he game with a scored the final he game out of a trip abroad in one of the first four England. Couch Jack White knew that punting was one of his junior varsity football team's Friday the Jayhawks repeatedly made errors trying to punt, and the Kansas State Wildcats took advantage to post an easy 24-7 KU in the season finale for both teams. The Jayhawks punted the ball five times in the game, for an average of 34 yards a The 'Jayhawks' long day in the cold started on the opening kickoff. Freshman Dave Dursfield fumbled the kick on the second-yard line, setting up K-State's first score. Jerome Holwell put the points on the board on the Wilcat's second attempt as he went in from the 20. The extra point kick was good. Kansas retaliated with a touchdown of its own in the third period, but by then K-State had added a field goal and the Jayhawks were through. Borrow wound up as Kansas' leading rusher for the day, picking up 80 yards in Bobby Barrow scored KU's touchdown on a 18-yard jump up the middle. Dennis Crawford hit a home run. the margin to 18-7, but that was as close as the Javahaws could come. Sports kick. But that doesn't indicate the magnitude of their trouble. White said that he had figured the game as a host-up, but that he was surprised by K-Man. "I thought that their intensity was the difference in the ball game," he said. "They took it to us right from the very first series, and we just couldn't recover." The Jayhawks, who also fumbled the ball seven times (they lost four), finished the season with a 1-3 record. K-State finished at 4-1. They suffered two blocked punts—one setting up a Wildcat score and the other resulting directly in a K-State touchdown. And the other team could he could get the ball away and lost the ball once on downs when he passed from the扑位position and the ball fell incomplete. Soccer club beats Colorado Despite an icy field and an inexperienced goalkeeper, the KU Soccer Club defeated the previously unbeaten Colorado squad, 2-1, Saturday in Boulder. The game had been scheduled to be played before the KU-CU football game at Cedar Park. Women harriers in national meet Three members of the KU women's cross country squad got a taste of national caliber competition over the weekend at the AIW National Championship in Madison, Wis. Michelle Brown, Sarah Frame and Nancy Bissell competed in the meet, which Big Eight conference member iowa State won. The Cyclones scored 62 points to win, Kansas State. Another conference member, Kentucky State, placed ninth with 368 points. Brown, Oklahoma City freshman, let the brownies 55th in a field of more 270 runners. "She ran very well," coach Tom Lonvale said yesterday. "Fifty-fourth isn't bad for a team." Frame placed 141st, but Lionvale said she had some bad luck. "She fell during the first half of the race, rolled over, got up and continued to run," he "But at about the two-mile mark, one of the poles that mark the course rebounded after a girl hit it and smacked her in the stomach. And it's hard to run the last mile in a national championship race when you can't breathe very well." Bissell, who has been hampered by a hip injury this fall, placed 188th. the soccer game to be switched to a football practice field. Paul Addison, who never previously had played goalkeeper, was put in that position when the regular goalkeeper, Rafael Perez, didn't show up at the game. There were no times available on the runners. "I'm proud of them," Lionvale said. They went up there to compete and they did KU coach Bernie Mullin yesterday praised Addison and the KU squad. He said a team effort prevented G from getting out of the playoffs, but goal was on a very difficult shot, he said. The Jayhawks' goals were scored by Bill Hornbock and Mohammed Amair-Alarm. A teammate from the 1970s, Mullin said that Colorado came out strong and aggressive, but that KU came back to play aggressively despite the greater size of Colorado players. In a junior varsity game yesterday, KU was defeated by Ottawa, 2-1. This was Colorado's first defeat in two years. pay tuition, textbooks, lab fees, and $100 tax-free dollars a month. The Air Force ROTC commission, an excellent starling commission, an excellent starling salary, challenging work (with some of the finest equipment in it), promotions, responsibility to education and much more. Find out today about an Air Force ROTC scholarship. It's a great way to serve your country and to pay for your college education. electronics computer science the艺术 form education majors. The Air Force formates men and women with academic majors such as these, if you're a graduate. You may be eligible for either two-year or the four-year Air Force help with the college bids, two three, and four year-scholarships. Mechanical and civil engineering majors aerospace and aeronautical engineering major We need certain college majors to become Air Force lieutenants. INVISIBLE SOUND CLEAN AND FAITHFUL. Sophomores interested in the two year program should contact Caitlah John E. Mason, Military Science Bldg., Room 168, or call 844-745-6200. Air Force ROTC-Gateway to a Great Way of Life The only other first place finish for KU was the 200 freeyle with Jesse Gwynn winning at 14. COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES! Freshman Peter Bakker-Arkema was named the first player in Sophomore David Eustes won the 200 butterfly in 15:6.3 and finished second in both the individual medley and the 200 last quarter. "It was a frustrating loss for us," Ream said. "But there is little doubt in my mind that we will be able to beat the dinosaur in the Big Eight championship meet." What a difference one event can make. In KU's season opening swim meet Friday night, the Jayhawks went into the final event led with Colorado at 33 points. By KEN DAVIS COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE PACILIES! INVISIBLE SOUND, CLEAN AND FAITHFUL! The two way speaker systems ADS 1400, 1500 and 1700 were developed right along with three possible reason. ADS wanted to create a coherent level of sound where everyone could access the music without having to reproduce musical sound with an optimum of clarity and a total objection. When the engineers of ADS finally were able to meet their requirements open quality in wireless sound from ground-up, duration only two years ago it has become the stand out product among many professionals and dedicated audiologists. The product known as the ADS (ADS) costs less than 1000 and signals with these ADSs the invisible Sound and the technical refinements that make the input signal response to the inquiring not feasible for instance. ADS L700 You owe it to yourself to hear these speakers! ADS L500 RMS ELECTRONICS audio 742 Mass. Open late·Thurs. & Fri. 841-2672 STEREO SKETCHS FROM 200.00 TO 11.000.00 The Chiefs, 3-7 compared with Oakland's NFL-leading 9-1 record, rank a rather meaningless No. I in the league's passing and got 212 yards from throwing yesterday. The Jayhawks wond both in diving. Tom Anagnos won both the three-meter and one-meter diving events. Mark Hill was second. Michele Nichols took third. Anselmi took second in the three-meter. Chiefs' coach Paul Wiggin said, "When Chiefs' coach Paul Wiggin said, 'When you've got four turnovers, you've got "We need a two-pronged attack to win," Wiggin said. Swimmers lose to Buffs Ecuador bilateral Stabler, who was intercepted four times, like three interceptions, but none of them bore the fury. The Chiefs tied the score in the second quarter. After two touchdown plays were nullified by penalties, forcing Kansas City to retreat to Oakland's yard line, Mike Livingston passed 28 yards to Larry Brunson for a first down. Then on fourth down, Livingston hit MacArthur Lane on a one-yard touchdown pass. Stabler, whose third-period touchdown pass to Casper made the score 21-7, settled for 138 yards passing, far under his per-game average. KU participated in another dual meet in Boulder besides the contest against CU, and the Jayhaws slipped by Colorado State, 57-56, in that one. Kansas City's Jan Stennered the eight player in NFL history to score 1,000 points when he kicked a 41-yard field goal. The quarter, making his 16-season total 1.001. The Buffaloes tallied seven points to KU's none in that event—the 400-yard freestyle relay—to win the dum, $0.53. Kansas also got a poor showing in the four sprint events. Stabler increased his season touchdown pass total to 26, throwing scoring strikes to Bred Filletnutt and Dave Casper, but the running attack led by mark Van Eeghen and Garrett accounted for more yardage in the Raiders' fifth straight victory. "We lost both the relays and that put us 14-4. We were down 38-2 in the four sprints." "The meet went very much according to paper," said the dejected Kansas coach, Dick Resmon. "We knew CU would be very important to us, that is an area we are just aren't read in yet. The next meet for the men's team will be the Big Eight Invitational relays on Dec. 3-4 in Columbia, Mo. The Chiefs were unable to capitalize on any of their interceptions. Linebacker Willie Lanier returned a third-quarter interception, 13 yards to the Raiders' 24, but Stenert missed a 43-yard field goal attempt. The Raiders drove 74 yards to score after the field goal miss, with Stabler throwing only two passes, including one to running back Carl Garrett which gained 28 yards. OAKLAND (AP) -- Ken Stabil called his performance mediocre and Cliff Branch, Oakland's most dangerous receiver, was first yesterday by the Kansas City Chiefs. Still, the Raiders won, 21-10, because, as we learned, they didn't win. And said, "We're going to do what we have to do." bass, treble and hi-fi a pair of powerful social sound with a totals ab ADS woodfer well designed for this in its own right in tape and digital ADS woodfer frequencies precision added to As a total ADS L40 ADS L40 Kansas City falls, 21-10 to Oakland 'mediocrity' RMS ELECTRONICS BETWEEN DAFF a sound studio "Our guys were trying. We had the effort, but we just couldn't pull it off. We are a young team, and it can be expected that we will take our knocks." STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11,000.00! C RMS ELECTRONICS BETTER DAYS a record start audio Use Kansan Classifieds SUA SUA QUA Kansas Union - Coaches will attend and will answer questions. MON., NOV. 15 8:30 p.m. Council Room SUA Indoor Recreation QUARTERBACK CLUB - Complete game film of the KU-COLORADO GAME Everyone Welcome! DEMO SALE Save Up To $800 on a good selection of TOYOTA DEMOS. Corona 5-Door Wagon Corolla Wagon Corolla Liftback Deluxe LAWRENCE TOYOTA Lawrence Plaza Ph. 842-2191 TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA POLYCOLOR EDITION WESTERN PARK AUTO SALES TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA --- 1976-77 KANSAS BASKETBALL STUDENT TICKET INFORMATION SALE BEGINS NOVEMBER 17 thru NOVEMBER 19 WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY PLACE: ALLEN FIELD HOUSE MAIN LOBBY (EAST) TIME: 10:00 a.m.—5:00 p.m. PROCEDURES: Season tickets may be purchased after Friday, November 19 at the main ticket office in Allen Field House anytime prior to the first game. 1. Enter the main lobby of Allen Field House (east) 2. Present current validated student I.D. 3. Pay for SEASON TICKET-STUDENT-$15.00 STUDENT/SPOUSE-$15.00 (proof of marriage required to purchase) 4. Sign your student season ticket in presence of ticket seller NO REFUNDS WILL BE MADE PLAN NOW TO BE A PART OF THE FUN & EXCITEMENT of JAYHAWK BASKETBALL!!! NOTICE SEASON TICKET IS NOT GOOD FOR SPRING SEMESTER UNLESS ACCOMPANIED BY VALIDATED SPRING I.D. AT STUDENT GATES BEGINNING WITH THE COLORADO GAME ON JANUARY 29. 1976-1977 KANSAS BASKETBALL KU Nov 37 T1: Ward 1 Mountain State (75) Home Nov 37 T2: Ward 1 Marysville State (75) Home Nov 37 T3: Ward 1 Oakland State (75) Home Nov 37 T4: Ward 1 Old Baldie (75) Home Nov 37 T5: Ward 1 Great Bend (75) Home Nov 37 T6: Ward 1 at Kirkwood Nov 37 T7: Ward 1 at Kirkwood Nov 37 T8: Ward 1 at St. Lucas Nov 37 T9: Ward 1 at Big Eight Tournament 1 Nov 37 T10: Ward 1 at Big Eight Tournament 1 Nov 37 T11: Ward 1 at Big Eight Tournament 1 Nov 37 T12: Ward 1 at Big Eight Tournament 1 Jan 1: Ward 1 Missouri*75 Jan 1: Ward 1 Missouri*75 Jan 1: Ward 1 Iowa State (75) Home Jan 1: Ward 1 Iowa State (75) Home Jan 1: Ward 1 Wisconsin*75 Jan 1: Ward 1 Wisconsin*75 Feb 2: Ward 1 at Oakland State*75 Feb 2: Ward 1 at Oakland State*75 Feb 2: Ward 1 Oklahoma State*75 Feb 2: Ward 1 Oklahoma State*75 Feb 2: Ward 1 Iowa State*75 Feb 2: Ward 1 Iowa State*75 Feb 2: Ward 1 Colorado*75 Feb 2: Ward 1 Colorado*75 Mar 2: T1 Thursday Big B Post Season T 7 Mar 2: T1 Thursday Big B Post Season T 7 Mar 2: T1 Thursday Big B Post Season T 7 *T1 - T2 *T1 - T2 SINGLE GAME STUDENT TICKETS a limited number of single game student tickets will be available for each game. These tickets will be sold at Allen Field House on the day of the game only from 8:30 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. The single game student price is $2.50. A current validated student I.D. is required at time of purchase and admittance. For a preview of the FIGHTING JAYHAWKS see the CRIMSON & BLUE intersquad game, Wednesday, November 17----7:30 p.m. Admittance by Student I.D. 8 Monday, November 15, 1976 University Daily Kansan Marathon From page one "I feel pretty good, although by feet are a little sore," Tom Quillen, Wichita freshman, said at midnight. "I've gone too far to quit. "I WISH WE'd get back to dancing, though. I am afraid I trump up sitting here." On stage, Turner turned bids for Bud McNeese's hat and Ted Owens' tennis shoes, which brought a few dollars each. Then McNeese wore warm-up jersey was auctioned for $6.50. By 12:30 Saturday morning, the break was over. Four marathon dancers climbed to the state, while some of the others led a dance around the crowded舞 floor. Burgys began to empty about 3 a.m., with just a few friends and workers in town. "We're not here for the day," Burgys said. Vets... From page one hired by the Veterans Administration, would be excluded because Dixon had charged that work study personnel had organized the organization for several years. Dixon, a work study employee, said work student personnel hired by the VA should be separated from the Campus Veterans Center and matched through Student Senate activity fees. Evans, Dixon and McCrusty discussed the election investigation after the meeting. Evans said that the committee to investigate the May election would be selected jointly by the current executive council, Dixon and McChristy, and that he hoped it could complete its investigation before Thanksgiving break. At the start of the meeting, about 40 veterans were present—the largest turnout the group has ever had, according to Evans. But the discussion of proposed bylaws, which involved section-by-section discussion and approval, took almost four hours and left about 20 members to discuss the election charges. Copies of the ratified bylaws will be available in the Campus Veterans office, on campus. --dancers said the early morning hours were the hardest, most because of the boredom. At 10 a.m., one shift of dancers stumbled on the floor, messaging one another or others to be at work. Susan Streck, Hays junior, said, "I'm very, very stiff in my legs, hips and feet. I wish I would have soaked my feet before I started." BY MID-MORNING, the dancers kept their movements to a minimum. After a break, though, there would be a brief flurry of energy perhaps a leap or a dash of energy. Some of the dancers stood with their hands in their pockets or on their hips, talking to each other or watching Mighty Bighorn films on a screen above Dance Dug. Above their waists, they looked stationary, but their feet bent shuffling. More supporters began to arrive Saturday afternoon, and by 3 p.m., about 50 people were either dancing or watching. Refreshed by the new arrivals, some dancers were among the most active dancers on the floor, but their movements were blurred by fatigue. ONE COUPLE clump to each other in a corner of the dance floor, separated from the more active dancers by an extra measure of exhaustion. Now, between songs, the dancers were less careful about keeping their feet moving. The music stopped at 3:37 p.m. Bufford Watson, city manager, announced the prize winners. They were determined by how much money had been donated in each couple's name. Joe Jrovev, Leawood freshman, and Mandy Hodge, Salina freshman, on the grand prize, with $633.80, their ing. The first place finishes each won what Miller said was $500 worth of prizes, including a CB radio, an FM converter, a skateboard and a calculator. Turner announced one more dance in the participants' honor, and the marathon was Miller said the final total, including some overhead, would top $2,500 below the goal of $3,000 below the goal of $3,000. "But you always have to shoot for some goal," he said, "and even $100 would help." "We'll definitely do this again next fall. It will be bigger and better next year." Jirovew wasn’t looking quite so far ahead “I'm going right to bed,” he said. Professor begins study on nursing home nutrition expenses, in addition to federal aid, she needed more money to support herself and her family. Standardbak had been working in the school and got a job near the school and got Stuley a job there. Clifford Schumacher, Shirley's college algebra instructor, said, "The Friday before the fire she had taken great pains to get my home address. She was going to come over Sunday and bring some make-up work she had been doing. nursing home, who Edwards called "delightful people to work with." From page one Fire ends SHIRLEY WAS home with Dawns and was cooking french fries in an electric skillet, which fire department officials say was the cause of the fire. He said he hoped the results would benefit the residents of many nursing homes. The fire that cut her hopes short was reported to the Lawrence fire department It was reported that Shirley ran out of the house about 11:15 that night, waving her arm in the air. 'Shrirley hoped to complete her studies in May 1977.' Standblack said. She stopped a passing car and pleaded with the occupants to call the fire SHIRLEY WAS found next to her daughter in an upstairs bedroom of the house, just inside the southeast window. She was alive alive, but badly burned. An occupant of that car, Dorothy Kirk, yelled to Shirley. "Yes, we will, we will!" Kirk said that as they drove off, she saw Shirley run back to the house, which was glowing from within, and a moment later she was gone. The Douglas County coroner said that the daby died of smoke inhalation. department. . . . Shirley was rushed immediately to the KU burn center and lived nine days. Shirley died four days later at about 2:30 in the afternoon. Marilyn Hall said that at the funeral, Shirley's mother leaned over the baby's casket and said, "Dawns, go get your mother and bring her home." Three strong brave people in a strange white land among strangers who loved her . . . Come to take her home . . . to rest forever in the pinescented earth of the Narion . . DISCO DANCE Sat., Nov. 20 8:00 p.m.-1:00 a.m. $1.75 A magnificent epic on the themes of collaboration and resistance. *Penguin Books, Ltd. The New World.* An artistic and intellectual triumph. - Time Magazine National Society of Film Critics Special Award...A film of extraordinary public interest and distinction. from Cinema 5 The Sorrow And The Pity is about four and a half hours...but, in terms of movie length, it is one of the shortest movies of the shortest movies of the --- The Sorrow and The Pity One of the greatest films ever made, The Sorrow And The Pity is a contribution to history, to social issues, and to art. If there any justice in the art, it shows Ophidia's old-inflicted labor for years. Grace Darden, Atlantic Monthly A tension is created, between the people on the screen and in the audience, that gives the film the effect of explosion. $1.00 Woodruff Auditorium SJA FILMS Beer will be sold with an I.D. Union Ballroom-Kansas Union Sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas No alcoholic beverages may be brought in. TUESDAY, NOV. 16th Make your appointment now for DALE WILLEYS 2nd Annual Serious Service Safety and Service Clinic Our Clinic Inspection includes All Safety Inspection Items Brake System Exhaust Steering & Suspension Electrical Charging System Heating & Air Conditioning System Tune-up; Fuel & Exhaust Analysis Cooling System. This complete analysis would normally cost more than $50.00, but for these two days will be ABSOLUTELY FREE WITH NO OBLIGATION! Nov. 17 and 18----5:30-9:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Make your Reservation now. Call Jerry Weeks at 843-5200. Finding nutritious food substitutes for nursing home residents who dislike a particular food is the primary goal of nutrition staff training. The Kansas Kansas faculty member and his assistant. The faculty member, Todd Risley, professor of human development, received a $215,000 grant from the department of Health, Education and Welfare to finance the research, which will be done over a three-year period. dale willey The Automobile Man PONTAC, CARLUAC, ANE, JEEP 518 N. 216 ROAD, Phone: 309-3209 K. Anthony Edwards is research associate for the project and a courtesy assistant professor in human development. Edwards came to KU from Minot. He was working to work under Risley and has been working on the project full-time since August. Edwards said Friday that if a nursing home resident silently rejected certain foods on the menu, he might lack a nutrient necessary for good health. Although food in nursing homes may be nutritious, they are unprepared, that isn't always so. Edwards said. Risley and Edwards are doing the research with residents of Cherry Manor "The real problem is in terms of whether the resident eats the food or not," he said. "We're looking at behavior rather than nutrition per se." The research is still in preliminary stages, he said, so no results are yet available, but r.suts from this study and others may be helpful in psychological and nutritional journals. MEET ME AT THE MARKET PLACE 8th and New Hampshire For instance, Edwards said, he will check on the foods are left after a meal to learn about them. ME THE M Bokonon The Frame Up Leather Limited The Shooting Gallery Dirty Thirties & Earlier Deja Vu POLYURETHANE --- Native American Artists Ltd. The Gallery The Armadillo Bead Co. Su Casa Graphic Arts Inc. The Harvest 6th Anniversary SALE MISS STREET DELI MASSACHUSETTS 50¢ OFF — with this Coupon REUBEN SANDWICH Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye. Reg. $2.00 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 The Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th $175 with this Coupon Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Reg. Price $2.10 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. $1.00 OFF — with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 The Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th $ 75 with this Coupon Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes--smoother in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETT ST. $1.00 OFF—with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETT ST. $1.00 OFF — with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Delta Upsilon & Alpha Gamma Delta - present - THANKSGIVING Canned Food Drive Mon., Tues., and Wed. November 15, 16 & 17 - Bud Jennings - Francis Sporting Goods - Brewery Sponsored by: - Lawrence National Bank · Aztec Inn · Mister Guy - Schumm Foods - Hodges Real Estate - Primarily Leather For more information call 843-7370 or 842-6303 --- University Daily Kansan Monday, November 15, 1976 9 very Guy nic in $50.00, ITH NO JOHN HARTMAN Fall concert at 8 tonight A Do you have any news tips? Call the KANSAN 864-4810 The KU Faculty String Quartet will investigate the fight in sought-in Swearbore Recital Hall, in Murray. The quartet will perform with four other faculty members, the School of Fine Arts faculty members of the School of Fine Arts. The members of the quartet are Howard Boyajian, violin; Karel Blaas, violin; and Raymond Stuhl, cello, all professors of performance; and Chris Harden, violin, Lawrence graduate student. Inci Bashar Maize, mezzo-soprano and assistant professor of performance; John Boulton, flutist and associate professor of performance; Mary Tuven Hoag, professional violist; and Lawrence Maxine, clarinetian and associate professor of performance, will assist the quartet. FOOTBALL TICKETS For Sale at $8.00 (our cost) KU-MU Call the SUA office 864-3477 A panel discussion with Marion Washington, two coaches, and two athletes. Question and answer period following. Commission on the Status of Women ISSUES IN KU WOMEN'S ATHLETICS November 16, 1976 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room—Kansas Union Everyone is welcome to attend. Business meeting at 6:30 The POT COUNTY PORK AND BEAN BAND,plays at the Hall tonight mondaynitlast chanceweekend romancedance: Off the Wall Hall $1.50 is not much to spend for a good time. KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered, or listed on a bulletin board, or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASS TOI 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional Each additional word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 AD DEADLINES to run Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. 841-0817 737 New Hampshire FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ad spots can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office at 864-355-7920. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ENTERTAINMENT Two bedroom apartment, part furnished, near downtown and bus. $135 monthly. Call 843-887-0206. FOR RENT BOKONON Paraphernalia for the concomitant bones of arms and pipes. 18 843-360. 12-15 181-360. 1 Bedroom furnished apt. available Jun 1 3婚 rooms合装,营造 Guest Apartment午 11-16 One bedroom apt. furnished, fully carpeted, basement, pool/spa. Two-story lease contract $15,000/month - gas, ceiling. Call 864-736-2900 for details. Bibliase for 2nd semester - Unfurnished 1 bed- foot apt. at Frontier Ridge - 8431-2603 after 5 p.m. Sublease 3 bedroom partially furnished house . fireplace. Available. Dct. Intl call 812-453-117 www.scholarship.com One 2-bedroom at, Jayhawk Towers. Sub- lease for second semester. Ask for Mr. King. Farm for rent. New mobile home, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. 400 sq ft. $35,000 per month. on paid road. 1-892-8206. Fred Morrow. 11-15 2 bedrooms furnished apartment available Jan. 1. 1 bedroom, on land; 2 rooms, pool. Call 841-7281. Two male roommates needed for a nice old house with an excellent location. Cail 841-4360 for more information. FINE SELECTION OF WINDSHIRTS MOVE MATE IBASE SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP Opens 9:30 a.m. to 10:50 p.m. RAASCH SADDLE 6 BRIDLE SHOP 842.8413 Mastercharge 3 NAPA N.A.P.A. Auto Parts For the Do-It-Yourself we offer Social Prizes. 2. Open 7 days and nights 3. We have it or can get it 4. Machine shop service 5. Two stores 500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444 3. we have it or danger in overnight TONY'S IMPORTS- DATSUN 817 Vermont 2300 Haskell 843-9365 843-6960 5. Two stores service problems? Imported car SEE **Sublease-b** /i bdm. apf. furnished. On bus route: carport; a/c. 842-6057. 11-19 Sublease B 1848, unfurnished Gatlight apartment, B 1925, non-mi-net includes gas暖炉 AC 811-9517 after 5. Tailor heat 12-23 FOR SALE STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS- Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, the following components are recommended at the GAMPHONE SHOP at KIPES: **tf** CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermaids. Unicorns. etc. On line, cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3833. Excellent selection of new and used furniture from the Renaissance, 13th to 17th trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 701-268-4500. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties: BALT ALU. BALT AUTO. ELECTRIC. 845-309-2000. W. 61b. Electrician. 845-309-2000. W. 61b. Westernize Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Westernized Notes! Make sales more effective. 2) For class preparation 3) For class preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available Excellent selection of used furniture, retiring- ers' goods, hardware, light equipment, etc. 854. Phnom Penh, Cambodia; 61-270-3289; five hundred RMB per room. 40% - 12% off on warm up suits, dresses man's and Swim Club. Rt (4) west on 822-776-776. Rt (5) west on 822-776-776. For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call TV Cable or 814-568-0128 or 814-1347. Porchie 191, 970 model, must sell immediate Citra Togkees 1-235-957 or 1-233-787. ATT: 11-19 Corvette 75 Loaded, Jumped 5,000 miles $8000 Warranty, 22/19 Topper 8Ks 11-15 Realistic Stereo System. Speaker MC 1000, amp 36V 25W, amplifier w/ walnut hull AM/FM, stereo, or other. FAIL #31. 72 SAAB 89 New clutch, Michelin tires. White- Oil interior. Needs heat repair only $150. $165-200 for all other upgrades. CAR STEREO SPECIAL—NOTICE—you know that warranty of your car stereo in the Midwest—warranty car stereo buys in the Midwest—which represents millions yrs. of experience in the car industry. It says at 8:30 a.m. RAY AUDIO. 12:58 e.m. Read $2 saving贾 THE ADVENT STEREO RECEIVER is the most sophisticated digital audio and manufacturing design and production weve done since 2015. But before this one is real and refreshing-all at once, a new RAV AUDIO 14 x 36 inch Consultant Headphone with RAV AUDIO 14 x 36 inch Consultant Headphone. Chrysler "300". good condition. $200 or best offer. Chevrolet "400". Apts. Bldg. 6. M 11-16 841-3743 Want to save money? Buy your used car from the local dealership. All service areas available. Call (850) 346-1234. How about a Planner $X 450 receiver for $170 to buy? You can buy it at Walmart—hardly wait! You drive the way you know we have to keep up with the latest. Save money and shop day-to-day. $Saving order service Stop in and call (866) 522-3800. MEDIA 15 w. ship date. Pioneer KP-250 FM stereo casel. under dash is now on sale. You never thought you could have so much car stereo for so little. Wow! Little Hat. The same size in and find out and buy AUDIO, I 3. E 8th. 11-16 Have you ever found yourself in what you want to be? Have you ever seen your pants down around your ankles with a sneaking suspicion that they were wet or have come in all we’ve our straight ahead special? Are you the one who doesn’t even need a pair of specials. We have a stereo system that will really amaze you for $360. See our super large speaker at www.stereosound.com or call 1-800-457-8920 more and get better, really pleasing professional performance. RAY AUDIO, 13 E. Bth. Stereo Center DO'S DELUXE BOUT 3 MASS. LAWFRANCE Caseteque taser tape and tapes new houndge. $90. Caseteque firearm tape and tapes new houndge. $125. TSI-300 1300 burner warranty, full warranty. $189. TSI-300 1300 incinerator warranty, full warranty. $249. has the eyeglasses has my message you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 VISIONS 67 Pontiae Bonneville, automatic, airor, air; Must sell-225, 841-8080 after 5. 11-16 1968 Volkswagen, reliable and good runner. 100- 116 842-484-848 or 842-506-55. *** 38" x 5peed Huff like new, $45. Typewriter- wife, 20" x 16 speed, good cond. case, $35— 119. KC, $6. 17 1962 WK—runs good--body rough. As in 1150- 1523 AW—armran. 843-648-88. EAMES MODERN DINING CHAIRS. Birch $200.00 value. $300.00 only (unless dinner offered). $200.00 value. $300.00 only (unless dinner offered). 166 Chevrolet I Tom Stew Vam Read for you to custom decorate. $250 at 1135 W. 400 or call 718-744-9288. One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Rocky Board. Professional sound systems, guitars, organs, drums, speeches and other instruments. Rocky Board, 140 W. Ward, 23d. 643-307. 11-15 12A2 PACE CB w/antena-Perfect shape, four numbers old $120 or best offer. BK 922-2327, BK 922-2648. One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Keyboard. Professional sound systems, guitars, amps, drums, special equipment and additional peripherals. Board 1420 W. 23rd. 843-307-11. 11-15 75 Peavey Musician head is solid state with 49" w112mm cabinet cabinet 5200 'Globe Mobil' and 6" w112mm cabinet cabinet 5200 'Globe Mobil' 74 NORTON 850 Command, 800 i460, excellent supercycle, fury bargain-$120, 810-454, 11-19 Honda Blazer CR250R M. Super playback $745 CRAFTS TRAINING SHOW $139 Call Dave at 811-828-1966 and leave an e-mail at 1-819-628-1966. DRUM SET. Ludwig, double bass, dumbbell, cases included. Blank silk finish, must. 411-393-8960 Foreign Area Studies text compiled by American Institute for State Development, Set of 58, 412-6219, 11-19 King-size watered. No leaks, $25. 813-355 Men. Wed. after 4 p.m. for Linda 11-16 HELP WANTED Football hall is good condition - make an offer. Available on: 01-04, 01-05, 21st Street. 11-18 Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, including providing supervision and assisting in research. Social science back- ground required. Master's or equivalent from McKenbore, Degt of Human Development 111 to 3 p.m. AEQ Opportunity Equity Manager-Qualified to 3 p.m. AEQ Opportunity Equity Manager-Qualified to 3 p.m. AEQ Opportunity Equity Manager-Qualified to 3 p.m. AEQ Opportunity Equity Manager-Qualified to 3 p.m. AEQ Opportunity Equity Manager-Qualified to 3 p.m. HELP WANTED Models wanted for photography contest. Good pay. Write Box 211, Leavenworth, Kansas, 66048. Enclose Photo. Now taking applications for salesmen or saleswomen for Christmas selling. Experience preferred, also necessary to be in Lawrence until May 18th. Resume to Weaver at Wetver. store, 901 Mass. M-11-17 AVON - earn extra money on your own time - Full-time. 11-20 Mrs. Sehil. 842-8162 11-20 LOST AND FOUND DANCERS—class B private club in Johnson County. Pay billage (913)-842-7241 after dinner. Lost: Brandon framed glasses—in the vicinity of Theodore Roosevelt Library Found: St. Joseph's High School Class Ring. Call main desk at the Union and claim 11-15 Student Number. Call lawn at Stadium and claim 6817 Lawn between Stadium and Call亭. Call 817-329-5000. Eldredgekner Optical PHOTOGRAPHY VIDEO DESIGN FILM WRITING & MEDIA FLAMINGO GUARDIAN PHOTOGRAPHY OFFICE VISUAL ART MODULATE ENAMORATION CINEMA DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE 30 Minute Level Order Now For Christmas MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE Loot, 11-9-76. Men's gold & black wedding band. Reward, Cast 841-741-540; 5:00. MISCELLANEOUS NOTICE PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ubiqui/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m. Mass. CARBAN CAFE--Good food from seattle. Lunch 10:30-12:30. Mass. Mass. Carb ban. Barbecue buffet, ever. Buffet, seafood, BBQ. Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishware, clock radio, clock televisions. Open daily at 12, 12, 12. Many at Special Discounts ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center CONTACT LENS WEARERS. Save on your hard or Soft supplies. Send for free sample of your favorite solution. Enclose 250 ml for postage and return to Contacts.com. Mail Subscriptions. Box 7432, Phoenix, AZ 85011. 11-16 UNLESS YOU LOVE SOMEONE, NOTHING ELSE MAKES ANY SENSE. COMMUNICATING IS ONE OF THE REAL ROADS of the Union. Socializing will follow a short business meeting. Gay community encouraged to attend. POETRY WANTED for Anthology Include *Anthony H. Burrows*, *P.O. Box 5642, San Francisco, California* *** ** Commission on the status of Women in Japan in 1976. *Kanazawa Union* (1976), 7-18. *Joya Jota University - Kanazawa Union*. Found. 2 rings in girls' restroom in Strong, Call id identify at 864-6729 11-15 Students; if you would be interested in taking a songwriter or music producer, you can contact Rory Bain (mailto: rory.bain@gmail.com) 843-522-9320. Found. High school class ring. Phone 842-3072. 11-15 1. HOOO, BOOKSKEEPER has returned to regular hours 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday. 2. HOOO, BOOKSKEEPER has returned to regular hours 6 p.m. Sunday; closed Mondays. Come in and browse, you're always welcome. 1400 Messages 11-18 Phone: 843-6424 NEW ODPen-Commerce Plaza, 31st and Iowa- self-service gas, 6-day车保 and mini 128 with air conditioning. PERSONAL Receive. Enroll now! in *Lawrence Driver School*. receive driver license in three weeks without receiving any other driver's license. EUROPE - ISRAEL - AFRICA - ASIA - SOUTH Africa Tour 2014 - First Arrival in Amsterdam, First Avenue, Tunisia, Paris, New York, London, Sydney, Dubai. Is your neck tense? Would you like a fact? Is your neck tense? Would you like a fact? Designers for beauty for women for tender skin. Designers for beauty for women for tender skin. Experienced pilot wants volunteer co-plotter with a staff member to assist an occupant or staff member preferred. Duties include observation, map reading, & et. No experience required. Participation interested in reply to P. O. Box 3571. If you are interested in serving as a Peace Corp representative, KUY-3 floor, Union 864-3701. SPORT Bikes-Boots Backpacks-Canoes-Tent 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Cedarwood Apartments New offering apartments for 10% discount! 1 & 2 bed units, sunny, fairchild and fortuneluxe 2014 Oodahl 843-1116 all makes of cars We service PICKENS AUTO PARTS PICKENS AUTO PART & SUPPLIES 26th & Iowa 843-1353 Are you an-exPCV or ex-Vista volunteer? If so drop by the KU - 864-731. 16-16 HEADQUARTERS. 841-2345 offers crisis counseling, information on services offered to victims of sexual assault, referrals for problem pregnancy, rape victim support, or support for victims in the criminal justice system. Free confidential, and open 24 hrs live. There seems to be some apathy present. Some of you beautiful young ladies are not responding to the news, and I am noticing a drop in campus daily. So once again I'll ask any attractive young ladies (18 yr or older who are women) to call me at 643-2341 and ask for Dukie for more information. I'll tell them that forwards are 11-19 KARATE AND SELF-DEFENSE instruction by national champions 8424,-8344, BSAI 12-2 Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505, 6:12 p.m. for referral To big Yout and big Wody… sorREE M...1-15 sorRREE! ~lil' lyst and lll' wody... M-1-15 SERVICES OFFERED Help wanted in Macro. Econ. 522 For details call H41,M40,IBM b-7. 11-16 Do your Christmas shopping early. For unique holiday gifts, choose from a range of formal hand-made items such as Dorea's Denim jacket and a wool sweater. TYPING Need a new blue shirt, Camis and use the tartan tartan as your backdrop. You can also use Laboratory Fabric by Scalpete of New York, Laboratory Fabric by Scalpete of New York, Laboratory Fabric by Scalpete of New York. experienced typist-term paper, checks, manuscripts 483-506; Mrs. Wright 483-506; Mrs. Wright Typist/editor. IBM PPC/elec. Quality work. Instructor. Desertations welcome. Meet Bahir, 842-913-8210 BIOLOGY TUTOR. Experimenter graduate. Graduate degree in Biology or related field. 605-238-1400, or 744. Reasonable travel expenses. ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands on paper and computer use in the 12th Biennial meeting, No. 266, Los Angeles, CA. Institution number: 403-758-1200. Presently offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1977. 1 and 2 bedroom units, furnished and unfurnished. *Don't Sawt'?* See me for all your sewing needs: *All types of sewing machines* *647-766 between 11:57 and Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 0001, 001, 002, 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, 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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, 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, 3100, 3101, 3102, 3103, 3104, 3105, 3106, 3107, 3108, 3109, 3110, 3111, 3112, 3113, 3114, 3115, 3116, 3117, 3118, 3119, 3120, 3121, 3122, 3123, 3124, 3125, 3126, 3127, 3128, 3129, 3130, 3131, 3132, 3133, 3134, 3135, 3136, 3137, 3138, 3139, 3140, 3141, 3142, 3143, 3144, 3145, 3146, 3147, 3148, 3149, 3150, 3151, 3152, 3153, 3154, 3155, 3156, 3157, 3158, 3159, 3160, 3161, 3162, 3163, 3164, 3165, 3166, 3167, 3168, 3169, 3170, 3171, 3172, 3173, 3174, 3175, 3176, 3177, 3178, 3179, 3180, 3181, 3182, 3183, 3184, 3185, 3186, 3187, 3188, 3189, 3190, 3191, 3192, 3193, 3194, 3195, 3196, 3197, 3198, 3199, 3200, 3201, 3202, 3203, 3204, 3205, 3206, 3207, 3208, 3209, 3210, 3211, 3212, 3213, 3214, 3215, 3216, 3217, 3218, 3219, 3220, 3221, 3222, 3223, 3224, 3225, 3226, 3227, 3228, 3229, 3230, 3231, 3232, 3233, 3234, 3235, 3236, 3237, 3238, 3239, 3240, 3241, 3242, 3243, 3244, 3245, 3246, 3247, 3248, 3249, 3250, 3251, 3252, 3253, 3254, 3255, 3256, 3257, 3258, 3259, 3260, 3261, 3262, 3263, 3264, 3265, 3266, 3267, 3268, 3269, 3270, 3271, 3272, 3273, 3274, 3275, 3276, 3277, 3278, 3279, 3280, 3281, 3282, 3283, 3284, 3285, 3286, 3287, 3288, 3289, 3290, 3291, 3292, 3293, 3294, 3295, 3296, 3297, 3298, 3299, 3300, 3301, 3302, 3303, 3304, 3305, 3306, 3307, 3308, 3309, 3310, 3311, 3312, 3313, 3314, 3315, 3316, 3317, 3318, 3319, 3320, 3321, 3322, 3323, 3324, 3325, 3326, 3327, 3328, 3329, 3330, 3331, 3332, 3333, 3334, 3335, 3336, 3337, 3338, 3339, 3340, 3341, 3342, 3343, 3344, 3345, 3346, 3347, 3348, 3349, 3350, 3351, 3352, 3353, 3354, 3355, 3356, 3357, 3358, 3359, 3360, 3361, 3362, 3363, 3364, 3365, 3366, 3367, 3368, 3369, 3370, 3371, 3372, 3373, 3374, 3375, 3376, 3377, 3378, 3379, 3380, 3381, 3382, 3383, 3384, 3385, 3386, 3387, 3388, 3389, 3390, 3391, 3392, 3393, 3394, 3395, 3396, 3397, 3398, 3399, 3400, 3401, 3402, 3403, 3404, 3405, 3406, 3407, 3408, 3409, 3410, 3411, 3412, 3413, 3414, 3415, 3416, 3417, 3418, 3419, 3420, 3421, 3422, 3423, 3424, 3425, 3426, 3427, 3428, 3429, 3430, 3431, 3432, 3433, 3434, 3435, 3436, 3437, 3438, 3439, 3440, 3441, 3442, 3443, 3444, 3445, 3446, 3447, 3448, 3449, 3450, 3451, 3452, 3453, 3454, 3455, 3456, 3457, 3458, 3459, 3460, 3461, 3462, 3463, 3464, 3465, 3466, 3467, 3468, 3469, 3470, 3471, 3472, 3473, 3474, 3475, 3476, 3477, 3478, 3479, 3480, 3481, 3482, 3483, 3484, 3485, 3486, 3487, 3488, 3489, 3490, 3491, 3492, 3493, 3494, 3495, 3496, 3497, 3498, 3499, 3500, 3501, 3502, 3503, 3504, 3505, 3506, 3507, 3508, 3509, 3510, 3511, 3512, 3513, 3514, 3515, 3516, 3517, 3518, 3519, 3520, 3521, 3522, 3523, 3524, 3525, 3526, 3527, 3528, 3529, 3530, 3531, 3532, 3533, 3534, 3535, 3536, 3537, 3538, 3539, 3540, 3541, 3542, 3543, 3544, 3545, 3546, 3547, 3548, 3549, 3550, 3551, 3552, 3553, 3554, 3555, 3556, 3557, 3558, 3559, 3560, 3561, 3562, 3563, 3564, 3565, 3566, 3567, 3568, 3569, 3570, 3571, 3572, 3573, 3574, 3575, 3576, 3577, 3578, 3579, 3580, 3581, 3582, 3583, 3584, 3585, 3586, 3587, 3588, 3589, 3590, 3591, 3592, 3593, 3594, 3595, 3596, 3597, 3598, 3599, 3600, 3601, 3602, 3603, 3604, 3605, 3606, 3607, 3608, 3609, 3610, 3611, 3612, 3613, 3614, 3615, 3616, 3617, 3618, 3619, 3620, 3621, 3622 2410 W. 25th Park 25 842-1455 ATIVE Not happy with your bike! Maybe you need a bike rack. Not a bike rack? No, you're on the centre bike, incubate and adjust your dummers, brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your bike rack, incubate and adjust your dummers, accessories bought at of time "nune-up" Rates: $150 SPECIAL Nov. 19 speeds $150.3 speed $150.1, hinge speeds $150.4 Complete professional speed $150.8 SPEAKING CREAMING FRAMING HY CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE - **DRYMOUNTING** - **STITCHERY** - **METAL FRAMES** - **RESTORATION** - **BARK BOARD FRAMING** Cross Reference Bookstore 842 1552 Mallis Shopping Center 9th and Iowa - Foosball - Pinball - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong HILLCREST BILLIARDS The Chalk Hawk Pin-Ball WANTED Typing on electric cable typewriter. Proofreading, prompt service. No threat present. Mitk Haps, 843- 91701. Experienced typelist THERESE ONLY. Will type the following for you: Bernhard et al. 844-1031 days, 844-1790 and 844- 2695 days. Bernhard et al. 844-1031 days, 844-1790 and 844- 2695 days. THEISIS BINDING COPYING The House of Uder's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for copying & copying in Lawrence. They thank you 835 Massachusetts or phone 835-810. Thank you. I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. New address. Two female roommates to share furnished Town- ship apartment. $104 rent all included in lil' "A different kind of bar COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a week One Under 18 Admitted The Lounge - Air Hockey - Foos-Ball featuring seclusion and quiet." Looking for married couple who plan to be in Lawrence a couple of weeks from weekend manhattan. Female to sublease Gatehouse Apt. Take over payment January 841-4523 11-16 Roommate need immediately for pile house camp site. Own room $88.75 mn 11-16 11-26 SUBLEASE-Village Square apartment $63.33 per room, 1/3 baths; own bedroom. 84-105 84-0105 Female roommate needed for spring semester, and male roommate needed for fall semester, plus 2 elec. Call Lia. 841-588. Keep crying. Burnt out of room. Female roommate needed immediately for Jay- son's apartment. Call 842-284-1864 for more information. One or two female roommates to share Jyaskwyn- tower rooms. All utilities included. 11-18 Female roommate wanted to share 5 bbm. house, 80 a.m. 642-8632. 114 Tennessee. 11-17 I and my well-nourished dog need a place to live. Jackie. 842-1076. 11-16 Female roommate wanted for Spring semester to share Jayhawk Tower apartments 842-710-746 - Bud on Tap 1811 w. 0m Tues..Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4 Turner Chevrolet HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service Call Ottis Vann! 843-7700 Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl For new Chevroletls and used cars at YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CREWEL 15 East 8th 841-2654 10.5 Monday Saturday - Pool Christmas Flights are filling fast Make reservations now! No extra cost for our services. SUA Maupintour travel service AIR LINE Phone 843-1211 KU Union Lobby Use the student discounts at in the summer. Keep your car healthy at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 🚗 10 Monday. November 15, 1976 University Daily Kansan Indians called white man's saviors Staff Writer Bv DAYNA HEIDRICK Indiang will be the saviers of the white man, White Cloud, an American Indian, said Saturday night in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. White Cloud, an Iowa, Otoe, Creek and Seminole Indian from Tulsa, said that even though the whites conquered the Indians, the Seminoles had not done because they had neither tradition nor roots. BOYD, WHO RESEARCHES cross-cultural communication with the Menniger Foundation in Topeka, said the Cross-Cultural Study Program at Menniger's women denominators, to promote cross-cultural understanding and to promote transcultural understanding. The hypothesis behind the search for common denominators is that people have similar reasons for their costumes and customs. White Cloud's comments followed a talk by Doug Boyd. The talk was sponsored by the Lawrence Growth Center, a nonprofit organization which sponsors workshops and speakers concerning the human potential movement. Boyd is the author of two books. One is a and the other is an account of the healing powers of the Cherokee Medicine Man Rolling Thunder. Boyd is now writing a book about the prophecies of Mad Bear and other Native American spiritual leaders. THE TITLE of this latest book, "Fourth World," refers to the new era Native Americans think the world is entering. Boyd said the transition period into the fourth world "will look to us (white people) like tragedy, with earthquakes and other natural disasters that the Indians see as purifications." Indians understand changes in the world because they have a close relationship with nature, Boyd said. They have lived in nature, observed it and are part of it. "What was prophecy is now history," boy said, noting the moor landing, which the villagers had discovered earlier. to talk about their beliefs with other people, are eager to share their prophecies and understanding of nature, and to explain the nature of other people are prepared for the coming age, Boyd said. Now the Indians, who usually are hestant White Cloud told the audience how they could cross the bridge into the new era. "The only way to live is within," white Cloud said. "You must learn to discipline your body and your mind to make your soul come alive." White Cloud told the audience to "go back and live your religion, whether it be Christian or Jewish or Moslem. Follow the laws." Task force to review African studies plan A task force to review KU's African studies curriculum was appointed last week by Jacob Gordon, director of the African studies program. The task force, which had been planned since the beginning of the semester, is the first at to study the effects of an intervention program the entire University, Gordon said Friday. The group will consider the role the professional schools of social welfare, engineering, education, journalism and business, play in African studies. It will also review University course offerings in African, Afro-American and Caribbean studies in conjunction with conde"s an academic institution including study abroad in Africa and the Caribbean. By May 1977, Gordon said, he is to receive a summary report and recommendations on KU's African studies program, concentrating on new programs. Community fair launches resource learning center Gordon said he used faculty opinions to choose task force members. Those selected were Tom Lewin, assistant professor of history and African studies; Elizabeth Schultz, associate professor of English; Dorothy Pennington, assistant professor of speech and drama and African studies; John Young, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student; Jeffrey Meeting; Harold Hardang, assistant professor of social welfare; and Richard Sheridan, professor of economics. Balloons, bluesgrass music and pantomime artists combined to create a circus atmosphere Saturday afternoon at the Community School of the Arts. The Community School, 101 N. Lawrence Ave., Colorful displays gave parents and children an opportunity to learn about the joys of jumping from "jungle" into a "pillow." More than 400 people found out how much fun learning could be as they got hands-on with the new app. An African studies student, who hasn't been chosen, will also serve on the tank The Fair was a kick-off event for the Community Learning Center, 1204 Oread Ave, a learning resource clearinghouse for parents, teachers, students and other community members concerned with learning. The Center, a nonprofit organization, is an outgrowth of teacher centers, a concept that originated in Greenwich Village. The centers are now in almost every major American city, she said. Bob Hubert, center director and Garden City graduate student, said Saturday that the purpose of the Center was to foster creative teaching methods, encourage new learning environments and centers and share materials and ideas in the Center Resource Library, a monthly newsletter and the ideas exhibit exchange. KU has had an African studies program since 1870. Hubert said the center also encouraged an exchange of ideas within the learning community, including KU, Haskell Indian Junior College, and private schools, public schools, daycare centers and preschools. A major focus of the center besides participation by professional educators, is community involvement. Hubert said. Creation of materials emphasized the use of such inexpensive, simple, recycled materials as paper, cardboard, magazines, wood and various containers, he said. Dolores Tolar, Center coordinator, said, "We want community involvement from the ground floor up. We have so many rich community resources." --- All-American Special! 1/4 pounder only HEAD FOR HENRY'S 69¢ —Sunday —Monday —Tuesday POPULAR FILMS Nov. 14-16 Something's Always Going On at HENRY'S We Have a New Series of Glasses KU to replace trash barrels Woodruff Auditorium BRIEF VACATION (1975) Dr. Vicier de Sica, with Florinda Bolkan (Italian subtitled) Fri., Nov. 19, 7:00 and 9:30 Sat., Nov. 20, 3:30 THE 10th INTERNATIONAL ANIMATION (1975) Fifteen different films ranging from three to eleven minutes each. Fri., Nov. 19, 3:30 Sat., Nov. 20, 7:00 and 9:30 The familiar blue and red trash barrels scattered across campus may soon be replaced by concrete and rock containers. The department of buildings and grounds construction crew has built two different cement containers, each with an exposed rock aggregate finish, Rodger Oroke, director of facilities and operations in the department, said Friday. "We're now trying to develop a way to make the containers in the cheapest, quickest way possible," he said. SUA Members of the administration saw some concrete and rock trash containers at the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Mo., and asked buildings and grounds to design a similar, cheaper container for KU, Oroke said. SUA FILMS SCIENCE FICTION SERIES JUST IMAGINE (1930) Dir. David Buther with John Garrick, Ed Brendel Maureen O'Sullivan Mon., Nov. 15, 7:30, 75c SPECIAL FILM THE SORROW AND THE PITY Nov. 16, 7:00, $1 CLASSICAL SERIES PRIMATES (1974) Dir. Frederick Wiseman Documentary Wed., Nov. 17, 7:30, 75c FILM SOCIETY D.O.A. (1949) Dir. Rudolph Mate, with Edmund O'Brien. Suspense classic 'B' film and TITLE LITERATURE Dir. Stanley Kubrick, with Sterling Hayden, Colleen Gray, Vince Edwards. Thurs., Nov. 18, 7:30, 75c The construction crew made the trash containers for from $65 to $75, less than half the $155 to $165 cost of commercially manufactured containers, he said. SUA FILMS "If this project goes full scale," Oroke said, "we'll develop a permanent form and build 150 or more to replace the 54 red and blue barrels now on campus." The barrels would be used more often, Oroke said, if they were strategically placed near the campus and were more secure than the new containers 800 to 700 pounds. IT'S A RIOT! "Splendiferously Funny." The New Yorker "It's a ball of a brawl!" Justin Creez R Eve. 7:40, 9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:00 Hillcrest Theatre A thriller R DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLVIER ROY SCHEIDER Every Evening 7:30, 9:45 Saturday, Sunday 2:30 Varsity Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs WALT DISNEY'S FIRST FULL LENGTH ANIMATED FEATURE! EVENINGS * W... - 7:30 & 10:35 * N.D... - 8:45 only Grada MAT. SAT.-SUN. 1:30 TWO-MINUTE WARNING 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASSANVETES TWO-MINUTE WARNING MARTIN BALSAM • BEAU BRIDGES • MARILYN HASSETT DAVID JAMSSEN • JACK KLUGMAN • WALTER PIDGEON • GENA ROWLANDS BROCK PETER • DAVID KLEIN • ANTHONY DAVIS • ONE KAPP R A wine of unusual quality "SPANISH FLY" the comedy aphrodisiac... Eve. 7:30, 9:30, Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:05 MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN IT'S A RIOT! "Splendiferously Funny." The New Yorker THE RIZZ JOHN HEYDEN INCENTIVE "It's a ball of a brawl!" -Justin Crier R Eve. 7:40, 9:30 Sat. Sun, 2:00 HILLER'S OFFICE Oroke said the crew was taking its time developing the containers and wasn't working on the project at the expense of other jobs. Be prepared to enjoy The Athlete's Foot Soon!! 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWO MINUTE WARNING CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASSAVETES TWO MINUTE WARNING MARTIN BALSAM • BEAU BRIDges • MARILYN HASSETT DAVID JANSEN • JACK KLUGMAN • WALTER PIDGEON GENA ROWLANDS BROCK PETERS • DAVID JANSEN • MARILYN HASSETT R A wine of unusual quality "SPANISH FLY" the comedy aphrodisiac ... Eve 7:30-9:18, Sat-Sun, Mar. 2, 1:55 Eve 7:30-9:18, Sat-Sun, Mar. 2, 1:55 Hillcrest TWO SIZZLER STEAK DINNERS FOR ONLY $5.29 Includes Dinner Salad, choice of Potato or French Fries, Sizzler Toast, Coffee or Regular Soft Drink ... Two Sizzler Steak Dinners — $5.29 Offer good with this coupon MON., NOV. 15 - FRI., NOV. 19 BUZZLER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE. Miller on tap Sizzler Family Steak House 1518 West 23rd St. Miller on tap TAXI SUA Indoor Recreation KU Duplicate Bridge Tournament Nov. 20, 1:00 p.m. $2.50 per person Big 8 Room—Union Top two teams will go to Cape Girardeau, Mo. for the Region XI Tournament to be held Feb. 10-12. All expenses paid. Tournament will be governed by A.C.B.L. certified director. Individual trophies to top TWO teams. Everyone welcome to participate but only students eligible for Region XI tournament. Sign up in SUA office. The University of Kansas 1976 faculty staff student Telephone Directory NOW AVAILABLE — WHILE SUPPLY LASTS 50c kansas union BOOKSTORE A LITTLE WARMER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol.87 No.61 The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas Abandoned pets face grim fate Tuesday, November 16, 1976 See story page three Jillian and Bob Countru livin' The search for an environment more conducive to living lured Richard Branham, his wife, Ruth, and their two sons from Chicago to the healthier atmosphere of the Kansas countryside. Branham, who formerly run a design agency with 25 employees, is charged for using the company website. Prof likes easy rural life By DOUGLAMBORN Their farm is northwest of Lawrence. Behind a sign on the mailbox proclaiming "A 4-H member lives here," chickens of all colors chase around the yard. A gaggle of irritated gray geese hong loudly as they mingle with the chickens. Richard Branham, chairman of KU's department of design, lives here with his family. He used to run a successful design consulting agency in Chicago. Two years ago, Branham decided he wanted a simpler life for his family, so he moved to Kansas Branham, along with his wife, Ruth, and their two sons, lives in a stone house. Behind it stands a red two-story barn. While walking out to the barn in his denim work clothes and muddy boots, he explained his reasons for leaving Chicago. "The pollution in Chicago is incredibly," be said, "It's more incredible." Branham continued, "now that I know it's incredible." Pollution was a special problem because his 6-year-old son, Eric, had asthma. His height and weight were then on the bottom of the charts. Braham said that after a year in Kansas his son had almost reached the normal size of other children his age. Branham said he also moved because he didn't enjoy the pressures and frustrations he faced. "I'd wake up at night figuring out the cash flow." Extensive travel for business purposes didn't appeal to him either, he said. "The glamour goes out pretty quickly. The last year I worked I flew 130,000 miles." last year I worked the new $10,000 unit to help improve visual education. "Even though 75 to 80 per cent of the information a person receives is visual, most people respond to text." Branham said he was concerned with putting together a program that could be taught from kindergarten all the way through to help people understand visual language. Branham said the lack of visual understanding was due to the proliferation of products loaded with imitation leather, wood and chrome. "If they really understood form they would buy their products. People are becoming less dependent on them." "They don't have what I call real experiences. They don't know how to build a fire. They don't know how to sleep outdoors." Branham said that most people buy things already made and couldn't make the difference. "IF YOU DON'T have these skills." Mrs. Barbara归纳,“you're a frustrated woman.” Although the Branhamts have learned many skills, they admit to having had their share of mistakes when they were fresh from the city. "You should've seen the first chicken we buttered," Branham said laughing. "It looks like a burger." "The first time we cleaned a chicken," his wife added, "we left the lunches in." Besides chickens and geese, the Branhams have rabbits, bees and ponies. They also raise fruit berries and honey from fruit trees they hire two roos to a wagon or a dog. "WE'VE DRIVEN to downtown Lawrence and back," Mrs. Branham said. Their only trouble during the outing was with one of the horses. "The first manble cover we came to—he tried to burn it," she said. She abruptly realized the difference between Chicago and Lawrence one day when she was driving around trying to borrow a harrow, a field implement. She saw a harrow in a yard, asked the owner about it, and the owner offered her to let her use it. "I could've died. I was amazed somebody, had that much faith in a perfect decision." Bramham described a time when he was shopping in Lawrence and carrying an "A woman opened the door for me. I was knocked. I couldn't believe it. That would have been worse." "I was in a different world. I knew then I had made the right choice." KU officials weigh effects of $21 million budget cut By BARBARA ROSEWICZ A severe cut totaling about $21 million in KU's fiscal 1978 budget has been recommended by James Bibb, state budget director. The cuts to the program to ponder its possibly crippling effects. Bibb's recommendations, received Friday, slash funds that KU requested for faculty salaries, operating expenses and capital improvement programs. Operating budget recommendations for the Lawrence and KU Medical Center campuses were $9.7 million less than the amounts approved by the Regents. Capital improvements requests were cut by almost $11 million. A 7 per cent increase in faculty salaries approved by the Regens was tapered to 3.5 per cent. KU ADMINISTRATORS will defend their budget requests Thursday in bearings before Bibb and Gov. Robert Bennett. Bennett will make his budget recommendations in January the 1977 Kansas law, which will make final appropriations. Chancellor Archie Dykes said last night that he was disappointed with the severe reductions, but that he was hopeful the governor would restore some of them. "If the cuts stand as they do," Dykes said, "we can be a stand-till year for the University." Bibb said the reductions were justifiable to keep a balance in state revenue in 1979. The necessity of reductions are a simple matter when comparing the requests with the outputs. Faculty salaries, operating expenditure funds and new and improved programs were priorities in the budget requests, Dykes said. All were severely cut. FACULTY MEMBERS would suffer a loss of buying power, Dykes said, because inflation will be greater than the 3.5 per cent salary increase. "I'm sure that would have an impact on the morale of the people in the University and probably result in a loss of some of our very best faculty and staff." Kansan posts open for spring Applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester Kansan are available in 105 Fint Hall, the Student Senate office in room 106B in the Kansas Union, and in the offices of the Office of Research. An application deadline is 5 p.m. Wednesday. Interviews will begin Friday. Applicants will be notified of the time and place of their interview. A critical new program for improvements in libraries was cut completely, he said. In the past, Dykes has been concerned with overcrowding and budget deficiencies in the KU library system. Accordingly, he has initiated a priority items in the fiscal 1978 budget. FUNDING FOR additions to Robinson concussion and Malott Hall have been cut. Drew Ellis, coach of the Eagles. and appropriations were to have been scheduled for the two projects this year. Comparable cuts at the Med Center will make it much more difficult to correct some of the problems the Med Center has had in the past several months. Dykes said, "We will be unable to correct the problems that have been so much on the public's mind without adequate resources," he said. Housekeeping, maintenance, and support services such as laundry and cafeteria services had come under public scrutiny within the past year. See BUDGET nare two ★ ★ ★ Budget cuts produce shock, little optimism By DEB MILLER and JOHN MUELLER Staff Writers After budget cuts recommended last weekend by James Bibb, state budget director, the reactions of several University officials ranged from shock to collapse. Bibb cut KU's requested operating expenditures for fiscal 1978 by about $10 million, and capital improvement requests by about $11 million. KU administrators will meet with Bibb and Gov. Robert Bennett Thursday to try to justify the requests. KU's seven per cent faculty merit salary raise request was cut in half. JOEL GOLD, presiding officer of the University Council and Senate, said he was "in a state of shock" after learning of the faculty pay raise cut. "I had no idea the cuts would be that deen," he said. Gold attacked the cuts because he said they would lower faculty morale and would cause KU to lose good professors to other states that could offer higher raises. If the university weren't restored, Gold said, faculty salaries will be outstretched by the cost of livine THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas now ranks 12th in salaries for professors and associate professors among 14 state-supported, Midwestern universities, figures from the KU Office of Institutional Research and Planning show. The average salary of KU professors is 26. Assistant professors earn an average of $15,000. Gold said he hoped Chancellor Archie Dykes could make a case before the legislature to get the cuts restored, but said that cuts made in this step of the budget process haven't in the past always been restored. KU's only capital improvement request that was approved was $1.8 million for the replacement of the building. BIBB CUT requests for Robinson Gymnasium and Malott Hall additions, and also rejected requests for renovations of the building. BIBB and Lindley, Marvin, and Green halls. Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, said that architecture students housed in Marvin Hall in downtown Denver stand up, it's really going to be a disaster." He said the architecture school might have to limit enrollment if Marvin didn't get a job. "The chancellor isn't going to like this," he said, "but if we don't get more room, we may have to limit the freshman class to 100 each year. Right now we let in 144." Marvin is the oldest unrenovated building on campus, Kahn said, and is only half as large as it should be to adequately serve the students in the School of Architecture. AN ADDED PROBLEM with space at Marvin is the expected doubling of the number of graduate students within the next year, Kahn said. "We only have 46 square feet per student. Kansas is 25 years behind the times." "We're 5,000 square feet short right now" we said. "We could be in deep trouble, we're too" well. James Ranz, dean of libraries, said that the library improvements money was to be used for books and several new staff positions. "There's no question that improvements are badly needed." he said. The future of the library improvements request is uncertain, Hanz said, but he added that it was still too early to predict how a new project would do on the final appropriation. Max Lacas, director of facilities and planning, said that he understood Bibb's concern with looking at the overall budget, but said he honeed the cuts could be restor- See REACTION page seven Propriety of program's religious teachings disputed Editor's note: This is the first of three articles on the KU integrated Humanities Program, known before this fall as the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program, and questions about religious teachings in the program. The second story will deal with an enrollment drop in the program that faculty members say was largely by two administrative decisions that stopped the program from advertising. The third will touch on some opinions students, faculty and administrators have about the program. By JERRY SEIB On a cold November night, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Anderson sat near the fireplace of their Prairie Village home and, in bitter tones, told how their son left for another country—another world, really. They told of their son, Phil, as a bright graduate of Shawnee Mission E High School, a student who had been associate editor of the high school newspaper, cofounder of a literary magazine and a They told his coming to the University of Kansas in fall 1971, hoping to get a degree in English or the classics. He enrolled in the then-new Integrated Humanities Program (HPF), which to the parents sounded like a good way to study great books. THEY TOLD OF his soon converting from Unitarianism to Catholicism, and of his dropping out of school after two years—and the maximum four semesters in the IHP—to enlist in the Marines. They said he later told them he enlisted to become financially independent. Classics program outline ★ ★ ★ The Integrated Humanities Program (IHP) is, according to the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences catalog, a freshman-sophomore program "devoted to an introductory study of great philosophical, historical and literary books of Western civilization from Homer to Dostoevski." Phil's parents told of how their son was released before scheduled from the Marines in August 1975, after writing to Marine authorities telling them he planned to re-enroll at KU. The program was begun on an experimental basis in the 1970-71 school year. It began full scale operation the next year as the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program. It was operated with Pearson College of the now defunct colleges-within-the-College. Program headquarters were moved from Joseph R. Pearson College to Peabody University, and the Pearson portion of the name was dropped. period and the fourth on the modern age. Completion of the first two semesters satisfies the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences distribution requirement in the humanities, and the program can satisfy various other requirements in other schools and departments. Thee are four semesters of work in the complete program. In each semester, students take a single six credit hour course on some segment of the work, two on the second on the Romans, the third on the medieval The program has always had several distinctive characteristics. Students don't take notes, and they don't ask questions of their instructors in lectures, but do work on implementing programs as trips abroad, stargazing. Three professors have been the program's only faculty members. They are Dennis Quinn, professor of English, John Senior, professor of classes; and Franklyn Nelick, professor of English. And, from the beginning, it has been controversial. Its opponents have called it oppressive and one-dimensional, while its backers—including Russell Kirk, a National Review columnist—have called it a "lively innovation" in teaching the classics. They told of their son's never re-enrolling when they returned from the Marines but, instead, going to France to become an observer at Fontbombaunt, a Catholic monastery in which monks are trained. THEY TOLD OF their son returning home in June 1976, again with intentions of re-enrolling at KU. Only this time, they said, he made a trip to the KU campus just before summer school started and the next day, left again for Fontgombault. This time, he wasn't going as an observer but as a novitate in the monastery, studying for the cloistered life of a monk. It is a life that Phil will make his own if he completes the required five years of study, a life "We believe, however, that if the allegations are true, that what is of issue is not academic freedom but separation of church and state." -Herman Goldstein, executive director of the Kansas City, Mo., Jewish Community Relations that could stop him from seeing his family after he becomes a monk. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson don't tell their son's story from memory. They tell it by paging through a notebook of plastic-covered photocopies of letters from their son and correspondence with KU students concerning their son. It is a notebook Mr. Anderson assembled after his son went to the monastery. THE ORIGINAL copies of the letters are in a family bank box. They are kept there so they can be used as evidence if the Andersons decide to sue KUF teaching religion in a state classroom in the HUP. The Andersons also have a file cabinet filled with notes and a notebook with names, addresses and phone numbers of students, parents and officials involved with the IHP. Using these contacts and their son's letters, they assert that seven of the 70 residents of Fontbault, the French monastery, are former IHP students. They say that 12 members of their son's IHP class converted to Catholicism and that, during the program's semester abroad in Ireland this spring, eight students were baptized and 10 confirmed. ONE OF THE Andersons' letters was sent them by Phil in April 1976. The letter says that about 40 IHP students and a professor, who were on the French side of the war, went to Fontenoy built in France to spend several days. Included in their files is a March 1975 post card to their son from an IHP faculty member who was visiting Fontombault. The post card told of plans for Phil to go to France with another KU student to enter the monastary and said the "father at the monastery told me how good it is you are coming." It was written five months before Phil was released from the Marines. "LIKE THE ACLU, our agency is very strong," she said. "I am glad Goddeline said. "We believe, however, that if the THE ANDERSONS are one of three sets of parents who have registered complaints about the IHP with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Jewish Community Relations Bureau. The parents—one set Jewish, one Catholic and one Protestant—have complained that the humanities program influenced their sons to join the monastery. Officials of the ACLU and Jewish Community Relations Bureau say they are making inquiries about the humanities program. They say they are interested in learning more about diversity but also say that a court case is a possibility. Herman Goldstine, executive director of the Kansas City, Mo., Jewish Community Relations Bureau, said the parents made their complaints in early August. He has met with three sets of parents and corresponded with a fourth set of parents concerned about the IHP. allegations are true. That what is of issue is not academic freedom but separation of church and Representatives of the ACLU and Jewish Community Bureau visited KU in early October and met with Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; Ron Calgaird, vice chancellor for academic affairs; Robert Cobb dean of the College of Arts; Michael Davis, and Mike Davis, University general counsel. The representatives also requested to meet with IPF faculty members, but the faculty members "refused." "We talk about religion when religion is relevant to the books we teach. Religion is a factor in many books in the humanities." Dennis Quinn, professor of English and director of the IHP, confirmed that he refused to meet with —Dennis Quinn, director of Integrated Humanities Program. ACLU or Jewish Community Relations Bureau that had always been willing to talk with parents. "ONE OF THE reasons I would not talk to them (the representatives) is that I don't want to be put in the position of maintaining my innocence," Quinn said. "It's like calling someone and saying, 'Hey, I hear you a homosexual.' Well, the proper way to respond is to say nothing." Quinn said he was reluctant to discuss the private lives of his students, and he chastised those he said were willing to make a public issue of private decisions. "I feel toward my students as doctors feel toward their patients and as lawyers ought to feel toward their clients," he said. "I really do respect their privacy." See HUMANITIES page six 2 Tuesday. November 16. 1976 University Dally Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press Beirut welcomes Surians BEIIRUT-Syrian tanks and troops silenced the gun of Beretu yesterday in a massive occupation that handed Lebanon its first real chance for peace in 1989. Joyful Moslem slaughtered sheep in a traditional Arab gesture of welcome. Women sent up incense of joy and loved Syrian soldiers with rose water and rice as a symbol of their reunion. The welcome was subdued in Christian quarters, where rightful militiamen ordered civilians to stay off the streets. Christian leaders seemed to feel more strongly the sting of Beirut's first foreign occupation since U.S. Marines landed to stop a war in 1958. Only a few instances of resistance were reported as the 6,000 troops and 400 tanks took over, all in Moslem and Palestinian-controlled areas. Earthauake iolts Pekina TOKYO—A strong earthquake grinded Peking yesterday, raising high-rise buildings, driving grim memories of the killer quake four months ago, Foreigners based in the Chinese capital, reached by telephone from Hong Kong, said there had been "no visible damage," and there were no immediate reports of Earthquake monitoring stations around the world said the quake measured between 6.5 and 6.8 on the Richter scale. That would indicate a quake capable of extensive damage, but considerably weaker than the massive earthquake in northeast China last July 28. Postal surplus surprisina WASHINGTON—The U.S. Postal Service turned in a $15 million surplus between July and September, a performance that officials said may forestall a bank run. The announcement came as a surprise because of the deficits in every quarter since 1972. At one time, the Postal Service project a defect of $428 million for the latest quarter. Only last month, it announced a record $1.2 billion deficit for the fiscal year. Postmaster Gen. Benjamin Ballar indicated that the financial improvement may result in a delay in the next request for higher postal rates. Vietnam's U.N. application blocked by American veto UNTED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)-The United States vetooed Vietnam's application for United Nations membership last night in the Security Council. However, the negative vote by the United States, one of the five veto-holding permanent members of the council, killed the resolution. The council voted 14-1 in favor of a resolution recommending that the General Assembly admit Vietnam to the United Nations. The Security Council's recommendation is required for the assembly to act on a membership application. U. S. Ambassador to the U.W. William Scranton, explaining the latest veto, said It was the fifth time in slightly more than 14 months that the United States vetoed Vietnamese applications for membership. The countries' occasions, on separate applications for membership by North and South Vietnam before the Southeast Asian nation was Vietnam wasn't qualified for U.N. membership because its failure to account for some 800 Americans still missing in action was ignored, and showed it lacked a "humanitarian" attitude. North Vietnamese troops and Viet Cong guerrillas forced the U.S.