A LITTLE WARMER
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
LA&S students need 2.0 GPA See story page five
DAY, ISAS LAST THE
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, February 1, 1977
Vol. 87, No. 80
Student Senate receives $108,000 additional funds
By SANDY DECHANT
Staff Reporter
An unexpected increase in the 1976-77 fall and spring enrollments at the University of Kansas aawrence campus means an amalgamation of the Student Senate's fiscal 1978 budget.
In addition to the estimated $60,000 in student activity fees, the Senate also will get about $15,000 in unallocated reserves, about $17,000 in controlled reserves and a portion of the university's unused funds allocated to campus organizations in spring and fall budget hearings.
This $180,800 is in addition to the $371,817 already budgeted for fiscal 1978.
500 Beisman, Senate treasurer, said yesterday the unexpected $0,000 from student enrollment fees was the result of low enrollment projections made in last April. The department also adopted the fiscal 1977 budget included the 1976-77 fall and spring semesters.
When John House, former Senate treasurer, prepared the 1977 budget last April, he projected a full-time enrollment of 450 students in spring enrollment of 18,500. Beairsted say.
The actual full-time enrollment for fall 1976 of 21,011 students and the predicted final-time spring enrollment of 21,830 students resulted in the unexpected income. Beisner
The actual spring full-time enrollment won't be known until the 20th day of classes. The Senate receives $8.60 in activity fees from each student enrolled full time,
The $17.00 in controlled reserves is annually budgeted to safeguard the Senate.
from a shortage of operating funds, should the treasurer overproject the next year's enrollment—the opposite of what happened this year, Beaiser said.
Unused controlled reserves in previous years comprise the estimated $15,000 in funds provided to the company.
In the past, money from excess enrollment fees, unallocated funds and unused funds was allocated in budget bearings, to student organizations. But, Beisner said, the Senate never had close to $108,000 with which to work.
"Although technically, the $100,000 surplus could also be allocated to campus organizations, we don't want to see the money wasted," he said.
For fiscal 1978, the Senate budgeted $48.965 for student organizations.
Tom Mitchell, Senate business manager,
said he wanted at least part of the money to
be reserved to insure the Senate enough
to prevent a should predict drop in
enrollment occur.
If enrollment drops, the amount of money the Senate gets also drops, he said. The Senate is financed totally through student activity fees.
Mitchell said that to prevent a future surplus, the activity fee could be lowered by
I realize that those activity fees may not benefit the student today, but they will be worth it in the long run.
"A lot of students would like to see the activity fee lowered just for their own benefit. What they don't see is that if there is a declining birth rate and the activity fee
All three student body presidential candidates have plans for the additional $108,000, one of the candidates, Randy Knotts, will receive $16,000 and the $108,000 to be transferred from the State of Kansas accounts, where it doesn't draw interest, to the Kansas University Enrollment System, where the interest could be used to finance a Senate-sponsored scholarship program.
The transfer of the $108,000 from the state to the Endowment Association would have to be approved by the legislature, McKernan said. If it was transferred, the state would lose money it would normally invest, he said.
Another candidate, Sherri Grey, Manhattan senior, said she would use the funds to improve intramural recreation facilities, increase Senate allocations to student organizations and would consider helping finance construction of the proposed stadium. But the president might have to be approved by the legislature or administration, she said.
had previously been lowered, the Student Senate will not have the revenue it needs.
Steve Leben, El Dorado junior, and another student, said simply that he would "send it"
"The purpose of the student activity fee is to provide a benefit for those who pay it." he
Mitchell cautioned the candidates to be britey with the money should they be
Kansas affected by natural gas plan
"Just because we have it, doesn't mean we have to waste it," Mitchell said.
By PAEH ALBERTSON
Special Correspondent
By YAEL ABOUHALKAH
WASHINGTON-James Pearson doesn't exactly relish the situation, but the Kansas Senator seems to be in an "I told you so" position this week as Congress feverishly considers President Jimmy Carter's emergency natural gas act.
Pearson has been a long-time but unsuccessful proponent of deregulation of natural gas prices, and he hoped that the new rules would spur exploration for more natural gas.
Kansas is directly affected in at least two important ways by the recent chilling
"We if we decide to accept the proposal, we will send a letter to town to teach more presentable," she said.
now, along comes the Big Freeze of 1977, a cold snap that has paralyzed large parts of the Eastern United States. The drain on natural gas supplies has shortened work weeks for thousands of businesses and put about two million people out of work.
The Lawrence City Commission will decide tonight whether to accept a proposal to acquire a warehouse area at Sixth and Fifth streets as the location for a new city hall.
Commissioner Carl Mibke said that the commissioners thought they had a chance to get the buildings without spending much money, but he instead costed the cost of renovating the buildings.
- The state, while not yet feeling the pinch of greatly curtied natural gas allocations, faces increased conservation methods later in the year as is shipped out of state by Carter's plan.
The proposal was submitted jointly by the Bowersock Mills and Power Company and Kansas Fibreboard Inc. at last week's commission meeting.
City hall site up for vote this evening
Commissioners were generally optimistic after they visited the buildings last Thursday. Commissioner Marrie Argeringer thought the buildings had great potential.
The Bowersock company owns Bowersock dam, electrical generating equipment, grain elevators and the building housing Closeout Carpet, 546 Massachusetts St. Under the proposal, the company will supply the equipment not sold to the city, the selling price would be $25,000.
Kansas Fibreboard buys additional buildings to the east. Under its half of the proposal, the city could buy the buildings for a value or for $20,000, whichever is superior.
- As the fourth largest supplier of natural gas for the nation in 1975, Kansas producers would stand to gain increased revenue from any deregulation act.
"I uke to see Lawrence get a city bus," he said. "It has good possibilities."
Carter's reallocation proposal calls for limited deregulation of natural gas prices, but only until mid-1977. It would also make states with only excess natural gas, such as Nevada, reliance on that gas to cripple Eastern states for emergency use in hospitals and homes.
Therefore, natural gas supplies for Kansas residents may decrease in the coming weeks, no matter how warm the state's weather gets.
But a staff member for the Senate Commerce Committee soft-paceded the possibility that Kansans faced curtailed access to government services because of the pending, interstate shipments.
"I don't think Kansas will be hurt under the Carter proposal," the staff member said last night. "It can always turn bad later on, but the odds against that are large."
The staff member said curtailments of natural gas in Kansas were running higher than expected. But he pointed out that many businesses, already cut off from their natural gas producers, had successfully prepared for alternative supplies of energy.
Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL
The situation isn't to positive for the East, even with additional natural gas being shipped through the Gulf.
"We need to move large amounts of investment capital as rapidly as possible into the search for domestic oil and gas," Gravel said. "This means deregulation of oil and gas so that the market can work its will in achieving greater domestic production."
All of these problems, of course, don't delight any congressman. But the crisis does reinforce the call of derogators such as Pearson and Sen. Mike Gravel, R-Iowa.
prolonged conservation methods to make sure there is enough fuel to at least keep homes heated until warm, spring weather arrives.
Deregulation is a complicated and con-
temporary sub课题. Briefly, this is the
political challenge.
Interstate gas—gas sold between states—is under control of the Federal Power Commission. Gas discovered before 1975 sells at 52 cents per 1000 metric feet (Mcs). New gas, discovered after 1975, sells at a $1.44 per Mcs.
Gas sold intrasteat—within the state that produces it—is uncontrolled except for market demands and sells now for between $2.15 and $2.25 per Mcs.
Obviously, it is more profitable to sell gas within the state that produces it, which means that gas producing states have little access to the supplies to sell at the lower interstate rates.
It isn't known just how much extra
see KANSANS AFFECTED naze three
1972
Town Swearingen (left), museum artist, and Orville Banner, paleontologist, view the exhibit recently completed. It is the only mounted skeleton in a dinosaur in Kansas.
New exhibit
Dinosaur museum addition
A reproduction of a rare dinosaur skeleton, mounted last week at the University of Kansas' Dyche Museum of Natural History, is the only mounted skeleton of a dinosaur in Kansas or Missouri, Larry Martin, assistant curator of vertebrate paleontology and assistant professor of systematics and ecology, said yesterday.
Martin said the duckbill dinosaur, Parasaurolophus walkeri, was an unusual kind because of a big crest on the top of its tail. The dinosaur might have used to sound mating calls.
an unstressed price, KU's museum pur-
chased this case made from a mold of the
mold.
The dinosaur lived about 70 million years ago and probably was about 11 feet tall and weighed six or seven tons.
In addition to the new display, the museum will open its spring Wednesday Evening Series of lectures and programs with, "Dinosaur Alive!"
The original skeleton is at the Royal Ontario Museum of Toronto, Canada. For more information, visit www.royalontario.com.
A presentation at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the museum's Panorama Room will feature slides and fossil specimens. Martin will show the appearance and behavior of dinosaurs.
The cost of the program is $1.50, and reservations can be made through the museum's public education office, Room 602, Dyce Hall. Tickets can be purchased at the main entrance. Tickets for all three programs to be presented this spring are $3 for museum associate members and $3.75 for others.
Leave policy fine as it is to Calgaard
By JOHN MUELLER Staff Renorter
A faculty proposal to change the University of Kansas subbatical leave policy may cause more problems than it might. A professor for academic affairs, said yesterday.
The proposal, from the Faculty Senate Committee on Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities (FRPR), will be considered by the Faculty Council at its next meeting. The committee has urged that less emphasis be placed on research in the humanities and sciences such as saabaticals, and that the decision-making on saabatical leaves be decentralized.
BUT CALGAARD said, "the plan would create only more layers of review than we have now. The system we have now isn't perfect, but I like it better."
A recent FRRP report indicated that KU sabbatical procedures, controlled by the University Committee on Sabbaticals, were numbered-second and, in some cases, not worthwhile. "FRRP recommended that many decisions to grant leaves by made by four academic groups, including research centers from KU's various schools and departments.
CALAIGRAR SAID, however, that he
proposed behind the proposed
academic groups.
The groups are in humanities; natural sciences, including mathematics and computer science; social and behavioral sciences; and professional schools and the
Lamping the professional schools and library together wasn't logical, according to Calgard, because "what do the Schools of Social Welfare, Fine Arts and Pharmacy have in common with the library?" And the books of Engineering could be put with natural sciences."
The real issue in University sabbatical policy, he said, is "the fact that someone's going to be unhappy. I don't care what the people are, we can grant only so many awards."
THE BOARD of Regents sabbatical policy currently limits KU's sabbatical awards to "4 per cent of the number of students admitted nationally with rank of instructor or higher."
FRPR called the limitation disabling because it didn't include assistant instructors in determining how many faculty members were eligible for awards.
THE FACULTY Council acted last week to seek increased state support for the faculty retirement fund, a benefit the council gave top priority, and also for faculty insurance and long-term disability coverage.
State aid for the present faculty long-term disability program may require a close look from administrators, Calgard said. The council proposed that the state finance a much-needed investment in the amount that be normally would have made if he hadn't been disabled.
Cangard said he thought the retirement fund request had been the most important of being mature.
Calgaird said possible administrative modification of the council proposals would be based on an assessment of cost and which would be the preferred fringes.
TOMMY HALL
Josh McDowell talked about the future last night in Hoch Auditorium
Josh McDowell exhorts Christ criticizes educational system
By RICK THAEMERT
Staff Renorter
The educational system is partly responsible for creating apathy and rambling existences, Josh McDowell, Christian evangelist, said yesterday in an interview.
Criticism evengues, said yesterday the 35-year-old activist said that today's educational system didn't meet the needs of students, especially their spiritual needs.
"Many know there's a need in our lives, but we recognize that it's a spiritual need," he said, adding that although professors can teach subjects, they fail to teach core values. "You can't help the students; you can't help the学生 reach a spiritual goal, he said.
McDowell, who has spoken at more than 40 universities in 42 countries, said students were part of "an educational system that depersonalizes the individual, depersonals sex," and that didn't provide adequate models for
substances.
Jesus Christ is the only worthy model to follow, despite the fact that many historians and professors doubt his existence. McDowell said.
McDowell said he believed the resurrection was fact and could be proven 'according to the laws of evidence'.
Speaking to an audience of about 800 Sunday night in Hoch Auditorium, McDowell presented statements that attempted to validate Christ's resurrection.
"I have come to the conclusion that the resurrection of Jesus Christ is one of the most wicked, vicious, heartless hawks ever foisted upon the minds of men, or it is the most fantastic fact of history," he said.
He said he based his belief upon manuscripts and historical records that date back to A.D. 68, which he has documented in his book, "Evidence that Demands a Verdict."
He has degrees in theology, language and economic theory and calls his view of Christianity an "intellectual-personal" one.
personal" one.
After two years of trying to refute the truth of Christianity, he was converted, and he now attempts to intellectually prove his truth, said he.
Amid sporadic "amens" within the mostly student crowd, McDowell invited students to accept historical evidence and Jesus Christ into their lives.
"Doubling Thomas was from KU." McDowell said. He said evidence of Christianity was also so beaten that he could not speak.
Until then, he said, students remain in an identity crisis. "They are asking the questions: Who am I? Why am I? What am I going to do?"
McDowell said most students didn't know that Jesus could help them find meaning in life and answer those questions.
"Students want to get just a functioning degree so they cannot be a functioning job and just function," he said.
And without meaning in life, apathy thruhes, he said.
"Students want to get just a functioning degree so they
can do what they want."
Ascending apathy among students is insecurity, McDowell said. Because students are insecure and can't share themselves with others, they turn to teachers, who consequently, he said, there is a "reaction instead of a response."
McDowell said he hoped students would begin responding to Jesus. Although he accepts the existence of other religions and teachings, he said, he has never found ways to improve and improve people's lives than through Christianity.
Through the teachings of Christ, he said, people can find freedom to be what they should be, strength to live as they should and a happiness that isn't dependent upon outside circumstances.
2
Tuesday, February 1, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Cold forces unemployment
The severe cold blitz that has left at least 75 Americans dead and sliced deeply into natural gas supplies has forced millions of Americans off the job or out of school.
school.
Theands of schools, particularly in the Northeast, were closed yesterday as she officials fought to preserve diminishing gas supplies.
The gas shortage forced the layoff of more than 1.5 million workers in areas where plants and businesses were ordered to close or reduce operations so available heating fuel could be used for homes in the Northeast and Midwest.
Carter submits proaram
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Jimmy Carter sent to Congress yesterday his $3.2 billion economic program that includes a $50 tax rebate for nearly every American. He said the program promises only "what can realistically be done" to speed economic growth.
Carter said the two-year program could help create one million new jobs by the end of this year, which would leave the nation's jobless rate at about 6.8 per cent. The unemployment rate in December was 7.8 per cent.
U.S., Panama resume talks
WASHINGTON—The United States and Panama yesterday opened a new phase of their protracted Panama Canal negotiations with agreement still far from certain on questions of sovereignty and duration of a new treaty.
certain on questions of sovereignty and duration of the Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and Panamanian Foreign Minister Aquilino Boyd met for two hours and announced that the negotiations, which began more than 10 years ago, would officially resume Feb. 10 in Panama.
Boyd said Panama planned to take over jurisdiction of the Canal and its Zone within three years after a new treaty has been ratified. He said by the year 2000, Panama wanted complete operating and military control over the strategic waterway.
HALTON HILLS
TODAY! WORLDIS OF FUN auditions will be from 3 to 7 p.m. in the Kansas 'Union's Big Room. LOCAL VOLUNTEER AGENCIES will hold a recruitment day from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the lobby of Fraser Hall. An information meeting on Monday at UHAGE INSTITUTE in Parks will be at 4 p.m. in the Union's International Room.
Read Faster Much OR YOUR MONEY BACK
TONIGHT: MT. OREAD BIKE CLUB will meet from 7 to 9 in the Union's Council Room. GAY SERVICES will meet to discuss "The Church and the homosexual" at 7:30 in the Union's Pine Room. UNCLASSIFIED WOMEN'S ADVISORY UNIT will meet at 7:30 in the Union's Centennial Room. KU TALISSON GYM will meet with a meeting and free demonstration at 7:30 in 172 Robinson Gym. KU TAEWONDO CLUB will host a demonstration of Korean Martial Arts at 9 in Robinson Gym.
Increase your reading speed 500,
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Our course was designed by an
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Correction
It was incorrectly reported in Monday's Kansan that applications for volunteers to teach Free University courses could be picked up until Feb. 14 in the SUA office. Applications can be picked up only until Feb. 4.
Events
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Watch the want ads in the Kansan.
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SUA MOVIES
CLASSICAL SERIES
FILM SOCIETY
MORGAN (1967)
Dir. Karel Reisz, with
David Warner, Vanessa Redgrave
Wed., Feb. 2, 7:30, 75c
Woodruff Auditorium
MEDEA (1970)
Dir. Pier Paolo Pasolini,
Maria Callas. Subtiltes.
Thurs, F. 3, 7; 3: 00, 9: 30, 1
POPULAR FILMS
MARQUISSE OF O
Dir. Eric Rohrmer
Midwest premiere
Feb. 16, Feb. 5,
3:30; 7:00; 9:30; 1
Kansas Union
GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL SOCIAL GATHERING:
In its February issue, National Lampoon sets out to answer a question that has been on everyone's mind since November 22, 1963.
- Fee Waivers
- GSC
- Placement Services
- Beer
- Party Plans
WHAT IF?
GRAND FIFTH TERM INAUGURAL ISSUE
NATIONAL LAMPOON
February 20th, 1976
H. Koehler
6,000 Days
- Gradex, Student Senate Elections
BASKETBALL IN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE Tues., Feb.1 Claremore Jr.College 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Feb. 3 Phillips University 7:30 p.m. Sat., Feb. 5 Grandview College 5 p.m.
- People
THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 3
7:00 in Big 8 Room,
K. Union
unded by Student Senate
10-24-83
GYMNASTICS IN ROBINSON GYMNASIUM Fri., Feb. 4 Emporia State 7 p.m. Sat., Feb. 5 Grandview College (ninth in the nation) 1 p.m.
What do the dates 1,3,4 and 5 have in common? In February, these are all dates of KU Women's Sporting Events.
---
FreeUniversity SPREAD IT AROUND
The Free University needs you! To convene classes for this spring semester! Teach everything and anything from knitting to trapping,from manual communication to massage!
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: Student Senate Treasurer's Office
PUBLIC NOTICE -
RE: Training Session
Course descriptions are available in the SUA office thru Friday, Feb. 4th!
All officers who are responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds must:
4. Account for all inventory.
2. Sign an organizational management contract with the student senate.
3. Obtain authorization for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
1. Attend a training session conducted by the Office of the Student Senate Treasurer. See the time listed below.
Treasurer. See the time listed below.
2. Sign an organizational management contract with the Student Senate
The session will last less than an hour. You must contact the Student Senate Office at 844-3710 to sign up for this session or for additional information.
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee.
International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
revenw would certaIwould receivt versta by Co Kar weait! mild would
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met. Even though you have attended a training session last fiscal year, you will still be writing in the final year. Training sessions will be held approximately once each month. The training session has been scheduled for the following time:
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Tuesday, February 1, 1977
3
ver.
Kansas affected
From page one
revenue Kansas natural gas producers would earn if Carter's plan is passed. It is certain that the state's gas companies wouldn't refuse the extra money they would receive for selling their gas through in-state connections, mandated by Congress and the President.
Kansas producers, tapping the natural wealth of the state's gas fields, hope for mild weather in the coming months. That would lessen in-state demand and enable
Pearson says Carter's bill probably won't have much impact on the current crisis because the rate of growth is low.
them to ship more gas interstate for a marked-up price.
"The only real long-term answer to the gas crisis is to bring supplies in line with demand," Pearson said. "And although we have failed to secure energy for the country, Congress must do it now or risk new and more disastrous consequences."
Such deregulation bills, however, are highly controversial and political because of their inflationary effects. Pearson's deregulation bill in the last session of Congress passed the Senate but was narrowly defeated in the House.
On this issue, conflicting studies draw no clear conclusion on the actual amount of natural gas still left below the surface of the continental United States. Large reserves, however, are believed to be untapten in the Gulf of Mexico area.
Woman reports rape to police
A 24-year-old Lawrence woman told police Sunday night that she was raped in her apartment by a man who asked to use her telephone.
She said the man, who told her he had escaped from police custody, threatened her with a butcher knife from her kitchen. The woman described the attacker as black, about six feet tall and weighing about 160 pounds.
THE KU BUSIKAN JIUJITSU CLUB
8
Opening meeting and demonstration TONIGHT,7:30 p.m.,173 Robinson Gym
Self Defense, Mind Body Unification learn the best of Jiujitsu, Wing Chun Kung Fu and Oriental Weaponry.
SUA
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
4 Day Package includes: March 13-19 $137.00
*4 Days Lifts *4 Nights Lodging *4 Days Rental
Round Trip Chartered Bus Transportation
- 5 Days Lifts * 5 Nights Lodging * 5 Days Rental
Round Trip Chartered Bus Transportation
5 Day Package includes March 13-20 $166.00
Options on both trips available
Extra day skiing****Discounts for own equipment/own transportation
Final Deadline to Sign Up—Feb. 4
For more info. call SUA office 864-3477
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MIDWEST PREMIERE
"THE BEST OF THE BEST-and surely the wittiest."-TIME MAGAZINE
"THE BEST foreign film of the year." NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW
JHC
"One of the year's TEN BEST!"
-KATHLEEN CARROLL/DAILY NEWS
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"Witty, joyous and beautiful."
-VINCENT CANBY TIMES
Eric Rohmer's THE MARQUISE OF O...
Directed by ERIC ROHMER based on the novel by H. von Nest
Fri, Feb. 4 and Sat, Feb. 5,
3:30, 7:00, 9:30, $1
Fri., Feb. 4 and Sat., Feb. 5,
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 $1
Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union
The Film "Wizards" and the Ralph Bakshi program
has been rescheduled for March 8.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Student Senate Elections
Spring 1977
Nunemaker Senate District
All Out of Town
G.S.P. Hall Sigma Alpha Epsilon #5
J.R.P. Delta Chi
Chi Omega Triangle
Gamma PhI Beta Delta Tau Delta
Sigma Kappa
6 seats
4
5 seats
Templin Sigma Nu
Lewis Kappa Sigma
Hashinger Alpha PhI
McCollum
Alpha ChI Omega
Delta Upsilon
6 seats
Corbin
All Scholarship Halls
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Sigma ChI
Kappa Alpha Theta
Beta Theta PI
Acacia
15th
15th
2 5 seats
Ellsworth
Nalsmith
Evans Scholars
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Lambda ChI Alpha
PhI Kappa Theta
Alpha Gamma
Alpha Kappa Lambda
Pl Kappa Alpha
3 5 seats
Oliver
Pl Beta PhI
Phi Kappa Psi
Sigma PhI Epsilon
Phi Kappa Sigma
PhI Delta Theta
Phi Gamma Delta
Alpha Tau Omega
TO RUN FOR GRADEX (THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL):
Elections for Student Body President, Vice-President, 106 Student Senate seats, class officers will be held Feb.16 and 17.
1) Pick up declaration of candidacy at the GSC office (Level 3, Kansas Union)
2) Return your declaration no later than 5:00 p.m. on Friday, February 4, 1977, to the GSC office.
IF YOU ARE RUNNING FOR SENATE:
1) Pick up declaration of candidacy at the Student Senate office (Level 3, Suite 105, Kansas Union).
2) Have the office of the Dean of your school or college certify your enrollment in that school or college.
3) Return your declaration (with 55.00 filing fee) no later than 5:00 P.M. on Wednesday, February 2, 1977, to the Senate office.
IF YOU ARE RUNNING FOR CLASS OFFICERS:
1) Pick up declaration of candidacy at the Student Senate office (Level 3, Suite 105, Kansas Union).
2) Have the office of the Dean of your school or college certify your enrollment and year in that school or college.
3) Obtain signatures of 50 students in their class on the petition form.
4) Return your declaration (with $5.50 filing fee) no later than 5:00 P.M. on Wednesday, February 2, 1977, to the Senate office.
Student Senate Seats Open:
Architecture 2
Business 4
Education 8
Engineering 8
Fine Arts 7
Journalism 3
Law 2
Pharmacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Social Welfare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Graduate School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
LA&S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
*Nunemaker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
**University Specials . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
*To be elected according to districts shown on the map.
**Any student who has a school code classification of (Z).**
Class Officer Seats Open:
Class Officer Seats Open
Sophimore, Junior, and senior class officers (President, Vice-President, Secre-
Sophistone, Senior and Senior
tary. Treasurer!
CANDIDATES MUST ATTEND A SPECIAL MEETING (TUESDAY,
FREBRUARY 8, AT 7:30 P.M. IN THE JAYHAWK ROOM OF THE KANSAS
UNION) TO APPROVE THE PROOF OF BALLOT AS WELL AS GO OVER LAST
MINUTE ELECTION POINTS. IF YOU DO NOT ATTEND THIS MEETING, THE
BALLOT WILL BE PRINTED AS THE PROOF HAS COME TO US.
(Paid for by Student Activity Fee)
4
Tuesday, February 1, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
An American value
Before you go on to read something else in today's paper, or before you proceed to do anything else today, let's stop to consider an all-too-familiar and all-too-uncomfortable problem.
It's a problem that, these days, can assume several names and forms: "exclusive residential district," or "preferred membership" or—one of the most infamous—"preserving ethnic purity." But perhaps you know it best as racial prejudice. Prejudice: irrational hatred of a particular group.
Some might say that any discussion of Prejudice in America Today is cliche; that anything that could be said about prejudice has already been said. And they might say that any discussion of prejudice is a problem; that prejudice exists because people keep saying it exists.
YES, IT is cliche. Racist attitudes have long permeated our thinking, and all that has been said in attempting to obliterate those attitudes has been of little avail.
But no, a serious discussion of a problem does not perpetuate the problem. On the contrary, we're in the fix that we're in because no one has been talking lately.