-backed South Vietnamese government to surrender in April 1975. Both the "Provisional" *South Vietnamese government and North Vietnam applied for U.N. membership in August and September 1975, when they were formally united in February 1976. From page one Budget slashed Vietnam's membership request was sponsored by 10 of the 15 council members—the Soviet Union, China, Rumainia, France, Germany, Pakistan, India, Libya and Tanzania. In the Lawrence campus budget, Bibb recommended: The other four permanent members of the council, who hold veto power along with the United States, voted for the application. United are Russia, China, Britain and France. *Only 25.3 of 33.9 new classified employee positions requested to staff new buildings -$43,835,625 for other operating expenses, a 24 per cent reduction in the £39,780. -$2,721,904 for utilities, a 25 per cent reduction in the request of $3,140,952 for construction. —The total cost of $1.8 million for the new computer center, the only capital investment required, would be about $175 million. Bibb said the computer center was the only capital improvement on the Lawrence campus approved because the project had already been started. Other projects had already been made in past years, he said, but there had been no money would be available for construction. Funds for capital improvements were also deleted for renovation of Lindley and Marvin halls, restoration of Spooner and new curtains for Hoch Auditorium. IN THE MED CENTER budget, Bibb cut: - 32.9 per cent of a $2.1 million request in operating expenditures, leaving $1,389,289 approved. --strongest signal yet that the economy may be faltering. -41.9 per cent of a $3.4 million utility request, for an approved $1,989,928. All increases over the base increase in the Family Practice and Outreach program. -44.5 million for new and improved academic and patient care programs. All increases in new and improved hospital programs. - capital improvement funds for projects including a new library, remodeling of Wahli Hall, the library building and family practice clinic that was to be established in Western Kansas, and purified water. Dykes said most new KU programs were cut completely because it was easier to eliminate programs that hadn't been run to eliminate those already in operation. MORE THAN $1 million for new and improved programs at the Wichita branch Dykes said that the other Regents schools had also received their budget recommendations and that he thought all had fared about the same as KU. PLAINS, Ga. (AP)—President-elect Jimmy Carter yesterday that tax rebates and increased government spending might be needed to spur the nation's economy. He also discounted the likelihood of wage and price controls. Carter said at a news conference that he thought that unemployment could be reduced to between 4 and 4.5 per cent over a long period of time, which would be applied to older adults who少 than 20 in the jobless ranks. He said this would take two to four years. The President-elect also repeated his belief that inflation could be held down by applying federal programs to areas of need, and then through a uniform national program. CARTER SAID HE couldn't yet be specific on details of his plans to decrease unemployment or the possibility that he would incur general tax reduction or one-time tax rebate. Unemployment is now 7.9 per cent. But he said that his possibilities for increasing the money supply included "tax increases." Industrial production down Carter considers programs to spur economy The industrial production indicator historically marks the onset and end of recessions, although short-term ad-hoc events aren't necessarily infallible indicators. WASHINGTON (AP)—The nation's industrial output has declined for two consecutive months, the Federal Reserve Board said yesterday marking the first drop in the key indicator since the start of the economic recovery in April 1975. The Federal Reserve said output dropped half of one per cent in October, and it revised the September figure, which had originally declined, to show a one-fifth of one per cent decline. The industrial production figures were clouded somewhat by the effects of strikes, and the numbers were low. The industrial sector, which includes the nation's mines, factories and utilities, generates about one-third of the jobs. REMINDER: The KU Backgammon Club meets every day, at 7 p.m. in the Oread Golf Course in Kansas before 7:00 to play in the tournament BRING YOUR BOARDS $2.50 per person Big 8 Room—Union Top two teams will go to Capo Girardeau, Mo. for the Region XI Tournament to be held Feb. 10-12. All expenses paid. Class buttons available at the door. For all class dues payers, buttons allow you free admittance to all future class functions. Mugs are still available at the class office for $1.00 in 113B, Union. at the HARBOUR 1031 Mass. SOPHOMORES TGIF Friday, November 19th How to cope with: He noted that he has planned to meet soon with leading members of Congress and business and labor leaders to discuss jobs and taxes among other subjects. *the emotional challenges 2:30—6:00 All YOU CAN DRINK And he warned against speculation, saying that he would remain tight-mouthed and that "no one on my staff or in my family is authorized to speak for me." TICKETS Cost: $20.00 per person point on any one of the appointments," Carter said. Saturday, November 20, 1976 9:00 a.m.—12:00 noon THE WOMAN ALONE KU Duplicate Bridge Tournament Nov.20,1:00 p.m. "FLYING SOLO" . . . a workshop for *the practical challenges (credit, taxes, self- defense, educational opportunities, etc.)* Phone: 864-4794 Sponsored by the Adult Life Resource Center, Division of Continuing Education, University of Kansas CALLING FOR HELP a play by Peter Handke art by MA Big Eight Room Union 12:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. Wed., Nov. 17 translated by Michael Roloff SUA FEDERAL RESERVE Chairman Burns has said he doesn't intend to resign his key monetary post and Carter said he believed he would be able to work harmoniously with Tournament will be governed by A.C.B.L. certified director Individual trophies to top TWO teams. Everyone welcome to participate but only students eligible for Region XI tournament. Sign up in SUA office. Carter also announced that Jody Powell, his press secretary while he was governor of Georgia and during his presidential design, would be the White House press secretary. SUA Indoor Recreation Carter, at his second news conference since his election, announced that he would fly to Washington next week to meet with Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns and the governor of California cabinets members, possibly including Secretary of State Hew Kissinger. He said those who weren't selected for cabinet rank might well be in line for other top government posts, including ambassadorsbins. But he also said that he intended to seek a related monetary policy. SUA CARTER SAID his selection of cabinet members and other top government officials would be a deliberate process in his investigation into interview contenders for each position. "I have not made a decision up to this ATTENTION: Pre-Dental Students FORUM — PURSUIT OF A DENTAL CAREER Carter said he saw no incompatibility between the goals of lowering unemployment and pursuing success; he pursued the promises I have made to the American people." DR. BERNARD BUTTERWORTH — Faculty member, Acting Dean of Admissions, UMKC School of Dentistry DR. HENRY MUSSELMAN — Former Dean of Admissions, UMKC School of Dentistry DR. ANTON VIERTHALER — Faculty member, Dept. of Comprehensive Dentistry, UMKC School of Dentistry DR. ROBERT C. LEE — Outstanding Dentist in greater K.C. DEAN ROBERT ADAMS — Assoc. Dean, LA&S, Pre Med-Pre Dental Advisor — KU Thursday, November 18, 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room of Student Union This organization partially funded from Student Activity Fee DISCO DANCE Sat., Nov. 20 8:00 p.m.-1:00 a.m. $1.75 Union Ballroom-Kansas Union Sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas Beer will be sold with an I.D. No alcoholic beverages may be brought in. Crewel Cupboard Quick N' Easy Needlepoint ornaments—18 different designs All Christmas items 10% off 'til Thanksgiving 841-2345 15 E. 8th The New Yorker THE RITZ...your key to entertainment. "It's ball of a brawl! -Judith Crist R Live 7:40, 9:30 Sat. Sunday, 2:00 The Millercraft PARKLAND STREET MUSEUM MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN A thriller R DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLIVIER ROY SCHEIDER Every Evening 7:30, 9:45 Saturday, Sunday 2:30 Varsity IT'S A RIOT! "Splendiferously Funny." The New Yorker THE IRITZ Your Key to Hailworth "It's a ball of a brawl!" -Judith Creat R Eve. 7:40, 9:30 Sat.Sun, 2:00 MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN A thriller R DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLIVIER ROY SCHEIDER Every Evening 7:30, 9:45 Saturday, Sunday 2:30 Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs WALT DISNEY'S FIRST FULL LENGTH ANIMATED FEATURE! EVENINGS W.W. - 7:30, 8:10, 10:45 *N.D.* - 8:45 only Panorama MAT. SAT., SUN. 1:30 PLUS "No Deposit, No Return" TWO-MINUTE WARNING 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper. CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASANAVETES TWO-MINUTE WARNING MARTIN BALSAM • BEAU BRIDGES • MARILYN HASSETT DAVID JANSSEN • JACK KLUGMAN • WALTER PIDGEON GENA ROWLANDS BROCK PETER'S • DAVID BIGHAM • ANTHONY DAVIES • JUDE KAPP R A wine of unusual quality "SPANISH FLY" the comedy aphrodiasic... Eve. 7:30, 9:30, Sat.Sun, Mat. 1:05 Hillcrest MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN MARATHON MAN Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs' WALT DISNEY'S FIRST FULL LENGTH ANIMATED FEATURE! EVENINGS N.W. - 7:30 P.M. & 10:15 P.M. Grandad MAT. SAT.-SUN. 1:30 Cit City co parking fraternity Developm of the cit The pa-missioner distance to Delta Delta Tier fraternity past. To second base have to have a to The frcity neve back on a parking compens removal. Firem restrictive able to fi spaces a break ou Po to COMMI fraternity Louisiana said it i provide p In other decide wi city's Al would all "Womens single w Saturd of the Di The on center, Avenue. From 9 on the en- women, I to 4:30, preventive law, mo- education Elizabed yesterday was to go is divorc married-depender "The society woman." A wine R Hillcrest Many Tuesday, November 16, 1976 3 City to review parking and PUD Staff Writer By JOHN MUELLER City commissioners will act tonight on parking for two University of Kansas Planned Unit Development (PUD) region for residents of the city's Alvamar area. The parking action will center on commissioners' earlier approval of an ordinance to remove 24 parking spaces from Phi Delta Theta and Phi Delta Delta fraternity members have parked in the past. Tighten's meeting will have the second reading of the ordinance and is the result of a committee of commissioners will have to argue their case. The fraternity members have said the city never told them of its decision to go back on an earlier promise to give them 30 parking spaces on Louisiana Street as compensation for the Edgehill Road removal. COMMISSIONERS have agreed that fraternity members weren't notified of the Louisiana Street change, but they also have a responsibility to provide stability to provide parking for fraternites. Firemen urged the Edgehill Road restrictions, saying that they wouldn't be able to fit one of their large trucks into the area of the Edgehill curb should a fire break out. In other business, commissioners will decide whether to grant developers of the city's Alvamar area a PUD revision that would allow them to build 14 single-family dwellings by the Alvamar golf course, 15th and 23rd streets, west of Kirkwood Drive. Commissioners voted 3-2 at their last meeting to allow the revision. However, opponents of the revision, led by Sam Dixon, 2002 Camellback Drive, have collected protest signatures from Alvaram residents in a population 40 per cent of the PUD area population. LAWRENCE'S PUD ORDinance provides that PUD revisions protested by 40 per cent of a unit's residents must be ratified 4-1 by commissioners. Commissioners will have to reconsider the issue and also decide the validity of Dixon's protest petitions. Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, said yesterday that city officials would have a report ready by tonight that would rule on the petitions' validity. Some people who signed petitions last week did so by notorized telegram, he said, so the city attorney and the signers had the power of attorney to represent the people for whom they signed. ANOTHER ISSUE in the Alvamar revision is one of credibility. Dixon said Sunday that Alvamar, Inc., the area's developer, had "committed a small-scale Watergate" by promising prospective homeowners in Alvamar that they would have an unobstructed view of the golf course. The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission, which unanimously recommended the PUD revision, has said the governor's residence in Avanmar residents' view of the golf course. Potential of single women to be discussed Saturday The one-day workshop at the resource center, Amex A, 13th street and Oread Avenue, Brooklyn, NY. (Phone: 212-589-6470.) From 9 a.m. to noon, discussion will focus on the emotional challenges faced by single women. In the afternoon session, from 1:30 to 1:40, speakers will discuss rape victim support and then the law, money management and the educational opportunities for single women. "Woman Alone," a workshop dealing with single women in society, will be sponsored Saturday by the Adult Life Resource Center of the Division of Continuing Education. Elizabeth Babocb, workshop leader, said yesterday that one purpose of the workshop was to get the single woman—whether she is divorced, widowed, separated or unmarried—to see herself as a full and independent person. The structure of pairs for people in society can be traumatic to the single woman. Many women are choosing the single life "The whole woman sees her relationship with a man as an addition to her life, not as a threat to her identity." to express their freedom and autonomy, she said. The workshop costs $20 and is open to everyone. Interested persons should contact Babcock at the resource center. A past development brochure for prospective Alvamar homeowners, published by McGrew Real Estate and Insurance, Inc., Lawrence, says that each Alvamar宅 house "will have a magnificent vista: . . . from any direction, the beautiful fairways, manicured greens, and sparkling lakes of Alvamar Hills Golf Course." JOhn MCGREW, whose firm published the brochure, said Sunday that it didn't constitute promise to Alvamar residents of an unobstructed view. "That brochure was made 10 years ago and depicts a very large area." McGrew said of the image. McGrew also said he doubted whether Alvaram residents really adopted the PUD revision, because "three or four people may have made this their cause. In the long run, the residents may think they've made a terrible mistake." A survey of Alvamar residents taken by Dixon last summer indicated that 54 per cent of the residents opposed making any changes to the building favored building single-family houses. COMMISSIONERS also will consider an ordinance authorizing the city to buy property and construct buildings for leasing to Packer Plastics, a factory in northwest Lawrence that wants to expand its warehouse space. The ordinance would issue to issuers $75,000 in industrial revenue bonds to finance Packer's expansion. Two agenda items concern rezoning law by Kasold Drive from an RS-1 to an RS-2 classification. The changes affect 145 acres north of 31st Street and east of Kasold Drive, and 29 acres at the northwest corner of Kasold Drive and Trail Road. WLDGEN SAID the change to RS-2 zoning would keep the affected areas residentially zoned, but would allow a greater population density in the area. Commissioners will consider a site plan for Carpet World, 2851 Iowa St., and will use on a site for a motorcycle agency by the late 1970s its items center on recommendations from the Traffic Safety Commission to deny traffic control at 15th Street and Kasdol Drive, and to reduce parts of 17th and 18th streets between Alabama and Louisiana streets. CORRECTION!!! The correct dates for Peace Crops Interviews are: Tuesday, Nov. 16 . . Liberal Arts & Science Wednesday, Nov. 17 . . Education Thursday, Nov. 18 . . Engineering Thursday, Nov. 18 . . Busin~ McDonald's Fans' Favorite Football Facts Game. It's almost as much fun to play as it is to win. If you think you know a lot about football, we're going to give you a chance to taste it and be tempted to win a free large fries Every time you buy a *Quarter Pounder* or a Quarter Pounder with Cheese between Nov. 5 and Nov. 28, you give you a Football Facts Run and Win Game card. You can use the card to challenge your football LQ!. First, rub off the silver area covering the question. Then select the answer you think is correct and rub off the silver oval next to that answer. It the letters "TD" appear under the silver oval, you win! Come into participating McDonald's to tour complete details and play our Fans' Favorite篮球 facts Game. And see if you really do know as much about football as you think you do "Say, do you remember who lost the Super Bowl in 1973?" University Daily Kansan We do it all for you. McDonald's 901 W.23rd St. Mister Guy's of Lawrence 10th Anniversary Sale 10th 100% luxurious lambswool cabled — crewneck Sweaters reg. $25 Now $1350 Another Group of lambswool crewneck Sweaters reg. $1900 Now $1290 A-smile pleated Denim Jeans reg. $1850 Now $1290 Our own Roughrider Khaki Hiking Pants reg. $1850 Now $1290 Long Sleeve Knit Shirts in solid and stripes reg. $1750 Now $12^{90} 1 large selection of 3 piece Suits in the classics, tweeds, chalk stripes & solids all this season's favorites! Values to $165^{00} Now $125^{00} Come by and celebrate Mister Guy's birthday and pick up on the savings just in time for the holiday season. Open Thurs. night till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 Mass. 4 Tuesday, November 16. 1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. Jury update needed In 12th-century England, Henry II ordered the citizens of the land to periodically assemble in their home communities to tell the crown all they knew of any crimes committed in their vicinity. As the population grew, it became unlikely that citizens would have personal knowledge of many crimes, and the order became unworkable. HOWEVER, that 12th-century proclamation gradually evolved into a legal institution that is very much alive today, even though its critics sometimes oppose it in the medieval system of justice in many ways. That institution is the grand jury. To some it's an anomaly in our legal system which should be either totally done away with or drastically reformed. To others, it's an integral and effective part of the judicial system which should be strengthened. There's no question that grand juries have imposing powers that other law enforcement agencies lack and that there is great potential for the abuse of those powers. Although the juries are convened only to determine whether there is probable cause to bring a person or case to court and not to hold a court or approve the right powers of grand juries can be used in subtle ways to inhibit and abuse the rights of individual citizens and whole societies. GRAND JURIES usually operate in total secrecy and have unlimited subpoena powers. Witnesses called before them cannot be accompanied by legal counsel, and only the prosecution's side of the case can be presented. Witnesses can invoke the Fifth Amendment, but a judge can decide that, in this case, the claim has no merit and force the witness to testify. If the witness doesn't, he can be charged with contempt and jailed for as long as the grand jury is convened. If another grand jury pursues the same case and calls the same witness, the witness can again be jailed for contempt. Holding these and other powers, grand juries have uncovered government corruption, exposed organized crime and brought many criminals to trial who couldn't have been prosecuted. He was a grand jury, for example, that was responsible to a great degree for ousting Richard Nixon from the presidency. However, there have also been many instances when grand juries worked on cases. During the '60s protest era, for instance, many federal prosecutors used the power of the grand jury to gather evidence of the crimes of President Johnson and Nixon. PERSONS EVEN remotely connected to protest groups or activities were often hauled before federal grand juries and subjected to intensive abusive questioning. Witnesses who weren't even suspected of crimes were asked to give details of as much as a year of their lives, telling the juries who their friends were, what meetings they attended and so on. Some grand juries, at the prodding of zealous federal prosecutors, were responsible for bringing to trial such defendants as the Daniel Berrigan case. Clearly, these grand juries inhibited constitutionally protected freedoms of expression by using intimidation. This also led to the clear abuse of the grand juries' powers. Thomas Jefferson feared in 1791 that grand juries would be transformed from In the '60s his fears proved correct. The danger is heightened by the fact that grand jury proceedings are secret that largely unnoticed by the general public. DENIED their potential for political abuse, grand juries also pose a threat to citizens who come before them on the local level. Local prosecutors can abuse their powers as readily as federal prosecutors or officers should be remembered that less than 3 per cent of all grand jury disagree with the prosecutor in cases presented before them. Several bills before committee in Congress indicate a move toward correcting the grand jury system's flaws without making it powerless. Among the long-needed reforms proposed are the establishment of the witness's right to legal counsel in the grand jury room; requirement that witnesses be told whether they are targets of the investigation; abolition of the testimony requirement; and a limitation for jail sentence lengths for contempt; and mandatory presentation of grand jury transcripts to witnesses and counsel. These reforms would make grand juries less susceptible to abuse and more just, and a centuries-old institution would be brought up to date. By John Fuller Contributing Writer YOU CAN'T STOP ME, GOVERNOR! IT'S TOO LATE! GARY MARK GILMORE OFF ON DEATH PENALTY Department, not profs, profits To the Editor: The Nov. 9, Kansan article by Stefra Frazier concerning textbook royalties makes reference to a physics manual. To many, any possible misapprehensions, we offer the following information, which Mr. Frrazier could have obtained from any one of the five universities (or two) student no longer at KU.) The manuals are printed by the University Printing Service and sold only at the Union Bookstore. Any proceeds above the costs of production and the fees of the university physics department. This helps to pay for supplies used in the instructional laboratory None of the authors has received any personal payment from this manual. Furthermore, the student saves I was gladdened to see the evangelists on campus Wed- day. They were all believers in the same Lord Jesus they proclaimed as Prince of program and to prepare free handouts and revised experiments. (There are no lab in ees (in physics lab courses.) Plains Baptist Church and his power will continue to be limited to only one vote. The fact that Jimmy Carter is a member of the Plains can in no way support the ideas suggested by Carter has a personal aversion Readers Respond Congress self-serving The press and the American people continue to ignore the country's greatest problem—the U.S. Congress. Time and Newsweek put Jimmy Carter on their covers last week and ran large stories on what Carter hopes to do as President CARTER MIGHT be able to change the structure of the executive branch a bit, and the lack of vetos will let Congress pour more billions into the same social programs that it has already built on bureaucracies for decades. But real change won't happen. What no one seems to be willing to say is that what Carter doesn't make much difference if Congress stays in the federal budget. Congress, and especially the House of Representatives, is rotten to the core. Senators and representatives don't act in the public interests. They act so their special interests will bear and so they will be reelected. In a previous column I noted that powerful committee chairmen are still selected essentially by seniority. This puts the oldest, safest, least flexible men in places of great power. I HAVE also noted that almost all significant bills are delayed or lost completely by political bickering among chairmen about whose committee is to handle an issue. The failure to select a selection of chairmen and the jurisdiction of committees. To put it mildly, it is discouraging to see the voters mindlessly reig big Democratic majorities to Congress, almost assuring that reform won't come. It is a great paradox that the American public consistently rates Congress at the bottom of all institutions in polls, but just as consistently reelected the same bunglings. Unfortunately, the same men who are bunglers when it comes to serving the nation are often quite good at the game of election. Jackson, D-Wash., who had the largest percentage of the vote of any sitter up for reelection, is a prime example. The amendment was designed to pressure the soviets to allow more Jews to leave the Soviet Union. In the year following the amendment the number of emigrating Jews fell from 33,500 to 12,000. ASIDE FROM rattling an occasional saber and getting defense contracts for his state, Sen. Jackson hasn't done much. His big triumph was showing through an amendment to a trade bill in December 1974. Sen. Jackson had blown it big, but the Jewish voters embraced him just the same. Scoop is great at getting the headlines, as are many politicians, but his results are quite AN EXAMPLE of dozens of miniature Scoop Jacksons working together can be found in the House's treatment of the energy problem. After the Arab oil embargo, Republicans proposed letting the price of domestic oil and gas rise so oil companies would have more incentives to find energy supplies. money because the $2 price at the bookstore is less than the $6 charged for a commercially designed textbook that is desirable for the University to adopt some uniform policy on royalties derived from faculty textbooks to merit full public confidence in its operations. The Democrats opposed that, saying it would raise prices. Almost a year later they finally came up with a plan. The Democrats decided to have a high gasoline tax to disproportionate the compulsion. A great way to keep energy prices down, right? Congressmen are now able to change their speeches in Congress before they are printed in the Congressional Record. Also, Congressmen can change their votes without their original votes being recorded. That is, if a vote will be approved by a majority of the members with his party and, then, if his vote isn't needed for the motion, he can change it to please his constituents. That plan wasn't passed, however, because some Democrats in Congress didn't like it. They were afraid to face the voters after raising prices. But eventually the original idea can be used to let domestic energy price rise was approved. THE DEMOCRATS had delayed this step 30 months. Moreover, the Democrats' decontrol bill didn't let the prices rise until now—after the election. This showed they would have a real discussion about lessening our dependence on Arab oil. THE PEOPLE should demand that Congressmen's remarks be printed as they were spoken and that all votes and vote changes be recorded. Without these changes it will remain difficult to really assess someone's record. What is to be done? The press must keep a very good eye on Congress. Carter must demand legislative reform, and the press and the people must back his demands. The senators who have opposed the "decentless" jurdisitions must be changed to avoid overlapping. All branches of government are important, but Congress is the most powerful in peacetime. It has received too little attention from the press and the media. It is time demand be raised. And it should force the nation's vital problems go unattended any longer. By Greg Hack Contributing Writer Glen McGonigle Lab supervisor, Physics and Astronomy Robert J. Friauf Professor of Physics and Astronomy Richard Sapp Professor of Physics and Astronomy Mideast analysis To the Editor: After more than 18 months of bloody civil war, after more than 20 failed attacks after more than 50 failed agreements, it seems as if everybody has forgotten the most problem: the Palestinians. The Riyadh Arab Summit at the end of October agreed to a new 30,000 man (20,000 of them are foreigners) peace-keeping force to control the "peace" achieved in Lebanon, and to enforce a 1969 Cairo accord that constricts Islamic movements within Lebanon. Now that the formerly most civilized, developed and peaceful Arab state—Lebanon is almost devastated, the Arab powers are sup- pleased. The Lebanese Palestinians to weaken them and maybe eliminate the "thorn." Instead of trying to solve the real problem in the summit, instead of doing something constructive with all the money they have, instead of getting the Palestinians out of the refugee camp, instead of freezing the problem hoping they can unite around it. In my opinion it is time to solve the problem. Raphael Goldman Tel Aviv junior Free speech tested To the Editor: It's an American treat to have freedom of speech. Not many places are left on the globe where a pair of travelers can come and proclaim their message. In the '60s, Sproul met the Berkeley campus because he was a student of dissidents, the leftists and the rightists. Everyone got (and is still getting) his shot at people's Peace, and second to see the test of the First Amendment. Bob Mendelsohn 2647 Arkansas We at KU have had our preachers, although most communication is done by way of writing, as this letter is in the Kansan, or by pamphlets distributed around campus. But to hear man preach isn't only a historical event (reminiscent of Wesley or Finney), but also a mission, an election, would they take such abuse and ridicule? What motivates them?" B52 use supported To the Editor: I would like to know in what capacity Mr. Kinney (Letter, Kansan, Nov. 10) served while in the Air Force. I would be surprised if he was a pilot or former Air Force pilot and find several of Mr. Kinney's comments inaccurate. I have never known a pilot to "crash" a multimillion dollar plane because of the disgard for the taxpayer's disregard. Mr. Kinkey should at least credit us a desire for personal survival. With a very basic look at the facts, Mr. Kinney would have discovered that the B2S is more than 20 years old and had already exceeded its projected useful life. It has already had its winger rebuilt and skin re-laced in 1980s and 1980s. The Bl isn't intended to replace the B2S, but to initially supplement the B2S forces. What do you suggest, Mr. Kinney? Do you think we ought to wait until 1985 when the B52 is totally obsolete before developing a useful replacement? Maybe we should still be using patched-up World War II aircraft. Would you like to get into MIG 23 under those conditions? Robert B. Lester Ozawkie third year law student to worshiping alongside a black person. On the contrary, his membership in this particular church is a clear indication that Carter, as most Southern churches, has a church on the basis of other characteristics of the church, such as proximity to his home, the youth, music or educational programs, the athletic program, or belonging in serving God. Or maybe he simply liked the preacher. In reference to your editorial, "The baptism of fire," which appeared in last Wednesday's Kansan, I find it necessary to form en鸣; that Jimmy Carter's affilis" in. with the Plains Bay Jail. Church has nothing to do with personal policy toward blacks. In January, Jimmy Carter will become the "executive leader of our country," yet he will still be only one member of the Carter blameless To Carl Young, contributing writer; Thus, attending this church wasn't one of the party's personal lives of Mr. Carter's personal life that, however unfortunate one aspect of it might be, being a devout cannot and should not affect. John Croman Shawnee freshman frequently sexually assaulted in the dark areas of town. This young man lived in an area many college girls passed on their way home. The area was lonely and dark at night and had many trees and bushes where Being a concern person, he being a concerned person, he took for an ear open for the sounds of a person in distress. Girls crying wolf To the Editor: I've recently come across an adaptation of one of Aesop's fables. It is my wish that you publish this new version in the book "How to believe." I am more meaningful to the women attending the University. The College Girls Who Cried "Wolf" There was once a young man who lived in a time when women of various ages were too F A cinat preva open Meet Mass Cli peop mon One evening, several frightened screams, coming from a woody area across from the cottage. He rushed into the woods only to find two college girls frolicking down the path between the trees, screaming and laughing kicking on their way home So grave was the sound of the screams to him that he continued to rush out into the woods and his vision appeared to be in distress. But again and again to his amazement, he found the screens from the woods came out and girls strolling merry home. There came a day when a college girl screamed in fright for help to evade a rapist who had been hiding in the bushes. But all in vain! The young man and his neighbors were no longer concerned with screens coming from the woods. Ma that Later that night, the raped girl, feeling sure that her screams were heard, angrily replied. "I'm a community for their blatant apathy. A wise friend repiled to her," If people would only screen in times of distress, then others would know when to Sh occu Stat bear James A. McClure Assistant Instructor Department of Human Development THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Editor Debbie Gump Published at the University of Kansas daily August 17, 2008 Subscriptions are $8 per month June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday June 14, 2008. Subscriptions by mail are $8 a semester or $18 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $8 a semester or $18 a year outside the county. Managing Editor Jim Batee Vee Abushakah Editorial Editor Jim Batee Campaign Editor Bill Brann Associate Campus Editor Steve Bilton Associate Spotlight Editors Chuck Alexander Photo Editor Jay Kovalev Staff Photographers George Milleren, Steve Schenkelt Sports Editor Steve Schenkelt Brent Anderson Associate Sports Editor Alison Gwynn Entertainment Editor Alison Gwynn Contributing Editor Carl Gong, Copy Chiefs Alison Gwynn Copy Chiefs Greek Hassan Great Hassan Make-up Editors Bald Swain, Dennis Vobler, Jay Benni Business Manager Terry Hanson Assistant Business Manager - Carole Roosterboot Associate Advertising Manager - Jair Clemente Associate Advertising Manager - Sarah McAnnah Custodian Manager Advertising Manager - Sarah McAnnah Advertising Manager - Katie Tung Advertising Manager - Qiheen News Advisor Publisher Business Advisor Bob Giles David Dary Mel Adams d in this area on on on had were con- nect of a bring from arm. rm. to bring away the the the the d to his the the name like唱 n a right night man no nams fried that that attent d to lonely access, in to e ment Tuesday, November 16, 1976 Flu shots available soon 5 By MARY RINTOUL Staff Writer While students at the University of Kansas wait for swine flu clinics to open at Watkins Memorial Hospital before they can get their shots, people 45 or older or who have chronic illnesses can receive the vaccination today. A clinic that gives both swine flu vaccinations and shots for other diseases prevalent among certain age groups will be open 2:30 to 6 p.m. in the Community Meeting Room at Babcock Place, 1700 Massachusetts St. Clinics that give only swine flu shots for people 18 through 49 will be open later this month. Pliscs at Watkins will be open to 7:30 pm. Nov. 18, 19 and 22, and 1 to p.m. Nov. 19. Martha Bass, Parsons freshman, said that she won't be getting a swine flu shot. "I don't think the swine flu vaccination has been proven enough." Bass said. She said that the several deaths that occurred recently throughout the United States after swine flu vaccinations had no bearing on her decision. BIRCE MCHENRY, Topeka sophomore, also said that he wasn't going to get a fui "I'm healthy and don't need the shot but I wouldn't be scared of getting one," Mum said. "I plan on getting a shot but I haven't gotten one yet and haven't really thought that much about it. It doesn't scare me if I have one or not." Proskada said. One student, Ed Prohaska, Atchison sophomore, he didn't really care how she did it. He said he However, Bud Hamilton, Overland Park saint, said he wanted to make sure that he was given a job. Hamilton lives in a fraternity and said he thought there was more chance of contracting flu in a fraternity. He said he wants to want to take that chance, by not getting it. "I'm going to get one for the precautions and because everybody else is getting them. I don't want to take the chance of getting laid." Scott Norris, Salina趴尔. said. OTHER STUDENTS are going to get a swine flu just to be on the safe side. Mark Scott, Lawrence graduate student, said he was getting the shot as soon as the game began. 'I'm the kind of person who would come down with the swine flu so I'm getting the job.' IF A PERSON decides he wants a swine but misses the clinics at Watkins, he will have to A clinic will be open from noon to 5 p.m. at the Lawrence Community Community Center. Before a clinic that was yesterday, 6,799 persons in Douglas County had received a vaccine. from 4 to 8 p.m., Nov. 17, at the Eudora City Cemetery, 480 N. Broadway, New York, NY. United Methodist Church, 261-928-3100. Other clinics in Douglas County will be the members of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, 2000 Stewart Ave., have recently acquired a new mode of transportation, a 1932 GMC red fire engine. Fire engines are a tradition among many Pi Kappa Alpha chapters across the country, Rodney Breeden, Leavenworth freshman, said yesterday. Most chapters one so that fraternity members can be recognized together on campus, Breeden said. Frat buys fire engine PI Kappa Alpha had a fire engine that members "membered in games, in battles" but didn't "be ready." RBJ He said the fire engine was purchased for $1,100 from a fire engine collector from Topeka. The chapter's Mothers Club, an organization of mothers who wish to help the fraternity, loaned the chapter most of the money, Breeden said. 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 in on Monday and Tuesday hairdress call. Call 842-8600 for appointment The Hair Suite Katie Answorth—Owner-Stylist Theima Wright—Manager-Stylist Diana Mott—Stylist Drana Morel—Stylist Beth Cole—Stylist Formerly Ramada Inn Beauty Salon Our friendly Face LOVE HAPPY BIRTHDAY 6th & Iowa Free Parking Call Now Place an ad Tell the world Call 864-4358 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 --is now delivering to Campus only. The delivery area includes All University Housing, Fraternities and Sororities, Jayhawk Towers, and Naismith Hall. SHERIFF SAM'S 24 TRAVELING DJ SERVICE ★ We'll bring our quality sound system to your party. ★ We have lots of prizes, plus all the hits. ★ Call 841-4666 to reserve your party after Jan.1, 1977. SHERIFF SAM JONES 7th and Mass. Downstairs at the Eldridge To Give The Students FASTER DELIVERY SERVICE THE GREEN PEPPER New Delivery Hours Mon.-Thurs. 5 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 5 p.m.-12:30 p.m. Sun. 4 p.m.-11 p.m. 544 W.23rd 842-9003 ku Let's Celebrate We've passed the 13th Week Junior-Senior Class Party KU Stables November 18, 8-12 p.m. Seniors must wear T-Skirts. All the beer you can drink for 50c Juniors will receive class cards. Come meet Prof. Peter Turk, HOPE Award Winner Sponsored by BOCO CALCULATOR SALE Were Now HP70 $165.00 $99.95 HP65 $795.00 $349.95 HP35 $195.00 $95.00 Casio FX10 $99.95 $39.95 Application Books for HP35, HP45 $10.00 $6.50 Rockwell $99.95 $49.95 While Supply Lasts! kansas union BOOKSTORE 6 Tuesday, November 16. 1976 University Daily Kansan Owners' fault that pets must die 100 YEARS AGO Staff photo By VIC FLEMING Staff Writer a rooppy-cyed boarder at the Charles Tse Memorial Animal Shelter takes a good look at the mackerel - Helen Melton. Melton has been at the shelter for 17 years and sole caretaker. Animal lover The three kittens climbed the bars on their cage, alternately batting and cuddling the finger that wiggled through the bars at times. It might be put to death by the week's end. Killing animals is something Helen Melton doesn't like to do, but it's part of her job as the manager of the Human Society's memorial to the Memorial Animal Shelter, 186 E. 9th St. "I wish the public could do this job for a month," she said recently. "Then they would quit calling me a killer. They need to have their nubs rubbed in it." DESTROYING UNWANTED cats and dogs is Melton's part in curbing Lawrence's share of the national cat and dog population explosion. More than 200 dogs and 80 cats passed through the shelter last month. More than half were killed. The remainder were "adopted" or reclaimed by owners. Melton said she blamed irresponsible pet owners for the excess pet population. Surgical spaying and neutering of pets would help solve the problem, she said. "I wish the people who breed these animals had to not them." she said. **ANIMALS** ARE disposed of by a "Euthanian" device, which acts as a vacuum chamber and suffocates the animal placed inside it. Death is supposed Operation of the "Euthannair" isn't something Melton looks forward to "If you look them in the eyes you can't do it," she said, shaking her head. "I have to do it in the morning before I'm fully awake." Some of the animals have caught her eye and now are her pet—Melton owns three baby koalas. Melton said she generally kept animals at the shelter longer than the three days required by law, hoping that someone would adopt them. "WEDEN' CHARGE for the adoption of animals," she said, "but we do charge $5 for distemper shots and require that all females be spayed." Spaying costs $20 if arranged through the Humane Society. She now operates the shelter with one full-time assistant. It was the death of a pet that first brought Molton and her husband, Vic, to the shelter WHEATWTED FOR the dog and managed a shelter with her husband until his death "We came to find a little dog just like the one that died. We were going to wait only a year. I've been waiting for 17 years now and I grew like that one has ever been brought in." Examples of the excellent care and compassion abound in the shelter and go beyond the mere care and feeding of the animals. State examiner certificates on the shelter attentive well to the job Melton has done. Word "excellent" is applied and "communicate" throughout; she liberally through the certificates. FEEDING THE animals, however, takes money. About $15,000 of the shelter's operating expenses of more than $35,000 is raised from contributions by Humane Society members and from donations by people who adopt or leave a pet. The shelter also receives about $20,000 for keeping dogs caught by Lawrence's two dog catchers. Lawrence doesn't have a dog pound. Mellon's guest book looks like the passenger list on Noah Ark. Besides dogs and cats, she has boarded guinea pigs, gerbils, white rats, monkeys, raccoons, skunks, coyotes, owls, falcons, squirrels, rabbits, chickens, hamsters, parakeets, ducks, pigeons, horses, crowns, goats and even a pig. Melton's position is simple: "We don't refuse animals." Humanities program discussed From name one By questioning methods used in the IHP, Quinn said the ACLU is threatening him. "I don't have to tell you the intimate details of how to teach," he said. "That is big responsibility." "WE TALK ABOUT religion when religion is relevant to the books we teach. Religion is a factor in many books in the humanities." Quinn said that IHP curriculum didn't reach the era of Christianity until the third bernier of the program. Before then, he studied in the University with religion consider only pagan religions. Quinn compared teaching the classes to teaching evolution. He said that a student taught evolution because the theory of evolution contradicts the creation theory, but said that a biology teacher wasn't held responsible. The biologist, Quinn said, had taught only what "No case has determined that the University can't teach the truth about religion," Quinn said. "That is an area where we feel we are protected." THERE HAVE BEEN conversions by members of the IHP, Quinn said, but it is difficult to tell whether any of those who did so because of the humanities program. "A vocation is a call from God," he said. "Nobody wants someone in the priesthood to have an angel." "We really do believe in freedom of the will. We don't believe in determinism. We would think that it would be utterly in vain to accept a position that we accept a position they see as true." Shankel said that when he and the other KU officials had met with ACLU and Jewish Community Bureau representatives, the KU officials "tried to persuade them that it would not be productive to file those law suits against the University." "WE THEM THERE are issues of academic freedom involved," Shankel said. "We feel that what faculty and students do outside class is their business." Hankel said he hadn't known that a number of HHP students had visited the monastery in France during their semester abroad this spring until parents had told them. students studying abroad to travel during their free time. Students who went to France to visit did so voluntarily and with their own money, he said. Shankel said he didn't plan to request any changes in the IHP as a result of the process. "THERE ARE ALSO several families who feel that the program is one of the greatest things they've ever come across," he said. Mark Singer, a Kansas City, Kan., attorney who is handling the IHP inquiry for the ACLU, said he wasn't sure what course the ACLU would take. He said that he was going through material presented by the parents and that he would make a summary report to the ACLU legal experts. The panel he said will determine whether a court case is justified. Singer said he had talked with other members of the ACLU about the program and said they took differing views on the questions of academic freedom and separation of church and state in the program. He described it as "a very "Academic freedom is opening somebody's mind and giving both sides of the story," Mr. Anderson said. "It's academic containment." THE ANDERSONS, meanwhile, dispute the arguments of academic freedom. The parents said their son became sulken and withdrawn during his two years at KU. They said he lost interest in music and school other than THP classes. "He stopped reading newspapers," Mr. Anderson said. "All I ever saw him read newspapers." Mrs. Anderson said, "He was very much a reader and a writer before this happened." The Andersons would like to see a change. They say a practical solution would be to add a professor "with a completely different approach" to the program to balance the teachings. "We're bitter about what happened to us." Mr. Anderson said. "They're trying to keep the waters smooth in the corporate office, and those kids should be going to KU to learn that." --- Tomorrow: enrollment drop. 1976-77 KANSAS BASKETBALL STUDENT TICKET INFORMATION SALE BEGINS NOVEMBER 17 thru NOVEMBER 19 WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY TIME: 10:00 a.m.----5:00 p.m. PLACE: ALLEN FIELD HOUSE MAIN LOBBY (EAST) Season tickets may be purchased after Friday, November 19 at the main ticket office in Allen Field House anytime prior to the first game. PROCEDURES: 3. Pay for SEASON TICKET-STUDENT-$15.00 STUDENT/SPOUSE-$15.00 (proof of marriage required to purchase) 4. Sign your student season ticket in presence of ticket seller NO REFUNDS WILL BE MADE 1. Enter the main lobby of Allen Field House (east) 2. Present current validated student I.D. PLAN NOW TO BE A PART OF THE FUN & EXCITEMENT of JAYHAWK BASKETBALL!!! SEASON TICKET IS NOT GOOD FOR SPRING SEMESTER UNLESS ACCOMPANIED BY VALIDATED SPRING I.D. AT STUDENT GATES BEGINNING WITH THE COLORADO GAME ON JANUARY 29. NOTICE 1876-1877 KANSAS BASKETBALL Nov 27 | Sat | Montana State (7.35) | Home Dec 1 | Wed | McKinney (1.35) | Home Dec 2 | Wed | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 3 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 4 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 5 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 6 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 7 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 8 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 9 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 10 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 11 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 12 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 13 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 14 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 15 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 16 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 17 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 18 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 19 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 20 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 21 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 22 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 23 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 24 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 25 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 26 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 27 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 28 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 29 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 30 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Dec 31 | Mon | Oakland Roberts (1.35) | Home Jan 2 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 3 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 4 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 5 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 6 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 7 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 8 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 9 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 10 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 11 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 12 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 13 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 14 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 15 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 16 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 17 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 18 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 19 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 20 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 21 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 22 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 23 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 24 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 25 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 26 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 27 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 28 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 29 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 30 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Jan 31 | Tue | Montana State (7.35) | Home Mar 1 | Thurs | Big Bost Season T | Away Mar 2 | Fri | Big Bost Season T | Away Mar 3 | Fri | Big Bost Season T | Away SINGLE GAME STUDENT TICKETS a limited number of single game student tickets will be available for each game. These tickets will be sold at Allen Field House on the day of the game only from 8:30 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. The single game student price is $2.50. A current validated student I.D. is required at time of purchase and admittance. For a preview of the FIGHTING JAYHAWKS see the CRIMSON & BLUE intersquad game, Wednesday, November 17----7:30 p.m. Admittance by Student I.D. Kroger KU SUPER SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT CORPORATION 1175 WE HAVE WHAT WE ADVERTISE! if all possible WE HAVE WHAT WE ADVERTISE! if all possible WE HAVE WHAT WE ADVERTISE! we run out of an advertised special, we substitute a $50 loan or a advertised special; we substitute a $20 loan or a advertised special at the BANK CRICE for the advertised special at the BANK CRICE WE GUARANTEE WHAT WE SELL. If you are even dissatisfied with a Kruger purchase, we will replace your item or service. Effective Nov. 16-Nov.24 Clover Valley Ice Cream $1.67 gal. FREE FREE Zesty Dip 8 oz. Carton Sunkist Oranges With the purchase of one at regular price. 20 for $100 Lean, Tender Pork Steak lb. 89c Pumpkin $179 Pie Go Fresh Baked wa Fried Chicken 8 pcs. $199 The sp prevent making America Europe German Golden Brown Jan correspo Frankfu group of Kansas native 1 Europe Remor that the German NATO, I "WIT mean a States," doesn't isolation Reiffer the NA17 complete strength condition election member replace He sa of troo strong Americ R REIF reason f forces i he said, U.S. p drawing and the He sa The U the acad Gymnas O1 Eve TODAY HUMA meets Union. p.m. in STUDEO D. TONI meets Room. STATU UNion's Room. Room. speak a the Un meet at the LL Alpha, sponsor JASAG in 4033 Tuesday, November 16, 1976 7 German says Carter's election won't alter U.S. role in Europe By MARTIN ZIMMERMAN The specter of isolationism will probably prevent President-elect Jimmy Carter from making any fundamental changes in the American military commitment to Western Europe when he takes office in January, a German newsman said yesterday. Jan Reifenberg, a Washington correspondent for the daily newspaper Frankburter Allegemeine Zeitung, told a group of about 35 people yesterday at the Berlin University of Applied Sciences "no alternative but to keep America on track." Europe for an indefinite period of time. Removing the four and one-half divisions that the United States has stationed in West Germany would threaten the future of NATO. he said. "WITHDARAWAL OF these troops would mean a return to isolationism for the United States," Refenken said, "and our age would allow for the luxury of isolationism." Reifengen said that the fragmentation of the NATO alliance, which has accelerated in recent years, would be made virtually permanent by increasing strength from Europe. Poor economic conditions throughout the continent and the election of Communists into several NATO-member governments would make it difficult for the new members to replace American troops, he said. He said that the continued Soviet build-up of troops in Eastern Europe was also a strong argument against withdrawal of American troops from the area. REIFENBERG ALSO gave a political reason for Carter's inclination to keep U.S. forces in Europe. Democratic Presidents, he said, are reluctant to radically change their approach Europe for fear of drawing criticism from the Republicans and the public. He said that West Germany considered the United States to be its most valuable ally, and that the recent elections both here and in Germany would have little effect on that standing. "The United States and the Federal Republic (of Germany) are bound to cooperate," he said. "There is just no other way. I don't see Carter rushing to Bonn or Washington, but I can see (German Chancellor Heinrich) Schmidt coming here in due time." THE MOST CRITICAL foreign policy problem facing Carter during the next four years, Refengen said, will probably be the challenge for the Organization meeting next month of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) will probably result in higher oil prices, he said, and such an action can have a significant impact in Europe and in the United States. "In Western Europe, a 10 per cent increase in oil prices will mean that they will fall back into a new recession," he said, "and this will have effects in America, also. The battle for energy will be the major threat to West Germany and the U.S. in the future." REFIENBERG SAID that Carter's pledge to open his foreign policy dealings to the American people was a "nice promise," but he added that it may be hard to reconcile morality with the exercise of power in international affairs. As an example, Reifenberg said that Carter's statement about not sending troops to Yugoslavia in the event of a Soviet invasion could have been correct. Carter has since corrected, was a mistake. "It is an elementary lesson in diplomacy class A that you don't tell your adversary what you will do," he said. "The element of politeness, the whole basis of the strategy of deterrotes. "In other words, Carter will find out that being President is quite a different story Reaction to cuts . . . From page one The University has plans that document the academic need for addition to Robinson Gymnasium. TODAY: THE UNIVERSITY SENATE HUMAN RELATIONS COMMITTEE meets at noon in Alcove D of the Kansas Union. COLLEGE ASSEMBLY meets at 4 p.m. in the Union's Woodford Auditorium. PTUDEX meets at 5 in the Union's Alcove D TONIGHT: BLACK PANHELLENIC meets at 6 in the Union's International Room. THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN meets at 6:30 in the Uni'er's Joyhawk Room. NAVIGATORS meet at 7:30 in the Union's Room. Atty. GEN, CURT SCHNEIDER will speak at 7:30 to the KU Young Democrats in the Union's Council Room. KU DAMAGES meet at 7:30 in the Union's Watkins Room. THE LDS STUDENT ASSOCIATION meets at 7:30 in the Union's Pine Room. Delta Phi meets at 7:30 in the Union's Council Room sponsoring the two one-play acts, "DER JASAGER UND DER NEWSAGER," at 9 in 4033 Wescree Hall. Events On Campus SUA FILMS SPECIAL FILM THE SORROW AND THE PITY Dir. by Marcel Ophuls, Tuesday, Nov. 16; 7:00; $1 CLASSICAL SERIES PRIMATES (1974) Dir. Frederick Wiseman Documentary Wed., Nov. 17, 7:30, 75c FILM SOCIETY D.O.A. (1949) Dir. Rudolph Mate, with Edmund O'Brien. Classic "B.I." Film Suspense classic. "B.I." (1956). Dir. Stanley Kubrick, with Sterling Hayden, Coleen Gray, Vince Edwards. Thurs., 10, Nov. 7, 30c from being a candidate for President." POPULAR FILMS BRIEF VACATION (1975) Dir. Victorio de Sica, with Florinda Bolkan (italian subtitled) Fri., Nov. 19, 7:00 & 9:30 Sat., Nov. 20, 3:30, 1 THE 10TH INTERNATIONAL FIRE EXHIBITION (1975) Fifteen different films ranging from 3 to 11 minutes each. Fri., Nov. 19, 3:30 Sat., Nov. 20, 7:00 and 9:30, 1 Both capital improvements were high on KU's budget request. Once the legislators see that the additions will be academically sound, economical in the long-run and energy-saving, the cuts should be restored, he said. REIFENBERG, WHO covered Carter's campaign since the New Hampshire primary, said he had some difficulty exonerating him. Mr. Carter, 340,000 Germans who read the Zeitung every day. He said he thought that Carter's religious convictions were gemine, but repeated his belief that Carter's greatest achievement was to build beliefs with the power of the presidency. "MALOTT AND Robinson have tremendous space problems," Lucas said, and added that Malott needed to remodel its animal care center to meet federal regulations. "It is very difficult to explain to a German reader what exactly Jimmy Carter 'is', said Reifenberg, who earlier this year had made a trip to Plains, Ga., to find out "you have to know the South. You have to know the North. You must understand what the South has been through." Woodruff Auditorium Such insights don't come easily to Europeans, he said. A story Reitenberg wrote in a recent interview about Gerald Ford's chances having "gone with the wind." That sentence, he said, was removed by an editor who couldn't understand what he was talking about. Lacasa also said he hoped that the money requested for the renovation of Lindley, Green and Marvin halls, and the Spooner Museum of Art, would be restored. "It's more economical to renovate Spinner and Green while they're vacant," Laura The renovation of Spooner is important because it is in the National Register of Historic Places. Place an ad Call 864-4358 It's spreading and coming here soon. You'll love it! The Athleke's Foot. --with this Coupon LEADING THE WAY . . . THE STABLES Home of the KU Student and Budweiser for 25 years Let the Good Times Roll $1.00 PITCHERS Every Afternoon Mon.-Sat. Noon- 6 p.m. $1.25 PITCHERS Thursday 6 p.m.-Midnight ALWAYS LOTS TO DO - Pool • Foosball • Pinball • TV Games The STABLES has all the latest tunes and a great sound system, too. The STABLES is available for beer'n' eggs breakfasts on any morning by reservation (scrambled eggs, beer, bacon or ham, rolls.) THE STABLES 1401 W.7th --with this Coupon KU INDIA CLUB presents DIWALI NIGHT Delicious ten-course Indian dinner followed by exciting cultural show. Tickets are now available at the Dean of Foreign Students Office (Strong Hall) and the SUA Office (at the Kansas Union). Sunday, Nov. 21st 5:30 p.m. Kansas Union For more information call after 5:00: Usha Patel 841-4841 Pramila Bhatia 841-2873 M. Padmanabhan 843-3596 Partially funded by the Student Senate For more information call after 5:00: Formally funded by the student sector 6th Anniversary SALE Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye. REUBEN SANDWICH 50° OFF- MISS STREET DELI MASSACHUSETTS with this Coupon $175 Expires Nov. 30,1976 The Bull & Boar Reg. $2.00 11 W. 9th $1.00 OFF—with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made gravy and served in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Reg. Price $2.10 "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30,1976 Expires Nov. 30,1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 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 SKI TRIP 4 Days of lift tickets 4 Days of ski rental Cost: $135, Jan. 9—Jan. 15, 1977 Sign up deadline-Dec. 3, 1976 Optional 5th day of skiing & ski lessons. For further information contact the SUA office. Ford RENT-A-CAR ADMIRAL LEASING & RENTAL Call 843-2931 23rd & Alabama FORD THUNDERBIRD TELEPHONE 843-2931 TO RENT A NEW FORD!!! | Make | Daily | Weekly | Monthly | Special Week end | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | PINTO | $9.00 plus 9 per mile | $54.00 plus 9 per mile | $145.00 plus 9 per mile | $7.00 plus 9 per mile | | MUSTANG MAVERICK | $9.00 plus 11x per mile | $66.00 plus 11x per mile | $155.00 plus 11x per mile | $85.00 plus 11x per mile | | GRANADA PICK UP | $12.00 plus 12x per mile | $72.00 plus 12x per mile | $165.00 plus 12x per mile | $90.00 plus 12x per mile | | LTD II | $13.00 plus 13x per mile | $78.00 plus 13x per mile | $175.00 plus 13x per mile | $100.00 plus 13x per mile | | LTD OLDS CUTLASS | $14.00 plus 14x per mile | $84.00 plus 14x per mile | $185.00 plus 14x per mile | $110.00 plus 14x per mile | | THUNDERBIRD SQUARE WAGON | $15.00 plus 15x per mile | $90.00 plus 15x per mile | $195.00 plus 15x per mile | $120.00 plus 15x per mile | 8432931 SEE Susan or Paul ADMIRAL LEASING & RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA # LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 8432931 GALIBIER VERORS Our best-selling model. A rugged, easy-to-fit hiking boot. Steel shank ending at the instep provides support yet allows the boot to flex for ease in walking. The gussetted tongue, developed for Gallier alpine boots, makes the Vercors the easiest boot to walk on. It also has the additional asset of allowing this single-width boot that very wide range of feet without difficulty.) Reversed tan two-piece upper with watertight stitching and a Jannu Gallier sole. Half sizes 4-13. Size 9 weights 5 lb. 6 oz. Price $65.00 GRAN sPORT Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents 7th & A. Arkansas 843-3328 8 Tuesday, November 16, 1976 University Daily Kansan KU field hockey record misleads By DAN BOWERMAN Sports Writer Field hockey coach Dianna Beebe ended her first season at KU Saturday with what was the best start in college history. But that record gives little indication of the season that KU's team had. Three of the losses came during one week in October and another three came at the Association of Athletics for Women (AIAW) Region 5 ski tournament, which ended Saturday. KU won two games before dropping three. Two of the losses were to the teams that placed first and second in the regional tournament and level to the national tournament next week. The Jayhawks missed being one of the teams to advance to the AIAW nationals at Valley Forge Military Academy in Wayne, Pa., by 53 seconds. KU lost in a playoff game Friday to Central Missouri State by 53 seconds of penetration time (time the ball is knocked out). After the game ended in a scoreless tie CMS went on to place second in the tournament, behind the defending champion of Region Six, Bemidji State College, and then the Jayhawks it was the end of the season. "On any given day or any given hour, either team could win," she said yesterday. "This time they just had 53 seconds more penetration time." KU played well, Beele said, and CMS may have come into the game a little overconfident because of the 5-1 thrashing it gave the Jayhawks Oct. 6. "I thought everybody (for KU) gave 150 per cent," she said. "We used good tactics, good stick work, and we moved the ball side to side, which is good field hockey. Bebee said the KU-CMS game was the most exciting of the tourney because two of its members were from the school. "Our defense played very well in the slighting cage and Junet Ballard played extremely hard." Ballard, KU's goalie, stopped two CMS penalty shot - a penalty shot the pailgole KU played Carleton College, Northfield, Mimi, in a consolation game for third place at the state championship. Orange Bowl merry-go-round set AP Sports Writer Rv DANGEORGE KANSAS CITY, Mo. There will be a method to the madness of selecting the Big Eight Conference representative to the Orange Ball Committee and the Orange Ball Committee and Monday. Five teams are in first place in the frzened Big Eight—and as many as three could be deadlocked when the season ends. The Nebraska-Nebraska game Nov. 38 at Lincoln The Iowa State Cyclones sent the conference race spinning into confusion during Saturday's Tournament victory over Iowa, knocking the Cornelians out of sole possession of the top spot. Colorado, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, all with 4-2 conference records, also share a record. Southern California and Ohio State but loser of three Big Eight games, is out of the running, along with Kansas and Kansas State. The Orange Bowl Committee said yesterday that if there was a two-way tie, the winner of the game between those two teams would go to the bowl. But the chance of a three-way finish is more likely. The committee said one of the reasons was that they - If one team had beaten the other two during the season, it would be invited. - If two of the teams had beaten the third, that team would be eliminated. The two teams had not. *If neither of the above situations existed, the team with the best overall rating should be selected.* "That's a super way to do it," Earle Bruce, the Iowa State coach, said Monday. "For once, fair men have come up with a fair way of choosing a team. They have my vote." Two and possibly three teams will be eliminated Saturday, when Colorado travels to Kansas State and Oklahoma State. The first two games before theoklaoma-Nebraska clash "We were told off against Carleton," Beebe said, "We made elementary mistakes, and it was just because of the letdown from the CMS game." Reamon says loss to CU no disgrace to swimmers Nebraska could claim the invitation if it beats Oklahoma, and both Oklahoma State and Colorado win. The Cornhuskers have defeated both the Cowboys and Buffaloes. The Jayhawks fell to Bemidji State Friday morning, 4-1, and Beebe said although Bemidji had good skills, KU made too many mistakes to win the game. Some people might like to call Colorado's 60-53 victory over Kansas last Friday in the opening swim meet of the season an upset, and their KU coach Dick Reamon in that crowd. "With the experience of the regional, I think we can start where we ended this year," she said. "We'll have a young but competitive team." By KEN DAVIS But Beebe is already looking ahead to the 1977 season. Sports Writer The altitude is a factor that could have had an effect in Boulder. Reamon said he thought the effect was mostly about the Sonoma basin, but about the problem of the altitude and KU lost both the 400-yd freestyle relay and the 400-yd medley relay against Colorado. According to the scoring system those losses put the jayhawks down 14-0. "Colorado is a much improved team," Reason said. "I'd be much more concerned if I thought we couldn't beat CU in the Eight championship. But there is no doubt in my mind that we will beat them. Right now it's just a matter of conditioning." The Kansas Jayhawks will play the Missouri Tigers Jan. 8 in the first televised game of the Big Eight basketball schedule, the conference announced Sunday. "It was certainly no disgrace to lose to CU. I feel that they have three of the top six sprinters in the Big Eight. The sprints are definitely our weakest area and I'm concerned about them. But the relays also hurt us. We needed to win one of those." There is the continuing possibility the field hockey program could be dropped, but Beebe said the decision depended on whether the women's athletic department received enough money to finance all women's sports. "I felt that we hit it a liltah lot more than they beat us." Rehamn said yesterday. "It's really too early to tell what kind of effect the loss will have on us, but I think if we would have run the meet again on Saturday morning we would have won. Of the nine games to be televised, Kansas will play in at least three. Its games against Oklahoma in Norman Jan. 15 and against Missouri in Feb. 12 are scheduled to be televised. Here is the Big Eight television schedule: Kansas to play in 3 TV games worried about it ahead of time. As the meet progresses, the swimmers found it wasn't so bad. "We are very frustrated over the loss," continued Reasonn, "but we learned a lot from it. We needed the competitive influence because we are a very young team. We are still finding out about ourselves." The invitation would go to Colorado if it wins along with Oklahoma and either Iowa State or Oklahoma State. The Buffaloes won all three games with those opponents. Jan. 6 - Mt. Laurean at KANAS Jan. 15 - Nebraska at Iowa State, KANAS at Oklahoma Jan. 28 - Oklahoma State at Nebraska Feb. 1 - Oklahoma State at Kansas Feb. 15 - Kansas at KANAS Feb. 28 - Kansas at KANAS The next meet for the men's team will be the Big Eight Invitational Relay Dec. 3-4 in Columbia. Mo. Reamon doesn't think theàyoff will have an adverse effect on his "I'm going to grant the men a full vacation. We've been working hard all year and they deserve a vacation. I think they'll come back from vacation better prepared mentally, I trust them enough to know that they will practice on their own." Iowa State would go to its first Orange "Bowl" if joined at the top by Nebraska and Colorado, since the best overall record formula would be used. The Cyclones would be 9-2, the Cornhuskers 8-2-1 and Colorado 8-3. Reason plans to continue to hold practices in the same format until Thanksgiving. The stress will still be on the coaches, so the sprints will begin not after vacation. Oklahoma and Oklahoma State would need a loss or tie by Colorado to be considered. Since Colorado plays Kansas State, during conference play, that possibility is unlikely. Few other Big Eight coaches shared Bruce's enthusiasm for the committee formula, although most agreed it was as fair as possible. "The key is money," she said. "It depends on how much money will be spent and how much money will be generated into the women's program. If we have the money, then field hockey will remain at KU." Beebe will loss at least three and possibly six players from this year's squad. Tandy Carlyle, Bella Lewellyn and Alexis Wagner will graduate. Peggy Hatfield, Mary Aston and Janet Ballard will be able to compete for the Jayhawks next season only if their student teaching assignments are close to KU. "We don't need a meet this weekend. I know I'm tired and there's a lot of work to do." Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. We Write All Risks Automobile Insurance 1977 HONDA EXPRES Only 299.00 It's automatic, gets a jump. It is automatic and is almost maintenance free. Stop by and learn to ride with obligation. See it at Horizon 2013. Parts for All Imports Student Discounts JAMES GANG FOREIGN AUTO PARTS Your BANK AMERICARDS welcome here master charge the premium charge Mon.-Fri., 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 843-8080 304 Locust --- MEET ME AT THE MARKET PLACE --- 8th and New Hampshire Bokonon The Frame Up Leather Limited The Shooting Gallery Dirty Thirties & Earlier Deja Vu Native American Artists Ltd. The Gallery The Armadillo Bead Co. Su Casa Graphic Arts Inc. The Harvest FAST FREE DELIVERY! 841-3100 today's special Free Double Cheese with any large pizza ASK FOR ONE STONE GROUND WHEELE WHEEL CHILLT OR MORE AND LISTY CAUST. HEAVY EDDYS At the Wheel 507 w.14th Pizza Sun.-Thurs. - 4:30 PM to 1:00 Meatball Grinders & Friday & Saturday until 2:00 AM --- Mechanical and civil engineering majors aerospace engineering electronics computer science The Air Force is looking for men and women with academic majoring in one of the two two-years of the Air Force's OTC program. Help with the college bills, two, three, four year scholarships We need certain college majors to become Air Force lieutenants. pay tuition, textbooks, lab fees, fees for training, monthly the Air Force ROTC program leads to an Air Force B士考 (Bachelor's in military salary, challenging work) with a focus on the world, promotions, responsibility, graduate education and career. Find out today about an Air Force ROC scholarship. It's a great way to serve your country and to pay for your college education. Sphomeres interested in the two year program should contact Capil John E. Mackenzie, Science Martial Biology, Room 108, or 844-644-7459 during the week. Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan 864-4358 Air Force ROTC-Gateway to a Great Way of Life A Holiday Affair coming Dec.2nd-4th TREASURES POTION PARLOR fine gifts for head and home, collectibles paraphernalia, imported and recycled clothing BOKONON .841-3600. 12 EAST 8TH ST. Karen's Bridal Shoppe private showings only 128 Minnesota Ph. 842-0056 Lawrence, Kansas Now . . . more than ever, Karen's makes beautiful things happen. Wedding Gowns Attendants' Dresses Formals There will be an open forum concerning the Student Blue Cross and Blue Shield Health Insurance Policy for your comments and to answer your questions. TIME: 7:00 p.m. DATE: Wed., Nov. 17 PLACE: Pine Room, Kansas Union ATTENTION: All Blue Cross and Blue Shield Health Insurance Policy Holders: PLEASE ATTEND. Partially funded by the Student Senate INVISIBLE SOUND CLEAN AND FAITHFUL. COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES! INVISIBLE SOUND, CLEAN AND FAITHFUL. The two-way speaker systems ADS 1400 (1500 and 1700) were developed right along with many professional audio systems to provide the best possible reason. ADS wanted to create a coherent line of customers where every customer would have to reproduce musical sound with an optimum of clarity and a tolerable frequency range. 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ASD 1700 You owe it to yourself to hear ASD 1400 We believe the ASD 1400, 1500 and 1700 are without competition in the genre. We take the time to give you an opportunity to own our sound studio like the step beyond the environment. Invisible Sound will then be impossible for you to accept anything else. El 'va --- Poets cepts" h words, I night RMS ELECTRONICS BETTER LATE a record store audio RMS ELECTRONICS BETTER DAYS a record store audio He re cepts" f and fror "The S Elliot translit in the Contem THE topics re to inten small n poetry. "The Elliott's his desi with the country --- "Repo who was from a the poementari ELLI aspect o Little T small ki a natur CLASS 15 word fewer Each a word Accommodation adae offer sex,cold BRING ERROI The than ance mate AD DE to run: Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Two be downtov STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11,000.00! Sublease fireplace One 2+1 lease for Sublease room aJ 2 bedro laundry Subleas carpartment: Subleas Jan. 1-1 AC. 841 THINK have a call Call us Nice paid P Sublease $185—ch "New A now at Western sense ou use ther YA 85 Tuesday, November 16, 1976 University Daily Kansan 9 Elliott declares poets 'valuable translators' By JANET FERREE Staff Writer Poets offer "alternate versions of concepts" by translating their perceptions into words, Harley Elliott, Kansas poet, said last night. Elliott illustrated the value of the poet's translations in a speech to about 60 persons in the Kansas Union as part of SUA's Contemporary Poets and Writers Series. He read his "alternate versions of concepts" from several of his published works, and from a book to be released next spring, "The Secret Lover Poems." THE POEMS THAT he read dealt with topics ranging from personalized reactions, to interaction with nature, to comment on life and death, from the world of poetry, but from reality." "The Werewolf reaction," a poem about Elliott's reaction to a midnight moon and his desire to roam the countryside, deals with Elliott's feelings about living in the country. "Report on the Fourth" tells of a drunk who was arrested for trying to drink water from a filling station air hose. Elliott says it is one of his news item commentaries. ELIOTT ILLUSTRATED another aspect of his poetry by reading "A Poem for the knight of Brunswick, Mo," "about a small kid who plays a baseball player, but a natural person." Turner played baseball by wandering in the outfield, "catching the ball because that was his job." "He was just like a little Zen Buddhist," Elliott said. Ellott said that he usually revises a poem trio, or six, seven times before he was married. "RARELY FLL find a quick shot, something that doesn't need much done to He said he didn't visualize an audience when writing a poem, and tried not to have him read. "a poem me to like a pulling on a pair of whatever you do—do it I want. I like to do it." Elliott lives in Salina, where he teaches drawing and painting at Marymount KU-MU FOOTBALL TICKETS For Sale at $8.00 (our cost) A panel discussion with Marion Washington, two coaches, and two athletes. Question and answer period following. Commission on the Status of Women ISSUES IN KU WOMEN'S ATHLETICS Call the SUA office 864-3477 November 16, 1976 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room—Kansas Union Everyone is welcome to attend. Business meeting at 6:30 LEADING THE WAY. THE TEEPEE "The Place for Your Next Party" MAKE YOUR SPRING RESERVATIONS NOW - Outdoor Patio - Facilities to handle 700 people - The all-new TeePee is the ideal spot for any kind of private party. There's no mess; no clean-up. Just come and have a good time. - Wedding Receptions - Rehearsal Dinners - Beer 'n' Eggs - Alumni Reunions Breakfast - Class Parties - Formals - Dinner Dances - Barn Parties CALL ACE JOHNSON TODAY 843-0540 --from Cinema 5 T The Sorrow and The Pity A magnificent epic on the themes of collaboration and resistance **Recommended for:** The Class Workbook A tension is created, between the people on the screen and in the audience, that gives the film the effect of explosion. One of the greatest films ever made, 'The Sorrow And The Pity' is a contribution to history, to social justice and to art. If there's any justice in the world, Marcel Qohui's monumental labor will be studied and debated by historians. An artistic and intellectual triumph Time Magazine TUESDAY, NOV. 16th National Society of Film Critics Special Award... A film of extraordinary public interest and distinction. The Sorrow And The Pity' is about four and a half hours, ...but, in terms of moral, intellectual, and educational value, the shortest story of the year $1.00 Woodruff Auditorium 7:00 p.m. KANSAN WANT ADS SUA FILMS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertisement in the University Dally Kanan are offered to all students without regard to their academic status. BIRLING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FILM HALL CLASSIFIED RATES 15 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 AD DEADLINES to run Monday 5 p.m. Tuesday 4 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDR business office at 864-1538. 1 Bedroom furnished apt available Jan. 1, tru- subbase contract. Gaslight Apartment Cav- nage. 864-4358 Two male roommates needed for a nice house with an excellent location. Call 841-2064 for more information. Two bedroom apartment, part furnished, near downtown and bus. $135 monthly. Call 843-887-9600. FOR RENT 2 bedrooms furnished apartment available Jan. 1; laundry, on bus route, 2 pools. B41-78138. Subway on 2nd seneser-Unfurited 1 bed room apt at 2Ri Room Rd. 84013 after 7AM at 9:30am Sublease= 1-bdm. apt. furnished on bus route; cerrant: a. 842-6075. 11:19 One bedroom apt, furnished. Fully carpeted, hardwood floors. In-law suite. Lease contract $175/month = gas, call Cell 866-249-3000. Located on the 1st floor of l Subbase 3 bedroom partially furnished house w/ bathroom. Two bedrooms, at jatihaw Tower. Towers One 2-bedroom suite, at jatihaw Tower. Towers One 2-bedroom suite, at jatihaw Tower. 