There was a movement during the '60s to break up the racial and ethnic barriers that had placed non-white Americans into little niches and kept them there. There were efforts on several fronts to establish the fact that ethnic and racial groups had identities of their own. Ethnic heritage, culture and values all stood up to be recognized.
AND IN many ways, progress has been realized. An employer can not—legally discriminate in his job because of an employee's race. A reactor can not—legally refuse to sell "
house to a prospective buyer because he is black. Minority groups have since made advances in several professional fields.
advances in seven. Those milestones during the '60s were supposed to work for the elimination of racial hatred that had scarred America's 200-year history. We thought we were on the verge of a new age of thinking and acting.
A decade later, we have come very far: THE ANSWER depends on how you interpret the question. In ways, we have come far. We've seen more blacks take seats at Congress. There is a opportunity than black and other minority students to enter college. Blacks have "broken the block" in many previously lily white neighborhoods.
Those progressions are monumental and certainly should be counted in our society's favor. Unfortunately, however, they might not be an accurate barometer of how well we tolerate one another in 1977. Allowing a black person to be your neighbor, and how well you and your neighbor get along are two different things.
A DECADADE, have we come very far?
Answer that question yourself. Count the number of remarks you hear (or say) about a "mixed" marriage, or about the predominance of blacks on a football team.
Notice how uncomfortable you get when you're outnumbered by "them." Look at how many people laugh with—not at—Archie Bunker. Question whether the number of minorities in the unemployment line and below the poverty line really concerns you at all.
Disheartening, isn't it? A decade obviously hasn't undone the racist transgressions of two centuries.
But it's no wonder. We've hardly tried.
Pre-enrollment plug
When 10 students were caught enrolling ahead of schedule this semester by using old and invalid permit to enroll cards, University officials apparently delivered only a lecture and told the miscreants to go and sin no more.
RARE OR non-existent is the student who attends the University of Kansas for four years without cheating at enrollment at some time or another. These 10 just happened to get caught.
At first glance, that soft slap on the wrists seems an unusually light punishment for criminals who were caught red-handed. But when one thinks for a moment about the emotion of it, the frequent response to it becomes clear that there was little more that could be done.
Nearly every student has a story or two about how to beat the system, how to sneak into enrollment early if a friend is working at the check-in station, so that you don't get caught for underclassmen, or how to get a false demeanor's stamp on a permit to enroll card, as the 10 violators did.
Until the University finally gets the computerized pre-enrollment system that officials have long been promising, there's no way to stop the violations. Enrollment workers can surely be more alert and reduce violations, but human error insures that there will always be a way to triumph over the rules.
IT WOULD have been a little silly to punish 10 students when so many more are obviously getting away with bending the rules. University officials need not fear that their kind treatment of these students will open the door for more abuse. This is true, but it's a long time—ever since the number of students at KU became too large for the old system of enrolling.
All that can be realistically done is to hope that computerized pre-enrollment for the entire University gets out of the conference room and into actual use soon. It would make involved and would easily easier for everyone involved and would stop making criminate out of students.
Budget rules slow Carter
The OSHA move was only a minor barb in the sides of the business community. Efforts to prohibit corporate bribes to foreign countries met even louder resistance.
Apparently, times have changed. At a conference on the economic outlook for Kansas
Jimmy Carter's people are working furiously these days to meet a February 15 deadline for putting their own stamp on the album for support. How much of a stamp will it be? Not much.
Mr. Carter may find the situation frustrating; conservatives will find it comforting. Viewed in terms of deficit spending, he will be enough, Mr. Ford projected income of $393 billion and outge of $440 billion for a $47 billion deficit. Mr. Carter already has promised to make bad matters worse. His cuts and spending increases will produce a $75 billion deficit.
BUT IF the new President had more time to work on the figures, the country might be facing a budget to boggle the mind. He doesn't have the time. Under the Budget Reform Act, the various legislative authorizing committees must
begin pulling their reports together on February 15. The reports go to the two Budget Committees on March 14.
When the Occupational Safety and Health Administration decreed that public toilets should be placed at specific locations in and in farm fields, cries of governmental meddling rang from the mouths of the faithful. Ridiculous, the businessmen claimed. Let us run our fire, we fit out, and fit not, as we are told to.
The Budget Committees must recommend income and outgo totals to Congress by April 15. The House and Senate then have until May 15 to fix the final target figures.
These deadlines, unlike most timetables on Capitol Hill, are taken seriously. The Budget Committees still are fired by the zeal of reform; they perceive themselves as a voice and their chairmen mean to match the record this year. And wholly apart from their pride in the reform process, the committees see the new procedures and initiatives that Congress can meet the White House on equal terms.
WITHIN THE FIXED timetable, Mr. Carter's people, competent as they are, cannot afford the budget accounts. Some large lump sums can be added—another $4 billion for public works spending that can be subtracted—$2 billion in tax cuts for
James J. Kilpatrick
© 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Letters Policy
AND GOVERNMENTAL dabbling with the private sector has long been criticized as the American business machine.
business. The deadlines will not permit the thousands of individual revisions that would have to be made to accrual records and insurance plan or the federalization of public welfare.
Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Letters must be signed; KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
Mr. Carter faces a second difficulty in shaping the budget for fiscal 78. His predecessors have taken a bold approach to sheer momentum of federal programs already in motion. Roughly 75 per cent of the budget is spent out of the $440 billion total is relatively uncontrollable.
Chief among the tenets of this faith is the assumption that competition lowers prices and improves services and goods.
American businessmen, those diehard chiefs of economic conservatism, have long touted the free enterprise system as essential to the maintenance of the American way of life.
THE BUDGET projects $6.7 billion in payments under Social Security and railroad retirement. The figures are untouchable. The budget includes $23.1 billion in federal retirement. Untouchable. There is an item of $31.2 billion in net interest on debts. Untouchable. Do not leave the house, do even if he were so minded, to cut costs of Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, veterans' benefits, and public assistance payments.
This needs to be understood by those who naively imagine it a simple matter to whack $50 and then add $40 billion there.
WESTPHAL
WELCOME
AMY.
WOULD YOU MIND
SCOOCHIN' DOWN Δ
MITE? I CAN'T SEE
THE BOARD.
CONGRESS MAY help him out of this dilemma by balking at some of these grandiose ventures. When young men and women in the working force fully understand why they are costing them, we are likely to see political rebellion. Five years hence a worker earning $23,700 will be walloped $3,247 in combined employer-employee taxes for Social Security alone. National health insurance requires much more. A sensitive House will be cautious.
Some of these were massive-
vast new sums for education,
welfare and comprehensive
fiscal modest—a new Consumer Advocacy Agency. They all add up. Simultaneously, he is committed absolutely to sub-
suming a balanced budget for fiscal '81.
The President has a third problem also. During the course of his campaign he made extravagant promises—and he made them in two directions at the same time. On the spending side, he promised a proliferation of new programs.
In sum, Mr. Carter hasn't the time, hasn't the power, and hasn't the political support to write major innovations into the budget for the coming fiscal year. Like the skipper of one of those prodigious superintendants, he can change course if he can change course a few degrees here or a few degrees there.
Businessmen should take lumps
But it takes 20 miles of ocean to turn around and half a day to stop. Next year, maybe, he will have a budget 30 per cent of which he may legitimately call his own.
JOHN ARMSTRONG,
president of the KFB, now
pleads for government help.
He has been estimated to be two years
here Friday, officials of the Kansas Farm Bureau and Cessna Aircraft Co. sang a different tune.
administration to step in and help Cessna's sagaing exports. As a result of embargoses imposed by Brazil and Mexico, Cessna's exports, which once amounted to 30 per cent of its business in 1974, is now down to 23 per cent—a 10-year low.
The underlying contradiction
Bill Sniffen
Editorial Writer
domestic oversupply, not counting 1977's harvest, is in business. It was a way out off the wheat crisis is government assistance—specifically, further foreign investment—guranteed foreign markets."
Russell Myer Jr., chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Cessna Aircraft Co., Wichita, called for the Carter
between wanting to be left alone and wanting government help when the going gets tough is evident, and is becoming the corollary to the chief tenet of leadership in business in the mid 20th century.
AS PAIL, MMcCracken,
chairman of the 1968 Counsel of Economic Advisors, noted at a meeting of the Nuclear spoke of economy in 1955, one
was speaking of the American economy. Not so in 1977, he said. As is becoming evident to the most devout of American business leaders, believer in the United States can maintain its stranglehold on the world's economic throat.
Still, some try, seemingly defying the notion that competition is the byword of the free enterprise system.
Hurt by the importation of cheaper clothing, automobiles, televisions and radios from countries such as Japan, Italy, France, Germany and South Korea, among others, their owners of these goods would like to see American-imposed embargoes.
—and embargoes imposed by, who else? The U.S. government.
then the American businessman had better learn to take his licks. He is no longer operating in an economic vacuum.
IF COMPETITION be the
if cornerstone of free enterprise-
provided the concept is paid
more than mere lipservice-
That's tough. And the business community's reaction is understandable. It makes economic sense to want to get the most for the buck. So requests for government help to break up a business that itself belies the conviction placed in the competition theory—will probably continue.
Unless, of course, American businessmen want to change their underlying economic assumptions.
That's not likely. So take your lumps, business. And stop bitching.
This schizoid nature of American businesses' economic beliefs can only reveal businesses' true passion—that loose screw, the cog in the machine, is really only what the American consumer (remember him?) gets.
Letters
To the editor:
Whistle silence no longer golden
Years ago, while sitting in 205 Flint, we'd snicker and take bets on how far the new kid in the class would jump after hearing the whistle for the first time at point-blank range.
To admit that you're associated with the KU School of Journalism—in any capacity—isn't very popular these days. The recent silencing of the University's press officers and inductive comments about the employees and students of Flint Hall.
I quite honestly felt no remorse when I first learned the whistle was gone, and I doubt that anyone who frequents Flint Hall felt differently. When I first started at KU I thought one criterion for being a journalistic reporter shouldn't be too good. Needless to say, with the whistle I was deeply relieved.
Now, after one week of classes, I'm beginning to understand the logic behind the whistle. It has kept me occupied. Professors and students never even needed a watch before. Classes rarely
After the whistle blew, you could walk the halls of Flint and tell immediately who were J-School veterans. They were the only people who weren't cowering in the corners and asking directions to the nearest civil defense shelter.
So, with the absence of the whistle, you can't blame the employees of Flint for skipping through the halls singing, "Ding-dong," but the whistle had its humorous side too. One professor played tag with it for so long that he'd stop in the middle of a lecture, pause a few seconds, and wait for the whistle at a clock. It was a unique time-keeping system. It was KU. But the whistle was also an undeniable headache.
went overtime. And the University as a whole ran on a smooth timetable without having to install a costly clock system. But now classes run long, almost without exception. It's enough to make you hang it all up.
Therefore, it is with mixed emotions that I tell you my ears have had a nice reprieve from that confounded whistle, but it's better to be interrupted and to understand more than to have the School of Journalism be the chief recipient of screaming ventdettes from irate people, saying we're the cause for the end of efficiency at KU. Personally, we like to get to class on time.
Sorry, guys, but the silence ain't so golden anymore.
Mike Strand Lawrence Senior
Kilpatrick disputed
To the editor:
Freedom of the press in high school? Balderdash!
The Kanse rightly printed James J. Kilpatrick's, "Schools Have Right to limit press" in last Friday's edition.
The rights of high school students should be the rights of slaves to the educational process only.
If high school students want to learn anything about personal freedoms they'll just have to wait for their graduation day. They will need to just promote and teach public information and relations work.
This business of allowing it to be free is nonsense. Those kids have to learn respect, the Pledge of Allegiance, to salute the flag and to get a shave and a hair cut.
The first Ten Amendments of the U.S. Constitution shouldn't really apply to anybody under the same law as Klimutz said, have anarchy.
En
in
hon
Why, if Joe McCarthy were here, he'd say that freedom of the press in high school would lead us straight down the road to Communism. Some of those leftist, "pinkie" kids would take me on a tour of the city, you knew your subscription was expiring.
Kilpatrick was right when he said public funds were financing those high school papers, and they should be under the strict scrutiny of educational administrators.
An en Universi been es Frankli D. Murp
Mur the U also s tinge n pract
Imagine, teaching such a thing as freedom of expression in HIGH SCHOOL?
Fraternity clinic 1905 u
Bah. Those kids should be learning how to read. The functional illiteracy in this country is high enough.
Rober for the new develop The che Med Ca
A gift made
Helen director "will be with C mittee
A person just can't imagine why that crazy Tray Jefferson, who was in charge of the decision if it were left for him to decide to have government without press or press without government he'd choose the
the press does is stir up trouble. I can't imagine why they were allowed to embarrass that nice Mr. Nixon.
Jeff Latz
Then, can you imagine our educators teaching such
anarchy in high school? Good Lord, I hope not. What would this country come to?
Jeff Latz
121 14th St., Apt. E.
Fuel saving urged To the editor:
must we always wait for an emergency before we act? Sure, KU needs a plan for an energy emergency, should one arise, but what are we doing now in the interest of our students? A warm walk through many campus buildings will tell you—not much! President Carter has asked repeatedly that EVERY gas consumer do his share by lowering temperatures, least 65 degrees, student, homeowner and homeowner, I see no reason why KU is exempt from acting immediately to reduce temperatures, as requested. By wearing warmer clothing, we will demonstrate a sincere interest in conservation, help reduce the victims of fuel shortages elsewhere in the country who are not as fortunate as we are
Jane Lfett
Toneka. iunior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Kansas Telephone Numbers
Newport - 664-4511
Missouri - 662-4355
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 19, 2014
Subscriptions to the University of Kansas and July except Saturday. Sunday and Holiday.
60644. Subscriptions by mail are $5 amateur or $18 junior. Subscribers year outside the county. Student subscriptions are year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $5 amateur or $18 junior.
Editor
Jun Bates
Managing Editor Greg Hack
Business Manager Janlee Clements
Editorial Editor Stewart Brann
Publisher Business Advisor David Dary Mel Adams
17
图
100%
bs
susinessman take his operating num.
And the 's reaction it makes want to get buck. So help. so helpful help belies the com- il probably
American to change economic
s, business.
nature of
'as economic
really
invest-
ment--that
coog in the
only what
or (remem-
en
Endowed chair in cardiology honors Murphy
school? Good What would to?
., Apt. E.
urged
An endowed chair in cardiology at the University of Kansas Medical Center has been named honorary son, Franklin E. Murphy, honoree son, Franklin D. Murphy, was KU's ninth chancellor.
wait for an wacct? Sure,
for an energy did one arise,
dancing now in warm walk
campus tell you—not
Carter has that EVERY
his share by features to
countenance, not
never. I see KU is exempt
ummediately to
ratures, as
earing warmer demonstrate a conservation,
& support
country who ate as we are.
Jane Lett
Teopka, teenager
August
during
Holl,
Kan.
or $18
or $20
ans are
any fee.
Editor
Brann
Adviser ams
Robert Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said last week that the new professorship was "a significant development in the history of the school." The chair is the first one in cardiology at the Med Center.
Helen Sins, Med Center information director, said that candidates for the chair "will listen in the usual way. I assume, Chancellor Chaney, our committee to choose the first professor."
A gift to the KU Endowment Association made the chair possible, Sims said.
Franklin E. Murphy, a founding faculty member of the School of Medicine, was a clinical professor of internal medicine from 1905 until his death in 1933.
LA&S requires minimum of C
Murphy received his medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1893. He also studied in Vienna, Munich and Goettingen and returned to practice in Kansas City, Mo.
counsel.
The new policy, recommended by the Educational Policy and Procedures Committee (EPPC), will require for graduation that a student enrolls college earn a GPA of at least 2.0 for all courses. It won't affect students now enrolled in the college, according to Robert Friau, chairman of EPPC.
A stricter grade point average policy for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, approved by the College Assembly last week, will go into effect for the fall 77 semester.
which requires that a student earn a 2.0 CPA for only his junior and senior courses
It is a change from the current policy.
HEAVY EDDYS PIZZA
The change would greatly simplify checking records for graduation, Friauf said. A computer now calculates a student's four year total GPA but doesn't calculate the junior-senior course GPA separately for that student. That must be done by the staff. The new policy, Friauf said, would save the staff time.
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Friulai said the EPPC thought a 2.0 GPA should be the basic standard in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at a university of KU's caliber.
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University Daily Kansan
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TUES. Scratch League 1:30
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Tuesday, February 1, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Blutcher causes quick problems
By ROB RAINS Sports Writer
Dave Blutcher doesn't like to cause trouble. But that's all he's going to give
ANGSTA
Sprinter Dave Blutcher
opposing Big Eight track coaches for the next four years.
"That's what I have in mind," Blutcher says.
Butcher is a freshman on the University of Kansas back team, but he's not your junior.
In his first collegiate competition, Jan. 15, Blutcher blazed to a 6.1 60-yard dash and qualified for the NCAA Indoor Championship Meet.
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I was surprised that I qualified so early," Blutcher said yesterday. "Iran a 60 in the intraasual meet and was surprised I turned it around that fast."
"I'm improving every week," Blucher said. "I know I've got a lot of room for improvement, but I feel I'm making good progress."
Blutcher, an electrical engineering major, has drawn praise from coaches Bob Timmons and Stan Narewski for his early performances.
BLUTCHER HAD since improved that mark-turning in a lifetime best of 6.06 in a dual meet with Nebraska last Saturday.
"There isn't a great deal of emphasis placed on indoor track in high school."
TIMMONS SAID Blutcher was easy to coach and had made the transition from high school to college without much difficulty.
Narewski said, "Until now, Dave had concentrated so much on track and field, and I didn't even think about running."
"Freshmen are under a lot of pressures that they haven't experienced before, and it is sometimes difficult for them to do well their first year. We're very pleased with the progress that Dave is making." Timmons said.
KU can thank a kid who lived around the corner from Butcher in Birmingham, Ala., for getting him interested in track. The girl named Narewalki for getting him to KU.
"IVE BEEN friends with coach Narewski since high school. He was the coach of a train club I ran for in Birthday Part of the reason I decided to come here."
"I wanted to go to a good academic school," Blutcher said. "KU caught my eye right off because of their high academic standing.
Blutcher has been running sprints ranging from the 60 to the 401 year, and
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SR-56 $109.95*
But learning to use it is a hassle, you say. Not true. Prerecorded programs are gathered into software libraries: Electrical Engineering, Math, Statistics. Finance. All you need do is load a mag card, press a few keys and you'll get answers that previously required a computer.
Excess instruments will retail $10.00 of your original SR-56 purchase price when you (1) return this completed coupon including serial number (2) along with your completed SR-56 customer information card (packed in box) and (3) a dated copy of proof of your purchase, verifying purchase between Jan. 1 and March 31, 1977.
SR-56 rebate Offer
O $ 0, 1210
Rickerson, Texas 75080
Name:
Address
City State Zip
SR-56 Serial No.
Please allow 30 days for rebate
techniques like optimization, iteration, data reduction, what-if matrices, mathematical modeling, need not tie up your mind—or your time.
ti
If you want the computer-like power of a card programmable then choose this one.
You can make your own programs just as easily. In just a couple of hours you'll begin to prove what a powerful asset you have right at your fingertips.
And there's not a better time to get an SR-52 than right now.
he said he wasn't sure which one he preferred.
"I think if I had to pick a favorite it would probably be the 200." Bluther said.
Other words published by law. Good in Continental U. S. only.
Butcher was recruited by most of the Southeast Conference schools because of his track ability and was approached by four or southern universities with football offers.
$1.25 Entry Fee
Electrical Engineering, Statistics, Math, Finance, Choose any two and (1) return this completed coupon including serial number along with (2) your completed SR-52 serialized customer information card (packed in box) and (3) a dated copy of proof of your purchase, verifying purchase between Jan. 20 and March 31, 1977
SR-52 free software library offer
F No. 018
Richardson, Texas 76508
Name
Address
City State Zip
SR-52 Serial No. (from track of calculator)
Mail Statistics (from track of calculator)
Texas instruments reserve the right to substitute software libraries of equal value, based upon availability. Please allow 30 days for delivery
Saturday, Feb. 5, 12:00 noon at the Jay Bowl Sign up in SUA office by Friday, Feb. 4, 3:00 p.m.
Foosball Tournament
Butcher is aiming at conference and national rallies now, but in the back of his national team. "I'll be here," he said.
"I know I can't run forever," Blutzer said. "I'm planning to go to summer school this year and I'm going to do it back home up my spikes, I want to have that piece of paper to show somebody."
"THE FINAL decision came down to KU, Auburn, Alabama, Southern Illinois and Georgia Tech." Blutcher said. "I think I made the right choice."
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
DOUBLE ELIMINATION,
BEST 2 OUT OF 3 MATCHES
1977 Texas Instruments Incorporated
SUA
65581
More info? Call 864-3477
The winning team receives an all expense paid trip to Cape Girardeau, Mo. for the Region XI Tournament, Feb. 10-12
INCORPORATED
--featuring
Kappa Sigma Benefit Concert Rice Auditorium, Baker Univ.
Country Heir
Pat & Gordon Cleveland and Brian Blais The Magician
between sets
Tickets available at:
Kief's in Lawrence
McKinney Mason
Feb. 4, 8:00 P.M.
Baker Union
--evelyn wood reading dynamics
Be the student you could be!
SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT 134
Do you fall asleep over your book? Spend all your time studying just to keep up? (Or feel guilty when you don't?)
ENROLL NOW FOR EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
. . . Read most material over 1000 words per minute
. Adapt dynamic methods to all kinds of material
. . . Organize, simplify,
remember
. . . Cut your study time in half
... Face exams with confidence
New classes begin next week.
Mondays 7-9:30 p.m.
Feb. 7—Mar. 28
Tuesdays 7-9:30 p.m.
Feb. 8—Mar. 29
W
FREE SPEED READING MINI-LESSON
FREE SPEED READING MINILESSON
After the KU home t Clarem House. home g
Again only 25 turnover point outrebe
KU, weekeet Nebras Univer
100
IN T day, gu with 1 Kolebe was hi
Acco
Washi
Gloria
Nix, a
The follow said, t going
You'll improve your reading within the hour—freel Daily Wed.-Sat., Feb. 2-5, 8 7:30 and 8:30 p.m.
M
Located in ADVENTURE a bookstore
Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa Phone 843-6424
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 1, 1977
7
Women begin homestand
After eight straight games on the road, the KU women's basketball team returns home to host Claremore Junior College, Claremore, Okla.; at 7 o'clock in Allen Field House. It'll be the first of six consecutive home games for the Jawhaws.
KU, 7-12, lost two games over the weekend against the University of Nebraska (NU) at Lincoln, 59-47, and the University of Nebraska at Omaha. 58-55.
Against NU on Friday, the Jayhawks shot only 29 per cent from the floor, with 28 turnovers as the Cornhuskers built an 11-6 victory. And KU also was put outbound, 43-39.
424
**IN THE** Nebraska-Omaha game Saturday, the Sanders led 10 in scoring with 17 points. The Jets scored each of Koleber each contributed 10 points. Mitchell was high score against NU with 12 points.
Clarence, 6-15, was an early season victim of the Jayhawks, falling 84-78.
According to KU coach Marian Washington, Clarmore's leading scorer Gloria Stevens quit the team, leaving Gina Nix, averaging 12 points, to lead the team.
The KU women held a team meeting following the Nebraska trip. Washington said, to decide what direction the team was going the remainder of the season.
NAISMITH HALL
1000 NATIONAL BAY 284-6030 LANCASTER STREET NO. 1010 BALTIMORE, MD 21005
"I'm hopeful that we will pull out of our slump and begin to play good basketball again," she said. "Maybe we can start against Claremore."
Room to rent?
Advertise it in the Kansan
864-4358
KU BRIDGE CLUB Organizational Meeting
We will also play bridge. Students and Faculty welcome
Wed., Feb. 2, 7:00 P.M.
Parlor A & B Kansas Union
SUA
We are now open for lunch at the Wheel Featuring: Daily Specials and
9 inch one man pizza for as low as $1.50
large pizza ordered at the Whee
Two large free draws with every large pizza ordered at the
EDDYS Fast Free Delivery Pizza 841-3100
HEAVY
EDDYS
Pizza
Mon.-
Wed., 5-8
Fast Free
Delivery
841-3100
Sex, like you've never heard it before!
FHI FHI FHI
MAXIMUM SEX thats JOSH!
That's JOSH!
TONIGHT! 7:30 HOCH AUD.
Sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ and Navigators.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students of any origin or nationality. PLEASE BREAK ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HLEASE
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
AD DEADLINES
to be lower
fewer...$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
1o run:
Briday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in personal mail or calling the DVH department office at 864-1534.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Need Exercise? Ramada Inn Figure Salon. Located in an updated, operation. Monthly and duly charged - 2023.
Embellish by Doris Decorative Arts for toile
and decorative paintings, pom-pom parade, doll
draping, country cairning, sand design, compo-
tion flowers (lin) and macrine. Carriage 2-8
floor.
864-4358
QUILT MAKING. WORKSHOP. Patchwork for beginners MAKING. 15-19 afternoon. Mirrored Quilting. Fri 19,月ming 9-12, afternoon 2-5. Fee $50. includes matte 9-12, mirror. Massage Beds. 740-831. Massage Beds. 740-831.
The concept and program of Democratic Seclusion need a voice at KU. You are interested in participating in the Democratic Seclusion Organizing Committee, call 842-631-8021, or 842-631-8025, for information.
FOR RENT
Desk top refrigerators 2.8 cubic feet. Anderson
Bedside, 812 New Hampshire. 843-204-24.
**
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to Union, utilizes yard, parking. 943-9579.
Must submit bedroom unfurnished Frontier Ridge apartment for spring semester. Rent $350/mo.
Share 2-bedroom apartment, partly furnished,
dishwasher, dishwashers, pool, on bus ride
2-3
8
Nice 3-dedroom furnished house for 3 R. KU boys.
No pets. 1647 Vermont. See owner, 1701 Vermont.