1. For class preparation 2. For class preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available online. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available online. Carport: 8' x 10' Barn: #42-84358 Standard Gauge Height: 715" Standard Gauge Width: 185" Standard Gauge Thickness: 125mm, included glass cover and glass door THINK ABOUT THIS! MAKEDBWOOK, will study chemistry. We'll go to the students Jars! Plan now to move up to the best school in town. Western Civilization Note—New on Sale! Make out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to learn. Nice studio 3, apt. 2, kpls. from campus, yps. phone. Phone 814-1775. Available after. Dec. Jai. YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CARPENTER 15 EAST 8th 041-2648 10.5 Monday-Saturday FOR SALE Sublease large, two bedrooms apartment, Park 25, 818--cheep, 843-3503 sometimes 11-22 STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on your high equipment other than factory dumps or cut-out products, please call us at (804) 219-7583 or the GRAHAM PHONE at KIFFES. CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture, Mermaids, Unicorns, etc. Don’t lose cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3835. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. BEL AIR ELECTRIC, 643-900, 3000 W, 81 hp. ELECTRIC, 643-900, 3000 W, 81 hp. Excellent selection of new and used furniture trades. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704 W. 13th St. Excellent selection of used furniture, refinished and new. 1229 Kid diy towels, Toughie, A a:0-10 m. Fee. Available at www.nicefurniture.com. 40%-75% on warm up dress, man's suit, Swim Club. Rf (4 west) 823-7568, & Swim Club. Rf (4 west) 823-7568. For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call CVB喇叭 814-5488 or 11-846-1347. Porche 191, 970 model; must sell immediate Call toks 1.523-397 or 1-123-789. After receiving the order, deliver. THE ADVENT STEREO RECEIVER is the most advanced studio and recording device in manufacturing design and production we’ve ever seen. But before this one is real and refreshing—all of us will see it at SONY's RAY AUDIO 13 E 8th St. Sony Consultant will be on hand. CAR STEERO SPECIAL - NOTICE you know, we have a car warranty at the Midway-West. WAREARY car stores buy in the Midway-west which represent many yrs of experience in the industry, and we have much better performance at real $saving values. Chrysler "300"; good condition $500 or best offer. Chrysler Avenger. Bldg. 6, 8 14-11-16 841-3743 Want to save money? Buy your used car from our condition control AII service records available. How about a Pioneer X50 $40 receiver for $70 to buy? It comes with a warranty, so you can hurry - but hurry not. By the way - you know we consistent day-to-day $29 savings order service consistent day-to-day $59 saving order service consistent day-to-day $199 saving order service in the trade. RAY AUDIO, E 6, 12th ed. **1983**. Pioneer KP-250 FM stereo cas. under dash is now on sale. You never thought you could have so much car stereo for so little. How little Hertt can you find in and out for AUDIO, 13 E. 8th. 11-16 Have you ever found yourself in what you feel like a hole? It can be the realization your pants are down around your ankles on your wall. Well we’re not like that. We’ve got our own AUDIO, 1 E. 8th Bloor Consulting Specialties. We have a stereo system that will really amuse you for $250. Come see our super special deal. We are here to help you find the best more and get better, really pleasing professional performance. RAY AUDIO, 13 E. 8th Street Concord, MA 01014. Casette tape player and new headset. $90. Casette tape rewinders and headphones. $145. Tesla T5-1300 turntable, full warranty, $299. Tesla T5-1300 turntable, half warranty, $199. 26. *Speed Buffy* in manual, $45. *TPwinterer* 27. *Manual*, good cond, gcd, $13. *11-17* K.C. K., K.C. 87 Portaise Bonneville, automatic, power, arm. Must sell-825, 841-6490 after 5. 1968 Volkwagen, reliable and good runner $800 1968 A82-4858 or A82-5655. 11-16 - STITCHERY • RESTORATION CREATIVE Cross Reference Bookstore 842 1553 Malls Shopping Center 1963 WW—ruge, good-body, body As in $150. 2012 ARA 843; bad-arm 842.[1]—17 ● METAL FRAMES ● RESTO 123A Pace CB w/utentia-Perfect shape, four kids (or 85% or best offer) Mail 842-223-2222 for Colby E-AMES MODERN TUNING CHAIRS. Biech designs $200 chair, $500 office chair or $1000 bar chair. $200 value only. See us at www.biech.com for details. CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE SPEAI 166 Chevrolet 1 Ton Step Van. Read for you to custom decorate your 1 at 1525 W. 6th St. 10-18 7. Power Music Band, band is adult size with a female lead singer; w/2 guitarists and a vocalist; w/2 speaker cabinets 800 w/Glossary Mic, Glossary Mic, Microphone, Speaker Cabinet, Mic, Tube Mic. --tours back to the 15th and 17th centuries in the Yorkshire. Reasonable rates. Contact P. Baldwin, P. 813-460-2920. 74 NORTON 850 Commande, 5.600 km, excellent supercycle upburst - $12.00, 14.544 - 15.19 - 16.09 DRUM SET. Ludwig, double bass, cymbals, stands, and cases included. Blak alt finish, must be done with a hammered tone. Honda CRI520 CRIS10 M. Super playback, $475. Grip King GRIPKING Grip King. C david V 1829 and 1836 make offer - 11.19 J.C david V 1829 and 1836 make offer - 11.19 King-size waterbed No-leaks $25 $41-358S 10- Wed. after a week for Linda Foreign Area Studies text compiled by American Forge and State Department. Set of 50, 481-219 481-229 15-159 Typewriter for李. Miguel Olivetti, Very good typewriter. School His converted into a ginger, engineer rebuilt. School his converted into a ginger, engineer rebuilt. HELP WANTED Football teams—good condition—make an offer. Available to our 914 W. 23rd Street 11:10 Samson compact, has FM-AM, stereo cabinet, Garard wintry, wristmusic can, 3 speakers, all in one. $195.00. (800) 624-7600. Check out these used bike specials: 1975 Honda MT120 1975 Honda MT125 1974 Buick S30 1974 Honda C770 1974 Honda CH750 1974 Canamat 100 1974 CLIF45 1976 See them at Horizon Honda. 1811 W. bk 842, 843 Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, foster and supervise students in assisting in Research. Social science back- ward research. Deputy of Human Development 111 to 3 p.m. An Equal Opportunity Employer to join 3 p.m. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Qual- ified Resumes Submitted To: HR @ McKenzie Now taking applications for sailmen or saleswomen for Christmas selling. Experience preferred, also necessary to be in Lawrence until June 29, 2018. M.L. 11-17 at Weaver's dept store, 901 Man. Models wanted for photography contest. Good pay, write Box 211, Leavenworth, Kansas, 66048. Enclose Photo. HELP WANTED AVON - Earn extra money on your own time - Ship to 30 countries - Full-time. 11-30 Mrs. Selih. 561-248-7850 DANCES-class B private club in Johnson Pay, payable (913)-854-7841 after 7am LOST AND FOUND Fundour Bureau for black and white woool stocking Bureau for grey, black and white woool stocking c. 31 x 13 x 6 in MISCELLANEOUS 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- s 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 6 Maa. Lost, 11-9-76. Men's gold & black wedding band. Reward, Call 841-7145; after 5.00. Red backpack full of books; name=William Dickerson. Call 841-6471. FREE—11%; yr old male eat very affectionate, fried fish and chicken; 84-1039; 11-22 free food and kitter food & 84-1039 NOTICE Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Mass. used furniture, diaries, lamps, lamps, televisions, daily open 12:59. POETRY WANTED for Anthology Include Books from the collection of P.O. Box 8642, San Francisco, California CONTACT LENS WEARERS. Save on your hard or Soft supplies. Send for free sample of your favorite solution Enclose 25c for packaging and 100c for mailing. Supplies, Box 7453, Phoenix, AZ 86011. librarians.com UNLESS YOU LOVE SOMEONE, NOTHING ELSE MAKES ANY SENSE: e. cumming. Gay Servers Are Not Enough in Union. Socializing hour will follow a short business meeting. Gay community encouraged to attend. Commission on the Status of Women: Issues in Jacobson room on The Issue 1979. 7-20 Jachawk房 - Kansas Union Students; if you would be interested in taking a songwriting course, contact Mr. Moskowitz at MSM-2015 or Ms. Barb Humphrey at MSM-2015. NOW OPEN-Commerce Plaza, flat and two- way openpace, g-6 bay car wash and mini mast, sales and service. Notes: **Enroll now!** in *Lawrence Drive School*, receive driver license in three weeks without further testing. GAY RAP GROUP, T: 10.28, Nov. 18, 62 KUMA GAY RAP GROUP, T: 3, 7:30 p.m. 11-18 PERSONAL HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals. - Imported Clothing Are you an-exPCV or ex-Vista training? If no drop by the KU-Y. 864-3763). 11-16 730Mass.841-7O7O Is your neck tense? You would like a facetite? Is your shoulder tight? You would like a facetite? Hair Designers for massage for relaxed or tented shoulders. Hair Designers for massage for relaxed or tented shoulders. Help wanted in Macro. Econ. 522. For details call 814-6450 between 5-7. 11-16 If you are interested in serving as a Peace Corps representative, KU-V Floor Unit 846-3701. 846-3701 Experienced plot wizard volunteer co-eplot for 10 students. Include male student or staff member preferred. Duties include observation, map reading, & ee. No transport required. Included parented parties 11-16 to P.O. Box 3071. KARATE AND SELF-DEENSE instruction by national champions B441, 8442; Maima, 12-8 HEADQUARTERS. 841-2345 offers crisis counseling, information on resources and support, phone line for referrals for problem babies, rape victim support, or parental free. Free confidential, and open 24 hrs. every day. Do your Christmas shopping early. For unique ornaments and decorations, come to Daren's New handmade union shops, items to come to Daren's New Union Shops, 204 W. Main St., New York, NY 10017. There seems to be some apathy present. Some of you beautiful young ladies are not responding to the questions they ask about campus everyday. So once again I'll ask any attractiveness questions and I will be content in Playboy's Photo Concet to call 864-2314 and ask for Duke for more information. I'll even match my opponents offer of a picture. I'm confident. For your convenience THE HAIR SUITE now has Tues., Wed., and Fri. Call for consultation 643-860- 7255, Tues., Wed., Call for consultation 643-860- 7255. Planning an Affair for the Holidays? Wait until Dec. 2nd-4th. 11-22 See you at the grind party. Kansas Union, Nov. 19. Hawk, Nett, 3-10-6. Bring all your 19-11-19 Happy Birthday, All of England and I are Picket! I miss you. Much love from Your Kid. Picket! I miss you. Much love from Your Kid. Excellent instruction in guitar, baritone, as well as piano. Instruction is available at buster times available. Keyboard Studio sessions are also available. SERVICES OFFERED Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 0001, 001, 002, 102 etc. Each course requires a unique combination of 368, 558, 627, 464. Regular sessions in the test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681. Aztec Inn FIVE PENCE Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a motorcycle, or adjust your entire bike, lubricate and adjust your brakes and brakes, true both wheels, adjust your tires, maintain and adjust your accessories bought at time of "tune-up". Rate 10 speed $15.00 or 3 or 5 speed $15.00, single speed $20.00, double speed $15.00, single speed $20.00, complete professional Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer. Learn about our Lawrence Schwimming School. 4-6 Mon.-Sat. Thurs. Ill 11h, Sun. 3/0, 1-4, 180 W. 6h, 842-6353. American and Mexican Food ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of papers from 1428 research journals, including 1435 davea巷 Ave., No. 568, Los Angeles. Publications since 1979. BIOLOGY TUTOR. Experimented tutors—Graduate and Professional Biology Tutor. BS or 112, 416, 417, 508, 608, or 798. Reasonable expenses. Send resume to: John B. Cohen, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53701. TYPING Typist/editor, IBM PCsize/dit. Quality work. Typist, instructor, desk demonstrations weblog. Nasir, 842-357-9127 *Cant Sew!* See me for all your sewing needs: 847-7566 between 10-3 spaces. 847-7566 between 11-17 Experienced typet - term papers, thesis, music, science, and other materials. Spellcheck, corrected 843-854, Mr. Wright. Experimented typet THERES ONLY. With type Theres only, the syntax of the code is: 164-8311 219 - 844-1789 198-765 164-8311 219 - 844-1789 198-765 THEISIS BINDING COPYING. The House of Uher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their blinding & copying in Lawrence. Let us show you $85 Massachusetts or phone 362-7584. Thank you. I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. New address. if All Mexican Dishes serve on piping hot plates 807 Vermont SUBLEASE-Willa Square Square $6.23 per month plus 1/5 afilites. Own bedroom. $8.75 per month. WANTED Roommate needed immediately for nice house computer. Oven room $8.75 m, plus 14 uf wiring. Typping on elite electric typewriter, Proofreading, prompt service. No theses please. Mr Haines, Hayes 721-345-9000. I and my well-mannered dog need a place to live. Jackie, 842-4267 Female to nubilease Gatehouse Apt. Take over payments January 841-452. EXPERT TYPING. Fast and accurate, reasonable rate, professional and minor grammar correction. Formal roommate needed for spring semester. I'll be on call 24/7, plus his 'else', call Lilian. 814-588. Keep tryin'. Looking for married couple who plan to be in married life. Mail resume to: Contact Park 25 office, 842-1456 Female roommate wanted for Spring semester to Jawhacker Tower apartments. 848-7104 Female roommate wanted to share 5 bdm. house, 604 a.m. 842-693-140. Tennesbury. 11-17 Female roommate needed immediately for Jayah- son's Power Apartment. Call 842-684-2868. One or two female roommates to share Jaskawk- ing apartment. All utilities included-$104 868-1855. - Pinball Wanted: 20" 10-speed bike, pref. good touring model, esp. with good frame and cranks, MADE in the USA. End of Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa 443-9812 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." The Lounge - Foosball 9th and Iowa - Feosball - Bud on Tap Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl BILLIARDS Pool HORIZONS HONDA HILLCREST ● Pool ● Snooker ● Ping Pong Home of The Chalk Hawk SELECTION OF BEER . 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a Week One No Under 18 Admitted - Pin-Ball - Air Hockey - Foos-Ball 1811 W. 6th Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sal. 10-4 FIELDS Mattresses · Liners Heaters · Frames Bedspread· Fitted Sheets COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS WATERBEDS 712Mass.St. Downtown Lawrence 842-7187 in the summer. Keep your car healthy Use the Use the student discounts at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 车 10 Tuesday, November 16, 1976 University Daily Kansan FALLEY'S Ohse Wieners 2525 Iowa Next Door to Gibson's Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days Prices Good Wednesday through Sunday November 17—November 21 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES U.S.D.A. Choice Rib Steak...lb. $1 39 Boneless Club Steak...6 to 8 oz. each 98¢ Big R Brand Fresh Oysters...10 oz. $1 59 Falley's Own Sausage...lb. 59¢ Stokoly Cut Green Beans 5 16 oz. $1 Cans Farmland Sliced Stokely Golden Corn 4 17 oz. $1 Cans Bacon Ohse Lunch Meats...12 oz. pkg. **69c** Center Cut Ham Slices...lb. **$1 89** Ohse "Big T" Boneless Hams...lb. **$1 69** Wilson Boneless Hams...lb. **$2 79** Wilson Braunschweiger...lb. **69c** Van De Kamp Fish & Chips...lb. **$1 19** 4 17 oz. $1 Cans Kraft Marshmallows...Regular or Miniature 10 oz. **3 for $1** Princella Yams...16 oz. **3 for $1** Shurfine Cranberry Sauce...16 oz. **3 for $1** Stokely Pears...16 oz. **39°** Stokely Fruit Cocktail...17 oz. **39°** Stokely Beets...Medium-Whole-Cut 16 oz. **4 for $1** 3 17 oz. Cans $1 2 46 oz. $1 Cans Stokely Tomato Juice 2 46 oz. $1 Cans Stokely Sweet Peas 3 17 oz. Cans $1 Parkay Margarine 16 oz. Quarters 39c Crisco Oil $1.29 38 oz. Tender Snappy Carrots...16 oz. pkg. 4 for $1 Crisp Jonathan Apples...3 lb. bag 98° Washington D'Aujou Pears...pkg. of 8 98° Mild Yellow Onions...3 lbs. 49° Fresh Tender Brussel Sprouts...Pint box 59° Bright Red Radishes...16 oz. bag 3 for $1 Parkay Margarine Crisco Oil $129 38 oz. Parkay Margarine 16 oz. 39c Lettuce 3 for $1 Sunkist Navel Oranges 15 for 99c Quarters 16 oz. 39c Quarters Crisp-Solid-Head Lettuce 3 for $1 Falloy Brown & Serve Rolls 3 $1 Pkgs. Jif Peanut Butter...18 oz. **89ᵃ** Duncan Hines Double Fudge Brownie Mix...23 oz. **89ᵃ** Duncan Hines Layer Cake Mix...all flavors **59ᵃ** Gold Medal Flour...5 pound bag **69ᵃ** 15 for 99c Falley's Own 50% Whole Wheat Bread ... loaf 39° Falley's Glazed Donuts ... dozen 99° Vogel Popcorn ... 32 oz. pkg. 49° Wilderness Cherry Pie Filling ... 21 oz. 69° Pot Ritz Whipped Topping 10 oz. 39c Falley Brown & Serve Rolls 3 Pkgs. $1 Libby Pumpkin 4 16 oz. Cans Limit 4 with $5.00 purchase Royal Gelatine 7 3 oz. Pkgs. $1 Libby Pumpkin 4 16 oz. $1 Cans Limit 4 with $5.00 purchase 6 oz. 39c Lindsey Medium Pitted Ripe Olives Royal Gelatine Kraft Sour Dips... 8 oz. 3 for $1 Kraft Philadelphia Cream Cheese... 8 oz. 49° Fluff Marshmallow Creme... 16 oz. 69° Pet Ritz Frozen Pie Shells Pkg. of 2 39c 7 $1 3 oz. Pkgs. 4 16 oz. $1 Cans Royal Gelatine 7 oz. $1 Pkgs. Folgers Coffee Two-Pound $3.99 Can —Limit 1 can please— Two-Pound $399 Can Folgers Coffee Pepsi Cola Bubble-Up—Dr. Pepper or Pepsi Cola 8 pack 89c Plus 16 oz. Deposit 8 pack 89c Plus 16 oz. Deposit FALLEY'S SAVE $246 Over Fairley's Low Discount Prices with Those Valuable Coupons FALLEY'S FALLEY'S Regular 89c POST ALDHA BITS CEREAL FALLEY'S SAVE $2.46 Over Falloy's Low Discount Prices with Those Valuable Coupons FALLEY'S Regular 89c POST ALPHA BITS CEREAL 13 oz. 69c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 21 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 89c POST ALPHA BITS CEREAL 13 oz. 69¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 21 COUPON Bundt THE SCHOOL MATH FOR 12-15 YEARS FALLEY'S PILLSBURY FALLEY'S PILLSBURY BUNDT CAKE MIX 99¢ Regular $1.33 FALLEY'S FALLEY'S Regular $1.19 PILLSBURY INSTANT MASHER POTATOES FALLEY'S Regular $1.19 PILLSBURY INSTANT MAShed POTATOES 32 oz. 99¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 21 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 69c FALLEY'S Regular 69c BETTY CROCKER TUNA HELPER all varieties 49c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 21 COUPON Tuna Helper Marion Taylor Jr. MARION TAYLOR JR. FALLEY'S Regular $1.09 COUNTRY KITCHEN LOG CABIN SYRUP 24 oz. 79¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 21 COUPON FALLEY'S FALLEY'S SANIFLUSH CRYSTALS 69¢ Regular 48 oz. 95c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 21 COUPON FALLEY'S SEVEN SEAS DELUXE THOUSAND ISLAND DRESSING 8 oz. 39c Regular 59c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 21 COUPON Deweys FALLEY'S Regular 99c COOKING EASE PAN SPRAY 9 oz. 69c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 24 COUPON FALLEY'S SEVEN SEAS VIVA ITALIAN SALAD DRESSING 8 oz. 39c Regular Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 21 COUPON FALLEY'S KELLOGG'S CORNFLAKES 69¢ 24 oz. Regular 89¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 21 COUPON C Mem Kappa parking Road, removal parking Com Plann- area revisi necess protest FALLEY'S Regular 97c KEEBLER PECAN SANDIES COOKIES 14 oz. 89¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Nov. 21 COUPON Si C AUTUMNY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, November 17, 1976 Basketball team debuts tonight See story page six Vol.87 No.62 Commission postpones cut of 24 frat parking spaces By JOHN MUELLER Staff Writer Members of Phil Delta Theta and Phi Kappa Sigma fraternities will lose 24 parking spaces in the 1600 block of Edghill Road, but city commissioners acted to allow some parking removal for two weeks to look into other parking possibilities to replace the spaces. Commissioners also failed to approve a Planned Unit Development (PUD) revision requested by developers of the Alvamar area. The Commissioners favored the provision, because it was necessary to enact the revision because of a protest provision in the PUD ordinance. The ordinance says that PUD revisions protested by 40 per cent of a PUD area's residents require a 41 vote of approval by commissioners. Acting on a report prepared by city officials earlier in the day, commissioners decided that 40 per cent of Alvamar's residents had protested the revision by validated signatures. ALVAMAR, INC., HAD requested the revision so it could build 14 single-family houses in an undeveloped area by the Alvamar Hills Golf Course. Opponents of the revision had objected to the change from a woodland park interfered with their view of the soil course. Commissioners postponed the fraternal 'parking space removal at the urging of Jeb Bayer, Ph.D Delta Theta president. He said the move was due to a safety allowing parking on only the east side Smiths and Joneses: Count your blessings By MARSHA WOOLERY Staff Writer To the Smiths, Jones and Browns of the world, to have an unusual name might seem ideal, but to those people owning them, they can cause problems. The most common problem is teaching others how to pronounce the name. Cathy Suchocki, Winfield junior, said yesterday, "I always know when the teacher's going to pronounce my name there, there's a silence in the middle of the 'S.'" walter Looney, 1201 W. 22 St. Terrace, said people often misnounced his name They don't want to spell it or pronounce it correctly, thinking it take offence. he said. But a person with an unusual name has to be annoyed about it "or else he will go crazy." Lazy. Patience is also helpful for enduring the same old jokes about one's name, some other name. Kansan posts open for spring Applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester Kansean are available in 105 Flt Hall, the Student Senate office in room 105B Hall, the Student Senate office in room 106C dean of men and dean of women. The application deadline is 5 p.m. today. Interviews will begin Friday. Applicants will be notified of the time and place of their interview. Ann Trusty, 1976 KU graduate, said, "Whenever I write a check, the people always say, 'Well, we don't need any LD. You; you look pretty trusty, heeh, heeh." Wes *icnogle*, Topek junior, has the power to perceive sometimes don't believe him when people say he "I have a lot of trouble when I call in for pizza because they think it's a joke," he said. Iceconge has his name also invited the nicknames of "Snogs," "Snag" and "Snapleps," which his friends regularly call him. Although adults are usually accustomed to the inconvenience of unusual names, children are often sensitive to the teasing they receive. Mary Troll, Wichita senior, said she often became embarrassed when she was younger at hearing stories about trolls billing billyboats under bridges. Barry Bloom, Wichita junior, said he remembered being tagged with the nicknames "Blueberry" and "Butterfly." But he didn't think his name was a problem now. Having an unusual last name coupled with an equally unusual first name can really cause pronunciation problems, Elmer Gillogly, Ottawa opphomore, said. Two of his roommates still have problems saying his name, and to make matters worse, another roommate also is named Elmer. But, despite the confusion and complications, Gillogly, who goes by Dale in class because it's less formal, said he wouldn't change his name. of Louisiana Street and on 17th Street Edgehill Road and Tennessee Street “It’s part of me now, and I wouldn’t think of changing it.” Bayer and the commissioners agreed that the extension was necessary, because if Bayer's recommendations proved feasible, they couldn't be implemented before the Edgehill Road removal was scheduled to occur tomorrow. FIREMEN ORIGINALLY proposed the removal because, they said, they wouldn't be able to fit one of their large trucks into the hole by the Edgehill Road curb if a fire broke out. The fraternity members may now park on only the west side of Louisiana Street and were previously told by commissioners that they could not stay at the 90-day period. Commissioners changed their minds about allowing parking on both sides, but Bayer said the fraternities could still gain five extra parking spaces by moving from the west to the east side of the street. Bayer said that he didn't have an estimate on how many spaces the proposed Tennessee Street parking could provide, but that it could help regain the parking spots the fraternities will lose in the Edgehill Road removal. COMMISSIONERS TOLD George Williams, director of public works, to use the extension time to study whether Bayer's suggestions were possible. Commissioner Marnie Argeringer approved of the compromise, but she reaffirmed her statement last week that they were not their parking spaces. I was not misquoted. Argeringer had said last week that "those kids shouldn't expect the city to provide the damn parking. The automobile isn't a God-given right." Bayer said that he realized parking See COMMISSION page eight Agriculture Part-time shepherd when Ahman Karr, University of Kansas buildings and grounds labor foreman, on campus, he's usually back on his 40-acre Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER farm north of Tonganoxie working with is herd of goats. Karr shares his duties on the farm, which includes milking twice a day, with his family. See story and more pictures page seven. KU archive holds wealth of info Bv PAUL ADDISON Want to see a film of Jim Ryun breaking world track records as a KU student, or watch last year's memorable KU-Oklahoma football game? Maybe you'd rather listen to an interview with Richard Nixon, Robert Kennedy or George Lincoln Rockwell, or read the minutes of the Kansas Board of Regents of 1866. If so, the University Archives, on the top floor of the Spencer Research Library, can tend to your needs and provide you with the information you need. The University of Kansas from its earliest days. THE ARCHIVES is a treasure house of material that includes dissertations, minutes of meetings, about half a million photographs and about 1,000 sound tapes dating from 1938. Other audio-visual material, copies of University Press publications, microforms, videotapes and cartographic materials also have been collected there since the Archives was formally established in 1969. "For students, the University Archives is an undiscovered gold mine where they can really get at good sources," Ned Keke, associate archivist, said yesterday. "There's a lot of stuff people could use—a lot of good term paper topics." Kebide the Archives tried to keep a copy of every thing ever, handed out at, printed or written about KU, including handbills from the days of student protests. He took care to print all architectural blueprints of campus buildings and numerous historical knicknacks, such as old footbaus, paintings and plaques. FOR SPORTS fans, the Archives is especially useful. The Archives contains film of all KU home football games since the 1930s, as well as film of most post World War II basketball games and track meets. It has one of the largest intercollegiate sports film collections in the United States, John Nugent, archivist, said. Nugent said that the Archive's 300,000 cataloged and 200,000 uncataloged photographs of KU events were probably the best introduction to the history of the University. The photos have been collected and donated by the University of Kansas Alumni Association, news bureaus, the athletic department and many individuals. University papers and records also contain valuable information. Nurtured said. "I DON'T KNOW how people relate to University records, but I think the correspondence files really help you realize what was happening then," he said. "If you take Chancellor Strong's correspondence from 1902 to 1923, for instance, you can get to know the man and you see that the Medical Center in Kansas City is there primarily because Strong fought for it." Nugent said that despite the opportunity for research, the Archives was now unrun "I don't think people understand what we have and how it can be used," he said. "There's so much here, although you sometimes have to do a little digging." Publicity woes cut IHP enrollment, director says Editor's Note: This is the second of three articles on the KU Integrated Humanities Program. This story deals with an enrollment drop in the program that faculty members say was caused largely by two administrative decisions that stopped the program from advertising.) By JERRY SEIB Staff Writer The Integrated Humanities Program (HHP) at the University of Kansas is only five years old, but the HHP program is still in progress. There has been a flap from the start over the need for the program and the methods used by its teachers. Its proponents have called it a unique way to teach the classics, an educational alternative to traditional music courses and man-sophomore curriculum. Its opponents have said it is unnervous and a form of indocrinization. In spring 1973, the College Assembly of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences voted to not let the humanities program fulfill the freshman-sophomore English requirement, as it had in the THEN, THIS spring, a personal disaster struck the program. Two students participating in an HP semester in Ireland drowned when they were traned by an incoming ocean tide while hiking. In fall 1973, after a long and bitter disagreement, the College Assembly rejected IHP plans for a Disputes over the goals and methods of the IHP continue. But this year, the IHP faces a new challenge. Dennis Quinn, professor of English a director of the program, says the drop hasn't been caused by the controversy that has shrouded the program or the tragedy in Ireland. He says it is largely the result of an over-representation that prevented the HIP from advertising itself to incoming students this year as it had in the past. THE FIRST decision, made this spring by the Office of Academic Affairs, prevented any academic programs from mailing literature or manuscripts to the university. Quinn said, had previously sent brochures to all incoming freshmen to acquaint them with the program, At about the same time in the spring, a committee of faculty and students, in charge of the preparation for the workshop against academic programs to set up information booths during the orientation. The IHP had always had a table with advisers and information in the Kansas Union during the orienta- Both decisions were made while IHP students and faculty members were in Ireland this spring. Quinn doesn't say that the decisions were aimed at the IHP. He says that they hurt the IHP more because of the difficulties. He would have been proposed if there were administrative support for the humanities program. "I felt very much that when we came back from Ireland, the general policy would be to squeeze us, to hold us down." "I THINK IF the College and the University -Denniss Quinn, director of Integrated Humanities Program. really have in mind giving full support, someone would have said. "Look, this is a good program, it's one that students enjoy. We have to find someone to tell students about it." "he said. "There have to be 50 freshmen out there who would have joined the program but couldn't." Enrollment in the freshman class of IHP dropped by 83 students, from 133 in 1975 to 50 this year. In the past, freshman enrollment in the IHP has always exceeded 100. In 1971, there were 142 freshmen; in 1972, 186; in 1973, 129; and in 1974, 182. SOPHOMORE ENROLLMENT has always been lower than the freshman total because some students leave the program after a year. This fall, there are 48 sophomores in the program. From 1971 to 1975, sophomore enrollment was 101, 139, 65, 80 and 31. Quain said the lower sophomore enrollment this year was caused partially by the program's semester abroad in Ireland this spring. If students were unable to spend the semester abroad, they either missed a semester or dropped out of the program. But he said the lower freshman enrollment wasn't totally caused by the semester abroad. "I FELT VERY much that when we came back from Ireland, the general policy would be to send the troops." "I say that curs is a successful program, successful in any way you measure it. I'm saying we occupy a space on the priority list that must be accessed when we want to execute of whatever priority lists there are at KU." Quinn said he wasn't officially informed about either policy change. He said that he found out about them by accident and that there wasn't time to find alternatives after he learned of the change. Jerry Lewis, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was chairman of the faculty-student committee that organized the summer orientation sessions for freshmen. He said there was no malice toward the IHP in its decision. "IN A ONE-DAY program, there simply isn't enough time for every academic program area to be represented, and we don't want to get academic programs to be competing against each other for students," he said. "Since some part of budget allocations is determined by the number of students, students become desirable to have in your department." Lewis said that materials describing the IHP were passed out to academic advisers and made available to students during the last few orientation sessions. But he agreed that the decision to eliminate academic programs' tables at orientation might have been especially harmful to the IHP. "What Professor Quinn says is true. It hurt them worse than anyone else," he said, "Students know there is an English program, they don't know there is a humanities program." RON CALGAARD, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said his office's decision about mailing pamphlets was prompted by a request from the department of Slavic languages and literatures to "A student can be be widened getting 42 separate pieces in information from that many pieces of information." He said that the decision stopped any individual program from mailing literature and that his office didn't deal with individual College courses. The student, Omar "Omair" shortly after the decision was made. Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said he had not discussed the enrollment attention with "I'd say there is support for the right of the program to exist," Shankel said. "My own philosophy is that the program has the right to "My own philosophy is that the program has the right to exist but that we should not give it benefits or amenities that other programs don't have." exist but that we should not give it benefits or amenities that other programs don't have." —Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor. ROBERT COBB, dean of the College, said that College programs and departments continued to have general literature available, but that the college was generally for on-campus distribution. Cobb said he thought that the decisions to "The only alternative that we've discussed thus far is printing a single brochure for unique or conspicuous or relatively new programs for underclasmen at the University," he said. "I think if it were a brochure designed for incoming freshmen, that it would be distributed ahead of time." restrict participation in summer orientation programs and mailings were communicated to the student body. "The fact that Professors Quim, (Franklyn) Nellick and (John) Senior give more than half their time to it and that we provide various other resources would indicate that we regard the Integrated Humanities Program as an interesting and valuable program in the College." Cobb said. QIINN, HOWEVER, says he thinks some faculty members and of officials to resent a "There is no justification for the suggestion that we are doing something wrong," he said. "It's fine to disagree with us, to oppose us, but not to suppress us." "It puts the humanities program in a bad way, and the humanities program is good for the University. It's always been the University here and the humanities program there." Quinn also said the IHP had been unjustly accused of sex discrimination by the Title IX subcommittee that this summer named possible defendants. Cobb to investigate the IHP for discrimination. Cobb said he had conducted an investigation and had written a letter to Shankel, saying that no evidence of discrimination in admissions to the IHP was found and that in teaching the program on the subject of sex roles were protected by academic freedom. SHANKEL WAS a member of a steering committee that assows the work of TITLE IX subcommittees on the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses. He said the Lawrence campus subcommittee's report on the IHP indicated that "there weren't any firm facts or specific justices, just that there were some questions about the program brought before the committee." Quinn said the IRP faculty wasn't told why it was named by the subcommittee. "If there's some real evidence, then an investigation might be justified," he said. "There are." (Tomorrow: Opinions) 2 Wednesdav. November 17, 1976 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press Carter, Kissinger to meet PLAINS, Ga.—President elect Jimmy Carter met with his running mate yesterday and arranged for talks with President Gerald Ford and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger as he stepped up his personal involvement in his transition to the presidency. Arriving at the Albany, Ga., airport, Vice President-elect Walter Mondale said he would be an adviser to Carter on the best possible appointments for the ad- It also was disclosed that Kissinger would meet with Carter in Plains Saturday morning. Carter has left most of the transition work so far to aides, but it was announced yesterday that Carter and Ford arranged a White House meeting in phone calls. King documents probed WASHINGTON—The House committee probing assassinations is investigating an unconfirmed report that documents relating to the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. and the use of a bomb in a police shooting. Meanwhile, the 12-member panel investigating the deaths of King and President John Kennedy authorized the issuance of what Sprague called “quite a few” subpoenas. He refused to disclose to whom the subpoenaes would be directed or what they would request. Speaking after a closed meeting of the committee, Sprape said the information about the missing documents was uncovered by staff investigators in Memphis, Victory of pro-separatists causes concern in Canada MONTRREAL (AP) -- Speculation and concern about the future of Canada swept the country yesterday after the election in Quebec. The vote in Quebec provincial elections. A number of politicians and business leaders called for a quick referendum on independence for the French-speaking province to get the question settled. Others said the Quebec electorate had merely been turning out a government they didn't like rather than voting for independence. Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau told the parliament in Ottawa that the federal government wouldn't negotiate any form of separation with Quebec or any other province but offered to have an early meeting with Néle Rene荔枝, the 54-year-old Parti Québécois leader and future premier. "We have only one mandate," Trudeau said. "That is to govern the whole country." Business is back to normal for two University of Kansas political organizations after the national and state elections, but we are pursuing their goals in different ways. By MARY RINTOUL KU political groups realign goals The KU Young Democrats are focusing their attention on the Kansas Legislature while the KU Young Republicans will start speaking people about the Republican party. Pauline Rosacker, Lawrence junior and president of the KU Young Democrats, said yesterday that the organization would pay more attention to the legislature and would try to get involved in the legislation she has gained control of the house this election. "THE EXTENT of the involvement depends on what I come up in the legislature and how much support the new legislators receive in their hometown." Rosacker The Young Democrats had its first meeting since the elections last night. The recuperation period is over, Rosacker said, will begin thinking about the 1978 election. "It's hard to keep people right now when the elections are over, but we try to keep informed and we'll try to keep them informed," Rosascher said, about the legislature. "Rosascher said." She said that several members would involve themselves immediately in the 1978 elections but that most members wouldn't become involved until fall 1978. The KU Young Democrats, in the state and nationwide, made a big difference in the race. "IN KANSAS a lot of Young Democrats campaigned for Carter and even though Gerald Ford won the state, Carter received much more anyone thought he would." Rosacker said. Ford unofficially received 477,741 votes to Carter's 608,419 in Kansas. Rosacker said the KU Young Democrats campaigned hard for Democratic candidates running for state and local office, especially Mary Keys, Arnoldress congresswoman, and Pinney, state treasurer, both were re-elected. Berman was elected in 2014, bearing incumbent Sen. Arnold Booth. In an effort to educate people about the Republican party, the KU Young Republicans will distribute their newsletter campuswide instead of just to members," Doug Bell, Fort Scott senior and president, said. He said that many people had the idea that the Republican party wasn't a party that focused on people. He said that the president was not a party that abolish that notion through the newsletter, there won't be any propaganda in the newsletter. We'll just let people know where we stand and they can decide for themselves." Bell said. HE ADDED THAT the newsletter would sometimes reprint articles by such writers as James Kilpatrick, conservative political columnist. Planning and speculating on the 1978 elections for state offices already have been made. "If Gov. Robert Bennett decides to run again in 1978, we'll campaign for him. I don't have any doubts that the Democrats can run at Roy G. Atten. Curt Schneider; ball say." Bell said that he thought Schneider would run because he had been "making himself apparent" through various media. Bell noted that Schneider spoke at the Young Democrats meeting last night and that he was seeing more of him in the next two years. IN THE NEXT two years the migration of seats in the Korean majority of seats in the Korean republic. Bell said he believed that the Republicans would win a majority in the house in 1978. He also said he wanted liberal and liberal candidates for the legislature and many of them had won. Bell said that if Murderer fails in suicide attempt SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -Gary Mark Gilmore, the convicted murderer whose execution was delayed despite his request that he be allowed to die, was found unconscious yesterday in an apparent suicide attack. He is now being coconnase in her apartment 40 miles away. labor support as people will see when the financial campaign reports come out later, Berman outspent Sen. Arden Booth, three to one." Bell said. "He tried to take his own life," prizm medical technician Tom Anungay said. "He told me I was a serial killer." GILMORE WAS listed in serious condition at the University of Utah Medical Center last night, and hospital spokesman John Keahey said Gilmore probably would remain in a mild comatose state for 12 to 24 hours before making a full recovery. the Democrats had run young but conservative candidates, they would stand a chance of retaining control in the house in 1978. Deputy Warden Leon Hatch said a note found in Gilmore's Utah State Prison cell, "I leave all of my personal belongings to my mother." The hospital spokesman said that Glimore definitely couldn't appear at the court. The apparent suicide attempts came one day before Gilmore was scheduled to appear in the next season, which will consider whether to commute his death sentence to a lesser penalty. Gilmore said that he wanted to be executed by firing squadrade rather than spend the rest of his life. pills, which wouldn't have killed him even if he hadn't received treatment. "Conservative Kansans will look at the liberal voting records of the new legislators in 1978 and decide to vote for conservatives." Bell said. Nationally, in the Ford campaign, the Republicans have nothing to be ashamed of, the Democrats have nothing to be ashamed of. THE YOUNG REPUBLICANS were disappointed with the election results this year. Bell said, but their outlook for the next few years is optimistic. He has served as consultant to the National Security Council, the Rand Corporation, the Hudson Institute and the Ford Foundation. Whiting is now professor of political science and an associate of the Center for Chinese Studies at the University of Michigan. The East Asian Studies Program and the doctorate Political science are jointly offered. Analysis for the Far East and in 1601 and 1922 as special assistant for the Burean of the Far East. Chae Jin Lee, KU professor of East Asian Studies and political science, said Whiting had written several books that were now considered a major influence on the foreign policy. Whiting's most recent book is "China and the United States-What Next?" "Ford came closer to getting elected than anyone thought he would. It's remarkable that we came so close with Watergate only four years behind us," Bell said. He said one reason Republicans fared worse in state elections the year that was the swing. "We were a huge swing." "Democrats started organizing four years ago. They also had a lot of organizers." A workshop on interviewing skills is being sponsored from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today by the International Relations Society of New York. This Third Annual Madridal Dinner, sponsored by SUA, will feature a formal program by Lawrence's Voci di Camera, a nine-member madrigal group composed of University administrators, faculty and staff, and two other Lawrence vocalists. Workshop on development of interviewing under way A medieval Christmas celebration, with wandering minstrels, trumpeters and a traditional English dinner, will be in the Kansas Union Dec. 2, 4, 5 and 7. Division of Continuing Education for 30 registered applicants. Tickets now on sale for Madrigal dinner Beulah Duncan, workshop coordinator, said yesterday that the workshop, at 13th and Oread streets, would help applicants in the helping professions—nursing and social work, for instance—to elicit information more accurately from the public. Tickets are on sale in the SUA office in the Union, at the Adventure Bookstore, the Round Corner Drug Store and Gardenland. Admission is $7.50. Dec. 5 is sold out. Prison authorities didn't know how Glmore got sleeping pills. They said he might have gotten them during visits with his friend, a woman under his tongue during later searches Arthur Thomas, workshop leader and associate professor of counseling, said yesterday, that individuals who pick up the ideas and attempt to use them in their work or personal activities would be able to communicate more effectively. Thomas said the workshop materials had been developed and researched during the past 14 years by Norman Kagan at Michigan State University and had been extensively used in his own work with teachers, counselors and students at KU. The elections this year can be viewed in a different light by Republicans, as they were by Bell, by placing the blame on the Democrats for anything that goes wrong. Gilmore, who has spent 18 of his 35 years in penal institutions, objected to Gov. Calvin Rampton's stay of the execution for pardon board review. Gilmore, sentenced to death for killing a motel clerk during a robbery in July, said delaying the execution subjected him to the "stress of cruel, unusual and inhumane punishment." "This isn't something you can learn passively," Thomas said. "You have to pick it out." The friend, Jeff Newman, said Barrett had told him of a suicide pact she and Glimor had made, but he didn't believe the plan after visiting Glimor Monday. The dinner will be in the Union's Kansas Room GILMORE'S ATTORNEY, Dennis Boaz, said that Gilmore was "greatly upset" that his execution was stayed past the scheduled Monday and that the suicide attempt was "consistent with what he has said all alone." Barrett, 20, was in a coma and in critical condition at Utah Valley Hospital in Vrovo, 40 miles to the south, officials said. She was rushed to the hospital yesterday morning after a friend found her unconscious in her Sorinville apartment. THE GOVERNOR'S office announced that the case had been removed from the agenda, and chairman George Lattner said he will meet with the next scheduled meeting beginning Dec. 8. "It's all on the Democrats now," Bell said. "They can't pass the buck." ENDS THURSDAY WALT DISNEY'S "SNOW WHITE and the Seven Dwarfs" Plus "No Deposit. No Return" Snow White-7; 10; 11:00 N.D.K.R.-40 only Granada DUSTIN NOFFMAN LAURENCE OLIVIER in "MARATHON MAN" Shown Eve, 7:30 & 9:45 Sat.Sun.Mat, 7:30 Varsity This may be your last chance to see one of the funniest movies in years. DON'T BLOW IT! "THE RITZ" ENDS THURSDAY Tonight at 7:40 & 9:30 Hillcrest 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWC MINUTE WARNING CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASSAVETES Evenings 7:20 & 9:40 Sat.Sun.Mat, 1:55 Hillcrest He's back in business and it's service with a smile. THE RAWDY ADVENTURES OF Tom Jones Evenings 7:35 & 9:30 Sat.Sun.Mat, 2:00 Hillcrest Former Kissinger adviser to speak on China policy Have an Affair with the Holidays! Dec. 2nd—4th Allen Whiting, recently described by CBS correspondents Marvin and Bernard Kalb in their book "Kissinger" as "the most influential man" in affecting the China policy of Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, will attend the University of Kansas tomorrow. Whiting will speak on "China and the World after Mao" at 7:39 p.m. tomorrow in 3139 Wescoe Hall. The lecture is open to the public and is free of charge. Whiting also will meet with faculty members and graduate students at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in $52 Blake Hall. He will speak on American foreign policy toward China. Whiting was deputy consul general of the American Consulate General in Hong Kong from 1966 to 1980. He had previously worked as an editor at The Times, the director of the Office of Research and CALLING FOR HELP a play by Peter Handke art by MA Big Eight Room Union 12:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. Wed., Nov. 17 translated by Michael Roloff SJA Christmas & Thanksgiving FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST Make reservations now! No extra cost for our services. Maupintour travel service Phone: 843-1211 X KU Union/The Malls/Hillcrest/900 Mass WHAT ARE YOUR CHANCES FOR LAW SCHOOL? AIDES, Box 13492, University Station, Gainesville, FL 32604 Name___ Address___ Our Systems Analysts will estimate your chances of being accepted into law schools of your choice plus schools scientifically selected to match your profile. Cost? $12. Send now for information. 99c reg. $1.59 Don Chilito's Texas Burrito NOW ONLY 99c reg. $1.59 Offer good Mon., Nov. 15 thru Thurs., Nov. 18 1528 W. 23rd across from post office 842-8861 MEXICO P FINEST REPAIR (Watches & Jewelry) DEPT. IN LAWRENCE The "appal design more e recruit DEPT. IN LAWRENCE "In it looking the attire Congre recruit that, bi design healthi Dix, corps campt Shelley recruit inform yester tomorrow 'I h some s Bock s AN descrii - 1 Year Guarantee . . . we will at no cost to you, repair or replace any defective part or workmanship, furnished by us, for one full year from date of repair. Bock from Peace nation complinevita Our guaranteed service includes: - complete disassembling and cleaning of watch movement - cleaning and polishing the watch case and band - electronic time-testing and adjusting for maximum accuracy Severely damaged parts or rusty watches slightly higher FAST SERVICE- GUARANTEED WORK BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Massachusetts 843-4366 OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS Wednesday, November 17, 1976 when the ut later. three to . sign, the termed of. ted than sarkable rate only nwed in a pey were on the wrong. v," Bell 1961 andureau of political center for university of to the and Corrthe Ford and the jointly Just Asian Whiting were now of U.S. most United 18 xxxxxxxxxx Peace Corps weathers setbacks By STEVE FRAZIER Staff Writer The Peace Corps has weathered an "appalling" attrition rate and some poorly designed service programs to become a major force in the world, a Peace Corps recruiter said yesterday. "In the early days, the Peace Corps was looking to be very big and very visible to get the attention of the government," Congress, "Michael Dkx, area manager for recruitment, said. 'The corps succeeded in that, but some of the programs weren't well managed.' Now we're smaller but healthier." Dix, a University of Kansas graduate and corps volunteer in Jamaica, is helping the university recruit a new Shelley Bock, Overland Park law student, recruit this week on the KU campus. An information booth was in the Kansas Union yesterday and will be there through January. Bck, who was a volunteer in Costa Rica from 1794 to 1796, said that because the Peace Corps operated in more than 60 nations under widely varying conditions, complaints from volunteers were ineptable. "I had a good experience, but I know that some say that they had bad experiences." AN ARTICLE in the Feb. 17, 1976, Kansan described the experiences a Peace Corps trainee, David Scharnhorst, Wichita graduate student, had on Tonga Island. The article said Scharnhorst left the island after his retirement because of "horrible" living conditions. Schambertor said Monday he didn't leave specifically because of the living conditions but because "the representatives of whom I dealt with and I did not get aloud." He said the government didn't supply him with a house as he had been promised, and that he hadn't paid. "They finally came up with a house. The only reason it was vacant was because no self-respecting Tongan would live there," he said. "I did not hold my ill feelings against the Peace Corps, but with the Tongan government." "I DON'T think that my experience in Iraq is the average Peace Corps experience." Dix said two recruiters had problems because of the Kansan story on Scharphar. "When a volunteer comes home early, somehow that's newworthy," he said. "In a sense, that's a compliment to the Peace Corps. People have a very idealistic view of it—they expect it to be something special. If you've got your head together, you're not expecting good conditions. You go over DIX SAID he disgraced with most critics who say the Peace Corps tries to impass the American culture. almost wanting the worst so you'll be surrounded because things are better. "Frankly, I have problems with art and music education overseas, but that is a very nice way to learn." The corps trains volunteers to understand and accept the cultures of the countries in which they will work, Dix said, so there will be a minimum of cultural conflict. "If anything, some of their culture rubs off on the volunteer." Bock said. DIX SAID that in the 1960s the Peace Corps was often accused of being a "front" for the CIA because the workers appeared to critics to be a potential spy network. "There are countries where the Peace Corps was thrown out, but that was because of insensitivity to the culture or some volunteers who abused drugs and became a focal point of anti-America sentiment. In most cases, though, volunteers are asked Dix and Bock estimated that there were probably 10-20 ex-volunteers on the KU campus, but they didn't know who they were. "Sometimes people are reluctant to say they were a Peace Corps volunteer," Bock said. "People you tell say, 'Oh, that nice,' and usually about it. People think of it as weird." 90 Opening Season KU Women's Basketball Friday, Nov. 19—KU vs. Alumnae Allen Field House -- 7 p.m. University Daily Kansan Students with I.D. admitted free. Tickets for nine exciting home games now on sale in Room 6, Allen Field House, for $8. THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAK WOMEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS BASKETBALL - 1976 - 1977 Nov. 19 Alumnae at Lawrence 7:06 Nov. 19 Tournament at Dale Mines, Ia. Nov. 26-28 Tournament at Springfield Mo. Ok. 14 Dec. 5 Clemence Junior College at Claremore, Ok. Dec. 6 University of Oklahoma at Ok. Dec. 8 University of Omaha at Lawrence 6:00 Jan. 6-7 Johnson/McLean State at Marvilles, Mo. Jan. 7-8 Johnson/McLean State at Marvilles, Mo. Jan. 12-13 Wichita Univ. at Wichita Ks. 5:00 Wichita Univ. at Wichita Ks. Jun. 20-21 Kansas State at Manhattan Ks. Jun. 22 Kansas State at Manhattan Ks. Jun. 22 Univ. of Neb. at Lincoln 7:00 Univ. of Neb. at Lincoln Feb. 1 Clemence Junior College at Lawrence 7:30 Feb. 2 Clemence Junior College at Lawrence 7:30 Feb. 10 Central Meadow College at Lawrence 6:15 Feb. 10 Central Meadow College at Lawrence 6:15 Feb. 12 Wichita Univ. at Lawrence 5:19 Feb. 14 pre-game game K.C. Kings at Kemper Arena 5:30 Feb. 18 Southern Mo. State at Springfield 5:30 Feb. 18 Southern Mo. State at Springfield 7:00 Mar. 10-12 AIW Region Championship at DeCayre, Ia. Mar. 12-14 AIW Region Championship at DeCayre, Ia. Let's Celebrate We've passed the 13th Week Junior-Senior Class Party Stables — November 18, 8-12 p.m. All the beer you can drink for 50c Seniors must wear T-Skirts. Juniors will receive class cards. Come meet Prof. Peter Turk, HOPE Award Winner Sponsored by BOCO COACH: Marian E. Washington All home games played in Allen Field House. 6th Anniversary SALE MISS STREET DELI MAIL MASSACHUSETTS 50¢ OFF— with this Coupon REUBEN SANDWICH Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye. Reg. $2.00 Earnings Nov. 61 Expires Nov. 30,1976 The Bull & Boar $175 Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH beef, home-made mashed potatoes - smothered in dark brown gravy. Ribs included. Reg. Price $2.10 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETT ST. $1.00 OFF—with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon pires Nov. 30, 1976 "OREAD BOOK SHOP HAS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE!" • GIFT BOOKS • UNICEF CARDS • CALENDARS • POSTERS OREAD BOOK SHOP IN THE UNION MON.-FRI. 8:30-5:00 SATURDAYS 10:00-1:00 CALCULATOR SALE SALE Were Now HP70 $165.00 $99.95 HP65 $795.00 $349.95 HP35 $195.00 $95.00 Casio FX10 $99.95 $39.95 Application Books for HP35, HP45 $10.00 $6.50 Rockwell $99.95 $49.95 While Supply Lasts! kansas union BOOKSTORE 4 Wednesday, November 17. 1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. Bike defeat KU loss Pedalplan, a bike path system that would have made bicycling in Lawrence easier has died—apparently because the city's safety agency of Kansas to help prepare the plan. It's too bad. Many Lawrence residents would have used the paths, which would have included routes along the new Clinton Parkway from Iowa Street to Warrenville, along the new Kaw River Bridge and on top of the ley on the Kaw. BUT THERE was probably one group, the students at KU, that would have benefitted most from the bike paths. The Lawrence residents would have used the paths mainly for recreation. Some students, however, use bicycles as their major means of transportation. If Lawrence's Pedalplan had been approved, the routes on the east and west sides of Mt. Oread would have been lengthened. Second, Arkansas and Alabama streets would have been used to drive bikers into the east of Memorial Stadium that would have allowed bikers to pedal up Memorial Drive. Unfortunately, these routes may never exist. The regional office of the U. S. Department of Transportation rejected the application for $85,527 in federal funds. Manhattan used the resources of K-State, "the whole works" according to the KU graduate and transportation official who killed the Lawrence plan. MANHATTAN, which used students from Kansas State University, had their request granted. So did Wichita, which did a better job than Lawrence in planning its bikeways in the downtown area. City officials said that just one man was involved in the planning of a new $100 million The Manhattan plan included studies by civil engineering students. JUST ONE person was assigned to work on the report because the city was notified just one month before the plan was due. Let's hope that the Lawrence bike plan can be saved and that another source of money can be found. Bicyclists endanger themselves and increase the probability of traffic accidents when they travel along crowded streets meant only for cars; Lawrence needs the bike paths. By Carl Young Contributing Writer Letters Zionists shroud truth To the Editor: This letter is written to bring to the attention of KU students and faculty a fragrant abuse of perfume that occurred on this campus Nov. 5. Fliers had been prepare announcing a Week of Solidarity with the Palestinian Revolution, sponsored by the Iranian Students Association and the Organization of Arab Students. Nov. 5, altered copies of the fler appeared on campus. "Week of Solidarity" had been changed to "Week of Sodomy." It was added to the speaker's book for the Palestinian revolution, had written a book called "Abdul makes a good deep hum," and that films would be shown: "A boy and his camel!" and "The date of the conference had also been changed." This attempt by Zionist forces at the University of Kansas again makes clear the unwillingness of these people to pay attention to the issue of the injustice done to the Palestinian people. Let me assure the Zionist elements who were responsible for this attempt to hide the truth that the truth will be brought to the American people. Use of American tax dollars and military hardware to keep Palestinians from their home is Their attempt to resort to trickery, even obscurity, to prevent the history and current reality of Israel being known, once again, is feast for fear of people who don't fear the truth. People who have occupied by force another people's land, who rely on $2 billion a year in American military aid to continue the war against terrorism as racist by a majority of the world, do fear the truth. an injustice that the morality of Americans won't long allow to continue. Shawkat Hammoudeh Amman, Jordan, graduate student Funding protest To the Editor: After reading of the Student Senate's supplemental funding of the KU Ice Hockey Club I have several reactions as a student, as a member of the Senate, Committee on Public Instruction, of the Recreation Advisory Board (RAB). As a student I recognize the necessity of thoughtful and prudent funding actions by the Senate to regulate certain aspects of the student activity fee, the Senate stands to lose a great deal of power. Without a reasonable funding policy the Senate stands As a three-year member of the Senate Sports Committee I have observed a growing disenchantment with the Ice Hockey Club. The Sports Committee denied funds for Ice Hockey club operation for the two years preceding the denial because the denial of funds came from a general student rejection of the promise of an ice arena coming to Lawrence. The Senate has committed itself to wait support of a program that operates in Kansas City, includes only a few students, plays before only two matches, represents overall a very small potential for participation by Lawrence students compared with other club sports. The mention of club sports brings me to the RAB. This is a major funding responsibilities of the Sports Committee last year. The Ice Hockey Club failed to send a representative to our budget hearings last year and it was decided to deny funds on the basis of the reasons listed above. This board has the responsibility to coordinate and manage the funds by funding Student Senate, I see nothing but a flagrant circumvention of the responsibilities held by the Sports Committee and by the RAB. Without consideration by these bodies, it makes as much sense to go before the Senate club sport to go before the Senate to request its yearly fund. The issue here isn't ice hockey, but rather a competent, responsible and sensible funding policy by the Student Senate. When it doesn't consider its own advisory bodies, the Senate doesn't seem to adhere to such a policy. Greg Myrberg Lincoln. Neb.. senior Someone once told me the road to hell was paved with good intentions. After hearing the complex, perplexing and in some ways tragic story of Gary Mark Glimore, I have no doubt that the saying is true. Utah case a nightmare THE EXECUTION didn't take place, despite Gilmore's vehement requests that the state of Utah have the courage to execute him as his sentinel. dictated. Lawyers who oppose the execution on legal grounds will appear at a meeting of the Judiciary in Pasadena today. Reportedly, Gilmore will there also in again request to die. Gilmore, 35, has decided it is better to die "like a man" than to spend the rest of his life in prison for killing a mollent last July. Following his conviction, Gilmore was sentenced to choose either death by hanging or before a firing squad. Nov. 8, the Utah Supreme Court, by a 3-2 decision, imposed a stay of execution, indefinitely postponing Gilmore's death. Last Thursday, at Gilmore's request, the court ordered execution, and agreed that Gilmore should die at 8 a.m. last Monday. our American penal system. Glimore, who has already spent 18 years of his life behind bars, has simply said he can't endure any more of the emotional stress of being imprisoned. The surprise of his death is that Glimore has been judged perfectly sanity. He committed murder—he readily admits it—and is willing to die for it. Mary Ann Daugherty Contributing Writer profess to disavow, doesn't come at the hands of the executioner as much as it comes from being locked up, demoralized and treated like an animal for years on end. Regardless of the legal questions concerning Gilmore's request to die, the nation's courts and legislators can no longer ignore the horrors implicit in her punishment. The time they reviewed the number of imprisonment to see whether, indeed, such a sentence is truly in accord with their professed ideals. Gilmore's request seems to be the most vocal pronouncement yet that cruel and horrible man is willing to kill. to keep Gilmore on death row, would be wise to do some evaluating of its own. The ACLU, which lately has seemed to have its representatives poking at every case on the dockets, needs to assess its own crusades. Granted, the ACLU opposed cruel and unusual punishment, and thus naturally is opposed to executions. But the organization's broader purpose is to protect individual rights and personal freedoms. Gilmore, by his own free will, does not know that the ACLU should be crusading for him, not against him. In the Gilmore case, the ACLU is a classic example of a group getting so ambitious that it lets its own members chose those very people it intends to save. THE AMERICAN Civil Liberties Union of Utah, the leading group in the struggle The Utah courts should also acknowledge Gilmore's right to call for his own death, but it isn't surprising that the final decision is being made over a lawsuit filed by a group of lawyers being aired before what now must be a very confused group of justices. SURELY, THOSE who make the final decision will want to make it thoughtfully, knowing this will, in all probability, be a landmark decision. And most decisions concerning the emerging right of a person to choose his time to die are todiously made. How long it took for the various courts to finally decide that Karen Quinlan parents could seek a court hearing from a life-sustaining respirator. But the Glimore case is even more complex because two traditionally meshed philosophies, one that deplores cruel and unusual punishment and the other that supports personal freedoms, are at odds. Those who finally decide Glimore's fate, one hopes will have the chance to make an impact in the one who really matters. He doesn't consider execution to be cruel and unusual punishment. In fact, he regards it as quite humane. Therefore, the court should allow him to die. THE EVENTS concerning the Gilmore case during the past week or so are distressing because all parties seem to think they are acting with only the best intentions. Gilmore thinks his request is unreasonable and does not sentence the ACU wants to discourage cruel and unusual punishment, and the Utah court system is trying to weigh both sides in hopes of setting a proper ground with the jury's case. Good intentions are clear on all sides, and that what makes the Gilmore case a nightmare. AIR SUPPORT! WE NEED AIR SUPPORT! JEEZ! SORRY! WE SOLD THOSE PLANES TO IRAN! © 1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURE Promising cancer lead canned An ad will appear soon in the Wall Street Journal and Barrons with a headline reading: "For Sale one thousand mice with malignant cancer $138 each." The text of the ad, paid for by a benefactor of the Cancer Science and Medicine will say: "Our research shows that the incidence and severity of cancer depends upon diet. We urgently want to refine that research so that it may help to decrease suffering from human cancer. The U.S. government has refused to support Pauling and his colleagues in this work during the past four years." THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsroom-864-4810 Business Office-864-4358 The real, middle-of-the-road American doctors have consistently opposed it for 25 years. In 1983, the American Cancer Society created a commission that condemned it without Published at the University of Kansas daily August 15, 2016. Subscriptions to *University of Kansas* are valid June and July at execlsation Saturday and Sunday, August 15, 2016, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., @6644. Subscriptions by mail are $9 per semester or $18 per year outside the county. Student subscriptions are only available outside the county. Student subscriptions attracted the interest of the likes of commentators on the right, therefore it must be no good. Managing Editor Journal Editor Jeff Abulakhak Campus Editor Stewart Branigan Associate Campus Editor Shelley Baldwin Associate Campus Editors Chuck Alexander Photo Editor Staff Photographers George Millerer Sports Editor Steve Shenquilleton Assistant Sport Editor Alain Gouwat Assistant Entertainment Editor Elizabeth Leech Contributor Mary Ann Daughtery, John Fuller, Greck Hack Copy Chiefs Greg Hack, Lynda Smith Make-up Editors Greg Hack, Lynda Smith Chuck Alexander Dennis Vubelu, Jyomi Ken Editor Debbie Gunn Business Manager Terry Honey Max Planck, who had some new ideas in Helmholtz's own field, told me to stand approval, even among the very physicists who were closely connected with the topic. Helmholtz probably did not even read my paper at all but made sure I would not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die and a few more people up that is familiar with it". unstood as cancer. The great physician Helmholtz once said, "New ideas need the more time they are given to really original they are." Antiinist Business Manager Carole Roeroetcher Advertising Manager Jiace Jemlens Company Marketing Manager Sarah McAnally Classified Manager Sarah McAnaly National Advertising Manager Timothy O'Shea News Adviser Publisher Business Adviser Bob Giles David Dary Mel Adams That's why Pauling has to tell his mice and laetrile is illegal in the United States. THE SOURCE of the continuing opposition is as little Nicholas Von Hoffman HENCE THE sale of the laboratory mice and the end of the research unless you want to send a contribution. (The Inventor) The Office of Park, Ciff, Hill Road Bill Road to the Park, Ciff, 94025. 'It is tax deductible.' You can't get better credentials or more prestige, but he can't get money because you don't have the prevaling ones. If they had been he would never have been able to solve the riddle of a disease like sickle cell anemia. So the question is the degree of competence and judgment of the people who control research. prestigious appointments don't guarantee scientific ability or even honesty, as the scandal of Kettering Institute (S-K) attests. It was discovered research data there had been made available and it involved in what would have been called quackery had If Paulina can't get some tax money out of the National Cancer Institute, the government agency with a monopoly on research funds, who can? Two-time Nobel Laureate Elisabeth Foster and once for peace] has such an astounding record of successes in chemistry, biology and medicine that there are many same persons with advanced college degrees in various branches of the physical sciences. Living Golden Oldie, right up there with the biggies like Ike Newton and Al Einstein. IMPRESSIVE degrees and chaeg-shot, no-risk journalism of the dingy award-winning magazine. It takes guts and determination. Authority, features of medicine. (c) 1976 King Features Syndicate Why has amygdalin received such treatment? There's no money in it since all it is is essence of apricot pits—therefore no drug company can explain why, explain the hostility, the anger and the refusal to investigate it by the scientific method. Pride may enter into it, as may the apparently didactic personality of Ernest Krebs, who first proposed amygdalin's use as well as a biochemical theory as work an antiseptic agent. of the commission, am man- Donald, a surgeon cancer, used to pose for cigarette ads in magazines. He burned to death of a fire thought to have been started by his own cigarette. it taken place on the fringes of medicine. Nevertheless, S-K was commissioned to investigate the efficacy of a substance the American Cancer Society crowd has been calling a nostrum for years—a substance used in chemotherapy or Vitamin B-17. As anyone could have said a priori, the S-K findings were highly negative. It got out, however, that the man who had actually done the experiments, Kanematus Sugirau, insisted that the compound had subsided at S-K that, "it is still my belief that 'amygdalin cures metastases.'" SUGIURA isn't the only professionally reputable researcher with good credential. We also possibly a very powerful agent in the treatment of cancer. T. Metianau, director of research pharmacology-toxicology at the University of California, had included lacrine was effective in mice injected with adenocarcinoma. Similar results were obtained by Paul Retnauer and another colleague. Institute Manfred von Ardenne But what do kraut-frog-jag scientists know? An irrelevant question, but laetrile has been condemned because members of the society advocated it. It is a conservative therapy, one that has THESE TIBITS and the rest of the story of the American cancer establishment's bad-will effort not to investigate this substance have been assembled by the Cancer Foundation, a free lance writer who is able to do this valuable work thanks to a journalism fellowship from the Alicia Patterson Foundation. The foundation is mentioned here because italmism and irrational on this topic as the cancer mavins. Exposing politicians and their girl friends credible research. The commission's secretary was radiologist Henry Garland, a chain-smoker who asserted "cigarettes in moderation are regarded by man as one of the better tranquilizers." He died of lung cancer, and the chairman Presidential style altered Staff Writer By PAUL R, JEFFERSON Through the years we've witnessed Eisenhower's golf mania, Kennedy's neopotamian, Johnson's surgery scars, Nixon's memoiry daughter and Ford's wife. When Jimmy Carter was elected President, the United States didn't get just a new set of teeth and an enigmatic whirlwind government to rewarm the entire federal government. A NOW, WE'RE going to have to put up with the front-porch philosophy of Billy Carter (with his ever-present six pack), Amy Carter's emergence into puberty, and the admonitions of Mix Lillian. Their activities will supple the goings-on of Jerry, Betty, Susie and Jack at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. The rest of us will be self-proclaimed piety and honesty, we will have to deal with the fact that he is still a peanut farmer from Georgia. Which means, The don't Kanss becau Dick for openers, that peanuts, peanut butter and myriad other peanut products will become fashionable. (When was the last time anyone did it?) party and they didn't serve peanuts? Other things that will be in wogue now that Jimmy is President: demi suits and short-sleeve shirts in the Oval Office, softball games, informal state dinner states, Georgia crackers in a crafty everybody about Georgia), denia, deny hygiene magazine, "Girls and Brats" and just. At his first press conference as President-elect last Thursday, Carter was asked whether he had any reservations about his leadership. He said he would drive the mandate he desperately wanted. Carter replied that he was an activist and he wasn't going to be a digni president. He was. ON ANOTHER level, Carter should change the character of the presidency. "We up to we ho over" Dec the as of its predecessor—the cautious, conservative to take action to achieve their goals Carter must deliver on his promises to reduce both unemployment and inflation. To do otherwise would be fatal to his term, but he (and possibly his party) out in 1880. EXPECTATION of the American people that I will believe in someone. Carter is that one. Still, there persists a disquieting feeling about Carter in the minds of many people. What seems strange, perhaps, to the American, is once again having an active presidency. Having leadership in the White House, with an active, positive President, an exception in recent times, will once again become the rule for our chief executive. It's going to be an interesting four years Wednesday, November 17, 1978 5 for the de that d seek a life- n more ionally deplores and the seedoms, decide save the be only dont hel and regards se court Gilmore so are seem to the best original courage and the high both proper Good lies and cases a case MANHATTAN ALL FEATURES the great face said, more time he the more and some it’s own that had no in-valent, even event who with the with the at least in truth does unincornishing its them see because its die and a up that is to as*10 nas to sell illegal in d t it to take mises to infiltration, this term, his sight an people someone. g feeling y people. , to the vaving an e House, , 4 an ex- again acute. ur years. Staff Writer By DAVID JOHNSON Association's investments stable The ups and downs of the stock market don't seriously affect the investments of the Kansas University Endowment Association. The partnership is supported by Dick Porto, treasurer, said yesterday. "We are a conservative organization set up to benefit the University. The securities we hold have a solid record and are proven over the years." Porto said. Declines in the stock market would hurt the association only if it wanted to sell all of its shares. The Endowment Association invests almost three-fourths of its total assets in marketable securities—U.S. government obligations, municipal and corporate bonds and preferred and common stocks, according to a report published in the October edition of The Small Business magazine of the $51,110,96 in total assets last year, $37,725 was invested. About 43 per cent of the Endowment Association's assets are invested in about 350 companies throughout the United States. Last year, the association's income was $1,934,369 on stock holdings totaling $22,182,926. PORTO SAID the Endowment Association tried to invest in companies dealing with natural resources. Among the companies that the association owns stocks in are Phillips Petroleum Co., Exxon Corp., AT&T, M&T General Motors Corp., Panhandle Eastern, Christiana Securities, Kansas Oil, Continental Oil of California and Continental Oil. He said income from these investments make up about 29 per cent of the total revenue. MARTIN HENRY, vice president for property management, said yesterday that the Endowment Association held an annual fundraiser in Texas and smaller retailers in Colorado. The Endowment Association also owns 32,000 acres of farm land in 28 Kansas counties and 400 acres in Oklahoma. Of this land, more than $1 million is dedicated to Waddkins, a benefactor to the University. He said the farm property was overseen by five managers. Revenue-producing property was taxed at the regular ad valorem to the assessed value—rate, he said, and property used by the University wasn't taxed. Among the Endowment Association's holdings are also several office buildings, including the Kansas Power and Light Building, the First National Bank Building at 8th and First National Bank Building at 10th. Massachusetts streets, McCollum Laboratories, and the Breidenthal Laboratory and the Family Practice Center at the KU Medical Center. University Daily Kansan Porta said much of the association's security holdings were deeded by various The Unitrust program, for instance, allowed donors to receive 5 to 10 per cent of the income of their investment annually, helium or hydrogen donations to donate investments to the association. Results of an audit conducted by the IRS last summer haven't been received by the Endowment Association, Porto said. The association was one of several institutions audited by the IRS in an attempt to become familiar with tax-exempt institutions. Porto said the object of the Endowment Association was to invest in a variety of steady growth markets in an attempt to lose in areas with gains in others. Based on the guidelines and objectives of the investments set by the finance committee of the association, an investment advisory firm on the east coast determines the specific markets and corporations to invest in, he said. "The whole investment picture could be completely different in 20 years," he said. HATTER ME TONIGHT 30c DRAWS NO COVER MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE – 700 New Hampshire 842-9476 4 DAY WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. "You Babes" "T" Shirts $3.90 Reg. $6 SHOP NOW FOR CHRISTMAS 3 Piece Suits Buy "Happy Legs" Reg. $60 $49.90 ENTIRE STOCK WINTER COATS 25% OFF! ONE GOOD GROUP Sweaters 1/3 OFF! MASTER CHARGE BANKAMERICARD "Happy Legs" Shirts $9.00 Reg. $16 ONE RACK Prides Crossing Pants Reg. $18-$20 $12.90-$14.90 10 10 5:30 WEEK DAYS Till 8:30 THUR. THE ATTIC 927 Massachusetts Street 4 DAY WED. THUR. FRI. SAT. 