Subleasing, 2-bedroom unfurnished apartment,
$145; store refrigeration 718 W. 20th. Bld., Apt. 8-396
200 West 2nd Street, New York, NY 10021
Gorgeous 1-bedroom apartment, shag carpeting,
living room, and office spaces plus utilities. Available Now
for $479.00 per square foot.
For Rent. Clean rooms and apartments. Lynch Real Estate, 843-1601, 2237 East. 2-4
commission needed, large four bedroom apartment.
rooms, utilities paid, 1225 $40.
843-823-$107
843-823-$107
One Room in Town House, call 841-1734. 2-4
Sublease to room 1 and 2 bedroom Apartment
to room 3 and 4
Private room for rent. Kitchen privileges
24 hrs.
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
no pets, 843-5767 tr
Large, quiet, private bath, refrigerator, enclosure
blocks west of campus, for mature户. 89-342
701, 654, 662, 668, 712, 718, 720, 722
Bubblespace 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment between the first floor and second floor of a stylish furniture. $200.00 per month. Lyon 841-779-6838.
Western Civilization Notes-Now on Sale! Make sense out of them. (A study guide. As a study guide. For Class preparation. For Exam preparation. New Anayat of Western Civilization] available now at Town
INVENTORY SALE: Extra Stock and Demo Units:
Prices Reduced to $129.00. Mary excellent one
unless you require her. Maximum Unique pieces of Electronics as well. New thru Feb 11th. Lay-Away. Call us please. Thank you. 9-11
Jayhawk Towers Apt. for rent-call 843-4903 and
ask to see 003D.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
hardware for your home. Furniture and Appliance Center, 703-521-8841.
***
FOR SALE
71. Gilson, Melody makes with hardshell saw,
using a single blade of blade 24 in. D-1/8 inch
automatic gearbox. It waits 60 mins w/D-1/8 inch
automatic gearbox.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT
CREWEL
THE CREWEL CUPBOARD
843-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
BILT AUDIO
ELECTRIC, 645-809-3000, W 8th ed.
www.biltaudio.com
UNICORNS, Mermalia, wings in flight and other imaginings in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to come from Stone cutting service; re-energizing industrial work, satisfaction gaffer. 941-8338.
THE CREWEL
Leather working tools and equipment. I am selling a complete set of tools and equipment for the sale of leather working in excellent condition. Call Dave at 842-3638 or box 052, Box 327, Lawrence, KS. For a detailed plate list
AKC female colla puppy with papers - 4 months
Nebraska new home due to live downstream
Nebraska
Sterro -寝室 8202 B receiver, Cormina Wing 9
spackers, Philips 8125 turntable. Must sell
us.
CUPBOARD
15 Fact 8th 841-2656
T.V. $ ^{19} $ Zenth, 20 months old. Call 841-2523
after 5. 2-1
For Sale: 68. Camaro; 4 speed, recently over-
engine. Good mileage. Call 861-2539 from
Miami.
Small compact Coldspot refrigerator, only used for small rooms. Excellent condition. Phone # 800-526-4711.
Redeemer Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod committee (numerical); All students and faceless active youth group. Place 80th and Haikou. A private non-profit more information contact.-Mit Fredrickson at 341-527-9200 at 1 a.m. Bible class and Sunday school at 10:15. Lutheran Leagan's League meets every month in St. Louis.
BATTERIES. Top quality fully guaranteed batteries and trucks. Electro-lyte Shop, 845 Minn. St. Just behind the U-guard parking he at Red Ribbon Battery, 610 Minn. St. and Saturday each week. Telephone: 844-726-9325.
ARC Golden Retrievers, Excellent stock. 478-
475. Trocks. 2-3
ARA in daash AM-FM stereo 8-track, Realistic FM Cassette store. Call 21-43-21-4
Minolta camera SRT1 10T, 50 millimeter lens, cane,
and extrais, $290; fsmr 842-7690, door 2-4
www.milcamera.com
FREED'S SPORTS SPECIAL-30% off on winning
race against raycogregg in qualifier 8.
KIDS' KEEP TAKING.
Guitars for sale. The best guitars in Lawerness are available at LMC, Bob Wideman, dealer. Low overload overhead low prices for Alvarez Yati Guitars. Shop online at 307 E. 911, nght-843-4916. Play 2-11 at 307 E. 911, nght-843-4916.
1927 Chevrolet $700 or best offer. Call Baldwin 1-
349-352. New engine and paint.
RADIAL TREE CLEANANCE. Fount stock at stool.
1975-80, 1976-77, 1978-79, 1980-81, 1982-83, 1984-
85, 1986-87, 1987-88, 1988-89, 1989-90, 1990-91,
1991-92, 1992-93, 1993-94, 1994-95, 1995-96, 1996-
97, 1997-98, 1998-99, 1999-2000
Used Magnavox component system with 8-track
recorded tape. Compatible with 49290 and
component with Galaxer change for 49290 and
49291.
2-165-13 used Dumplin rafters only $3 for the
two 12-inch rafters 12-14 for $3 at Rakian
2-11, pair 12-14 for $3 at Rakian 2-11.
Casete tape sale. Flip 60-minute for only $4
or Rve 100 minute for $5. Ray Backstory
2-11
2-11
Kodak carousel
new. Also Lelo M-3, M-83, 941-910 after 5.
2-4
Steel Components discounted 20-40% All Major Stores factory warranty, call JMJ, 217-600-3850 each year.
Refrigerator; Sanity 12 ft. capacity; Used 6
months. Cons $150, call 864-2420. 2-7
SCURA P3 mask for sale. Excellent condition,
used only two times. B141-8518, ankirk for Lami-
2-58
15 Eas 818th 841-2638
12-5 Monday-Friday 10-5 Sat.
4 cvl. 72 Vega $1100 or the best offer, 842-1703
after 7.90 2-7
Color TV 20 inch portable. Excellent condition.
very valuable $20 or less.兜住 843-3584 affair.
www.catworth.com
ARP A3-1 camera with 28 mm lens and auto
camera for trade for good reception
841-d109 after f5.6
HELP WANTED
Newspaper carrier, K.C. St. evening route, must have economic insurance. D.K. mornings, on trips to New York.
EXPERIENCED 12.50-12.50 LW addressmail multitask for busi-fication or part time employment. Inquire in person at Jayhawk Printing Press, 8th & Vermont. 2.4
SUMMER JOURNAL. Over 200,000 in all 50 states.
Your jobs back if you don't obtain yours
through our comprehensive catalogue. Books
SUMMER JOURNAL. College Georgia. Pa. 18601.
For best selection. 2-82
Part time help wanted. Phone work and light
work. $23.90 per hour. 841-64532. 2-4
MEN-WOMEN, JOBS ON SHIPS, American
Foreign,
No experience required. Excellent pay
and benefits. Send resume to:
$4 for information SEAFAX, Dept. E-8, Box 209
$45 for Washington, Michigan 98362
2-15
LOST AND FOUND
Lead a man's wedding band, made of yellow and silver, in his hands. Howard, awarded in Call 812-249-3000.
Found man's watch in front of Union on sidewalk. Call to identify. 822-996-996. 2-1
FOUND. A team of artists画 on sidewalk along Mississippi. Call and claim, #42-601 after visiting.
Found-Light brown 3 month old Oskay mixed kitty pup. Female with dark tinged furches. Followed home 2 days later.
Last-Last 6. Colored sliders (about 20) in small
paint brushes. Use on 17th Street, 434-946 or 644-444.
3-4
Found—Keys east of campanile on the hill–cell
and identity, 864-2933
2-2
Lost-Soft watch, silver screen and band, blue lens look on JPHR shop while trailing Caihong in the background.
Two yards of fabric at 12:20 Jan. 28, near Wesley Hall Call (864-3100) to ask for Carl.
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available at Alice at the House of Uher/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, at 8 a.m.
Kaw Valley Craft Exchange, quality handcrafters,
pottery, weaving and jewelry. Call 814-842-8917.
Jewelry: 814-842-8917
KU> KARATE CLUBS' opening meeting and
workshop. 6 p.m. 173 Roling Gym. For info:
841-593-1077
iwap Shop. 620 Max. Used furniture, dishes,
tables, clock televisions. Open daily 12h.
9am-7pm. (455) 328-5644.
EUROPE_WORLDWIDE academic discountes year
1 (804) (801)-241-902
(804) (801)-241-902
Is there a place for Homosexuals in the church? Gay services are meeting of the senate, 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the Dignity (Gay Catholics) and Metropolitan intramurti Church in Kansas City. The policy—2-1
Never be late for another class Call Jayhawker
Uph-44, 832-2583 or 843-6231 2-2
Enroll now in Lawnies driving school, receive new license for the next five years. Req's light taxi transportation provided, drive new kayak or boat.
Juliette club opening meeting and free demonstration. Julee will wear a military dress, wink down king for her insult and defense, wink down king for her insult and defense.
PERSONAL
KARATE- Improve yourself physically and mentally this semester. Study this Orientation class from national champions. Classes now form the Bachelor's program in Biomedical Law, Lawrence, Kansas (913) 824-824. 2-11
MAKIN MUSIC - We make it easier. Funk, blues,
soul, jazz, rock, hip-hop, gospel. We make it
bass, banjo, mandolin, saxophone, piano. McKinney,
Vaughan.
Kaw Valley Craft Exchange selling quality hand-
made woodcraft, commission seek new member-
842-8607-9000
Gay Counselling Service. Call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m.
tt
K-Sterter to KU Med School 3 year prj
wrote apd Dave Stone 1247 Lamarville Manhua
wrote Dave Stone 1247 Lamarville Manhua
We'll remind you to take that call. Call Jaja-
hawker Wake-Up, 843-2833 or 843-6231.
2-2
Wanted- information from you who witnessed
Wanted- information from you who witnessed
January, January PCI 'note' on windowed (A)
January, January PCI 'note' on windowed (A)
Embraced by your obsession? For personalized counseling or free life visit call 845-1695, a240, www.ncsu.edu/psychology
On a day like today wouldn't you enjoy a relaxing massage or a book reading session? And Rothin facets by appointment only. We also have gift certificates and give to someone special and much appreciated. Please call 212-874-9655.
Archie and Del-Give it back our whittle. Sincerely, the 'RU-Love H or Leave H' coattion
STEVE LEVEN AND RALPH MUNYAN RE-
LIEVING the student body for patient body
and vice president.
RIDES ___ RIDERS
Ride to N.Y.C. over spring break. Share
and drive. Mint 841-680. Charlie B.
624-644
SERVICES OFFERED
You'll get you out of bed. Call Jaayhwer Wake-
Up. U84.3623 or U84.6321.
2-2
Babybaiting—Part-time or Drop-in care. My home is close to one of two. Dumma 843-922-6031
sister kettle scale
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
FIELDS
WATERBEDS
10% off dinner with coupon
712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
THEISM BINDING COOPY. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you need R33 Massachusetts or phone 845-279-0171. Thank you.
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476.
Typist/editor, IBM PCA/elite. Quality work
throughout your projects. Distant dissentations welcome.
Mail 604-821-9838. Johnson #691-821-9838.
WANTED
Small delivery, or entire household moving. Free
Estimate, call 843-8571.
Experienced typist-term paper, books, mails, pulse
analysis, spelling correction, 843-5053, Mrs. Wright
- 843-5053, Mrs. Wright
Math tutoring—complement, experienced tutor with 12 years of experience in math tutoring. 116, 117, 119, 121, 128, 130, 189, 188, 888, 8
One male roommate needs $90 month and utilities, washing and dryer available. Call 843-6547.
Female roommate wants to share 2 bedrooms
with his/her family. $5.50 per month, and
24 hours a week. Call 829-1234.
Female Roommate to share 3 bedroom apartment
with roommates. Utilities included:
1800 a.m. room, 926-5644
Companions to commute from Topeka to Law-
rence, Kansas. Call 210-729-7900 (after 3:50 p.m.)
Female roommate wanted to share house in country. Peta OK. Call: 834-0478.
2-2
Roommate=·Meadowbrook Apt. Tennil courts.
known pool, c/o K. U.S. buz Coach. Cell Bill 852-
903-6710.
Need male or female to share 2 bedroom furniture. Requires: 120mm Ethernet Injugate IQ 101. Louisiana, Jupiter, 14 a.m. 6:30 p.m.
Male roommate for apartment on W. 9th, $80. 20-
1/3 utilities. Call 842-4923. 2-2
Roommate, $5.00, Livingroom, 2 baths, large
garage, study, garage, uses. U43-8648 5 p.m.
Living room, $5.00.
Roommate to share 4 bedroom house. Must be clean and non-smoking. $870.00 and I/U must have a valid ID.
Male roommate for 2-bedroom diplex, $78 plus
utilities. 664-310-8, 842-7527-85
2-8
Wanted female roommate, cheap clean place close to campul. Campul 841-5294 2-3
Need third roommate in nice three bedroom
townhouse. Utilities paid: $6 per month.
$2-4 per night.
Compatible roommate to share 2 bedroom house with living room, kitchen and bath with basement. Call 612-854-7300.
one or two roommates wanted or will sub lease
two-bedroom Towers apartments Call 843-604-
2975
Flayd's Big-Rue hotels roommates $55 and $65.
101 Louisiana, come by. 2-4
NEEDED—one female roommate to share apartment at Jasper Avenue $64 a month. Unlimited parking.
Male roommate requests to share space two bed-
room apart. Roommates must be at least 100 cm tall (100 cm includes attire). Call Temp
for details.
Part-time flight instructor wanted immediately,
alive at Lawrence Avenue, Municipal Airport.
Roommate for four bedroom townhouse with three librarian and 14 students. $24-$45.
Phone: 817-2711.
Roommate wanted to share two bedroom apart-
ment and provide plus utilities, on bus line,
90% after 1 year.
Need a good typewriter—electric or manual.
Call 843-6286
2-3
safe communitary. not smokers; share large open
space; avoid parking in high traffic areas;
off-street parking, near campus. Cell Phone
unlimited.
Graduate students need roommate to shur-2 room.
Graduate students must have a phone plus its utilities. Call 843-556-8 or 842-250-8781.
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
HORIZONS HONDA
Sales, Parts, Service
1811 W. 6th
1811 W. 0H Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Wings To EUROPE Charter Flights Youth Fa
P
Recent Travel Arrangements for Individuals & Groups
The Lounge
KU Union Bldg./900 Mass.
Hillcrest & the Malls Ctrs.
843-1211
"A different kind of bar
A different kind of bat featuring seclusion and quiet."
- Foosball
9th and Iowa
- Bud on Tap
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
- Pinball
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
- Pool
Maupintour travel service
Home of
The Chalk Hawk
quality travel arrangements since 1951
TRY
BILLIARDS
- Pool
* Snooker
* Ping Pong
Pin-Ball
Air Hockey
SELECTION OF BOWLING
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
- Foos-Ball
SELECTION OF BEER
The Cham Hawk Open 7 Days a Week
8
Tuesday, February 1, 1977
University Daily Kansan
FALLEY'S
100
Family Pack FRYERS
2525 Iowa
Next Door to Gibson's
Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days
Prices good Tuesday thru Sunday
Feb. 1 - Feb. 6
RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
38c
Fresh Roasting Chickens ... lb. 49ᵃ
Fresh Chicken Breasts ... lb. 99ᵃ
Fresh Chicken Drumsticks ... lb. 85ᵃ
Fresh Chicken Thighs ... lb. 79ᵃ
Fresh Chicken Wings ... lb. 49ᵃ
Armour Smoked Sausage Polish Sausage or Kubassy ... $1^{49}
Seitz Corned Beef ... $1^{39}
U.S.D.A. Choice
7 to 9 oz.
avg.
CLUB STEAKS
99°
U.S.D.A. Choice Rib Steaks ... lb. $139
U.S.D.A. Choice Rib Roasts ... large end $129
Ohse Luncheon Meats 5 varieties ... 12 oz. $69^{c}$
Ohse Wieners ... lb. $79^{c}$
Swift Premium Bacon ... lb. $119}$
Swift Premium
Brown & Serve Sausage ... 8 oz. $79^{c}$
Taste-O-Sea Breaded Perch Fillets ... lb. $109}$
69c
79c
Del Monte Tomato Juice 49c 46 oz.
Del Monte Tomato Juice 46 oz. 49c Del Monte French Style or Cut Green Beans 4 16 oz. cans $1 Del Monte Whole Kernel or Cream Golden Corn 4 17 oz. cans $1
46 oz. 49c
Del Monte
Whole Kernel
or Cream Golden
Corn
4 17 oz. $1
cans
Heinz Ketsup . 26 oz. $7^{c}$
Ritz Crackers . 16 oz. $7^{c}$
Cigarettes . all brands and sizes . ctn. $3^{79}$
Shurfine Pure Cane Sugar . 5 pound bag $9^{c}$
Pillsbury Biscuits Sweet-Buttermilk $7 \frac{1}{2}$ oz.tubes 10 for $1
Ellis Chile with Beans . 15 oz. 2 for $89^{c}$
Falley's Fresh Glazed Donuts . dozen $99^{c}$
Shurfine Frozen Orange Juice . 6 oz. 5 for $1
Win INSTANTLY or COLLECT to Win!
INSTANT CASINO CASH
NO PUBLISHING NECESSARY
To enter, collect 10 Swepstakes Jokers. See Collection folder for details.
SWEEPSTAKES
GRAND PRIZE
$5000
GAME VALUE
$1000
100
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE JANUARY 20, 1977*
GAME VALUE
$1000
100
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
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F
[Image of a child]
Staff photo by MARIANNE MAURIN
Wednesday, February 2, 1977
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.87,No.81
ough temperatures have risen somewhat during the day, nighttime lows have kept many sidewalks and streets covered with ice. Doug Ferguson, Wichita junior, found out on Friday that a $100 million federal grant had been awarded to
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Bowersock acquisition deferred
Not safe!
By JOHN McANULTY
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission last night discussed the Bowersock proposal, which could have long-range significance to the city. The council will use specific details could be studied.
The proposal, by Steven Hill, president of the Bowersock Mills & Power Co. and Fibreboard Inc., would enable city to the northeast corner of Massachusetts and Sikh streets to build a new city hall and develop recreational areas on the river
If the new city hall is located there, as set forth in the proposal, rights to the four acres
would cost $1. If not, the site would cost $25,000. The city would also gain two acres just to the east for use as a parking lot for about $20,000.
THE BOWERSOCK and Fibreboard companies own property surrounding the proposed city hall site. Officials of the company say that having the city ball on that site would increase the value of the adjacent land they own.
Mayer Fred Pence said he didn't want to make a decision yet because he didn't know whether he wanted the city to be obligated to build a city hall on the site. The city commission would have 60 days after approval of the proposal to decide on the city
hall before it the $25,000 would have to be paid to the Bowersock and Fibreboard companies.
HILL AGREED not to make the city pay
the $25,000 if legal problems made the city
overcharged.
Commissioner Barkley Clark said he was concerned that legal entanglements might force the city to wait until after the 60 days to make a decision.
Clark said he thought a proposed 99-year lease to the city for the Bowersock Dam was too long. Maintenance of the dam would be the city's responsibility under the proposal, and Clark said many things could change before the lease ran out.
A lease on the buildings would be for 30
Local clergy differs with Vatican
Rv MARV RINTOU!
Staff Reporter
Some Roman Catholic officials in Lawrence find themselves at odds with other priests and the Pope over a doctrine issued by the Vatican and approved by Pope Paul VI that the Catholic Church won't ordain women as priests.
**L'EADERSHIP** (bishops) seems to be against women being priests, so said, *many* women are *priests*.
The Rev. John Rossiter, a chaplain at the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1631 Crescent Road, said yesterday that he disagreed with the doctrine.
Father Rossiter declined comment on why he be disagreed with the doctrine but said opposition to the ordination of women was mainly determined by cultural differences.
The doctrine basically said that because Jesus was a man and chose only male apostles, only men could naturally be chosen for women, therefore, shouldn't be ordained.
"Whether or not the Pope is right is a subjective judgment. The Pope felt be was being faithful to the teachings of Jesus Christ."
Father Rossiter was in agreement with Rev. Richard McBrien, a Catholic
theologian from Boston College, who had said, "There's a division between the church leadership and the scholarly community."
Father Rossiter defined the church leadership as the bishops and the scholarly community as the thinkers or theologians. He said he doubled that the Pope would reverse his decision in response to negative reaction.
"THE DECISION won't be reversed, at least not by Pope Paul," he said. "It would seem the Catholic Church in modern times respond to the majority or DESCISE."
The Rev. Michael Moriarty, of st. John's Catholic Church, 1229 Vermont, said in a speech on Saturday.
"Certainly, I agree with the Pope," he said. "It's a 2,000-year tradition. If Christ had wanted it changed, he would have changed it."
Father Moriarty said the ultimate decision of ordaining women rested with the Church, so that theologians "Don't have any say about it."
"Theologians these days are self-proclaimed and I don't hold with them," he said. "I go with the official Church at all times."
Plan eases staff's school costs
A new program introduced at the University of Kansas this semester is helping to provide financial assistance for costless expenses of University employees.
Staff Reporter
All employees of the University who have worked in full-time classified or unclassified positions for at least a year are eligible to enrol in classes included in the program. To participate, they must remain full-time employers for the program's duration.
years. The new lease would free the city from a complicated 1872 lease, which has hindered development of the riverfront and the harbor. In 1953, the built the first dam across the river. Therefore, the Bowersow company controls the land as long as it maintains the river.
The program, authorized by the state last year, covers the costs of tuition, required fees, books, laboratory fees and other supplies used by employees in the program. The program is offered at the University or at nearby schools. Traveling expenses aren't covered.
By BARRY MASSEY
adult education programs, or other courses approved by the chancellor.
PARTICIPANTS IN the program may take regular curriculum courses at colleges or universities near Lawrence, accredited by the College of Education vocational technical institutions, courses in
Thirty-one people have received financial assistance this semester under the program, Bill Hogan, chairman of the program's review committee, said Monday.
He said assistance averaged $15 to $20 for supplies and $4 to tuition, which pays for three credit hours at staff rates, which are $14 a credit hour.
HOGAN SAID that because the University had budgeted a limited amount of money for the program, requests for assistance were limited to $100.
Participants can take no more than three credit hours during their first semester in the program and no more than six credit hours after that.
To apply for the program, Hogan said, a person must submit an application to the program's review committee and qualify under one of two classifications:
Priority I: Immediate education or training that is required by the employee's department or division as a condition of employment, and that will provide skills or
knowledge for the person's current job.
The applicant must submit a letter of explanation from his supervisor when he applies under this category.
THE COMMISSIONERS agreed that the new lease could be what is needed to encourage private development of what they called a potentially attractive site.
The requirement of one year of continuous prior employment is automatically waived for employees who apply for assistance under Priority I.
Priority II: Education or training that is considered useful for the applicant's future in his job and that would enhance the usefulness of the employee to the University. An employee must have his application signed by his supervisor.
The benefits of the program, Hogan said,
Sister Mary Collins, associate professor of religion, said she thought the doctrine was correct.
"I THINK that it's unfortunate and that it is strange a more women from the church."
THE PROGRAM doesn't cover payment of educational costs of a University employee who wants to complete work for a "terminal degree"—the highest degree attainable in a field—that he started before becoming a University employe.
Sister Mary and Father Rositer said that even though the doctrine was approved by the Pope, it wasn't issued as an infallible doctrine. An infallible doctrine is a doctrine issued by the Pope when he is speaking for God.
Each semester a person must reapply for assistance from the program, Hogan said, and remain in good standing by maintaining his grades to the review committee.
will generally depend upon what each participant wants to accomplish. However, the participants' goals can differ.
"I SEE THEM as staff benefits which people can use to enrich their background, to help them towards a better job, or just to broaden their field of vision," Hogan said.
Although the program isn't designed to specifically help any one type of employee, Jeannette Johnson, assistant to the executive vice chancellor, said recently that, it probably would most benefit those with low salaries.
However, Sister Mary said, many people will读 it as infallible.
"For most classified employees it will be very good," she said, "but its primary benefit will be to those employees with low salaries."
Johnson said that through the program a classified employee could take courses enabling him to get a better job or to move up in his civil service classification.
"My own personal ambition isn't to be a priest but I know and support several women," he said. "Even if I support the ordination of women, I personally believe that the Catholic Church isn't ready to deal with women and won't be for three to five 10 years."
Although the program was budgeted
$2,500 this季期, only about $2,000 was
awarded to applicants, Hogan said, and
the staff should as a reserve for un-
forseen expenses.
In other action, the commission decided to put to a public vote in the March 8 primary elections, on whether to use general obligation bonds to pay for the new Water Treatment Plant. The bonds, totaling $4.4 million, would be paid over 20 years.
SISTER MARY AGREED with Father Rossetter that the Pope wouldn't reverse his decision.
"I believe that his statement is sincere and comes from a belief in his own convictions," she said. "A future Pope could change the decision but not Fone Paul."
Lynn Taylor, dean of the School of
bachground, said his student, Prebystrian,
hajiun (Shaheen) Bashar, attended 20.
"The Pope has a tradition that I don't but we have some fine women prestige," she said.
Taylor said he doubted that the Pope would reverse his decision because he didn't think the Pope would be swayed by public opinion.
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH had argued for years about the ordination of women and last year accepted it at their national convention. The church will be officially ordained beginning Jan. 1.
Many Catholic women attended the convention to support the ordaining of women in the diocese, the rector, of the Episcopal Church Trinity, 1011 Vermont, said. He said the women supported Episcopal women priests to gain support for their cause in the diocese.
The Rev. Mr. Matthews said that he favored the ordination of Episcopal women but that the Rt. Rev. Edward Turner, bishop of Kansas, wouldn't derrain them.
"the bishop is a traditionalist with a traditionalist viewpoint," he said. "He hasn't eliminated the possibility of anyone sitting at the present time he wouldn't do it."
See VATICAN page five
THE COMMISSION said that even though water rates would rise, the public would save $5 million by approving the bonds. If the bonds aren't approved, revenue bonds would be used, which the commissioners said would result in higher prices.
The commission also heard arguments by members of the East Lawrence Neighborhood Association for and against the park's wooden center in the Brook Creek Park area.
Opponents of the center said the existing neighborhood center would be adequate if it had to be replaced.
Advocates said the existing building wasn't large enough to hold all the activities.
Interim classes show big gain
Enrollment in the second University of Kansas intercession this year increased by 67 per cent over last year's interspection enrollment from about 600 to 900 students.
Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, yesterday released figures that show 907 places were filled in the intercession courses, which were held Jan. 31. Dyck said, however, that many students had more than one year actual total enrollment was only 905.
Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chairman for academic affairs and chairman of the interdisciplinary committee, said the study found 300 more than had been predicted last fall.
But future intercession enrollments may be down if bad weather occurs during energy shortages, according to Hutchison and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
Shankel said that "we definitely do have to consider the energy problem. Interaction serves a valuable function, but it's during its duration it's during the coldest part of the year."
Although the size of intersections may be diminished if the energy crisis grows worse, be said, KU still will have an intersection program.
A total of 52 course sections were offered in this year's intercession, both on and off the Lawrence campus. Classes at Lawrence in Ursuline Field Hall and Robinson Gymnasium.
Summerfield and Robinson were adequately heated during intersession despite last month's bad weather, Hutchison said.
The intersession committee will meet in about a month to consider ways of handling possible energy shortages during future intersecessions, he said.
Teletype to break sound barrier for deaf
Bv RICK THAEMERT
Staff Reporter
But unlike many deaf people, Ken Culver, president of the Kansas Association for the Deaf, and his wife, Peggy, refuse to be part of a silent, nonverbal group; they are pushing for improvements for the deaf.
Nothing appeared peculiar about the neatly trimmed, two-story brown house at the end of the street. Nor was there anything peculiar about its upper-middle-class occupants. The two smiling peering through the front door were two normal Americans, except for one thing. They were deaf.
ENTERTING THE HOUSE with Jeannie Ash, Tupeka senator (tol like an american in Paris—a
man of color) and a graduate of the U.S.
As greetings were exchanged, no words were spoken, only smiles and the modest, quiet sound of a laugh.
I was well aware that I had entered a world of communication of which I was totally ignorant, and that I faced a barrier that no person could overcome easily. I relied on Jeannie, who has no hearing impairment experienced with the deaf because of two deaf patients to help me break the communication barrier.
MR. CULVER motioned, and Jennie's quick eyes read his fast moving hands. She explained that he was eager to show me a machine that is rapidly becoming one of the deaf's greatest breakthroughs.
A last, a form of distant communication for the
customer, a mail deliverer, pointing to a large mailbox-shaped machine.
When the phone rings, he explained, lights throughout the house blink to signal the call and the telephone receiver is placed on a coupler beside the teletypewriter.
Mr. Culver explained, through Jeannie, that the
machine was a teletypewriter, and that it transmitted and received messages using electrical signals. For the deaf, the signals come from the telephone.
Except for several codes, such as QM for question and GA for go ahead, the message is nothing more than a phone conversation in written form.
THE PERSON placing the call type his message on a keyboard on the teletypewriter. The message is sent to the caller through the telephone.
through the telephone lines. When the message is received at the opposite end, the machine converts
The roll of paper in the teiletyepter writers remnants of an earlier conversation between the Culvers and Jennie. Except for several codes, such as QM for question and GA for go ahead, the message is nothing more than a phone conversation in written form.
THE CULVERS and Jeannie own two of only one telephone teletypewriters (TTYs) for the deaf in Lawrence, but there are hundreds more throughout the United States and in 10 foreign countries. The
owners are linked by an international TTY telephone book.
Since the first TTY was installed in Lawrence more than two years ago, interest has grown and regional TTY meetings now draw up to 50 people, Mr. Culver said.
However, interest in the system is lacking in some crucial areas. Despite requests by TTY enthusiasts, the Lawrence Police Department hasn't installed a machine.
Consequently, deaf people must channel emergency calls through the Ottawa Police Department which owns a TTY, and that can mean loss of valuable time.
Mr. CULVER said the installation of TTYs wasn't costly. In fact, old or out-dated machines telephone Co., and Western Southwestern Bell machines are purchased. The teletypewriter in the Culvers house is a $20,000 model which Mr. Culver builds. The teletypers usually cost between $100 and $200, he said.
The major expense of the TTYs stems from the phone company's long-distance rates, Mr. Calver said. When TTY users are charged for long-distance calls while operating the machine, the time-consuming typewritten conversations run up phone bills.
ALTHOUGH MR. CULVER said he hoped that one day there would be discount rates for TTY owners. The only way to shorten conversations now is to talk on a machine or on a call机 that costs several hundred dollars.
Mr. M. Curley raised his arms in a universal gesture
Mr. Culver raised his arms in a universal gesture
ringing phone. His eyes, and those of his wife, immediately looked up to the brightly flashing lights. They pointed up, then laughed heartily, obviously aware of the surroffed look on my face.
MRS. CULVER came in from the kitchen making a stirring motion with her hand and looking
. . contrary to what most people think, lip reading isn't widely practiced and is difficult to master because there are many styles of language and many ways of moving the mouth.
Jeannie said that when the Culvers were home alone, they waited at least eight rings before they answered to discourage calls other than TTY owners. However, when their daughter, who can hear, is home, she answers the phone. If there is no TTY call, she answers the TTY call and places the receiver on the coupler.
inquisitive, Jennie said Mrs. Cuver was asking me whether I'd like coffee.
When she returned to the kitchen, Mr. Culver and Jeannie began telling me of another possible improvement for the deaf, called Line 21. Line 21 would be simple written captions that would accompany all television show but would appear only in the homes of those who had the Line 21 attachment. There now is only one with captions—the 11 p.m. news on channel 11.
DESPITE THE difficulty of reading lips, Jeannie said, Mrs. Culver knew everything about the soap operas and understood them better than Jeannie did.
Jeanne said that contrary to most people think, lip reading isn't widely practiced and is difficult to master because there are many styles of language and many ways of moving the mouth.
"Come on now, is she really deaf," Jennie said, looking skeptically at Mrs. Culver and laughing. Mrs. Culver nodded and nudged a definite "yes." In reading Mr. Culver is, in much easier to
lip reading. Mr. Culver said, is much easier to misunderstand than sign language.
He said many people in the Lawrence area doubled the adequacy of sign language teachers, some of whom are teaching a new type of sign language that uses more grammar and often causes problems for young children when they grow older and must switch to the standard method.
Mr. Culver handed me a piece of paper containing all the letters of the alphabet illustrated in sign language. He smiled kindly, his face much more expressive than that of the average person, who often leans on words to communicate. He then turned and motioned to Jeannie.
"He said he'd like to see a sign language class at all the universities, and also a class for professional services, so that doctors, lawyers and all professional people could communicate with the deaf," she said. "He hopes somebody KU and K-people have teachers who can teach deaf people."
See TELETYPE page three
2.
Wednesday, February 2, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Gas bill compromise made
WASHINGTON - House and Senate confereces agreed on emergency natural gas legislation last night, apparently breaking an impasse that had threatened to delay the shutdown.
If both houses go along with the compromise, the legislation could reach the President by late this afternoon.
Under the compromise, settled on by a House-Senate conference committee that met for less than half an hour, the house would abandon its effort to put a price ceiling provision in the bill.
ceiling provision in the out.
The legislation is designed to get natural gas to homes and other top priority users of gas through the winter by allowing emergency sales free of specific price controls and by forcing pipelines to share supplies.
Arctic weather continues
Below-freezing temperatures in the Midwest and East kept fuel-starved factories yesterday and prompted warnings of multibillion dollar increases in heating and food bills.
A state of emergency was declared in hard-hit Buffalo, N.Y., after fresh snow Monday night. An Army engineering battalion from FT, Bragg, N.C., was ordered to fly into the city to help clear streets.
Cubans train black troops
WASHINGTON-Tanzania, one of the African countries U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young will visit this week, is allowing Cuban troops to train black Rhodesian guerrillas, who source sources say. The team has 200 Cuban troops in Tanzania to train and equip Rhodesian silks to fight against the white minority regime.
Senate to consider election questionnaire
A proposed questionnaire asking student opinions about financial aid problems, resampling of the end-of-class whistle and the closing of Jayhawk Boulevard to all but emergency traffic during daytime will be considered by the Student Senate tonight.
The questions would be part of the Feb. 16 and 17.Senate election ballot.
Regarding financial aid, the questionnaire would ask students about problems they've encountered in getting scholarships and loans. They also may be asked whether they are interested in a refreshment area in Watson Library, or if they see a need for a mandatory resource class on using the library and other facilities.
The Senate also will act on two bills, four petitions and one resolution at the meeting, which begins at 6:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. It is the last meeting scheduled until after senate elections.
One bill to be considered would allocate $469 from the 1977 contingency fund to the agency.
A resulution by Mike Taraboulos,
Association of University Residence Halls
Kappa Sigma Benefit Concert Rice Auditorium, Baker Univ. featuring Country Heir Warm-up Band: Pat & Gordon Cleveland and Brian Blais The Magician
between sets
Tickets available at:
Feb. 4, 8:00 P.M.
Kief's in Lawrence
McKinney Mason
Baker Union
MIDWEST PREMIERE
Eric Rohmer's new film THE MARQUISE OF O...
“ENTHRALLING...”
—Marine Laout Malonewane
“PERFECTION..."
—Norma Mellen Goody After Dark
“ELEGANT..."
—Roger Greenwood Porthouse
“DELIGHTFUL..."
is
A petition from the Academic Affairs Committee asks the Office of Curriculum and Instruction to study the validity of student-teacher evaluations.
"UTTERLY ROMANTIC..."
— Judith Criss, Saturday Newswire
"ENDEARINGLY FUNNY..."
— Kathleen Carrson N.Y. Daily News
"WITTY AND JOYOUS..."
— Vincent Callee N.Y. Times
"IMMENSELY SATISFYING"
"THE MARQUISSE OF O..." Directed by ERIC ROHMER Based on the novel by H. von Kleist Starring Edith Clever, Bruno Ganz
From NEW LINE CINEMA
Fri., Feb. 4 and Sat., Feb. 5 - 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 - $1
Woodruff Auditorium - Kansas Union
The Film "Wizards" and the Ralph Bakshi program has been rescheduled for Mar. 8.
Quitting Business Sale! LAST CHANCE!
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ON OUR ALREADY
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Another petition asks the executive vice chancellor's committee on assistant instructors and teaching assistants to examine and put to use recommendations of the Academic Affairs Committee's classroom teaching report.
president, would establish a student personal property insurance program. The Senate would advertise the service and provide all forms and information, but the policy itself would be handled by a private insurance company.
Place an od Call 864-4358
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Wednesday, February 2, 1977
3
University Daily Kansan
mont
Teletype . . .
From page one
UNFORTUNATELY, SHE, said, there is a threat to the deaf, called in Washington, D.C.
Because of the dearth of deaf schools and the often inadequate teachers and facilities, deaf people must go to vocational schools, and many end up doing mental work. Those who find good jobs seldom get raises, Jeannie said.
Mr. Culver said the image of dead people as helpless has been sparked by depled people who are too lazy to work and resort to selling pencils.
Jeannie said, "That's what adds to the reputation of deaf people. People see them and say, 'Oh, the poor little things, they're so helpless.' The deaf who have worked hard to achieve something in life really hate the lazy types."
FRUSTRATION SHOWING on Mr
Culver's face, he said that people forget that learning comes from reading, observing and doing, and that hearing need not enter the picture.
Jeannie said, "A lot of insurance companies won't even allow policies to deaf people. Actually, they're better drivers because they're more observant.
As I looked at the alphabet in front of me, I was sure they were observing the inadequacies of communication that I was taught. I wasn't through an interpreter don't seem genuine.
KNOWING IT would take too long to muster the appropriate courtesies, I was relieved when Jeannie showed me the sign for "thank you."
On the way out, I was startled when Mr. Calver pointed to three pictures on the wr and said out loud, "These are my children. These two are married—only one left." He
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4
Wednesday, February 2, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Evel fails to show
Tuesday night the Chicago Amphitheatre was host to its biggest fire since the 1968 Democratic Convention. "Evel Kriegel's Death Defiers," broadcaster might have been disturbing or frightening if it had not been so completely and laughably aborted.
The keystone of the show, in case you haven't heard, was to be when motorcycle stuntman Evel Knievel jumped his bike across an artificial pond filled with "maneating" sharks.
BUT KNIEVEL, who is notoriously for failing in do-or-die attempts but escaping with his life and several million dollars anyway, injured himself during a practice jump ("worried about the fish's welfare," host Telly Savalas said) and missed the show. CBS was left with a video tape and live cameras in Knievel's hospital room.
The crowd of thrill-seekers was obviously disappointed, considering they shelled out some rather big bills to be there. Although the video tape did draw a few gasps and screams, Savalas and co-host JSt. John were forced to give their rather inane color-talk over a background of occasional hoots and whistles. (St. John: "These men do it just because they have to." Savalas: "You said it, love.")
The other daredevils doing what they had to do included a middle-aged man in a tuxedo
who sat in a special chair while four sticks of dynamite were exploded beneath it, a man who hung by his teeth from a helicopter above Miami Beach, a man who tried to jump a snowmobile 145 feet through the air and made about 38, the specialists who caught and transported the sharks for the show, a man who plummeted 84 feet into a sponge and a 72-year-old tightrope walker 170 feet above Miami Beach.
The whole show was in such bad taste that it took half an hour before one could tell that it wasn't sad. The viewer could only thank Mr. McC with Howard Cassell doing the telecast.
The viewer could also pray that the thing wasn't being seen overseas, lest the world's image of the American psyche drop another couple of notches.
Some psychologists theorize that Evel Knievel, the Hero, is merely a substitute for the dead and buried American frontier.
Americans are afraid they are going soft and civilized and need some ways to express their individualistic, aggressive and macho traits, they say. The burgern register of day-to-day life must be offset by some sort of a fantasy. That's where Evel comes in.
The theory makes sense. But it is hoped that all the people leading grey little lives will eventually find some other way to escape than watching such men tempt death.
Josh is '70s style Christianity
They're not exactly words that go together like bread and butter although for the past three nights they're words that have had a special meaning for about 5 per cent of the KU student population.
Maximum Sex.
Christianity.
Yes folks, just in case you missed the glossy posters that have sprung up all over campus since semester break, Josh has been in town with a series of 60-minute problems aimed at improving problemers and reaffirming faith among Christians.
Josh is Josh McDowell, a professional traveling speaker for Campus Crusade for Christ. According to Pam Bush, a KU organizer for Campus Crusade, the movement isn't a church, nor is it denominational, but acts merely as an arm of the church to encourage Christian activity and participation. McDowell is the founder of Organize Yourself organized and efficient body that markets Jesus Christ in much the same way that a business markets soap powder.
McDOWELL's visit to KU was booked two years in advance because of his busy schedule. Planning for his lectures began in late September 1976. McDowell spoke at campus organizations and receives $125 a day expenses as well as
Campus Crusade for Christ is obviously no fly-by-night movement. Founded in 1981 by William Bright, it has grown throughout the world, including five at KU, who coordinate activities and show new members how to effectively share
royalties from his two books and tape recordings of his speeches.
CAROLINE E.
Paul Addison
Editorial Writer
their faith in Christ. Each staff member is supported by a number of businesses, clubs and individuals who pledge a sum of money each year.
BEESIDES CAMPUS and high school speakers and conventions, the movement also organized the catchy national aid buttons and bumper stickers proclaiming, "I found it." The cost of the movement's blanket campaign of 252 metropolitan areas and about 5,000 kickstarter members an estimated $25 million to $35 million.
Using sick advertising techniques, letters to newspapers, word of mouth and both paid and voluntary personnel, McDowell manages to pack 'em in
wherever he goes and then wows his audience with well-heeled casual lectures that include jokes pointed against nonbelievers, the story of his conversion to Christianity and a presentation of his Biblical theories in support of resurrection, biblical prophecy and "maximum sex."
THEY'RE LECTURES that follow tried and tested public speaking formulas, building in emotional intensity and vigor, encouraging audience participation, using conscious body language gesticulation in an effort to relate to the audience.
For Josh and the Campus Crusaders this is '78 style religion, carefully formulated, packaged, anecdoted, animated, and told. But insult the intelligence of the listener but yet preaching the value of a relationship between both subtle and overt diacritic nuance.
Sunday's talk bark the title "The Great Resurrection Hoax," and included a discussion of his own evidence in support of resurrection. The thrust of the lecture, however, was the more sensitive matter addressed by this discussion of the insecurity of nonbelievers.
"I LIKE to meet people who hate Christians. They're usually insecure," Josh said, and went on to imply that the students were not to blame when students was due to insecurity and that
students are insecure because they hadn't yet found Jesus Christ.
To the uninitiated, McDowell plays on the conscience and seeks to redirect people's thoughts and actions in a manner that he knows better. He merely reinforces their beliefs and tells people what they want to bear. By casual reciting quotations and established facts from the Bible, he comes across as a quasi-evangelical fundamentalist trying desperately to refute any theories that don't match his views.
FOR MCDOWELL and the Campus Crusaders the heavy promotion approach used to spread "the word" seems to have brought results in terms of numbers of inquiries about the program throughout the country.
But at what cost? Can the movement reconcile within itself and explain to others the need to use big business sales techniques and large scale advertising campaigns to promote the growth of Christianity?
Therein lies the rub. For some, the excesses of the movement merely cheapens the name of Christianity and brings the name of Jesus Christ into disrepute. While there are no clear answers to such emotional issues, it makes one wonder—would Jesus Christ himself have approved?
Odds stacked against February
February has never gotten an even break.
People just don't seem to like the month. They talk with
syrup fondness of April
showers and May flowers,
of hot August nights and October
afternoon of December eves
FILMING A MOVIE? OH, MY.
NO. MR. MONDALE--THAT'S
NATO ON MANUEVERS!
February. It was already the subject of scorn and ridicule; what difference did a little more make?
WHAT'S MORE, February has been stuck with the only holiday of the year dedicated to a varmint: Groundhog Day.
RIGHT
MIAMI NEWS
© 1977 M
Carter's promise met by Amy
by the fireplace. But never a word about February.
Our source thought Amy was at her best during the Inauguration period.
cats, whose names surpass even Grits and Jet Black in originality. Those cats are, of course, the Misty Malarkey Yingyan.
For several months now we've heard Jimmy Carter tell us how he's going to bring together the American people. Just how he plans to do it has left many of us wondering.
won the presidency (the big one came during the height of Amy's charismatic appeal, the source said.)
A highly placed Washington source told us last week just exactly what these plants were. What we've found out is really hard to tell, but the weapon has been in the national news almost as long as Jimmy.
"THE KID is typical Americana. You've heard the slogan, 'baseball, hot dogs and apple pie.' Well, Jimmy's told that Amy's his softball, grits and pice ban, which the
SHE SEEMED to like most of the pre-Inaugural gala given in
Jimmy's plan for togetherness and understanding lies within a rather petite package that weighs about 65 or 70 pounds, has long, blonde hair, and is just as handsome for more than nine years now.
"Amy's charisma is even double that of Jimmy's," the source said. "Why, you shouldn't overprick a lenoir that overpricked a lenoir. Plains last summer? Well, that was about the same time that Jimmy's campaign picked up momentum. The press hasn't idled alone since, and Jimmy's digging the consequences."
The Carter sons should have realized Amy's coming attraction by reviewing past presidencies, as Jimmy did, according to our Washington source.
"IMMY noticed that the past three presidencies were less than overwhelmingly popular because all of their children were going off to college or getting married in the Rose
The source said Amy was Jimmy's favorite child and the local mayor. "We look at what's happened to Jimmy since Amy was born: his peanut business prospered, his wife became governor of Georgia, and he
Inauguration Day it's been all Amy, and she walked only two blocks to their mile."
The month is, of course, at a disadvantage from the start. It has only 28 days, and even that isn't for sure. February has the dubious distinction of being the only month that isn't
JIMMY'S PLAN is to delight Americans with his daughter Amy, through the press. And his plan has been working well.
"Now look at the Kennedy administration. The ideas of Caroline and John-Playing have been made a list of people's envy."
When asked whether constant press coverage of Amy might bore Americans and Amy soon, the source said:
Garden, which did gain a little air time. But those activities didn't really seem too typical for the common American.
"I can't sing as well as Ray Bolger. But once you're in love with Amy, you’re always in love with Amy."
"Jeff and Chip are just a tad mad," the source (a Southerner) said. "Sure, they had some publicity during the campaign. But ever since that promote down pennsylvania Avenue on
There are two pets who haven't had the opportunity to get their pictures taken, however. They're Amy's two
The source further characterized Amy as a typical American by noting that she used in the naming of her pets.
Then came the benediction shortly after her father's swearing-in the next day. Amy, being the churchgoer she is, seemed interested in the minister's words at first. But the benediction was a little too long and she flash a long yawn to the millions of Americans watching on television.
To begin, there's Grits the dog. His mug shot appeared in her room and she was back week after he was given to Amy by her fourth-grade teacher at her school.
source noted, is a Georgian delicacy.
DESPITE ITS good effects for Americans, Amy's publicity is causing some family unrest, the source said.
Jimmy's honor the night before he became President, the source said. But as the hours went on, Amy fell asleep.
BUT THERE'S also Jet Black, who's been with the team for years now. J. B. (Jet Black) the nackname) was found wandering near Billy's gas station near Billy, and was adopted by the Carters.
Jay Bemis Editorial Writer
PETER WRIGHT
Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Letters must be signed; KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
Letters Policy
Jerry Seib
Editorial Writer
Admittedly, February is no May or September, and it never really made any claims to be so. February asks only for a little respect, understanding and anoration.
LOOK AT a list of some people who were born in February: George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Babe Ruth, Hank Aaron, me. That list should stand without further comment.
AS IF it wasn't enough that Augustus suilted February's credibility from the start our society has taken it one step further. February has become which those first payment Christmas shopping charge accounts are due.
February has never done anything to deserve all this abuse. In fact, February has done some pretty good things.
Why did Caesar Augustus finger February as the month to be singled out in this dremene-mentum its fair share of days, months its fair share of days, and let it keep them all. Besides, if everybody likes April so much, why not give it a extra day during leap years
And your old fifth grade teacher probably doesn't realize the humiliation Valen-Tina and I imagined. Imagine the embarrassment of having to sit next to a girl during the annual class party while some smart elk passes out cookies and knowing looks.
guaranteed the number of days it will have. One year it's 28, the next its 29.
The class holidays, like Independence Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas were parcelled in December months by whoever it is that parcels out holidays. Even January, which certainly ranks as a more dismal month than January, gets New Year's Day.
which is celebrated, or whatever, today. Someone once decided that groundhogs have some mysterious power of long-term weather forecasting, and be somehow hoodwinked calender makers into dedicating a whole day in recognition of his ability.
The only true February holiday, Valentine's Day, is kind of a silly one anyway. It seems to have been designed by Michael Cards and perpetuated by your old fifth grade teacher.
THE GENERAL public saw through this ridiculous story a tear in his heart. But he yet another reason to laugh at February, the only month in which a rodent and his shadow were caught by the National Weather Service.
Why not make them due in the middle of January? People don't have much to do except pay bills in January anyway. They haven't even started to worry about income taxes then.
February just isn't that bad.
After all, February isn't
January, and this year we
should be glad of that.
But no; it was too easy for the retailers and creditors of America to kick around
It's all a farce, of course.
Groundhogs have no more idea of how much longer it's going to be cold than do you or I. And if it doesn't be cold, you would make it? If it's going to be cold, it's going to be cold.
LIKE CHARLIE a lot, of people could get along just fine without Valentine's Day. If you never get any mail anyway, there no point in scheduling a holiday to emmaarize the point.
I personally wouldn't want to be a member of a white sorority, but it would be nice to know that the doors were open. Lincoln once said, "United we stand, divided we fall."
KU needs more administrators like President Carter who helped open the doors of his hometown church to blacks after hundreds of years as a civil rights leader. Carter, like Lincoln, had no other choice, because of the pressures of the time, yet they were gigantic steps in closing the separation. Martin Luther King once said, "I have a dream that one day sons of slaves and of slave owners will sit down on the table of brotherhood."
Whites indulge in black music, dialect, and entertainments. Whites imitate blacks in songs and dances. Whites wear black hairstyles and clothes designed by blacks for blacks. At a recent dinner party, whites ate foods
I, too, was discouraged and saddened as I read Nancy Tollefson's letter in reference to this recent discriminatory distinction yet present at KU because of its status as or similar types of discrimination here. It has been more than 100 years since blacks were set free from bondage, yet we are not free. We are enslaved from playing the guitar in businesses, white churches, white clubs, white soreties and white fraternities.
Or
Letters
To the editor:
Blacks find doors shut
Ev
TOI AGEN from Vivia UP A in the
TO CLU
n.m.
VOL
from Wess
socii
and Uni^2
prepared by blacks that they once discarded as garbage. These are whites of all ages, from all walks of life, yet a black can be equal to or on the same level as a white. A black has to be twice as prepared to receive the same recognition.
My greatest aversion to being at KU has been the superficial relationship with whites. Instructors smile in your face all the time, but they also accept F₁, whereas he might deserve average or better. A white would receive what he deserves or better. White students borrow notes, books, laughed and joked. Students who accepted in their affiliations. Many foreign-born students and other American minorities are
R
treated as whites by whites Why not blacks?
TO:
6:30 I
Unto
be at
Ms. Tolleison, amidst peer pressures and society partitions I certainly admire your courage to speak out against your sorority sisters and other forms of prejudice. The one form of prejudice is one that has been channelled through from slavery. Their thinking is along the same line as their counterpart William Shockley who tends to believe that blacks are genetically inferior to whites. I hope this has made some sense. But I wonder about eradication of other closed forms of prejudice here at KU.