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Open Thurs. night till 8:30 MISTER GUY 920 Mass. MISTER GUY 6 Wednesday, November 17.1976 University Dally Kansar Cagers debut tonight The University of Kansas basketball team will make its debut at 7:30 tonight when the Jayhawks take the court for the first time in an intraquadrade game in Allen Field House. Admission is $2, but students will be admitted free with their KU-IDs. The Jayhawks, who open the season in ten days against Montana State, will be divided into two teams, the blue and the white, with six members on each. In the first half on the blue team will be Donnie Von Moore, 6-9 center; Ken Koenigs, 6-10 forward; Herb Nobles, 6- forward; Clint Johnson, 6-2 guard; John Douglas, 6-2 guard; and Milt Gibson, 6-0 guard. will be Will Moore's first game since the 1974-75 season. He out sat last season because of illness. Douglas will be seeing his first action tonight. He is a junior college transfer from Decatur, Ala. The remaining six players will comprise the white squard: Paul Mokeski, 7o cent; Brad Sanders, 6-4 guard; Cris Barrhouse, 6-4 guard: Hassan Houston, 6-4 guard: Rashid forward; and Mac Stallcuck, 6-7 forward. Houston, Anderson and Stallcup are all freshmen. The reed saw action at KU last week. KU Coach Ted Ewens said that the lineups wouldn't represent KU's starting five for the coming season, but that he would use basic allusions by KU this year. At the Nike, Koenigs, Nobles, Barnhouse, Douglas, Johnson and Sanders will square off for the Blue against the White, at Houston, Gibson and Stallcup for the white. Golub's long haul ending "We'll play two ways this year," Owens said. "Our basic alignment will be with Donnie or Paul in at the post, but we'll have another lineup when we want to move at speed or pace, and that will be the team we have starting the second half (tonight)." By GARY VICE Assistant Sports Editor In four days it will be all over for Chris Golub. After years of high school and college football, the endless days of practice will end; Golub, a senior free safety from Westwood, will play his last game. While at the University of Kansas, he has made it through the season he didn't play Sports varsity, the days when the desire to practice wasn't there and the game that put him in the hospital for the knee surgery that left his return to football in doob. And with his collegiate playing days coming to a close, Gelub and, indeed, his wife, Miriam, were in town. "THERE WERE times I wanted to give it up," he said as he lay nearly submerged in a whirlpool bath recuperating from practice. "I enjoyed playing but not practicing. I had always been in practicing day after day. Mostly it was my parents who made my stay with it. "It took me two years before I got to start. But then I got what I wanted—to play the Big Bleu." This season, Golub, who was leading the conference last year with four interceptions until he was sidelined with a knee injury in the Oklahoma State game, was expected to anchor KU's defensive secondary. He has responded well to the task, striving to create an esprit de corps in the defensive backfield and to lead by example. HEADING INTO the Missouri game Saturday in Columbia, Mo., Goohb is second on the team in tackles with 79, leading in passes broken up with 10, tied for the lead in fumble recoveries with two and second in interceptions with three. "YEAH, I got to meet him quite a bit out there," Golub said. "After a few times I started talking to him and we exchanged a few words, nothing harsh." And that is what Colorado and its running back Tony Reed had in mind offensively against the Jayhawks last Saturday. What happened with the Rams on Friday with 12 picks, many of them on Reed. Explain how a free safety could log so many tackles, he said, "In the defensive design assistant coach (Lance) Van Zandt has for us the safe safety is involved in a lot of running plays. He's expected to watch for the pass and to support the line against the run. Most of my tackles have been on sweens." Even with his outstanding defensive strength, falling short of his rather generous goal. "I had a goal this season. Well, everyone has a goal," he said. "Mine was to average nine or 10 tackles a game, which 11 games would put me over the 100 mark. I hope I could make 21 tackles against Missouri (to make 100). If I, we probably won't win." For Golub and KU's other seniors, it was more important to impart. None of them relied on the thought process. 1974-75 Safety Chris Golub *concluding their football careers at KU in a losing team.* "THIS SEASON," it's been a real disappointment for me," he said. "I thought we'd go to a bowl game, but we had some things go wrong, losing Nolan and all. We played tough in all our games. It's important we win Saturday." The Tigers, whose quarterback Steve Pisarkiewicz and receivers Joe Stewart and Leo Lewis have been devastating opponents' defensive backfields might put the focus on Golub and his teammates in the secondary. Thus far, KU's secondary, as has one of the team's weak points, has relinquished 128 yards a game passing. "We're trying to pull the secondary together a bit," Goldbub said, "instill confidence in each other. I don't feel we've been all that weak. Some teams passed on us with some success early in the season, but we're improving. And some of those games, where we gave up a lot of yardage, it was also partially because of a weak pass rush." THE PASS defense's longest afternoon this season came against Nebraska quarterback Vince Ferragamo, who split every in seam in every zone the Jayhawks could set up. He completed 14 of 27 attempts for 199 yards. "Ferraragua was certainly the best we've faced this year," Gulbab said. "He gave us the most problems by recognizing our defenses and calling audibles at the line. We tried to confuse him, but we couldn't give him false leads." When the season is over, Golub said, his objective is to graduate. He is majoring in mechanical engineering and will have about 10 hours remaining after the spring semester. But there is another possibility in his future he wouldn't turn down. "I'd love to try and pro ball if I got drafted," he said. "But 'I can't see myself' in the air." And, if he doesn't have football tying up his time, what will he do? "I don't know. I know what I'd like to do, he said, grinning as he tipped his head toward a picture of a woman taped to his wrist. "I find a way to use the free time." TURKEY TROT Cross Country Race Sat., Nov. 20 1:00 p.m. — West Campus, 23rd and Iowa Registration between 11-12:00 noon, Parking Lot of 23rd and Iowa Jr. High, High School, KU students, University Faculty/Staff and Open Division Junior High and High School receive trophies. KU students, Faculty/Staff, and Open Divisions winners receive turkys. Also the person that comes closest to their predicted time in each division receives a turkey. 5 divisions: Men and Women Course: 2 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles for adults 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ miles for Jr. High and High School Sponsored by Recreational Services and Lawrence Parks & Rec. Walters delays career to swim By COURTNEY THOMPSON Janet Kay Walters has been "J. K." ever since her older sister nicknamed her that at age four. She's been a competitive swimmer almost that long. Walters swam in her first meet at age 9. By the time she was nine, she had auditioned for a major role. She said that by now she should be through with swimming. At 26, she's still playing tennis and golf. She also supposed to be at the KU Med Center this year completing a degree in nursing. But she's still here as the senior member of the KU women's swimming team. "I CAME BACK for an extra year because I knew we were getting a new coach and I got a scholarship to swim," Walters said. "Being the oldest on the team is neat. The girls look up to me. I've been doing this long I can help people -tell them what they are doing wrong and get them 'up' for a Walters said that KU workouts were easy compared with those she faced during the 1970s. "We had to be more patient," he said. "Sometimes it gets tiring—the daily workouts—but it comes naturally to me," she said. "If I didn't come to practice, I'd feel weird." HELPING PEOPLE is Walters' "thing" all the time, not just in competitive swimming. She coached younger swimmers throughout high school, and her intended career in nursing originated with her interest in working with people. Walters hopes to get her master's degree in nursing and then teach at a college. She said that she might take time out to work for a while first, possibly in an emergency or maternity ward, the departments that appeal to her most. "I've always had an inclination toward the medical thing," she said. "I worked as a candy-tripper; my mother was a nurse's aide, and I really get into the science stuff." "I guess it all ties in. I like to help the people learn this stuff, just like I think I'll enjoy helping people through nursing," she said. In her spare time, Walter's works six weeks as a work as a teacher assisting in the anatomy laboratory. Walters' other activities are offshoots of his athletic and academic favorites- WALTERS ADMITS WITH a laugh and a ride of the eyes that her swimming doesn't match. She runs at least one-half mile each and last year ran cross country for KU. She loves to read science books, especially medical ones. "I've got a boyfriend and all that, but I hardly see him. When you swim every night and have meets on the weekends, what can you say?" she said. Walters said that her best friends outside KU primarily were girls she swam with on the Johnson County YMCA team (the Jets). The swimwear is also a former swimmer for the Jets. "SHE COULD'VE been really good at either (running or swimming) but now she's kinda old. Back then, when she was my age, I had a girl. A woman did then was have kids." she said. Walters' mother was a swimmer and runner and now operates a wain shop in Boston. "I're really enjoying the whole thing here," she said. "It's fun now — we work out about two hours each evening. But when we get back home, the morning is running, weight lifting, swimming." "Next week we start the two-a-day practices, 6-7 a.m. and 5:30-7:30 p.m. That's 6,000 yards in the evening and 3,500 in the morning to think of it, that's gonna be hard work." OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -- Ron Bonne scored 27 points as the Kansas City Kings handed the Milwaukee Bucks their seventh straight win in a game that Association game played here last night. But Walters said she would "wear" *word* if she didn't get on the fun each day. For *Furious 7*, she was like a child. Kings beat reeling Bucks, 100-91 Scott Wedman, who finished with 19 points, led the Kings to a quarter push to the Kings. Sheed, 86-64, and a jumper by Mike Barr put them out of reach. The teams entered the final period with the Kings ahead, 73-72. Elmore Smith and rookie Alex English each scored 21 points for the Bucks, and Bobby Dandridge added Kansas City is 7-7 and Milwaukee is 3-12 for the season. SEMESTER BREAK SKI TRIP WINTER PARK COLORADO Trip includes Round-trip transportation Beer & soft drinks on the bus 4 Nights lodging in condominium 4 Days sking RK iums 4 Days of lift tickets 4 Days of ski rental W Cost: $135, Jan. 9-Jan. 15, 1977 Sign up deadline-Dec. 3, 1976 Optional 5th day of skiing & ski lessons. For further information contact the SUA office. SOPHOMORES 1031 Mass. 79ku T.G.I.F. at the HARBOUR Friday, November 19th 2:30-6:30 ALL YOU CAN DRINK Class buttons available at the door. For all class dues payers, buttons allow you free admittance to all future class functions. Mugs are still available at class office for $1.00 in 113B Union. BUTTON Walters works hard in and out of water POTION PARLOR fine gifts for head and home, collectibles paraphernalia, imported and recycled clothing BOKONON .841-3600. 12 EAST 8TH ST. DISCO DANCE Sat., Nov. 20 8:00 p.m.-1:00 a.m. $1.75 Union Ballroom-Kansas Union Sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas Beer will be sold with an I.D. No alcoholic beverages may be brought in. The University of Kansas Theatre presents RASHOMON a dramatization from a famous Japanese film with traditional theatre techniques NOVEMBER 12. 13. 19. 20 at 8:00 p.m. 21 at 2:30 p.m. for information call The University Theatre Box Office 864-3982 KUA American College Theatre Festival entry Particularly funded by the Student Activity Fee University Dally Kansan Wednesday, November 17, 1976 7 Home-grown Dorinda, a Saanen goat that has been a grand champion 14 times in the last two years, is Ahman Karr's "pride and joy." Dorinda is one of about 50 goats on Karr's farm near Tonganoxie. FARMER Every family member takes his turn walking the goats on Karr's 40 acre farm. Story by Rick Padden Photos by George Millener STOP STOP Karr rises before 5 every morning to milk his goats. goats When Ahman Karr, grounds foreman at the University of Kansas, punches out each daytime and heads home, he knows he won't be able to kick off his shoes, read the paper and just relax when he betc them. He has chores to do. For the last seven years, Karr and his family have been living on a 40-acre farm two miles north of Tonganise and, along with them, the family's four children. Karr, his wife, Emily, his son, Ralph, and his daughter, Paula, on their own resourcefulness to meet most of their basic needs. "We're homemakers," Karr said recently. "We provide our own meat, our own vegetables, our milk and butter and we THE FAMILY LIVES in a small, wood-framed house that Karr built himself. It isn't a fancy house. There are only basic furnishings—no dainawater, no color television and no shag carpet, but Karr "The house isn't finished yet, but it's better than what we started out with seven years ago at this site." he said. Karin keeps a kisel house warm by adjusting a thermostat. "We moved onto a bare 40 acres of ground. Now we have three rooms- and a path (no bathroom). It's warm and it dry." Klar does keep his house warm by adjusting a thermostat. "I USE A WOOD-BURNING, pot-bellied stove to provide the basic heat. Now is the time of year I have to get out and chop firewood for the winter." The house lives lived in, perhaps even a little cluttered, but Karr says he wouldn't have it any other way. "I'd rather live out here in the country in a tent than in the nice house in Lawrence. This is exactly what I want." The house isn't tied into Tonganoxie water mains, so Karr pumps in all his water from a 1,000 gallon water storage tank "We've got country water here," he said. BUT THE BIGGEST chore of all for Karr is taking care or almost 50 goats that live on the small rural plot. At 5 every morning, Karr walks out of his warm house, saunters past the kid pens and the buck pens, through squawking groups of bears and roosters and to the doe pen, where 18 does wait to be milked. "The does have to be milked twice a day," he said. "Once before I go to work and once when I get home." We always get a treat of best tender, loving care and Karr they do, we I've had some of the best breeding goats in the country. The herd can't be cared by by just one person and Karr said, "It's a family venture. We all in it together." "SAANEN GOATS, WHICH were originally developed in the Swiss Alps, are my top ones right now." He said that Laurie had been working with a different type of goat, called the Nubian. goat, called the Nunan. "They're known for their long floppy ears and mischievous "They're known for their long floppy ears and mischievous temperament." Karr said. "Ralph has been working with yet another breed. It's the smallest of the three when full grown—the Tagengerb." KARR SAYS HE talks to his goats when he's alone with them and he thinks they sometimes understand what he's saying. "I think they're the funest animals there are," he said. "I like to take them out for walks, especially in the summer when the leaves are on the trees. I take them out and pull the branches of the trees down a bit so that the goats can nibble at the leaves." The Karrs enjoy their animals but they also take them very seriously. They've raised many award-winning goats the past five years, and they attend all the local, regional and national goat shows they can. Karr said they had entered goats in 14 shows last year "They took home awards from each show. They win enough prize money at the shows to pay for all of our travel expenses." DORINDA, a 3-YEAR-OLL milk-cooking and Karrt “pride” in the championship champion 14 times in the last two years in various club shows. His breeding operation is gaining Korn some widespread recognition among fellow goat lovers, and this year the National Breeders' Association awards him. "I got into this business because I was unhappy with the cow I had. I decided that cows were too big and clumpy and stinky." Karr said he felt that goats were much cleaner than most other domestic animals. He had her warts not only clean, but also insides and are satisfied with their coat. "OURS ARE HAPPY MOPS. Some people say that their mops are always trying to get out of their pens, but ours don't do that." "I have no real market for the goats' milk, but I give some of it to the kids and some to the three hogs I own." He and his family also drink the milk and like it better than cows' milk. He said he hadn't made any large profits from his breeding operation, and ran it mainly to provide extra food and milk for his family and to get the pleasure that he takes from working with the good-natured goats. When asked if there was money in his business, Karr smiled and said. "Yeah—mine." A woman is standing in front of a wood-burning stove. She is holding her head up with one hand and smiling at the camera. A man is sitting on the floor, leaning back with his hands on his knees and looking up at the woman. He is wearing a dark shirt. The background consists of a kitchen space with wooden cabinets and a countertop. Karr and his daughter, Laurie, use an old pot-bellied stove to warm their feet between chores around the farm. 8 Wednesday. November 17. 1976 University Daily Kansan Prof hopes to decrease smoking by subliminal perception methods By JOE RADCLIFFE Staff Writer By using subliminal perception on heavy smokers, an acting assistant professor of physical education at the University of Oklahoma can be able to help people kick their habit. The professor, Elbert Glover, said yesterday he planned to start an experiment in January that he hoped would explain what subliminal perception can help grokers. "The implications are much bigger than just smoking," Glover said. "It can be used to stop all kinds of abusive behavior, such as drugs, alcohol and overeating." Glover has received a small grant from KU for the project, and he hopes to get a matching grant from the Kansas Lung Association. Glover, who has never smoked, already has completed a partially successful ex-smoking program. THE EXPERIMENT, which he used for his doctoral dissertation at Texas Woman's University, Denton, Tex., involved showing a group of women movies that were spliced with words that would, he hoped, bring a negative response to smoking. Glover collected a list of several words that women said they found highly objectionable. He then took several words associated with smoking, such as "quit," Commission . . . From page one wasn't the fraternities' right, but that "parking its crammed as it is." "We realize commissioners are doing this when we know that but we don't want to lose 981.406.RP5325." Argersinger told Bayer, "Just don't have a fire. We didn't start this to be mean." IN OTHER ACTION, commissioners authorized issuance of $875,000 in industrial revenue bonds for Packer Plastics, Inc., a northwest Lawrence factory that wants to expand its warehouse space and buy new equipment by March. The city now is committed to providing Packer with a lease on real estate and future buildings at the present Packer site, near Iowa Street north of the Kansas Turnpike. A total of $625,000 of the industrial revenue bonds will pay for expanding the warehouse by 80% of its feet, and the rest of the money will pay for machinery. Commissioners approved two agenda items concerning the rezoning of land by Kasalo Drive, from RS-1 to an RS-2 classification. The changes affect 145 acres north of old Streets and east of Kasalo Dr. A corner of the west corner of Kasalo Drive and Trail Road. A CHANGE TO RS-2 zoning keeps the affected areas residentially zoned but allows a greater population density in the area. Commissioners also took tentative steps toward providing the Lawrence library with $47,000 more budget by 1978. The steps included a new library fund moll leave from 2.5 to 3.0 mills. COMMISSIONERS APPROVED a plan for Carpet World, 2851 Iowa St., and approved another site plan for a motorcycle ramp to accommodate endangered recommendations from the Traffic Safety Commission to deny traffic controls at 15th Street and Kasold Drive, and to remove parking from parts of 17th Street and Alabama and Louisiana streets. The Orchards area, east of Kasos Drive between West 15th Street and Harvard Road, was withdrawn from PUD regulations. The change means that the Orchards are now within Lawrence's conventional zoning and development regulations. The Orchards, Inc., area developer, requested the change. A company representative said that he and Orchards are satisfied that he agreed on all differences between them. "stop," "cancer," and "die," and splice the words in a movie totally unrelated to smoking so that one word came up every half-second, forming a running message to the women smokers: "QUIT . . . SMOKING YOU." THE WOMEN, who all smoked at least 15 cigarettes a day, didn't consciously see the words. Glover said, though their reactions were intertwined... "Some of them said they felt uncomfortable, or that they were having trouble breathing," he said. "They seemed to be experiencing some anxiety." Two weeks later, when the women came back, some of them had cut their smoking significantly, but others had started to smoke more. "Some of them had quit 10 to 12 cigarettes a day," Glover said, shaking his head. "But just as many had increased. That really confused my data." GLOVER SAID he thought the increases had occurred because the movie had caused anxiety, which some women tried to alleviate through smoking. Others, however, received positive reinforcement from the words that Glover assumed would be objectionable to all women. he said. "I was hoping they would attach a negative response to their words," he said, and he kept asking for the word. GLOVER THOUGH he was the only one in the country doing this kind of research, until he heard about a similar project at the University that had been successful in helping overgrowers. In his new experiment, Glover said, he plans to correct the problems he had with the problem. "I plan to use pictures instead of words," he said. "People have different concepts of words, but pictures are universal. People tell them almost exactly the same way." "Calling for Help," a play by Austrian director Jürgen Klimke, is today in the Kansas Union Play Bldg Eight Room. The play, sponsored by SUA Fine Arts, has no plot, a small, and is 20 minutes. Director Jullann Wolfarth, Canton, Ohio, graduate student, said yesterday that the research team's findings are "very encouraging." Austrian play on 'help' calls to be presented "It involves four people in various stages of needing help who can't find the word," Wolfrath said. "Instead they use various phrases commonly used for calling for help." She said that these phrases ranged from long phrases, such as "People should be punished for stealing food from children," to short phrases such as "Fire!" By the end of the play, when the characters find the word "help," they discover that they no longer need it, she said. Wolfrath is directing the play to meet one of her requirements for obtaining a doctorate degree in theater, she said. Her major field is directing. The play starts at 12,30 and 7 and 9 p.m. There is no admission charge. REMINDER: The KU Backgammon Club meets every Wed. at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room, Kansas to 7:00 to play in the tournament BRING YOUR BOARDS --record student attendance at Assembly and committee meetings. ATTENTION: All Blue Cross and Blue Shield Health Insurance Policy Holders: Glover said he would use pictures that most people would find appalling, such as a skull and crossbones and a car accident, mixed with pictures related to smoking. There will be an open forum concerning the Student Blue Cross and Blue Shield Health Insurance Policy for your comments and to answer your questions. Funding may be a problem, Glover said, because he has to pay each participant $5 and the splicing of the movies is also expensive. PLACE: Pine Room, Kansas Union Partially funded by the Student Senate "The more money I get, the more people can have," he said. "And if I get a lot of money, I will be happy." Robert Cobb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that results from the mail balloon should be known by the Assembly's next meeting Dec. 14. DATE: Wed., Nov. 17 PLEASE ATTEND. A decision on the approval of proposed College Assembly by wills will be made by a vote. - That student attendance will be made public twice a year. A change in the Assembly by-laws requires a two-thirds majority of those votes. wasn't recommended by the ad hoc committee on revision of Assembly bv-laws. TIME: 7:00 p.m. Faculty and student representatives will vote on the by-law revisions as they were presented. The Assembly discussed a recommendation for the formation of the Committee on Policies and Educational Goals (CPEG). Cobb said this issue would be separated from the discussion of the by-laws revisions because of a split opinion. He said it would be discussed later and would be subject to the same amendment procedure as the by-laws revisions. New amendments to the proposed by-laws include: Assembly to vote on by-laws *That no student may serve more than two terms on the six proposed standing committee.* A CHANGE ON student voting on remissions and tenure recommendations - That the secretary of the Assembly will Andrew Debicki, chairman of the by-laws revision committee, said that the proposed CPEG wouldn't have statutory responsibilities to see that other committees did their work, but that the other committees would make reports to CPEG. --- TACO TICO SPECIAL Buy Two Burritos Get One FREE! Offer good Thursday, Nov. 18 — Sunday, Nov. 21 TACO TICO 2340 Iowa 841-4218 T A C O T I C O Holiday Inn IOWA --- MEET ME AT THE MARKET PLACE Bokonon The Frame Up Leather Limited The Shooting Gallery Dirty Thirties & Earlier Deja Vu Cantor Hy Sky of the Beth Shalom Religious Center, Kansas City, Missouri, will lead a discussion and lecture on the topic of "A Jewish View of 'The Parting of the Ways'" in the Pine room of the Kansas Union, Thursday evening, November 18th. p.m. Cantor Sky has a master's degree in Hebrew education and culture, and is currently completing his Ph.D. work from Dropsie University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with a major in Rabbinics and a minor in Medieval Jewish History and comparative religion. He has written and lectured extensively on the History of the Second Jewish Commonwealth and the beginnings of Christianity. We invite you to join us for an evening with a fine scholar and interesting personality. Jewish-Christian Dialogue Sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish Students 8th and New Hampshire Native American Artists Ltd. The Gallery The Armadillo Bead Co. Su Casa Graphic Arts Inc. The Harvest SUA Indoor Recreation TICKETS KU Duplicate Bridge Tournament Nov.20,1:00 p.m. $2.50 per person Big 8 Room—Union Top two teams will go to Cape Girardeau, Mo. for the Region XI Tournament to be held Feb. 10-12. All expenses paid. Tournament will be governed by A.C.B.L. certified director. Individual trophies to top TWO teams. Everyone welcome to participate but only students eligible for Region XI tournament. Sign up in SUA office. --- 1976-77 KANSAS BASKETBALL STUDENT TICKET INFORMATION SALE BEGINS NOVEMBER 17 thru NOVEMBER 19 WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY TIME: 10:00 a.m.—5:00 p.m. PLACE: ALLEN FIELD HOUSE MAIN LOBBY (EAST) Season tickets may be purchased after Friday, November 19 at the main ticket office in Allen Field House anytime prior to the first game. PROCEDURES: 1. Enter the main lobby of Allen Field House (east) 2. Present current validated student I.D. 3. Pay for SEASON TICKET-STUDENT$15.00 STUDENT/SPOUSE-$15.00 (proof of marriage required to purchase) 4. Sign your student season ticket in presence of ticket seller NO REFUNDS WILL BE MADE PLAN NOW TO BE A PART OF THE FUN & EXCITEMENT of NOTICE JAYNAWK BASKETBALL!!!! SEASON TICKET IS NOT GOOD FOR SPRING SEMESTER UNLESS ACCOMPIANIED BY VALIDATED SPRING I.D. AT STUDENT GATES BEGINNING WITH THE COLORADO GAME ON JANUARY 29. 1878-1877 KANSAS BASKETBALL KU O1 Eve ku Nov. 27 (Sal) Montana State (7:35) Home Dec. 1 (Wed) Murray State (7:35) Home Dec. 4 (Mon) Oregon State (7:35) Home Dec. 6 (Mon) Oakland College (7:35) Away Dec. 9 (Thurs) Idaho State (7:35) Away Dec. 12 (Fri) Fordham University (7:35) Away Dec. 17 (Fri) Mankato State (7:35) Away Dec. 21 (Fri) Louisville State (7:35) Away Dec. 26 (Mon) at Big Eight Tourn... Away Dec. 29 (Mon) at Big Eight Tourn... Away Dec. 30 (Thurs) Idaho State (7:35) Away Jan. 8 (Sal) Missouri (3:101) Home Jan. 15 (Sal) Oklahoma State (7:35) Away Jan. 18 (Sal) Kansas State (7:35) Away Jan. 22 (Sal) at Kansas State* Away Jan. 27 (Sal) at Kansas State* Away Jan. 29 (Sal) Cahood's (7:35) Away Feb. 5 (Sal) Oklahoma State (7:35) Home Feb. 10 (Sal) Kansas State (7:401) Home Feb. 19 (Sal) Nebraska (7:35) Home Feb. 19 (Sal) Nebraska (7:35) Home Feb. 26 (Sal) Big B Post Season T.. TBA Mar. 3 (Tues) Big B Post Season T.. TBA Big B Conf Game: Idaho State T.. TWELVE SINGLE GAME STUDENT TICKETS a limited number of single game student tickets will be available for each game. These tickets will be sold at Allen Field House on the day of the game only from 8:30 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. The single game student price is $2.50. A current validated student I.D. is required at time of purchase and admittance. For a preview of the FIGHTING JAYHAWKS see the CRIMSON & BLUE intersquad game, Wednesday, November 17----7:30 p.m. Admittance by Student I.D. as oic ne 8 on om or d and the an Wednesdav. November 17. 1976 bly and 9 e made recom- pose Com- tational University Daily Kansan by-laws proposed respon-tees did mmittees On Campus **TONIGHT:** ETA KAPA NU meets at 5:30 in the Kansas Union's International Room. A STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE FORUM begins at 7 in the Union's Council Room. SUA BRIDGE CLUB meets at 7 in the Union's Pine Room. CAMPUS CHRISTIANS meet at 7 in the Union's Parlors B, A and C. SUA FINE ARTS PROGRAM presents the play, "Calling for Help" by Peter HANDLEt at 7 and 9 in the Union's Big Eight Room. SLAVIC AND SOVIET AREA STUDIES presents Peter HANDLEt on "Apokak on" and Peter HANDLEt on "Apokak Type of Socialism in Eastern Europe--Hungary 1976" at 7 in the Walnut Room. SIGMA XII meets at 7:30 in the Union's Jawkway Room. Events TOMORROW: An INSTITUTE FOR KANSAS LEGISLATORS training program is all day in the Kansas Union. OPERATION FRIENDSHIP and the University Senate Committee on Foreign Students are sponsoring the film, "Personalizing the Education Process" at 3:30 p.m. in 4035 Wesco Hall. The UNDERGRADUATE MEETS meets at 3:30 p.m. in 627 Fraser Hall. A FRENCH AND ITALIAN LECTURE begins at 3:30 p.m. in the University of Minnesota, on "Montale and Legenda," begins at 4:p.m. in the Council Room. RICHARD ROWSON, president of Praser Publishing, will talk on "Getting Your Research Published" at 4:p.m. in the Union's Pine Room. ANGEL FLIGHT meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Military Science building. The ALL SCHOLARSHIP HALL COUNcil meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room. The UNION'S GOVERNORS ROOM. A KU PRESENTALT PANEL LECTURE begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Missouri at Kansas City admissions directors begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Jayhawk room. The JAYHAWK AUDUBON SOCIETY presents Robert Hoffman, professor of systematics and Ecology, speaking on "The Yellowstone Grizzly Bear" at 7:30 p.m. at the South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Massachusetts St. An EXPERIMENTAL LECTURE begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Big Eight Room. KU SAILING BROTHERS B and C. A CAMPUS CHRISTIAN CONCERT begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's ASIAN STUDIES PROGRAM and the department of political science present Allen Whiting, professor of political science and an associate of the Center for Chinese Studies at the University of Michigan, who will lecture on "China and the World after Mao" at 7:30 p.m. in 3139 Wesco Hill. UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S NEWCOMERS CLUB meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Walkins Room. STEPHEN HOWELL meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Sanford Recital Hall. THE PHILOSOPHY LECTURE begins at 8:p.m. in Plantinga, professor in the department of philosophy at Calvin College, who will speak on "Possible Worlds and Non-existence" at 8 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. FHI LECTURE meets at 8:p.m. in the Union's Pine Room. If no new methods are created to attract students to the University of Kansas, the declining birthrate may cause KU's enrollment to drop from 22,535 in 1976 to 15,000 by 184. Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday. Senate group to try to draw future 'Hawks Sankel talked to a group of students interested in participating in the Student Senate's Statewide Activities program in the International Room of the Kansas University. Statewide Activities is designed to ease the transition of high school, junior college and out-of-state students to the University. The program is aimed at people who have expressed interest in KU, and isn't geared toward recruitment, Sheila Everhart, chairman of the Senate Statewide Activities subcommittee, said. Sankel said that in six to eight years, the number of students graduating from high schools has increased. A reduction in students would mean a reduction in faculty members, clerical workers and federal funds allocated to the University. he said. The University is allowed one new instructor for every 15 students, three new clinical workers for every new faculty member and $600 in Federal funds for each new student. He said if enrolment declined, the University would lose personnel and funds at the same rate as it would have gained them. Everhart said that the Statewide Activities program would be staffed by KU student volunteers who would conduct tours for visiting students and families, accompany representatives of the admissions office to high schools and distribute informational packets to interested students in their hometowns. SHERIFF SAM'S TRAVELING DJ SERVICE ★ We'll bring our quality sound system to your party. ★ We have lots of prizes, plus all the hits. ★ Call 841-4666 to reserve your party after Jan. 1, 1977. SHERIFF SAM JONES Downstairs at the Eldridge 7th and Mass. NOW SIRLOIN STOCKADE GIVES YOU COMPLETE LUNCHES 1.69 Everyday Low Prices...Everyday Monday Thru Friday 11AM'til 4 PM CHOPPED STEAK 1.69 CHOPPED STEAK 1.69 FISH 1.69 CHICKEN FRY 1.69 GERMAN STYLE SAUSAGE 1.69 STOCKADE CLUB STEAK 1.69 Each lunch includes salad, toast, and potato plus your choice of coffee or tea. Open 11AM to 9PM Weekdays — 11AM to 10PM Weekends By RICK THAEMERT Staff Writer $ 5^{\mathrm{c}} $ hike won't stop candy cravers Prices shown available only of the following Siton Stockades: Kansas City = 11828 Blue Ridge Extension • Gladiator -6906 N. Oak Lee's Summit = 8288 Chipman Rd • Liberty-601 S. 291 Hwy Olatte = 1215 N. Rawhide • Shawnee Mission -7414 N. Nielsen Rd Lawrence = 1015 Iowa St • Leavenworth -3108 S. 4th Trafficway Warrensburg = 709 N. Charles Open 10AM to 8PM Every Monday SIRLOIN STOCKADE The Family Steakhouse Come in NOW Get your "PUNCH-A-LUNCH" Card You buy 9 Lunches Get one FREE SIRLOIN STOCKADE Students will pay five cents more for chocolate candy after Jan. 1, but Lawrence retailers and wholesalers said yesterday extra nickel to satisfy their sweet tooths. According to H. G, McMahon, salesman at Coker A.B. INC, 1923 Moodie Road, the price hike is the result of a cocoa bean shortage in South America that will affect all chocolate candy prices in the United States. “It’s a competition thing,” he said. “If one goes up, they all go up. When Mars, Peter Paul and Hershey raise their prices, the much covers 50 to 80 per cent of the market.” A slight increase in the size of candy packs will accompany the higher prices. McMahon sales "I don't think it will hurt our business one bit," she said. "I've had so many kids hand the 20 cents already, I have to keep saying, 'No, not yet.' Let's hold off as long as we can.' They seem willing to pay the extra money." Despite the increase from 15 to 20 cents for many candy bars, most businessmen and customers won't be greatly affected, she said. Mary Katzfey, who sells candy at the Kansas Union, said, "Unless you knew the size of the candy before, you probably wouldn't even notice the increase in size." MCMAHOH SAID, "There will be bones of contention, but 20 cents don't amount to a big deal." However, some people will oppose the price hike and won't pay the extra nickel, Bloy Floyd, owner of Jayhawk Food Mart, 846 Illinois St., said. buy the cake, and they don't react as much to price changes." "I don't think anyone will quit eating candy," he said, "but they may be more disciplined than they are discriminative as the price becomes higher. If a person comes into the store to buy a Snickers and we're out of them, he may choose to pay 20 cents for another candy bar." "IHATE TO see the prices up because every time they do, it eliminates a certain percentage of people because they just can't afford to pay the extra. There are people who might买 a candy bar for 15 cents, but won't pay 20 cents." Floyd said that he liked to stock candy bars within the same price range, but that it was difficult to do so when the all companies switched their prices at different times. IT'S ALSO difficult to know what stock when a price change is involved, he said. Mars, Snickers, Hershey and M and M's always will sell well, he said, but some less popular brands might not sell if their prices are raised, he said. The price increase also can cause problems for retailers and manufacturers, "A candy bar that's not popular or is just coming on to the market will have another obstacle to fight when the price goes up," he said. Flovd said he would wait to see how the price change affected customers, and then stock the candy if it was still in demand. McMahon said the price increase would have little effect on wholesalers. "THERE WILL be more money involved, but we'll have the same amount of stock," he said. Katzfey that that chocolate candy was the biggest seller among students, and that the nickel increase would affect a lot of popular products. "I'm sure there won't be any more 10-year Tootale Rolls after the first of the year," she Products such as sunflower seeds, jelly beans, gum and hard candy will stay the same price, he said, but could go up any amount upon the availability of their ingredients. Student reports $1,045 burglary Letsch, Overland Park sophomore, estimated the value of the stolee items at Stereo equipment, guns and other personal items were taken from the residence of Douglas Letch, Frontier Ridge Apartment on Friday morning while Letch was at school. Police said the burglar apparently entered the victim's apartment by removing a key from his lock. Come hear and see why Kansas City's ONE WAY BAND is "The" finest in musical entertainment. CDW Productions presents OWB Live at the National Guard Armory, 200 Iowa, Lawrence, Ks. 10 p.m.—3 a.m., Nov. 20, $2 cover. Let us BOOT you right out of our store!!! by Frve Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Come hear and see why Kansas City's ONE WAY BAND is "The" finest in musical entertainment. CDW Productions presents OWB Live at the National Guard Armory, 200 Iowa. Lawrence, Ks. 10 p.m.—3 a.m., Nov. 20, $2 cover. by Frye Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop Fight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street 10 Wednesday, November 17, 1976 University Daily Kansan TOM MAYER Staff nhnh Job change Richard Wright is leaving his post as station manager at KANU rams to become associate director of the station and to devote more time to teaching. He has been station manager since 1970. KANU head changes jobs Staff Writer By MICHAEL KING When Dick Wright was graduated from UConn in 1964 he made his vision of studytype music. He Instead he was drafted into the Army and sent to Thule, Greenland. "They didn't know what to do with me because I was a singer," he said. "And because they couldn't find anything else for me, they managed the manager of the armed forces radio station." Wright's experience has held him in good stead. Today he is station manager of KANU, a position from KANU he will resign Dec. 1 to become KANU's associate When Wright was discharged from the Army, he came back to KU and took a master's degree in music. And after receiving his degree, he went to New York. "I AUDIATIONED at the Metropolitan Opera. "You've got a good voice," they told me, "but how many roles do you know?" They were quick to answer, suggesting I go back and learn more, suggested I go back and learn more, "NBC had an opera program at the time, so I auditioned for that too." "When I got there I realized that there were thousands of young people just like me," he said. "I couldn't make myself bear that I wasn't going to stay at the top." "But I was getting discouraged pounding the sidewalks. My wife had had our first child, and I was homesick, and so I decided to come back." He returned to Lawrence and became musical director of KANU. After he started to work at the radio station, he received a letter from NBC saying he had been accepted for their program. He decided to remain in Lawrence. "I'll always wonder whether I made a mistake," he said. IN ADDITION TO working at the radio station, Wright rejoined the musician's union and played with jazz bands throughout the area. In 1986 he left the radio station and became manager of the record department at a Lawrence music company. "By that time," he said, "I was making $60 a month; I had six children. I was singing around the area, and I was getting up at 4 a.m. filling vending machines. "Because I was under civil service they couldn't raise my pay, and with six children, I knew I couldn't continue on that." In 1970 Wright returned to KANU as station manager. On Dec.1, he will leave that post to devote more time to teaching. Wright, also a broadcaster on his station's "Jazz in the Night" and Saturday morning jazz show, said he didn't know what his duties would be under the new management. "I'm so interested in so many different things that I felt I'd be shortchanging the situation." "TM NOT AN administrator. I don't like pushing a pen and filling out forms." develop courses. that appeal to nonmusic majors. The station has changed, he said, from primarily a music station to a station that places emphasis on news and public affairs. AT 118,000 wattts, KANU one of the most powerful FM radio stations in the country. Its listening area covers more than 100 miles, and it has a potential audience of 3 million. KANU is on cable systems in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Arkansas. "This large area makes programming especially difficult," he said. "People's tastes are changing. They used to be dictated too strictly by the commercial radio stations. But public radio has made its presence known. Besides becoming the associate director of KANU, and teaching courses in music and art at various colleges, "Our listeners find our programming not politicized in a stuffy way. And not political in a stuffy way." "You never think you've done enough. It's nice to know that people like what you do." Papanek, senior design consultant for Volvo A-B, is developing a taxi for the handicapped and creating "Work Enrichment" programs for the workers. Final preparations for an auction on lost items collected by various departments of the University of Kansas were made last fall to the Senate Student Services Committee. Senate authorizes auction calls for central tutor file Panakep is chairman of Design at the Kansas City Art Institute. He was Dean of the School of Design at CalArts and a professor in Denmark, England and Canada. He works as design consultant for the World Health Organization developing diagnostic kits for primary health care for villages in the Third World. The committee, authorized by the Student Senate at its last meeting to organize a sale of the lost items, decided to hold the auction on 5 p. Friday, Dec. 3, in Hoch Auditorium. The demonstration is scheduled to be from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. ISA members will walk down Jayhawk Boulevard distributing leaflets that protest the recent arrest for disorderly conduct of 92 Iran students at a demonstration in Houston. The Iranian students in Houston were protesting the deportation of Iranian students. Vorkapan, design consultant for Volvo A-B of Sweden, UNESCO-UNIDO, and Nikon of Japan will speak at 7:30 Thursday in room 3140 of Wesson Hall. Papanek's talk, "Because People Count: 12 Strategies for Post-Industrial Design," is part of the University of Kansas fall 1976 conference on Architecture and School of Architecture and Urban Design. A petition was authorized to be written for the committee asking Chancellor Archie Dykes to review a Senate recycling program, and being the University operate the program. The committee recommended that the proceeds from the auction go to the services committee's budget, but the Senate must approve that recommendation. The committee also decided that any unsold items would be given to a public service organization. Papanek's book, "Design for the Real World," is translated into 23 languages. He wrote "Nomadic Furniture" and "Nomadic Furniture Two" with Jim Hemmesey and recently co-created a website for Dot Work. "How We Work," by Dan Doan Work, will be published in 1977 by Panthen Books. Design consultant to speak Norman Forer, KU associate professor on social welfare and to advise the Iranian president, met with members me and two weeks ago to discuss the civil rights implications of the arrests in Now, the Senate operates a newspaper recycling program, which has dropboxes at its headquarters. trialized tutor, roommate and car pool file to be placed in the KU Information Center in Papenek was elected to the Professional Fellowship of the Society of Artists and Designers in Great Britain, is a member of Industriele Designerine in Denmark, an honorary fellow of the American-Scandinavian Foundation and a diplomat and fellow of Disenatreous Industriales of Mexico. He works as a member of Working Iranian students from KU marched Friday, Nov. 12 with about 120 other Iranian students from area colleges to a noon rally at the Federal Building in Kansas City, Mo. The services committee also authorized a resolution to be written calling for a cen- Now, there is such a file in the Senate office and the Information Center, but the committee said that the Senate office was too understaffed to constantly update the file, and that the information center could better organize and operate it. A spokesman for the Iranian Student Association (ISA) at the University of Kansas said last night plans were under way for a demonstration today to protest what the ISA says is harassment of Iranian students in France and in the United States. The French government arrested and deported Iranian students who were charged in the Nov. 2, shooting of an Iranian diplomat. However, the New York Times reported that a group named Reza Razad had been killed in a shooting shooting. The Iranian diplomat was killed. Foer said the faculty members would send letters to the Houston police department to protest his arrest. He will be in the Office of Immigration in an attempt to stop the possible deportation. Both the petition and the resolution, after being accepted by the services committee, will be sent to the full Senate at its Dec. 1 meeting. 'Harassment' protested by Iranians Houston and the possible deportation of the arrested students. RID KILLS CRAB LICE ON CONTACT Crab lice infest even the nicest people A Thanksgiving food drive for Lawrence families is being conducted by Delta Upson fraternity and Alpha Gamma Delta sorority. Greeks collect food for needy Canned foods were collected the past two nights and will be collected again this week. - Special comb included The collected can will be given to Penn 10th Columbiavania St, which will distribute it. - Without a prescription at Drug Stores Group Four for the International Congress of Societies of Industrial Design. RID Papanek studied design and architecture at Cooper Union in New York, engineering and product design at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ethnology and social anthropology at various universities and architecture with Frank Lloyd Wright. Teal Dakan, Wichita junior, said yesterday this was at least the fourth year that Delta Upsion had been involved in a season where it year it works with a different sorority. IT PAYS TO BE IN DEMAND. SUA FILMS CLASSICAL SERIES PRIMATES (1974) Dr. Frederick Wisman documentary Wednesday 7:30, 75c it pays to be in demand, and if you're the type we're looking for it. pays for obligations, naturally POPULAR FILMS CLASSICAL SERIES D.O.D.A. (1949) Dir. Rudiph Mate, with Edmund O'Brien. Suspense classic. "B" Film (ACG 1954) (1954) Dir. Stanley Kubrick, with Sterling Hayden, Cole Gray, Vince Edwards. Thurs., 10, 18, 7, 30c FILM SOCIETY Air Force ROTC has scholarships allowances and jobs for selected young men and women majoring in engineering academic fields. Fields of Engineering General and Electrical Engineering Mathematics, Physics and Engineering paves well now and the future. Air Force ROTC offers 4-year, 3-year and 2-year scholarships allowance. AROTC also offers the $100 tax offer on the tuition allowance during the undergraduate student's first year to receive a commission in a combat for challenging jobs. There be more numerical advanced education you'll need to acquire you'll have financial security and start your career ladder where your ability limits it. It pays to be in demand we are looking for it. It pays MIDNIGHT MOVIES BRIEF VACATION (1975) Dir. Victorio de Sica, with Florinda Bolkan (Italian subtilted) Fri. Nov. 19, 7:00 & 9:30 Sat. Nov. 20, 3:00, $1 THE 10TH INTERNATIONAL TOURNEY OF ANIMATION (1975) Friday from 3 to 11 minutes each. Fri. Nov. 19, 3:30 Sat. Nov. 20, 7:00 and 9:30, $1 Sophomores interested in the 2 Year Program should contact Capt. John E. Mackey, Military Science Blog, Room 108, or call 844-6474 during November or December. and SEX MADNESS Fri, Nov. 19 & Sat, Nov. 20 12 o'clock Midnight, $1 ships, schools, offices for rugs elds ace, airline OTC and jeans car, tips THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE Air Force ROTO - Gateway to a Great Way of Life Woodruff Auditorium Parts for All Imports Student Discounts JAMES GANG FOREIGN AUTO PARTS your BANK AMERICANO master charge Mon.-Fri., 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 843-8080 304 Locust Dec.2,4,7 at 7:30 p.m. Price $7.50 SUA MADRIGAL DINNER Kansas Room of the Student Union Traditional Old English Feast with Entertainment by Voci di Camera accompanied by wandering minstrels and trumpeteers. Presents Tickets at Round Corner Drug Adventure Book Store Gardenland, SUA office Free Mushrooms with any large pizza FAST FREE DELIVERY! 841-3100 today's special ASK FOR THE CUSTOMER WHERE WE AT CUST OR REGULAR LIMIT CUST! HEAVY EDDYS At the Wheel 507 w.14th Pizza Meatball Grinders & Sun.: Thurs. - 4:30 PM to1:00 Friday & Saturday until 2:00 AM Submarine Sandwiches,too Kd The media cold : Get a new twist on Fashion!! the VILLAGE SET 922 Mass. Open Thurs. 'til 8:30 Kis Amer docto afflic adult "H feelin blister at Wr the s sore heal. I Acc ment are sex. BRIN - CLJ 15 i s e Eac AD AaD to r o m Wee Thu Wed ERI T a r F o R d d s U D I Wednesday, November 17, 197 11 rence ta Up Delta ders & Kissing could cause cold sores; doctors battling the 'new VD' es,too Kissing could be responsible for one of America's most common diseases today, doctors say, one that, in its simpler variety, is often mistaken for the nation's adultulation during their lifetime. The disease, Herpes Simplex, is the medical name for what many people call herpes. Herpes Simplex however, comes in two types. The most common, type I, can infect people from the waist up but is usually infected to the mouth. Type II infects people from the mouth and groin, confined to the genital area. Both cause the same 'type of painful sores. "Herpes Simplex starts with a tingling feeling and a sense of burning before a blister appears," Demis Dahl, a physician at Walkins Hospital, said yesterday. "Then she takes off and fends to an open sore that usually takes about a week to heal." DAHL SAID that many doctors were calling type II "the new venereal disease," a result of an increase in sexual activity among sexually active researchers at Baylor University's School of Medicine, the rise in type II began two to three years ago and now afflicts an estimated 250,000 people each year, making it the second most frequent and quicker to spread than gonorrhea. Dahl said some circumstantial evidence linking type II to cancer of the cervix was still inconclusive. Researchers also have noted that some women with type II have a higher miscarriage rate than the female average. Heres Simplex II often makes urination difficult. The virus can't be detected in the bloodstream because it is buried in the nerve endings. "THE FIRST ATTACK is always the worst," Dahl said. "Replication can occur at a lot of different times, not just through sexual contact, and can be connected to changes in body temperature, sunlight and the menstrual cycle." For cases of type I, lack of sleep, fever and nervousness might cause the disease to Some type of contact has to take place between people before Herpes Simplex of either type can be transmitted. Type I often occurs after kissing and type II after sexual intercourse. It is also possible for type I to be transmitted to the genitals through oral sex. According to Dahl, no accepted treatment has yet been medically found effective for either type of Herpes Simplex. Some years ago, a process of photoinactivation, which involved putting a dye on the blisters and shining fluorescent lights on them, was used as treatment, he said, although doctors worried that it might lead to cancer. Be prepared to enjoy Athlete's Foot The Soon!! University Daily Kansan We Write All Risks Automobile Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. BOONE'S RETAIL LIQUOR NOW OPEN - Cold Beer & Liquors - American & Imported Wines KANSAN WANT ADS Charles Boone, Owner 843-3339 Asecomodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered to a. all students without regard to race, color, national origin, gender or marital status. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times time times time 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 Each additional AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months and can be placed in person or simply by calling the UDR business office at 641-1538. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 FOR RENT Sublease 3 bedroom partially furnished house fireplace. Available Dec. 1st. Call 625-8453. 11-7-7 2 bedrooms furnished apartment available 1 laundry, on bus route, 2 pools. Call 841-7281. One bedroom apt., furnished, fully carpeted, bathroom, kitchen, laundry, 370 sq. ft. (192 + 181 + 152) Btu. (160 + 145 + 132) Call: 310-626-8288 One二床电梯 at, Jachayk Towers. Sublease for bedroom. 841-5926. Ask for Mike. Sublease for 2nd semester--Unfurnished 1 bedroom apt. at Frontier Ridge, 84139 - 84038 after 6 months Sub-learning Meadowbrook brook for second se- ment call; John听应 S. P.M. B41-8095. 11:23 Sublease 1840 unfit furnished Gashal apartment, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, includes gas heat炉, Ai 51-8937 after 1 year. Nice studio apt. 2 bks. from campus, $90 bills phone. Phone 841-7175. Available after Dec. 1st. Sublease- bldm. adapt. furnished. on bus route; carport: a/c 842-4575. 11-19 Sublet Towers Apartment. Utilities paid, b floor pool view. Take over by Dec. 20th. 842-855-366 Sublease 1 bedroom furnished apt, for 2nd semen. Available Jan. 14, 811-3721. 11-19 --has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 For rent to student an apartment close to Kansas City for $349. Parking Available in 电话 843-9579 Sublease large two bedroom apartment. Park 25. $185-$cheep. 843-3003 anytime. 11-22 THINK ABOUT THIS! MEADOWHOOK will, have students TATI in a way that move up to the students JAN in a way that move up to the ROYAL CREATIVE FRAMING AT CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE ● ORYMUNTING ● METAL FRAMES ● RESTORATION ● BOARD FRAMING Cross P B Bookstore Center HALF AS MUCH Goods • Vintage Clothing Selected Secondhand - Imported Clothing - Furniture - Antiques 730Mass.841-7O7O FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Western Civilization of Western Civilation! Makes sense to you. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. **tf** STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or tmae most productive in the market is best offered at the GRAMOPHONE SHOP at KIEFES. CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Mermalts. Uniforms, etc. No faux cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3883. tf Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists. BELA AUTO ELECTRIC, 845-390-9900 W. 40h. b1h. ELECTRIC, 845-390-9900 W. 40h. b1h. Excellent selection of new and used furniture trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 708 15th Street, New York, NY 10023. Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerators, gas and electric ranges at low, low prices! 1222 East Gt. Topkake, Ka 11 a.m. p-6. Pm free. 1-5344-8288 or 2-8384. tt 40%-$25 off on warm-up suits, dresses, & Swim Club B. 4 (west on 23rd) $82/786, & Swim Club C. 4 (west on 23rd) $82/786 For the lowest prices on top quality stereo equipment, call Bruce at 841-858 or Craig at 867-397. Porche 914, 1970 model; must sell immediate Porche 1235-3397 or 1-235-7807 Atn. and weekends. Want to save money Buy your used car from a good dealer or an excellent condition. All service records available. Casitec tame and player sets, new bacons, $90. Casitec tame and player sets, new bacons, $90. Technifax SI-130 turntable, full warranty, $219. Technifax SI-130 turntable, full warranty, $219. E 8 AMEES MODERN DINING CHAIR. Birch bent plywood, black iron frame. Excellent condition. $60 value, $30 each (set only). See at Crane's, 715 Mass, or call 743-719-818. 3 "speed Huffy, like $45. Typewriter- 296, 3 "Manual, good cond, case--$25, 396, 4 "Knife." 1963 VW—run good--good body. As is 15.10 2502 Arkansas. K43-648-88. 11.17 166 Chevrolet I 1 Ton Step Van Ready for you to drive. Model W-10, W-11, W-18, 843-691 weekdays 8-5. 123A Pace CB w/ntema-Perfect shape, four 60-inch or 80-inch best or sale. For Colby 60-inch 12-18 for Colby 80-inch 12-18 74 NORTON 850 Command, $6.50. kmu. excelent supercycle, fall bargain-$120. 4-168. 11-49 75 Feaye Musician; head is solid state with 40 w/412" speaker cabinet $800, 612" Michelson adapt DRUM SET. Ludwig, double bats, cymbals, stems, and cases included. Blue silk finish, mulit- many color options. Honda Eliteforce CR250 M. Super playboy, $475. Kia Optima 300 M. Playboy, $389. Mazda Miata 600 M. offer with a make offer, 10-19. BMW M5000 M. offer, 10-19. Foreign Area Studies text compiled by American Foreign Affairs for State Department. Set of 50, pp. 611-621. Imported car service problems? TONY'S IMPORTS- DATESUN 500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444 NAPA SEE ... N.A.P.A. Football tables—good condition—a make offer. Available to see 91 W. W32d Street. 11-19 2. Open 7 days and nights 3. We have it or can get it overnight For the Do-It-Yourselfer we offer Social Deities. Typewriter for sale. Cal. Magellan 1477; Very good condition -555 Cal. Magellan 1477 after a $8 price. m.i.17-14 School bus converted into camper, engine rebuilt, excellent condition. Call 842-2896. 11-18 4. Machine shop service 5. Two stores Auto Parts Sainyo compact, has FM-AM, stereo cassette. Garrard fortable, with magnetic gate, 2 speaker. Sainyo compact, has FM-AM, stereo cassette. Garrard fortable, with magnetic gate, 2 speaker. Sainyo compact, has FM-AM, stereo cassette. Garrard fortable, with magnetic gate, 2 speaker. Sainyo compact, has FM-AM, stereo cassette. Garrard fortable, with magnetic gate, 2 speaker. Sainyo compact, has FM-AM, stereo cassette. Garran 1976 Dodge Charger. S.E. Black / w/disky vinyl L dodge radiator and battery. 8-inch brakes and brighter Cruise Sport. 9,000 miles. Vehicle Service Warranty 5 years or 50,000 total accumulated miles. Must sell in a los Angeles location. HELP WANTED Check out these uses 1976 Honda MT252 1976 Honda MT253 1976 Honda CTR5 1976 Honda CT50 1976 Honda 1976 1976 Honda XL250 1976 Honda XL250 1968 CHIELVE MALIBU. Gold and white, auto trans, power steering, air conditioning, 6300 miles, good gas mileage, body fair, mechanically perfect, clean, priced to sell, 151 KWtemen, 11-22 Now taking applications for mulesmen or salesmen for Christmas selling, Experience prior to Lawrence until Christmas. See Mr. Quakeburn, 311-747-8888 at Weaver's dept. store, 901 Man. 511-17-47 See them at Horizon Honda, 1811 W. 6th, 843- 3333 Aluminum Cookware, brand new set never opened, must be sent immediately. Call 11-23- 2678. One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Kee Keyboard. Professional sound systems, guitars, amps, drum, special equipment. Contact us at 843-790-1512; keyboard, 1420 W. 23rd; 843-300-717; 11-17 BOOKS- Thousands of used paperbacks and hardbacks at a reasonable price for book dealing with religion—20% off regular price. Booth 9. Quantrill's Flea Market. 811 New Hampstead. Open Sat-Sun. $5 per book. 107 Challenge R/T 3珍珠 black, leather back- kick. $2,595.00. Recorded by Gareth Bresson. Recently Restored. Bison $260. 842-790-0000. Needed immediately 2 Jantitors at Wakaraun school, and 1 Jantitor at Bokombo school schedule. Call 843-4833 or 843-1608 AVON- Earn extra money on your own time. AVON- Full-time, full-time. Anch. Mrs. Seilhoff 82-810-8000 Storrey Garret, Garrett turntable. Shuttle cartridge, amplifier section, 2 speakers, 22 watts. $69 Call Greg 2300 Haskell 843-6960 Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, and assisting in research. Social science back-room assistance in research. Social science back-room Roberts, Dept. of Human Development 111 to 3 yr. an Equal Opportunity Employment Qualification to 3 yr. an Equal Opportunity Employment Qualification. Models wanted for photography context. Good books on 211, Leavenworth, Kansas. K6058. Engleph. Print. 817 Vermont 843-9365 DANCERS-class B private club in Johnson County. Pay rebate. (913)-848-7241 after five months. Order Now For Chris MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE Many at Special Discounts ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center Phone: 843-6424 HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service A LOST AND FOUND 1811 W. 6th Lost: 11-9-76 Men's gold & b. Reward, Call 841-7153 after 5:00. Red backpack full of books; name=William Red backpack empty of books; name=William Lean left jacket in jackets 428 Linden on 11-9-76 Please call 841-6455. Name is on tag inlet. 11-19 Oar in ringed oil set in November 12. 11-19 Reward Call Jenny at 842-8973. Pair of glasses in a blue case, between Two pairs of glasses in a blue case, between Lost: Pair of glasses in a blue case, between 2940 and Lindley. If found please 11-19 2940 MISCELLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Aice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Aice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday- s, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m. Mass. FREES—14 yr. old male cat, very affective, would like to age and provide 1 month kitten kitty food. Made up of NOTICE CASHAM CAFE - Good food from scratch. Lunch morning or evening. Regular menu, even for similar sized dinners. Stainless steel. Swap Shop, 260 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, paper, clocks, cups, televisions. Open daily 15:30-7:30. 844-999-7262. POETRY WANTED FOR Anthology Include P.O. Box 20464, San Francisco, California Students: If you would be interested in taking a class with Roger Bain immediately, #84-30525. If you would be interested in contacting Roger Bain immediately, #84-30525. J. HOOD **BOOKSELLER** has returned to regular in- formation at 1 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday & Saturday; 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday; closed Mondays. Come in and browse, you're always welcome. 1450 Mass, 845, 742 St. James' Church NOW OPEN- Commenceer Plaza 31st and low- tow-service gas, 6-bay car and mint mint. PERSONAL GAP RAP GROUP: Thursday, Nov. 18, 832 KUYANG, Apt. 3, 7.3 p.m. Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals. If you are interested in serving as a Peace Corp representative, KU-Y 3-floor Boot. room, 846-371-301. - Feosball HEADQUARTERS, 841-2545 offers crisis counseling information on resources and alternatives; provides support for problems pregnant, rapi victim support, or postpartum care; offers free, confidential, and open 24 hrs. every week. VISIONS Cedarwood Apartments New offering apartments for you. 1 & 2 bathrooms only, furnished and unfurished MADRID MADRID Codarwood Apartment 2914 Ousdahl 843-1116 Pinball Aztec Inn All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates American and Mexican Food 807 Vermont Open Daily 10 a.m.--Midnight Except Sunday HILLCREST BILLIARDS Home of SERVICES OFFERED KAHATE AND SELF-DEFENSE ENERGY nationally champions. 842-844, 8351; Mass. 12-2 There seem to be some apathy present. Some of you beautiful young ladies are not responding to our conversations about campus everyday. So once again I ask any who are interested in attending the university, who are would-be contestants in Playboy's photo call to call 864-2314 and ask for Duke for more information. I'm offering $3000 for first and $200 for runner up. 11-19 For your convenience THE HAIR BUTTER now has Tuxedo, and Wear Calf Appointment 822-860- 3451. Send resumes to the Hair Batter's office. 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl Planning on Affair for the Holidays? Wait until Dec. 2nd-4th. 11-22 RIDES ——— RIDERS See you at, the grd party, Kansas Union, No. 18. Hawks' Warm 5-30-6-20 Bring all your friends to see you! Do your Christmas shopping early. For unique gifts like this, a beautiful hand-made item can be to Dovey's Dream. It's easy and cheap. Happy B-Day Magic Man. Keep your shirt on. 11-17 ● Pool ● Snooker ● Ping Pong BEEF Save This Ad—and with it time money ($26/keps), and effort in applying in bed for your next party. Talk directly with an Olympic College counselor to get detailed information and ferrals. 871-728, Jiery. 11-17 COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Congratulations Ann. You are now a consenting adult. Another Cuckoo. 11-17 ● Pin-Ball ● Air Hockey ● Foos-Ball Girl desperately needs ride to anywhere in south- west. Mail oblige-college-841-3890-2600 6 P.M. Lease 312-7589 "A different kind of bar 00 DENIM JEANS ...*600 DENIM JACKETS ...*1000 DRESSES & PANT SUITS Value of trade-in SELECTED DRESSES LONG & REGULAR...¥10⁰⁰ SELECTED PANT SUITS CORDUROY & POLYS...¥15⁰⁰ "Value of trade-in" means you will receive a direct deduction of that amount on your purchase of the new item listed. One-for-one trade. All clothing traded will be donated to the Salvation Army. THE Town Shop FOR MEN 839 Massachusetts the man's shop PS I Accom ment a are of sex, e BRING THE Country House FOR WOMEN FOR WOMEN at the back of the Town Shop --- CLA- 15 wk we ar au to mon tien frida Fridr Th th un FOU da da da UDI 114 S Parts for All Imports Student Discounts University Daily Kansan Friday, November 19, 1976 13 JAMES GANG FOREIGN AUTO PARTS JAMES COPELAND FOREIGN AUTO PLEASE BENNIE HAMILTON master change theatre bus Mon-Fri 8:00-5:30 Sat 8:00-5:00 Mon.-Fri. 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 843-8080 304 Locust Ks. Ks. James V. Owens RETAIL LIQUOR STORE A large selection of imported & domestic Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. WINES and COLD BEER at 620 W.9th Next to Owen's Flower Shop Open---- 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. 841-2256 POTION PARLOR fine gifts for head and home, collectibles paraphernalia, imported and recycled clothing BOKONON 841-3600 12 EAST 8TH ST. Grand Opening Today! JU KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered on campus or related to regard to a student's college, or national office. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five time times time times time 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional $ AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Saturday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. Candidates can be called in person or simply by calling the UK Business office at 664-1538. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 FOR RENT *Sublease-* bldm. *adpt. furnished* on bus route; *earport; a/c* b42-845.675. 11-19 2 bedroom furnished apartment available Jan 1; laundries, on bus route, 2 pools. Call 641-735-0800. Sublease large two bedroom apartment. Park 25. $185-$chan, $340-353 anytime. 11-22 Sub-learning Meadowbrook book for second se- ment call John 2. S P.M. 841-6975. 11-23 Sublease 1 bedroom furnished apt. for 2nd sem- tainment. Available Jan. 14, 811-5721. 11–19 Sublease 1 bureau unfurnished Gault apartment, 200 sqm, room, includes gas heat. AC 841-2937 after 5. Sublime space, furnished Meadowbrook studio second second semester. Available Dec. 18. 842-927-8971 For rent to student an apartment close to Kansas paying $10,000 paid. Parking Available 12-18. Call 813-957-8970 SUBLEASE 2 - bdmr. apt, apl. gas and water .pd. Appliances furnished. $175. On bus line. dk Take-over, unlease. $5 mo. utilities paid; one账 to University. Apply Opion Box 225 JX *Sublease clean 2 bedroom, unfurnished apartment,* *bus route. Available 1. Call 814-7724 after 5.* FOR SALE THINK ABOUT, THAT'S MEADOWBROOK, with students like you, now we can move up to the student jail. Excelent selection of lows and used furniture materials. Designed for the Trade This Trade. This Trade and Appliance Center, 7041 Westheimer Drive, Denver, CO 80209. STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or dimes out-of-products, we offer a selection of high-end units at the GRAMMONY SHOP at KIEFS. *tf* Cedarwood Apartments New offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1972. Furnished and furnished. furnished and furnished. 2414 Ousadki 843-1116 Eldredgeker Optical DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE 2201 S. MAIN ST. HARRISON, NY 10548 Eldoeker Optical PACIFIC MEMORIAL DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE 810 W. 3RD ST. CARSON, CA 95607 DO'S DELUXE QUALITY WORKSMANSHIP BOY'S MASS LAW PETTING FARM Western Chivilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Chivilization! Makes sense to you. 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Clero Stores. tt CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Miniature sculpture. Merminals. Unicorns, etc. Stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. If 841-3833. Alternator, stater, and generator. Speeckan- ALU ELECTRIC, 843-900-3900, W. 610# ELECTRIC, 843-900-3900, W. 610# Excellent selection of used furniture, retired furniture. 12325 b49 f66, Potsdam 78. a-1 m.-6 p.m. Furniture 12325 b49 f66, Potsdam 78. a-1 m.-6 p.m. 40% - 15% off on warm-up suits, dresses, man's pants, and Swim Club. Rt a twest on 825-787-786. Rt a twest on 825-787-786. Porsche 1914, 1970 model, must sell immediately. Honda 1935, 1937 or 1-2837-k9, p.m. and weekdays. 11-19 Want to give money? Buy you used car from us. We can help with any condition. All service records available. 14 NORTON $50 Commando, 5.600 ml. excellent supercycle, fallback $-bargain -$120, 841-164 11-19 $30 Commando, $-bargain -$120, 841-164 11-19 auto-mixer equipped. rated power: 200 watts HVAC (60-150°C) w/heat exchanger maker w/hardcase kit Cam. Cam. B483-12-19 11-19-19 DRUM SET. Seduq, double bats, cymbals, bells included. Blue silk waltz. 811 - 384-218. 11-19 Honda Eliteforce CR250 M. Super playboy, $75. Honda Eliteforce CR250 M. Super playboy, $75. Call Dave at 81-139-66 and make an offer, 11-19. Call Dave at 81-139-66 and make an offer, 11-19. Foreign Area Studies texts compiled by American Foreign Affairs for State League. Set of 50. 841-6219 11-13 *** *** *** Football tables - good condition - make an offer. Available to see W1. 92d. W3rd Street. 11-10 bike specs: 180 Kawaki 350 180 Kawaki 350 184 Bultaco 350 184 Bultaco 350 180 Honda CB750 180 Honda CB750 180 Honda XL290 180 Honda C170 See them at Horizon Honda. 1811 W. 6th. 843-12 3333. 1765 Dodge Charger S.E. Black /w black vinyl landa ridge no flack Black interior; power win- ning motor; Automatic transmission. Vehicle Service Warranty 8 years or $0,000 miles. Must sell. Must be insured at $7500-$843 04-16-13 170 Challenge R/T 3/7裤 black leather buckle 280 Challenge T/F 3/4裤 black leather buckle Recently Restored. Bounty $250. 842-99-118 1968 CHEVELLE MALIBU. Gold and white, auto trans. power steering, air conditioners, mileage, good gas mileage, perfect clean, priced to sell, 1312 Kentucky, after 11-22 Pentus SP500 with 1/2.5 len and Pentus 1/2.5 with 1/2.5 len condition 6500 call C81-824 or 6500 condition 6500 call B81-824 Stereo: Garrett turntable, Shure cartridge, amm- cuity cable. MC4140A after 3-50. MC4140A after 5-30. MC4140A after 6-30. Aluminum Cookware, brand new set never even used, must all musture call; Bell 11-23- 2789. Size 13 leather coat, new $20—worn less. Size 15 leather coat, new $18—worn less. 209 after 5 p.m. | 11-19 1973 Plato wagon, Squllee dress like new, 20.000 miles A,C, radial skirts, 4-speed; by own- er. 1975 Plato wagon, Squllee dress like new, 20.000 miles A,C, radial skirts, 4-speed; by own- Radial studded snow tires—FR 78-14, new condition. 841-59155. 11-23 Two damn good snow tires. F 79-14, 841-2869 STEREO SOUND SYSTEM $350. We have one of the nicest component systems you could use to control your surround sound it for yourself—it has a quality and sound that a lot of folks pay $100 to $200 more for—they get what they want. The limited warranty. Come in and hear our special high performance $350 sound system—it will work beautifully and we all appreciate. We are truly STEREO SPECIALISTS! AUDIO, 13 E, price, quality and price list 11-30 26th & Iowa 843-1353 We service all makes of cars PICKENS AUTO PARTS & SUPPLIES & SUPPLIES $229 SOUND SYSTEM SPECIAL--Receiver, BACKTRACK and 3 RUDDY speakers. You can get the money and its the only full warranty given. These are specialist in the trade-RAY AUDIO, 13 BKS. Christmas shopping? Give a love the gift of a beautiful speaker or a record cleaning kit in a gift box, a speaker station or a recording card in a gift cordset? Or a beautiful set of headphones. All are unique ideas. Hay Angela 4, E. St. Kathleen 13-30 Special E.O.M. Ship, Advent 201 call deck $250. Special E.O.M. Ship, Advent 201 call deck $250. Real special! wooden. 9 doves, motor drives, to Boise Limited offer $150 each. Walnut hand- made. Out of special end of the month sale. Buy out of special end of the month sale. Buy ELCTRIC-VOICE SPEAKER SPECIAL Intercom 87570 point good deal good deal VP 410 (6) 87570 good deal good deal VP 410 (6) This aid is for those of you who are looking for another way to participate in the sound around the Allion: three speakers, sound will open your ears and pop your eyes. All for the audience! To play at Ray Audit 13.12 ~ 11:30 The Speaker Specialist The Lounge 1009 Chev. Caprice, excellent condition, loaded. 865-273-4490, by owner-$599 or best offer, 865-273-4490. Krusell Skip-bindings. Nordica Boots. Good shoes for children. Call 843-7411. Also see lips, jewelry. Our selected earless stereo will give you more satisfaction than a loud bass or a loud treble. Let the audio specialists of CESA provide you with the perfect earless stereo. 67 Chevy (Impala), Reasonable price, call 842- 3734. 4 doors, blue. OLD ENGLISH SHEEPPOWER puppies for sale 8 age 3 to 10 years. Call 613-854-2950 or 1-800- 121-9434. Calls 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. 12-11 PM Color="14" RCA Portable. 2 years old. Perfect. $169. Call 864-601-401. 11-23 72 SAAB 90-91 white, olive interior. New clutch. nine tires. Need Heater repair机 .11-23 11-28 One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Rock Keyboard. Professional sound systems, synthesizers, amps, drums, special equipment. Includes a digital piano. Board, 1420 W.ird, 843-3007. 11-22 10. Student ID discount on all used car, trucks, bicycles, and skates. 19. Sales 1000 Mile Main lease monthly. 13-19 HELP WANTED "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." Job opening for Research Assistant, 50% time, from May 26 to June 17, providing assistance in research, Social science back-office and assisting in social research. McRoberts, Dufau of Human Development, 111 to 3 a.m., Equal Opportunity Employment. Qualifies to 3 a.m. An Equal Opportunity Employment. Qualifies to 3 a.m. An Equal Opportunity Employment. AVON - Earn extra money on your own time. AVON - Full-time. Time: 11-30. Mrs. Sellis. 