Rita G. Selkirk
Rita G. senator
Kansas City, Kan. senior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 16, 2014 www.ku.edu/usnews/education/july-16-2014
June and Judy are excused Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscriptions by mail are $1 each or $18 for 600 subscriptions. Subscriptions by call are a $2 member or $18 for 600 subscriptions. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1.95 per student.
Editor
Managing Editor
Diane Mack
Jill Bailey
Campus Editor
Alison Gwinn
Associate Campus Editor
Berkshire Editors
Campus Editors
Barbara Rainerer
Copy Chairs
Business Manager Jiaque Clements
Advertising Manager
Advertising Manager
Advertising Manager
Classified Manager
Classified Manager
Assistant Classified Manager
Assistant Classified Manager
Owen O'Connor
National Advertising Manager
Robin Guertner
National Advertising Manager
News Adviser Publisher Bob Giles David Dary
Business Adviser Mel Adama
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 2, 1977
5
because they ist.
ell plays on to redirect situations in a Christian to want they want tootiations andotiations, Bible, Bible, vehementallyoperately to match his
the Campus emotion app ord" seems in terms of the program
explain to business sales advertising growth of
some, the
meter merely
stantiness and
Christ into
Christians and
first answers
make one
Christ himself.
fifth grade
yellow doesn't
valence Vale-
nance of a girl
to a dwarf
partly while
passes out
cookies and
meals
Brown, a lot,
Brown, a lot
at time's Day. II.
At time's Day. II.
scheduling a,
scheduling a
size the point.
Thanksgiving
are parceled
glorious
are parceled
er it is that
Even
erritially ranks
month than
New York.
never done
serve all this
february has
good things.
of some peo-
n in February;
on, Abraham
till, Abraham
t list should
without further
nobinary is no r, and it never claims to be only for a lit- understanding and
isn't that bad.
february isn't
this year we
if that.
ut
es by whites.
amidst peer partitions peltive partitions we our courage against your sisters and other sisters in one sister is one in channelled slavery. Their the same line the partpart William tends to believe genetically I hope this the significant eradication of nests of prejudice
y, Kan. senior
On Campus
Events
TODAY: LOCAL VOLUNTEER AGENCIES will hold a recruitment day from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Wescow Cafeteria. Vivian McCoy will speak on "GROWING UP ADULT (Whover Taught Us)" at noon in the United Ministries Center.
TONIGHT: STUDENT SENATE meets at 6:30 p.m. in the Big Broom of the Meets Union. "DINOAUSS ALIVE!" lecture will be at 7:30 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium.
TOMORROW; UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB will have its winter program at 9:30 a.m. in the Union's Watkins Room. VOLUNTEER AGENCIES will recruit from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the fourth floor of Woods, historian, will speak at a sociology and history colloquium at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Council Room.
"The Pope is the traditional wing of the Church," he said. "I think it would have been amazing if he had approved the ordination of women."
From page one
HE SAID THE DECISION from Pope Paul was expected.
The Rev. Mr. Matthews said that the Catholic Church would change its mind about the ordination of women but that the ordination didn't come from the bishops or the Pope.
Vatican . . .
Walt Disney's
"The Church will eventually change but the change will come from other parts of the Church mainly young women and younger, more liberal priests," he said.
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70-150mm $^{1}179^{99}$
70-210mm Series 1 $329^{99}$
35-85mm Series 1 '369$^{99}$
75-260mm
75-260mm $ ^{1} 179^{99} $
35-105mm $ ^{269^{99}} $
85-205mm For Konica only $ ^{149} $
75-205mm Macro $^{1}189^{99}$
All Vivitar zoom lenses are available in very limited quantities. Each zoom may not be available in every mount.
85-205mm
f 3.8 Zoom Lens
75mm f/2.8 Lens
here is an incredible
incredible lens you may
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but a good one
made by one of Japans'
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your shots from one posi-
tion with just a touch.
AVAILABLE
FOR PEN MAIN AND MIN
ONLY
OLTA ONLY.
Retail value to OLTA ONLY.
239.99. Wolfe's Sale Price
SOLIGOR
75mm-260mm
OUR LONGEST RANGE
.COM
$10999
Mamiva M645
ZOOM
---
This amazingly versatile lens positions in the viewfinder by zooming from 75mm to 260mm and then automatically diaphragm and meter coupling, and the greatest zoom from 75mm to 260mm [for portraits] to 260mm [for wildlife or canids]. Come in to try one on
Volfe's $139'99 for pentax
(ALE Price and Minolta
Wolfe's Sale Price
SALE Price and Minolta $10.00 additional for Canon.
Mamiya
Wolfe's
Price
10. 0% additional for Canon Nikon, or Olympus mounts.
$49900
Here is the Ultimate compact SLR ideal format system camera. It has all the features of a medium camera, and the results of a medium format camera. Since the negative area of the camera is the photograph is excellent. At last, a camera for both pros and serious amateurs, with waist level finder and 80mm lens.
MAMMA GROUP
*ideal formal* .. negative enlarge
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10 exposures, 20 back
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The most exciting development in camera design is system design. This 6 X 4.5 SLR gives you an entirely modular system that can be rechargeable lenses and finders to screens and backs ... plus every other accessory to simplify any camera.
Join the revolution to the Bronica ETR ideal-Format SLR
*Electronically controlled, multicolored leaf shutter lenses. Shutter speeds from 8 full seconds to 170/6th of a second. From 40 wide angle lens.*
Wolfe's $699 Sale Price
Nikkormat FT2 Body Only
FOTON
Sold with waist level finder and 75mm lens.
Here is a great new camera, precision built
with an automatic handle, to handle, and packed
with outside feel.
*Nikon-designed "center-weighted" thru-the- lens, meter system.
*Shutter speeds to 1/1000th second
*Shutter speeds 10/1700b to 1/232th second*
*"Electronic flash synch to 1/232th second"
*Build-in hot show for cordless flash unit*
*high brightness viewfinder shows exposure information*
Pick the lens you need at additional savings thru Woler's Low Prices.
*Accepts more than 50 Nikon system lenses and many Nikon accessories.
Wolfe's Super Low $ Sale Price
As part of the famous Nikon system, the Nikormat F-2 is a gilt-aged investment in fine photography. And at our special, low price, there's not a better value today!
179 $ ^{99} $
Nikkormat FT-2, Body Only, retail $287.00
ST 605
FUJICA
Fujica ST 605
SLR Camera
SLR Camera
The more compact and lightweight a camera, the easier to capture with the least amount of tissue quality or precision. Now your picture taking can be fun, easy, and rewarding as well as practical. Our digital microscope system, make the photograph standard rather than custom (focusing or ground glass—which ever gives you the best images), allows us to obtain ability means sharper pictures. Greater ease, greater accuracy, greater all mean
Wolfe's
Sale
Price
$169⁹⁹
Fujica ST 605 made to sell for $239.95
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Nikon Retail Price
F2 Photonic Body Only $629.50 $399.00
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F2 (Plain Camera) $495.00 $379.00
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Phone Orders Accepted
master charge
THE JOY OF SMART CARE
Your
BANKAMERICARD
welcome here
STORE HOURS
Monday 8:30 to 8:30
Tuesday thru Saturday
8:30 to 5:30
Mail Orders Welcome
WOLF HEAD
Wolfe's
FOR PHOTOGRAPHY"
camera shop, inc.
"THE SUPERSTORE
Financing Available
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
Parking
Topeka, Kansas 66603
Municipal Parking
Parking
WOLFES
CAMERA
SHOP
Ten Street
---
6
Wednesday, February 2, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Women trounce Claremore 73-41
By RICK BRYANT
Sports Writer
KU's women's basketball coach Marian Washington was glaad to be home finally as her JaYawk team defeated Claremont Field. 7-24, last night at Allen Field House.
The dayhawks played only their fourth home contest of the season when they beat Charemort for the second time this season. KU won the first encounter 84-78.
Neither team played well but KU played well enough to win, although the 'Hawks were guilty of 26 turnovers while Claremore committed 17.
commitment.
"Overall I was not pleased with the quality of our play but a win is a win and this was a big victory for us tonight,"
Swim program expands at KU
increased financial allotments from the administration have allowed the division of recreational services to extend open swimming hours and to establish a new program for the physically handicapped in Robinson Natatorium.
Saturdays from 5 to 7 p.m. have been set aside for any person with a physical handicap to swim with persons present to help them.
The new hours for open swimming are:
Monday through Friday, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 10:30 p.m.
and Sunday 2 to 4 and 6 to 10:30 p.m.
and staff only. The pool is open for faculty and staff only on Monday from Friday from 12:30 to 1:20; and for faculty and staff and their families on Sunday from 4 to 6 p.m.
Washington said. "The potential is here for us but we have to play as a cohesive unit to win as a team, not as individuals."
V. C. SANDERS led the Jayhawks, 8-12, with 16 points, hitting eight of 16 shots in just a little over half of the game. Sanders hit her first five shots from the floor before
Adrian Mitchell followed in scoring with 13 points and June Koleber and Sue Berens hit in double figures with 12 and 10 points respectively. Kansas hit 32 of 76 for 45
for Claremore, hitting six of 16, most from long range, and one free throw for 13 points. Gina Nix, Claremore's top score coming into the game, added 10 points.
per cent
Jowahna Tanner was the leading scorer
Kansas outscored Claremont during a seven-minute span in the first half, 17-6, route to a 44-22 halftime lead. Washington fell to the second half the last 15 minutes of the second half.
WASHINGTON CREDITED a tough man-to-man defense with forcing many Claremont turnovers and developing the team's much-needed aggressiveness.
Foosball Tournament $1.25 Entry Fee
Saturday, Feb. 5, 12:00 noon at the Jay Bowl Sign up in SUA office by Friday, Feb.4, 3:00 p.m.
DOUBLE ELIMINATION,
BEST 2 OUT OF 3 MATCHES
More info? Call 864-3477
the winning team receives an all expense paid trip to Cape Girardeau, Mo. for the Region XI Tournament, Feb. 10-12
SUA
FreeUniversity
Now is Your Chance . . .
You CAN TEACH!!!
THE FREE UNIVERSITY needs you to teach macrame, manual communication, juggling, yoga, belly dancing, massage, physical fitness and many more courses you can think of!
This is the LAST WEEK to fill out the course description. Do it today in the SUA office!
SUA
MOVIES
CLASSICAL SERIES
FILM SOCIETY
MORGAN (1967)
Dir. Karel Reisz, with
David Warner, Vanessa Redgrave
Wed., Feb. 2, 7:30, 75c
MEDEA (1970)
Dir. Pier Paolo Pasolini, with
Maria Callas. Subtitles.
Thurs. F, 3; 7, 130; $9, 10
POPULAR FILMS
MARQUEISE OF O
Dir. Erich Rohmer
Midwest premiere
Feb. 4, 1987
Feb. 5, 1987
3:30; 7:00; 9:30; $1
Woodruff Auditorium
Kansas Union
MASS STREET DELI
041 MASSACHUSETTS
FAMOUS
SANDWICHES
ALL DELI SANDWICHES
$1.25
8:30 p.m. to close
Nightly
Coupons not
accepted
Reg. Price
to $2.00
$1.25
8:30 p.m. to close
Ninety
Coupons not
accepted
Reg. Price
to $2.00
What do the dates 1,3,4 and 5 have in common?
In February, these are all dates of KU Women's Sporting Events.
BASKETBALL IN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
Tues., Feb. 1 Claremore Jr.College 7:30 p.m.
Thurs., Feb. 3 Phillips University 7:30 p.m.
Sat., Feb. 5 Grandview College 5 p.m.
1974-75
GYMNASTICS IN ROBINSON GYMNASIUM
GYMNASICS IN ROBINSON GYMNASIOM Fri., Feb. 4 Emporia State 7 p.m. Sat., Feb. 5 Grandview College (ninth in the nation)1 p.m.
ANGEL FLIGHT RUSH
Air Force ROTC
A Service Organization of Arnold Air Society
Feb.1-12
For further information contact 864-2073 or 841-6324
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
"DAMES"
and
DESSERT
COMING
SOON!
The GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL, a fully accredited UNIVERSITY, offers programs for July 1-August 12, anthropology, art, economics, bilingual education, folk-talking, theater and language and literature. Tuition and fees; $220; board and room with the Guadalajara AMA SUMMER SCHOOL. The University is the city of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85271
BACKGAMMON Tonight, 7 p.m. Kansas Union
It's a movie about a woman who beheads her brother; stabs her children and sends her lover's wife up in flames.
For Maria Callas, it's a natural.
PETER GILBERT
Medea
Marta Callas first dramatic movie.
Directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini.
Thurs., Feb. 3, 7:30-9:30
$1.00 Woodruff Auditorium
Padre Island
Spring Break March 11-20 $125.^{00}$
includes:
round trip bus
seven nights accommodations
trip to Mexico
beer and soft drinks on bus
Stop by or call the SUA Office for more information
864-3477
Deadline for sign up Feb. 4
---
Be the student you could be!
WASHINGTON THE
MASSACHUSETTS UNIVERSITY
Do you fall asleep over your book? Spend all your time studying just to keep up? (Or feel guilty when you don't?)
ENROLL NOW FOR EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
. . . Read most material over 1000 words per minute
. . Adapt dynamic methods to all kinds of material
. . . Organize, simplify, remember
... Cut your study time in half
... Face exams with confidence
New classes begin next week.
Mondays 7-9:30 p.m.
Feb. 7—Mar. 28
Tuesdays 7-9:30 p.m.
Feb. 8—Mar. 29
PETER TOWNSEND
FREE SPEED READING MINI-LESSON
FREE SPEED READING MINI-LESSON
You'll improve your reading within the hour—freel Daily Wed.-Sat., Feb. 2-5, 8 7:30 and 8:30 p.m.
H'
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Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa Phone 843-6424
Wednesday, February 2, 1977
University Daily Kansan
7
'Hawks aiming for road victory
Before Herb Nobles fell into a shooting slump, he could hit almost anything, as Oklahoma State knows all too well.
By DAN BOWERMAN Associate Sports Editor
When the Kansas Jayhawks met Oklahoma State Jam in Allerdie Floor House, Nobles pumped in a winner to the box for give KU. A 62-60 win over the cowboys.
KU hopes it doesn't have to rely on a last-second shot to beat Oklahoma State in Stillwater, Okla., at 7:35 tonight, but the Hawks will take it if it means it.
With the first half of the conference season over, KU will face must-win situations for the remaining seven league games.
"IF WE'RE to stay in the race for the regular season championship, we have to win every game," KU coach Ted Owens said. "We have two players, so we definitely have to win."
The Jayhawks' first test is tonight on the road. And they have had trouble winning read games this season, with four losses and two wins.
"We have not played with good consistency and patience on the road," Owens said. "This will be a very stern test for us, but our team can pass to pass to stay in the championship race."
"When we have our small line in," he said, "one of our 6-7 guys will have to cover a 6-4 or 6-7 buy, and they take you right to the post."
THE COWBOYS won't have an overall height advantage over KU, but Owens said he was worried about possible mismatches between the two lineups.
Fire officials said the fire apparently started at the first base side of the press box area and worked its way over to the third-base side before it was contained.
DETROIT (UPI) — A stubborn blaze at aging Tiger Stadium near downtown Detroit was contained last night about two hours after it broke out in the press box area, sending flames into the air that could be seen for miles around.
Oklahoma State should pose a problem for the 'Hawks in Stillwater although the Cowboy's chances for the conference title are slim. The Cowboys are in a tie for six place with Iowa State at 2-5. Kansas is in a three-way tie for third with Kansas State and Nebraska at 4-3. Missouri is in first at 6-1 and Oklahoma is second at 5-2.
Containing Holder will be KU's major problem. He is the Cowboy's leading scorer and rebounder, averaging 16.2 points and nine rebounds a game.
Jim Campbell, general manager of the Detroit Tigers, said the press box was "probably wiped out." Blaze also agreed that the bulk of the structure before it finally was contained.
OKLAHOMA STATE, though, will have to stop John Douglas, who is shooting at a 17.4 clip, and Herb Nobles, who has a 15.8 average. Nobles is also leading the 'Hawks
KU's small lineup usually includes three 2-player Clint Johnson, John Douglas and Hassan Houston. One of them probably had a strong play against Ousloz Holder or 6-7 forward Elli Johnson.
SPECIAL JAZZ CONCERT
Fri., Feb. 4 at
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
Gary Foster and Bobby Shaw
op recording Jazz Artists direct from Hollywood
$4.00 Admission 9-12 Concert Call 843-8575
Opening day for the Tigers' baseball season is Saturday, Campbell said. "Don't worry," he playballs. "It's all play baskets."
Tiger Stadium survives blaze
"I don't know if you're concentration or what," Owens said. "In the course of playing 26 games, you're going to have some flat moments. But the competition in this league is so tough that you only have to be slightly off."
OKLAHOMA STATE
F- Ole-Hawks
E- EE Johnson, 67 junior
G- Antew Jones, 67 freshman
H- Reagan Wilson, 68 senior
G- Ronald Dennis, 51 senior
- nery Nobles, 6-7 senior
F - Clint Johnson, 6-2 junior
K - Keen Koeps, 6-10 junior
G - Hannah Houston, 6-2 freshman
G - Hannah Houston, 6-2 freshman
But the Jayhawks also will have to keep from playing inconsistently.
OKLAROMASTATE
KANSAN WANT ADS
KANSAS
- Gradex, Student Senate Elections
in rebounding with 8.1 a game, followed by Ken Koenigs with 6.7.
Probable Starting Lineups
- Placement Services
Have you tried
Athlete's Foot.
919 Mass. * 841-2995
Lawrence
GSC
SOCIAL GATHERING:
GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL
- People
- Party Plans
- Fee Waivers
THURSDAY,
- Beer
7:00 in Big 8 Room, K. Union
Funded by Student Senate
FEBRUARY 3
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kannan are offered to students without regard to their prior enrollment. BIG ASSIGN ALL CROSS TO 111 FILTH HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
AD DEADLINES
15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
1 to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more 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 calls can be placed in person or via the URK business office at 864-3543.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
864-4358
Need Exercise! Ramada Inn Figure Salon.
Located 852-2933 and operated. Monthly.
852-2933
Excell now at Doria Decorative Arts for tol
and decorative painting, pom-pom parade, dall
dragging, country caving, sand design, compa-
rent design and nautical call. Note 851-72-8
1066 New Hampshire.
QUILT WORKSHOP Pathwork for beginners Feb. 6, afternoon 10-11am Workshop for beginners Quilting Feb. 19, morning 9-12, afternoon 2-5 Fe. $8.50, include T-shirt and Pencil Bag. 706 Mass. M3-701. Advance 2-2
The concepts and programs of Democritean Socialism need a voice at KU. If you are interested in participating in the Democracy Societal Organization Committee, call 842-6321, 842-6930, or 825-7491.
FOR RENT
Desktop top, refrigerator. 2.9 cubic feet. Anderson
Rockwell A185 New Hampshire. 843-204-244.
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to
unilit, utilities paid, parking. 845-979-789
Must sublease bedroom and unfurnished Frontier
large apartment for spring semester. Rent 2-
00 per month.
Sublining. 2-bedroom unfurnished apartment,
$145. storefitting 718 W. W5th. Apt. 9, W-203.
FURNISHING. $129.
Nice 3-bedroom furnished house for 3 S. KU, boys.
No pets. 1647 Vermont. See owner, 1701 Vermont. $25,000.
Share 2-bedroom apartment partly furnished.
Enter a room, air-dishwasher, pool, on bus line
2-3
***
Gargousa 1-bedroom apartment, short carriage,
1,500 sq ft. $380 per month. Utilities. Available Now.
$490 per month. Lease only.
For Rent. Clean rooms and apartments. Lynch Real Estate, 943-1601, 2237 Ohio. 2-4
Roominate needed, large four bedroom apartment.
Utility units paid $125, 2-4
843-6293-$107
843-6293-$107
One Room in Town House, call 841-1734. 2-4
Sublease to May, 1 and 2 bedroom Apts. On Bus
Route, 841-6348.
2-4
Pavilion room for rent. Kitchen privileges 665
unities paid. 814-3527. Keepying it.
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
tn. pets, 843-7567.
One bedroom furnished apartment at 19 West
14th available immediately. Call after 5:
8-242-6300
Large, quiet, private bath, refrigerator, entrance
blocks of west camp, for mature trees.
Bubblera 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment (1750 sq. ft.) with furnished living room, $200/mo. Lyme RI-47786
renting furniture.
25 2-bedroom, b bedroom; $225, $50 reward;
large living room. 841-558-6100-630
905-253-7120
Jayhawk Towers Apt. for rent-call 842-4933 to see 0023.
仰
B
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS
SADDLE & BRIDGE
Open 9.30 am to 6.45 pm
Owen's Liquar Store
843-1186
910 N. 2nd
RAASCH
FOR SALE
INVENTORY SALE: Extra Stock and Demo Units
Prices Reduced. To Keep economy excellent on
these units, please call us at 1-800-456-7230.
Unlimited pieces of Electronics as well. Now that
their prices are down, you can order them
E-88. No phone calls please. Thank you.
2-11
in THE MARKET PLACE
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BELL AUDIO ELECTRIC, 843-908-5000, W. 61; BELL AUDIO
ELECTRIC, 843-908-5000, W. 61.
Mastercharge
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
furniture supplies, including the Furniture and
Appliance Center. 70% Mature stock.
Western University Civilization News - Now on Salem! Make
Musketeer at National University. Make a Male
Musketeer at Western
745 New Hampshire
State Park of Mexico
UNICORNS, Mermalds, wings in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to come from Stone cutting service. HEIRELY Professional work, artisan training. Guaranteed. 841-3833. guff
AKC female eagle puppy with papers - 4 months
new home due to living downstairs
841-383-363
Leather work tools and equipment. I am selling a complete set of tools and equipment using either a leather work tool or an excellent condition. Call Dave at 843-388-7521. Box #32, Lawrence, KS for a complete list.
Fu Sale 68 Camaro 4 speed, recently over-
weight. Good mileage. Kitamura 64-259 = 20
to 6 p.m.
Sterio - Marantz 222B I batery. Cervin Vega 26
spoilers. Phillips 212 turntable. Must sell $25.
430x270x85mm
| MODEL | IDENTIFIER |
| :--- | :--- |
| TERMINAL 1 | TERMINAL 1 |
| TERMINAL 2 | TERMINAL 2 |
| TERMINAL 3 | TERMINAL 3 |
| MODEL | IDENTIFIER |
| :--- | :--- |
| TERMINAL 1 | TERMINAL 1 |
| TERMINAL 2 | TERMINAL 2 |
| TERMINAL 3 | TERMINAL 3 |
Caldwell Optical
BATTERIES. Top quality fully guaranteed battery packs and trucks. Electro-Hite LifeShop 540 Mon St. Just behind the Macy's store, 8 am to 8 pm on Friday and Saturday each week. Telephone - 212-736-9900.
Small compact Cooltop refrigerator; only used for a month. Excellent condition. Phone #866-470-2121
Redemere Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod membership (conservancy) All students and face-activity youth group. Place 310 and Haskell Street, Jefferson City, Missouri more information contact: Mit Fredrickson at 9 a.m. Bibl class and Sunday school at Suburban Layman Park, Missouri more information contact: 2-24
AKC Golden Retriever, Excellent stock. 478-
2-3
Topkens, Topeka
Minolta camera SRT 101, 50 millimeter lens, case,
with camera, $200 firm; 842-900-03, day only. 4-7
weeks.
ARA in daah AM- FM stereo 8-track, Realtime FM Cassette stereo. Hce 824-2172 2-4
FRID'S SPORTS SPECIAL—30% off on Winning Wages. Winnings Discounts on raquette equipment. No restrictions.
1907 Chevrolet $700 or best offer. Call Badwin 894-3562. New engine and paint. 2-4
BADAPA, THE CLEARANCE. Four pairs at close
motion of 540° to the floor, 75° apart.
"PIPP 166", "PIPP 168", "PIPP 170", "PIPP 172", "PIPP 174", "PIPP 176", "PIPP 178".
Guitars for sale—the best guitars in Lawrence are available at LMC, Bob Wiedeman, dealer. Low overheat conditions low prices for Alvarez guitars. Come place on 307 E. 9th, 843-4916. 2-11
Magna Gear component system with 8 track
support and Magna Gear gearbox
component with Garrad变速器 for $1490 at
www.garrad.com.
2-165-13 used Dudnip radios only $3 for the
2-165-14 - pair 12R-14 for $3 at Rak
2-165-15 - pair 12R-14 for $3 at Rak
...
STORY STPR $50, STORY STPR 1023 receive, BSR
toward $25, JTM 911-4416-456, 2-7
Kodak carousel 7601 projector automatic focus lens
Also LiceM 310, M549-110 after 2.4
- 2-4
Cassette tape sale 59 minutes 60-minute for only 34
or five minute for 55. Rustock Bridge has
$2 off cassette tape sales.
4 avl. 72 Vega $1300 or the best offer, 842-1703
2-7
Screw Components discounted 30-40% Al Major Store components warranty, call JIM. 817-562-4590 anytime.
Refrigerator, Sanyo X12 cf. capacity. Used 6 month. Cost $150; call 864-2624. 2-79
SCUBA PRO mask for sale. Excellent condition used only two. Call 841-6514, ask for Lampin 2-3
Color TV, 20 inch portable. Excellent condition,
very dependable $89 or best offer 843-584-1284
71. Gibson Metody maker with hardshell case.
72. Gibson Metody maker with hardshell case.
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DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
30 Minutes later
Bajan AP-1C camera with 28 mm lens and auto
Canon 6410D MILK trade for good stereo receiver
(1.5x zoom)
has the eyeglasses
you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 814-7421
Marshall, 100, Amp Head, $273—(new $750)
Marshall, 100, Amp Head, $248—(new $750)
$300, three months Call: 841-362-288
$400, four months Call: 841-362-288
Royal Electric Typewriter with carbon ribbon.
Contact Benton Agency, Inc. 843-607-729
2-9
& Sandwich Shop
Petri: PTX 30 mm single-reflex camera, carrying
a lens for $25 or best price. Call Caryll Jerry at
411-769-8222.
Hole-In-The-Wal Delicatessen.
846 Illinois 843-7685
HELP WANTED
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy way. Become an Avon representative and make the money you need selling quality products on your own time. Two openings in Lawyer's Row. 2-16
544 s. spalding, **Bulldog**, 190 cm with Salomon
544 hindlings. Call John 841-5725. 2-8
EXPERIENCED 12.50-15.00 LW address registration
Experienced Inquiry in person at J&K Printing
Inquire in person at J&K Printing
Part time help wanted. Phone work and light
hiring. $2.30 per hour. 841-6432.
2-4
SUMMER JUMP. Over 200,000 in all 50 states.
Your money back if you don't obtain yours
through our compundation.
Attention: 416-370-8000, State College, Pa. 19811.
Act now for best selection.
2-2
MEN-WOMEN, JOBS ON SHIPS, American Foreign No experience required. Excellent pay and benefits. Req. Master's degree or for information, SRSAFAX, Dept. E-8, Box 209. Port Anaconda, Washington 98522. **2-15**
LOST AND FOUND
Lost a man's wedding band, made of yellow and white gold. The band is offered in white gold white gold. Reward is offered. Call Salma at (212) 834-6900.
Lost- Jan 6. Colored slides (about 20) in small envelope, packed with tape. Lost- Jan 8. Color slide (about 24) in 40- or 64-mm or 84- or 124-mm paper.
Found—Light brown 3 month old Himalayan
pups. Pop up in a tough tongue. Followed by
2-2
845-845-6
Found—Keys of campanile on the hill—call
2-2
Keyes, 864-2923
Lost-Neko watch, silver silver and blue band, face lost on JHP ships while trailing Cairn. Call 2-322-6080.
LOST - Omega, gold ladies dresses, Reward -
If found, call 835-5600, ask for Cathy. 2-8
Two yards of fabric at 12:30 AM, 28, near Wesco Hall Call (664-3100) to aid for CKA
Follow the instructions to obtain
Call 842-2094 to identify. 2-4
Found female Husky-Show mtx. 4% |month old
2-4
Found ladies Times wix, turquoise hand. Call
Gary 814-5295
2-4
Found female Hucky-Chow mix. *v*₁ months old.
Call 824-405 to identify.
2-4
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Alice at the House of Uher/Quick Cop. Center,
Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Mon-Fri, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m, on Saturday at
8:38 Mass.
Kew Valley Craft Kochsau, quality handcrafters
of artisan woodwork. Located in Mount
Marshesau, above Mercantile Castle 814-862-9500.
KARATE CLUBS* opening meeting and
Gam. For info: 841-239-7560
Gam. For info: 841-239-7560
Free University needs class conviverers for this semester, please contact us via availability in 24/7. Deadline February 4.
Swaps Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, paper, clock televisions. Open daily 12pm-8pm.
**euroroupe.WORLDIDEW academic discount year**
round S.A.TA 4228 First Ave, Tampa, FL
9-4
Never be late for another class Call Jayhawk
Wake up, U4-8238 or U4-6521)
2-2
A support group for women that have gone/come back from the war has started now through the Women's Center. It has been called "The War Room."
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
IVAN'S SERVICE 66
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Bobbi
Redken
FRIER: The Women's Resource Guide is now online. Click here to find out about 104B and 104B in the Union behind the Dell. **2016**
PERSONAL
KARATE--Improve yourself physically and metically this semester. Study this Oriental combat art from national champions. Classes now form the basis of KARATE classes at Lawrence, Kaiser (913) 842-8244. 2-11
MAKIN' MUSIC—We make it easier, Funk, blues, hip-hop, soul, funk. We do the basics: piano, banjo, mandolin, ukulele, harmonica. Mr. McReynolds will teach you how to play these instruments.
Kaw Valley Craft Exchange selling quality hand-crafted commissione communication fee new member #821-823-6401
Gay Counseling Service: Call 842-7505. 6-12 p.m.
tf
Wanted - information from who witnessed collision with car parked behind Snow Hall, 24 January. Culprit left "note" on windshield. (Actually blank paper.) Please contact 840-433-258.
Embarrassed by your obesity? For personalized counseling or free literature call 841-1659-2232
Archee and Del-Gel us back our whistle. Whistle, the "KU-Love U or Leave R" coilation
We'll remind you to take that call. Call Jay-
hawk Wake-Up, 843-2833 or 843-6321. 2-5
On a day like today wouldn't you enjoy a rela-
bling massage or a walk in the park? No, that's not
an option. And Redkin fees by appointment only. We also have many other time you want to give someone a special and much appreciated
treatment.
STEVE LEVEN AND RALPH MUNYAN RE-
BEAUTIFY STATE students for body student pa-
ses and vice president.
RIDES RIDERS
Ride to N.Y.C. over spring break needed. Sharpe gas and drive. Mitch 841-8088, Charlie 841-8097.
SERVICES OFFERED
will you get you out of bed Call Jahewker Wake-
up. 843-2633, or 843-6231
2-2
Babytitty-Part-time or Drop-in-care My bmy
home is located at 204-891-6321 from mothers of two. Dec 20th - Jan 7th
Small delivery, or entire household free
Call estimate, 843-9571
2-7
math tutoring--competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 600, 122, 115, 116, 117, 121, 122, 123, 142, 140, 588, 627,
reasonable rates. Call 824-7681. **11**
Sewing, knitting, mending. High quality work, 2-8 reasonable price. Phone 841-7238.
Architecture Students Interested In Photographer.
842.9755 2-8
Tutor for Econ. 622, and 520 and Graduate Student Economics prefer 841-715-04 after 6 p.m.
TYPING
Experienced typist—term paper, papers, mine, ink.
Specialize in proof, postreading, spelling and
correcting. 843-505-7291
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/citec Quality work.
Typist, IBM Pica/citec Desktops assistance welcome.
电话:842-3128
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf
Will type your paper with TCL Term papers and
paper with 864-7190 evenings & waltzes 2-18
841-7190 evenings & waltzes 2-18
WANTED
Female roommate wants to stay 3 bedroom
公寓邻居会申请 $75.00 monthly.
and $22.00 monthly.
Male roommate for apartment on W. 9th, $80
and 1/7 utilities. Call 821-6923. 2-4
Roommate= Meadwoodbrook Apt. Tennis courts, pool, on K-U, bus路。Call Bill R.
Female roommate wanted to share house in country
Pets. Kt. OK. Call: 831-6078.
2-2
Home of The Chalk Hawk
Compatible roommate to share 2 bedroom house
or a 3-bedroom house.
Male or female. C96-8214-884.
B-3
Male roommate for 2-bedroom duplex. $78 plus
utilities. 646-310-768. 642-732-537. 2-3%
Wanted female roommate, cheap clean place close to campus. Call 841-5264 2-3
Need male or female to share 2 bedrooms furnished apartment, from Union Ingle, 14 after 14.
Need three roommate in nine bedroom
house. Utilize paid $3 per month.
Need two roommates in nine bedroom
house. Utilize paid $2 per month.
One or two roommates will审清
two-bedroom Towers apartment. Call 812-462-6688
Roommate, $90.00. Livingroom, 2 baths, large
storage, garage, new furniture, 843-834-06 after 5 p.m.
Flayd's Big House—need rooms $55 and 665,
1105 Louisiana, come by. 2-4
Roommates to share 4 bedroom house. Must
have non-striking $89.99 and 1/2 bath.
$82.66-$86.60
Part-time flight instructor wanted immediately
Lawrence Avancey Municipal Airport 465-327
Roommate needed for 2-bedroom duplex month Calm Randy 8457-7257, offer 8641-3610
NEEDED—one female roommate to share apartm
tion with 2 girls for $160 a month. Unified
Shelter: call 647-8571
Roommate for four bedroom twoumester with
siblings. Has 10 students. Students:
月 utilities paid 825-7711.
Resmunch wanted to share two bedroom apart-
ments plus utility units, on bus line:
842-973-8579
Need a good used typewriter—electric or manual
Call 843-6268
2-3
Male roommate will share nice two bed-
room suite. Free bath includes toilet. Call Tom
1-800-324-7598.
H
Roommates need to share Hawkway
apartments ($120 per call. Call 812-260-4
3
Graduate students need commute to share 2 bedrooms. Students must have a 5'1" lift;学生必须有5'1"的电梯。Credit: 844-556-8-5, 842-950-205
Male roommate, non-smoker, share large apart-
ments. Occupies off-street parking, near campus. Call Pho-
ton at 610-425-8777.
Roommates wanted for nice 2 bedroom apartment
One block from campus. $85.20 and utilities
$47.90
- Pinball
Female wanted to share expenses with grad students in convenient 2 bedroom apartment C-88
Want to buy 'Textbook of Medical Physiology' by Guyton, 5th edition, 843-8490 after 5 p.m. @ ASSISTANT INSTITUTE HALF-TIME, 1977-78. Applies from any department or school a $200 discount. Must be enrolled in a postacademic rate program must be enrolled in a postacademic rate program vanced degree while teaching. Diane involves an academic year of study per week and assisting with other administration. Manual Women and minitaries are encouraged to apply. We expect to have approximately 60 available in the Western Civilization Library, 216 West. Wescon, completed app. 8/28.
Roommate wanted-female to share Towers
gardens and bedroom, all utilities paid.
2-11
2-11
House resident for Cancun House. Rent and
insurance apply. Resident can apply on or before Feb.
15th. Apply online at www.cancunhouse.com.
NAISMITH HALL
Female grad student at share house near campus.
Color TV, laundry, utilities included. $28
Bachelor's degree required.
TRY
- Pool
- Snooker
- Foosball
9th and Iowa
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Ping Pong
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Fees-Ball
The Lounge
- Foos-Ball
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEFP
- Bud on Tap
- Pool
COMPLETE
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
Over 1 Days a Wine, No One Elmer, 18 Admitted
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
Open / Days a Week No One Under is Administered
A
EURQPE
Charter Flights Youth Fares
WingsTo
KU Union Bldg./900 Mass.
Hillcrest & The Malls Ctrs.
843-1211
Maupintour travel service
public travel arrangements since 1951
8
Wednesday, February 2, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Gymnasts roll after slow start
Saturday the Jayhawks took second in a three-team meet at the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Rapids, scoring 168 3 points.
The Kansas University men's gymnastics team opened its season already on Saturday after winning a title.
Monday Karas added another 15 points and beat Western Illinois in Macomb by 6 points.
KU scored 185.8 against Western Illinois, which scored 120.2. The Hawks dominated Ohio, scoring 113.6.
Mike Hynes won the all-around despite problems with all of his routines. He scored 45.7 to take the first-place spot. Jody Summers was third in the all-around, 40.85, although he worked only five of the six events.
SEA WILLIAMS won two first places for KU. He took first in floor exercise with an
Football shrine honors Savers
NEW YORK (AP)—Gale Sayers, named to the Pro Football Hall of Fame only last month, was one of 11 players elected to the College Hall of Fame yesterday, thus becoming, at 33, the youngest player in the college shrine.
Sayers, a star at KU from 1962 to 1964 and currently athletic director at Southern Illinois University, was one of football's premier runners until a knee injury ended his pro career in 1971 after seven seasons with the Chicago Bears.
8. 6 score and first in long horse vaulting with a 9.15.
John Nunley won the still rings competition with an 8.75. Ford Chubertson was first on the parrel bars with an 8.35 and Summers won the horizontal bar with an 8.25.
Summers also was second on floor and vaulting and tied for third with Hynes on parallel bars. Hynes also took second on the horizontal bar.
IOWA UNIVERSITY won Saturday's meet, scoring 194.9 to KU 193.0. Northern Iowa scored 186.5 to WV 185.2.
Culberton sook second on the pennel horse and Bill Harms was third.
Williams had the only first-place victory for KU with a 9.1 in vaulting.
"I thought it (Western Illinois) was a good meet," KU coach Bob Lockwood said. "That trip was good for us. It gave us something to cheer about.
SUA
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
4 Day Package includes: March 13-19 $137.00
- 5 Days Lifts
Round Trip Chartered Bus Transportation
* 5 Nights Lodging
* 5 Days Ski Rental
Options on both trips available
Extra day skiing***Discounts for own equipment/own transportation
Final Deadline to Sign Up—Feb. 4
For more info, call SUA office 864-3477
5 Day Package includes: March 13-20 $166.00
*4 Days Lifts
Round Trip Chartered Bus Transportation
*4 Nights Lodging
*4 Days Rental
TWO FOR ONE Buy 1 Get 1 Free!!!
TWO FOR ONE ..
Buy 1 Get 1 Free!!!
Our Giant Hamburgers and Giant Cheeseburgers
are now quarter pound!
Griff's
BURGER BARS
23rd
842.
Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE 50-STORE
23rd & Alabama
Open Daily 8 A.M. to 10 P.M.
Prices effective thru Sunday
Night, Feb. 6.
Meat item sold as advertised.
None sold to dealers.
Quantity Rights Reserved
Right to Limit, Please.
COST CUTTERS
Kroger
COST CUTTER SPECIAL
Beer
OLYMPIA
6-12 oz. $ 129
Cans
C.O.V. Boneless
COST EASY CUTTER SPECIAL
BRISKET
79c lb.
Dutch Maid
9 oz.
Potato Chips...pkg. 49¢
CORT MARKH
CUTTER SPECIAL
Buy 1 - Get 1
FREE
OLD WORLD
YOGURT
1 lb. Potato Salad, 6 Rolls &
8 pies. *Fried Chicken* ...$2.79
Large Calif.
Navel Oranges...10 for $1
CUST CUTTER
HENRY SPECIAL
Buy 1 - Get 1
FREE
Kroger 8 ct. Wiener or
Sandwich Buns
Fresh Store Baked
French Bread...loaf 49
C.O.V. Boneless
BRISKET
79¢ lb.
Large Calif.
Navel Oranges...10 for $1
Buy 1 - Get 1
FREE
Kroger 8 ct. Wiener or
Sandwich Buns
Fresh Store Baked
French Bread...leaf 49
CLOROX BLEACH
Limit one with 10.00 in
other purchases ex-
cluding cigarettes and
beer and this coupon.
Credit Feb 4 & 977
Subject to applicable
state and local tax
Gal. only 17c
SAFE:
64c
KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
C & H OR
KROGER SUGAR
Limit one with 100.00 in-
closing purchases and cigarettes and
beer and this coupon.
South Feet.
Subject to applicable state and local tax.
5 lb. bag only 17¢. MADE.
KROGER CUT CUST COUPON
Betty brocker
HAMMER BROOK
Dinner Mixes
With this coupon or the
list of Hammer Helper.
Limit one coupon per
pass. Feb. 6, 1977. Subject to
applicable state and
local tax.
WILD $12 oz. Bx. 15c
HOUSE COST CUTTER COUPON
Farmland
CANNED HAM
With coupon or the
phone number 516-294-0311.
Farmland Canned Ham.
Good thru Feb. 6, 1977.
Subject to available
state and local tax.
SAVE:
Farmland 5 lb. $11.00.
Farmland 5 lb. $11.00.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Spring 1977
Nunemaker Senate District
Student Senate Elections
All Out of Town
G.S.P. Hall Sigma Alpha Epsilon #5
J.R.P. Delta Chi 6 seats
Chi Omega Triangle
Gamma PhI Beta Delta Tau Delta
Sigma Kappa
4
5 seats
Templin Sigma Nu #1
Lewis Kappa Sigma 6 seats
Hashinger Alpha PhI
McCollum
Alpha Chi Omega
Delta Upsilon
Corbin
All Scholarship Halls
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Sigma Chl
Kappa Alpha Theta
Beta Theta PI
Acacia
2 5 seats
Ellsworth
Nalsmith
Evans Scholars
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Lambda Chi Alpha
PhI Kappa Theta
Alpha Gamma
Alpha Kappa Lambda
PI Kappa Alpha
3 5 seats
Oliver
PI Beta PhI
PhI Kappa Psi
Sigma PhI Epsilon
PhI Kappa Sigma
PhI Delta Theta
PhI Gamma Delta
Alpha Tau Omega
Elections for Student Body President, Vice-President, 106 Student Senate seats, class officers will be held Feb. 16 and 17.
TO RUN FOR GRADEX (THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL):
1) Pick up declaration of candidacy at the GSC office (Level 3, Kansas Union)
2) Return your declaration no later than 5:00 p.m. on Friday, February 4, 1977, to the GSC office.
IF YOU ARE RUNNING FOR SENATE:
2) Have the office of the Dean of your school or college certify your enrollment in that school or college.
1) Pick up declaration of candidacy at the Student Senate office (Level 3, Suite 105, Kansas Union).
3) Return your declaration (with 5.00$ filling fee) no later than 5:00 P.M. on Wednesday, February 2, 1977, to the Senate office.
IF YOU ARE RUNNING FOR CLASS OFFICERS:
2) Have the office of the Dean of your school or college certify your enrollment and year in that school or college.
1) Pick up declaration of candidacy at the Student Senate office (Level 3, Suite 105, Kansas Union).
T
3) Obtain signatures of 50 students in their class on the petition form.
4) Return your declaration (with $50.50 filing fee) no later than 5:00 P.M. on Wednesday, February 2, 1977, to the Senate office.
Student Senate Seats Open:
Architecture 2
Business 4
Education 8
Engineering 8
Fine Arts 7
Journalism 3
Law 2
Pharmacy 2
Social Welfare 3
Graduate School 23
LA&S 15
*Nunemaker 27
**University Specials 2
*To be elected according to districts shown on the map.
**Any student who has a school code classification of (Z).**
Class Officer Seats Open:
Sophomore, Junior, and Senior class officers (President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer)
tary, treasurer:
ALL CANDIDATES MUST ATTEND A SPECIAL MEETING (TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 8, AT 7:30 P.M. IN THE JAYHAWK ROOM OF THE KANSAS
UNION) TO APPROVE THE PROOF OF BALLOUT AS WELL AS GO OVER LAST
MINUTE ELECTION POINTS. IF YOU DO NOT ATTEND THIS MEETING, THE
BALLOUT WILL BE PRINTED AS THE PROOF HAS COMEO US.
C++
// 程序名称:函数示例1
// 调用者:函数示例1
(Paid for by Student Activity Fee)
N c
A LITTLE WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
'Hawks pick up victory on road
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.87, No. 82
Thursday, February 3, 1977
See story page six
Toasty chat with Carter sets mood
WASHINGTON (UPF)—In the first of his "fireside calls," President Jimmy Carter yesterday made a direct, televised report to the nation on his main policy goals and set the inspirational tone of his presidency by calling for dedication, sacrifice and unity.
Seated before a lighted fireplace in the White House presidential library, he warned Americans the road to economic and social health would require "dedication, perhaps even some sacrifice" and made pointed reference to the fact that, in his administration, the symbolic sacrifice started at the top.
Carter said much could be done to start the nation on the road to recovery, and—breaking little new ground—he offered this summary of his objectives:
- Gas shortages: He congratulated Congress for passing his short-term Emergency Natural Gas Act, noted he had already signed it, but said the nation's failure to devise a long-term energy policy will make it much longer to solve."
FREDERICA ROSARIO
● Energy policy: Declared he has an April 20 goal for submitting to Congress his own long-term energy program. "Our program," he said, "will emphasize conservation and the use of energy which could be saved, is greater than the total energy we are importing..."
● Economic stimulus: He defended his
yearly $21 billion tax cut and jobs
proposal, including its $50 tax rebate for
nearly every one, as "the best-balanced plan
we can produce . . . It will produce steady,
balanced sustainable growth.
**Jobs:** Carter said his quick-stimulus proposals for public service and public works employment "will not be make-work projects" and stressed the priority beneficiaries of his jobs proposals would be unemployed, Vietnam veterans.
- Tax rebates: He said the rebate feature, distilled by some members of Congress who favored emphasis on job programs, was the only quick, effective way to generate jobs and create those jobs." He predicted the rebate and lower standard deduction features of his package would reduce this year's income taxes by 30 percent for an average family of four, which he estimates is about $485.
- Conservation: He said he would support congressional efforts to pass strip mining legislation that would produce new energy resources while protecting the environment, and work for climate justice that would address climate banker spills."
No dates were set for these items.
- Tax reform: His advisers are already working with Congress to develop sweeping reform of the "arbitrary, complicated and unfair" tax system. No timetable or details, however, for what he indicated would be a long process.
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Student Body President Tashle Tasheff was a bit confused and frustrated as she tried to make a point during discussion of a
End of frustrations
possible athletic ticket during last night's Student Senate meeting. The meeting was Tasself's last as student body member.
Election to poll student opinions
By SANDY DECHANT
Staff Writer
Students who miss the whistle will have a chance to say so because of last night's事故.
The questionnaire also would include questions on student financial aid problems
The Senate voted to devise a questionnaire asking student opinions on resumption of the whistle, the closing of Jayhawk Blvd. to most traffic during the day and the addition of a refreshment area in Wadsworth. The Senate voted to abolish the Senate election ballots Feb. 16-17.
A list of the 227 candidates for the Student Senate elections Feb. 16-17 appears on page seven. Class officer candidates also are listed.
and the need for a one-hour credit course on use of the Library and other University of Chicago facilities.
The meeting, this Senate's last, was attended by only 59 of 106 senators.
At the four-hour meeting the Senate also allocated $4,159 to facilitate the opening of the Minority Affairs Center, originally scheduled to open last November.
Rodney Dennis, chairman of the Senate minority affairs subcommittee, which developed the center, a lack of organization within the subcommittee had delayed the request to the Senate for money to operate the center.
The center, to be on the third floor of the Kansas Union, would be the first coordinated effort between the three major American Americans and blacks. Demis said.
The Senate allocation will be used to purchase office equipment, office supplies and library supplies, to pay rent and utilities, and to sponsor speakers and activities of interest to minority students,
Dennis said.
The Senate also passed a petition recommending that a recently finished report on the improvement of graduate assistant teaching be sent to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, and the school deans for "serious consideration."
The petition, prepared by the Senate Academic Affairs Committee, recommended changes in the selection, training, training teachers, teaching assistants and assistant instructors.
At halftime, with the number of Senators dwindling, the Senate passed a petition requesting Chancellor Anne Dykes to take the oath of office, famed the William Bailour Student Union.
The petition requests that all school deans return to Shankel, by April 1, their responses to the committee's recommendations.
Natural gas use resumes: oil use continues
Preliminary approval for the issuing of a maximum of $2.5 million in bonds for the satellite union, approved at a student loan agency in New York City on March 18, 2007 for Rentz of Rentzs at its Jan. 26, 2007 meeting.
The satellite union will be near Allen
House. Its completion date hasn't
been set.
In other action, the Senate petitioned Donald Alderson, acting vice chancellor for student affairs, to provide a centralized database of student files, passed a resolution suggesting that the newly elected Senate complete within a month and a half current efforts to provide a student private property insurance database to changes in the Senate Rules and Regulations.
Balfour, who will continue to teach physiology courses, resigned last May after more than eight years as vice chancellor for student affairs.
By STEPHEN HESS
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas returned yesterday to a half-and-half ratio of oil and natural gas used for heating KU buildings after six days of operating entirely on oil.
"The gas company possibly resumed supplying us natural gas because line pressure diminished," Perkins said. "We probably had to rely on oil of a kind with a day this resumption."
Richard Perkins, physical plant supervisor of buildings and grounds, said KU had received supplies from Kansas Public Service Gas Co. Inc. and been operating on 50 per cent natural gas since 11 a.m. yesterday.
SINCE JAN. 8, KU has been operating partially on oil, its reserve fuel source, and the University had run entirely on oil since 1990. It has also held private reserve fuel oil to last several months.
Carter's fuel measure says that higher prices received for natural gas bought during the emergency period wouldn't trigger huge price increases in gas sales.
Gov. Robert Bennett yesterday sent a telegram to President Jimmy Carter telling him he was opposed to transferring his position in the organization to the position of Kansans and Kansas state.
PERKINS SAID the temperature controlled how much oil and gas were used. For example, a 24-degree temperature may require 13,500 gallons of oil to heat KU, while
The big advantage of using natural gas instead of oil is financial. Perkins said.
0-degree temperature requires 18,000 gallons.
"It costs two to three times as much to produce steam heat by oil as by natural gas," he said. Steam heat is used for cleaning and the transportation of hospital equipment and cleaning."
Other factors are involved, of course," Perkins said. "Fuel consumption is affected by open windows, wind shift index, amounts of rain, snow and lightning on buildings, and sunny or overcast days."
when heating boilers get dirty it takes a lot of work to clean them. Oil is more difficult to handle and there are problems with it spilling. It's also more difficult to unload from trucks than gas."
Perkins said he didn't know when KU would return to 100 per cent natural gas usage.
OILY EQUIPMENT is harder to clean and tends to get messy, Perkins said.
"We'll be glad to get as much natural gas as the gas company will give us," he said. "One hundred per cent usage of natural gas can one know when KU will go back to that."
"Gas is much easier to maintain because
See GAS page two
According to Mike Tarabolous, chairman of the Student Services Committee, the Senate no longer has the resources and time to examine the tutor, roommate and carpool files.
He said a "reasonable amount of response from the student body" to the files warranted the need for Alderson to consider centralizing files within the Office of Security.
After the meeting, Tedde Tasheff and Steve Owens, student body president and vice president, weren't sentimental—just glad it was over.
"I'm ready to drink," Tasheff said. Owens wished and said, "I don't know whether the whistle for classes will ever blow again, but we could certainly have used it to shut up some of our long-winded senators."
Stained glass tradition preserved
Bv RICK THAEMERT
Staff Reporter
In a dingy, dusty, three-room studio overlooking Massachusetts Street, three skilled craftsmans work to preserve and expand an age-old art form—stained glass.
On a clear day, sunlight rushes into the rooms and passes first through the faded studio windows and second through the panels of stained glass in the room, forming shadows of deep hues on the walls. The majesty of the colored windows appears in sharp contrast to their humble surroundings.