842-818-7690. Needed immediately 2 juniors at Wakaraus Moon! Hours can be worked around school time. Models wanted for photography context. Good paint. Write box 21, Leavenworth, Kansas, 666. Mother's Helper In Lake, New Guinea, to care weekly this room and board One day of per- sonal time. Need delivery.Must have car. App. Need delivery.Eldra's Eds fit.First on the Wheel, 507 W, 14th St. 11-23 Maurice minded student wanted for errand runner position. Approximately four hours per day, five hours per week. Employees lanceeous errands, odd jobs, cleaning, etc. $2.40 per hour. Employee Dated 8, 16 September, 8, 16 December. Mary Lee at 842-704-794 EARN UP TO $5000 per SEMESTER OR MUCH more. Apply for commission. Lines guaranteed to wi- g, Aggravated rate. Please reference resume.$2, for job description, info sheet, application form. Mail resume.$2, for job description, info sheet, application form. Send receipt code number, numb. card, work code, and salary to National College receive your $2 back. WRITE: Nationwide College MI, 81066 (CIMS), Box 348, Arlington, MA, MI, 81066 'A different kind of bar Imported car - Feosball Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl service problems? TONY'S IMPORTS- DATESUN Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday 500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444 9th and Iowa SEE . . . LOST AND FOUND Call Ottis Vann! For new Chevrolet's and used cars at Loft: Last jean jacket in 488 Lonely on 11-9-16 Call: 841-6456. Name is on tag include. Phone: 841-6456. Name is on tag include. Found in dispatch area of Summerfield Thur- Nov. 11—set of keys. Call 864-1293 and 11-22 Found: small white fat kitten found in vicinity of Malls Old English apts: 842-2998. 11-22 MISCELLANEOUS Lost: An owl ring in a gold setting. Nov. 12 Reward: Call Jenny at 849-8973. Lost: Pair of glasses in a blue case, between Naismith and Lindley. If found please call 841- Found: a yellow contact case on the south side of Murphy Hill morning. Call 864-220-3900. Found Light jacket found Monday by Allen Field Phone: Call 864-289-1133 Call: 864-289-1133 Found: A bus pass at Hoch bus stop Wed. P.M. Call 641-2831. Keep trying. NOTICE Bud on Tap PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through 9 a.m., to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 11 a.m. Mass. Turner Chevrolet FREE—1½ l, old male cat; very affective, milky kitty and litter. 843-5061 11-22 kitty food and litter. 843-5061 PERSONAL - Pool CASSAH CAPE—Good food from scratch. Liberty 10-30-26 8:50 AM, Mass. Pleasure; backdoor eye, 10-30-26 8:50 AM, Mass. Pleasure; backdoor eye. Swap Shop, 620 Mason. Used furniture, dishes, lamps, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12 PM-5 PM. (800) 347-9999. RESUME PACKAGE: include samples, instructors, expertise, and contact information for resume. Mail A5 to Resume. P.O. Box 723. Address: 480 West 10th Street, New York, NY 10009. POETRY WANTED FOR Anthology Include Anthology Series P.O. Box 56424 San Francisco, California OPPORTUNITIES Attention; Waterbill padders and Energy Conservation. Decrease water bill by 1/4 and save energy by 20%. Replace faucets and faucets They pay for themselves in the form of electricity. Schmidt, 1211 Owls Lawrence, Kan. 60044. 12-1 A good selection of used furniture, refrigerators, toiletries, cookware and appliances are: 1- 1472-3555, 1690, 4093, Topes, Ka Free 3- 1472-3558, 1690, 4093, Topes, Ka Free Gay Counseling Service: call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals. Unique collection of Greek jewelry, make exquisite jewelry. 811 New Hampshire, 10-5 Saturday and Sunday. $795.00 Freshman Girl: Third year Washburn law student soon to be prominent Washburn attorney is shopping for a record on his website. For 8. Write: Mert Buckley, 3224 Baird Pl. No. 307, Topke K-6611 843-7700 HEADQUARTERS, 841-2354 offers crisis counsel and drug information and counseling; referrals for treatment of overdose and mental health counseling; or just a concerned listening day. Free confidential, and open at night day. Freelance. 12:15-12:30 ATIVE CROSS REFERENCE BOOKSTORE MING - DRYMOUNTING • STITCHERY - METAL FRAMES • RESTORATION • BABY BOARD FRAMING Cross Reference Bookstore 842 1533 Mall's Shopping Center --see you at the grad party (Marya Union, Nov. 19. Hawk's Nest, 3-10, 3-6-0). Bring all your friend's Sales, Parts, Service KARAAT ANE AND SEL-DEYEAU INMATRIXATION KAARAT ANE AND SEL-DEYEAU INMATRIXATION 12.2-8 $KARAAT ANE$ AND $SEL-DEYEAU$ INMATRIXATION 12.2-8 There seems to be some apathy present. Some of you beautiful young ladies are not responding to the university's campus diversity. So once again I ask all who are interested in attending university, who are would-be contestants in Playboy's Photo contest to call 864-2314 and ask for Duke for more information. I'll answer that question for $2,000 for first and $200 for runner up. 11-19 Do your Christmas shopping early. For unique traditional gift sets, you can purchase a handmade leather liner, even for Dresden Drysanders. A few more details at www.driesanders.com. HORIZONS HONDA For your convenience the HAIR SUTENUE now has Tuesdays, and Weekends. Cash or appointment 926-8500. Must have a valid ID. Planning an Affair for the Holidays? Wait until Dec. 2nd-4th. 1811 W. 6th MTHCLORS. LIPS and a certain kind of but- ter before youake. Evel mor Yor. 11-9 before youake. Evel mor Yor. 11-9 [M] Jan. 2-8, Jackson Hole, WY $180 Package [M] everything but food, Contact Karen 11-25 **BIG GREETINGS** [M] Jan. 2-8, Jackson Hole, WY $180 Package [M] everything but food, Contact Karen 11-25 Happy Thanksgiving to Bile A and all you HIPC turkey, but wait until X is done. Seeking people with diverse interest for purposes of BS (brasstorming) 481-918 or 481-920 11-12, 13-12 Need help writing paper? Assistance offered on the project. Requests, rate and contact: 11-22-8 SELL OR TRADE SERVICES OFFERED Attention G.P. We are in business again! The company is located at 201 East 3rd Street, December 4. Contact us, you know the number. CALL PEOPLE WANTED. Women preferred: - CALL MORE PEOPLE, Nov 19 - Nov 21, Nov 25, Nov 30 - Nov 43, Nov 57, Nov 68 Browne KE, Thank you for our first year of browning and the promise of more to come. Browne KE and the promise of more to come. Browne KE 61. VW sunwet; unreg running but no condition. Sell for parts (r/large trade small) 842-9758 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, 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, 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, 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, 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, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 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, Need a new bike! Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer. Prices start at $49. Lawrence Schoolwinter Cycle, 4-6 Mon.-Tuesday, thurs. 8:30, Sun. 1-3, 1:42-1:50 W, 8:42, 62-636. Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a "Tune-up," we'll clean up your bike, adjust your derailer, brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your brake pedal, ensure all accessories bought at time of "tune-up." Rates: 10 speed $15.0, 3 or 5 speed $15.0, single speed $15.0, double speed $15.0, single speed $25.0, complete professional *Cant Sew?* See me for all your sewing needs! *All types of all types of all sizes* 843-7656 between 10-9 has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 VISIONS NAPA 2. Open 7 days and nights 3. We have it or can get it overnight N.A.P.A. Auto Parts For the Do-It-Yourself we offer: 1. Special Prices 2. Open 7 days and nights 3. We have it or can get it 4. Machine shop service 5. Two stores 817 Vermont 2300 Haskell 843-9365 843-6960 ACADEMIC BIBRARY SCHREACH PAPERS. Thousands on covering 1250 publications. No. side 12, Los Angeles 1235 12th Street, No. side 10, Los Angeles 916 14th Street, No. side 8, Los Angeles BIOLOGY TUCKER. Experienced tutor - Graduate admission only. 850-264-7188, 850-264- 7196, 416-500-688, 688-743, *Razasmanin* 416-500-688, 688-743. LIFTING Sandford Genetics Co. with research family kin- gistry and genetic resources. Receive rate. United States. Receive rates. Contact Fulfill- ment. Tyslider/editor, IBM Piece files, Quality work. Teach students, dissertations, welcome to: Call Joan. 843-921-797. Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, meal plan. Send resume to Mrs. Wright, spiltr cells: 843-6048, Mrs. Wright. THEISM BINDING COPYING. The House, Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for thems binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you need a phone or mobile phone. Thank you. EXPERT TYPING Fast and accurate, reasonable response to minor grammars. Call 842-8690 12-8 Employed型 typelib. THERES ONLY. Will type in the form of text as follows: Karen at 944-0141 days, 1749-1765 weeks and 820-8243 hours. I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. New address. Typing on elite electric typewriter Proofreading No pressure. No stresses. Mr. Mackay 0658. 11-23 WANTED Looking for married couple who plan to be in the city? Contact Park 25, office. 843-145-167. Contact Park 25, office. 843-145-167. Male Roommate to share partially furnished Male Roommate to share partially furnished Male Roommate to share partially furnished Male Roommate to share partially furnished One or two roommates to share Zaykwah- 843-1855. All utilities include 11-15 LEAD VOCALIST Male or Female for 8-9 months to begin working. Must be willing to work. John. 841-312. keep talking 11-15. Wanted: 25" 10-metre bike, pref. good touring bike, with good frame and brakes. 8793 18:19 11-19 Need male roommate to build 2 bdm. apt, for roommate semester. $85 a month + room assessment. 11-20 Roomman to share two bedroom duplex for spring semester. 842-752-378 after 6 p.m. 12-28 One or two female roommates to share a 2-bed- room apartment for spring semester. Call 11-23 303-529-8607. one female roommate for Towers Apt. in spring; own room; 285 utilities including 841-6549, 11-30- 3211. Permanent to share wood-heated A-frame on 45 Pierce. Pine fine, must have carved $70.00. 12-45-36-12-45-36- Female homemate needed for spring semester. $728 a month, electricity; Glaight AspLight 48. 12-11 32-11 Female roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom apartments with two (ex) female furnished, all new and up-to-date. B Shov Gifts, Flowers, Bath Accessories Holiday Store Hours: Sun. 12-5 Nov. 28—Dec. 23, Mon.-Sat. 9-8 849.1290 Nov. 28 - Dec. 29. Monthly. 826 Iowa 842-1320 Presently offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1977. 1 and 2 bedroom units, furnished and unfurnished. 2410 W. 25th Park 25 842-1455 GRAN SPORT Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents 943-2290 Pool Snooker Ping Pong 71th & Arkansas 843-3328 HILLCREST BILLIARDS Pin-Ball - Pin-Ball • Air Hockey • Face Ball . COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER Shark Hawk Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted 14 Friday, November 19, 1976 University Daily Kansan Antifreeze,good tires necessities in winter By PAUL JEFFERSON Staff Writer With the onslaught of icy gusts of wind, blanketing snowfalls and the ever-present slush of winter, many students need to take shelter. They should ensure themselves of continued good health. But students aren't the only ones who need that extra care in a less-than-ideal environment. Mechanics in Lawrence say that car owners also need to pay a little more attention to their cars during the winter when they are them of continued mechanical health. "They should always keep enough antifreeze in the car to avoid cracking the engine block," Jerry Weeks, service manager at Dale Wiley Pontiac-Cadillac. A GOOD antifreeze should protect a car down to 10% degrees or lower, Weeks said. Operating a car without antifreeze would ruin the engine because the heat generated by it would be much higher than the outside temperature, causing the block to crack. *You should change your antifreeze every two years to maintain visibility,* *from frosting inside the cabin.* non tarp, service writer for John Haddock Ford, said that many antifreeze also acted as coolants during the summer, but they must be changed regularly. He said that gas fire freeze-up can also be a problem if water condenses in the gas Jin Bilderback, service manager at Jayhawk Volkswagen, said that the majority of the cars he serviced never had a freezing problem in winter. "A METHANOL additive, such as Heet, will absorb the water and then get burned in a small amount of time." "A lot of the Volkwagens are air-cooled, so they don't use water or antifreeze," he said. "All our Rabbits, Dashers, Datsuns and others have water-cooled and use an all-year, coolant." Brothers . . . From page 11 "I avoid movies or things where you don't get to talk or be on a one-to-one basis," Green said. He said a one-to-one relationship with an older male was what the little brother didn't have at home, so it was the man's job to establish the relationship. relation should it was best to base the relationship and said it such as taking, or walking. **THEY LOVE just walk around on campus during the day. They get a big kick off.** Parker said his little brother liked playing catch, going to the park or just riding in a car. "Jance, Parker recalled, his little brother wanted to go to a store to buy a "bunch" of candy. When asked whether he had any milk or water, "Wahdya mean? I gotta whole quarter." Baska said more students were discovering that little brothers and little sisters could be both cute and interesting companions. He said the number of Big Brothers and Big Sisters had increased so much that occasional holiday parties, funded by the Student Senate, were becoming too crowded to host all the people involved in the programs. BASKA SAID he hoped the programs and the facilities would keep expanding, because they helped give needy things that were often taken for granted. Scott recalled, "The first thing my little brother said to his mom when she told him he was going to a Big Brother was, 'Are we gonna get to go to the football games?'" Porno ... From page 12 office so it can be distributed to other post offices and police stations. "WE JUST ENCOURAGE people to know they're buying from," be said. The easiest way to solve the problem of mailboxes full of junk mail is to "drop the mailbox" and have it sent directly to a server. However, if bare mailboxes are a problem, people can write to the Direct Mail Marketing Association and mail order companies to have their name added to mailing lists everywhere, insuring more junk mail than ever. Be prepared to enjoy The Athlete's foot Soon!! equipped with snow tires because "they didn’t learn to spin and get air" and are a bello. Bidders can be a hell of a job. Weeks said that radial tires were excellent for driving on snow and ice. "NOW WE have cars with front-wheel drive and they're equipped with radials." "You can leave your radial tires on all weather," he said. Tarp said that he thought studded tires had an advantage over radial tires because they are less expensive. "But I think they're passing a law in the legislature to prohibit rape in court." he said. According to a spokesman for the Kansas Highway Patrol, studded tires can't be on the road before Nov. 15 and they must be removed by April 1. WEEKS SAID that cars equipped with windshield washers could get a special antifrost solution to keep the windshield clear. "You can also buy it in a can. It's similar to antifreeze in what it does," he said. Tarpy suggested that drivers carry a large bag of salt or some sand in their car trunks in case they became stuck in snow or on ice. *ALWAYS carry some jumper cables,* *they can save you $15 for a towing* *chair. Buberback said that the best insurance to keep a car running in winter was to keep it covered. "It shouldn't cost any more to run a car in the winter. Just make sure the battery has enough water in it, and is charged. If a car has been maintained, it won't break down." IF YOUR MOTHER ASKS YOU WHERE YOURE GOING TONIGHT ... TELL HER YOURE GOING bananas 97th and Metcalf 381-7600 Windmill Shopping Center. 50¢ off on a sandwich with the purchase of any drink with this coupon. NO LIMIT. 18 AND OLDER. EXPIRES NOVEMBER 30. Advertise in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. BRITCHES CORNER 843 Mass. The Holiday Season is coming and Britches has the fashions you'll want! Joy Stevens evening gowns and suits by Pierre Cardin and Yves St. Laurent. Open Mon.-Sat. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8:30 "Contemporary Clothes for Men & Women" Rich McCrowty When you've got only 2 tickets to the big game and you forgot that you asked Cheryl,Lori,Tracy, Kelly,Sabrina and Trisha,but they didn't ...it's no time to get filled up. ©1976 The Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis. Lite MILLEPESSE DECAF Lite Beer from Miller. Everything you always wanted in a beer. And less. B Bennett deaf to Regents' defense of building requests By BARBARA ROSEWICZ Staff Writer TOPEKA-Gov. Robert Bennett cut short the Kansas Board of Regents' defense of capital improvement requests Friday, declaring that a budget made it impossible to finance the requests. Brennett's scrutiny of capital improvements throws into doubt the proposed funding of KU's Robinson Gymnasium and Malet Hall, for which she is a candidate. Such are two priorities of University administrators. Bennett asked the Regents, who defended the capital improvements requested by all seven Regents' schools, to realign their priority list of 56 requests along lines that the state could afford. THE LIST, which the Regents said was made in consideration of each school's own priorities, placed KU Medical Center Integrated Family Practice and four other schools fourth, and the Malot Hall addition 11th out of 68. can afford this program," Bennett told the Regents and Regent school administrators midway through the school year. There's no way in God's green earth the state The governor will make his recommendation to the 1977 Kansas Legislature in January. The governor will not make this recommendation. FUNDING FOR utilities increases and energy conservation methods were among his first con- The Regents had made a special requests for energy conservation methods for the Regent's schools. They requested $527,000 for the Lawrence campus to insulate and weatherproof buildings and double glaze storm windows with high-performance paint and improve the air conditioning system of buildings at the Med Center. KU had requested $100,000 for preliminary planning of a trash-burning energy generation project. Bennett said he thought repairing existing facilities was now feasible to construct new ones. 'TM SERIOUSLY considering terminating any construction program that has not been commenced," he said. "We're in something of a crunch. At this point we have to start living in buildings we've got rather than building any new ones." James Bibb, state budget director, last week cut all capital improvement requests, except those for which funds had already been appropriated by past legislatures. The computer center was KU's only capital improvement request retained by Bibb. The 1976 Kansas Legislature had appropriated $1.8 million from fiscal 1978 for the project Bennett brachecd the topic of revenue bonds as a solution to the funding of new buildings. ALTHOUGH THERE were questions of the legality of using the educational building fund to pay off revenue bonds, there was also optimism over the proposed solution. Max Lucas, University director of facilities planning, said the idea would probably be looked Unless there are legal snags, the Regents would sell bonds to construct buildings and use revenue in the educational building fund to new off the bond Chancellor Archyke Dykes said yesterday that a benefit of the plan was that buildings could be constructed now, instead of waiting for the construction to accumulate enough money to pay for a building. IF OFFICIALS find that the plan is legal and decide, to use it, it could affect the proposed additions to Robinson and Malott, which were cut by Bibb. Lacasa defended the Robinson addition as the Lawrence campus' top priority. Some students have had to delay taking required courses in physical education for two years, he said, because there was a lack of space to add more sections of some classes. Dykes said that not only physical education majors were affected, but also students in occupational therapy and education who needed physical education classes as part of a Final planning of the project, which was funded by the legislature last year, has been completed. A request of $3.5 million was cut. A $4.5 MILLION dollar request for Malcolm Hall to put out a cutoff for final plans had also be- come apparent. Lucas said the addition was needed to meet enrollment demands and also to comply with federal requirements concerning animal care facilities. Programs have certain requirements, he said, and KU must meet the requirements to keep federal program grants. "I think many of those programs are in jeopardy," he said. The Med Center's integrated family practice program requested $320,000 to set up a clinic in a Kansas community. The clinic would be part of a program geared towards doctors and physicians them to practice in Kansas. Warren Corman, Regents' facilities officer who presented the requests' defense, said he would try to get them to sign. "We wanted the governor to realize what a tough situation we're in," too, he said. KANSAN Monday, November 22.1976 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Vol.87 No.65 FEDERAL FUND OF HUMAN RESOURCES Jauhawk nation A waving flag complemented the waveting wheat of Kansas football fans at Missouri when halfback Bill Campield scored on a 28-yard run to make the score 16-0. That touchdown proved to be the winning margin in KU won, 41-14. The Flag was made by Tom Muther, an avid KU fan from Topkam, and is held by Allen Liektig, Lawrence Flawed budgets called a mixup Staff Writer By BARRY MASSEY The mistake by the Commission on the Status of Women concerns a $314 voucher written Aug. 14 to the Kansas Union, acco- nouncing Maggie Plagnan, commission president. prepared before student organizations' accounts are activated in the fall. Opinions varied on budget's fate Carlin is the leading contender for Speaker of the House. The new speaker will be elected Dec. 6, when the legislature meets to organize its January session. The Campus Veterans didn't report a balance of about $100 as "income since July" on the treasurer's financial statement. These statements must be SEN. JEQ. WARREN, D-Maple City, agreed that the Democratic House would make little difference in this year's bidding. As far as KU's budget goes he said, in each of the 20 years that he has been in the BEISNER SAID that the organizations either didn't understand that they had to deal with the problem or did. Rep. John Carlin, D-Smolan, said Friday that he did not foresee any obvious differences between the new Democratic and the old Republican House, and added that in the past the two parties hadn't been much different in their fiscal policies. reports or that delays in banking transactions had caused reports' flaws. Several Kansas legislators expressed differing views Friday about the new Democrat-controlled Kansas House of Representatives, which is next year's University of Kansas budget. CARLIN ALSO said that the budgeting process wasn't a game but a sound policy, referring to the cuts that James Bibb, state legislator made in KU's fiscal 1978 budget last week. into the reports after they had been audited, audit of the organization's checking accounts If Bennett has to look at every item in every budget, Carlin explained, he can't do a good job when he tries to develop an overall budget. The legislators were attending the second legislative institute at the Kansas Union Town Hall. By DEB MILLER "Bibb's cuts are a standard process," Carlin said. "People have misleading ideas and think that Bibb actually feels all those items need to be cut." Two campus organizations' failure to follow Student Senate budget procedure probably resulted from a misunderstanding, Bob Beisner, Senate treasurer, said yesterday. Kansas Senate Bibb has made similar reductions in KU's budget. "It's simply a way of making the process less difficult programs it feels it needs," he explained. Pierre "Patte" McGill, current Speaker of the House, and a Democrat of Louisiana, responded to a response. "I've worked with John Carlin for many years," McGill said, "and I'd he'll be elected the new speaker, as it seems certain he will win." But he didn't prioritize higher priority on Kosovo than on politics. One House member who said he felt there would be a great deal of difference in this year's House was Rep. Loren Hohman, D-Topeka. "Traditionally, the Democrats have been more sympathetic to the needs of the people," Holman said, adding that "the needs of the people" included mental health, tax breaks at middle incomes and education. "I THINK YOU'LL see a harder look at all of these things and a closer look at how they are handled." However, another newly elected House member, Rep. Kent Roth, D-Ellinwood, wouldn't speculate and said that it was a whole new ball game. A newly elected House member, Rep. Anthony Hensley, D-Topeka, agreed that a Democratic House would make some difference. "We'll just have to wait and see what happens," he said. "I think there will be an effort to reestablish the austere Docking budgeting process," Hersley said, "and there will probably be a bill on legislative budgeting." The Campus Veterans and the Commission on the Status of Women failed to report their last year's cash balances on a monthly basis, and the treasurer at the beginning of this semester. ★ Regents to convene here KU will host the November meeting of the Kansas Board of Regents, beginning today with the "Council of Presidents and committees" ending tomorrow with the board meeting. The Council of Presidents, a group of top administrators from each of the seven Regents schools, will convene in the room of the Kansas Union at 9:30 a.m. "Talking to the two groups Friday af- ternoon," Beesner said, "it seemed a ma- ter of concern." The board will meet at 1:30 tomorrow in the Union's Kansas Room. This afternoon, in the International Room of the Union, the Academic Committee will need at 1:30, the Health Education Committee and the Coordination Committee at 4. Tomorrow morning, also in the International Room, the Budget and Finance Committee will meet at 8:30, the Legislative, Bylaws and Policy Committee at 9:15, the Extension Committee at 10, and the building committee at 11. The board meeting will review the findings and actions of the various Regents BEISNER SAID that the organizations were notified by telephone Friday of the mistakes. He said a meeting with representatives from the two groups; Randy McKernan, chairman of the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee; and himself had been scheduled for tomorrow afternoon. Jim Bates, Great Bend senior, was chosen editor of the Kansan Friday for the spring semester by the Kansan board. Janice Clements, Overland Park senior, was selected business manager for the spring semester. The Finance and Auditing Committee last Thursday night called for an investigation The results of that meeting, according to McKernan, will be sent to the Finance and Auditing Committee, which will make a decision concerning the reports. Routine items on KU's agenda to be presented to the Regents include authorization of a parking lot for GSP and Corbin Hall, contract approval for the KU Medical Center clinical facility, acceptance of medical procedures, Malott Hall addition and approval of the naming of the Parnot Athletic Center, the new addition to Allen Field House. Kansan picks spring heads Applications for news and business staff positions will be available immediately following the vacation in 105 Flint; the Student office, 105B of the Kansas Union; and both the deans of his and dean of women's offices in Strong The editor and business manager will interview applicants late next week. Changes proposed in events committee Staff Writer By SANDY DECHANT The Student Senate Rights, Responsibilities and Privileges Committee will present legislation to the Student Senate next week proposing that the University Events Committee be placed under the Senate's jurisdiction. The Senate committee will present a proposal to the Senate at its Dec. 1 meeting that would require Student Senate approval of all policies adopted by the events committee and that would establish a student majority in the composition of the com- AT THAT MEETING, Caryl Smith, chairman of the events committee, said that the committee was responsible only to the directors and Del Shankel, executive vice chapellor. The proposal is a result of the Nov. 8 meeting between the Senate committee and three members of the events committee, who were chosen by whom the committee was responsible to. Steve McMurray, chairman of the Senate committee, disagreed. He said at the rights committee meeting last night that the only mention made of the events committee's function and purpose was in the Senate Rules and Regulations. According to the Senate Rules, "The Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct," "Authority for the promulgation of rules concerning student non-academic conduct resides in the Student Senate . . ." IN ADDITION to calling for Senate approval of all policies adopted by the events committee, the proposal would change the composition of the committee. Instead of the 14 faculty and staff members and nine student members who currently compose the events committee, the proposal would call for nine voting student members and five voting faculty members. Other nonvoting students could be added as deemed necessary by the events committee. Mc Murry said that if the proposal was passed by the Senate and approved by Dykes, the events committee would have to comply with it. Professor discusses Cuban life in weekend language workshop By DAYNA HEIDRICK Arrom, the Rose Morgan visiting professor of Spanish, spoke Saturday to about 150 people in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. His lecture on "Cuba A revolution isn't an event, but a process, according to Jose Armen, Aroman humanist and scholar, referring to the Cuban revolution; the overthrow of the Batista regime in 1969. Dean outlines terrorism To stop acts of international terrorism, the United Nations must improve security measures, increase protection of diplomats and minimize the benefits received by terrorists, according to John Murphy, president of the University of Kansas School of Law. Speaking before the Douglas County and KU chapters of the United Nations, Mr. Garrison said that primary motivations behind terrorist groups: they may be seeking to stimulate group action, they may want to extort funds for a cause, they want to unite in a particular government. Murphy told the 40 people who attended the chapters' luncheon at the United Ministries Center that although there was no generally accepted definition of terrorism, two classifications might be general terrorism and transnational terrorism. 'International terrorism is where in- dividal 'actors' are controlled by a country to do a job on other countries. Transnational terrorism is where an autonomous group of individuals use their Own in lieu of Murphy. Much said. Murphy said the Palestinian Liberation Organization was one example of a tran- With the exception of the adoption of a 1974 treaty protecting foreign diplomats, Murphy said, the U.N. had "adequately dealt with terrorism" because of a fear on the part of many U.N. members that such measures would be directed against groups like al-Qaeda and those in wars of liberation in southern Africa and elsewhere." Murphy was an attorney in the office of the legal adviser in the State Department working on U.N. matters from 164 to 1967. He was a member of the United States delegation to the U.N. General Assembly in fall 1965. Today--Culture in a Revolutionary Society" was the keynote event of an all-day academic workshop for Spanish and Portuguese teachers. Arrom was born and raised in Cuba and has visited the island recently. He said he had noted a great improvement in the life of the Cuban people in the past 15 years. Arrom said that when he returned to Cuba the educational improvement was evident in speech. Before 1959 the lower class could be distinguished from the upper class poor for poor French, poor Spanish, but Arrom said, every lesson is calculated and speaks Spanish clearly. ARROM SAID that before 1959 nearly half the population was illiterate, three-fourths lived in shacks and one-third had intestinal parasites. Arrom said that now Cuba had eliminated unemployment, racial discrimination, deportation, begging, gambling, prostitution, drug abuse, illiteracy and slums. ARROM'S TALK was followed by a panel discussion by KU faculty members who addressed specific aspects of the Cuban revolution. Arrom said students in Cuba paid their way through school by working several hours a day collecting grapefruit and oranges in the groves that surround the schools. Similarly, study groups 15 hours a week. Arrom said this idea was important for developing an tradition of the Cuban patriot, philosopher and writer of the 19th century, Jose Marti. Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs and professor of economics, said education, health and diet had been substantially improved for Cubans through a redistribution of income and employment. He said the freedom of choice for most Cubans had improved since pre-Castro days. As long as the great masses believed their prospects were better than before, Calgaard said, the government wouldn't need riffles to stay in power. WILLIAM GRIFFITH, professor of history, questioned whether Cuba had freed itself with the overthrow of Batista, or merely exchanged one master for another. Griffith said he didn't challenge the facts of the material improvements in Cuba, but rather was concerned that the material changes were accomplished on credit. Griffith said Cuba, who before the revolution was economically dependent on the U.S., now had a $4 billion debt to the Soviet Union. Griffith said he had observed nationalization of the Cuban revolution and a drift toward the Soviet pattern. Shirley Harkes, assistant professor of sociology, discussed the integration of Cuban women into the labor force. Harkes said the Code of Family Law passed in 1975 attempted to redistribute labor in the home to free women for work outside the home. Raymond Souza, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, said the revolution had produced a new form of art that is tradition and had fostered a tremendous explosion of creative activity. 2 Mouday, November 22, 1976 University Daily Kansar News Digest From the Associated Press Fallout moves over Atlantic The leading edge of an immense mass of airborne radioactive debris from a Chinese nuclear explosion moved out over the Atlantic Ocean yesterday, leaving traces of increased radioactivity, according to federal monitors. A spokesman for the Environmental Protection Agency said that the traces of residual radiation recorded so far were insignificant. the minute increases in ground level radiation were recorded at Cheyenne, Wyo., and Phoenix, Ariz., the EPA said. Reame confers on N.Y. debt NEW YORK-Mayor Abraham Beame conferred with representatives of President Gerald Ford and President-elect Carter yesterday in an effort to help New York City avoid possible bankruptcy. New York City has possible utility space. A court ruling that a key $1.8 billion segment of the city's recovery program was unconstitutional touched off an urgent series of new city, state and federal rescue moves. The mayor was just back from Jerusalem, where he left the one-word prayer "Help!" sucked in a crack of the Wailing Wall—the ancient site where Jews go to pray and to slip pieces of paper bearing their prayers between the stone blocks of the temple wall. Beame said there was no solution in sight to his city's fiscal troubles and ruled out new taxes or further large-scale cuts in services. Venezuelans offer contemporary play The Repertory Theatre troupe of The Ateneo of Caracas, Venezuela, will present "La Farra," a contemporary Venezuelan theater, at 7 play at the United Ministries. The "Teatro de Repertorio del Ateneo de Caracas (TRAC)", as the group is known in Spanish, was invited to the United States to participate in the Symposium on Latin American Theatre at Pennsylvania State University in October. They are now on a tour of the United States that focuses at several universities across the nation. Rodolfo Rodriguez, who diets"La Farra", said that its author, Rodolfo Santana, was the most important young author in Venezuela today. In "La Farrar," Santana uses concrete events that occurred in Venezuela in the '60s and expresses them by using stylized techniques. Latin American theater differs from the theater in the U.S. because it is generally very naturalistic and realistic. The Hair Suite For all of you K.U. students, buvy workmen and working men, we will be open late Mondays and Tuesdays I 9:00 p.m. This will help K.U. students get in on Monday and Tuesday days. Call 842-8600 for appointment. Katie Ainsworth - owner-Stylist Thelma Wright - Manager-Stylist Diana Mott - Stylist Bob Cale - Stylist Formerly Ramada Inn Beauty Salon MAM BATT Our friendly Face 6th & Iowa Free Parking Call Now RESUME PACKAGE Includes samples, instructions and worksheets. Prepared by successful executive. Mail $5.00 to: RESUME P. O. Box 71, Clearview City, Ks. 66019 [Anime Character With Red Hair and Black Hat] We need certain college majors to become Air Force lieutenants. Mechanical and civil engineering majors ... aerospace and aeroautonal engineering majors electronics to compute the Air Force is looking for young men and women with academic majors such as these. If you're able to obtain a bachelor's or may be eligible for either the two-year or the four-year Air Force Master's degree, help with the college bids, two, three, and four-year scholarships. pay tuition, textbooks, lab fees, and $10 tax-free fees for all students in the UC TPC program leads to an Au-Port program that helps students challenge, training work (with experience in the world), promotional responsibility, graduate education and internships. Sophomores interested in the two year program should contact Cindy Paulsen at (801) 367-4444 during November or December. Bldg. 108, Room 144, call 844-7443. Find out today about an Air Force ROTC scholarship, it's a great way to serve your country and to help pay for your college educa- Air Force ROTC-Gateway to a Great Way of Life to all spaceball enthusiasts. Final Rounds of the First Anniversary Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall Spaceball Tournament will be played Monday evening, November 22. All are welcome and come with any space such as Fast Leo, High Flying Chuck, Aviator Scott and Wild Wisness. An Open Invitation HEAVY EDDYS PIZZA TODAY'S SPECIAL! Watch the want ads in the Kansan. 2 Free Large Draws with any Large Pizza at 'The Wheel' Fast,Free Delivery,Too. 841-3100 At the Wheel 507 W. 14th James V. Owens RETAIL LIQUOR STORE A large selection of imported & domestic WINES and COLD BEER at 620 W.9th Next to Owen's Flower Shop Open 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. 841-2256 Fly roundtrip from Kansas City. Chicago Bound? Leave Dec. 11, 15, or 18 and return Jan. 16. $71 por person based on minimum of 10 persons (Regular coach fare is $110) Contact: SUA Travel KANSAS UNION PHONE 864-3477 M --and you pay only . . 88c. . for a second pizza of the next smaller size. Travel arrangement by ... Maupintour travel service Kansas Union Lobby Phone 843-1211 Mon., Nov. 22 Pizza Buy one pizza of one size . . . FOREIGN LANGUAGE BROADCASTS To hear the latest news in any of the following languages 24 hours a day, dial: 2:00—12:00 p.m. Pizza inn. no coupon necessary in the Hillcrest Shopping Center, next to the theatres. 864-3003 864-3241 864-3034 864-3219 864-3055 864-3218 * ANNOUNCED Oriental Russian German Portuguese French Spanish ADAPTORIES Thanksgiving Flowers for your table from Nye's Flowers 939 Mass. Downtown 843-3255 KU LANGUAGE LABORATORIES --by and enjoying the good food. At HENRY'S we aren't letting the remodeling interfere with our good customers. We will be open all the time. So come by and give us your opinion. 6th & Missouri 843-2139 HEAD FOR HENRY'S HEAD FOR HENRY'S HENRY'S is in the process of remodeling—but don't let that stop you from coming --reg. $ 6^{98} TACO TICO® BUY ONE SANCHO GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON Tomatoes Cheddar Cheese Meat Soft flour tortilla Lettuce WITH COUPON Tomatoes Cheddar Cheese Meat Soft flour tortilla Lettuce Bite into a sasho today. It's so good, you're sure to want another! So buy one...and get one with this coupon. Just bring it to Taco Tico the next time you're hungry for something special. BUY ONE SANCHO GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON Good Monday, Nov. 22 -- Sunday, Nov. 28 1 Order per Coupon Holiday Inn 2340 Iowa TACO TICO Always in season and seasoned to please Watch the want ads in the Kansan. K-STATE & WSU will be there so Come on down and support your school! 681-1741 Welcome Fraternities & Sororities Doors open at 8:00 CASINO Featuring HEADSTONE ★ 31st & S. Hillside Wichita, Kansas INVITES ALL KU STUDENTS TO A BIG-THREE PARTY WED.,NOV.24th the CRAMOPHONE shop Ask for Station No. 6 Eve ROD STEWART A Night on the Town Included: Hay Hauncey, Tracy Went Jim Winston, The Bulltrap Ori WB WARNER BROS. 842-1811...Ask for Station No. 6 Rod Stewart A Night On The Town Kief's discount price $3.99 TOD. FOREI meet at Union will m Union will m A PH LOQUI Alchen Evolout at 4:30 TON will me CHESS B and ENSEE Pine F CLUB of the and V PHILI Intern KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE KANSAS I-913-842-1544 YAMAHA Accuphase EWS.INC. Kings & Orchids REVOX POWERHORSE THORNS TEAC SKOSS SKICKING WWW.POWERHOSE.COM Guardian TDK audio televise BOL JBL Monday, November 22,1976 3 --- YAMAHA copperhead inc. A Kid's Rides DEVOX NONCEA ORENS EAC POSS TEKERING Cassandra Glassoad mavilli technica UBL On Campus Events TODAY: THE UNIVERSITY SENATE FOREIGN STUDENT COMMITTEE will meet at 11:30 a.m. in Alcove B of the Kansas Union. NONTRADITIONAL, STUDENTS WILL MEET AT 12:45 a.m. in Alcove B of the Union. VOLUNTEER CLEARING HOUSE will meet at 4 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union. A PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY COLLOQUium, "Uncertainties in the Ultimate Calcium," Viewing Chemical Reactions in our Galaxy, will be presented at 4:30 in 136 Malt Hall. TONIGHT: OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will meet at 7 a.m. 1629 W. 19th St. The SU CHESSE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors B and C of the Union. THE THAE TAU DANCE ENSEMBLE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room. THE THAE TAU DANCE ENSEMBLE will meet at 7:30 in the Oread Room of the Union to discuss the "Equality of Men and Women." THE UNDERGRADUATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will meet at 8 in the International Room of the Union. AAUP seeks support of exigency A copy of the financial exigency policy will be mailed to all KU faculty members after Thanksgiving to gain faculty support for the document, Robert Fraufu, chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), sad Friday. Fire damages set at $28,000 A fire early Saturday evening at the home of Grant Thomas, 2223 Vermont St., caused a total of £2,000 damage to the house and its contents, fire officials said yesterday. The fire, which started in the attic of the house, was apparently touched off by a pile of burning leaves in the driveway, fire investigators said. Correction It was incorrectly reported in the Kansas that KU buildings will close for Thanksgiving vacation at 5 p.m. Tuesday. The buildings will close at their regularly scheduled closing times. The Kansas Union will close at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Wanted: Thin Young Men for Dangerous Job, Orphans Preferred "PONY EXPRESS RIDER" Evenings 7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30 Granada What the song didn't tell you the movie will. PG Ode To Billy Joe Evenings 7:25 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. 3:00 Hillerville DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLIVIER in "MARATHON MAN" Shown Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30 Varsity 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWO-MINUTE WARNING R CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASSAVETES Evenings 7:30 & 9:40 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:55 Hillerville He's back in business and it's service with a smile. THE RAWDY ADVENTURES OF Tom Jones Evenings 7:35 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:00 Hillerville Wanted: Thin Young Men, for Dangerous Job, Orphans Preferred "PONY EXPRESS RIDER" G Evenings 7:30-9:30 Sat.Sun.Mat.2:30 GAMES MOVIE MARKET TIME What the song didn't tell you the movie will. PG Ode To Billy Joe Eve. 7:35 & 9:30, Sat.Sun. 2:00 At its meeting Friday, the AAUP executive committee also discussed plans to send a letter to Gov. Robert Bennett in response to the question of national faculty salary report from AAUP. 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWO MINUTE WARNING The document, which will be presented to the University Senate at its meeting Dec. 2, outlines procedures to be followed during exigency—a financial crisis that would force the University to dismiss tenured faculty members. The report rated KU in the next-to-last comparable universities across the country. *Considering salaries of this year and projections for next year, we are sliding into He's back in business and it's service with a smile. Friand said that exchanging information and views about the proposed KU budget helped establish contact between state legislators and faculty members. Tom Jones In other business, committee members What the song didn't tell you the movie will. PG Ode To Billy Joe Eve. 7:15 & 9:30. Sat. Sun. 2:00 Hillcrest discussed having an AAUP chapter meeting early next February with the local state legislators to discuss attitudes about support of higher education in Kansas. The Other Cheese Sale Good thru Wed.. Nov. 24 at The Stinky Cheese Shop 809 1/2 W. 23rd 842-7434 Try something new for lunch, the salad bar at THE GREEN PEPPER The salad bar offers 24 unique embellishments for only $1.85 Try something new for lunch, the salad bar at THE GREEN PEPPER The salad bar offers 24 unique embellishments for only $1.85 544 W. 23rd THE GREEN PEPPER Pizza 842-9003 THE GROOM PEPPER Pizza 544 W. 23rd THE GROOM PEPPER PIZZA 842-9003 A COMPLETE PRINTING SERVICE FOR LEFTHANES E BORN IN 1925. MEMBER OF THE CATALOGS, INVITING SPONDING PARTIES FOR THE ORIGINAL EDITION OF THE TOLSTOVER STUDIO WORKS. QUICK Copy Center WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS — PLEASE TRY US! • 838 MASSACHUSETTS • PHONE 842.3610 / 841.4900 COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES! 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BOONE'S RETAIL LIQUOR NOW OPEN • American & Imported Wines • Cold Beer & Liquors Charles Boone, Owner 843-3339 Malls Shopping Center 711 West 23rd Indoor Recreation QUARTERBACK CLUB • Complete game film of the KU-Missouri game • Last meeting of the year Mon., Nov. 22 7:00 p.m. Big Eight Room Kansas Union Everyone Welcome! BOONE'S RETAIL LIQUOR NOW OPEN • American & Imported Wines • Cold Beer & Liquors Charles Boone, Owner 843-3339 Malls Shopping Center 711 West 23rd Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358. Indoor Recreation QUARTERBACK CLUB • Complete game film of the KU-Missouri game • Last meeting of the year Mon., Nov. 22 7:00 p.m. Big Eight Room Kansas Union Everyone Welcome! 6th Anniversary SALE MISS STREET DELI MASSACHUSETTS 50¢ OFF— with this Coupon REUBEN SANDWICH Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye. Reg. $2.00 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 The Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th $175 with this Coupon Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Reg. Price $2.10 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. $1.00 OFF— with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 100 6th Anniversary SALE MISS STREET DELI AND MASSACHUSETTS 50¢ OFF— with this Coupon REUBEN SANDWICH Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye. Reg. $2.00 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 The Bull & Boar 11 W. 9th $1.75 with this Coupon Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes—mothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included. Reg. Price $2.10 Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. $1.00 OFF— with this Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETT ST. $1.00 OFF—Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. with this $1.00 OFF—Coupon ANY LARGE PIZZA "The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 Coors Pitchers $1.00 New Yorker Mass St. Deli Limit 1 pitcher Per couple per day with this coupon Expires Nov. 30, 1976 G's G's BAR-B-Q 530 W.23rd St. 841-3402 EASTERN CITY CAFE "The Taste is in the Sauce" NOW OPEN 11:00 a.m.—2:00 a.m. FRIDAY & SATURDAY Bring your party to G's Friday & Saturday Nights. We're now open till 2:00 a.m. to bring you Bar-B-Q only the way "G" can make it. REGULAR SANDWICH SPECIAL Treat yourself to any of "G's" fine Bar-B-Q Sandwiches from 11 a.m.—2 p.m. Daily and get your choice of Tater Tots, Fries or Chips and Drink Free. SMOKED TURKEY DINNER SPECIAL Tues., Nov. 23rd and Wed., Nov. 24th Let "G" take care of your Thanksgiving early with a delicious Smoked Turkey. Dine in or take it home. If you've already bought a turkey Bring it in and "G" will prepare it. Better hurry, we'll be closed Thanksgiving. NEW HOURS Sun.-Mon.—Closed Tues.-Thurs.11 a.m.—9 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.—2 a.m. 4 Monday, November 22, 1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. JFK killing recalled Thirteen years ago today, I was a third grader. I don't think we did much at school that day, but then, I don't remember much about the morning. All I remember is the afternoon. Thanksgiving vacation was coming, and I was part of a class full of students who were getting out to get out of school. We weren't much interested in doing multiplication tables, especially so soon after lunch. I THINK the teacher was eager, too. She didn't much like teaching multiplication, so she passed out a bunch of flashcards. We were to color them, and she would put them up on the bulletin board. I didn't know much about the world in those days. I knew how to walk single-file and buy a lunch ticket, but that was about all. I didn't know anything about the President, or Dallas, or how to pronounce "assassination." And then the principal broke in on the public address system. "We think the President has been shot." He played radio news reports over the system, and we all sat there and listened. We heard the whole thing, right up until they said he had died. I REMEMBER how some of us kids reacted. We were sort of scared. Most of us had never heard of a President being assassinated. No one could shoot the President. We were sad, I guess, but mostly we felt threatened. It was as if something very sinister had gripped the country. Who, or what? Thirteen years is a long time to hold vivid memory, especially of some childhood scene. And I wasn't even involved, not really. But maybe I was. Maybe we all were. Maybe the day President John Kennedy was killed is a day engraved in many minds. I suppose that's why it deeply troubles me, and many others, to read stories like the one published in 1864 by Patasha as a 1864 memo from then-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said Lee Harvey Oswald told Cuban officials in advance about his plan to shoot Kennedy. WE ALL really want to believe that Oswald acted alone and that there wasn't a conspiracy. But increasingly frequent reports tying Kennedy's death to Castro just won't let us believe that anymore. The Warren Commission's report, the official explanation of the assassination, has been kicked around like an old tin can. It is full of holes and fissures that only new investigation can fill. This latest story says that the memo was addressed to the commission, which was appointed by Kennedy's death, but that no commission members recall having received the memo. Information such as this, if it's true, demands response. The existence of such a memo would strongly suggest that Oswald, Cuba and Kennedy's death were somehow closely connected. It also would cast suspicion on both Hoover and the commission, both of which are said to have had the memo. NETHER OF these suggestions should be ignored. For 13 years, the nation's law enforcement agencies have, in effect, treated Kennedy's death as if it was no more than the death of some of our own officers. They not only miffed if the public or the press asks them to answer to the controversies surrounding the commission's report. Perhaps fears of international or internal governmental conspiracy are as foolish as a child's fear of the dark. If so, it won't hurt to question whether if they are indeed as foolish as some say. All I know is it's been 13 years, and the circumstances surrounding the death of a U.S. President have never been clearly explained. People are still upset about the shooting. They won't easily forget. And they are going to keep on asking "who, or what?" By Mary Ann Daugherty Contributing Writer LOS ANGELES—This is the city—Los Angeles, Calif. The city has taxis, the city has buses, the city has cops. The city has tourists. That's where we are in. We're Kansans. "Bet Hollywood is really a big deal back in Kansas," says a cashier at Universal Studios as she searches for a sequined Hollywood t-shirts. Harrumph for Hollywood! "Not really," we deadpan, picking up our shirts and walking out the door. Not really, we said, but we may have been lying. After all, he is KU student journalists get to go to a convention in the "Big Lemon"." And, after all, the book is Hollywood is Hollywood. Or is it? Let's follow Dorothy's second cousins as they take a guided tour of Oz—Universal Studios: 12:35 P.M. PST Here we are now, getting on the bus, our nametags slyly slipped into our pockets. We are all determined not to act like a teenager with a momentary lapse when one of us felt a palm tree to see if it was real, we have succeeded. We even managed to remain in the room and into MacLean Stevenson at Burbank's NB教科社. But this is the supreme test—Hollywood. At Universal Studios, we will see stars from comedy and drama even Bruce the Chance of "Jaw" fame. The question is whether we will maintain our calm or whether we will embark on the front of God and everybody. 1:07 P.M. PST We arrive. The reconstituted school bus glides majestically into a parking place. The driver of the bus, we have discovered, is himself a celebrity. He is a part-time carpet-cleaner who has cleaned carpets for both John Wayne and Donald The lines are amazingly long and the crowds are huge. It is obvious that what is keeping Universal in business isn't its movies or music. Every five or 10 minutes a Glamor Tour, heavy with tourists, sets out on another tour. And this goes on all day long, all year long. We can almost smell the money. Jim Bates Editorial Editor Before boarding a Glamor-Tram, we decide to rent a pocket Instantmatic to help us remember our experience. The man at the camera booth notices our accents. "Where are you people from?" he asks patronizingly. "Kansas." 1:12 P.M. PST "Kansas, huh," the man says, completely unimpressed. "Dorothy, right? Ding-dong, the bitch is dead, and all that?" We negotiate the camera rental, and he hands us the pocket Instrumental. O'Conner. Needless to say, we're impressed. "Yeah. "Now to work it," he begins, all you have to do . . . We explain that we know how to work a pocket Instantic. "Really," he says, "You have "Really," he says, "You have them in Kansas?" We grumble and head for the GlamorTram. 1:59 P.M. PST Randy, he says, "I have them in Kansas?" We grumble and head for the With the help of our perky guide Traci, and our Tram-ing agent Michael, Hollywood the way it really is. Suddenly Frank makes a 2:10 P.M.PST There is a huge rumbling sound, like the sound of a toilet flushing played at 16 r.p.m. Six medium-sized rubber rocks bounce down a cliff toward the GlamorTram. Five of them are suspended on a platform shield on the side of the road. The other one bounces ridiculously over the bus and into the distance. "Be honest, now," Traci says. "How many of you came here to see a movie star?" Two ladies from Milwaukee, a retired plumber and one of the student journalists wave their hands. Somewhere in the back of the tram, a woman smirks. "Whew," says Tract, wiping her forehead with her wrist. "That was a close one, wasn't it, guys?" "Come on now. Really!" A five-year-old boy from Idaho joins the throng. "Well then, I've got bad news for you—it's Saturday and all the stars are off work. But don't worry. It isn't hopeless. Just last week Telly Savalin drew on a dress (gasps) and once Walter Matthau actually disguised himself and went along with a tour. Oh that Walter, he's such a card." "Frank. Oh, Frank. Don't take the short cut, Frank. You know these rocks are Frank. Oh, Franaugh!" With reverent whispers and exclamations of awe, the tour 2:14 P.M.PST gets off the tram and walks through Julie London and another "Emergency" star's dressing rooms. "wrong turn" and Tracid goes into an act worthy of the worst movie Universal ever did. Neither looked as if it has been used lately. The walking tour continues onto a sound stage where the tourists see a mock-up of the iridesse set and a horror set. "Let me show you how it works," she says, and she pushes a mysterious button. The highlight of the horror set comes when Tract notices the tourists gazing at womentouching at a huge, stuffed griffin. The griffin shudders, and its wings raise a full three inches and drop again. Then the act is repeated. The crowd applauds. Back on the GlamorTran again, we drive past such landmark buildings as the house. Then Frank loses control again. "Frank . . . Not the old bridge, Frank . . . You know how dangerous it is . . . Frank! Frankkkkk!" The last hour has been interesting, but unevenness. The mock towns are far more interesting than the griffin, and, aside from the fact that every single set of words "make" and "The Six Million Dollar Man," it's been very untyack. Boards fall off the bridge, and it drops a full foot or two beneath the bus. Then the process is reversed as Traci jokes, "Sure scared you, didn't we?" 3:49 P.M. PST The only real laugh came about 10 minutes ago, when Tract showed us the mock-up of a 747 being readied for Universal's "Airport 1977." "It's an exciting movie," she said, "about a 74 that turns upside down and sinks in the Bermuda Triangle." We had to smoker at that one. But now everyone is getting a bit tense, because we are coming closer to the one thing all we have been waiting to see—Bruce the Shark, comics creator and a blacker. Whenever we pass a body of water, there is a scramble for cameras and a whitening of knuckles. Finally, the big moment comes. The former Tram is what looks like a fake other fake New England resort on the edge of a farm pond, when suddenly the Tram lists the water and the big fish leaps. The cameras clink furiously, trying to focus on teeth, mouth, head and, oh yes, those doll-like eyes. Unfortunately it isn't even the real fake shark used in the film. The real fake shark especially built to score the GlamorTram riders. 4:28 P.M.PST THE NEW Mexico area director for OSHA was very impressed by Mr. Robert McCoy, magistrate Robert McCoy, read him the law creating OSHA and This is the city. That was the tour. We're still Kansans. Some of the most pleasant stories that come along have to do with combats between David and Goliath—especially when the combatms turn out according to the instructions. Albuquerque of such a struggle, David won, and Goliath is much annoyed. "Where's your warrant?" she asked. They didn't have one. "Sorry, boys," she said, and closed the door. Oh well, we philosopher, touring Universal is just one of those things you have to do when you're in Los Angeles. Luckily for us, we didn't go there with any dreams or illusions or high hopes. Luckily for us we're cynics. Cast in the role of David, in this particular drama, is a 100 per cent free and independent play by Bruce Hertzler by name. The part of Goliath, as you may have surmised, is played by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to ensure that all court, Hertzler has succeeded in bringing the giant to his knees. That is what happened on a February day in 1975, when two OSHA inspectors, John Parsons and Rodney Prows, approached the company. This is a small plant, employing only five persons, engaged in the manufacture of cardboard boxes and the reloading of cartridges. The OSHA gushworms wanted to have the company hostel, president of the company, meet them at the door. Sigh. There is nothing worse than having your cynicism about a myth proved right. THE CASE prompts a word of advice to every businessman, small or large, who objects to the visits of OSHA inspectors: Tell 'em to give a warrant! If the inspectors refuse to get a warrant, throw the bums politely out. obtained a warrant. In April, the inspectors returned. The Hertzlers, undawnted, said they would challenge the validity of the warrant. They retained the complaint and got a preliminary injunction. OSHA a modern Goliath The mills of the law grind slowly. It wasn't until late August of this year that a three-judge federal court unanimously uphold the Hertzers' challenge. The Fourth Amendment, the court said, demands a showing of how far before the warrant may be validly issued. No such showing had been made. The warrant was therefore void. says that warrants may issue only upon a showing of probable cause, "particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." THIS JUDICIAL conflict ultimately will have to be resolved by the Supreme Court. It has been said that Mexico was so courage that defenders of personal liberty are bound to be encouraged. What the Fourth Amendment guarantees is that "the right of the people to be secure in their homes from unreasonable effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated." The amendment Yes, it would slow the inspectors down. But the slow and constitutional way is infinitely the better way. The Fourth Amendment dates from Magna Carta; it is among the most glorious provisions of the Constitution that protects even the lowest citizen from the hobnail intrusions of the omnionnet state. This is at least the second such ruling against OSHA. In a Texas case a couple of years ago involving the Gibson's identity disclosure, the identical decree came down. Meanwhile, however, in a Georgia case, a federal court ruled the other way; in Georgia, the authority of OSHA to enter without a warrant was upheld. James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1976 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. YES, THIS would inconvenience the bureaucracy. To operate within the plain boundaries of the Fourth Amendment would impose no prohibition on OSHA inspectors. Such a procedure would require no more than a sworn statement, presumably from some anxious neighbors, to condition exists at such-and-such a plant. Thus armed with probably cause, inspectors would encounter no difficulty in valid search warrants. The Department of Labor naturally will appeal the Hertzler decision it will be allowed to enforce. If the contitutional issue can still be resolved, Meanwhile, enough law has been written by district courts to hearten other impingements on Gellish. Tryants can be toppled. Nothing more is required than the will to try. OPEC WASHINGTON Blaming of 'Zionist forces' unfounded To the Editor: Thursday through Friday, June 20 and Monday through Thursday, June 21 and July 4 except Saturday Sunday and Halloween. Subscriptions by mail are a $5 member or $8 subscription by email. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $7 fee. In-state students receive a $6 fee. This is in response to Shawkat Hammoudheh's letter to the editor of Nov. 17. Obviously, Mr. Hammoudheh was perturbed by the fact that someone, or a group of people, altered copies of a filer that appeared on campus recently to advertise "A Week of Adventures." The Revolution sponsored by the Iranian Students Association and the Organization of Arab Students." The fact that he felt the need to distort reality has provoked me to respond. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN **Lester Grimm** Managing Editor Yael Abouhaklah Manager Editing Jim Bates Counsel Editor Steven Bremen Associate Campus Editor Sheri Badwin, Assistant Campus Editor Chuck Walters Photo Editor Dave Reger Staff Photographers George Millerer, Sports Editor Steve Schleidert Etainment Editor Alison Gwinn Entertainment Editor Editor Debbie Gump or Editorial Editor Jim Bates Business Manager Terry Hanson Altered fliers defended To the Editor; Stephen W. Nichols Gladstone, Mo., senior Member, Lawrence ACLU Assistant Business Manager Carole Rosskoster Advertising Manager Jain Clemente Classified Manager Sarah McAnally Classified Manager Sarah McAnaly National Advertising Manager Timothy O'Shaughn National Advertising Manager Timothy O'Shaughn Mr. Hammond makes the totally unfounded assumption that the fliers were altered by "bionist forces." Why was he not among the immature high school children or some pranksters? Why not someone who has a real bone to pick with Arab nationalism, such as a former independent gas station owner who has since lost his hip and is now dulled or embrane? Or why not a Lebanese who deplores Palestinian presence in a country that is the Riversa of the Middle East turned blood-bath? If Mr. Hammond believes that "the enemy hinders his support thal allegations with evidence before acuse without any probable cause. Miss Daughterhy then proceeds to give miss her own view of the organization's "broader purposes," whi-b she says simply is "to protect individual rights and personal freedoms." Miss Daughterhy concludes that because Glimore, of his own "free will" wants to die at the hands of the state, the ACLU, ambitious in protecting our personal freedoms. In regard to the letter from the mouch, who ostensibly wrote his letter to the editor with the approval, or at least the blessing, of the Iranian president, for the establishment of American tax dollars and military hardware to keep Palestinians from their home" as "an injustice" when he asked that Shakwat the Shah of Iran's dictatorial habit. I suggest that Shawkat Hammamol Furthermore, Mr. Hammoudepera perverts the reality of the situation in Egypt and Palestine, and don't fear the truth. If the Palestinians really knew the facts, they would be venting their hostilities not upon the Israelis but upon other Arab governments. The Bank Arab populations to thrive in fifth and despair following the 1948 war instead of offering them decent housing and adequate nourishment. Moreover, Israel is an island of true democracy in the Middle East, a sea of totallitarian dictatorships. order on Gary Glmore, in spite of his wishes that they go ahead. Finally, it is ironic that Mr. Ham- Readers Respond rethink this position. My office is stocked with a plethora of material dealing with the "truth" he has so eloquently misrepresented. Director, Hillel, KU. Jewish Students ACLU's support valid To the Editor: In an article dated Wednesday entitled "Ulah case a nightmare," we saw Mary Ann Dangherly's views on "the right to die," or more specifically, the right of Gary Mark Gilmore, an inmate in a Utah State Penitentiary, to allow her to be held in certain conditions reporter is entitled to her own value judgments with regard to such a complex issue as the "right," if it is to die. Answer, included in the article is Miss Daugherty's personal chastisement of the American Civil Liberties Union. Of the more exaggerated remarks made by Miss Daugherty with regard to the ACLI, it has been stated that he recently has seemed to have its representatives poling at every case on the dockets, to assess its own crusades." This charge referred to the ACLI's efforts in Utah to restrain the state from carrying out an execution as upholders of personal freedoms, should be supporting him. Unfortunately, Miss Daugherty has made a complex issue into a very simple one. First, she has improperly defined the "broader purposes" of the ACLU, and has then gone on to ignore the fundamental nature of life will in the Gilmore case. The ACLU's purpose is, agreed, to protect individual rights, but further, to protect such rights in opposition to the powers of the state. Thus, the ACLU must make sure never has the right to take a life, regardless of Gilmore's wishes. I question whether Gilmore's death wish is truly voluntary. If Mr. Gilmore could be released, would he still want execution, or is it simply that he would rather have "it" than imprisonment? In short, the ACU that is simplest if guilty of inflicted capital punishment are inferred capital punishment. They argue that if state capital punishment didn't exist, Gilmore wouldn't have such an option to have the state kill him. Would they the abolition of capital punishment rob him of his supposed right to have the state kill him? The answer is no, Gilmore would Daugherty and every individual to support the efforts of the ACLU and others, who can never be too zealous or botsarian graduate student on how "Zionists shroud truth," let me say the following: I write a small department newsletter that is put together with an eye to keep people from taking themselves too seriously; therefore, they should not file a question appeared, they were quickly brought to my attention. I know who the perpetrators are, and they are certainly not "Zionists." I believe they were making a social comment on all fliers and demonstrations. The attack on the hoax flies is certainly a more flagrant abuse of freedom of speech than the humorous fliers could ever be. I believe most Americans are deeply sorry that the Mideast has had problems for a thousand years, and now we know that there is simple solution; however, this seems to me to be an example of politics interfering with clear thinking. I believe they should go home to fight their enemies or take their others fight their own battles—after all, we have managed to stay out of Beirut and Ireland. Twyla Snow Secretary Department of Aerospace Engineering Diam Pa Stu I Son made own decision To the Editor: I don't personally know Mr. and Mrs. Richard Anderson of Prairie Village who sit before their fireplace these days, but I do know that their lost son, nor do I know that son, Phil. To offer comments on any member of the Anderson family would be to descrend the tearjerrier journeyman level of the Kusansi Nov. 18th account. But I would like to say this: every family whose child leaves home to go to college has, in some sense, "lost" that "child." True, not all children become adults quite so dramatically or part from parents by putting so much distance, literal and psychological, between them. But whenever a "child" leaves home and becomes something that goes against the parents' grain, someone or another does it. In this case, it is the Integrated Humanities program of studies that is being held responsible. Accom ad are offe sex, col BRING. 15 wor fwee Each s wow Phil Anderson didn't become a felon or a junkie lost in the drug scene, as have other sons and daughters of recent years. For that, Pearson wouldn't have been able to make a difference in a vocation, repellent indeed to anti-Catholics, but one that parents with different orientations would have accepted with pride and joy. A parent who respects a child as an human being has the responsibility for a chosen way of life—a way of life chosen after childhood ended. Many factors—never just one—contribute to a young person's choice, even when they are not fully integrated Humanities Program as a way of coping with their own unhappiness is a parental "easy out." AD DI to run to run Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday ERRO Constance Scheerer 1637 Illinois St. STER of an other you v at the ! Monday, November 22, 1976 106 Owner & Maistyle even the in the shark are the worse nicism ight. oophize, one of to do angeles. don't go ams or Luckily Mall's Beauty Salon (In Malls Shopping Center) 842-1144 Blane—Owner & Hairstylist REDKEN cision and Mrs. village ce these that son, on any would take lour- Nov. 16th e Scheerer Iols St. ne a felon scene, as of recent did child was to ad to antifailants with have ac- joy in. A joy had life. ay of life— dhood has just one— his choice, eg. an unwa- gram as a unwha- it."t. me adults art from distance, between "d" leaves that goes somewhere or bailure. In integrated ties that is is: every one to go to lost" that Parts for All Imports Student Discounts JAMES GARDEN FOREIGN AUTO PARTS Your BANANA AMERICANO welcome here master charge pay by phone Mon.-Fri., 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 843-8080 304 Locust The Hair Suite has a special just for you if you want to step out during the Holidays with a style that will make everyone notice. Call us today about our individually styled permanent wave and haircut for only $25.00. Attention All Males Open till 9:00 Mon... Tues... Wed. THE HAIR SUITE 842-8600 THE HAIR SUITE WINTER PARK COLORADO Be prepared to enjoy The Athlete's Foot Soon!! Trip includes Round-trip transportation Bear & soft drinks on the bus 4 Nights lodging in condominium 4 Days skiing WY SEMESTER BREAK SKI TRIP ums 4 Days of lift tickets 4 Days of ski rental KANSAN WANT ADS Cost: $135, Jan. 9—Jan. 15, 1977 Sign up deadline-Dec. 3, 1976 Optional 5th day of skiing & ski lessons. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to students, not without regard to their financial status. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES times times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday 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 items can be placed in person or by calling the UDX business office at 864-3583. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 FOR RENT SUBLAXLE2 - bbmr. apt. apl. water and iid. pd. Appliances furnished, $175 On bus line, $180 Sub-lessing Meadowbrook showcase for second semester call John 2.5 P.M. 841-8675. 11-23 Sublease large two bedroom apartment, Park 25, $185-$cheq. 843-3503 nine-11-22 Sublease 1 bdm. unfurnished Gatling apartment, 140 West 5th St., includes Gas room. AC 11-2817 after 5. 10:25 HVAC 11-2817 after 5. 10:25 Sublase bacillus, furnished Meadowbread studio and second airsnter. Available Dec. 12-18 867-2045. For rent to student an apartment close to Kansas to attend a student audition, Parking Available now Call 843-978-6370 Sublease-economical four bedroom townhouses 0067 or 843-7333. 2500 W. Lakeview 0067 or 843-7333. 12-8 Furnished sleeping room, share bath, some cooking. Inquire 706 Illinois, evenings. 11-23 Sublease clean 2 bedroom, unfurnished apartment, bus route. Available Dei. Call 841-7544 after 3. Telephone: (841) 7544-0000. 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Gold and white, auto trax, power steering, air conditioning, 6300 miles, good gas mileage, body fair, mechanically perfect, clean, popt to sell, i21 11-22 11-22 Pentex SP900 with 1/2 SSS and Pentax 1/2 SSS Pentex SP900 with 1/2 SSS and Pentax 1/2 SSS condition $250 complete Call: 813-725-6790 or www.pentex.com Surety; Car拘试算; $u$ 担保;cash 担保;money Maryan; Carmacar 财信 5.30 万;mat- 11-22-17 1973 Pint wagon, Squire square like 2000, 26.00 mil. $425 or best offer, 424-504-598, 11-23 The New Yorker, 424-504-598 Aluminum Cookware, brand new set never opened. must sell immediately. call Bell 11-28 two dann good snow tires, F 78-14, 841-2869. 12.22 Radial judged snow trees—FR 78-14, new condition; 841-5915. 11-23 Turner Chevrolet STEREO SOUND SYSTEM $350. We have one of the nicest component sound systems you could imagine, and it works for yourself-it has a quality and sound that it $229 SOUND SYSTEM SPECIAL-REceiver. 8-channel sound system that is good and better than any x-kryo you can get for the money and benefits you get. We tell you a lot about its quality. We are specialists in the trade-RAY AUX. 11-30 843-7700 Presently offering apartments for occupancy January 1, 1971. 1 and 2 bedroom units, furnished and unfurnished. 图示:一只小鸟在树上休息。 TONY'S IMPORTS-DATESUN Imported car service problems? 500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444 SEE . . . 2410 W. 25th Park 25 842-1455 - Pool * Snooker * Ping Pong Special O.M.B. Sale, Advert 201, gate deck $260 $200. Real specs include 8x10 wood system; Made to be Bosch limited to $150 wood system; Made to be Bosch limited to $150 wood system; Other specials to be special end of the month. Other specials to be special end of the month. Sales 11-30 ELECTRO-VOICE SPEAKER SPECIAL Interfaces ELECTRO-VOICE SPEAKER SPECIAL Interfaces 262 bar, ideal for good deal on VU 142 110 262 bar, ideal for good deal on VU 142 110 262 bar, ideal for good deal on VU 142 110 Christmas shopping? Give a loved one the gift of a beautiful set of headphones or a record cleaning kit in a gift box! Or be a beautiful set of headphones. At $5 from up. Please stop by the store at 19th St. E. 9th H. 11-30 Our selected car sensors will give you more information on hot air intake, let the key turn off and automatically lock the door. **11-80** **11-80** 87 Chevy (Impala), Reasonable price, call 842-7234, 4 dourts, blue. This ad is for those of you who are looking for a sound engineer. Buy this round the Allison; three speakers will open your ears and pop your eyes. All for $100. We hear it at Ray Audil 13. E 11-20. Snoopers. 190 Chev Caprice, excellent condition, loaded. 825-304-2040 tape屋, by owner-$990 or 11-25 $990 Color="14" RCA Portable. 2 years old. Perfect. $69, Call 864-801-601. 11-23 - Pin-Ball - Air Hockoy - Foos-Ball OLD ENGLISH SHEEPDOG puppies for sale. 14 old English Sheepdogs had 5 PADS. 12-11 Cali 844-853-1075 had 5 PADS. COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER 7 SAAB 99- white, olive interior. New clutch. Mollen treads. Need heater repair only. 11-23 11-23 Kneisel SKi-sbindings. Nordica Boots. Good must-sell. Call 843-7512. Also some 11-23 hours. (800) 663-9620 1969 WJ-1 owner-new engine, good body. Complete maintenance record. Must礼让 $1,000-$1,123 One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Rose Keyboard. Professional sound systems, guitar strings, drum kits, synthesizers. Rose Keyboard, 1420 W. 23rd, 843-307. 11-12 Must sell now -guitar with case. $40 cash takes 11-81 7480 after 5. 67 Olda Delhomme 88, auto air, power, 76,000 miles 78 Olda Delhomme 88, auto air, power, 76,000 miles B500. Call 842-2164 during calls. B500. Call 842-2164 during calls. Home of The Chalk Hawk HELP WANTED For sale. Motobecane hospital. Only 2 months. excellent condition. Call Paul at 842-3681. 11-23 One of the largest selections of musical instruments in the area at Rose Keyboard. Professional sound systems, keyboards and instrument stands. Instruments. Rose Keyboard. 1420 W. 23rd. 843-307. 11-28 65 VW Bug-new new brake, new battery, new charger, new tires, new hood. 65 VW Bus-sized (sinew) tach. door, exter- view mirror, seat belts. AVON—Extra extra money on your bown time. AVON—Extra extra money on your bown time. Mrs. Selik. 842-8162. 11-30 Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, involving the development and assisting in research. Social science bakeoff, social sciences internship at McKibbies, Dept. of Human Development, 111 Park Avenue, NY. Job to 3 p.m. on Equal Opportunity Employer. Qualification: Master's degree or equiv. in Biology or a related field. Need delivery people. Must have own car. App with Zipcar. Edy's Eddy's Car for the Wheed Wheel 507 W 14th. Bt 11-25 Mother's herbal live in, Lake Quinztu, he or she will be the day before week 16. She will be on board. One day of the week 366-748. Needed immediately 2 Janitates at Wakaurau on Friday, June 9 at 10 a.m. Call 843-4233 or 845-1608. 11-25 LOST AND FOUND Models wanted for photography contest. Good pay (box 21, Lehigh, Wavensburg, Kasson). 600 pp. $850. 