A young man leans over a drafting table covered with full-scale drawings of possible stained glass endearments. He is Dennis Perry, a graduate student at Art Glass, Inc., 868-834, Massachusetts St.
"It's a timeless art," he said, pointing to several tinted windows, lamps and mirrors in the room. "People like it because it offers a glimpse of what is going on inside beautiful in and of itself, as well as
something that is slightly out of the ordinary."
MAYGERS SAID stained glass, which is growing in popularity, no longer solely depended on large businesses and churches for its existence because many homeowners and small businesses were finding that stained glass is an accessible and functional art form.
Walking to the window, Maykers picked up a stained glass sign that read, "EXIT."
But, the nostalgia craze also hurts stained glass companies, he said, because consumers often sacrifice quality and originality for the sake of having some semblance of stained glass in their homes or offices, even if it's a plastic fiffle lamp.
"Nostalgia is one basis for the growing popularity of stained glass right now," he said.
DESPITE THAT fact, Maygays said business had been booming at Creative Art Glass, Inc., the only stained glass studio in the Lawrence area.
Since its founding almost three years ago, the studio has created several hundred stained glass articles for churches, restaurants, bars and homes nationwide.
Although the studio sells some already-made glass pieces to customers, 95 per cent of its business comes from custom orders. he said.
A 2' by 18' mural in the New Yorker restaurant, 1021 Massachusetts St., has been one of the studio's three creations. "I even have three lampshades in Schoenberg's a foreign exchange student took back with him," Maygers said, laughing.
WHEN AN ORDER is placed, Maygers said, he examines the site where the stained glass window or fixture will go and estimates the cost of $40 to $45 a square foot. 3' by 5' window, for example, costs about $8 barring special labor problems, he said.
Sex decriminalization bill's aim
"When you buy a stained glass window,
TOPEKA—A state senator who thinks "the state has no business in the bedroom" said yesterday that he would soon introduce a bill that would eliminate criminal penalties for homosexuality, adultery, cohabitation and sodomy.
"I wrote the bill because of my strong personal belief that the state has no right to tell
Staff Renorter
By STEVE FRAZIER
Kansas law currently classifies adultery, cohabitation and sodomy as misdemeanors. Homosexuality is punishable under the sodomy prohibition. Adultery would remain grounds for divorce in Kansas even if either's bill were signed into law, he said.
The senator, Elwainne Pomeroy, R-Topeka, said he would introduce a companion bill specifically prohibiting homosexual marriage.
The laws prohibiting certain sexual acts between two consenting adults are seldom, if ever, endforced. Pornoyen said, "but their sexual acts makes possible selective enforcement."
"The ridiculous thing about the cohabitation law is that we say it's illegal, yet under the right circumstances we elevate it to common law marriage."
two consenting adults what they can't do in their own bedroom." Pomeroy said.
Pomorye's bill also would amend a current law by defining prostitution as any sexual act for hire. Now, prostitution includes only sexual intercourse for hire.
Lawrence recently eliminated its cohabitation ordinance while revising the city code. Pomeroy other cities in Kansas had done the same "long ago."
Pomeryo就 he wrote the companion bill banning homosexual marriage to affirm the
Pomeroy's bills are nearly identical to two bills he introduced last year that passed the Senate but not the House.
traditional concept of heterosexual marriage.
"if legislators just sit back and think and consider the facts, my bills will pass easily," he said, but instead, "they'll probably think it's too hot an issue."
"Last year, I got a few letters from people who thought my bills were the 'last straw' in a permissive society, he said. "I got one call from a distraught woman who said that the only reason she was talking to me was because of the adultery laws, and that I shouldn't make it legal."
"I asked her if she wanted to see her woman in jail and she said no, so I carefully explained to her that adultery would still be grounds for divorce."
it's very important that it is an integral part of the party. The Mayers may, walking to the back room.
"Sainted glass is appreciated most in its final resting place, according to how well it works with its surroundings. It must be unobtrusive. It must not be as bold as to be a distraction," he said.
"Stained glass is interesting because it requires engineering ability," he said as he clamored up the long stairs to the studio. "Yet, it's also a very personal art form in that it can be coordinated with the client's wishes."
MAYGERS SAID that his clients were pleased with the high quality of the studio, whose reputation had spread almost solely to managers and players called the "whole ticket" to success.
in back room, where the stained glass is stored, several vehicle wooden crates held rows and rows of '3 by '3 panes. Milky whites, magendas, deep golds and togebrets in different colored walters formed part of a church in Texas or a bar in New Jersey.
Meyers held up a piece of blue glass to admire. As he placed it in the window, the color changed to deep purple. He explained that stained glass took on different shades in different lights, a property called dichroism.
"YOU ALMOST never get stained glass. It's always changing," he said, picking out a new brown and yellow piece of red lime oil when he placed it in the window.
Most stained glass is made from stirring and pouring colored metallic oxides into sheets of molten glass. Most of the glass the studio uses comes from West German churches and in recent floods it has included States have made it difficult to buy domestic glass.
See GLASS page seven
"Can you imagine working at a place where they made this?" Maygers said, smiling proudly, "I can say that I'm smiling proudly, of red and yellow." Wow. let's stop and look at the one a while.
sheets of stained glass come in three
Sections ABS seven
PETER JOHNSON
Creation of glass
Staff photo
Judy Gerling, who does her work at Creative Art Glass Inc., works on a stained glass window for her relatives.
2
Thursday, February 3, 1977
University Daily Kansar
News Digest
From our wire services
Economic plan criticized
WASHINGTON—President Carter's $31.2 billion economic stimulus package got a cool reception on Capitol Hill yesterday amid criticism that it doesn't create enough jobs and doesn't take into account the effects of a cold winter.
enough jobs and don't take responsibility. The House Ways and Means Committee began hearings yesterday with Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal and Bert Lance, budget director, on tax aspects of Carter's plan- $11.4 billion in tax rebates and special Social Security payments, a $4 billion permanent tax cut for low and moderate income people, and tax incentives for business.
The Republican Conference, which includes all the Senate's 38 GOP members, yesterday imposed an economic recovery package calling for $28.2 billion in stimulus spread over this fiscal year and next, compared with Carter's $11.2 billion for the same two years. The GOP plan calls for permanent individual tax cuts rather than Carter's temporary rebates and for business incentives rather than his public works and public service job programs.
$125 million for K.C. Star
KANAS CITY, Mo. - Stockholders of The Kansas City Star Co. have approved a proposed $125 million purchase offer from Capital Cities Communications, Inc., it was announced yesterday.
was announced yesterday. When the sale is completed it will be the largest amount ever paid for a company operating a single newspaper property. The Star publishes morning, evening and Sunday editions. The Kansas City Times is the morning edition.
Thomas Murphy, chairman of Capital Cities, said the purchase was approved yesterday when the number of shares tendered under the offer topped 75 per cent. The newspaper also confirmed the approval. The purchase is to be completed no later than Feb. 19, Murphy said.
Emergency gas act upsets Kansas suppliers
By YAEL ABOUHALKAH Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Kansas natural gas suppliers yesterday expressed concern about the implementation of President Jimmy Carter's reallocation program
Carter signed the Emergency Natural Resources Act that night. Congress approved the bill nearly a year later.
The act calls for gas to be diverted from better-supplied states such as Kansas to eastern states. Official dealing with this issue will be made by higher prices in Kansas could occur.
"We don't want gas moved out of Kansas if it will hurt our industries and homes and help other industries in the Northeast," Robert Rober, chairman of the Kansas Energy Advisory Council, said from his office here.
"Iam not wild about protecting industries in the Northeast that have not taken the precautions for contracting for alternate supplies of energy that our industries did."
Harry Ford, a spokesman for Cities
transporta 55 per cent of kansas' natural
resources.
"The supplies we have for Kansas are pretty much down to the bare bones," Ford said from his company's main office in Oklahoma City. "We cannot imagine that the President or Congress could take our gas meant for homes and small businesses to send to the high-priority users in the East."
Kansas' natural gas suppliers say that, despite their curtailment in the state, they
"There's no such thing as excess gas in the country right now," Robel said.
still don't have enough gas to meet the needs of all Kannas industries.
And Ford warned, "We are not out of the woods by any means."
Most large Kansas industries and commercial firms in the past few weeks have been forced to switch to more costly natural fuels such as fuel oil, propane and coal.
The affected industries include most Kansas Power and Light subsidiaries, some refineries, a large aircraft manufacturer in Wichita, and the Corporate Farm Chemical Corporation and the FMC Corporation in association with the Chemical Division, both in Lawrence.
Curtailments and switches to alternate fuels, however, haven't forced many job layoffs in Kansas, in contrast to the 2 million people unemployed in the East.
But gas cuts and the resulting switch to alternate ignition to hurt Kaisars who continue the coming fire.
Robel said, "Our fuel are up to three times as costly. You are not going to be seeing Kansas industries shutting down-at that rate." And he支付 for it on higher prices.
From nage one
"WE'D APPECIATE the cooperation of all the students and faculty in conserving energy, like using good judgment on lighting, heating and any kind of electric.
Gas ...
Ford agreed: "I don't see any alternative. If the energy for industry costs more, then their product is going to eventually cost more."
William Salome, vice president and general manager for Kansas Public Service Gas, said KU restored natural gas supplies because of eased line pressures.
"The warmer weather and less line pressure are the main reasons for KU's getting natural gas. Our problems come because of the huge amounts of gas that are needed for our customers." Salome said.
Kansas Public Service Gas gets most of its energy from natural gas, a regional distributor of natural gas.
"Warmer weather also affects how much natural gas we can give out. The right conditions, along with our quotas from City Service, will determine how much natural gas supplies we'll be able to give out in the future."
"WE WERE fortunate to have some natural gas in storage," Salome said. "Many gas companies on the east coast have used up to 50 per cent of their supplies in storage, which is probably too much for this time of year.
Accent the ARTS
Student Union Activities and
Accent the Arts present:
JOFFREY II
"The best small classic ballet in the country."
Clive Barnes, N.Y. Times
8 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 10
Hoch Auditorium
$4.00 general admission
Tickets at SUA
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
4 Day Package includes: March 13-19 $137.00
• 4 Days Lifts • 4 Nights Lodging • 4 Days Ski Rental
Round Trip Chartered Bus Transportation
5 Day Package includes: March 13-20 $166.00 Round Trip Chartered Bus Transportation
Options on both trips available
Extra day skiing...Discounts for own equipment/own transportation
Final Deadline to Sign Up—Feb. 4
For more info. call Sua office 864-3477
Kappa Sigma Benefit Concert Rice Auditorium, Baker Univ.
featuring
Country Heir
Warm-up Band:
Pat & Gordon Cleveland and
Brian Blais The Magician
between sets
Tickets available at:
Feb. 4, 8:00 P.M.
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STREET ADDRESS
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STATE ZIP
Interstate gas—sold between states—eells at a federally controlled price of either $25 or $30 per gallon, depending on when it was discovered. Intrstate gas—sold in the state that produces
Kansas is the fifth leading producer in the nation of natural gas, Louisiana. It is one of the world's largest producers of oil.
it-sells on a free market. Its price is about $2.25 for a thousand cubic feet.
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Lower Level Eldridge
SHERIFF SAM JONES
7th & Mass.
Padre Island
Spring Break March 11-20 $125.00
includes:
round trip bus
seven nights accommodations
trip to Mexico
trip to Mexico
beer and soft drinks on bus
Stop by or call the SUA Office for more information 864-3477
Deadline for sign up Feb. 4
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Try our new sandwich line and salad bar ...and of course our UNIQUE pizza.
544 W.23rd 842-9003
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Roll a loca with o mont autho
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Thursday, February 3, 1977
3
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some fuel for which with hot
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iver.
Rolena Hyde, the 5-month-old daughter of a local Indian couple charged in October with child abuse, may be coming home this month, according to her father and court
Indian child expected home soon
Her parents, Tony and Tweedy Hyde,
were charged with child abuse in October,
and since have seen their daughter only on a
limited visitation basis.
Mike Elwell, the juvenile court judge who originally ordered that the child be taken from her parents, said yesterday that he expected Roleta to be returned to the Hydes by mid-February.She is now in a foster home.
Hye said he thought a demonstration and meeting led by Russell Means, American Indian Movement leader, in December had helped speed plans for the return of Rolena.
"We read in the papers before the demonstration that Judge Elwill said the demonstration would prove nothing," Hyde said. "But I think it swamped him over to our men when people took calling him and asking him to let us have her home for Christmas."
A court date will be set next Monday to appeal Judge Elwell's decision but Elwell said that wouldn't affect plans for returning the baby to the Hydes.
The Hydes were allowed to keep the baby for a two-day Christmas visit.
Elwell said his decision would stand until it was overturned by a higher court. He also said the Hydes would be supervised by a lawyer, and the SIRS (SIG) of Bolinda was returned to them.
Hyde said SRS representatives brought Rolpa home twice a week for visits.
Booklet twists housing facts
An error in a housing booklet almost delta in the next semester's residence but contract.
fred McEhlenie, acting dean of men, said yesterday that the prices of single and double rooms were transposed in one section of the booklet, which describes the University of Kansas hall system. And some booklets also were missing pages.
The dean of men's and dean of women's offices, with the housing office, worked Friday and Saturday hand-correcting his bulletins to meet a Jan. 31 mulling deadline.
McEhlenie said the cause of the errors hadn't been determined.
The deadline for the return of residence ball contracts is "as soon as possible," be flexible, and keep your team ready to want a specific coormate or room should return their contracts before Fri. 14. Those returning contracts between Feb. 15 and March 14 will be handled on a first-come, first-serve basis.
Single rooms will be offered until May 31, or until the 30 per cent limit of single rooms in residence halls has been reached, McElhennie said.
On Campus
Events
TODAY: Local VOLUNTEER AGENCIES will be recruiting from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the fourth floor of Wescoe Hall. HERBERT GUTMAN, social historian, will speak at a sociology and history colloquium at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Council Room and will lecture at 8 p.m. in Smith Hall, room 100.
TONIGHT: ANGEL FLIGHT will meet at 6:30 in the Military Science building, room 104. GRADETED STUDENT COUNCIL will meet at 7 in the Union's Building for job placement; we will be served; job placement and fee waivers will be discussed. AAUP will meet at 7:30 in the Union's Jayhawk Room. KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Union's FLY-FISHING WORKSHOP for adults will be held at 7:30 at the Museum of Natural History.
TOMORROW; SOCIAL FIELD-WORK INSTRUCTORS will meet at 9 a.m. in the Union's Jayhawk Room. JOHN KRONIK. Cornell University professor, will speak on "Galdos and the Grotosete" at 4 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room.
Loveland reported the injury to SRS, which took Rolena out of Lawrence Memorial Hospital Oct. 6 and placed her in a foster home.
X rays showed that Roberta had a apoplasty fracture of the log and facial bruises. There were no signs of fractures in her pelvis.
The episode began when the Hydees took Roleta to Charles Loveland, a Lawrence pediatrician. According to Hyde, she fell off a bad and caught her leg in the bed frame.
Elwell ruled that the baby couldn't be returned to her parents until the Hydes received counseling and attended parental instruction classes. At that time he also said
he might wait as long as six months to rule
himself, and he would be permanently
returned to her parental
Means, after hearing the Hydes' story, organized a protest at the county courthouse in which he accused "white-dominated" courts of engaging in a conspiracy to remove Indian babies from their homes.
Before the demonstration, Means, Elwalt and representatives of the Hydes had a 80-player game.
It was after that meeting that Elliwell reconsidered a Christmas visit and an annual trip to London.
HAVE A JEWISH DATE
Today is Tu Bish'vat (literally, the 15th day in the month of Sh'vat), traditionally the new year of the trees according to Jewish custom. To celebrate, Hillel (K.U. Jewish students) is handing out a date to every person who visits our table in the Kansas Union (level four). We are also collecting money from those who may wish to plant a real tree in Israel.
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today only Sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish students
1976
Gunnie Sax For those special moments . . .
the VILLAGE SET
922 Mass.
Open 'til 8:30 Thurs.
What do the dates 1,3,4 and 5 have in common?
In February, these are all dates of KU Women's Sporting Events.
BASKETBALL IN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
Thurs., Feb. 3 Phillips University 7:30 p.m.
Tues., Feb. 1 Claremore Jr. College 7:30 p.m.
Sat., Feb. 5 Grandview College 5 p.m.
Preliminary to Men's OU game
GYMNASTICS IN ROBINSON GYMNASIUM
Fri., Feb. 4 Emporia State
Sat., Feb. 5 Grandview College 1 p.m.
7 p.m.
JOHNSON
(ninth in the nation)
It's a movie about a woman who beheads her brother, stabs her children and sends her lover's wife up in flames.
For Maria Callas, it's a natural.
Medea
Mary, Cullen first dramatizes movie.
Directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini.
Thurs., Feb. 3, 7:30-9:30
$1.00 Woodruff Auditorium
Room to rent?
Advertise it in the Kansan
864-4358
MISS. STREET DELI
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SUA
TODAY OR TOMORROW Fill out your course description in the SUA office.
We need class coveners for massage, disco dance hang gliding, knitting, macrame, belly dancing and many, many more courses.
Today and tomorrow are the last days to fill out a course description.
Share what you know, now!
Be the student you could be!
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ASSOCIATE EDITOR
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4
Thursday, February 3, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Meany's plan off base
George Meany hauled out his something-for-everybody economies book this week and gave the House Public Works Committee a lesson in how to cure the nation's economic
Meany, director of the AFL-CIO, presented a lesson as simple as it was short-sighted. He called President Jimmy Carter's economic plan "timid" and urged lawmakers to spend $10 billion to create public works jobs.
Carter has already proposed a $31 billion economic stimulus package that includes $4 billion in emergency public works projects in addition to $2 billion already allocated. If Meany calls that timid, he must also think the Shah of Iran is a frugal guy.
MEANY HAS thrust himself into that surprisingly large category of observers who are upset because Jimmy Carter has been in office two weeks now and hasn't solved the problems of energy, inflation, unemployment and the common cold.
What Carter has proposed is a balanced, well-conceived plan of action to bring the economy back into some semblance of order. He has proposed a package of proposals that will pump life back into the economy, provide some immediate job relief and whittle away at the remaining unemployment problem.
What Meany proposes is that the federal government spend more money that it doesn't have to increase the federal deficit that it doesn't want.
MEANY READILY admits his plan would immediately increase the deficit. But he uses this theory : "Put America back to work and you strengthen the economy. Tax tax users into taxpayers and slash the budget deficit."
Give everybody some tax money as wages, then let them pay you some of that money back and we'll use it to "slash the budget"
deficit. Somehow it's hard to see exactly what will be gained in the process.
Carter instead proposes 'a program of reducing taxes and putting that money back into use. It's at least theoretically possible to do this by making a larger sector and begin paying some dividends.
HE SUPPLEMENTS that with a reasonable job program, a job program that will give work while holding down educationocracy that Carter has promised to control.
His plan at least deserves a chance. We need not fear that Jimmy Carter will sit idly by, as did Gerald Ford, if things aren't progressing satisfactorily.
It's hard to imagine that Meany's program is born of anything but the frustration of being shut out of power for eight years. While the Republican administrations of Ford and Nixon were in power, Meany sat nervously on the sidelines and grumbled about the lack of government action on the economy.
AND HE WAS right. The Republican administrations sat on their hands when they weren't fighting with Congress.
But now Meany proposes to come flying into the scene like some eleventh-hour Superman to snatch the country from the jaws of disaster in one fell sweo. He wants to do in a day all the things he's been hollering about for eight years.
America's economy seems to work right only when we have a war or when the government is pumping sufficient amounts of money into public works programs. In either case, there is a false industry holding the system up. In the case of war, it's the arms industry; in the latter case, it's a government-backed works program.
America needs to revolve out of that kind of vicious circle. Jimmy Carter proposes a program that might be a start. George Meany has no idea what he is proposing.
Had Interlaken, Lunau and orthodox Overland Park Jew, been speaking to a larger crowd, he said the hell might have broken loose.
He caused enough commotion among the 20 or so students he spoke to in the Kansas Union.
New age antiquates absolutism
Tkatch, a soft-spoken seemingly sincere man, said simply that the six million Jews slaughtered by Hitler in World War II deserved what they got. But he was a good agent of God, was at least helped by Him in Hitler's effort to create a supreme race.
TKATCH WAS the guest of Hillel, KU Jewish students. He isn't a professional speaker; he works for a scrap-metal firm. He doesn't seem to be either a financier. He is, simply, devout.
**KATCH IS an absolutist.** The Torah's Commandments are all equally important; it is just as much a violation to touch one's wife during and one week after a divorce, or to kill. In defending his argument that the Jews deserved slaughter, Tkatch said the only way to condemn Hitler's actions was to accept the only "ubiquitous" criticism he gave to Criticism based on more opinion, practicality or "gut feeling"? isn't logical. Situational ethics vary from culture to culture, and from historical period to historical period.
And being devout, Tkatch says the slaughter was punishment to revisionist Jews for not keeping the Torah's Commandments. The punishment is sufficient to selective thus accounting for the additional seven million killed in World War II.
BUT THEREIN lies the snag in the absolutist argument. Which absolutes, if any, are we to accent?
The Torah, says Tkatch, lists 613 Commandments, of which
nor are applicable today. (He might be doing a bit of revision himself in the morning.) An orthodox cannot work on the Sabbath,
Yet Israeli soldiers are a notorious exception.
Christian religion also condemns murder. Yet the pilgrimages, the Inquisition and, more recently, the war in Northern Ireland seem to flout this prohibition.
THE HINDU religion posits the belief that cows, fat but sacred, are not to be killed. Yet India's Indian die daily of starvation.
Episcopalians only begrudgingly recognized that women were people, and could be ordained as priests. Pope John Paul II insisted that way His reason? Jesus chose men as His Angels.
Two problems plague organized religion's hierarchies. First, most are hopelessly out of touch with contemporary world problems. Second, though to say recent military conflicts are caused by Israeli covertive labels Catholic-Protestant, Jew-Moslem and Greek Orthodox-Moslem are convenient and sufficient labels to fuel the war propaganda used in Northern Ireland, the Middle East and Cyprus, respectively.
right side and the wrong side.
Religion has had a definite positive impact on the world's moral values. It has shaped the world in ways of feeling against killing that Teach refuted as illogical. But organized religion's time may have passed.
Letters
Enrollment process a mockerv
The enrollment system at KU makes me nauseous. The letter schedule was designed to make enrollment as fair as possible; but the mere presence of the schedule made it hard. Little notice is given to it. Fraternities and sororites have systems for getting class cards pulled or enrolling early. Knowing someone who is working enrollment makes early enrollment even easier. Students must know ways to ensure your choice of classes. The registrar's office will change your scheduled time if a "good reason" is given. Athletes get automatic access to desired classes via the registration portal. All these systems working simultaneously, it is a small wonder that the people at Station Five began stamping all permits, regardless of the letter schedule, by noon Friday. The majority of people at Station five had already enrolled by other means.
The students can hardly be blamed. The blame lies with the enrollment "establishment." By the end of high school, university is more or less
Dean Lewis says he will talk to the students "to make sure that it doesn't happen again." If it does, he wants them to treatment students receive when enrollment falsifications are discovered, then no wonder so many students make use of them. Students must be with little fear. Considering the tremendous competition for classes at reasonable times, who wouldn't risk getting the job with a mere lecture on morality.
It boils down to choice.
Logically, if one is to consider himself a member of a religion, he must be a Catholic, clerics, like it or not. Then, he
And this is called fair? How fair is it to be shut out of the same class semester after graduation? In the situation may *eem* to many professionals in the enrollment game, it is often a reality for the more honest students. And when you get it wrong, feel only anger when I read that Dean Jerry Lewis will not punish the students who stole a Nenunaker Dean's stamp in their enrollments to expedite their enrollments.
To the editor:
using the use of migration techniques during enrollment. If this continues, the day when the entire student population has completed enrolment by June 30, 2014, grows pealer and nearer.
Ann Selzer Lawrence junior
After pondering for a week on the Kansan's new editorial policy of unigned editors, I am still perplexed.
Policy perplexing To the editor:
"Unsigned editorials," we are told, "provide for strengthening the editorial voice," and allow the Karansan to more closely approach what it terms a "real" newspaper.
The attachment of a signature to an opinion and the high quality or "clout" of that signature will be mutually exclusive goals.
For me, there is something extremely irritating in reading an editorial with inaccurate statements and not knowing the authorship, even when I agree with the thesis of the editorial.
If quality is desired through the use of collective opinion, why not have each editorial opinion approved by the editorial board, yet retain the primary author's signature? As far as your goal of being a "real" newspaper editorial boards don't change every semester.
At the least, you might reveal to your leadership the membership of your editorial board. Your definition of "top Karsan editors" is not awfully informative.
Especially for a profession that continually disdains "off-the-record" comments and vigorously fights for comprehensive open-meetings laws, the government policy seems inexplicable to me.
An article in Tuesday's paper telling what the candidates for student body president plan to do with $108,000 in surplus
Position unclear To the editor:
Jon Josserand Johnson graduate student
Jon Josserand
The first project that my running mate, Ralph Munyan, and I envision for these surplus funds is reinstatement of Feedback-the published student evaluation of courses and instructors and look at semester indicated that students considered the only good advice on what courses and instructors to take was that they got from other students. Advice from assigned advisers and unassigned faculty members was rated either fair or faint by many students and their total advice was inadequate.
student fees was far less than complete.
My plans were condensed into only two sentences. One of them is this summary of my position: 'Steve Leben . . . said simply that he would "spend it."
The Feedback we envision, based on ones used at other universities, would include comments from students who took each course and instructor, a listing of course requirements for each course, and combined numerical ratings of each course and instructor.
Well, that's true. We will spend the money, since it was paid by currently enrolled KU students who expected to receive benefits from it. But information on exactly when we would be in mind to spend the money on was omitted.