9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl Days a week No One Under 18 Admitted Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted In found in dispatches of Summerfair Turris, Nov. 11—set of keys, Call 8642-193 and identify this. Found: small white fat kitten found in vicinity of Malta Old English apts. 812-298-90 11-22 YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RITZMAN INSTALL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 15 East 84th 841-2646 10.5 Monday Saturday --overnight Found. a murphy contact case on the south side of Murphy Hall Mall. morning. Call 864-220-1234. Found: Laird locket packet from Monday by Alten Field phone. Call 864-299-1133; recent contents of packet: Call 864-299-1133 Found: A bus pass at Hoch bus stop Wed. P.M. Call 841-2531. Keepying. Turquise ring at or near Quantitari's 11/15. Great sentiment value. 843-6025 anytime. Lot: locker containing manuscript and letters. Reward. James Binger. 864-5220 11-23 Lost: shoe box marked "Campus Christians/Dec. 3 full ofill meantime need for at age-end shooting for KU students. Must have shooting 3,000 hours. Reward Call Zahil. 864-1499 11-20 MISCELLANEOUS Found: silver callen in 4023 Wescoe on Thurs. Nov. 18. Callen #3674-397 and 11-30 PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available at Alice at the House of Ubique/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mass. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 838 tft FREE-IE---yr. old male eat, very affectionate, supply kitty food and litter. 841-3053. 11-22 supply kitty food and litter. 841-3053. 11-22 NOTICE CASBAH CAPE - Good food from scratch. Tunch made with the best mix of pork and beef, plus lots of Milk. Please make an even better order! Shop, Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture. Dispensers, napkins, clock televisions. Open daily. 12hrs. with cash. POETRY WANTED for Anthropology. Includes "Poetry in the Making," P.O. Box 5642, San Francisco, California. RESUME PACKAGE. Includes sample, industry executive materials; executive minutes; a executive mini-纪录片; Rehearse, BD, 10- 50. A good selection of used furniture, refrigerator, toaster, toaster and oven. 1-725-335-2200, E. 6th, Ft. Topch, Ks. Free refrigerator, freezer, dishwasher, etc. 1-725-335-2200 Unique collection of Green lily make up of 100+ potted plants. New Hampshire, 10-5 Saturday, 18-8 Euroflair now! in Lawrence. Driving School, Halfway Highway. Drive Truck. Drive New. Highway FastTruck. Drive Truck. Drive New. 12-25 OPPORTUNITIES EUROPE ISRAEL AFRICA - ASIA - SOUTH AUSTRALIA BERLIN CHEGNA MIDDLE EAST Air Travel Annex 1st, First Avenue 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th 11-22 Freshmen Girls: Third year Washburn law student to be prominent Wichita state jurist for 7 years, record the law for 7 years, in record for 8. Write: Mert Buckley, 3214 Brillow Park, 30. Noctet, Ks. 654-296-2730. 军 FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS, WATS, NATS, JEANS RAASCH SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP Cars 30 yrs old & 6 yrs old 209 W. Bth BankAmericard Mastercharge DOS DELUXE BOSS MASS LAWRENCE, MI PERSONAL Planning an Affair for the Holidays? Walt wait Dec. 2nd-4th. 11-22 KARATE AND SELF-DEFENSE instruction by national champions, 842-834, 842-835 Mass. 12-2 Gay Counseling call: 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals. 12-8 SKI Jan. 2-9, Jacket Hook. Food, Wymm. $180 Package everything to everybody. Food Bag. Connected Bus. 11-25 Need help writing papers? Assistance offered on specific project. Reassure rate, call 11-228 www.ramsey.com Seeking people with diverse interest for purposes of BS (brainstimulation) 841-898 or 811-823 11-23 CHARLIE MANNSON I LOVE stars in our eyes from undercover activities. Keep going! 11-80 11-20 Need help, a referral, or just come to talk to **CHEAD AUARTERS**, 814-2354. We never cloak Professor Bricker's magic show--don't miss it during A HOLIDAY AFFAIR: 2-14. 1-13 Attention G.P.: We are in business again! The company is excited to announce the new December 4. Contact us, you know the number Jugging and Clarence Dillingham at Santa Maria, two teams coming at A HOLIDAY PAC, Dair. 2-4, 11-23 Freeling in outside! Let us turn you around with a massage, at Headmasters 98. Vermont 11-23 Drese Rebecca-Bearie! Happy 20th and many more—loge-here. I love you. Hugs! 11-22 SELL OR TRADE 91 VW mwr mounted, ung running but poor condition. Sell for parts/trade small boat. 8:40 11:30 14:50 SERVICES OFFERED Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 601, 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, Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Rates arenable. Call 842-7841. Not happy with your bike! Maybe you need a brake. If you don't have one, buy an electric bike, lubricate and adjust your derslurs, brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your tires, and keep the gear ratio on. Necessary accessories bought at time of "tune-up". Rates: 10 speed $15.50, 5 or 3 speed $15.20, single speed $15.90, double speed $16.40, 15 single speed $16.90, Complete professional Need a new blue kit? Come and see the largest selection of quality blue kits used by our used Schwimm to trade in! Lawrence Schiwm Cycle, 4-6 Mon.-Sat. Thur; till 3:30. Sun; 1-4. 1528 W. 6th, 8428 S. 7th St. *Don't Sew!* See me for all your sewing needs: • 12-8 *745-768 between* • 12-8 ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands on file. Send $1.00 for your 192-page, mail order catalog. 6705-8025; 261-6774. 12-8. Custol. 9025-8025; 477-8747. BIOLOGY TUTOR. Experimenter -Graduate (805) 416-3287, 805-6288, or 874. Reasonable $19.00 per hour. Alexander's Christmas Shop Gifts, Flowers, Bath Accessories Holiday Store Hours: Sun. 12-5 Nov. 28 - Dec. 23, Mon.-Sat. 9-8 826 iowa 842-1230 NAPA N. A.P.A. Auto Parts For the Do-It-Yourselfer we 2. Open 7 days and nights 2. Open 7 days and nights 3. We have it or can get it 4. Machine shop service 5. Two stores 5. Two stores 817 Vermont 2300 Haskell 843-9365 843-6960 9th and Iowa - Foosball Typist/editor, IBM P垒/eleite. Quality work. Designer, IBM P垒, dissertations welcome. Call down. 842-9127. ITI Sandford Genealogy Co. with research family history information on the Northwest United States. Reasonable rates. Contact Buford Sandford at (715) 323-6400. Experimented typhus. THESES ONLY Wint type of typhus. Theses on other dates were at 1644-1651 days, 84-1790 events and 130-2275 cases. TYPING Experienced typist—term papers, thesas, mike, bakeware. 843-5086, Mr. Wright. 843-5086, Ms. Wright. - Pinball THEISIS BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence or Lapee, both 852 Massachusetts or phone 842-3610. Thank you. --has the eyeglasses you want. 806 Massachusetts Phone 841-7421 I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. New address. tt WANTED EXPERT TYPING. Fast and accurate, reasonable knowledge of major grammar or minor grammatical code. 842-856-9099 12-8 Typing on elite electric typewriter. Proffding, needless. No services. Please Mrs. Haray. 0058. 11-23 The Lounge Need male roommate to share 2 bdm. apt. for second semester. $3 a month + mailmen 11-30 "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." Male Roommate to share partially furnished smoking room. Must be a registered smoking. Available 2nd semester. **851-039-179** and **851-039-180**. Looking for married couple who plan to be in the same city. Contact Park 25 office, 843-1858. Owen fennell romerate with Towers Apt. i. ninety- Owen fennell romerate with Towers Apt. i. ninety- One or two female roommates to share a 3-bed- room apartment for spring semester. Call 11-258 141-5298 Roommanat to share two bedroom duplex for spring semester. Call 845-7524 after p. 128. b. 130-639-2811 Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl Person to wear wood-heated A-frame on 45 seats, fine must, have $78/mo. for 15- after 5. Female roommate needed for spring semester. 782 Roommate required: Gailight Asphalt Cable. 121 6641 after 9:00 M T. Female roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom apartment in East Village. Rooms included: utilities费 $70 a month. 842-656-984. 12-1 Need place to live January-February. Call 864-214-3705 or message an announcement at 864-214-3705. Borat (No. 667). Codurad Armpartment New offering apronware 1997 and 1997. 1 & 2 backs only; Perforated and authertized VISIONS featuring seclusion and quiet. 2914 Oudahi 843-1116 HORIZONS HONDA - Bud on Tap EASTERN STATE COLLEGE Keep your car healthy Use the in the summer. Pool Use the student discounts 1811 W. 6th Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4 at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 smiley car 6 Monday, November 22, 1976 University Dally Kansan KUvents frustrations on outclassed Tigers 37 0 Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER Once forgotten smiles beamed anew following cornerback Skip Sharp's 46-yard touchdown interception return KU whoops, hollers; MU drowns in sorrow By STEVE SCHOENFELD The tale of two teams had just ended—both with highly emotional scenes. For one- KU- the pain had subsided. The wounds had healed, the sorehes had closed. A crushing 41-14 victory over Missouri had satisfied a Jayhaws' contingent, which had seemingly forgotten their season-long frustration as soon as their boys went ahead, 3-0, early. The win had left them drooling. The other side--Missouri--was at a boiling point, at least those who stayed beyond halftime or the beginning of the third quarter. Their frustration was pouring over. They were fuming that their team had beaten USC, Ohio State and Nebraska and now had lost to a team who had a 1-5 league record. The Missouri fans let the Tigers know exactly where they stood. For the Jayhawks and their fans, there was plenty of celebrating. It included dancing, singing and lots of hollowing and whopping it up. No one had to ask them to "Get and boogie." The KU Marching Band was already showing them how. "We want more, we want more," the band shouted in unison. They weren't calling Bud Moore, the KU head coach who had plotted the Jayhawks to their first back-to-back winning seasons in their league. They wanted more points on the board. They got their wish when reserve quarters lassie rambled three yards for Rita a few years ago. "All right, All right, Lissak," yelled starting quarterback Mark Vicendeen, who had both of his elbows torn and his jersey bloodied from the forcibleness of the "This is amazing," one student on the sidelines yelled. "I love it, I love to see Ditto the KU players who had lost five of their last six games. "A massacre over Missouri two years in a senior senior safety Chris Goblau. said. "It's one of the worst things I've ever seen." Safety Skip Sharp, who scored on a 46- yard interception return, said, "I was so fired up before the game. I was so high out there, I were hoars from yelling. This is just irritating. It wasn't 'super' if you were from Missouri. It was 'massive' his anger on the 'Tigers' al M乔菲oJ "Al Must Go." some shouted. Others sang. "Goodbye Al, We Hate To See You Go," they sang, urging Ono's disgust. The Tiger players heard the message loud and clear - too clear. "All that stuff makes me mad," Missouri offensive tackle Morris Towns said. "Every place we've been I've never heard the home game." That is true. It was to the point of help prudent. The fans are so sickle. they're for us when we wear it, but they don't support us when we wear it. Most of the Tigers appeared stunned by the presence of the injyhawk* conquest. KIJ, *kvju* *kwu*. "I knew we could beat them like this," balfootBill Kill Campbell said. "Last year he was the best in the league." each. Laverne (Smith) had 20 and they are still doing the same thing this year." The Jayhawks said they should've played that well all year long. “All season long we had something go wrong,” tight end Jim Michaela said. “We always had a breakdown, a bad break, bad weather, and today. Today we didn’t make those mistakes.” Campfield said, "This is the first time we've played as a team since we beat Wisconsin. The line was blocking perfect. The boxing was perfect and the dribbling was reading perfect." Beson was referring to ending the season the Jayhawks' way. The Missouri players who trudged out of Tiger locker were going home. Their tale didn't have a happy ending. 90 92 Alums fall to varsity in basketball Karen Jamison and Sheila Vann paced the women's varsity basketball squad to an 82-45 win over a team of alumni Friday after winning games prepared for their season opener tomorrow. Staff photo by DAVE REGIER Jarnison, with 14 points, and Vann, with 22, led the women in scoring while Ann Ribas scored 8.5. Commenting on her team's play, coach Martian Washington, said, "We played too tight in the first half trying to make holes that weren't there, which forced a lot of losses." Tomorrow night in Des Moines, the women play Grandview College. Laverne Smith and KU's ground attack compiled 421 yards against the fallen Tigers "in the second half we read the defense a better and overall played more effec- tive than before." Weekend Sports Roundup She said the team was still working to improve its offense. By GARY VICE With an 0-3 record, KU had to win its next two matches to take four place in its pool and earn a spot in Saturday's final. It did not make the top eight, 15-14, 15-6, and Northern Town, 16-14, 15-7. But because they were the fourth place team in their pool, the 'Hawks had to go against the first place team in the other pool in the first match Saturday. That team, Southwest Missouri State, beat KU, 15-7, 15-7. The Jayhawks finished the tournament with a 3-5 record, which put them in sixth place. Southwest Missouri State won it, and Nebraska at Lincoln was second. Minnesota finished third, Missouri fourth and St. Cloud sixth. Oklahoma was seventh and North Dakota eighth. Thursday, the Jayhawks lost their first two matches to Nebraska at Lincoln and Minnesota. Then they lost their first match Friday to Missouri. 15-7, 15-7. Things just didn't go well for KU's volleyball team at the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Region Six tournament this weekend. enough to beat Nebraska at Atomla in the second match, 15-9, 15-11, but not long enough for the third match, when St. Cloud (Minn.) State whipped KU, 15-5, 15-8. However, KU coach Bob Stancifluff was still optimistic, saying that KU isn't that far from being able to compete against the teams that beat KU this weekend. "We had the youngest team there," he said, "so the future looks promising. Out of it are you?" The Jayhawks finished the season with a 34-14 record. But Stanclift's mind was already on next season. Kansas rebounded from that defeat long Women trounce MU The KU women's swim team didn't have to worry about making a comeback during the second half of Friday's meet against the University of Missouri. KU won easily, 79-52, in its second Big Eight meet of the season. A slow start in the first half, which caused the team to lose to Colorado last week, didn't happen against Missouri, KU led throughout the meet, winning 11 of 15 events, including all but two individual events. Debbie Bunker, Chesterfield, Mo., freeshain, won both the 100- and 200-yard freestyle races. Her time of 94.8 in the 100 freestyle set a Bie Eight record. COUPLED WITH last year's 7-5 mark, the victory gave KU its first back-to-back winning seasons since 1961-62, and some were in the future. Missouri also ended the season 6-5. Volleyballers get 6th And a relieved Kansas coach Bud Moore did a victory dance—the twist--while sitting in a chair in his dressing quarters following the game. COLUMBIA, Mo—Plop, plop, fizz, fizz, oh what a relief it is. Vicendise, the third quarterback who has been called upon to try to fill the dutes vacated by the injured Nolan Cromwell, rushed for one touchdown and passed for another while gaining 111 yards rushing on 23 carries. Susie Padgett, Wichita freshman, was also a double winner for KU, taking the 100 backstroke and 200-yard breaststroke races. Tracy Hagerson, Kansas City, Mo., That optimism is based on the performance of sophomore quarterback Mark Vicendee, who in making his second start against the Packers has to its best scoring afternoon of the season. Saturday's season--ending victory over Missouri surrendered the wounds of what was a disappointing year for many KU football players. "It was a great victory for us," Moore said. "Because of the situation, it was the first time I had ever been in the army." freshman, turned in her best time of the season, at 234.4, to win the 200-yard赛 The victory over the Tigers in a game played before 92,559 fans in Faurot Field salvaged a winning season, 6-5, for the team, who had lost five of their last six games. "All right! That was a good one." Moore accused of KU's 41-14 troweling of the STILWATER, Olka. (AP) — Oklahoma State coach Jim Stanley predicted "an exciting game" when his Cowboys, who are insured of being Eight Conference champions, clash with Brigham Young at the Tangier Bowl Dec. 18 in Orlando, Fla. Coach Gary Kempf said the only trouble came in the two relay races. The game will be a rematch of the 1974 Fiesta Bowl between the Cowboys and Brigham Young, 9-2 and runnerup in the Western Athletic Conference. The Cowboys won the first match with the WAC team, 16-6. "The execution of Vicendess was the difference," Moore said. "We've been able to move the ball before, but turnovers did us in our quarterback execution was snubber." SO NOW IT will be easier for Moore to enjoy the coming winter months leading to spring football drills having avoided a losing season. OSU to Tangerine "We've all made some mistakes, starting with myself, that hurt our squad," he said. "I'm just thankful we finished a winner, and I'm also grateful being a strong program like we want here." For junior defensive ennom Tom Dinkel, he is another year ahead, and playing doesn't hurt him. "We know now that with Mark Vincendie at quarterback our offense will be there one more time," Dinkel said. "We'll work hard this winter and I know we'll be able to move the ball, and most of our defense will be back." BUT CROMWELL, the excellent athlete kwas had been able to replace, will have won 9% all other competitions. "I won't be missed," Cromwell said. "You talk to the players. They're winning." "We don't want to win." After a soreless quarter, KU's defensive lineman BLAVERne Smith, enveloped for 24 adults Smith, who left the game with several minutes remaining because of an injury he had played against earlier in the game. yards on 20 carries in the game to surpass Greg Prout and the Charlie Davis and move into the No. 3 spot on the Big Eight career rushing chart with 3,192 yards. But the early exit may have cost him the 22 yellow heats on Saturday to net 1,000 yards on the season. The 3rd half had made it more noticeable when freshman Mike Hubach connected on a 49-yard goal. The field goal, his second of the game, broke KU's distance record of 47 yards held jointly by Bob Swift and Mike Love. It was his seventh field goal of the season, which lies in his first quarter with a 53-yard attempt that fell, just short. MU offensive guard Joel Yearian, said, "They found our weak spot. Their pass rush was the key. That's what really surprised me. We knew they had (Mike) Butler, and he is an animal, but everybody else came on gretty strong too." Missouri went to the air trying to strike back quickly, but quarterback Steve Pisarkiewicz and Pete Wood had little success. He scored 149 yards and suffering two interceptions. "THIS IS the way to end it all right," Smith said of the winning effort. "I think I would've made it (to 1,000) if I didn't get the coaches, they were trying to let me set it." After Hubach's 29-yard field goal in the second quarter gave the Jayhawks a 3-0 lead, cornerback Skip Sharp intercepted a pass and raced 46 yards down the left sideline for a touchdown. It was Sharp's first touchdown, but he him into the conference lead, and it visibly stunned the Tigers, who seemingly quit from then on. Missouri's talented wide receiver Joe Stewart said, "We were moving the ball pretty well at first. Then after the interception we seemed to lose confidence." He pointed out that perhaps its finest game of the year, accounted for much of Missouri's obverse problems. MESSAGE RU- Sharp 20 hatch 20 RU- Sharp 46 interception return (Hubck hatch) RU- Michaels 2 pass from Viecembe (Hubck hatch) RU- Michaels 2 pass from Viecembe (Hubck hatch) RU- Viecembe 1 run (Hubck hatch) RU- Doverwere 19 pass from Woods (Gibbons hatch) RU- Doverwere 19 pass from Woods (Gibbons hatch) RU- Sawyer 2 pass from Woods (Gibbons hatch) KANAS 0 0 24 10 7-41 MOSUOUI 0 0 0 0 14-14 KU 12 First downs 84-221 Rutgers yards 67-19 Yale yards 12-38 Passer 10-51 Paterson 1-51 Ivy League 12-31.5 Pittsburgh 3-2 Cornell 3-2 Pittsburg lows 9-40 INDIVIDUAL KU - 1, Smith - 20, 189, Vupeepe - 23, 111, Rankens - 10, 41 KU - 1, Smith - 20, 189, Vupeepe - 23, 111, Rankens - 10, 41 MU - Ruevien - 27, 185, Vupeepe - 23, 111, Dlower - 1, 41 MU - Ruevien - 27, 185, Vupeepe - 23, 111, Dlower - 1, 41 TEAM STATISTICS KU - Vicendese 1-4-0, McMichael 0-1-1, KU - Piskargiev 4-13-2, Woods 8-16-3 Newicz 2- (8) Passing KU—Pisarklewiez 4-13-2; Woods 8-18-0 Recordings KU-Stewart 7-67, Dower 3-32 and Winstow 2-30. Punting KU-Hochstaff 4-21 KU—Hubach 4-41.3. MU—Montgomery 7-30.7 Sports Writer When the KU basketball team opens its conference schedule against the Missouri Tigers in January, there is a possibility that they will lose to the many empty seats in One Allen Field House. By ERIC MARTINCICH Not that the game against the defending Big Eight champions won't be exciting. It may be the biggest, most crucial contest the 'Hawks will encounter this season. But the MU game, along with three others, have been scheduled to be played in Lawrence during the semester break. This means that the student who plans to be away from the University from Dec. 18 will receive a fourth of the home games scheduled. Rb BESIDES THEIR game against Missouri, KU has home games with Arkansas, Oklahoma State and Iowa State scheduled during semester break. Plus, the Jayhawks have a home game against Iowa State Jan. 18, which is at the beginning of second-semester enrollment when many students are still away. Last year, only the Jayhawk Classic was played at KU while students were away. Clyde Walker, athletic director, said that it didn't like the time of the conference in which he played during games. "We wouldn't schedule conference games over the break if it were possible," Walker said. "It's up to the Big Eight Conference to decide." It usually, we have very little control, over it. WALKER postSAID that because of the new league postseason tournament, conference games had to be played earlier this year. Last year, the MU game was the only conference game Kansas played over the break and it was in Columbia, Mo. "We play a 27-game schedule, which begins the last Saturday in November and ends the first week in March," he said. "We put a lot of pressure on getting around playing over the break." Walker said that Kansas had to play over the break because of the number of games he played. Walker said that he couldn't comment on how much revenue Kansas might stand to lose. "We NEVER like to play when the year we have won," said, but this year we have no choice. "The students are very important in helping the team. As far as enthusiasm is concerned, we should try to make it more enjoyable." KU head coach Ted Owens said that he wasn't pleased with the idea of playing the pitcher in a World Cup game. ones at KU. We hate to play the conference onewer here without them." Several players echoed Owens' sentiments. Req positio were budge Paul Mokeski, who scored 29 points in the Crimson and Blue game Wednesday night, said that it would have been nice if the games had been scheduled to be away. "I ab Bashar the libr Besie person hazard "You really can't get around it though," Mokesi said. "It would help if they could come to the games. It different when we are on the field, and it can be as enthusiastic of a crowd as normal." Walt Shawr proble librar maters sonnel "It a have a deter. credited Hierst CLINT JOHNSON, who probably will start at guard Saturday night when the Hawks open the season against Montana before the team enjoy playing before big crowds. A SII years system parts. Cha convir credit Assoc Schoo additi "A big crowd gets the team going," Johnson said. "When the crowd cheers for you, you really feel the vibrations. When they cheer like that, the players really come." The study Reger Johnson said that since many students lived in Kansas City, he hoped there would be crowds over the vacation as good as those during the regular semester. Several students from the Kansas City area, however, said that they probably were just drunk. Cary Fox, Shawnee Mission sophomore, said that if there were better things to do in Kansas City, he would probably stay at home. "I THINK most students feel the same that it's not too good to have games scheduled." Fox said that he might come up for the MU game, however since he knew students in their class. Brian Todd, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, said that he'd probably go to the Big Eight Tournament in Kansas City over the weekend. He also will try to see the games played in Lawrence. Karen Smith, Shawnee Mission junior and a member of the KU pompon girls, said that the squad was required to be at all but the Arkansas game. "There's no big inconvenience for us to be at the games," she said. "Most of us will be here." KATHELLE LACY, Topeka senior and another member of the squad, said that even though most of the cheerleaders would be in Lawrence for sorority activities, it was still considered a hassle to have to attend the games over the break. "It is hard to cheer to a small crowd," Lacy said. "But the team needs support and coach Owens has been good to us. We feel it's the least we can do for them." S urpass move career early rders he on the right," think I can't get to let t three Mike 1 goal. broke jointly was his ch ties 33-yard strike Steve I little for 149 ans. in the a 3-0 septed a the left sharp's vailed visibly quit Basketball team opens Saturday See story page three n, said, iss rush urprised er, and came on her Joe the ball the indlence." its finest much of 7-41 14-14 kick). ech kick). kick). kick). Tuesday, November 23.1976 Jinks 10-41, igger 2-10, J. D. Downer 1- 3 ce ats in the day night, once if the away. ns' sen- though," they could when we as en- ably will when the Montana i playing going," heers for ns. When nally come COLD students were would good as ar. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ansas City probably one games. sophomore, go to do in stay at the same d to have up for the new students y, Kan. you go to the City over make the Lawrence. junior and said that all but the The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas or us to be fus will be senior and said that leaders wouldities, it was to attend full crowd," support and us. We feel en." Vol.87 No.66 Regents praise Watkins but find Watson lacking Bv BARBARA ROSEWICZ Staff Writer Kansas Board of Regents members were in agreement yesterday in both their criticism of Watson Library and their praise of Wattles Memorial Hospital as they toured the two facilities in the first of a two-day meeting on the KU campus. "I absolutely couldn't believe it," James Basham, Regent from Fort Scott, said after the election. Besides an overall lack of space and personnel, some conditions presented fire Requests for more classified staff positions and $189,870 for books and journals were cut last week by James Bibb, state budget director. Walter Hiersteiner, Regent from Shawnee Mission, said he observed problems with personal safety, security of library property, acquisition of new materials, lack of space and limited personnel. "It all seemed to be rather dramatic. We have a problem we're not going to be able to deter. We're well aware that an accreditation report of two years ago mentioned the acuteness of the problems here." Hiersteiner said. A SURVEY OF THREE consultants two years ago reported that the KU library system was "undernourished in all of its parts." Chancellor Archie Dykes said he was convinced the library would have accreditation problems with the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools in their next visit unless there was additional financial support for the library. The Regents currently are making a study of the library conditions of all the Gee Smith, Regents' chairman from Larned, said libraries in all the Regents' schools need attention. Problems at KU are typical of problems at the other schools, The Regents' schools are KU, K-state, Wichita State University, Kansas State College at Pitbush, Emporia Kansas State College at Salem, Emporia Kansas State College and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina. BESIDES PROBLEMS with Watson, KU administrators also are concerned with space and personne problems and material and equipment needs at the School of Law Library and the Clendening Library at the KU Medical Center. Reactions to student health services at Watkins Memorial Hospital were as positive as reactions to the library were negative. Prudence Hutton, Regent from Newton, said she thought the faculty was "won- town" and would never work there. Basham said he was impressed with the construction of the out-patient facility and the speed with which patients got in and out. He said, with no smell and no disairce, he said. BESIDES THE tours yesterday, there were meetings of the Council of Presidents—a group of top administrators from the seven Regents' schools, and the Regents' Academic Committee, the Health Department, and the Institutions Coordinating Committee. The Council of Presidents and the Council of Directors will meet every month preceding the board meeting. In the Council of Presidents' meeting, the recent budget cuts were still a live tone. KU's total request for the Lawrence campus of $101,727,242 was cut to $88,790,917. A $33.1 million Med Center request was cut to $3.6 million. DUANE ACKER, president of K-State, said the schools compared notes on what their responses would be to Gov. Robert Rutledge to outline their operating budget priorities. Bennett has asked each school to explain how it would spend the money if he granted them a 5 per cent increase over what they received in state funding last year. ACKER SAID K-State's priorities would be a 7 per cent faculty pay increase—the amount requested by all Regents' schools, as well as increases in classified employee salaries and other operating expenses, had been cut from 10 to 5 per cent by Bibb. KU administrators have also placed faculty salaries first on their list of operating budget priorities, followed by other operating expenses increases and funding for libraries and scientific equipment. Most Regents' schools requested a 10 or more percent increase, but almost all in- Dykes said KU's report to the Governor would be made immediately. The plight of the Regent schools' capital improvements will be discussed at the next session. BIBC CUT ALL capital improvements at all Regions' schools, except those for which past legislatures had already appropriated money. The computer center was the only capital improvement on the KU campus untouched by Bibb. Topics discussed in the committee meetings yesterday will be reviewed at the board meeting today at 1:30 p.m. in the board room. The committee will be studied further in the committee. KU topics to be reviewed by the Regents meeting include authorization of a parking lot for GSP and Corbin Halls, contract approvals for the KU Medical Center clinical facility, preliminary drawings of the proposed plan for the rehabilitation of the naming of the Parrott Athletic Center, the new Allen Field House annex. The Budget and Finance committee will meet at 8:30 a.m., the Legislative, Bylaws and Policy committee at 9:15 a.m., the Extension Committee at 10 a.m. and the Building Committee at 11 a.m.-all in the Union's International Room. SCHNEIDER The Kansas Board of Regents meeting yesterday and today brought Regents and administrators from across the state to KU. Chancellor Archie Dykes (left) and President Duane Acker of Kansas State University compared common budget problems Regents meeting Staff photo yesterday at the Council of Presidents meeting, the first of a number of meetings before the board meeting this afternoon in the Kansas Union. KU last hosted a Regents meeting two years ago. Plant would increase water bills By JOHN MUELLER Lawrence residents will pay noticeably higher water bills next year if financing of the city's planned Clinton Reservoir water plant is approved by voters next spring. Gene Vogt, city utilities director, said Sunday that the proposed plant would cost about $8 million. The city's engineering consultants, Black and Veatch, Kansas City, Mo., have said that water rates could increase next year by 25 to 50 per cent, depending on how the plant's construction is financed. The 25 per cent increase would result from general obligation bond financing, which must be approved by voters. City commissioners decided last week to submit this method of financing to voters next spring. KU housing plans free tutoring Free tutoring will be available to KU students who live in residence and scholarship halls next semester through the Additional Comprehensive Education Fund. The experimental program is jointly sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) and the ASHR according to Sherri Righ, ASHC president. Grey is also a member of the AURH ASHR Special Joint Committee on Educational Studies. Few tutoring services will begin in the halls the third week of classes next semester (February 14) and will continue every other week, for a total of seven weeks throughout the semester, Grey said yesterday. ANCE CENTER will be established at each of the residence halls with the eight scholarship halls forming an additional center. Four subject areas will be offered by each center, one every evening, Monday through Thursday, from 7 to 9. Students will be able to attend any session at any center. The four subjects offered by each center will be determined by a survey that will be distributed to residence and scholarship hall students the first week in December. Grey said. The survey will ask the students what subject areas and specific classes they think they will need help with next semester. "NEXT WEEK we are going to department heads for recommendations of graduate students who may desire to be here we'll also advertise for tutors," she said. Tutors will be paid $ 5 an hour and will be guaranteed two hours of pay each night that they are present. The program is being funded for the spring semester by a $3,710 allocation from the Pearson Trust Subcommittee on Cultural and Educational Enrichment, she said. That is an expenditure of 66 cents for each hall resident. be financed next year," Grey said. "It may have to come out of the students' conference." GREY SAID the idea for the ACE program grew out of a trip to Colorado colleges this summer sponsored by the KU housing office. AURH and ASHC members who went on the trip were impressed by the massive tutoring program for residents of University of Colorado housing and decided that KU needed a similar service, she said. If the ACE program is successful it could expand to include educational programing teams in individual halls who would coordinate Free University type activities, tutoring and the Reading and Study Skills Program, she said. "We're calling them 'classwork assistance' services because of the negative connotations associated with the term 'tutoring,'" she said. "I really don't know how the program will "OUR PRESENT plant is very good," the water on our apron isn't enough water to keep it dry. Our ultimate goal is to expand to off- campus, students and fraternities and members. Vogt said that Lawrence's water consumption last summer was near the 17 million gallons a day capacity of the present plant at Third and Indiana streets. The plant, which is to be maintained, estimates, would add 10 million gallons a day to the city's capacity. The proposed plant would treat water from Clinton Reservoir and would be on Dragstrip Road, 1000 feet of where of 23rd street ends of lawrence. Vogt said that the new plant would be used mostly by the southern and western parts of Lawrence, but that it would also serve as a back-up system for the entire city. VOGT SAID that the new plant could produce more than 10 million gallons a day in future years, "possibly 20 million by the year 2000. We are talking about 90,000 people in Lawrence then, and that would give us a total of 37 million gallons of water." The city's current water pool is drawn from the Kansas River and from six wells. About 145 million gallons are taken from this source and are produced by the century-old Bowersock Dam. "We're just in the stages of deciding what The plant will include a new laboratory for chemists to test water, he said, which will allow scientists to conduct more tests in the old laboratory at the present plant. we want in the plant," he said. "Actually, we're ahead of engineering." Vogt also said that the new plant would have more office space, because "the chemist will have his own office and we'll have a management office. too." Vogt wouldn't estimate the size of the new plant, and said that "really, that $8 million figure I gave was just a ballpark estimate. It's anoxerate." The total employment at the new plant will be 10 persons, he said. Black and Veatch spokesman were unavailable for comment on their report. Vogt and Byrd Watson, city manager say that water consumption will rise in future years, as Lawrence's population grows, and that inflation makes rapid construction of a new plant essential if the city wants to save money. Following voter approval of the general obligation bonds, construction of the new plant would start by next summer. Revenue bond financing, which doesn't require voter approval, would start plant construction a year later. RAPID CONSTRUCTION and cutting costs were major factors in commissioners' support for general obligation bond financing. General obligation bonds, they said, could be $2 million cheaper than the contracts which would require extra interest charges. the commissioners' discussion at their last meeting centered more on how to finance the new plant than on whether it should be built. Both methods of financing would raise water rates. Neither would raise taxes. THE ENGINEERING consultants have predicted that general obligation bonds would raise water rates next year by 25 per cent. With this type of financing, they said, water rates will also rise by another 26 per cent in 1970 and 1971, and 19 per cent in 1980. City officials are preparing a study that will say exactly how much rates will in- See WATER page two Two University of Kansas students were killed last night and four others were injured when their car collided with a freight train north of Ottawa. 2 KU students killed in crash north of Ottawa The accident occurred on U.S. 59, a half rule north of Ottawa. The four injured students were listed in satisfactory condition at Ransom Memorial Hospital in Ottawa. They are Mavis Carroll, St. Louis freshman; Sharon Thompson, St. Louis junior; Alexis Gill, Love, St. Louis freshman; and Vonnie Crain, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. Delarie Simmons, St. Louis sophomore, was one of the students killed. The name of the other student, also a sophomore, hadn't been released at press time. A PILLOW FIGHTING BIRD. Illustration by DAVID MILLER Happy Thanksgiving Today's Kansan is the last issue until Tuesday, Nov. 30. Kansan news and business offices will be closed for the Thanksgiving holiday until Monday, Nov. 29. All University buildings and offices will close at 5 p.m. today except for Marvin and Green halls, which will remain open 24 hours a day. Vets to ask for election review The executive council of KU Campus Veterans decided yesterday to ask the University Judiciary to hear charges of irregularities in Campus Veterans elections and determine whether new elections should be held. The executive council, comprising the organization's four officers, met with Claire McChristy, Lawrence sophomore, one of two veterans who made charges of election irregularities at a general Campus Veterans meeting Nov. 12. The members at the Nov. 12 meeting voted 16-1 to set up a committee to hear the charges and recommend what action, if any, should be taken. Most of yesterday's meeting was spent discussing how to set up such a committee. BILL EVANS, Campus Veterans president, said two veterans had asked to serve on the investigating committee. But McChristy said he wanted the But McChrisy said he wanted the committee to be totally unbiased. "It would be best if we could find people who haven't even read anything about it in the library." Mark Epstein, treasurer, suggested a hearing before the University Judiciary, in which he defended his views. Epstein said that it was possible the university Judicary wouldn't be able to handle it, he added. other avenues of recourse be tried before coming to the Judiciary. If the Judiciary can't hear the case, the group decided it would ask the Student Senate Elections Committee to hear the arguments and recommend a solution. McChris and Mike Dixon, Lawrence senior, had charged that one ballot was not counted. place, that one candidate's name was left off newspaper advertisements about the election and that some people weren't able to vote. Last May's election resulted in a two-vote last year by Evanvail on Dixon the content for press release. Roaches in machine bug students The hot-drink machine in Oliver Residence Hall has dispensed cockroaches with its hot chocolate on at least three occasions, and McGee, resident director, said yesterday. "The bugs were dead, not alive, but that makes relatively little difference," McGee said. He said he thought the roaches had climbed into the cabin to escape climbs graved in the carpet. "An open-cup vending machine has to be licensed just like any restaurant," Jolly said. "If there are roaches, it's not because of unsanitary machines, but because of the Forrest Jolly, director of vending operations for the Kansas Union, said he hadn't heard any machine of cockroaches in the Oliver hot-drink machine. He said be doubted that cockroaches could come from the hot chocolate itself, but that it might be possible for them to climb in through the door where the machine dispenses drinks. Jolly said the workers who service op-cup vending machines followed strict guidelines to insure that they were sanitary. He said that the machines were completely sealed except for the servo door, but once it was opened the machine "perfect: dark, moist and hot." "Also, we have to remember that this is the time of year that mice and roaches enter our house." Cookeraches get into Oliver with the packing material around canned goods, Jolly said, and the vending machines are near the canned storage area. Jolly said his workers sprayed around the machines about four times each year, but that they couldn't control cockroaches in entire building was effectively fumigated. McGee said that the Oliver vending machines also seemed to be "inoperative for an inordinate amount of time. We assume that we need only the machines that not function properly." Jolly said that the machines were unally out of order because of vandalism or theft. "This has been a year of light vandalism, but there's always a little extra just prior to the storm." He said that a cigarette machine in Oliver had suffered $50 damage Sunday night. 2. Tuesday, November 23,1976 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press Swine flu hits Missourian JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.—State health officials yesterday confirmed the first case of swine flu in Missouri. Dr. H. Benny Donnell, director of the Missouri Health Division's medical section, said the case of the swine flu was found in a man 'in his 30s' in western Missouri, where the virus was found. Donnell said the man hadn't had a swine flu immunization shot before contracting the illness but had gotten one since. Donnell said blood studies taken during the acute stage of the "in-luke illness" in mid-October confirmed the change in antibody levels that proved the infection was gone. Ford nledaes cooperation WASHINGTON — President Gerald Ford met with President-elect Jimmy Carter for 75 minutes in the Oval Office yesterday, and promised complete cooperation to ensure a clean-up. Carter said, "I believe that the debates and the election itself have reached a conclusion that leaves the nation unified. After the meeting, both men talked to reporters gathered on the White House lawn. "There could not have been a better demonstration of friendship and unity and good will than shown me by President Ford." Ford said that in his judgment the transition was working smoothly and emphasized that he would cooperate completely. U.N. group admits Israel NAIROBI, Kenya - The U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization was invited to submit a report from full membership in the world body and admitted it unaccepted to the European Union. But the organization also voted by an overwhelming majority to condemn Israel's educational and cultural policies in Arab territories captured in the 1967 war. The adoption by the conference of the anti-Iraqi resolution was part of the price demanded by Arab and Soviet blocs states for their cooperation in agreeing to the resolution. GOP chairman resigns WASHINGTON - Mary Louse Smith opened the way for an early showdown for control of the Republican party by announcing yesterday she is resigning as party chairman. But she warned against any "fatal lurch to either extreme of the political spectrum." The voluntary resignation becomes effective in January. Tavern's machines robbed again Heavy Eddys pizza and the Wagon Wheel tavern, both at 507 W. 14th St., were broken into early Sunday for the second time in less than a week. Police said the methods used by the burglaries were similar to those used in last week's break-in, and that once again the burglaries pried open the seven amusement machines in the Wheel and removed the cash from the coin boxes. Police said the burglars first entered Heavy Eddys by prying open a window. They apparently took nothing from the restaurant but entred it only to gain entry The burglar entered the tavern by way of a connecting ladder, police said. Once inside they pried open four pinball machines, a flipper game, a cigarette machine and the joke box, taking an undetermined amount of cash. In addition, the thieves caused an estimated $50 damage to the window of the house. Vacation Buffet Tuesday, Nov. 23 Pizza, Salad, & Spaghetti All for only $1.89 from 5:00-9:00 p.m. Pizza inn In the Hillcrest Shopping Center, next to the theatres. RENT-A-CAR FORD PINTO Ford RENT-A-CAR ADMIRAL LEASING & RENTAL Call 843-2931 23rd & Alabama FORD PINTO space and buy new equipment by next March. The ordinance authorizing the money has already been approved and is ready for adoption on tonight's second reading. Ford Ford RENT-A-CAR ADMIRAL LEASING & RENTAL Call 843-2931 23rd & Alabama | Make | Daily | Weekly | Monthly | Special Week end | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | PINTO | $9.00 plus 9t per mile | $54.00 plus 9t per mile | $145.00 plus 9t per mile | $7.00 plus 9t per mile | | MUSTANG MAVERICK | $9.00 plus 11t per mile | $66.00 plus 11t per mile | $155.00 plus 11t per mile | $9.00 plus 11t per mile | | GRANADA PICK UP | $12.00 plus 12t per mile | $72.00 plus 12t per mile | $165.00 plus 12t per mile | $9.00 plus 12t per mile | | LTD II | $13.00 plus 13t per mile | $78.00 plus 13t per mile | $175.00 plus 13t per mile | $10.00 plus 13t per mile | | LTD OLDS CUTLASS | $14.00 plus 14t per mile | $84.00 plus 14t per mile | $185.00 plus 14t per mile | $11.00 plus 14t per mile | | THUNDERBIRD SOUARE WAGON | $15.00 plus 15t per mile | $90.00 plus 15t per mile | $195.00 plus 15t per mile | $12.00 plus 15t per mile | SEE Susan or Paul TELEPHONE 843 2931 TO RENT A NEW FORD!!! An ordinance that would increase the mill for the public library from 2.5 to 3.0 The request involves 42.9 acres of land at the southwest and northeast corners of 23 Street and Kalaadin Drive. The land, now commercial by the change. Commissioners first considered the zoning change two weeks ago but postponed it. Commissioners now need more time to consider the implications of the change. Commissioner Bartley Clark Commissioners will authorize the city to give $75,000 in industrial revenue bonds to Packer Plastics, a northwest Lawrence factory that wants to expand its warehouse City to decide mall zone request ADMIRAL LEASING & RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 over Mud Creek The bridge isn't in Lawrence, but City Manager Buford Watson said it was the city's responsibility to build a new bridge. The Mud Creek dechannelization program THE INCREASE in the mill levy would provide the library with $47,000 more funding. Library board representatives said the increase is needed to keep the library and to keeppace with rising utility costs. 843-2931 "What are we going to do with the downtown?" he asked. City commissioners will act tonight on a zoning request from Four Sons Corp. to allow for future construction of a large center that could rival the downtown campus. Another ordinance eligible for adoption on second reading again centers on rezoning the area to be designated as RS-2 classification. The change affects 145 acres north of 31st Street and east of Kasol Drive. A change to RS-2 zoning requires a new RS-2 zoning be installed but allows greater population density. they couldn't predict what kind of shopping center would be built in the Kasolid location, nor could they say when it might be built. They said they wanted the change because they were too old. There are both major streets and the surrounding area and was ideally suited to commercial uses. In other action, commissioners will consider a resolution to buy new fire fighting equipment, to be paid for by issuing general obligation bonds. The equipment consists of two minipumpers at $30,000 each. FOUR SEASONS representatives said JOIN KASBERGER, fire chief, said he favored cutting costs by buying the minipumper instead of getting one regular pumper. A regular pumper costs $90,000. Commissioners will also enter the holiday season by considering a request from the Salvation Army to set up Christmas Kettles in certain parts of the downtown area. Commissioners will also take bids for extending a Leavenworth County bridge crease if voters approve the general obligation bond financing. Because the average water bill for Lawrence residents would increase by $300, cent increase would raise the bill to $10 Water increase . . . From page one Vogt said that the rate varied monthly and that it wasn't easy to use averages in the models. "THIS SUMMER the rates were $10,75, but in January they're $4.50. I'd agree, though, that we're talking about a $2 increase overall." Voyt said. The city uses a sliding rate scale, which gives big industrial water users diminishing costs. Paying for the plant through revenue bonds, according to the consultants, would reduce interest expense. Commissioners have agreed that general obligation bonds would be the least expensive method of financing the new plant, because the general bonds could be paid off in 5 years or would need to be off in 30 years, they said, and would require about $2 million more in interest payments. LAWRENCE WILL apparently have to pay everything for the new plant. Vogt and Watson have said that federal public works grants weren't available for Lawrence, because the grant money went to cities with high unemployment rates. Vogt said that despite the cost of building the new plant, it would bring a number of advantages besides increasing Lawrence's water capacity. Mosquito book available in 1978, and 19 per cent in 1981. There would be no increases in 1979 or 1980. The booklet, "Mosquitoes in Kansas: Natural History and Methods of Control," was written by two KU graduate students in the School of Ecology. The authors are Jane, Lelie, Helley, Reddings, Gallf. Anyone who wants to prepare early for next year's mosquito season may request a booklet recently released by the Kansas Biological Survey. Copies are available from the Kansas Bioanalytical Survey, 2015 Averna A, Campus Wilson, University of Wisconsin. Booklets on chiggers, ticks, skunks and poison ivy and poison oak are also available The booklet explains food preferences, dusse relationships, life cycles, habitats and ecosystems. --- --the sly. Off the Wall Hall presents For all you Cold Turkeys on the Billy SPEARS BAND Off the Wall Hall. Fri. & Sat, Nov. 26 & 27 $2.50 show at 9:00 p.m. m. 841-0817 737 New Hampshire --in p Owen in wi loss o defeat KU year, had p were 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 SUBMARINE RESUME PACKAGE 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 842-1117 1420 Crescent Includes samples, instructions and worksheets. Prepared by successful executive. Mail $5.00 to: RESUME P. O. Box 71, Clearview City, Ks. 66019 雪花 Christmas Open House Christmas Open House Preview of Holiday Decorations and Floral Arrangements Sunday, Nov. 28 — 1:00 to 4:30 p.m. Everyone is welcome—Refreshments served Register for Free Door Prizes Owens FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana Lawrence, Kansas 843-6111 Owens FLOWER SHOP pnc indian Lawrence, Kansas 843-6111 BARBERO DE CABOTA CONFITURAS Y MEDIDORES DE LA LEY DE COMERCIO MUNICIPALIDAD DE SANT JOSE PACIENTE Fall Festival FROM Peter Pan NOV.24th thru DEC.3rd Fall Festival NOV. 24th thru DEC. 3rd WE WILL BE Closed THANKS Fall Festival FROM Peter Pan NOV. 24th thru DEC. 3rd WE WILL BE CLOSED THANKSGIVING REG. 49¢ SIZE HAMBURGERS "Same Fine Quality" 4 $1.09 FOR HAMBURGER and FRENCH FRIES 49c REG. 79c S R ICE CREAM • VANILLA • FUDGE RIPPLE • COFFEE BRICKLE • CHOCOLATE • APPRIMINT • BUTTER BRICKLE • NEAPOLITAN • BLACK WALNUT • CHOCOLATE CHIP • BUTTER PECAN • CHOCOLATE ALMOND WE FEATURE THESE FLAVORS AND MORE Peter Van ICE CREAM HALF GALLONS 89¢ FREEZER PAK 4 HALF GALLONS $3'49 J ICE CREAM CONE 1/4lb. DIP 29¢ PER DIP HOT FUDGE SUNDAE REG. 75¢ 49¢ Peter Pan MILK COMPLETE LINE OF GRADE "A" DAIRY FOODS 1015 W. 6th 521 W. 23rd If hi the U should on Mo Allen Bi fo The with this footb Tuesday, November 23,1976 3 by next ing the and is second option on zeoning mm RS-1- affects east of zoning ly zoned city. holiday from the Kettles area. --- University Daily Kansan V E BRICKLE R BRICKLE COLATE CHIP LIMOND D MORE AK DGE AE 75¢ 9¢ There 's no place like home Runners agree: By ROB RAINS Sports Writer SOMEWHERE IN NORTHEAST KANSAS-Tommy McCall thought he'd never see the University of Kansas campus again. Timmons and women's coach Tom Lienvale dropped off five teams of runners at different points, all about 26 miles in country miles northeast of Lawrence. He was participating Saturday, along with 14 other members of the KU track team and two members of the KU women's cross country team, in track coach Bob Timmons' brainchild—a crow-flight marathon of more than 26 miles. The only thing the runners knew was the direction they were from Lawrence. the direction they were from Lawrence. McCall, who had never run more than eight miles at one time, was more afraid of getting lost in the woods that he was of After covering more than 20 miles of the hill and rough terrain in this part of the state, McCall, a middle distance rider, still wasn't sure he was going to make it. "We climbed a radio tower to see if we could find Lawrence, "McCall said. "We final spotteed water towers; so we had to close them." McCall, a sophomore, had held doubts about the run since Timmons approached him with the idea the previous week. None of the other runners expressed a fear of never seeing Mt. Oread, but they did wonder when it would be. The team of George Mason, Joel Cambron and Bruce Coldsmith won the marathon, covering the approximately 31 miles they ran in 4 hours, 17 minutes. The teams ran, walked, climbed and crawled their way to Lawrence. They all made it, with the last group coming in 9 hours and 25 minutes after they started. The distance is approximate because we don't know where they ran down the hill, journey by journey. The last group, that is, unless you count Timmons and Liovale. They walked the whole route and finished in a little more than 13 hours. "I'd been thinking about going all week," Timmons said. "I wasn't going to but when we got out there we finally decided to go ahead and do it. I'm sore." The only casualty in Timmons' second marathon—the first was in 1973—was McCall. He twisted his foot, although the ball went within shouting distance of the finish line. The only person to run in both of the crow-flight marathons—crow-flight because the distance from the starting points to Lawrence was the regulation marathon distance of 26 miles, 383 yards as a crow flys, but not as a man runs—was George Mason. He considered this a better race. Mason said the easiest way to run the race was to follow the power lines that were on contour maps—except that they did not have enough light to add one. They waited in the rain. "We got to look at the maps before we started," Mason said. "Last time we didn't and only about one-third of the people finished." "That tucked everybody up," Mason said. "I didn't remember it cutting across the way it did until we got to the room, when we figured out what bad happened." Timmons said there was more of a challenge in this kind of race than in an ordinary marathon. That was one of the reasons he began it. "If the cross country team had qualified for the nationals we probably wouldn't have run it," Timmons said. "But the team was a bit down." "We didn't want people to run if they were hurt or sick. Also, if people got hurt during the run we wanted them to quit," Timungs said. The two women in the race, Michelle Brown and Sarah Frame, left for Thanksgiving vacation following the race and were unavailable for comment. Tim Tobin, a member of the men's track team who ran in their group, said they run a good race. "They ran just as well as everybody else," John said. "Except for a couple of wrong turns we made that cost us quite a lot." We would have we would have finished a lot sooner." Timmons, who took a lot of good-natured ribbing because of his performance, said he wouldn't try the exercise again without better preparation himself. The team, responding with a refrain they have heard many times, told him, "But it's 90 per cent mental, coach." Jayhawks set for season opener Holman said recently that he hadn't been wrestling easily lately to stay in shape, but he went home Friday to train more intensively. "Dd normally be arm wrestling every other day," he said, "but my major-civil law degree." In past season openers under coach Ted Owens, the Jayhawks have been successful in winning 11 and losing just one. The only defeat in the season was underbelder defeated KU 72-64, in Lawrence. KU, which struggled to a 13-13 record last year, will face a Montana State team that had problems of its own last season. They were 5-7 in the Big Sky Conference, and KANSAS 3 3 If history is a predictor of the future then the University of Kansas basketball team should win its opening game when it takes on the No. 75 Saturday night in Allen Field House. "I'll be wrestling in pool halls and bars in Houston every night next week, and I'll be running three mules a night to get down to 160." Sports Writer Bv ERIC MARTINCICH Holman will be competing in one of six divisions for $10,000 in prize money. The six divisions are lightweight (Holmann's heavyweight and two women's divisions, heavyweight and two women's divisions, Holman, Houston freshman, qualified for the tournament by winning the 160 pound and under division of the Southwest Region in the Arm Wrestling Association. The national tournament will begin at noon Saturday in Los Angeles. Big Eight has four in Top 20 The Big Eight's balance again took its toll with only four conference teams ranked in this week's Associated Press college football poll. The Jayhawks face a Grandview team that returns two starter's from last year's squad. Grandview's new head coach, Jerry Stater, is expected to use man-to-man and zone defenses in hopes of keeping KU off balance. Arm wrestler trains for LA tournament After tomorrow's game, the Jayhawks travel Friday to Springfield Mo., to compete in the annual Thanksgiving Turkey Tournament. While most KU students are goring themselves on Thanksgiving dinners, Scott Holman will be trying to lose weight and train for competition in the World Professional Arm Wrestling Association National Tournament this weekend. Okalahoma, which is headed for the Fiesta Bowl, leads the way with a No. 8 ranking. Cobraskaka and Oklahoma State each spot in the both Oklahoma and Oklahoma State title (10). Both Missouri and Iowa State dropped out of Forward Herb Nobles Kansas, which last year grabbed the consolation trophy, will open the tourney against Northwest Missouri State. Other team's competing are Wichita State, St. Louis and Carmichael Junior College, St. Louis University, Nebraska and Southwest Missouri State. MONTANA STATE will have three returning lettermen starting the game against the Jayhawks, including Bruce Smith, a 6-11 center. finished the year with an overall record of 9-16. Koening, a 6-10 junior who led the team in both field goal, (495) and free throw, (758) HERB NOBLES will start at the other forward position. Nobles, a first 6-year, led KU in blocked shots and was second in steals last year. The Jayhawks will go with a young but experienced lineup when they meet Montana State for the first time in their 79-year history. John Douglas, a junior college transfer, will make his first start for Kansas. He will be joined in the backcourt by Clint Johnson, who also plays a game for the 'Hawks last season. Women's team opens season KU women's basketball team will open its regular season and a busy week of action tomorrow at Grandview College of Des Moines Iowa. Either Paul Mokesi or Donnie Von Moore will start at the pivot. Owens said last night that he wouldn't decide until later and who would draw the starting assignment. 1. Pittsburgh (39) 10-0 1,172 2. Michigan (13) 10-1 1,008 3. Southern State (7) 10-1 1,008 4. Georgia (1) 9-1 877 5. Maryland (2) 11-0 1,070 6. TCA 11-0 1,040 7. Houston 7-2 500 8. Texas Tech 7-2 500 9. Wyoming 8-1 334 10. Texas A&M 8-2 319 11. Ohio State 8-2 318 12. Notre Dame 8-2 306 13. Colorado 8-3 133 14. Pennsylvania State 8-3 132 15. Penn State 7-3 740 16. Iowa 7-0 40 17. Alabama 7-0 29 18. North Carolina 8-2 15 19. Ite N. Carolina 12 15 Holman now weighs 163. At forward, Owens will start Ken ternero with emphasis placed on the man- for-man press. "I think that both Paul and Donnie can do the job," Owens said. "I'm hopeful we'll have another situation like we had a few years ago with Rick Suttle and Danny Knight when we could play both an equal time without losing effectiveness." Owens said that KU wouldn't have a set lineup this season. "I don't like to think of five particular people as our starters," he said. "I believe this club will have seven or eight who may start at any time." Owens appears optimistic. "I think everyone is ready to play," said. We've practiced for six weeks now and are ready to play again. Owens said that KU would begin preparation for Montana State this af- HEAVY EDDYS PIZZA He is confident, though, that his lack of training won't hurt him. TODAY'S SPECIAL! "When I win ... if I win," he said, "already have his phone who will send me the answer." 2 Free Large Draws with any Large Pizza at 'The Wheel' Fast,Free Delivery,Too. 841-3100 At the Wheel 507 W.14th Chicago Bound? Fly roundtrip from Kansas City. Leave Dec. 11, 15, or 18 and return Jan. 16. ONLY $71 per person based on minimum of 10 persons (Regular coach fare is $110) (Regional Coast) CALL 5110 Contact: SUA Travel KANSAS UNION PHONE 864-3477 M Travel arrangement by --- REMINDER: Maupintour travel service Kansas Union Lobby The KU Backgammon Club meets every day. 7 a.p.m. in the Oread Room, Kansas 7:00 p.m. in the tournament 2:00 p.m. in the tournament Phone 843-1211 7:00 to play in the tournament. BRING YOUR BOARDS It's spreading and coming here soon. You'll love it! Athlete's Foot. Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. We Write All Risks Automobile Insurance Karen's Bridal Shoppe private showings only 128 Minnesota Ph. 842-0056 Lawrence, Kansas Now ... more than ever, Karen's makes beautiful things happen. • Wedding Gowns • Attendants' Dresses • Formals Wanted: Thin Young Men Hat, Dangerous Job, Orphans Preferred "PONY EXPRESS RIDER" G Evenings 7:30 9:30 Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:30 Grandade Museum of the Arts DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLLIVIER in "MARATHON MAN" R Shown Eve: 7:30 & 9:45 Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:30 Varsity What the song didn't tell you the movie will. PG. Ode To Billy Joe Eve: 7:15 & 9:30, Sat. Sun. 2:00 Hillcrest 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWO MINUTE WARNING R CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASSAVETES Evenings: 7:20 & 9:40 Sat. Sun. Mat. 1:55 Hillcrest He's back in business and it's service with a smile. THE KAWDIY ADVENTURES OF Tom Jones Evenings: 7:35 & 9:30 Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:00 Hillcrest Granada What the song didn't tell you the movie will. PG. Ode To Billy Joe Eve. 7:15 3:00 DUSTIN HOFFMAN LAURENCE OLIVIER in "MARATHON MAN" R Shown Eve. 7:30 & 9:45 Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:30 Varity 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWO MINUTE WARNING R CHARLTON HESTON JOHN CASSAVETES Evenings 7:20 & 9:40 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:55 Hillcrest He's back in business and it's service with a smile. R THE RAWDY ADVENTURES OF Tom Jones Evenings 7:35 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:00 What the song didn't tell you the movie will. PG. Ode To Billy Joe Eve, 7:15 & 9:00, Sat-Sun, 2:00 Hillcrest 91,000 People. 33 Exit Gates. One Sniper... TWO MINUTE WARNING a smile. F G's G'S BAR-B-Q 530 W.23rd St. 841-3402 MELANIE LYON "The Taste is in the Sauce" NOW OPEN 11:00 a.m.—2:00 a.m. FRIDAY & SATURDAY Bring your party to G's Friday & Saturday Nights. We're now open till 2:00 a.m. to bring you Bar-B-Q only the way "G" can make it. REGULAR SANDWICH SPECIAL Treat yourself to any of "G's" fine Bar-B-Q Sandwiches from 11 a.m.—2 p.m. Daily and get your choice of Tater Tots, Fries or Chips and Drink Free. SMOKED TURKEY DINNER SPECIAL Tues., Nov. 23rd and Wed., Nov. 24th Let "G" take care of your Thanksgiving early with a delicious Smoked Turkey. Dine in or take it home. If you've already bought a turkey - Bring it in and "G" will prepare it. Better hurry, we'll be closed Thanksgiving. NEW HOURS Sun.-Mon.—Closed Tuos.-Thurs.11 a.m.-9 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. 4 Tuesday, November 23,1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer Win ices fallen cake Because of circumstances such as losing star quarterback Nolan Cromwell in mid-season, KU football coach Bud Moore said the Jayhawk's surprising 41-14 victory over Missouri Saturday was the best win the team had had since he became head coach. "We've had a great deal of adversity," Moore said. JIAHWAK FOOTBALL teams are certainly no strangers to adversity. The victory over Mizuza gave them a 6-15 record and their first back-to-back winning seasons in 14 years. There have been highlights such as the team's trips to the 1969 Orange Bowl and last year's Sun Bowl, but those 14 years are full of long streaks of bad luck, frustrated hopes and unfulfilled dreams. KU has traditionally suffered from an inability to get it all together, no matter how promising the team looks in the preseason. But as a local sports writer pointed out this fall, hope springs eternal in the hearts of Jayhawk football fans. Saturday's thrilling satisfying victory was a good reason why. THE TEAM could have given up and just gone out and run through the motions against a team that had already beaten three of the top teams in the nation. KU had suffered bad luck and bad breaks in losing their last six games, but they were not in an inexperienced quarterback. Probably few fans would have thought badly of them had they lost. Instead, as safety Skip Sharp said after the game, they just got "fired up" and went out and totally dominated a good football team. That says a lot about the spirit and determination of the players and the coaches. The victory not only gives the team and its fans a sorely needed morale boost, it plants the seeds of hope for next year. Linebacker Terry Beeson said it showed that if you worked hard and faced adversity, something good would come from it. He's right. Hearty congratulations are in order for the Jayhawks, coach Bud Moore and his staff. We know it's been rough. Pollution is a bad solution By John Fuller Contributing Writer in the waning days of the late political campaign the accidental President found himself in the Pacific Northwest telling the aircraft workers that, thanks to the administration's environmental noise standards, the airline industry would have a new silent swifter and more jobs would be created for people in that region of the country. It was a strange statement by the head of an administration that had opposed environmental protections on the grounds that they cost jobs and slow down the economy. two STRIP mining bills were vetoed by Ford on those grounds. As a result the specifics of the bill that should have been obvious that, if strp mining is prohibited, deep tunneling, needs more machines, and more power, will have to be used. If the airlines must scrap half their jets and the coal industry isn't allowed to use the cheapest technology available to it, airplanes are going to cost more and so is coal and electricity and everything else made from coal. But raising the prices doesn't axiomatically cost jobs. Nor does it cause inflation. piig-sty air and green-scan drinking water weep about the costs, they don't explain that those so-called costs constitute the paychecks of workers in the construction industry be caused by environmental sissies. Inflation is when all the prices rise, when the price level rises. Prices for individual products are often more expensive as improved quality, temporary shortages, strikes by workers making the same thing in " . . . the cumulative costs of pollution abatement could lie in the trillion dollar range by the middle of the '80s—comparable Nicholas Von Hoffman (c) 1974 King Features Syndicate competitive shops and on and on INSTEAD OF howling at "the bird and bunny crowd," or railing at "environmental hazards," Fortune does, it might help to calculate the benefits as well as the costs. Unhappily, the traditional bookkeeper of a set is up only to figure costs. "Eighty-one industrial plants employing 18,000 people have been forced closed," Fortune tells us, but makes no estimate of how many environmental standards have created. When the advocates of The Democrats aren't likely to reduce arms expenditures, but as long as both parties are in power, they will regulate prosperity through government spending, it's very important that arms not be allowed to be the only or the first form that spending can take. Sums comparable to those wasted in the Pentagon are being washed in education and medicine and, although non-military spending makes no difference in nerves, in narrowly economic cars, the plusses of self-defense itself will do aside, it's very important that billions for water treatment plants and other nonwar objectives remain popular and respectable. volume to handle the paper work and red tape. Moreover, environmental regulation can raise the costs of going into business by encouraging new competition for older, established giants. Even so, the economy and sanity will be better served if our environment efforts were carried out less wastefully and less harmfully. Most en- countries are currently existing large corporations if for no other reason than they have the dollar THE PRO-pisty crowd at Fortune and elsewhere have a point when they bring up these objectives, because we make sense when they say that the same environmental objectives can be reached, no by some sort of bureaucracy that implies, but by some sort of use tax. Companies that pollute are charged or taxed for the costs of undoing their mess. Companies that don't pollute don't pay. It isn't much different from a city government saying to a factory—we charge so much a base to hand you a saverager to take care of the mess yourself, or you can develop a process in your factory so that you don't have any garbage. PRESIDENT CHUNG HEE PARK THE BUCK STARTS HERE MIAMI NEWS Standard regulatory structures and procedures can't be applied to problems like the environment. We have to learn how to regulate without so much control. We have to, we have to. There is a bit of Ferdinand in most of us. Besides, we need the jobs. to the outlays for defense or education. "Unthinking that we should spend that kind of money to satisfy the Ferdinand the Bull complexes of people who won't settle for Airwick but want the swamps by their side," she sniffed the health-at-an-price view, "sneers Fortune, which has no objection to defense at any price. Yet we have every reason to believe that our toxic environment far more American lives every year than the Russians do. The Student Senate seems ready to join the crowd. The Senate's Rights, Responsibilities and Privileges Committee has studied the events committee discussed in week that would put the events committee under the Senate's jurisdiction. Senate events power unsound The bill would also change the committee from 14 faculty and staff members and nine students to four faculty members and nine students. Pity the University Events Committee. For most of this semester people have been disputing its decisions and questioning its origins, jurisdiction and power. bureauacraucies and committees is usually quite interesting. Unfortunately, it can also be displeasing. Committees are for slow action, confusing discussion and arbitrary decisions. THE BEHAVIOR of I have never served on the events committee, but I know from talking to past and current members that the committee has sometimes had these problems. The committee has been jealous of its power at times, denying requests that seemed legitimate because the applicants didn't follow procedure to a tree, or because the applicant had tried to get around the committee and failed. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 31, 2016. Subscriptions to *Ukraine* are $15 per month June and July except Saturday and Sunday, October 28, 2016, and November 4, 2016. Subscriptions by mail are $15 per month or $18 per year a outside country. County student subscriptions are $25 per month a year outside country. THE ECONOMIC effects of spending money on war material and munitions and spending it on preserving the environment other than their political consequences aren't, although both kinds of expenditures do create employment. Editor Debbie Gump Managing Editor Yael Abushakull Editorial Editor Jim Bates Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editor Sherri Bedwell Assistant Campus Editors Photo Editor Media Photographers Music Editor Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor Gary Vie Shoot Artist Assistant Entertainment Editor Elizabeth Leech Contributing Writers Am Daugherty, John Fuller Gunnin, Gunnin, Copy Chiefs Make-up Editors Chuck Alexander Demon Vabori, Jay Bemis **Dobbie Gump** Managing Editor Yael Abushakull Editorial Editor Jim Bates Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editor Sherri Bedwell Assistant Campus Editors Photo Editor Media Photographers Music Editor Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor Gary Vie Shoot Artist Assistant Entertainment Editor Elizabeth Leech Contributing Writers Am Daugherty, John Fuller Gunnin, Gunnin, Copy Chiefs Make-up Editors Chuck Alexander Demon Vabori, Jay Bemis Business Manager Terry Hannon Artist Assistant Business Manager Carole Roederkoetter Advertising Manager Janice Jemmes Manage Director Claudia McCann Classified Manager Sarah McAunny National Advertising Manager Timothy O'Shea National Advertising Manager Greg Hack Contributing Writer MANY COMMITTEE members represent different interests at the University, and as often occurs with humans, these interests can get in the way of proper scheduling and use of facilities. My knowledge is again second-hand, but it comes Administrators on the committee have many things to do, so much of their days are spent with organizational tasks. But if they blame them, they come to expect attention to detail and orderly process. Legitimate requests that disrupt the normal order of work can change sometimes don't get the attention they deserve. from "reliable sources," and I have hear committee members tell of instances where people are invented by such self-interest. Business Adviser Mel Adams VET THE events committee usually does a more than adequate job. Despite having most of the flaws of any big company, the events committee accomplishes much and serves KU. News Adviser Bob Giles The plan to put the committee under the Student Senate's thumb is a bad idea. For all that can be said against the events committee, it can't be said that it lacks expertise. The faculty don't have any own interests, granted, but it is this very fact that gives them a wealth of knowledge about most parts of the University. THE PROPOSAL doesn't have much practicality. The Senate won't do a good job if it tries to review all events committee decisions—that would be too much to do. So how would the Senate decide which decisions to discuss? The student members of the events committee could respond, but then you have a handful of students who can gain support for their (not always unbiased) views by manipulating the Senate. At the risk of sounding elitist, the events committee has many members who usually know what is going on in the world. Most students senators, in contrast, have trouble understanding what is going on in just the Student Senate. The change in the committee from 14 to five faculty and staff members would be bad, too, because it would slash the events committee's pool of knowledge. The absence of the nonstudent committee members not representing diverse interests. You could have a majority of the events committee overruled in effect by any student members who could sell their votes to the Senate, which seldom undertakes complex issues. There does remain a question of rights and rules, because the KU Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct does state: "Authority for the learning student non-academic conduct residues in the Student Senate." The events committee, like all of us, can be improved. But the way to do it is by having the committee open-minded, not by being open-minded, not by putting the committee under senators who too often play games or by stripping the committee of most knowledgeable members. FURTHERMORE, no harm has been shown in having a faculty and staff major on the events committee. Like it or not, many students on the team have gone and go along with the tide as well as or better than the best administration bureaucrats. events. This point does need to be cleared up by the chancellor or the university council, but there is no reason this part of a code necessarily means the department over the events committee. But clearly this doesn't mean the Student Senate has sole power over such conduct, and it is impossible to manage it in any way related to scheduling. Letters Execution immoral To the Editor: Mary Ann Daugherty's shallow analysis of the Gilmore case (Kansan, Nov. 18) was quite disturbing. She goes on to express her disillusionment with those interest groups that are interfering with Glimmes's death. "You should be crushed for him, not against him." Somehow Mary Ann has been able to construe the efforts of those people who have supported capital punishment as being anti-Glimm. What is so intolerable about doing everything possible to prevent somebody's chest from being exposed? 30-cm bulleties? It may be rough in places, but "Rashomian" has some style, some wit and a delightful sort of oriental, black humor resolution along with interesting theatrics. The thing that compared with the other two theater productions I've seen this year, "Rashomon" is a refreshing throwback. It is worthless, and "Everybody's Somebody's" Mother (Sometimes) was so bad it made my mind hurt. In a society governed by reason rather than emotion, we can't accept the fact that one man is able to render ultimate judgement over another. No matter how hideous the crimes The crowning absurdity of Mary Ann's piece came when she charged those who are ultimately responsible for making the weight decision not to lose sight of the fact that "Gilmore is the only one who really matters." Nonsense! A decision to go ahead and blow Gilmore all over the Utah prison yard would have far-reaching effects on the other 700 residents of Death Row. It would only echo the word "street" before others become victims of legally sanctioned murder. of these convicted individuals may have been, we must force ourselves to realize the finality of a death sentence and the gross immorality of impositing it. It may be argued that Hammurai was ahead of his time, but certainly not by a 4000 years. He's showing his concern for theater at its best. ("Come on kids, tonight we're playing the Big Eight in the theater!") Jeffrey pyr. Chicago, Ill. senior Church upheld In response to Mr. Fuller (Kansan, Nov. 18), first, the church has no doctrine that designates the number of children a couple may or may not have. It simply rejects the use of chemicals and the use of chemicals and devices. It says that, because of the life principle involved in the procreative process, a denial of this must be matched with a spiritual awareness brought on by another denial, that the life principle in the universal flow can't just be turned off on and rejected without responsibility. As a result, it stresses the natural rhythm method, which can be very exact and precise. "Rashomon" is the KU entry to the American Theater Festival, and one can only hope that its competition is poor so it can retain the honors KU won with "Compassionas last year." Secondly, abortion isn't merely an unseless debate. It is an indisputable, biological crisis is a destruction of human life. It is a denial of the sacredness of life. What remains is the willingness of men and nations to assume this attitude. Continuing, the bishops didn't say that homosexuals were immoral and so "condemned," but merely that the state is abnormal and it is the act that gay homosexuals have a special call to chastity and, also, the grace inherent in a special struggle. In closing, surely Mr. Fuller must realize even if he may not understand the ground from There was an amusing quote in last Friday's Kansan. It came at the end of our critics' disappointment) theater review. which certain beliefs may spring that if morality does exist it certainly doesn't become unsustainable because it is no longer "practical" or "contemporary". As if anything new can shift nature of what is "now" or what is utilitarian. The thought amuses me. The whole article bespeaks an unfamiliarity with the spiritual qualifier of looking at the world through the context of the spirit, which is God, universe, which is God, and not merely what is touchable, or measurable, or "practical." Thomas Krische Lawrence junior Play has style,wit To the Editor: Steve Miller Waverly graduate student --- YOU MUST UNDERSTAND... DEMOCRACY INDRA YOU MUST UNDERSTAND... DEMOCRACY THAT... WHAT I'M... STOMP STOMP DOING HERE... IS REALLY ONLY... TEMPORARY. YOU MUST UNDERSTAND... DEMOCRACY INDRA THAT... INDRA WHAT I'M... STOAP ON STOPP E th Altho be incr during last we student "Pec basic r possibil referer Johr said tl librari also st DOING HERE." IS REALLY ONLY. TEMPORARY. How fictitious the re were avenue could needed Aecc ment are of sex, e BRINC n Tuesday, November 23, 1976 5 paper overeer, can ing into aging older, University Daily Kansar wd at have a b these also y that al ob not by ranking ss, but ate are costs of appanies pay. It a a city a facac off, anger to yourself, access in u don't struc- can't be like the to learn out so effects. there is a at of us. Jobs. s may y does doesn't be because we nothing dons on a "now" n. The e whole u un- spiritual e world v not of the of the and not and not or cal." Krische ee junior wit ng quote usan. It critic's disap- w. UK entry Theater only hope UK KU won st year, cormer for Come on paying the compared theater this year, rerefreshing vel was loved bad it bad it laces, but me style, ful sort of humor with in- te student - ORARY. Early research beats the late library rush Although hours at Watson Library won't be increased to cope with increased usage during final, library administrators said that students should stay on their schedules if students planned their schedules well. "People should get in here and do the basic research on final papers as soon as possible," Clint Howard, associate reference librarian, said Friday. Howard said that people having difficulties using the library should inquire at the reference desk where the assistants were aware of all possible research resources to see the librarians could also be arranged if more help was needed, he said. John Glinka, associate dean of libraries, that said students should be aware of other libraries around campus where they could also study and find relevant material. Study areas are even available in residence halls and other living groups, he said. "There won't be any changes in the library guidelines for additional student help or longer hours during finals," he said. "One of our problems here is that we try to spread our service over the calendar year, but we can't ultimately cut back during the vacation." Increases in student library use was noticeable during the past two weeks, and this should continue through the first two weeks of December. Glindaika said. Rod Runyan, head of security and delivery at Watson, agreed. "We usually average about 2,500 people coming in through the turistas every day between Monday and Friday. For the first time in our office, we have, however, we hud close to 3,500," he said. "We're expanding this year. There will be 80 events in 25 days," Howard Collison, Fine arts committee chairman, said Friday. The celebration, which will last from Feb. 10 until March 6, will feature six main events, Collison said, including a performance by Joffrey II, a small classical ballet troupe associated with the New York Civic Center Joffrey Ballet, and the work of Paul Stephen Lans play, "Homerica, a Trilogy on Sexual Liberation." Plans are being made final for SAU's spring season fine arts celebration, including the "Arts." Ballet,world premiere highlight 80 events in fine arts program Lim, Philippines graduate student, was awarded the American College Theatre Festival prize last March for his play, "Conspirations." "ACCENT THE ARTS" also will include a performance by the national touring company of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"; a piano recital by Requisca Costa, world renowned concert pianist and KU professor of piano, and an exhibition in the Kansas Union Gallery of works by Colette Bangert, Lawrence artist. Call the KANSAN 864-4810 --one two three four five time times times times times John Taller, professor of art, has been commissioned to create a poster for "Accent the Arts." Collinson said that five originals and 50 prints of a limited signed edition of the poster would be sold through the SUA office during the festival. JAMES GANG FOREIGN AUTO PARTS your BANK AMERICAN welcome here master charge the service center Mon.-Fri., 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 843-8080 304 Locust Do you have any news tips? Parts for All Imports Student Discounts Collison said that informal noon concerts by fine arts students and faculty would be held in the Strong Hall lobby during Accent the Arts. 1977 HONDA EXPRESS SUNSHINE It's automatic, gets ap- priately towed by a maintenance free. Stop by and ride with toilee in or around your Arizona's Honda: 1811 W. fh; 4343 N. Arizona's - Only 299°0 Christmas & Thanksgiving FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST Make reservations now! No extra cost for our services. Maupintour travel service Phone: 843-1211 KU Union/The Malts/Hillcrest/900 Mass KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their academic status. BALLEN ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL Watch the want ads in the Kansan CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Each additional word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 to run: Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m. Thursday Wednesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design, sculpture. Mermaids. Unicorns. Etc. Compound stone cutting. Satisfaction guarantee. 841-3833 ERRORS FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-435B UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flat Hall Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office Sub-leasing Meadowbrook studio for second session call, John 1.5 P.M. 841-8975. 11-23 FOR RENT SUBLEASE -2 bbm, apt. apL, water and gas Apilmani furnished. $175. On bus line, 814-324. FURNISHED. For rent to student an apartment close to Kansas Call 843-6759. Parking Available 11-23 Call 843-6759. Parking Available 11-23 Subluxe 1 bdm. unfortified Gadget apartment, 100 ft. above ground, includes gas heat AC 41-29317-289 Furnished sleeping room, share bath, some cooking Inquire 760 Illinois, evenings. 11-23 STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any price you see on popular hifi equipment with them, factory dams or dims out-of-product, you can get the best value from the GRAHMONISE SHOP at KIEFS. U Sublue space, furnished Meadowbrook studio and the second semester. Available Dbl. 12-17 at 11am. Sublease clean 2 bedroom, unfurnished apartment buit route. Available Dec. 1 Call 841-7242 after arrival. Western Civilization Notes-Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense out of Western Civilization! FOR SALE Subluate—economical four bedroom townhouse 0076 or 841-7333—2500 W. King Street 0076 or 841-7333—16:22 Excellent selection of new and used furniture trade. Trade the Furniture and Appliance Center, 7045 North Avenue, New York, NY 10026. Competitive living situation, private rooms, drive-in and lots of nice people. Rooms available 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Crier Stores. tl Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties. LIGHTING, ALUMINIUM BELT, AUTOMOTIVE, ELECTRIC, 843-9000, 2000 W, 60 hp. FUEL CELL, 843-9000, 2000 W, 60 hp. Excellent selection of used furniture, refrigerator, oven, dishwasher, towel machine, Towels, TVs, PCs, 12345 Kitchen, Wardrobe, m.p. f.m. p.m. Free Shipping 48%,7% off on warm-up suits, dresses, mark's shoes. $69 for Club Swim Clubs r. 4 west (on Moor Swim Club). $29 for Club Swim Clubs. Want to save money? Buy your used car from BMW. BMW will provide a 24-hour service. All condition. All records available. 1976 Dodge Charger. S.E. Black /h/w vinyl landau roof. Black volkswagen® tires. 4x4. Vehicle Warranty. 9,000 miles. Vehicle Service Warranty 5 years or 50,000 total accumulated miles. Must sell at least 12-13 Pentex BP500 with 1.25 inch and Pentax 1.25/ 1.35-inch lenses, equipped with a condition condition 240i complete Call 819-748-768 or phone 819-748-768. Striere, Garard furnitable. Shuttle carture, $35 McMahon, McMahon 3-85 after 5.5 days. $41 Call Greg McMahon. Aluminum Cookware, brand new set never ever opened, must sell immediately! Cathy Blen 814-326-5000 1973 Pritz, wagon, Squire duck like, new 26,000 cents in 10,000 miles. $495,000 or $895,000 or $1095,000 or $1295,000 11-25 Radial studded snow tires—FR 78-14, new condition 841-59155. 11-23 STEREO SOUND SYSTEM $350 We have one of the best home to hear you. You must really see and hear our loudest of all folks pay $190 FULL WARRANTY on a limited warranty. Cost in cash and send us your proof of warranty. We will really arrange you for STEREO SPECIALISTS' performance, price and quality. RAY AUDIO. $229 SOUND SYSTEM $ SPECIAL--Receiver, $199 SOUND SYSTEM $ SPECIAL--Receiver, $250 better than any SYNC-y you can get for the money and its on the way. You can get it at a lot about our quality. We are specialists in the trade-RAUY AUDIO 13-19 ELECTRO-VOICE SPEAKER SPECIAL Interface EVOICE Speaker Interface 257 pts. $257 per person good deal on VCR tape SPEAKER CABLE ADAPTER 168 Chv. Caprices, excellent condition, loaded. AMM tape stricter, by owner-$990 or best offer. Bellman's 24 hour service. Christmas shopping? Give a loved one the gift of music speakers or a record cleaning kit in a gift box. How about a beautiful set of headphones All from $5 up, use Rakuten. Ray Ace at 13 K. St. 30 Special R.O.M. Soh. Advised 301 cel. desk $200. $300. Real special - 15 woofer.宝德舞手柜 $200. Real special - 15 woofer.宝德舞手柜 to Booga - Limited offer $150 ea. Walnut hand bar. Limited offer $150 ea. Walnut hand bar. Real special of the month sales 11-19 10:45am-7:30pm Our selected car stallion will give you many more interactivity options than a lot of standard cars. The audio specacultats at cost less - let's look at the price again: $19,000. WARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CENTERED 15 East Bath 841-626 10.5 Monday Saturday This ad is for those of you who are looking for the best system money can afford. The system includes the sound will open your ears and pop your eyes. All for the Speaker System Ray Audit 13:11 E-10-20 The Speaker System Ray Audit 13:11 E-10-20 67 Chevy (Impala), Reasonable price, call 842-3734, 34 doors, blue. OLD ENGLISH SHEEPDOG poupes for sale, 8 price. SHEEPDOGs available at: 119. Cali 843-7401 after 5 P.M. 121. Miami 843-7401 1969 WM-1 owner - new engine, good body, complete record机. Must sell $1,000. 11-25 11-25 Knexial Skids-bindings. Nordica boots. shapes must suit. Call 843-6771. Also some 11-23 11-23 Color="14" RCA Portable, 2 years old. Perfect. Balloon $89, Call 864-601-01, 11-23 Gifts, Flowers, Bath Accessories Holiday Store Hours: Sun 12-5 Nov. 28--Dec. 23, Mon.Sat. 9-8 826 iowa 842-1320 7 SAAB 19- white, olive interior, new clutch, Moldlin tires. Need heater repair机 11-23 12-25 Alexander's Christmas Show Must sell now, -guitar with case. $40 cash takes 11-23 Bak784-1740 before 67 Olds Delmont 84 auto air, power, 76,000 miles, very good condition exceptional condition Call Paul at 924-312-6500. VW Bump - new tires, new brakes, new battery, new wheel cylinders, new master cylinder, recent power steering pump, new power window works. 842$ or best offer-must sell. 843-312-600. Shop HELP WANTED Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, offering a PhD in research, assisting and in research. Social contact is encouraged. Contact Bob McKibberts, Dept. of Human Development, ppm to 3 p.m. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Qualify by June 1st. 68 VW Fastback. Best offer. Call 842-7721 after 11:30 AVON- Earn extra money on your own time. AVON- Extra money. Full-time. 11-30. Mrs. Selia. Bldg #2. 11-30. Need delivery people. Must have own car. Apply to Eddy P驴车 in the Wheel, 907 W. 14th St. 11-23 LOST AND FOUND Mother's Week Live in Lake Quivant, to care week he wears his jacket and board. One day off per week, he visits and board. Models wanted for photography content. Good. prize Write Box 20, Lewisworth, Kentucky, 600F or 800E. Needed immediately 2 juniors at Wakara hours each week worked around school schools. Found. Light jacket found Monday by Allen Field House. Huge, colorful contents of pocket to be found. 844-294-994. Found: A bus pass at bus stop Wed. Pred. Call 841-238. Keep to try. Turquoise ring at or near Quantrill's 11/15. Great sentimental value. Reward: 843-6025 anytime. Lost: box marked "Campus Christmas Dee, 7.5% ofMitte meantie for use at year-end shindig for KU students. Must have it back to shindig with 2,000 books. Reward. Call 11-20- 844-109- Lot: foster, containing manuscript and letters. Reward: James Binger. 864-3200. 11-23 Found: silver银链 in 4023 Wescow on Thurs, 19. Nov. 18 Call #3847-396 and 11:30 Loc: Red Coral Neckchurch Nov. 17, Reward? Please lost Barge at 864-2198. Keeping 12. 3 MISCELLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ulrich/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday- Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 12 noon. NOTICE CABASH CAFE- Good food from scratch. Lunch with salad and potato bake at 10:30, 20:30, 28:30, 36:30. Mass. Bake, backyard bake, or barbecue. POTTER WANTED for Anthology Include Award-winning P.O. Box 5064, San Francisco, California RESUME PACKAGE. includes samples, instruct- ures and training materials for the expe- lence Mail to RSVP; Resume B: 10-16 607-495-2100; Resume C: 10-16 607-495-2100. A good selection of used furniture, teak furniture, solid wood furniture, hardwood furniture, soft- wood furniture. 1-978-3252, 1025 F, T60; Ke. Free hardcover catalogue. Attention: Waterbill papers and Energy Conservation water with products designed for toilet, shower and faucets. They pay for the installation and faucets they call or write McKinley, 1211 Oread, Lawrence, KC 60444 12-11 Enroll now! in Lawrence Drive School, Rehman Central Paradise Test. Drive now, pay later, $50/week. Central Paradise Test. Drive now, pay later, $50/week. Freshman Girl: Third year Washburn law student soon to be prominent Washburn attorney is shooting for a record fifth district. & Write: Mort Buckley, 2324 Brirau PL, No. 307, Topek Ks. 664 PERSONAL KARATE AND SELF-DEFENSE instruction by national champions 824-824, 835) Mass. 12-8 Gay Counseling Service; call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals. Ski Jan. 2-9, Jackson Wole, Hym. $180, Package everything but food contact Roy, 841, $180, Package everything but food contact Roy, 841 Need help, a referrer, or just someone to talk to CALL HEADQUARTERS. 814-355. We never clutch. www.headquarters.com Protenter Brieker's magic show-dont miss during a HAULED AFFAIR! Dec. 2-4. 11-23 CHARILE MASSON: I LOVE stars in our eyes from underwater activities. Keep going! 11-30 Jugging and Clarence Dillingham as Saint Lucie, more secure at a HOLIDAY Farm, Dec. 24, 11-32 Attention G.P. We are in business again! The numbers for December 4, 2015, and December 4, 2016, are correct. You know the numbers. Seeking people with diverse interest for purposes of BS (brainimaging)* 81-918 or 11-928 *** *** 11.29 Feeling inside out! Let us turn you around with a massage at Headmasters 89 Vermont Ave. 11-23 Need help on brams! You aren't alone. Come to me in Danforthom Church! Sponsored by the Christian Society of Danforthom Church! Excellent instruction in guitar, banjo as well as violin. Classes are available on more than five times available. Keyboard Studio. HEY, BEAUTIFUL! If this is you (attractive female in a Playboy Bunny Photo Context), call 825-2805 and make my offers, of $2.00 for first book, of $1.50 for second book, for someone else; call me anyway and offer a $5.00 gift card to playboybunnys.com. SELL OR TRADE 61 VW sunroof, intreg, running but poor condition. Sell for parts/trade small boat. 842-9385. SERVICES OFFERED Not happy with your bike! Maybe you need a bike rack, or an electric bike, or an entire bike, lubricate and adjust your derailers, brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your brakes and chain Need a new bikie? See and see the largest selection of quality bicycles. Lawrence has to bring Along with our need Software for Mon-Sat. Mon-Sat. Thursday 8:30, Sun-1, 4-12:30 W. 60, 842-653-63. Thurs. 8:30, Sun-1, 4-12:30 W. 60, 842-653-63. HALF AS MUCH Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing • Furniture • Antiques • Imported Clothing 730 Mass. 841-7070 TYPING Typist/editor. IBM Pica/ite. Quality work. Writing dissertations. Welcome calls. 842-917-8271. Don't Say 'Sce'? See me for all your sewing needs: 1258-7637-8668 all types of sews 1258-7637-8668 WANTED Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mice, misc. Expenses 843-505. Mrs. Wright. 843-505. Mrs. Wright. Typing on elite electric typewriter, Proofreading, promotional service. No tissues please. Mr H. 11-23 12-23 I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. New address. ACAPEDIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands on papers from 1958 to 2006. No. 266, Los Alamitos, California. Copyright 2006. THISIS HINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us handle your 858 Massachusetts or phone 482-3731. Thank you. Room Stowhouse to share partially furnished smoking room. To request a room, smoke. Available 2nd semester. Call 831-0979- 3124. Experimented typify. THERES ONLY. Will type 1380. At atau at-6441-351 days. Will type 1740-796 days. At atau at-6441-351 days. Will type 1740-796 days. Need male rominate to build 2 barm apf. for second semester. $$5 a month. Average 11-30 weeks. 11-30 Math Tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 0001, 0011, 0022, 0033, 0044, 0055, 0066, 0077, 0088, 0099, 366, 555, 627, 648. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7651. Boonmute to share two bedroom duplex for spring semester. Call 842-7527 after 6 p.m. 12-8 Looking for married couple who plan to be in Lawrensburg, PA or for weekend man or woman. Park 25 off Ithaca Ave. Grad-student desks roommate for 5th semester to take over homework and Jawahar层子 11-23 B44 - 814 - 6061 One or two female roommates to share a 3-bedroom apartment for spring semester. Call Zita One female roommate to Towers AI. In apt; in room 210, 215, attics furnished, i414-615, 11-8 room 31, 315, attics furnished, i414-615, 11-8 Female roommate needs for spring mattress. $75 for 180 sq ft. Gauchey; Gallant Mail: 422-869-604 after 2:00-M-F. Female roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom apartment with two other female roommates. B2-824-604-12-1 Need place to live January-February. Call 644-821-7500, message airline information at 844-293-1298. Borotla (No. 647). Phone: 844-293-1298. Aztec Inn Aztec Inn Nride Hide to N.Y.C. or nearby area for two- Christmas. Nride 864-6216. Call Stuart After 7:00. 12-6 American and Mexican Food All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont 842-9455 STATESMAN The Lounge HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service - Pinball - Football "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." - Bud on Tap Sou... Lot Hillercrest Ave 843-9812 Open Daily 10 a.m..Midnight Except Sunday 1811 W. 6th Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4 Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl FELDS The Chalk Hawk - Pool COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS Mattresses - Liners Heaters - Frames Bedspreads - Fitted Sheets WATERBEDS 712Mass. St. Home of Tba Chalk Hawk TRY HILLCREST BILLIARDS ● Pool ● Snooker ● Ping Pong ● Pin-Ball ● Air Hockey ● Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted Downtown Lawrence 842-7187 Keep your car healthy in the summer. Use the student discounts at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W.23rd 842-4152 Happy car --- 4 Tuesday, November 23, 1976 University Dally Kansan Comment (Obinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. Win ices fallen cake Because of circumstances such as losing star quarterback Nolan Cromwell in mid-season, KU football coach Bud Moore said the Jayhawk's surprising 41-14 victory over Missouri Saturday was the best win the team had bad since he became head coach. "We've had a great deal of adversity," Moore said. JAYHAWK FOOTBALL teams are certainly no strangers to adversity. The victory over Mizzou gave them a 6-5 record and their first back-to-back winning seasons in 14 years. There have been highlights such as the team's trips to the 1969 Orange Bowl and last year's Sun Bowl, but those 14 years are full of long streaks of bad luck, frustrated hopes and unfulfilled dreams. KU has traditionally suffered from an inability to get it all together, no matter how promising the team looks in the preseason. But as a local sports writer pointed out this fall, hope springs eternal in the hearts of Jayhawk football fans. Saturday's thrilling satisfying victory was a good reason why. THE TEAM could have given up and just gone out and run through the motions against a team that had already beaten three of the top teams in the nation. KU had suffered bad luck and bad breaks in losing four of their last six games, but also having an inexperienced quarterback. Probably few fans would have thought badly of them they lost. Instead, as safety Skip Sharp said after the game, they just got "guided up" and went out and totally dominated a good football team. That says a lot about the spirit and determination of the players and the coaches. The victory not only gives the team and its fans a surely needed morale boost, it plants the seeds of hope for next year. Linebacker Terry Beeson said it showed that if you worked hard and faced adversity, something good would come from it. He's right. Hearty congratulations are in order for the Jayhawks, coach Bud Moore and his staff. We know it's been rough. Pollution is a bad solution Bv John Fuller Contributing Writer In the waning days of the 'ate political campaign the accidental President found himself in the Pacific Northwest telling the aircraft workers that, thanks to the administration's environmental noise standards, the airline industry worked with the airport to buy new silent swifteys and more jobs would be created for people in that region of the country. It was a strange statement by the head of an administration that had opposed environmental protections on the grounds that they cost jobs and slow down the economy. TWO STRIP mining bills were veted by Ford on those grounds. As with the specifics of its use, there could have been obvious that, if strip mining is prohibited, deep tunneling, which needs more and more power, and the power, will have to be used. If the airlines must scrap half their jets and the coal industry isn't allowed to use the cheapest technology available to it, airplanes are going to cost more and so is coal and electricity and everything else made from coal. But raising the prices doesn't axiomatically cost jobs. Ninion does it cause inflation. Ninion does it cause inflation. Inflation is when all the prices rise, when the price level rises. Prices for individual products rise for all kinds of reasons such as an increase in demand or shortages, strikes by workers making the same thing in pi-ty air and green-scan drinking water weep about the costs, they don't explain that those so-called costs constitute major part of the new industries created by environmental issues. "... the cumulative costs of pollution abatement could lie in the trillion dollar range by the middle of the '80s—comparable Nicholas Von Hoffman (c) 1974 King Features Syndicate competitive shops and on and on bird and bunny crowd," or railing, at "environmental concerns." Fortune does, it might help to calculate the benefits as well as the costs. Unhappily, the traditional bookkeeping of the Western World is set up only to figure costs. "Eighty-one industrial plants employing 18,000 people have been forced closed," Fortune tells us, but makes no estimate of how many environmental standards have created. When the advocates of The Democrats aren't likely to reduce arms expenditures, but as long as both parties are committed to achieving an end to high government spending, it's very important that arms not be allowed to be the only or the most significant form that spending can take. Sums comparable to those wasted in the Pentagon are being wasted in education and medicine and, although non-military spending makes no difference in narrowly economic terms, the plusses for these activities will do aside. It's very important that billions for water treatment plants and other nonwar objectives remain popular and respectable. Even so, the economy and sanity would be better served if our environmental efforts were carried out less wastefully and with greater environmental regulation favors currently existing large corporations if for no other reason than they have the dollar volume to handle the paper work and red tape. Moreover, environmental regulation can raise the costs of going into business for our new competition for older, established giants. THE PRO-piggy crowd at Fortune and elsewhere have a point when they bring up these kinds of objections. They also make sense when they say that the same environmental objectives can be reached, not by regulation and the clanking bureacurity that implies, but by some sort of use tax. Companies that pollute are charged or taxed for the costs of undoing their mess. Companies that don't pollute don't pay. It isn't much different from a city government saying to a factory—we charge so much a factory carbage off. Or you can hire a scavenger to take care of the mess yourself, or you can develop a process in your factory so that you don't have any garbage. Standard regulatory structures and procedures can't be applied to problems like the environment. We have to learn how to regulate without it. We have to because there is a bt of Ferdinand in most of us. Besides, we need the jobs. to the outlays for defense or education." Unthinkable that we should spend that kind of money to satisfy the Ferdinand the Bull complexes of people who won't settle for love but who can't afford a poets one sniffed—"the health-at-any-price view," sneers Fortune, which has no objection to defense at any price. Yet we have every reason to believe that our toxic environment takes American lives every year than the Russians do. PRESIDENT CHUNG HEE PARK THE BUCK STARTS HERE MIAMI NEWS THE ECONOMIC effects of spending money on war material and munitions and spending it on preserving the environment are rather similar. The basic difference is that identical sequences aren't, although both kinds of expenditures do create employment. Senate events power unsound The Student Senate seems ready to join the crowd. The Senate's Rights, Responsibilities and Privileges Committee has studied the events committee and will have been invited. They would put the events committee under the Senate's jurisdiction. Pity the University Events Committee. For most of this semester people have been disputing its decisions and questioning its origins, jurisdiction and power. The bill would also change the committee from 14 faculty and staff members and nine students to eighty members and nine students. THE BEHAVIOR of bureaucracies and committees is usually quite interesting. Unfortunately, it can also be displeasing. Committees are rather famous for slow action, bureaucratic decisions and arbitrary decisions. I have never served on the events committee, but I know from talking to past and current members that the committee has sometimes had these problems. The committee has been jealous of its power at times, denying requests that seemed legitimate because the applicants didn't follow procedure to a tee, or because the applicant had tried to get around the committee and failed. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 16, 2013. Subscription prices vary by date. June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscription fee by mail $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. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Manager Editing Editor Associate Campus Editor Causus Editor Stewart Brann Associate Campus Editor Bill Sniffen Assistant Campus Editor Sibia Swann Photo Editor Chuck Alexander George Repapers Dave Bregner George Repapers Geoff Koehler Sports Editor Steve Koehler Assistant Sports Editor Gary Viee Assistant Sports Editor Elizabeth Leech Assistant Entertainment Editor Elizabeth Leech Contributing Writers Anni Haugheimer, John Fuller, Greg Hack Copy Chiefs Greg Hack Make-up Editor Chuck Alexander Make-up Editor Baldwin Dennis Vohorliy Jay Bemini Business Manager Ferne Hansen Assistant Business Manager Carole Roosterhouse Advertising Manager Jian Clementes Marketing Manager Clarisse Monkey Classified Manager Karen McAnahy Marketing Manager Sarah O'Malley National Advertising Manager Timothy O'Shen Artist MANY COMMITTEE members represent different interests at the University, and as often occurs with humans, these interests can get in the way of impartial decisions on important issues and facilities. My knowledge is again second-hand, but it comes Business Advisor Mel Adams Administrators on the committee have many things to do, so much of their days are spent with organizational tasks. Because they are blame, they come to expect attention to detail and orderly process. Legislate requests that disrupt the normal order and ask to make many changes in the way the attention they deserve. Greg Hack Contributing Writer from "reliable sources," and I have heard committee members tell of instances where they were inwardly hearted by such self-interest. VET THE events committee usually does a more than adequate job. Despite having most of the flaws of any big event, the events committee accomplishes much and serves KU. The plan to put the committee under the Student Senate's thumb is a bad idea. For all that can be said against the events committee, it can't be said that it lacks expertise. The faculty and staff members have their own reasons for not taking this very fact that gives them a wealth of knowledge about most parts of the University. THE PROPOSAL doesn't have much practicality. The Senate won't do a good job if it tries to review all events committee decisions—that would be too much to do. So how would the Senate decide which decisions to discuss? The student members of the events committee (as they are informed, but then you have a handful of students who can gain support for their (not always unbiased) views by manipulating the Senate. At the risk of sounding elitist, the events committee has many members who usually know what is going on at the conference. Most student senators, in contrast, have trouble understanding what is going on in just the Student Senate. The change in the committee from 14 to five faculty and staff members would be bad, too, because it would slash the events committee's pool of knowledge and increase the size of the committee members not representing diverse interests. You could have a majority of the events committee overruled in effect by any student members who could sell their votes to the Senate, which seldom understands complex issues. The events committee, like all of us, can be improved. But the way to do it is by having the committee open-minded, not by putting the committee under senators who too often play games or by stripping the committee of most knowledgeable members. FURTHERMORE, no harm has been shown in having a faculty and staff major on the events committee. Like it or not, many students on the team work hard and go along with the tide as well as or better than the best administration bureaucrats. There does remain a question of rights and rules, because the KU Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct does state: "Authority for the learning student non-academic conduct residues in the Student Senate." events. This point does need to be cleared up by the chancellor or the university counsel, but there is no reason this part of a code necessarily means the committee will over the events committee. But clearly this doesn't mean the Student Senate has sole power over such conduct, and it is important to have power in any way related to scheduling. Letters Execution immoral Mary Ann Daugherty's shallow analysis of the Gilmore case (Kansan, Nov. 18) was outie disturbing. To the Editor: the ning is that compared with the other two theater productions I've seen this year, "Rashomon" is a refreshing bread choice. Joe and Everybody's SOME body's. Mother (Sometime) was so bad it made my mind hurt. It may be rough in places, but "Rashomon" has some style, some wit and a delightful sort of oriental, black humor resolution along with interesting theatrics. She claims Gilmore has exercised free will in arriving at his decision to die. Does this mean that Mary Ann honestly feels that free will truly exists when one's only choices are that of a slow car or a slow cell or an expedient, violent death at the hands of a bunch of amateur marksmans? I don't think so. She goes on to express her disillusionment with those interest groups that are working against these deals. She says that these groups "should be crusading for him, not against him." Somehow Mary Ann has been able to construe the efforts of those groups so as to avoid capital punishment as being anti-Gilmore. What is so intolerable about doing everything possible to prevent somebody's chest from being exposed by five 30-caliber bullets? - "mashomun" is the KU entry to the American Theater Festival, and one can only hope that its competition is poor so it can retain the honors KU won with "Concomsona last year." The crowning absurdity of Mary Ann's piece came when she charged those who are ultimately responsible for making the weighty decision not to lose sight of the fact that "Gilmore is the only one who really matters." Nonsense! A decision to go ahead and blow Glmore all over the Utah prison yard would have far-reaching effects on the other 700 residents of Death Row. It would only be a matter of time before those others become convicted of legally sanctioned murder. In a society governed by reason rather than emotion, we can't accept the fact that one man is able to render ultimate judgement over another. No matter how hideous the crimes He's showing his concern for theater at its best. ("Come on kids, tonight we're playing the Big Eight in theater!") of these convicted individuals may have been, we must force ourselves to realize the finality of a death sentence and the gross immorality of imposing it. It may be argued that Hammurab was old of his time, but certainly not by 4,000 years. Jeffrey Byrd Chicago, Ill. senior There was an amusing quote in last Friday's Kansan. It came at the end of your critic's disappointment: the theater review Church upheld In response to Mr. Fuller (Kansan, Nov. 18), first, the church has no doctrine that designates the number of children a couple may or may not have. It simply rejects the rule of use of chemicals and devices. It says that, because of the life principle involved in the procreative process, a denial of this must be matched with a spiritual awareness brought on by another denial, that the life principle of mutual charity flow can't just be turned off and on and rejected without responsibility. To the Editor: As a result, it stresses the natural rhythm method, which can be very exact and precise. It is a denial of the sacredness of life. What remains is the willingness of men and nations to assume this attitude. Continuing, the bishops didn't say thatosexuals were immoral and so "condemned," but merely that the state is abnormal and it is the act that is immoral. The bishops have a special call to chastity and, also, the grace inherent in a special struggle. In closing, surely Mr. Fuller must realize even if he may not understand the ground from Secondly, abortion isn't merely an unsolvable debate. It is an indisputable, biological reality, which is a destruction of human life. which certain beliefs may spring that if morality does exist it certainly doesn't become unsustainable because it is no longer "practical" or "contemporary". As if anything happens, the ability to shift nature of what is "now" or what is utilitarian. The thought amazes me. The whole article bespeaks an unfamiliarity with the spiritual qualifier of looking at the world through the context of the spirit, the soul, and the universe, which is God, and not merely what is touchable, or measurable, or "practical". Thomas Krische Lawrence junior Play has style, wit To the Editor: Steve Miller Waverly graduate student Earth YOU MUST UNDERSTAND... DEMOCRACY INDRA THAT... INDRA STAMP STAMP WHAT I'M... DOING HERE... IS REALLY ONLY... TEMPORARY. Altho be incer during last we student YOU MUST UNDERSTAND... DEMOCRACY INDIA THAT..." INDIA WHAT I'M... STORM STOMP "Peo basic t possibil referer John said th librari also stu DOING HERE" IS REALLY ONLY" TEMPORARY. 1978 NWT SPECIAL FEATURES D How ficialie the rese avenue could needed CLA Accom ment are of sex, c BRING Subl. Jam. AC. Sub- mest. For Uni- Call SUB App n Tuesday, November 23, 1976 5 paper over, can into aging older, wd at have a these also may that al ob- not by nanking os, but te are costs of appanies pay. It a city a fac- cace off, anger to yourself, access in u don't struc- can't be like the you learn out so effects. there is a at it of us. abs. University Daily Kansan is may you does doesn't becauseae nothing anything ends on a "now" n. The whole world spiritual the world se spirit, of the and not able, or acca'i Krische e junior wit ing quote asian. It critic's disap- ow. U. entry Theater only hope KU won kU won it year." "occur for Come on paying the laces, but me style, ful sort of humor with in- compared the theater this year, his freshening elf 'he was sorry for the accident' other bad it te student --areas are even available in residence halls and other living groups, he said. ORARY. Early research beats the late library rush Although hours at Watson Library won't be increased to cope with increased usage during school, library administrators said they would have to adjust if students planned their schedules well. "People should get in here and do the basic research on final papers as soon as possible," Clint Howard, associate reference librarian, said Friday. Howard said that people having difficulties using the library should inquire at the reference desk where the assistants were aware of all possible research materials to see the librarians could also be arranged if more help was needed, he said. John Glinka, associate dean of libraries, said that students should be aware of other libraries around campus where they could also study and find relevant material. Study "There won't be any changes in the library guidelines for additional student help or longer hours during finals," he said. "One of our problems here is that we try to spread our service over the calendar year, but unfortunately cut back time the vacation." Increases in student library use was noticeable during the past two weeks, and this should continue through the first two weeks of December. Glikla said. Rod Runyan, head of security and delivery at Watson, agreed. "We usually average about 2,500 people coming in through the turnstiles every day between Monday and Friday. For the first time we arrived, however, we had close to 3,000," he said. Ballet, world premiere highlight 80 events in fine arts program "We're expanding this year. There will be 80 events in 25 days," Howard Collinson, Fine arts committee chairman, said Friday. *currs are being made final for SUA's* *spring semester fine arts celebration,* *by the Currents* The celebration, which will last from Feb. 10 until March 6, will feature six main events, Collinson said, including a performance by Joffrey II, a small classical ballet troupe associated with the New York City Center Joffrey Ballet, and the world premiere of Paul Stephen Lain's play "Libération," a Trilogy on Sexual Liberation." Lim, Philippines graduate student, was awarded the American College Theatre Festival prize last March for his play, "Conversations." “ACCENT THE ARTS” also will include a performance by the national touring Call the KANSAN 864-4810 Do you have any news tips? company of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"; a piano recital by Seacosta Costa, world renowned concert pianist and KU professor of piano, and an exhibition in the Kansas University Gallery of works by Colette Bangert, Lawrence artist. Parts for All Imports Student Discounts For All Imports at Discounts JAMES GANG FOREIGN AUTO PARTS your BANKAMERICARD welcome here master charge the best price Mon.-Fri., 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 843-8080 304 Locust John Tallner, professor of art, has been commissioned to create a poster for "Accent the Arts." Collinson said that five originals and 50 prints of a limited signed edition of the poster would be sold through the SUA office during the festival. Collison said that informal noon concerts by fine arts students and faculty would be held in the Strong Hall lobby during Accent the Arts. 1977 HONDA EXPRESS 0 2 it's automatic, gets ap- ples for gear, and is almost maintenance-free. Stop by and learn to ride with no objection. See it at Horizon's website. 图示为飞机飞行状态示意图。 Christmas FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST Make reservations now! No extra cost for our services. Thanksgiving Maupintour travel service Phone: 843-1211 KU Union/The Malls/Hillcrest/900 Mass KANSAN WANT ADS --one two three four five the times times times times Accommodations, goods. services and employment advertised in the University Daly Kaanan are offered to all students without regard to their background. BING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES Watch the want ads in the Kansan AD DEADLINES time times times times times 15 words or each additional word .02 $.20 $.25 $.25 $.75 $3.00 .01 .02 .02 .04 .04 .05 Monday 5 p.m. Tuesday 5 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS 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. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Complete sculpture. Mermalds. Unicorns, etc. Metal stone cutting. Saturation guarantee. 841-3833. UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 FOR RENT Sub-leasing Meadowbrook brook for second se- cond call John 1.5 P.M. 841-6075. 11-23 3) for exam preparation 'New Analeys of Civilization' available now at Town Crier Stores. tf SUBLASE 2 = bbmrt. apt., alg. and water pdp. Appliances furnished, $175. On bus line, 841-3234. For rent to student an apartment close to Kemaskan is available. Paid. Parking Available. 12-18 Call 843-7597 Subluate 1 bdm, unfurnished Gadget apartment, 2 bdm, not include IMC, includes heat ACI 41-2911-89, heat 2-82 Sublease space, furnished Meadowbrook studio and the second semester. Availabd Dec 15-18 10am-4pm. (23) 876-952-7122 Furnished sleeping room, share bath, some cooking Inquire 764 Illinois, evenings. 11-23 Western Civilization Notes—On Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization makes sense to Sublase—economical four bedroom townhouse 801 or 733-2743, Trailings 2500 W. 6th or 647-8343, 12-2 Subclass be clean 2 bedroom, unfurnished apartm bus route. Available 1 Bed, Call 814-7242 after routing. FOR SALE STERERO COMPONENTS FOR LESS - Redirected of any price you see on popular hifi equipment other than factor models or dump out products, and other than KDFS or those at the GAMPHONO SHOP at KIFES. 1U Conservative living situation, private rooms, driver and lot of nice people. Rooms available. Excellent selection of new and used furniture from the inventory. Trade the Furniture and Appliance Center, 704-832-3991. 1) As study guide 2) For class preparation Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties: BELLY AUCTION, ELECTRIC, 830-8650, 2000 W. 94th, B1. BELLY AUCTION, ELECTRIC, 830-8650, 2000 W. 94th, B1. Excelent selection of used furniture, refi- fierer and storage units. Prices are $150 per room. 11am to 8pm. $2 m-Friday; $4-$6 pm-Saturday. Hire late only. 40%-75% off on warm-up suits, dresses, man's shorts and wetsuit's. eateries, a. Altavista Club, Club City, 215-869-6300. Want to save money? buy your used car from a local dealership. All service condition. All service records available. 1976 Dodge Charger, S.E. Black h/w black vinyl landau roof. Black leather interior. Powder coat. 2003 Mopar vehicles. Vehicle Service Warranty 5 years or $0.00 total accumulated miles. Must sell at a less than $14,999 price. Pentix SP500 with 1.2/5 lens and Pentax 1.2/5 lens condition 2000 call Call 819-730-6980 or condition 2000 call Call 819-730-6980 Storrie. Garard turntable. Shure cartridge, am- plifier. McBach 800. after $25. Shure cartridge, McBach 400. after $35. Shure cartridge, McBach 11-25. Aluminum Cookware, brand new set never opened, must sell immediately. Call Brian 11-23 1972 Pinto wagon, Squire deluxe, like new, 26.00 knips or $850 in best condition; 4-axed, by two owners or $1800 or best offer; 424-900 in best condition. Radialstudied smoked fires—FR 78-14, new condition. 841-5915. 11-23 **STEREO SYSTEM SYSTEM $300** We have one of our on-site rooms to house you. You must really see and hear our home sound. You will receive a lot of folks pay $100 to $200 for the limited warranty, Come in and hear our special offer. We are very happy that really amaze you. It will be much better than ever. **STEREO SPECIALISTS** We deliver performance, price and quality. Please call us at (864) 759-2828. 8229 SOUND SYSTEM SPECIAL- Receiver; R-8229; SOUND ELECTRO-VOICE SPEAKER SPECIAL Interface for 802.11n and 802.11g Wireless $75 tip. A good real good VU (34 hz) with an 802.11n wireless adapter. EACH IS $75. 1983 Chev. Caprice, excellent condition, loaded, tape stereo, by owner-$990 for 8-12 842-5094 The car is equipped with a power window. $2,799 Christmas shopping? Give a loved one the gift of music, books or a decorative cleaning kit in a gift box. How about some new shoes or headphones. All from $5 up. Please shop at us online at www.us-shop.com H 13-30 W 11-30 Special O.M.B. Salem, Advent 201 call desk $269 Special O.M.B. Sweetwater, Advent 201 call desk $349 Real special - 15' winder, 8' booster Drive; to Boga's Limited offer $150 ca. Walnut land off; Special off the end of the month sale off; Special off the end of the month sale 1-10 Our selected car stores will give you more satisfaction. We'll be happy to help. Let the experts attend at our cost less! Let us guide your shopping experience. YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT RUGS—CANVAS—CREWEL THE CREWEL CREWEL 15 East 8th 844-2664 10.5 Monday-Saturday This ad is for those of you who are looking for a performance around the Allison; three speakers, the sound will open your ears and pop your eyes. All for 10 minutes. The Audit Ray Audit 11:30-12:10 The Speaker Specialists. OLD ENGLISH SIEBEEPDP puppies for sale. 8 Male. Called BADGER. Age 12-18. 12-18 Call 641-804-05 after 5 P.M. Gifts, Flowers, Bath Accessories Holiday Store Hours: Sun. 12-5 Nov. 28—Dec. 23, Mon.-Sat. 9-8 826 iowa 842-1320 Kneisel Skims-blindings, Nordica Boots. Good masks—must sell. Call 843-6771. Also good Indian shoes. 1969 WV—I owner-new engine, good body. Complete maintenance record Must sell $1,000—$11,233 Alexander's Christmas Show 7 SAAB 99- white, olive interior. New clutch. Micrin tires. Needs heat repair only. 11-23 Color="14" RCA Portable, 2 years old. Perfect. $160, Calm 864-601-1, 11-23 67 Olda Debonet 88 auto air, power, 78,000 miles 68 Olda Debonet 88 auto air, power, 78,000 miles 69 Olda Debonet 8500 Call 642-3164-1264 70 Olda Debonet 8500 Call 642-3164-1264 Must sell new-guitar with case. $40 cash takes 11-23 $84, 761 after 5. 64 VW BW; new tires, new brakes, new battery; 60 VW BW; new tires, new brakes, new battery; 60 VW BW (6,000 miles) sleek, deck, everything new. For sale: Motobecle bicycle. Only 2 months old. excellent condition. Call Pauli 16:23 11-23 HELP WANTED 68 VW Fastback. Best offer. Call 842-7721 after 11:30 Shov AVON-EN extra money on your own time. AVON- Full-time. Full-time. A1: 30 Mir. Sells. 842-8162 LOST AND FOUND Need delivery people. Must have own car. Apply to the Wheels 207 W. 14th St. B. 11-23 Mother's Week Live in Lake Quitaqu, to care weekly with her husband and children, weekly help with cleaning and board. One day off with her husband and board. Needed immediately 2 juniants at Wakaraus Mauze. Hours are required around school time. Models wanted for photography content. Good color for box 211, Leeworthown, Kansas, 6000. Yellow for box 212, Leeworthown, Kansas, 6000. Found: A bus pass at Hooh bus stop Wed. P.M. Ball 841-2381. Keep trying. Found. Light jacket found Monday by Aller Field Foundation. Call 864-299-7100 for pocket knife. Call 864-299-7100 for wallet. Lost: Sue box marked "Campus Christmas, Dec. 3" full of mistletoe meant for use at year-end shindig for KU students. Must have it back to school with 3,000 books. Reward: Call 11-3084-8419 Torquefire ring at or near Quantity II 11/15. Great sentimental value. Rudges. 843-6025 anytime. Found: silver necklace in 2012 Wesco on Thurs. Nov. 18: Call 864-2976 and claim. 11-30 Lost: folder containing manuscript and letters. Reward. James Binger. 842-5200. 11-23 Lout: Red Coral Necklace Nov. 17, Reward! Please Lotr: Bendred @ 864-2198. Keeping. 12-3 *** MISCELLANEOUS PRINTING WHILE YOU WASH is available at Alice in the House of Uber/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 12 noon. *Must NOTICE CASSAN SAH - Good food from sarratch. Lunch 10:30 2:30 3:20 4:30 Miss. Tea a backpacker even if you don't eat much. Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, bed- pan, luggage, clock televisions. Open daily 12-5p to 7pm. POETRY WANTED for Anthology Include *A Short Story by Catherine S. P.O. Box 5646, San Francisco, California RESUME PACKAGE: includes sample, illustrations, and resume materials. Mail 50 to: Resume Box, 216 W. Washington Blvd., Suite 317, Washington, DC 20005. Unique collection of Green jewels made by Jewish artisans in New York City. 813 New Hampshire 1-5 Saturday nights at Joffrey's on Broadway. Attention: Waterbill bills payers. Energy Conservation: Water bills payers. Water with products designed for toilet, shower and faucets. They produce water for cleaning. Information call or write. Tim. Scribner, 1211 Oral Lawn, Lawyer. Km. 6048-14-11 Enroll now! in *Lawrence Driving School*, re- lational to the Lawrence High School. Passed Pa- tion Test Drive, pass date later. Click here to enroll. Freshmen Girl, Third year Washburn law student to be prominent Wichita attorney is shooting for the record Has dated freshman girl in case of pregnancy. 324 Baird Pl. FL, No. 307, Topka, Ks. 6611. 324 Baird Pl. FL, No. 307, Topka, Ks. 6611. PERSONAL KARATE AND SELF-DEFENSE instruction by nationally champion Baskin, 824-834, Mass. 12-28 Gay Counseling Service; call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for queries. Shi Jan. 2-9: Jackson Wole, Hym. $180; Package everything but food contact Contact 11-23 Professor Bricker's magic show don't miss it during A HOLIDAY AFFE! CHEAT 1-12, 11-23 Seeking people with diverse interest for purposes of BS (Brainstorming) 81-491 or 81-123 | | | | :--- | :--- | | 1 | 11-123 | Need help, a referral, or just someone to talk to HELDAQARTERS, 814-235. We never cloak him. Attention G.P. We are in business again! The phone number is 714-328-1200. Contact us, you know the number December 4. Contact us, you know the number CHARLIE MASSON I LOVE stars in our eyes under unrestricted activities. Keep going. 11-20 Jugging and Clarence Dillingham at Santa Fri, 10am -- come attend a A HOLIDAY Fair, Dec. 2, 11-12am Need help on snacks? You won't stare. Come to the Christian Chaptel Spent. You sponsor by the Christian Chapel Spent. Excellent instruction in guitar, bass, as well as piano. Also, an additional three available Rock Bassard Studios on campus; three available Rock Bassard Studios on campus. HEY, BEAUTIFUL! If this is you (attractive feature for a woman) you should have your Photos' Camera put on. Call 842-3805 or www.heybeautiful.com to make my opponents offer of $2,000 for first place. You will get your opponent's money for someone else; call me anyway and other friends to help you out. SELL OR TRADE 61. VW mw unroot, unreg, running but poor condition. Sell for parts/rate small trade. 842-9735. SERVICES OFFERED Not happy with your bike! Maybe you need a bike lift to adjust your entire bike, lubricate and adjust your brakes and chain, truss both wheels, adjust your tires, lubricate and adjust your accessories bought at time of "time-out". Rates: 10 speed $150.50, 3 or 5 speed $152.50, 6-speed $154.50, single speed $158.50, single speed $650. Professional supplies. HALF AS MUCH Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawesen has to offer! Bring your own bike for use in Cyclery. 4-Mon-Sat, Thurs, till 8:30, $30, Sun-1-4, 1828 W, 8th, 642-6363. Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing • Furniture • Antiques • Imported Clothing *Can't Saw?* See me for all your sewing needs: *All types of all items* *647-765 between 12-8 TYPING Math Tutoring—competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses in math, algebra, pre-algebra, or calculus. 123, 124, 125, 136, 368, 528, 627, 646. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Rateable rate. B4-782-761. ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERPS Thoughts on Research in the Field of Acupuncture 1820 Abbott Ave. No. 266, Los Angeles, CA 90037 Experienced typist—term paper, tests, misc. Experienced typist—writing, spelling, spelling. 843-5036, Mr. Wright. WANTED Tysipl editor, IBM Pixelecite. Quality work. Help with printing, distortions welcome. Call 842-917-9128 THEISK BINDING COPYING. The House of Uther's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us help you with $85 Massachusetts & phone 342-7631. Thank you. I do damned good typing. Peggy 823-4576. New address. EXPETT TYPING. Fast and accurate, resonable text. Mini minor grammar校准. CALL 912-852-3480 12-8 Experimented typed `THRESS ONLY` will type the results of a test with the specified atoms at 864-831) days, 1474-1960 days, and so on. Typping on elite electronic typewriter. Proofreading prompt service. No thème please. Mrs H. 11-23 Joe B. Male Rescue to share partially furnished house $520 / mo. Male Rescue to share partially furnished house $650 / mo. Male Rescue to share partially furnished house $800 / mo. Second counsel. #843-0197. Second counsel. #843-0197. Need male roommate to2 b婴儿, apt. for second semester, $$ as a month, a month. 11-30 11-30 Looking for married couple who plan to be in Lawrence a courthouse or for weekend man/woman outings. Park 25 off office. Roommaill to share two bedroom duplex for spring semester. Call 842-782-36 after p. 19. b. Roommaill to share one bedroom duplex for spring semester. Call 842-782-36 after p. 19. Grad-student desks roommate for and between bedroom apartment bed 641-6166 11-23 bedroom apartment bed 641-6166 11-23 One or two female roommates to share a 3-bed- room apartment for spring semester. 11-23 11-25 One female roommate for Towers Apt. in spring, own room, BUIs; utilities included 841-659-136 and 841-659-137. Female roommate needs for spring therapy. 822 Female roommate needs for gym. Gailapt Ampt 140 6641 after 2:00 P.M. 12-11 Female roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom apartment with two other roommates 101-825-8004 101-825-8004 32-1 Need place to live January-February. Call 864-1234 phone date anytime at 864-1234 - 999 or NB (999) 750-2222. 中国人民银行 [730Mass.841-7070] Nickelson to N.Y.C. or nearby are for two- Christmas. 844-621-69. Call Stantater 720-12. 12-6 Aztec Inn American and Mexican Food All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont 842.9455 Pinball - Foosball The Lounge Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." - Bud on Tap Home of HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service MOTORCYCLE Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl 1811 W. 6th Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4 - Pool The Chalk Hawk COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS FIELDS TRY HILLCREST BILLIARDS ● Pool ● Pin-Ball ● Snooker ● Air Hockey ● Ping Pong ● Foos-Ball COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER 9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted Mattresses • Liners Heaters • Frames Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets WATERBEDS 712Mass.St. Downtown Lawrence 842-7187 Keep your car healthy in the summer. Use the student discounts at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W.23rd 842-4152 HAPPY CAR 6 Tuesday, November 23, 1976 University Daily Kansan The Organ Makers 图为1984年新造的印刷室 From a small third floor balcony, one can see pipe organs in various stages of production. BARRISON Tuning, or voicing, the metal pipes is a job that demands a good ear. B Pattonterson readily admits to not having perfect pitch, but his ears are able to discern what's wrong with each pine and what needs to be done to bring it into time. 2013年金钟奖 获奖者:周秋丽、李晓玲、张颖、王颖、刘梦、赵雪梅、杨慧芬、黄婷婷、周静、郭欣欣、许小峰、周轶、何雨晴、杨嘉婧、孙悦、郑奕薇、杨媛媛、陈怡怡、陈璐雯、陈颖、周璇璐、陈璐玥、陈璐璐、陈璐玥、陈璐玥、陈璐玥 The metal pipes, voiced and ready to sing, make their way through production to Gene Rinke, who works in pipe preparation on the Story by Steve Frazier Photos by Jay Koelzer "Every organ we make is custom built and designed." The building is nothing special. Probably few motorists notice the four-story factory, painted the very drabest of greens, as they round the corner where New Hampshire sits. Inside the building at 612 New Hampshire St., though, is the Reuter Pipe Organ Co. manufacturer of some of the largest, most complex and most expensive musical instruments. "There are only six to eight other complete pipe organ manufacturers in the country," Alan Fisher. "Rheem's personnel and service manager, said recently." "Some small companies that just assemble various organ parts from different places call themselfs organ manufacturers, but they aren't like us. We buy some lumber and a machine." Molten tin and lead are cast into pipes at the company's North Lawrence plant. A German woodworker works fashion organ consoles from flawless walnut and on the main plant's third floor. Another worker saw entire keyboards from single pieces of wood, cutting between the white keys that become the raised black keys. AND IN THE BASEMENT, Bob Patterson carefully taps or scrapes tiny bits of metal as he "voices" each metal pin. "Each pipe is actually like a little person," Patterson said. "Here's the body, ears, throat and lips—the larger ones also have tongues. "Listen to this one. It has something in its throat," Patterson said as he tested a pipe. A light on the "lilist", and the rasa was no. Reuter's $88 employees produce about 30 pipe organs each year, "depending of course, on the size of the organs," Fisher said. Sizes range from practice organs, with two ranks of pipes and costing about $10,500, to massive instruments, with almost 100 ranks of pipes, that cost more than $300,000. "We sell almost entirely to churches, although some go to universities and a few to private homes," Fisher said. REUTER CUSTOMERS INCLUDE the Old South Church in Boston, Mass.; Boys Town, Neb.; and the University of Kansas. On a map in Fisher's office, small colored pins that represent Reuter customers form large clusters around almost every major population center in the United States. "We sold one this summer to a dentist in Shawnee, Okla., who had to have his house remodeled so the organ would fit. Now if you go to Shawnee to have your teeth fixed we can do it." KU has a concert organ built by Reuter in Swarthout Recital Hall, and three smaller Reuters in teaching and practice studios in Murphy Hall. Fisher said Reuter had also Reuter's engineering staff designs an organ to fit the customer's available space and budget. After the organ is installed, Reuter technicians make tonal adjustments and, if necessary, rearrange the organ. "Usually, we don't alter the building's structure for acoustic improvements," Fisher said. "However, once we get specifications from a church in North Carolina whose architect is John E. Parnell, we use them." "The church wrote back and said we were the only organ company that was honest enough to tell them that, and they said they would do whatever we asked to improve the instrument." THIS FALL, REUTER finished installing the largest pipe organ in Kansas at the Ludersdorf in Lindsberg. The new organ has 80 ranks of pipes and costs $20,000, Lammert Dahler and Heinz Wellinger at Behrens. "We're delighted with it. Our inaugural concert on Oct. 9 played to an overflow crowd—the response was beautiful." Dahlin said. He said Robert Vaughan, one of his former students who is now a Reuter engineer, plaved with him for the dedication ceremonies Oct. 24. A. C. Reuter, Albert Sabol and Henry Jost established the Reuter Organ Co. in 1974 at Trenton, Ill. Fisher said that in 1919 Reuter built an organ for the Lawrence Masonic Temple, and the local Chamber of Commerce had convinced the company's founders to move to Lawrence. "We've been making organs in the same building since 1919," Fisher said. "We're not so glamorous; we don't have a lot of fancy things. You know, the insides of most factories are made of wood." Fisher reached for an arm-length pipe in his office and blew into the end, producing a clear, steady tone. "See, it's just like a whistle. That's it—we are making whistles." "Why does a customer decide to buy a Reuter organ? Well, it's just the best organ." COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE Fashioning the cabinets for the organs is done by Goetz Berthelb (left) and Clyde Pike (right). The cabinets of German craftsmen COOPER'S INDUSTRY R b Bill Capnell (left) of the design department works closely with the assembly technicians such as Fred Whitehead. A LITTLE WARMER THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol.87 No.67 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Children's story as opera at KU Tuesday, November 30, 1976 See story page seven Regents count on budget approval By BARBARA ROSEWICZ Hope still lingers for some of the University of Kansas' capital improvement bids, despite warnings of a tight state budget in fiscal 1978. Although Gov. Robert Bennett said at budget hearings earlier this month that he might fund only cost-saving initiatives, only 25 million is counting on at least $15 million for capital improvements—enough to fund more than $8 million worth of projects applied in the state. A quarter and a fifth are million in new projects. The list, revised after Bennett criticized it for requesting an unrealistic amount of state funds, includes the computer center, the Robinson Gym and Malot Hall additions, a KU Medical Center Family Practice model clinic and planning money for a solid waste energy plant at KU. The list was trimmed from 68 to 21 items. The computer center was KU's only capital improvement request retained by James Bibb, state budget director, who cut requests including funds for additions to Robinson Gymnasium and Malet Hall. The 1975 Kansas Legislature had already appropriated $1.8 million from the fiscal 1978 budget for the computer center. AT THEIR MEETING on the KU campus last week, the Regents approved a revised list of capital improvement priorities for six Regent's schools. The original priority list, presented at the governor's budget hearings, didn't include any capital improvement from the seventh Regent institution, the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina. WARREN CORMAN, Regents' facilities officer, said at the Regents' Building Committee meeting last week that the meeting of 21 items limited requests to $20.079.900. State officials have assured the Regents of $15 million, he said, and there's $4 million or $5 million that could be available to the state agency that makes the best appeal. "We may not get all of that, and we may get more. I'm still not illomatic," he said. During the priority reshuffling, $100,000 in planning money for KUUs solid waste plant facilities would be added for inclusion at the tailend of the revised list. Bennett has said some of his main concerns are increases to cover increased waste costs and energy conservation authority. KANSAS STATE University's requests for energy consumption improvements is still number one on the revised list. A total of $420,000 for power plant improvement requests were requested. The Family Practice clinic and the Robinson Gym addition remained the next highest priorities, but the position of other requests was changed slightly. However, a number of requests from both the Lawrence and Med Center campuses were dropped from the list. Those Lawrence projects dropped were renovation of Linder, Marvin and Green halls, restoration of Spooner Museum and new curtains for Hoch Auditorium. At the Med Center, requests for a new library, a new nursing facility, a medical center and an elevator and purchase of land around the Med Center were dropped. In addition to the priority listing, the Regents approved a separate request for energy consumption funds. Of a total request of $2.5 million for all the Regents' capital funds, more than $10 million. The money would install capacitors, double glaze and storm sash windows and insulate and weatherstriber buildings on the Lawrence campus. It would replace and double glaze windows and condition-building systems at the Med Center. GLEE SMITH, Regents' chairman, said "We're asking for what we think is the minimum necessary and don't expect to get less than what we ask for." all of KU's proposals on the Regents' agenda were approved unanimously. A man is climbing the wing of a light aircraft. The aircraft is parked on a grassy field under a wooden shelter. See REGENTS page two A 1947 Sittison Voyager is ready to fly after Jeff Moffet, junior, rescued it from an elderly woman's a年age a year. Mofet has been restoring the plan for about Antique plane year, but most of the restoration was completed before he got a manual that showed where parts fitted and where they went. See story page five. Library expansion recommended By PAUL ADDISON Staff Writer The complete remodeling of Watson Library and the construction of a library on the site of the present military science building are the main recommendations of a new report by the Libraries Facilities Planning Committee. Appleberry named college head Staff Writer By DEB MILLER Appleyberry was named to the office last month on the Board of Regents meeting in Lawrence. James Appleberry, assistant to Chancellor Archie Dykes, said yesterday that his new job as president of Kansas State University in Pittsburg was a good experience. He will assume the position Jan. 18, replacing George Budd, president since 1965, who announced his resignation last spring. After a sabbatical next semester, Budd will return to Pittsburg State in the fall as a professor. APPLEBERRY WAS one of five finalists recommended to the Regents by a Pittsburgh State advisory committee composed of alumni, faculty members and students. Those five finalists were chosen from 160 candidates, most of whom were senior college and university executives, from all parts of the United States. Appleberry, who is a professor of administration, foundations and higher education, has been involved in several programs at the University of Kansas while serving as assistant to the Chancellor, Professor of Computer Science development, new and improved programs at the KU Medical Center and Outreach programs. MANY OPPORTUNITIES exist for burgel State, Appleapple said in press release. "The college can provide a high quality education for students and assume a leadership role in inventive and cooperative activities," and indeed, the entire state," he said. Appleberry will hold a news conference dece. 9 at Pittsburgh State, which has an enrollment of 5,600, to get better acquainted with students, faculty and administration. Appleberry said that he had no new programs to implement at first because the first few weeks would be a time of learning. "We're just trying to build all of our planned ideas," he said. Appleberry came to KU in 1973 as a fellow of the American Council on Education in the Office of the Chancellor. He has a B.S. degree, and M.S. degree and an Ed.S. degree from Oklahoma State University and an education doctorate from Oklahoma State University. He is listened in "Who's Who Among Authors and Journalists," "Contemporary Authors," "Personalities of the South" and "Leaders in Education." He is also the author of several dozen articles, bulletins and television programs. Appleberry said there were no plans for his replacement yet at the University. The report was sent last week to Del Shankel, executive vice chairman, who will in turn submit it to Chancellor Archie Dykes. If approved, Shankel said yesterday, the report will become part of the University's planning goal and may be used for the 1979 request of preliminary planning money to the state's budget director. The planning committee said in the report that two major facilities were needed to provide the University library system with more flexibility and to allow library services at Watson to focus on the humanities, the social sciences and library processing. THE REPORT recommends that Watson Library be remodeled throughout so that ventilation, plumbing, lighting and acoustics are in top condition. Walls and other barriers should be removed to alleviate frustration of library patrons and inefficient organization of library services, the report says. The new structure would include reading space for about 3,000 users with full reference and circulation services, accommodation for microphones, equipment and group study rooms, space for periodicals and documents and space for staff. The report recommends that the new structure be made to function indefinitely as originally planned, and entirely new library building. It is hoped that the building would relinquish space now occupied by departmental libraries in Strong, Malet, Marvin and Murphy halls. Collections of science, engineering, business books would be housed there. FINANCIAL ESTIMATES for the remodeling of Watson and the new library will be made available after Shankel has reviewed the report. In making its recommendations the planning committee considered long-term projections of student numbers and volume holdings. By the year 2000, it is expected that the libraries' present holdings of about 1,700,000 volumes will have increased to more than 3 million documents will more than triple from half a million to about 1,700,000. Concern about conditions in the University's library system has existed for more than a decade. In 1965, Robert Downs, dean of Library Administration at the University of Illinois, who had been a professor at the University, Facilities Commission to survey space needs, found a deficiency of about 44,000 square feet. In 1971 an investigation by Louis Krueger, a in私人 an investigation by Louis Krueger, a stated that Watson needed major remodeling because the instrument inappropriate for meaningful library use." A REVIEW VISIT by the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. nursery space and funds must be corrected if the University was to maintain high quality undergraduate and graduate programs. That report led to the formation of a new library committee which presented initial recommendations in November 1975. The committee elected to either replace all present library buildings with a new structure or renovate Watson Hall, which is now the University administrators decided to pursue the second recommendation. Last week the Kansas Board of Regents criticized Watson for its lack of space and Job applications for Kansan staff now available Applications for Kansan staff positions for the spring semester are available in 105 Flint; the Student Senate office, 105B of the man of men's and dean of women's offices. The deadline for applying is noon Thursday. Interviews will be conducted by the spring editor and business manager Thursday afternoon and Friday. An interview scheduling sheet is posted outside the Kansas newsroom, 112 Flint. 9-year-old girl harmonizes with KU music group VII. Bv MERLE GOLDMAN Staff photo by DAVE REGIER Birgit Jander in rehearsal A slender, blue-eyed 9-year-old girl picks up a recorder and begins to play. She blows a sweet and a甜 airy tone and sits perfectly still. She is dwarfed by a group of University of Kansas students as they play recorders in pleasant harmony. Little Birdgirl Slander isn't someone one would expect to find rehearsing in Murphy Hall. And for many people in the Collegium, Birgit is an engina. She is the quiet little German girl who appears in a rehearsal in September and has faith that she will succeed. Earlier this semester, when Birgitt's mother talked to Daniel Politikos, associate professor of music history and director of the Collegium, to ask whether she could play with the group, Politikos was surprised. The scene is a rehearsal for some of the players in the Collégium Musicum, a performance group in the School of Fine Arts, dedicated to music from the Medieval, Baroque and Renaissance periods. "WE THOUGHT 'hmmmmy, maybe, maybe not,' but she did quite well." he said. Everyone in the group likes Birgit, he said, but she is always very quiet. "I don't think she's ever said more than 10 words to me." he said. Birgit is one who speaks through her activities. Behind the plagid face and shining blue eyes is a mind with many interests. IF she is asked why she likes the recorder, the answer will be silence. But Birgit readily will play a duet with her mother. She won't say whether she likes arts and crafts better than music, but she will show a colorful picture of a parakee she made by quilting construction paper. The picture was exhibited at the Lawrence Arts Center last year. During an interview last week, Birgit sit in her living room, before a large picture window. The view is of a large field, and the room, filled with modern wood furniture, looks like an extension of the nature around it. Birgit's 7-year-old brother is on the wood coffee table and pointed to the sanders" two parachutes. They make a lot of noise when Birgit plays the recorder, he said. HIRGIT, DRESSED in a red sweater and brown corduroy jeans, said that she liked to listen to the sounds of the birds outside, especially cardinals. She then opened up a music-writing pad to show the music she has written. "I DON'T think they learn enough in school here," she said. She gives her three children a class in German language and literature every week, and they speak both English and German and literature in school. When Janda, M.janer, Janda said that the children were busy and didn't miss it. she flipped through a few pages and stopped to play her original melody, "You Walk Forward and You Breathe Backwards," and then read the words to songs written in "Biritg language." German in reverse. She pronounced, without hesitation, the words to a song called "Tigibt Dnal" and turned to the empty pages in the back of the book. The Janders came to the United States six years ago when Rudolf Jander became a professor of systematics and ecology and entomology at KU. Mrs. Jander, who has a Ph.D. in biology, helps her husband with his work and stresses her children's needs. "I'd like to combine all the words into one big piece," she said. "There's enough room here." Every morning before school, Mrs. Jander said, Birtig practices recorder for a half hour downstairs while Albret plays upstairs. Birtig's older brother George, 11, isn't interested in music, she said. He studies Latin with a tutor. Neither of Birgit's parents is a musician, but Mrs. Jander said it was traditional for children to play the recorder in Germany. Birgit began to play about three years ago, Mrs. Jander said, and has been studying privately ever since. Mrs. Jander said she asked if Birgit could play with the Collegeium because she didn't know of any other recorder group in town. In Germany, she said, children start recorder when they are 5 or 6 years old and the departments of parks and recreation in most cities sponsor music for children. But in Hillcrest School, where Birgit is in fourth grade, she said, there is no recorder group and children don't play in musical ensembles until fifth grade. Mrs. Jander said she wasn't sure that Birgit was good enough for the Collietum, but Glen Corkerham, Vicksburgh, Miss. graduate student and assistant to Politeke in the recorder sections of the Collegium and who also is Birgit's private instruction. Cockerham said that Birgit would play in a Collegium recital ccc. for the Church of St. James, preparing for the choir touring with Birgit and Birdit is a fast learner. "SHE MIGHT not get it the first time but by the rehearsal is over, she'll have it," he said. The Collegium comprises three recorder groups and two sections of vocalists. "You can get to a moderate level fairly easily," he said. "But then to get to the level of an artist, it takes practice and ability." Pollutte said that the recorder, an ancestor of the flute, was easy to begin to play. as well as style. The fact that Birgit already has gained proficiency with the recorder confirms a theory that Cockerham has about children and music. "It shows that if kids are given the opportunity, they can develop at an early age rather than being restricted to joining a sports team," said Doyle. "In her own quiet way she seems like a very alert and intelligen't young girl," Politke said. "But I can thoroughly understand her timidity when she is suddenly popped into a world of adults with no one of her own age." But despite Birgit's play the recorder well, the inner life of this young musician remains a riddle to her teachers. Cockerham he said he got a glimpse of Birgit with her peers when she was dancing at the German Club's Oktoberfest. But perhaps the only way to know what "Bigrit Land" is like is to read a translation of her song with that title: The Land of the sky I come to you. The Land of the dreams full of gold and silver. land of God. no art there in the favorite land of the dreams." 'Birgit Land. The land of the moons. 2 Tuesday, November 30, 1976 University Daily Kansan News Digest From the Associated Press Carter defense cuts uncertain WASHINGTON — A key adviser to President-elect Jimmy Carter said yesterday he didn't know now whether the $2 billion to $7 billion savings in defense spending would be sufficient for his campaign. Berry Blechman, the defense specialist on Carter's transition budget analysis staff, said a decision on proposed reductions would be made only after looking at the overall budget. Experts estimate that Carter will be able to change only about 20 per cent of the fixed 1978 budget. He will have total control of the 1979 budget. Ford plans to submit that budget by Jan. 17, three days before he leaves office. Carter reportedly plans to send his alternative proposals to Congress by Feb. 15. Even if Carter makes cuts of up to $7 billion in Ford's 1978 budget, it probably makes the 1973 budget. Group to help Irish sects OSLO, Norway—Decaring that they are “no petticoat leader” leaders of the women's soccer league, the national federation pledged Mokso to end harassment and abuse in the people of Norway to benefit the athletes and Protestants. Mairead Corrigan, a cofounder of the movement, said a trust fund would be set up with the money to provide care for children, to establish small factories to create jobs and to begin other community projects. She said unemployment was 26 per cent in Northern Ireland Corrigan, 23, and Betty Williams, 32, began the movement after William saw three children killed by a runaway car whose guerrilla driver had been shot by a police officer. (AP) Court to decide tapes' fate WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court said Monday it would decide whether former President Richard Nixon sign control records of his administration, as the court considered a request to do so. The court agreed to hear arguments by Nixon's attorneys, who contend that Congress violated the ex-President's rights to privacy and invaded the powers of the presidency two years ago. At that time, Congress gave control of the extensive records to the General Services Administration (GSA). A three-judge federal court in Washington upheld the Presidential Materials and Records Preservation Act, discounting arguments by Nixon's lawyers. If the justice agrees with the lower court, an estimated 42 million pages of documents, including about 200,000 prepared or reviewed by Nixon, and the tapes will remain Students killed in auto accident A pre-Thanksgiving holiday accident killed two KU students and injured four others who were riding in the same car. A former U.S. high school freight train north of Ottawa on U.S. 59. Delaware Simmons, 20, Kansas City, Mo, sophomore and Bentley student in the engineering and the car. were killed when the car apparently crashed into a slow-moving freight train The injured were: Mavis Carroll, 19, St. Louis freshman; Vonnie Crain, 20, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Sharon Thompson, 18, St. Louis freshman; Jeffrey Banks, Margaret Lueg, 18, St. Louis freshman. REMINDER: ...NOTICE... The KU Backgammon Club meets every Day, at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room, Kansas to 7:00 to play in the tournament Draft Beer - The Aquarium 1717 West 4th Wed. nite — pitcher $1.25 for ladies from 9:12:00 BRING YOUR BOARDS Fri, nite — from 4-8 pitcher $1.25 for everybody Sat. nite — Drink & drown for ladies $2.00 all the beer you can drink! REIGN AUTO PART Student Discounts Carter advocates reversal of recent steel price rise master charge THE INTERNATIONAL CAFE Parts for All Imports Mon.-Fri., 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-5:00 843-8080 304 Locust President-elect Jimmy Carter said Monday he had "sent word" to the nation's steel companies that he hoped they could reverse recent price hikes to help hold down global inflation. Bv the Associated Press But he said the steel companies so far had been noncommittal in responding to his plea. A spokesman for Carter said most of the contacts with the steel companies were made by senators and House members. "I haven't talked to them (the steel company executives) directly but I have sent word to them." Carter said in an interview with CBS anchorman Walter Crankite on the network's evening news show. He said steel price increases could have a negative result because they represent a signal to the world's oil-producing nations. Three major steel producers, including the nation's largest, closed ranks with their competitors on Monday by announcing a 6% stake in steel used in consumer products. U. S. Steel, the nation's largest producer; Bethlehem Steel Corp., and Republic Steel Corp. on Monday joined six other firms that earlier announced price increases on flat-rilled products. The hikes are effective Dec. 1. Flat-trolled products are used mainly in the automotive and appliance industries, and consumers could soon feel the impact of higher prices in form of higher prices for those products. Regents . . . From page one THE REGENTS authorized *the use of $475,000 from the Pearson GSPE curriculum for building a parking lot for GSPE hello.hls.* - the use of $10,000 from the Pearson income for repair to a terrazo floor in GSF. $\textcircled{a}$approval of preliminary plans for the Malott Hall addition. naming the Parrrot Athletic Center, the dressing room addition to Allen Field Hill. **the title of Registrar Emeritus for James Hitt, who retires next month.** Also, Regent Walter Hirstierne was appointed as an ex-officio member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Kansas Center for Research, Inc. - repair of the dormitory roof at the Law Enforcement Training Center at Hutchinson. *the approval of two equipment contracts for the Med Center clinical facility. HOUSE OF USHE: PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT . A list of figures 8, 10, 11, 12 × 14 south sides, indoors, gathering right head HEADRIGHT FOR THE FITS CUSSION AND BINDING A COMPLETE PRINTING SERVICE FOR LEFTERGRADING BUSINESS IN THE MIDDLE GROUND INVESTIGATION BASE, POST- OFFICE AND INTERNET. ALL QUOTAS ARE VALID UNTIL USED. Joy Center WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS — PLEASE TRY US!® 838 MASSACHUSETTS • PHONE 842.3610 / 841.4900 SEMESTER BREAK SKI TRIP WY WINTER PARK COLORADO Trip includes TRIP INCLUDES Round-trip transportation Beer & soft drinks on the bus 4 Nights lodging in condominium 4 Days skiing lums 4 Days of lift tickets 4 Days of ski rental Cost: $135, Jan. 9-Jan. 15, 1977 Cost: $135, Jan. 9—Jan. 15, 1977 Sign up deadline-Dec. 3, 1976 Optional 5th day of skiing & ski lessons. For further information contact the SUA office. Holiday Affair Q The KU:Y is partially funded by the Student Activity Fee. Arts & Crafts Sale Sponsored by the KU-Y Commission on the Status of Women is sponsoring a Dec. 2nd—4th United Ministries Building 1204 Oread (one block north of the Kansas Union) POTLUCK SUPPER Tuesday, November 30 at 6:00 p.m. Council Room, Watkins Scholarship Hall 1506 Lilac Lane Call Andrea Romine — 841-1756 if you plan to come and bring a dish. Hope to see you there the SUBMARINE OPEN LATE EVERY NIGHT! DINING ROOM AND CARRY-OUT! THE MOST UNUSUAL SANDWICH SHOP IN LAWRENCE! 1420 CRESSCENT ROAD-JUST WEST OF THE CHI OMEGA FOUNTAIN! 842-1117! Bob and the Car Race Larry's Auto Supply 842-4152 Full line of foreign and domestic parts Student discount 25%-45% 1502 W. 23rd --- AIRLINES Christmas FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST Make reservations now! No extra cost for our services. Phone: 843-1211 Maupintour travel service KU Union/The Malls/Hillcrest/900 Mass --- SPRINT ON DOWN! to the Athlete's Foot S NOW OPEN! Featuring 15O styles of athletic shoes like Adidas, Puma, Nike, Converse, Spotzlift, Tiger, Tretorn, and Fred Perry. We also carry a full line of socks, T-shirts, shorts and warm-up suits. We're open evenings so, come on down! Open Eveningas The Athlete's Foot. City asked talks the fo 919 Massachusetts Lawrence, Ks. Phone 814-2995 N sankAmericard : Master Charge No Unive that carry to the year. Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. Tuesday, November 30,1976 3 --- 1152 Students mull KUAC role more than $2.5 million is taken in and spent annually by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, and four KU students are on probation in deciding how that money will be spent. The four students, who are representatives on the 20-member KUAC board of directors, became highly visible recently when they made public discussions about a proposal to award the annual KU-Misouri football game to Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. Jill Grubbaugh, chairman of the Student Senate Sports Committee and censoror of a Senate resolution opposing the possible move to Arrowhead, said yesterday that the university would not that issue might damage the effectiveness of student board members in the future. "I THINK A lot of the alumni and the KUAC administrators think that what we did was wrong and that that put us in some jeopardy," she said. "It's going to take us out of their respect. But from the faculty and administrators, I we gotten a lot of support." Cyclle Walker, director of athletics, had asked the board not to discuss publicly the talks with Missouri officials about moving the football game to Arrowhead. After the Senate passed the resolution opposing any plan to move the game to Arrowhead, Walker said that he welcomed any student views but that he couldn't discuss the talks with Missouri officials until later. CLARK COAN, dean of foreign students at UTSA, said he would guard student views "I think students give us some of the best input there on the board," Coan said. "They ask the proper questions and keep the rest of us on our toes." Dave Shapiro, a student board member, and that no one group controlled the schools. "Now, obviously, the KUACAC knows their feelings probably carry a bit of weight," Shapiro said. "But, with the exception of the last meeting, students are not confident." It was at that last meeting that the board voted to continue discussions with the University of Missouri about moving the KU-Missouri football game to Arrowhead. SHAPRO SAID that a check of board meeting minutes since 1971 showed that almost every vote was unanimous or one dissent. The only close vote during that time came on a proposal to rescind a policy against the use of 25 per cent of any net profit of the KUWA to do unto University account to be used at the discretion of the chancellor. THE BOARD voted not to rescind the policy but to redefine it the net profit as the total profit left at year's end, minus depreciation and capital improvements. Sapiro told the board's action on this proposal was an example of effective leadership. *"Student representation fought abovelog the policy, and I think there will someday be a change."* Walker said the definition of net profit was a realistic one because it allowed for part of the total profit to be used for capital improvements. He said that the NCAA projected that 80 to 90 per cent of the nation's colleges and universities would lose money in their programs during the next few years. No action taken on groups No action will be taken against two University of Kansas student organizations that failed to report their last year's carryover balance on a financial statement to the Student Senate treasurer earlier this year. The decision to not take action against the groups, Campus Veterans and the Commission on the Status of Women, was made last week after a meeting with representatives of the organizations and Bob Beisner, Senate treasurer, and Randy McKernan, chairman of the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee. "We'll report back to the committee (finance and auditing) that it was strictly a misunderstanding because of the way they" form was wored and that there is no problem." Beisner said after the meeting. The meeting with the two groups grew out of a recent audit of student organization accounts by Beisner. The audit revealed that the groups had failed to report their last year's cash balance of their company on a financial report made to Beisner. Representatives of both groups said they didn't understand that they had to include the balance on the form because of the way the form is delivered. The form asks for "income sings" July 1. Beisner said that the forms would be worded more concisely next year and that the Senate would keep a closer check on all organizations organization accounts funded by the Senate. "The Most Brilliant New Movie of the Year!" Wedding in Blood A MASTER OF LIFT AND BRAIN MICHAEL PECOLI • OTTAHME AUDRIAN ONLINE ON WWW.CINEMASUB.COM Wed., Dec. 1, 7:30 & 9:30 Woodruff Auditorium 75° PUFF'S FRAGRANT WEEDS. Shecoots! Weersthauns! Driver Wants! "ITHINK WE'RE totally dependent upon winning and losing as far as profit is concerned," he said. "We need some capital improvements to keep up a winning program, so I don't foresee any large profit." Sapiro said the policy was, at worst, an indication of support to the University when no profit occurred. At best, he said, it is a business case in university when the KUAC muckes a net profit. PIPES OF PEACE George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. Politician' Stumps constantly on hand. MADRIGAL DINNER Coan, who has been a board member for six years, said the absence of close votes didn't mean that there was an absence of discussion and disagreement. Dec. 2,4,5,7 Kansas Union Ballroom 7:00 p.m. $7.50 per person A Traditional Old English Feast with Wassail, Roast Baron of Beef, Flaming Plum Pudding. "Some people probably think the board is a rubber stamp," Coan said. "I don't think it. The board has a lot of outspoken people who use it. They are nice and have no hesitation about speaking out." 3rd Annual Madrigals performed by Voci di Camera with Minstrels and Trumpeteers. But Shapiro said that the board did react to student opinions. Tickets must be purchased for Dec. 2, by Dec. 1, 12:00 noon. For Dec. 4, by Dec. 2, 12:00 noon, for Dec. 7, by Dec. 6, 12:00 noon. Dec. 5 Sold Out. WALKER SAID that an additional student member had recently been added to the board. That gives the board four faculty members and 10 faculty members and administrators. Grubbaum said students didn't voice their opinions on every issue, especially on technical matters of insurance policies and salaries. Ticket Outlets: SUA office, Gardenland, Round Corner Drug, Adventure Book Store (Hillcrest) Presented by the SUA "In relation to other universities, the athletic corporation here isn't screwing the students," he said. "We have more say as students than a lot of schools do." On Campus TODAY: THE UNIVERSITY SENATE HUMAN RELATIONS COMMITTEE meets from noon to 2 p.m. in Alcove B of the Kansas Union cafeteria. TONIGHT: the annual meeting of the JAIYHAWK TRACK AND FIELD OFFICIALS at 7:30 in the Annex of Allen Field University. COLTON, professor of history at Duke university, is the featured speaker of the KU lectures Lecture at 8 in Woodruff Auditorium. Events TOMORROW; The film "ANTIGONE" will be shown by the KU classes department at 7 p.m. in 3139 Wescoe Hall. The KU TAEF KWON CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Lawrence High School wrestling hall. A special MEDITATION introduction lecture will be given at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Regional Room. Announcements PRE-ENROLLMENT for majors in SOCIOLOGY will be Thursday and Friday in 716 Fraser Hall. the new executive staff members are: Charles Hoard, Lawrence junior, station manager; Bob Moody, Almena senior, operations manager; Bill Kempin, Levenworth junior, program director; Robb Ferguson, Shawnee Mission senior. The KJHK-FM executive staff for the spring semester was announced last week. Staff picked for KJHK "THE MOBILE"... Mayline's Finest Parallel Ruling Straightedge made. The Kansas Union Bookstore has in stock, business manager; Joanne Brand, Wichita junior, chief announcer. 42" — $ 40^{00} $ The selections were made by a three-member committee comprised of the station manager and operations director for the fall semester and Ernest Martin, assistant professor of radio-TV-film and faculty advisor for KJHK-FM. kansas union BOOKSTORE Ask Santa to put one in your Stocking Just a Reminder . . . Welcome Back! We're glad to see you back in Lawrence so . . . All the Pizza, Salad, & Spaghetti you can eat!! $1.89 from 5-9 p.m. Pizzainn Tuesday, Nov. 30, 1976 Hillcrest Shopping Center, next to the theatres. TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA You ask for it! You got it! TOYOTA COROLLA TOYOTA COROLLA $300 off $200 off FORD EXPLORER TOYOTA CORONA If you can find a bette built small car than TOYOTA Then Buy It! NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY YOUR NEW 1928 TOYOTA! I YEAR END PRICES PLUS AN EXTRA $20 OR $300 OFF! See Why Lawrence Toyota is Douglas County Number 1 Small Car Dealer AWRENCE Lawrence Auto Plaza OYOTA Phone 842-2191 CHEVETTE VS RABBIT (a brutally honest comparison) CHEVETTE Smallest of popular Chevrolet species, indigenous to North America. Easy to own and care for, surprisingly tough and spacious for its size. Four wheels, four cylinders, big rear hatch, front disc brakes, rack-and-pinion steering. A lovable car with special appeal for people with limited budgets and plenty of places to go. RABBIT A small, long-eared mammal of the hare family, technically one of the lagomorphs. Native of southern Europe and northern Africa. Four legs, one tail. Hops about, multiples indiscriminately and often becomes a pest. From left to right: Chevette Coupe and typical rabbit. Chevrolet 4 Tuesday, November 30,1976 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page reflect the view of only the writer. 'Pill' not good enough The "pill" and other modern birth control methods have affected the world dramatically in the past 20 years. There has been progress, especially in developed countries, in curbing the soaring world birth rate. There are more women in the work force and pursuing careers. There have been revolutionary changes in sexual attitudes and behavior, thanks to the freedom from unwanted pregnancy. YET, DESPIEZE the wide acceptance and use of birth control, the methods themselves are far from perfect. Fifteen to 35 per cent of the women who take the pill, for instance, experience negative side effects such as nausea or weight gain. Many women are prevented from taking the pill because of their height or other factors, disease, high blood pressure or depression. Some researchers assert that the pill can cause cancer. Other methods or devices also have built in dangers or inadequacies. The rhythm method is only about 76 per cent effective, according to Planned Parenthood. IUDs are designed mainly for women who have had children, and can cause infection or cramps. Diaphragms can be awkward and, if used with a child, can cause tetanus. The list goes on but the most glaring deficiency is that the onus for birth control has been placed on women. MEN MUST choose basically between all or nothing. They can have an irreversible vasectomy that precludes their ever being fertile again or they can opt for the timeworn and risky methods known to high school boys. Now, a study sponsored by the Ford Foundation and published in part in the September-October issue of "Family Planning Perspectives," shows that public and private support of research on reproductive biology and birth control has been declining since 1972. The study also says there were 230 promising scientific leads that could yield better contraceptives, some of them for men. However, the study says more than three times the money now needed to be required to research the leads adequately. In 1974 the world spent about $119 million on birth control research. Sixty-eight per cent of the money came from the United States. They study says that $143 million would be needed this year just to compensate for inflation and to maintain a "minimal level" of research. Though the actual figures for this year aren't complete, researchers say that the research will be well below $143 million. That's a far cry from the $360 million the studies say is needed this year to pursue the 230 new research avenues. IT'S DIFFICULT to understand why the United States is cutting back on research in an area of study that is becoming increasingly important to the world, not only in terms of future survival but also in terms of sharing human relationships and society. If there are ways that men can more equally share the responsibility for birth control, if contraceptives already existing can be made safer and more effective or if new and better ones can be developed, then the United States should not diminish its support of such reservation. Its likely that if men instead of women were choosing between sexual freedom and damage to their bodies there would be much less trouble raising the necessary funds. It would probably be a top priority. By John Fuller Contributing Writer Carter should remember to pardon Patty Hearst By DAVID EAGLE Guest Writer President-elect Jimmy Carter made some big promises during the course of his campaign, but perhaps the biggest was his vow to restore what he called "love and trust" to both the manner and method he used in this country. No one can deny that the divisions racking this nation during the last twenty years have been truly horrendous—beginning with the racial violence attending the civil rights movement in the late 50s, through Lyndon Johnson's bloody escalation of the Vietnam War in 1952 and then carried soon after, to the day glory of the revolutionary counterculture in the late 60s. WE MUST all hope that the national shame that was Watergate marked an end to these two decades of turmoil—but it must be said that Mr. Trump has issued no band, if he expects to resume this battered and weary country. He has made a wholly admirable first step in his pledge to grant an unconditional amnesty to the tens of thousands who resisted the draft and fled the country rather than participate in the illegal and immoral Vietnam war. There remains, however, one aching remnant of our revolutionary past that needs immediate action. The people who but a single person, whose life has been damaged perhaps beyond repair by forces totally beyond her Most Americans are all too familiar with her story—the abduction, the torture and confinement, the raps, the inductation, and finally the forced conversion—the bizarre series of rapes and photographs, the staged bank robbery, and the months of flight from Federal agents whom she believed, one knows how accurately, would just as soon have killed as I refer, of course, to America's own negative Joan of Arc. The Lady of the Machinegun, Patricia Hearest. It IS no secret that the ATT is more likely that the Hearest case sought much more than just a Government victory. They sought to make Miss Hearest a symbol—a symbol of rebellion crushed, of youthful defiance and unrest under liege, ignoring if we may, the point that such behavior is shameful coming from a government itself founded in the fires of revolutionary arder, it may be argued that no person has been served by Miss Hearest's continued martyrdom. apprehended her. Many Americans suffered a real heartbreak during the confused contradictory course of her trial. (David Eagle is a Prairie Village sophomore,) SHE'S OUT on bail now, enjoying a small taste of freedom for the first time in over a year; her family is at last able to give her the care and aloofness along, and kind hearts everywhere have been lifted by the sight of her smile. But this will be only a short respite—she faces still more charges, more fines, imprisonment, more shame and humiliation and pointless suffering as the victim of the government's relentless urge to why I think the vintage has come to end this vindictive nonsense. A Presidential pardon for Patty Hearst would be a morally correct example of the generous compassion that moved Ford to grant a reward for her unrepentant, and deserving, Richard Nixon. Hearst's only true sin is that of having been in the wrong place at the wrong time; she has paid a thousand for that "error," and the money come to end her misery. BURNS © 1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURE Malraux's life spanned century A very intelligent, complex, innovative and energetic man died last week, and the world will miss him. And Malraux行使 fast-paced life that spanned the 200th anniversary. In many ways he touched the significant activities of 20th century men. HE WAS AN explorer and adventurer, going to Southeast Asia, where he studied Asian wisdom and Asian revolution. Here he began a lifetime as an author, too, by writing novels and artistic studies about the East. Another fact of 20th century life has been war, and Malraux was quite a warrior. He organized a group of volunteer pilots to fly against the Fascists in Spain's civil war. He felt a great sense of comradeship with his fellow flyers, so much that he sup- plied him with a special support in a human sense . . . something like fighting in the calyx in the days of Napoleon." As you may have guessed, Malraux was a romantic, especially concerning war. When the Nazis occupied his France, Malraux plunged into resistance and fought with his troops to separate fact from myth in the stories of his heroism in the underground. OF MALRAUX, a general of the resistance army said: "He would have been a great medieval mercenary. He was a true romantic and he was dominated by an extraordinary passion for war." He also about the techniques of soldiery . . . with him it is instinct and an art, not knowledge. Greg Hack Contributing Writer Of his bravery, Malraux once said, "I am aided by an irrational feeling of in- vulnerability." Could that not have been said about the optimism and the sense of destiny of the entire Western world? He was also a great critic and the minister of culture for France. He was fascinated by museums. His ideas on the arts were never bound by tradition or the pressures of his age. He did promote art movements, but put down contemporary Russian novelists and Picasso. He wasn't afraid to go against the grain. HIS MINISTERIAL position drew him into the political arena to a small extent, but his active personality probably had more to do with his political involvement than any other factor. Malaux liked to keep up with day-to-day politics, but he also liked more to see events in the flow of history. His theories were different and interesting. The trend of his lifetime that he saw as most important was what he termed "the death of Europe." Indeed, Europe's past domination of world affairs has faded, and the United States is funding and socialism and communism dominate the politics of much of the world. MALRAUX knew the Common Market would succeed in some ways, but would never become so powerful to be defeated. He called what he called "A Europe governed by a parliament," and the strengths of the United States system, at least in foreign policy. He foresaw the death of political labels, which is still in progress. I have read (and I must admit borrowed from) several articles written since Malraux's spirit, and they all have paid tribute to his spirit, to his bravery in war, to his novels and art history. None, rather, really grasped the message of his life. futility of 20th century philosophy. That is, rationality and science can't supply meaning on their own. Indeed, Malraux realized that by making science and technical knowledge an absolute, one kills meaningful absolutes. MALRAUX realized that by saying there was no reason, no evidence to believe in an absolute (such as God), that he was also saying there was no reason to hope for man or to believe man truly has personality or goodness. Malraux was torn by what he saw as the rational thing to do—seek power and pride—and his human but to him irrational desire to love and seek His answer was to seek an abstraction in a free and eternal humanity in art. None realized that Malraux showed the I don't think this answer is sufficient. It wasn't good enough for DaVinci, Van Gogh and other artists who sought an absolute in art. To Malmur's credit, he didn't say it was a sufficient answer, either. He merely admitted it was the best he could do. Malraux deserves credit for many things, but most important is that he joined in the search for a rational hope for mankind. His failure is tragic, but we must admit it and carry on. He no longer can. College successes short-lived The advice to young people warning them off college continues to issue forth in a multiplicity of forms. One of the latest discouraging announcements appears in the Chronicle of Higher Education (Nov. 8), telling of a new study by psychologists which contend that students are most likely to standing students in college are the ones who are most likely to be unhappy 10 years hence . . . unhappiness is the only thing the new test shows to be predictable on the basis of a measure of academic success." TEN YEARS ago we were Thank! ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE QUEBEC AIR FORCE being told that life was over for the young person who tried to take it on "unquipped" by college; parents with children who dropped out of higher education heaped guilt on themselves for their failure to do their job. Now the newspapers tell us that the Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that 180,000 college graduates a year will soon be in "over supply." We want them to be in "the national Assessment of Educational Progress," quoted in the public prints saying, "I don't think education should say that if you go to college you are guaranteed a better paying or more satisfying job. . . we have a number of jobs that psychologically for the fact that the types of jobs they want aren't there at present." In that connection, Mr. Forbes' organization has determined that 44 per cent of our 17-year-olds are looking forward to working because about twice the number of professional and managerial jobs there are. SOMETHING is badly amiss. The experts, educationalists and authority figures who have had control of higher education policy and recruited these past obviously haven't known what they were talking about. Billions of dollars of public, family and student money, not to mention the lost years of boredom listening to these classrooms, has been lost. So many people have been so badly misdirected in career choice and education that men are not being educated at Stanford University, now talk about "the educated protariat" and the increasing disjuncture between these two expectations of the educated worker and the realities of the workplace." How did the disjuncture between educated worker and the workplace grow so great? Part of the explanation is the greed of the academies over the profession, a gullible public. The taxpayers were and are being biked for billions to pay for sloppily administered higher educational enterprises in which hard work is rare and overwork is common. The Pentagon and the other promiliary zealots overestimated the number of white collar operators and auto workers to aspire to grander things. The trouble is that there aren't enough grand things to go around. Power and money in America is still distributed in a way that's less useful years the ruling classes have told the aspiring egalitarian masses, shut up, behave, go to school and we'll give you the goodies, but there isn't no way for them to get anywhere high the end of the bell curve. EVERYBODY IS supposed to have a satisfying job; everybody is supposed to have a non-dead end career. How can Nicholas Von Hoffman 1974 King Features Syndicate IT WAS that part of the American Dream which says my kids are going to have it easier than me. The My-Son-the Doctor Complex. The lapod intellectuals and professors who write books for children Magazine or get the richer sort of foundation grants and consultancies generally call this "egalitarianism," the idea that your kid or mine can grow up to be the equal of a Henry Kissing man my daughter. It's worth an important theme in our fiction and political speech for a century. At the same time, respect for social class has all but vanished. The black people are one of America who no longer know their place. There is no magic, no awe in being rich. The only difference between a rich man and a poor man in America is that they have a reasonable for the sons and daughters of computer warriors even they could possibly use, but something else and something larger was also at work. mirage. Too many people qualified, which is why we're hearing the clucking about raising standards; beyond that the ability of the professors to instill merit, much less to test their students' abilities, professors have been caught too often manipulating the game The other side of the coin is that there are less and less people to do the dirty work. In fact, a quarter of people by threatening them with starvation or appearing to up the status of the jobs. Garbage men become sanitation engineers, only nobody believes that work? It can't, which is why the academics rushed in with the idea of "the gift" that would be academically deserving, the competent as determined by objective examination would get the goods which would no longer be distributed on the basis of their class, inheritance or sex appeal. The meritocracy was a EGALITARIANISM is the strongest single, operating political value in the United States. The love of liberty is rare; the love of equality is universal. Students imbued with egalitarian values won't give up their masters degrees to accept careers sweeping the streets, and, unwaverly, they will be in closer match between expectation and reality, we are going to have some unusual and different troubles for ourselves. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 25, 2016. Subscriptions for June and July are accepted Saturday, Sunday and Halloween from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 60444 Subscriptions by mail are $3 am or $18 pm. A year outside the county. State student subscriptions are $7 am or $14 pm. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $7 am or $14 pm. A year outside the county. Editor Marriage Editor Manager Editing Editor/Editor Stanford Editor Campus Editor Brown Editor Business Manager Aistant Business Manager Carole Roosekooter Antenatal Advertising Manager Jarile Tawalle Antenatal Marketing Manager Newa Adviser Publisher Business Advice Bob Hills David Dary Adamis Mel Adams --- Tuesday, November 30, 1976 5 PENGUIN MARINEWHO FEATURES L FEATURES ophy. That can't supply id, Malraux science and isolate, one by saying evidence to God), that so reason to truly has he saw as power and it to him and seek to seek an eternal sufficient. It Vinci, Van sought an idn't say it either. He est he could for many is that he emotional hope logic, but we be no longer Staff Writer ny people why are they talking about the professionals to less to test the疲倦. Thepute. The疲倦 can caught too the game. The coin is the work. my work. In to recruit them training them appearing to be unaware of sanitation body believes ISM is the operating the United of liberty is equality is imputed imputed values won't its degrees to the matching match match ation and having to different events. By RICK THAEMERT KU pilots say fly it, you'll like it Flying 10,000 feet above the ground in private planes, many University of Kansas students and faculty members have found a new adventure and an economical way to travel. In fact, some flybys, like Jeff Moffet, Lawrence junior, have even restored an alarm. Moffet, who has been flying for two years, said recently he found his 1947 Sinnison in an elderly woman's barn. After he bought it from her, he recovered the fabric wings, painted it and overhauled the engine. The airplane is an airplane that can fly over 120 m.n.h. "I haven't flown it yet," he said, "but I know it will fly. It should be ready in a couple of days." AT THAT SPEED, Moffet gets about 14 miles to a gallon, making the operating expenses of the plane about seven or eight dollars an hour. He said that a plane cost less than people bought. One can be bought for the price of a car or two. "I'd say about the cheapest you could buy," he told plane that would fly is $2,000. "he still doesn't." Although the costs of buying and operating an airplane can be expensive, Moffet said, the benefits of flying are worth it. "I really enjoy it," he said. "I'd love to tell you some story about the birds and the peaceful freedom of flying, but it's not like "SOMETIMES I feel really removed from everything. It's a very relaxing experience." Moffet had his favorite experience was flying inches above Kansas wheatfields, which wasn't dangerous if there were no obstacles. Kansas is a good place to fly because, if anything goes wrong, the flat farmland in Kansas is not a good place to fly. MOFFET SAID the only scary flight he had had was in his first winter snowstorm, when the lights on his plane wouldn't work. The plane would fly slowly and would be able to see clearly enough to land the plane. Winter poses another kind of problem for Leland Miller, professor of occupational therapy, because his antique plane has an open cockpit. Miller said he first became interested in flying because it was academically challenging. He later bought his 1938 Hawker Aircraft in Kansas City, and began flyng for pleasure. "My old plane would make it if the guy could stand the cold." he said. "IT'S THE ONLY known flying 35W in the world," Miller said. "It's a taildrafter. It looks little more pizza-like. It taildrafter tailserger's tool plane (one with a front nose wheel). You either fly Miller said that there was a camaraideral omnitor owners of antique planes, and that he had been an avid collector. Miller's plane was at a national fly-in last year for antique planes in Blakesburg, Arkansas. them or they fly you, and the last option isn't a good one." "The whole history of American aviation was 'right here there sitting on the field,' he recalled. "It is really neat when the plane takes off, and you are kneeling. That's an important part of our history." MILLER SAID one of his most memorable experiences was walking up and down the rows of airplanes at Blakesburg in the silence of the mast listening to the wind blow through the slats of the planes represented the history that the 500 planes represented. Miller said he recently flew to Minnesota, a 14-hour drive by car, in just under four hours. A small plane is more economical than a car, he said, because it飞 three times faster (about 150 mph). and gets more fuel gas mileage (about 20 miles in a gallon). Besides being economical, fashion is enovable, especially at night. Miller said. “ITS JUST beautiful with all the lights on the ground,” he said. “And because the Midwest is so clear, the lights make navigating as easy as dusk speak. Speaking of duck汤, we saw a flock of geese coming back from Minnesota. You have to watich for them, they could do a number of things for them at *tcarman*. They could build a numb- er of them. But Miller hasn't had any dangerous flights, just relaxing ones. BECAUSE OF HIS open cockpit plane, Miller said, he can't fly much more than 20 minutes during the winter cold, so he rents planes for long distance trips. "Sometimes I drive past the airfield on my way home from work, and even though I'm tired, I'll take the plane up for 20 minutes or so," Miller said. "It doesn't matter how tired or hung up you are, it's such a fresh, clean break from everything. Flying lets your soul catch up with your body and get mellow." Ralph Adams, professor of chemistry, said he also had problems in the winter, especially getting his World War II trainer started. But when he takes to the air, he becomes one of a wave of pilot plots who perform experiments or fly them. "I'm not a show pilot," he said, "but I can do boots, gloves, goggles and handgarmes." But, he said, he uses caution because certain rolls cause his plane's engine to fly. Adams said his plane was certified for aerobatics, but most private planes weren't. He said he didn't need to couldn't conform to standards set by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). See FLYING page seven Senate to hear two proposals The Student Senate is to hear tomorrow night proposals to legislate districting for Senate elections and to add representation of special students to the Senate. The Student Senate Elections Committee is to present the proposals. Kevin Flynn, elections committee chairman, said at last night's committee meeting that the proposal to legalize was just an administrative procedure. He said that districting had been used to achieve voter distribution since last spring to replace the Colleges-within-theCollege system. The CWC's were eliminated last fall. Flynn said that the wording in the Senate code had changed to replace CWC's wording. The lack of special student representation on the Senate was "just an oversight," Benita Bock, former elections committee chairman, said. WEDNESDAY Plants For Survival: Man's Dependency on Plants 7.30-9.00p.m. $1.50 Museum of Natural History December 1 10 cm She said that in the past "the number of secondary students was too small to be recruited." Special students are students who take classes without seeking a degree. Flym estimated the number of special students entangled enough togituate representation, he said. According to the Senate Code each school We Write All Risks is allowed one representative for each 200 students enrolled in that school. Spring Senate elections will be Feb. 16-17. Plung forms are available in the Senate of Flynn said that the filing deadlines for student body president and vice president was Jan. 26 and the filing deadline for senators and class officers was Feb. 2. Automobile Insurance Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. Attention All Males The Hair Suite has a special just for you if you want to step out during the Holidays with a style that will make everyone notice. Call us today about our individually styled permanent wav and hairstcut for only $25.00. Open till 9:00 Mon.. Tues.. Wed. THE HAIR SUITE SUA FILMS 842-8600 CLASSICAL SERIES WEDDING IN BLOOD (1973) Dir. Claure Chabrol, with Stephanie Andran, Michel Roy, with Dr. John R. 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SUPER SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT Effective Nov. 30 Dec.7 Pepsi Light 8 - 16 oz. Bottles FREE With the purchase of 8-16 oz. Bottles at regular price. Plus Deposit. Qt. Bottle of FREE Coke With the purchase of 8 pcs. of Golden Brown Fried Chicken for $1.99. Plus Deposit. Schlitz Beer 6-12 oz. $119 Glazed dozen 99c Donuts Golden Ripe Bananas 6 lbs.$100 Quarter Pork Loin lb. 89c 6 Tuesday, November 30, 1976 University Daily Kansan 543 1+1 Staff photo by JAY KOELZER The Jayhawk bench celebrates point No.100 Michigan still rated No.1 By the Associated Press The Michigan Wolverines gathered an impressive 38 of 48 first-place votes in the first Associated Press regular season game, and a second by the top position by more than 100 points. KU squashes hapless Bobcats Sports Writer broadcasters throughout the nation. The Wolverines easily outdistributed runnerup Marquette, which hasn't played. The Cowboys beat on three balls and totaled 727 points. Michigan, which beat Western Kentucky, 70-70, in its season opened the 866 weekend. The No. 1 seed is Ohio. *** By ERIC MARTINCICH The Top 20 teams in the Associated Press college basketball poll, with first-plACE in parentheses, this season's records are points. Points based on 18-10-16-14-12-10-9 etc. The Montana State Bobcats won't forget their first trip to Kansas for a while. If they knew what was in store, they probably wouldn't have made the long trip to Lawrence. After the game with KU on night, they probably wished that they had. MANHATTAN (AP) —Kansas State pulled early in the second half and went on to route Arkansas State, 83-61, last night. K-State zooms to 2-0 The Jayhawks opened their season by thrashing the Bobcats, 104-47, in Allen Field House. The 7.870 fans saw the second largest victory in KU history. Only the 68-8 victory over Washington of St. Louis during the 1923-13 season was larger. 1. Michigan (38) 2. Kentucky (19) 3. UCLA 4. Kentucky (1) 5. Louisiana (1) 6. Kentucky (1) 7. Louisville (1) 8. N Carolina 9. San Francisco (1) 10. Arizona 11. Cleveland (1) 12. Alabama 13. Washington 14. Tennessee 15. Maryland 16. S. Illinois 17. South Carolina 18. Ridgeau 19. McKinley 20. Charlotte Kansas State, now 2-0 on the season, led 41-27 at half time and scored the first three baskets to an 29-point lead in the first 55 seconds of the second half. The margin ballooned to 31 points on two occasions, the last 81-50 with 3:15 left in the game. Owens didn't announce that Mokeni would be his starter at the pivot until "Iwms happy to get the chance to play all of the squad," coach Ted Owens said after the game. "It's always good for team morale when everyone gets to play." For the Jayhawks, it was an opportunity to take a look at the entire squad. Everyone, in fact, looks like Jayhawks. or the season opener and for outside competition. The game was an exhibition of shooting as the Hawks surpassed the 100-point mark for the first time since the final game of the season. The team scored a 12/76 victory over the Missouri Tigers. Paul Mokeski and Herb Nobles had 14. Bryce Smith had 14 for Montana State. en ken Koeings led with 18 points. Junior college transfer John Douglass hit 16. he "This game was important for us because we needed to play someone besides ourselves," he said. "It was getting to the point where it would be impossible to manipulate our selves to do any good." "With Paul in, we should get possession at the center jump." Owens said. "With Donnie (Von Moore) on the bench, we have more flexibility in substituting." Owens wasn't totally satisfied with the victory. Owens said that Mokeki would start at the pivot when the Jayhawks took on Murray State tomorrow night in Allen Field House. Owens said that the 'Hawks were ready KU women begin trip at Phillips University we had too many breakdowns on defense and our offensive movement was too much. "The fault situation was one aspect of our play that I wasn't happy with at all." By ROB RAINS Sports Writer After finishing a disappointing seventh in a holiday tournament last weekend, the KU women's basketball team starts a rugged three-game swing through Oklahoma and Texas tonight when it faces Phillips University in Enid, Okla. After the game with Phillips, the team will play Claremore Junior College, Clairemont, tomorrow and will play Dayton, Wayland and Baldest, College in Playaway. Tex. Coach Marian Washington is looking up to have a hard time said yesterday, it will be a tough one for her next week. "If we win two out of the three games, I'll be pleased." Washington said. Phillips is led by three-time All-American Karen Cannon, who filled the Patties to a 28-7 record last year. KU split its two games with Phillips last season. Claremore, the Jayhawks' opponent tomorrow night, played in the same holiday tourney as KU—the Turkey Tournament at Michigan. They also played in Springfield, Mo.-and finished sixth. Clarence is 1-8 on the year, and the Jawbone ensues foe on the trip. Wayland Bapisti's final opponent on the trip, is picked third by Sports Illustrated magazine in its presseason poll of collegiate women's teams. Wayland lost two starters from last year's team but is still a veteran team. Washington said. in the tournament last weekened, the Jayhawks started slow but finished with a flourish to even their season record at 8.2. They also won by crumbling Grandview College, B1-45. "I think the change provides both of them with a greater opportunity to use their strengths to full advantage," Washington said. KU fell to Northwest Missouri State, 66-59, in the first round of the tourney, and dropped a 68-65 decision to the University of Missouri-St. Louis in the second round. The Jayhawks won the consolation finalating host Southwest Missouri State, 92-51. Burnett and Adrian Mitchell paced the Jayhawks scoring for the three games, and Mitchell was selected to the all-tournament team. The major turnaround in the final game, Washington said, was the result of a line-up change. She moved starting guard V. C. Carroll and forward Heward forward Carmelly Burnet to guard. Washington said KU played a better overall game in the consolation finale. She didn't do well with the way the team turned things around. "The mistakes we've been making are things we can change," she said. RESUME PACKAGE Includes samples, instructions and worksheets. Prepared by successful executive.Mail $5.00 to: RESUME P. O. Box 71, Clearview City, Ks. 66019 (Illustrated): dancing Our most popular middleweight down parka. 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We will repair or replace any Teltronics watch developing such defect within 1 year of purchase. • 30-day home trial; if not completely satisfied with your watch, return it within 30 days for full refund of purchase price, no questions asked. • Ultra-thin case, with stainless steel back. All watches have matching bracelets. Mail check or money order to: TELTRONICS, 2400 E. Devon, Des Plaines, Ill. 60018 FREE! Order any two Teltronics L.E.D watches and get the 5-figure 5-function electronic memory watch with battery and carry case FREE! Please send the following watches: (Specify your choice of 10 times a day, 1 hour, 2 hours, 3 hours, or 4 hours) gold or silver medium with $17.95 understanding that I will receive free a Teltronics calculator with every two watches ordered (no cash—no COD's accepted. Offer good in continental USA only) Add $1.00 shopping and handling cost for each watch Illinois residents add 5% sales tax. Enclose my check or money order for the total $___. Name: Address: City State Zip advertised in TV GUIDE BUY DIRECT AND SAVE! 6-Function L.E.D. Watch only $16.95 Silver modem watch Yellow gold plated. $17.95 Jewelry case in box with each watch Teltronics manufactures and sells exclusively these quality- crafted solid state watches worldwide—over 1 million sold at much higher prices. Now, order direct and get tremendous savings, all these features: • 6 functions controlled by a single button; hour, minutes, seconds, month, date, and day. Accurate within 2 minutes per year. • Full year warranty against defects in materials or workman- ship, except battery. We will repair or replace any Teltronics watch developing such defect within 1 year of purchase. • 30-day home trial, if not completely satisfied with your watch, return it within 30 days for full refund of purchase office; no questions asked. • Ultra-thin case, with stainless steel back. All watches have matching bracelets. Offer received by Dec. 18, 1976 will be delivered before Christmas. Mail check or money order to: TELTRONICS, 2400 E. Devon, Dos Plaines, III 60018 Please send the following watches): (Specify your choice of 10 years at time.) followed by OS. (For watch within 80 G. for gold is $17.90) I understand that I will receive: free. a Teltronics calculator with every new watch ordered. QUANTITY STYLE FINISH PRICE Order for two Teltronics LED watches and set this 8-digit electrician's electronic calculator with battery and carry case FREE! Add $1.00 shopping and handling cost for each watch. Illinois residents add 5% sales tax. I enclose my check or money order for the total $ ___. (No cash—no COD's accepted. Offer good in continental USA only) Name: Address: City State Zip: advertised in TV GUIDE Tuesday, November 30, 1976 7 because our point rectable ns on nt was e foul that I Opera premiers A classic children's bedtime story will come alive as an opera at William Inge Theatre when "Hansel and Gretel" premieres Dec. 1. The opera, written in 1893 by Engelbert Humperdick, a German composer, will be presented at 8 p.m. through Dec. 4 and at 1 p.m. Dec. 5 as part of the William Ike Theatre Series. The production is a joint production with the Ike departments at KU, Elizabeth Green, PhD Beach, FlA, graduate student and director of the production, said last week. As director, Green said she emphasized the "Romantic universe," and the medieval Christian spirit that Humperdinck emphasized. Green said she also put greater emphasis on dramatics. "I want to prove that opera is good drama as well as good music." she said. The lead roles are performed by Sarah Johannen, Austin, Minn., junior, as Hansel and Nancy Atkins, Lawrence graduate student, as Gretel. The witch is played by Frances Ginsberg, Dallas, Texas, senior. Hansel and Gretel's parents are played by Jane Bucker, Lawrence Gilmans, Lawrence graduate student. In one scene a ballet is performed by William Lenoir, Karsas City, Kan., special student, and Victoria Stevens, Pacific, Cal., senior. A choir of local children, ages five to 12, sing the chorus. One of the challenges of the play, according to Green, is that it is fantasy and involves magic in several scenes. In one scene a gingerbread house appears from nowhere while an oven explodes in another episode. Green said she was limited in directing because of the strict musical score. All actions must be completed at a specific moment because the music continues to play. However, she said she was pleased that she had been able to fulvesed her bad been extremely cooperative. Design psychologist's topic All performances have been sold out. Edward Ostrander, a psychologist who studies the relation of design to human behavior, will speak at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Ostrander's talk, "Behavioral Research for Design Decision-making," Myth or Reality, is the last of the full lecture series on design at the School of Architecture and Urban Design. Ostrander is a professor in the department of design and environmental analysis in the college of human ecology at Cornell University. He was a featured speaker at the National Science Foundation Conference on the Application of Social and Behavioral Sciences to Design at KU in June. Ostrander analyzes and evaluates buildings and their effect on people and uses the information in designing similar buildings. "It's good for relaxing and getting away from the laboratories and classes," he said. ADAMS, WHO has been flying since 1943, doesn't have much time to fly anyaircraft, but he was a pilot during WWII. Flying . . . From page five Fortunately, the only accident Adams has had was on the ground, he said. "I was pushing my plane into the hangar "Now I'v bobbling around like a cripple. "Now I'v bobling around like a cripple. Some plots can't afford their own planes, so they rent them from flying clubs. Doug Carlson, Shawnee Mission senior and vice president of the Optocap Flying Club, said KU students and faculty members made up 70 per cent of the club's HE SAID THE club was a corporation that rented four planes. After the initial $50 to join the club, he said, members pay eight dollars a month, which entitles them to rent one of the planes for between $8 and $14. According to Moffet, training to get a pilot's license involves 20 hours flying time with an instructor, 15 solo flying hours and two FAA tests, one written and one in flight. Dykes' assistant to leave to work for Schneider Mary Hantelt, assistant to Chancellor Archie Dykes and former personal secretary to former Gov. Robert Docking, was the director of the Atty. Gen. Carl Schreider's secretary. Dykes has said no one will be hired to take her place. However, James Scaly, administrative assistant to the chancellor, said yesterday he would assume the largest portion of Hanfelt's work, in addition to his own. Hanfelt will replace Schneider's married and married mother from Toronto. "It was a hard decision to make," Hanfelt said yesterday. "I enjoyed the University of Michigan." that I really missed all the activity in Topeka." Hanfelt was Docking's personal secretary for eight years. In 1975, after Docking left office, she worked as a research assistant in Spencer Library's Kansas Collection, organizing Docking's papers for presentation to the university. She was appointed assistant to the library. It has been speculated that the addition of handle to Schneider's staff signifies his involvement. "If he is, he is not say that to me," Hanfeid said. Schneider contacted her because his secretary was leaving and he needed a copy. University Dally Kansan A massive effort to modernize Lawrence's City Code will begin tonight, when city commissioners consider 15 ordinances that change laws the city no longer enforces. Commission to drop old, unenforced laws Clark said that some of the ordinances clearly were unconstitutional. One ordinance "violates the equal protection under law" because it prohibits the use of indecent language in the presence or bearing of females and children. Barkley Clark, city commissioner and University of Kansas professor of law, said last night that "it's very important we clean up the code. We have laws that are so vague they're not enforced, and many are products of the 19th century." Another ordinance, which Clark called "extremely vague," now prohibits "bawdy houses" in Lawrence. The new ordinance would prohibit "houses of prostitution." Commissioners also will consider legalizing "crime and horror publications" Clark said that tonight's proposed ordinance changes are the beginning of city efforts "to be out front among cities in getting rid of the ordinances that aren't enforced. Even if they aren't now enforced, they still might do something with them." Commissioners also will officially remove parking spaces in the 1000 block of 24th Street and Flushing Boulevard. Delta Theta and Phi Kappa Sigma fraternities now park. Alternatives will be considered to replace the lost spaces. The ordinance that removes the Edgehill spaces has already been approved, but commissioners postponed its second and final reading until tonight to give city officials time to consider ways of compensating for the change. The fraternities have suggested that parking be switched from only the west side of Louisiana Street to only the east side, and that parking be allowed on 17th Street between Edgehill Road and Tennessee Street. Buford Watson, city manager, said last night that the Louisiana Street change probably would be approved. Jeb Bayer, Phi Delta Theta president, has said that this change would give the fraternities five extra spaces. Watson said he didn't remember what had happened to the 17th Street parking possibility. Bayer has said he doesn't know if there are spaces that alternative would provide. Other ordinations eligible for adoption on second reading tonight are the issuing of temporary notes of $100,000 to pay for next year's construction projects and acres at the northwest corner of Kasold Drive and Trail Road to a residential classification that would allow a greater population density in the area; and raising $47,000 more funding to provide $47,000 more funding by 1978. KANSAN WANT ADS Accommodations. goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to students of international origin. PLEASE BURN ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111F FLINT HALL CLASSIFIED RATES AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS one two three four five time times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 Each additional $2.00 UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Three ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDB business office at 861-5284. FOR RENT SUBLIFE-2 = bbm, aut, aqt, and water pfd Aplains furnished, $75. On line lit. pfd Subbase spacecraft, furnished Meadowbrook studio 189-8427 - Available. Semester 1. 8427- 8428 Sublease clean 2 bedroom, unfurnished apartment, bus route. Available Dec. 1. Call 841-7742 after season. Sublease 1840 ft. infurnished Gatlight apartment, 362 West 9th St., no. I/m, includes gas heat and AC 811-2912 after a $75 monthly fee. Suburbale -economical four bedroom townhouse 320 W. Tailorville 2500 W. Churchill or 843-791-2333 16:22 www.suburbalerecommercial.com Sublease apartment - 2 bedroom townhouse - Trailridge, Apt. 330. 842-7612. 12-3 Competitive living situation, private rooms, bathroom, kitchen, laundry room, driver and bldg of late people. Rooms available for rent. 2 bdrm apt. w/ laundry. Pay electric and water. 16 bdrm. 1 On bus route 7185 7738 10 bdrm. 1 On bus route 7185 12-23 2-bedroom, furnished apt close to campus. Available Jan. 1st, $175 monthly plus utilities (24H). Residences are located on the main street. Spring Simmons? Yes, we will have some open-air sessions with 50 meals per week with unlimited seconds that can eat it). weekly maid service (let our "number one" girls pick up your room!), hotel dinners, swimming pool, study areas. Don't delay at Nallah Hall, 180 Nallah Drive 843-6528-12-8 Nallah Hall, 180 Nallah Drive 843-6528-12-8 Sublease two bedroom apartment, Plaza Plaza 184-6026, 185 plus utilities. Bus route. Room 18-3 Avail. immediately-limited, clean, unfurnished. Bldg. adm. $158 per month. On bus line. Call 844-267-3200. FOR SALE STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any price you see on your phone fifth equipment other than factory damage or close-out products. Please inquire about the specific equipment at the GAMPHONE SHOP at KIFFE. If you need it, call 212-746-3085. Excellent selection of new and used furniture, tools, appliances, and accessories. Trade the furniture and Appliance Center, 701-235-4960. 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 man preparation "New Analysis of Stores 'Civilization' available at Town Crier Stores." tt CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional gold and silver work at reasonable prices. Virtually any design. Mermals, Mermaids, Unicorns, complete stone sets. Satisfaction guarantee, repairs. 841-3838. Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties. BELIC AUTO ELECTRIC, 840-326, 3900. 2000-1500. 40-75% off on warm-up suits, dresses, manners, 60-80% off on swimsuits, Swim Club BnB. 4 (west on $29) 843-776-16. Want to save money? Buy your used car from an excellent condition All services records available. Excellent selection of used furniture refinished used office furniture 6 - 8 p.m. Floor deliveries 1 - 344-750-1200 STEREO SOUND SYSTEM $30. We have one of the most compact sound systems you could use in your home, but they don't need to be for yourself! It has a quality and sound that a lot of folks pay $100 to hire more for the family. We have a limited warranty. Come in and hear our special high performance $250 sound system. It will play music, talk on phones, and please us. We are truly STEREO SPECIALISTS. AUDIO, 13 E. 8th. Price, price and time: 11-30 **$229 SOUND SYSTEM SPECIAL**--Receiver, is a speaker and a radial speakers. This system has two outputs (to the loudspeaker) for the money and (to the only full warranty system) for the money. These are specialist in the trade—RAY AUDIO, 100. ELECTRO-VOICE SPEAKER SPECIAL Interface Voice and Pulse Tone Dual digital deck up to 948 rpm Max. Input of 256 kHz/16-bit analog input Output of 48 kHz/16-bit digital output Special O.M.S. Advert. Advent 201 call deck $200. Special O.M.S. Advert. Advent 201 call deck $200. Real special - i wonder if she loves drone. To Boog Limited offer $150 ea Walnut hand- set. To Boog Limited offer $150 ea Walnut hand- set. To Boog Limited offer $150 ea Walnut hand- set. To Boog Limited end of the month sale. Christmas shopping? Give a loved one the gift of music—an ear stereo or speakers. Quality often comes from those with some blank tape for your room. Or buy a special pair of headphones. Ideas include: Ray Audio, 18 K, Eight St., 11-30 This ad is for those of you who are looking for a voiceover to lend support around the Allison: three speakers, the sound will open your ears and pop your eyes. All for hearing it hair at Ray Audit 13, R. 11-30. The Speech Box. Our selected car servers will give you many instant access to your data. Let the specialists on best set bit lets the specialist on best set bit let OLD ENGLISH SHEEPDGPP puppies for sale. 8 Male, 41-67; Female, 32-51. Bald. 32-1. Cali 841-649 after 5 P.M. $99. 67 Olda Delmont 84, auto air, power, 76,000 miles 67 Olda Delmont 83, auto air, power, 76,000 miles 67 Olda Delmont 82, exhaust and bauten 642 Call 842-2164 evening 65 VW Baja - new tires, new brakes, new battery, 85 VW Bug - new tires, new brakes, new battery, 80 VW Beetle (8,000 square feet) deck, everything new for 2014. 68 VW Panback. Best offer. Call 842-7721 after 11-30 1970 Ford Pickup 360 3-4s. %l. top. Good rugged 84h. 84m. V4; good good. economy. 12-8 84h. 84m. V4; good good. economy. 12-8 svc TURNABLE. semi-auto, bell drive, with ABC-VC14 curb mark, new styles, dustcover. Like new. 841-6036. 12-6 WOODSON Sound Systems. Professional guard- ware. For heavy-duty use. 1970 BMW 1600, clean. dependable. air-cond. carbon monoxide filters include group 850 or blower. 841-826-6381 or 850 or blower. 841-826-6381 Pair Matters, 12' x 18', guest chairs, 3 way椅 Pair Matters, 12' x 18', guest chairs, 3 way椅 $250 best offer. Pair 23 ' Bryce hosts- $280 best offer. Pair 23 ' Bryce hosts- 72 Datum 1200: high mileage, damaged windshield, has most severe engine and rebuilt bug. Inventory is up. A LIST OF PRODUCTS THAT MAKE WORTHY GARMENTS the highest quality and best prices for woolen jersey blazers, woolen jackets and woolen jersey blazers. WOOLERCHAMP garments the highest quality and best prices for woolen jersey blazers, woolen jackets and woolen jersey blazers. TRADIWARE ALPINE GRAN handmade tents, anime bagpipes, EUREKA gourmet gery butter. Black knives, Built-in brochures, Blausch and Lomai mats, teacher flight jackets. Also A tude knife kit, NAVY SUPPLES and MORE MORE! QUOTE YOUR AVENUE. GO TO YOU WITH THE cheap transportation 1921 VW Bug-xcellent cheap transport in engine, new clutch engine, new transmission 824-3244 HELP WANTED Job opening for Research Assistant 50% time, focusing on research and assisting in research. Social science banker, McKenzie, Dept of Human Development, 111 to 3 p.m. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Qualify by December 31 of each year. AVON- Earn extra money on your own time. Avon- full-time, full-time. 11-20 Sellia, Selia. 11-20 Mother's Helper live in Lake Quivira, to care for children. Serves on dinner and board. One day off with 368-784-7971. Clinical pharmacology group at KU Med Center studies the adverse compensation. For information visit kcu.edu. Models wanted for photography contact. Good puppy. Write Box 211, Leavenworth, Kansas, 60405 Available immediately>1-1 time computer pro- gramming experience; 2-3 days of other programming tasks; and other programming tasks in a produce report build and maintain system. training course and/or 8 months. COBOL pro- gramming course and/or 8 months. COBOL pro- gramming course and/or 8 months. Administrative Information Systems, 322 West, Administrative Information Systems, 322 West, Lawrence Kansas 60545 Application deadline: December 6, 1996. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY FOR PERSONS WITH DISABLEITIES ENCOURAGED TO EXAMINE THEIR COMPUTER SKILLS. YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CARPENTER 15 East 8th 641-230 10-5 Mon-Sat, 11 8 on Thurs. LOST AND FOUND Found: silver necklace in 4023 Wesco on Thurs, Nov. 18. Call 664-9376 and claim. 11-30 Lost:船 box marked "Campus Christmas/Dec. 3" full of milkmeat meant for use at year-end shindig for KU students. Must have it back to shindig with 3,000 bottles. Reward Call 864-149-10 864-149-10 11-30 Lost: Red Coral Necklace Nov. 17, Reward? Please call: Brenda at 864-2198. Keeping 12-39 Found on 11.22, box of 8-track tracs on Campus West. Call 864-4321, ask for Darrell. 12-2 Found a set of keys lot near trash container in Stuffer parking lot. Sat. M42-8175-12-2 Found. woman's coin purse with name Mary Terry, other items. Many other articles, claim at the Language Lab. MISCELLANEOUS NOTICE Help! I have lost all my identification, I'm desperate to find my personal ID. If found please provide it. Located large square gelling glass 11-19-78 BE Located on the campus of Levera at the Union Cafeteria on Browne Street Alexander's Christmas Show CABASM CAFE-CAO good food from setch, Lunch 10-30, 30-50, Mbiss, Mass. Have a handy handout, e.g., menu, directions. BRSUME PACKAGE. Include samples, instruct- ories and materials for a specific expe- sive. Mail AX to RESH. PO Box 728, Austin, TX 78701. Swap Show. 628 Mass. Used furniture, dishware, lamps, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12pm-7pm. POETRY WANTED for *Arthology*, Include: 1. **Dorothy** (Boy) P.O. Box 2642, San Francisco, California 2. **Christopher** (Boy) P.O. Box 2642, San Francisco, California Gifts, Flowers, Bath Accessories Holiday Store Hours: Sun. 12-5 Nov. 28 - Dec. 23, Mon.-Sat. 9-8 826 iowa 842-1320 Unique collection of Greek jewels, ink pots, brushes, and a variety of items from the fifth-century B.C. 411 New Hampshire, 10-5 Saturday and Sunday. Attention: Waterfill paving materials and Energy Conservation systems to be by 7/14 and save water, with products designed for the residential and facade. They pay for themselves in a few years. Mail address: Waterfill, 120 S. Milwaukee St., Schmidt, 1211 Dawes, Lawrens, K004-6844. KARATE AND SELLI-DEFFENSE instruktion by nationals champions. B424-824, 833H5. Mason. 2-2 Commission on the Status of Women: 1976– Supper Tuesday, November 30, 1976 6:00 p.m. Council Room, Washington Scholarship Hall 544-812-1586 841-112-1586 to plan to come and bring a dish. PERSONAL CHARLIE MASSON. 1 LOVE stars in our eyes undercover activities. Keep going! 11-30 Gay Counseling service: call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals. HEY, BEAUTIFUL! If this is you (attractive female in your Playboy's Photo Content), call 842-2805 TO MAKE OR REQUEST ONE OF MY MONDAYS. I will make my opponents offer of $2,000 for first place and $1,000 for second place for someone else; call me anyway and offer a free vacation. Shove it down, their brains. S.R. Thanks for the help. He's a big guy. So he's going to work. She's fine, and with no rolling stick he'll never be able to do anything. SELL OR TRADE Excellent instruction in guitar baritone, as well as vocals. Combo backing, three times listed. Keyboard Studio; Voice Tracking; Recording Kit. SERVICES OFFERED Not happy with your bike? Maybe you need a "Tune-up"—we will clean up and adjust your bike's brakes and chain, true both wheels, adjust your wheels and chain, buy new accessories at lame of "tune-up" $15. Rates are based on the price of these necessaries bought at lame of "tune-up" $15. Special price $8.50 SPRCIAL New. 10. speeds $13.50, 3 speed $11.50, special speeds $4.50. Complete professional equipment. Need a new bike? Come and see the largest selection of quality bicycles Lawrence has to offer. See the Lawrence Schwinn Cycle, 4-Mon-Sat, Tillur, thru 9月. Sun, 1-4. 1825 W. 6th, 824-6363. 61 VW sunroof, unreg. running but poor condition. Sell for parts; small trade. boat 842-9785. ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thunderston on the Northwest Coast 360 H. Los Angeles Call (855) 274-1272; Tel (855) 274-1275 Math. Tutoring--competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 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, 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, 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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, 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1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 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, 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, 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, COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS TYPING THESIS BINDING COPY. The House of Uber's Quick Copy COPIES is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us know at 838 Massachusetts or phone 854-751-9500. Thank you. Typtist editor, IBM Pixeilla. Quality work. Assistant editor, dissertations welcome. Website: 842-913-8721 I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. t Experienced typist-term paper, thesis, mike. Experienced typist-spreadsheet, spelling, spellier. 843-5043, Mrs. Wright. EXPERT TYPING. Fast and accurate, reassemble a document under a minor grammarian. Call 842-8699 12-8 Typing. Thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. 762 per double page journal. 842 page. 12-6 Experienced typist, THESES ONLY. Will type templates in C++ and Java using the Korean Kernel. Karel at 844-851-391, 844-718-9600 and 844-726-5515. WANTED Need male roommate to 2 bdmr. apf. for a second semester, $$$ a month. a monthly rate of 11-30 Male Rousemite to share two furnished furniture and bedroom. Call 800-827-9141. Smoking Available. 2nd semester. Call 800-827-9141. FELDS Roommate to share two bedroom duplex for winter swimmer. Call 742-8572 after 6 a.m. 12:2-8 Looking for married couple who plan to be in the same household? Contact Park 25 office, 843-1455. Female roommate needed for spring semester. $72 a month, plus 10% Gaslight App. Call: 800-753-6848, M.F.P. Need place to live January-February. Call 684-1694 message any message at 684-1694 for Barb (N). Need Ride to N.Y.C or nearby area for two— Hospital 864-6216. Call Stuart after 7:00. Rescue team to share two bedroom duplex for 12 people. Rescue team to share two bedroom duplex for 12 people. One female rampmate for Towers Aps for in spring. Two male rampmates for Towers Aps for in spring. Female roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom apartment with two other female Friends, all of whom are very social. Person to share-size large clean two bedroom apartment, in a house near campus. Spring semesters. Bachelor's degree required. Mattresses • Liners Heaters • Frames Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets Person to share 2 bdmr. duplex. $70 plus ½ utilities. Kitloads 2:39 after 520. WATERBEDS 712Mass.St. % utilities. . . . . Male roommate wanted to share apt with own roommate. I have a 12-ft. bedroom. From Mesa Union Call 845-837-6847. 12-2 Downtown Lawrence 842-7187 SINGAPORE Aztec Inn American and Mexican Food All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 17 Vermont 842-9455 The Lounge HALF AS MUCH "A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet." - Bud on Tap Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa 843-8912 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday - Pool - Pinball - Foosball Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing • Furniture • Antiques • Imported Clothing 730 Mass. 841-7070 TRY HILLCREST BILLIARDS Home of HOLLYWOOD - Pool - Snooker - Ping Pong The Chalk Hawk BILLIARDS ● Pin-Ball ● Air Hockey ● Foos-Ball COMPLETE 'SELECTION OF BEST HILICRET BOX' Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted in the summer. Keep your car healthy in the summer Use the student discounts at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W. 23rd 842-4152 HAPPY CAR 8 --- Tuesday, November 30, 1976 University Daily Kansan FALLEY'S 2525 Iowa Next Door to Gibson's Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days Prices Good Tues. thru Sunday Nov. 30 — Dec. 5 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES Andy Griffith Brand 79¢ Sliced Bacon 12 oz. Pkg. $79 Ohse Brand Wieners 16 oz. $69 Andy Griffith Brand Sausage ... lb. 89¢ Swift Premium Brown & Serve Sausage ... 8 oz. 79¢ Armour Speedy Cut Boneless Hams... lb. $179 La Siesta Corn Tortillas ... 2 Packs. 69¢ Fresh Oysters ... 10 oz. $159 Van De Kamp Halibut ... 8 oz. $119 Schlitz Beer 6 pack 12 oz. cans $1 19 Falloy's Potato Chips 9 oz. 59¢ Golden Grain Mac & Cheddar Dinners 4 7½ oz. Boxes $1 Kraft American Singles 12 oz. 89¢ Campbell Tomato Soup ... 10¾ oz. 5 for 89¢ Campbell Chicken Noodle Soup ... 10¾ oz. 4 for $1 Campbell Mushroom Soup ... 10¾ oz. 4 for $1 Shurfresh Saltine Crackers ... 16 oz. 49£ Libby Peaches ... 29 oz. 49£ Shurfine Pears ... 16 oz. 39£ Shurfine Whole Tomatoes ... 16 oz. 3 for $1 Stokely Tomato Juice ... 46 oz. 2 for $1 Shurfine Mixed Vegetables ... 16 oz. 3 for $1 Welch Grape Jelly ... 20 oz. 69£ Pet-Ritz Frozen Topping ... 10 oz. 39£ Shurfine Frozen Peas ... 10 oz. 4 for $1 Butternut Coffee 1 pound all grinds $1 99 Totino's Frozen Pizza 13 oz. 69¢ Golden Ripe Bananas 2 lbs. 29¢ Sunkist Navel Oranges or Washington Red or Golden Delicious Apples 15 for 99¢ Mr. Coffee Coffee Maker ... regular $32.95 $2499 Crisco Shortening ... 3 pound can $149 Shurfine Pure Cane Sugar ... 5 pound bag 89¢ Bakers Angel Flake Cocoanut ... 7 oz. 59£ California Avocados ... 4 for $1 Tender Fresh Broccoli ... bunch 69¢ Tender Snappy Carrots ... 1 lb. Pkg. 3 for 89£ Mild Yellow Onions ... 3 lbs. 49£ Imitation Orange Juice Frozen Bright & Early 8 6 oz. cans $1 Super Scoop Meadow Gold Ice Milk ½ gallon 68¢ Libby Cut Green Beans 4 16 oz. Cans Delta Paper Towels 3 Jumbo Rolls $1 Meadow Gold Sherbet ... ½ gallon 88¢ Dromedary Dates ... 16 oz. 89£ Planters Mixed Nuts ... 12 oz. $129 Easy Off Window Cleaner ... 16 oz. Regular 69¢ 39£ Shout Pre-Wash Spot Remover ... 12 oz. 89£ Fab Detergent ... Giant Size $119 Real Chocolate Flavor Hershey Instant 32 oz. $149 Hershey Cocoa 16 oz. $129 Hershey Milk Chocolate Chips 11½ oz. 88¢ Lyndon Farms Frozen French Fries 5 20 oz. Bags $1 69 C Schlitz Beer 6 pack 12 oz. cans $7.19 Falloy's Potato Chips 9 oz. 59c Golden Grain Mac & Cheddar Dinners 4 7½ oz. $1 Boxes Kraft American Singles 12 oz. 89c Butternut Coffee 1 pound $199 all grinds Totino's Frozen Pizza 13 oz. 69c Golden Ripe Bananas 2 lbs. 29c 2 lbs. 29c Sunkist Navel Oranges or Washington Red or Golden Delicious Apples 15 for 99c Super Scoop Meadow Gold Ice Milk Imitation Orange Juice Frozen Bright & Early 8 6 oz. $1 cans ½ gallon 68℃ Libby Cut Green Beans 4 16 oz. $1 Cans Delta Paper Towels 3 Jumbo $1 Rolls Real Chocolate Flavor Hershey Instant 32 oz. $1 49 Hershey Cocoa 16 oz. $1 29 Hershey Milk Chocolate Chips 11½ oz. 88℃ Real Chocolate Flavor Hershey Instant 32 oz. $1.49 Lyndon Farms Frozen French Fries Lyndon Farms Frozen French Fries 5 20 oz. $1 Bags FALLEY'S $462 SAVE Over Falley's Low Discount Prices with These Valuable Coupons FALLEY'S SAVE $462 Over Falloy's Low Discount Prices with These Valuable Coupons FALLEY'S Regular $1.39 HELLMAN'S MAYONNAISE 32 oz. $1.09 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON BENTHOM SPIRIT BLANK CHRISTMAS TREE 2017 FALLEY'S Regular $1.39 HELLMAN'S MAYONNAISE 32 oz. $ 1.09 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular $2.13 JOHNSON TODDLER BABY DIAPERS 12 ct. $159 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 55c FALLEY'S Regular 55c GLAD WRAP 100 ft. roll 29¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular $1.29 GLAD TRASH BAGS 33 gallon 8 ct. 89¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 25 pound $2.99 Regular Bag $4.09 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 25 pound $2.99 Regular Bag $4.09 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S LIPTON TEA BAGS 100 ct. $1.59 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular $1.89 LIPTON TEA BAGS 100 ct. $ 1.59 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular $1.33 PALMOLIVE LIQUID DETERGENT 32 oz. 89c Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular $1.67 BORDEN'S Giant CREMORA 22 oz. Size 99¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 93c FALLEY'S COTTAGE CHEESE 24 oz. 79¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY KRAFT VELVEETA 22 oz. Pkg. Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 VELVEETA VELVEETA INSTITUTION OF AMERICA Regular $2.09 COUPON VELVEETA VELVEETA FALLEY'S KRAFT VELVEETA 32 oz. Pkg. $1.79 Regular $2.09 Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S CHARMIN' BATHROOM TISSUE 4 roll Pkg. 69¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON FALLEY'S Regular 85c CHARMIN' BATHROOM TISSUE 4 roll Pkg. 69¢ Limit 1 with coupon good thru Dec. 5 COUPON ---