To the editor:
Such a book might cost about $50,000, but we believe that students are interested in what happens when they answer And. And the students said in the survey that student advice on what courses and instructors to take is available as a device available. Feedback is the best way to disseminate it.
The second allocation we would make from the surplus funds would be for capital improvements to KU's recreational facilities. It is being proposed that a new fee of $2 to $4 a semester be assessed annually. We are also planning our recreational services and facilities. But we say that no new fee should be added until the surplus of funds you've already paid is used up.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Saturday. $10 per person, Sunday and Friday. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan.
$25 per person for a week in Douglas County and $10 a semester or $30 for two weeks. $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee.
Jim Bates
Janice Clemens
Steve Leben
El Dorado junior
Thus we would make some improvements—resodding of playing fields, adding lights to tennis courts, etc.—from the surplus funds, and then see if additional fee additional fees is necessary.
with any legal problem. To make this an ongoing program, though, would require an increase of $1 or $2 in fees in the past year to up. So before we decide whether such an attorney should be hired, we are first taking a survey of current students to see whether they'd be willing to add additional fee for that service.
We feel that these new projects could produce significant and tangible benefits for students and student Student Senate should fail to approve these or other programs after we are elected, we would then favor lowering the fee until the surplus is used up.
Reduced rates fair
And we are considering another allocation of the money to hire a student's classroom available to help any student
whose major premise is based on humanism. If in doubt, take a look at the porticos of the KU Museum of Natural History, and see whose names are inscribed there.
In Thursday's Kansan it was reported that teaching assistants and assistant instructors working more than 40 per cent of the time "receive 'staff fee' rates of $14 a credit hour" while those working under 40 per cent of the time "pay regular fees of $2.50 a credit hour up to the regular enrollment fee of $291.90."
FREEDOM OF religion is a precious right. So is freedom of choice.
To the editor:
The $14.00 fee that the reporter cited applies only to full-time members of the staff; most graduate students are not required staff and therefore receive no reduction in their fees.
Apparently your reporter got her figures confused. Our staff fee eligibility cards entitle us to pay the regular resident's fee of $150 per week, but than the $1.50 fee that would be charged to non-residents. This is a "benefit" only in the sense that many assistant instructors and teaching assistants come here from other states and foreign countries, so their resident's fees if they were not employed by the University.
BY THESE definitions, even Hitler was a hypocrite. Also an absolutist, he was following a religion of his own, Nazism, and was consistent with its principles.
Bill Sniffen
Editorial Writer
Tina Blue
Whether that choice be negated by organized religion's antiquated absolutist princes or a secular free individual free will, isn't up to the Tkatchs, Popees or sacred cows of the world.
Lawrence graduate student
The unorganized religion or common sense, gut feeling and opinion might well be a better answer. That religion is nearly as old as the others. Humanists, who are not usually discount the existence of absolutes. The words you are now readened were written by one of several million people educated at colleges or universities
can be content knowing he has as set of absolutes by which to live. If he accepts some and rejects the others, he is a lycovirte.
It's up to you.
Beware of the Devil
SHE'S
TRICKY!
RAM ENERGY
Carter's tax rebate plan no cure for economy
the economy; so they have already offered them to individuals, families and corporations. In most cases, they manage to rationalize, in their best "bureaucratise," as too costly, plans to allocate money to the very people who it most, the "invisible" poor.
expected at $1.5 billion total for the nation's consumers. And estimates are that natural gas demand will be by $4.5 billion this year.
THESE PRICE increases will take a big chunk of the government bonus, and could throw an additional economic recovery machinery;
The Carter Administration's plan to send at least $50 to nearly every American later this year in the form of tax breaks, could no longer be lost more than a drop in the proverbial bucket.
The rebates, once thought of as a godsend for the American taxpayer, have fallen into the
The plan, subject to Congressional approval, is a part of the administration's $31 billion "economic stimulus program." In addition to the $50 for each dependent, Carter has
Paul Jefferson
Editorial Writer
However, circumstance seen and unforeseen may eat up any surplus or consume it notably not notably for coffee) for the year are
GOVERNMENT officials hasten to point out that rebates would be paid to taxpayers regardless of level of income. The combination of rebates and tax cuts will supposedly keep businesses back into circulation by consumers over the next two years.
also proposed permanent tax reductions for low and middle-income families; more specifically, single people whose incomes are married couples earning less than $17,500. filling jointly.
"it seemed like a good idea at the time" category.
ABOUT FOUR million Americans who have no children, no income and receive little support, would be excluded from the program. Government officials say the cost of reaching this group is too high, and would therefore not administrative problems."
AND ALTHOUGH government officials and the general public would like the rebates to be permanent catalysts to our uncertain economy, rebates are only temporary solutions at best; at worst, they may be entirely self-defeating, their cost on other community, national and world conditions.
The government's plan to distribute rebates, while providing some type of refund to 96 per cent of the population, may become more notorious for those whom it leaves out.
So rebates are an integral part of the administration's two-year program to stimulate
The Carter administration began with a promise to bring new faces and new ideas to deal with the business of government. But in dealing with his initial and most important challenge, the economic slump, Carter and his advisers have returned to the tried and true methods of tax cuts and rebates.
Meanwhile, if the administration has its way, the rich will get a little bit richer, and the poor won't.
CARTER'S administration is being built on his promises to cut the red tape of bureaucracy. In exchange, making it little to severe.
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By JOE RADCLIFFE
SPECIAL MARKET
RADIO SPORTS
Staff Reporter
The sport of writing bad checks is alive and well in Lawrence, causing many grocery store managers to tighten their policies and to turn to Frances for help.
You probably don't know who Frances is unless you've been arrested for writing bad checks, but she is often店 manager's last resort when they're faced with returned cards.
Frances Berkowitz is a 27-year-old special investigator for Douglas County and a woman you don't want to know if you plan to write a bad check.
"It's a relatively new position," according to Berkowitz, who has worked as special investigator since she was hired under a federal grant about two years ago.
in most counties, returned checks are bandled by the sheriff's office.
WORKING IN A Lawrence office, Berkowitz tries to collect payment on about 200 checks a month. The checks come from all over the county.
Special Features
By the time a check is sent to her office, it is 30 days old. The first step in collecting payment for the check is to send a letter to the check writer, Berkowitz said, and added that reaching the person is seldom a problem.
"HAVEN't figured out why," she said, but people who write bad checks almost always tell the truth.
Berkwitz said that if the person didn't answer the letter, he received a summons to jail.
If he fails to appear in court, a warrant for his arrest is sent to the sheriff. If the person has written at least three bad checks, she said, she doesn't bother with a letter or a summons, but immediately sends a warrant to the sheriff.
Some people get in trouble on their first offense when they ignore her letter,让她说的话。
People found guilty on their first offense usually are released if they pay for the check and the court fee, Berkowitz said. If the person can't pay, a payment plan is set
"I HAD ONE guy who wrote a bad check for $1 and some odd change," she said. "He didn't answer the letter so he eventually had to nav a $4 court fee."
"Most of the checks we get are first offenses," she said. "But sometimes we get a guy that writes 20 or 30 checks at once, usually he gets caught."
"NO ONE助 FOR IDs," she said.
We could not execute anybody because we
wouldn't have permission.
Berkowitz said that when she first started working, she were more liberal about checking the checks.
Since then, she said, her office has ad-
vised the driver's licenses and to
initialize the checks.
"Now, about 90 per cent of the checks that come in we have a good case on," she said. "If it goes to court, they're going to be very few people fight it once it is in court."
Berkowitz said she told stores not to accept counter checks.
"IF THEY don't take an ID on a counter, they can forgive it," she said. "We don't even care a real person."
Even so, Berkowitz said she still got counter checks occasionally.
Many of the people Berkowitz deals with are repeat offenders.
"I've got some people that periodically go through spells of writing bad checks," she said. "Why some people do this, I don't know."
There are two types of people who write bad checks, Berkowitz said.
"The majority are people who don't know what they're doing," she said. "It gets near the edge."
little low. They don't get in trouble if they get in touch with us."
"Then there are the people who write the checks knowing they don't have the money."
"We had one guy come in here just off the bus," Berkowitz recalled. "We had three cases on him for bad checks and he walked into my office with his suitcase and asked if we had a warrant for his arrest. I told him we did, and he just said, 'Well, you might as well throw me in jail because I don't have any place to stay tonight.'"
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Thursday, February 3, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Javhawks win on tip-in at buzzer
By DAN BOWERMAN
Associate Sports Editor
The Oklahoma State Cowboys are probably developing a psychological block to the buzzer when they play the Kansas Iavhawks.
For the second time this season, the 'Hawks beat the Cowboys with a shot at the buzzer. This time Dom尼 Monroe tipped in an errant John Douglas shot to give Kansas a 9-8 win. For the third, 12 Herb Nettes notted a 31-four run out for a 62-40 victory.
The win, coupled with Oklahoma's 66-36 triumph over Missouri, keeps the Jayhawks, 14-6, in the thick of the Big Eight championship race with a 5-3 conference.
record, good for a tie for third place with Kansas State. Missouri and Oklahoma are in the middle.
KANSAS
22
KU, WHICH led by as much as 17 points in the first half, had trouble putting the ball in the hoop in the second half as the Cowboys nibbled away at the lead. Fred Stevenson knotted the score at 50-50 with 7:34 remaining. Stevenson had sparked the Cowboy's revival by scoring 12 of his high 18 points in the second half.
The score was tied four more times, with Douglas, who scored 10 of KU's last 12 points, the game at $58.8 by connecting both ends of a one-and-a-four foot
Cannon scored 47 points against the Jayhawks, now with a 9-12 record, in a home-court win earlier this season at Enid, Oka. The Phillies, 22,1, have won their last 20 games and are scoring 91 points a game for a 49.7 per cent shooting average.
Donnie Von Moore
The KU women's basketball team hosts Phillips University and three-time All-American Karen Cannon at 7:30 tonight in Allen Field House.
KU women host Phillips tonight
KU snapped a five-game losing streak Tuesday night by beat Claremore Junior College, 79-41. Guard V, C. Sanders led the 'Hawks with 16 points.
Oklahoma State's Stevenson tried to inbound the ball with 30 seconds remaining, but a full court press employed by the Jayhawks confused the Cowboy's star, and he was charged with a turnover when five seconds expired. He attempted to call a time out, but rules disallow that opportunity once three seconds have elapsed.
KU coach Marian Washington said the
to win tonight was stop to Cannon on
a pass.
Center Adrian Mitchell is the top score-renovator for the Jawhawks with averages of 17.4 points per game.
THE JAYHAWKS then stalled the clock down to five seconds when Douglas took his 12-foot shot and Von Moore tipped it in with one second remaining.
"She is an excellent player and one of the best we will face all season," Washington said. "In our first game, no one else for Phillips scored more than 10 points, so it's vital we shut Cannon down and play our best."
If OSU had gotten the ball in bounds," Sam Miranda, KU assistant coach said following the game, "we'd really been in serious trouble. And with only 30 seconds to go the advantage would have been theirs. "I wasn't a thing of beauty at the end, but
"What you've got to do now is keep winning and not worry about everybody else." Mimanda said. "All we've got to do is be patient, and if we do we should be all right."
31-18, but the 'Hawks were plagued by fouls, which put Ken Koechens on the bench with 7:35 remaining. Three other Jayhawks, Nobles, Douglas and Haasn Houston, played the final minutes of the game with four fouls banging over their heads.
★★★
KANSAS
MANSAWS
FG FT PF Pt.
Nobles 0 0.1 4 14
Douglas 9 3.1 14 20
Kimberly 4 1.4 5 9
Johnson 4 1.2 1 9
Gilburn 4 0.0 1 9
Henson 1 0.0 4 3
Henson 2 0.0 4 3
Volce 17 6.2 21 60
McCormick 27 3.6 14 20
NOBLES, WHO played much of the second half with four fouls, sparked KU's fast-breaking attack in the first half. The 'Hawks ran up on a 26-9 lead, as Kansas put in 18 straight points during an eight-and-a-half minute span.
KU's win was paced by the 9-of-18 shooting and 20 points by Douglas, and by Nobles' 7-of-10 accuracy for 14 points.
OKLAHOMA STATE
Johnson 5 3-0 1 6
Roller 5 3-0 1 13
Huber 5 3-0 1 8
Steverson 6 6-6 1 18
Daniel 3 6-0 1 6
Taylor 3 0-0 1 2
Ketsey 1 0-0 0 2
Williams 1 0-0 1 2
Total 22 18-17 13
The second half opened with KU leading,
Sports Roundup
Free throw contest
KANSAS ... 31 28 - 60
OKLOMAHOSTATE ... 18 40 - 58
KU'S RECREATION Services is sponsoring a basketball free throw contest, with the first round scheduled from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium.
There will be separate divisions for men and women. No entry fee or advance fee.
The second round will be 9 a.m. to noon Feb. 12 in Robinson, and the final round will be during half-time of the Kansas-Nebraska game Feb. 19.
SEATTLLE (UPI)—VETERAN ROSIE Casals and Russian teenager Natalash Chrymeva, both unseeded, gained quarterfinal berths in the $100,000 Virginia Slims of Seattle yesterday. No. 1 seed Chris Evert met Virginia Ruzi later in the evening.
Rosie Casals wins
Second-seeded Martina Navratilova played Linda Mottram.
Casals was near-perfect with her overheads and pulled out winning shots to force a win.
Chimrevre, age 18 the owner of one of the most powerful serves in women's tennis, played Pam Teaquarden, 6-4, 6-4. After she became upset over a lighting problem
The deadline for entry blanks, which can be picked up at First Serve and Athlete's Box, is Wednesday.
K.C. tennis tourney
BARRYBOOKE RACQUET Club of
Amarillo City, Mo., is sponsoring a mixed
dance program.
Announcing
The Pizza Inn
GIANT
PIZZA
SPECIAL
A Giant Pizza, a Pitcher of Soft Drink, and all the Salad you can eat—For only
$5.95
Thursdays 5 p.m. to Midnight
Pizza inn.
We also feature our Daily Buffet
12 p.m. Monday - Friday
Tennis
inn.
Pizza inn.
Place an ad Call 864-4358
PUBLIC NOTICE
Cassem's BIT MASS LAWRENCE
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: Student Senate Treasurer's Office RE: Training Session
FINE MEN'S WEAR
All officers who are responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds must:
1. Attend a training session conducted by the Office of the Student Senate
Treasurer. See the time listed below.
1. Sign an organizational management contract with the Student Senate.
2. Only advance written authorization for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization management contract with the student student.
ANNOUNCES:
4. Account for all inventory.
The session will last less than an hour. You must contact the Student Senate Office at 864-3710 to sign up for this session or for additional information.
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee.
Wednesday, February 9,1977 - 2 p.m.
International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met. Even though you have attended a training session last fiscal year, you will still have to attend one during this fiscal year. The training sessions will be held once per month once each month. The training session has been scheduled for the following time:
Winter
CLEARANCE SALE!
OVER 500 PAIRS OF Jeans, Cords, Slacks
BUY ONE PAIR, Second Only $1.
20%
off all long-sleeve shirts, slacks,sweaters and leather coats
15 to 50%
off on all suits, sportcoats, blazers and winter coats
BAHAMAS?
SAN DIEGO?
BAHAMAS?
SAN DIEGO?
How do five carefree and sunfilled days aboard a private yacht sound? The K.U. Sailing Club is now planning two cruises for over spring break. A cruise from Miami to the Bahamas and a trip from San Diego to Catalina Island are in the making. Come tonight and find out more. Everyone welcome, no previous sailing experience is necessary.
Sign ups start tonight, February 3 at 7:30 P.M. in Parlors A and B
of the Kansas Union.
Sponsored by SUA.
Pacific A War B
of the Kansas Union.
Sponsored
by
SUA.
THE DIRTY THIRTS
& FARLIER
SPECIALIZING IN
ANTIQUE
& COLLECTABLES
812.2226
10:00 7:30
Church Members
1926
HARVARD
MUSEUM
THE DIERY THIRTY'S & EARLIER
SPECIALIZING IN ANIQUE &
COLLECTABLES
842.2226
10:00 - 5:30
Closed Monday
armadillo bead co.
Create and make your own necklaces,
bracelets and earrings from our wide
variety of beads, an
Select from our unique gift jewelry
MON SAT 10:00 - 5:30 THURS 10:00 - 8:30
SHOOTING GALLERY
GARY BROWN PHOTOGRAPHER
841-2369
Photographer in Washington,
Coastal Park, Commercial and
Work and Recreation Plaza, Los Angeles
1181 L. 80th
CUSTOM HANDCRAFTING
• Wallets • Coats • Check Book Covers
• Mittens • Holders • Bandles Canes
• Vests • Map Cases • Tissue Walks
• Shirts • Key Caps • Wristbands
ROCKPORT CARQUES-DINGO BOOTS-LADIES HANDBAGS
Regina & James Winthrop
16 East 8th Ph. 842.6680 LEATHER LTD.
MOTIVE AMERICAN ARTS
Turquoise Jewelry Custom Jewelry
Paintings Artifacts
Baskets Rugs Pottery Jewelry Clasps
the gallery
fine art work by
the following Lawrence Artists:
IAN GRAMMYE - Beckham Fine Art
KAREL GOULD - Flower Art
ANN JOHNSON - Merrill Fine Art
KEITH KON - Oriental Painting
ELIZABETH LADY - Textiles
LAWRENCH POTTERY
JAN YVINES - Pottery
BETTY LEESEGNOR DOROTHY NEWMAN - Pottery
the MARKETPLACE
8th & New Hampshire
su casa
SELECT MEXICAN ARTS & CRAFTS
MEXICAN INDIAN BLANKETS
OAXACA BLACK POTTERY
10:00 5:30 Men's Sat
10:00 8:30 Thurs
841.3622
Déjà~vu
WOMEN'S CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES
IMPORTS
COINS
OPEN 10:00-5:30 (18:00 THURS)
841.0808
meet me at
HARVE ST
OPEN 10:30 TO 8:30
SERVING HOME MADE TARI
CATERING AVAILABLE
CONDOMS ONLY
THE FRAME UP
FESTIVAL STREET
AUTUMN FESTIVAL
FRAGILE ITEMS
FOR SALE
In touch with the freedom of an idea...
let us help you put your ideas in print
or display them by signs
Graphic Arts
Incorporated
745 New Hampshire • 841.6611
POTION PARLOIR
fine gifts for head
and home,
imported
and recycled
clothing
BORONON
12 EAST 8TH ST
NATIVE AMERICAN CREATIONS
Turquoine Jewelry Custom Jewelry
Paintings Artifacts
Baskets Rings
Pottery Jewelry Classes
SHOOTING GALLERY
HARVEST
HARVE'S
OPEN 10:30 TO 8:30
SERVING, HOMEMADE TART
CAT RING AND MIRROR
CLOSED SUNDAY
CUSTOM HANDCRAFTING
* Wallets * Coats * Check Book Coverss
* Mittens * Hushers * Badge Cases
* Kits & Tools * Needle Felted Fabrics
* Shorts * Key Cases * Wristbands
ROCKPORT CASUALS-DINO BOOTS-LADIES HANDBAGS
16 East Bldg
Ph. 842-6640
LEATHER LTD.
www.leatherltd.com
22 F
Déjà~vu
WOMEN'S CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES
JXM0115
COINS
OPEN 10.00 S 30 (8:00 THURS)
843-6808
G
desig made consi cathe
Af-
is c
temp
then
and
terse
and
N
POTION PARLOY
fine gifts
for head
and home,
collectibles
paraphernalia,
imported
and recycled
clothing
BOROVON
541 3600
12 EAST 8TH ST.
Thursday, February 3, 1977
7
227 to run for Senate Feb.16-17
Glass ...
From page one
designs; antique, a clear, textured, hand-made glass, opalescent, an opaque glass consisting of swirls of many colors; and cathedral, a clear machine-made glass.
After glass is filed for a work, he said, it is cut, filed and placed on a full-scale template of the design. Strips of lead are then fitted in between each piece of glass and placed in place where they intersect. Often lead is used and copper and塑 used instead.
When a window is secure, putty is applied to seal unseen cracks, a process called "weather-proofing". Steel brackets are added to seal cracks and make them as strong as a curtain or window.
Mayers walked over to several large stained glass windows that were chipped, dirty and still encased in wood. The windows are from a synagogue in Teopahi that was destroyed by the Civil War. Collective Art Glass, inc., finishes redoing them, they will be part of a new synagogue.
"This window means a whole lot to these people," he said. "They can remember their grandparents being a part of that and know how their children will also be a part of it."
MAYGERS SAID the studio wanted to do more original creations, such as a stained glass series depicting fantasies they have envisioned for eight Green Pepper pizza restaurants in the area. The studio also wants to try glass etching and painting, he said.
"We're always experimenting with new creative uses of the medium," Mayers said, sitting at his drafting stool, where the creations begin.
A program to increase the representation of minorities as navy officers is being started at the University of Kansas by Bruce H. Mack, associate professor of social welfare.
The program seeks to attract blocks, Indians, Chicanos and women into the officer ranks of the Navy, Smith, recently appointed as commander inland in the Navy reserves, said Tuesday.
Smith said there had been a problem of retention, keeping minorities in the Navy after they enlisted. Smith said, in part, this was a result of discrimination.
More minorities sought by Navv
Attempts to improve the Navy's image will be done through slide presentations to interested groups, tours to the naval installation in Olathe and Navy VIP trips to the Pensacola naval air station where Navy aviators are trained.
In 1972 the Navy set up targets for minority representation. Targets for enlisted men are based on their representation in America as a whole. In other words, blacks make up roughly 12 percent of the total population and this, therefore, is the goal of recruiting ranks. I.D. Derrie Perman, a recruiting officer in Kansas City, Mo., said, currently 11.3 per cent of the Navy is made up of blacks.
At the University of Kansas there are six members of minority groups in Navy affiliated programs, Lt. John Foster of Kansas City, M., so said.
Perman said the Navy is seeking to increase black representation in the officer corps and to create more black comrades. The 6 per cent figure represents the percentage of blacks in college in 1970. The Navy is also seeking a 2 per cent representation of other minorities as off-duty enlisted.
150 STYLES
ATHLETIC SHOES
Athlete's
The Foot.
919 Mass. • 841-2995
Lawrence
After the 5 p. m. deadline last night, 227 students run for the 106 Student Senate in the Feb. 15 and 17 elections.
recipient candidates are Brad Yoon, Spectr. Secretarial candidates are Pam Alander, Reflection; Kathy Taylor, Avanti, Avali Smith, Spectrum; Sheril Gibson, Cox, Cottrell; Ashi Sigman, Reflection and Chody Saulz.
HEAVY EDDYS PIZZA
Architecture (two seats)- Joseph Bandy Avanti, Jante Cacci, Secretary, Kay Kramer, Avanti, Bill Quinnam, Spectrum, Tan, Chair and Heaven. Rowe W. Business (two seats)- Curie and Curie, Rowe W. Business (two seats)- Kelil Allaniam, Rick
University Dally Kausan
HEAVY EDDYS
Court is set to begin hearings on Thursday. The
Treasurer candidate for secretary is Patiyya Casanatha; the
Treasurer candidate for junior minister is Bharat Gandhi;
the Treasurer candidate is Junior minister; Barisha
Bachim; and the Treasurer candidate is Junior minister.
Students running for junior class preside are Joe Bevera, Agent; Craig Hines, Reflection; and Tom
Phil, White-Start, and Greg Schaepe, Avail.
Phil, White-Start, and Greg Schaepe, Avail.
Reflection, Dawn Cohen, Spectrum, BILL Hamilton,
Brittany Gunther, M.D.
Thurs. BLACK OLIV
Fri. MUSHROOM
At the Wheel 507 W.14th
Fast Free Delivery 841-3100
Engineering (eight days)-Sandy Apel, Spectrometr.
Engineering (eight days)-Sandy Apel, Spectrometr.
Richard W. Durham, Reflection; Douglas J. Edmonds,
Richard W. Durham, Reflection; Douglas J. Edmonds,
Reflection; Gary Fouse, Reflection; Tom Marshall,
Independent, Rhonda Kavail, Avant; Jim McAurley,
Avant; John R. McAurley, Jim McAurley;
Bill Scott, Independent; John R. Sphal, Spectrometr;
Stanford, Avant; R. Wilton Jones, Jr., independent;
Stanford, Avant; R. Wilton Jones, Jr., independent;
Education (4th year) Westa; Diana Herbertgut, Spectrometry
Construction & Technical Training in Computer Applications, Demonstration and Instruction of Autosampler, AutoFilm Recorder, Automatic Film Recorder, Automatic Film Recorder, Kevin L. Fowler, Spectrometry, Lead Laugher, Avanti
Construction & Technical Training in Computer Applications, Demonstration and Instruction of Autosampler, AutoFilm Recorder, Kevin L. Fowler, Spectrometry, Lead Laugher, Avanti
Construction & Technical Training in Computer Applications, Demonstration and Instruction of Autosampler, AutoFilm Recorder, Kevin L. Fowler, Spectrometry, Lead Laugher, Avanti
HaFraction, Laser Pulser, Spektrum, MGs, Mallery-Gauss,
Miguel-Adolfo, Niemeyer, Norbert, Leatherback, Arvita, Gavin,
Gonzalo, Guillermo, Avila, and Chrity Winton.
Mon. ONION
Plat Alts, Lewish town. Detrite I. Codon, Spectranium
Brussels. Detrite J. Codon, Spectranium
Bruce Duckett, Lewish town. Spectranium
Bruce Duckett, Lewish town. Spectranium
Bruce Duckett, Lewish town. Spectranium
Bruce Duckett, Lewish town. Spectranium
Bruce Duckett, Lewish town. Spectranium
Bruce Duckett, Lewish town. Spectranium
Bruce Duckett, Lewish town. Spectranium
Bruce Duckett, Lewish town. Spectranium
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Grassland Research. Graduate School, (549) makes *Larry* Compete in
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Grassland Research. Graduate School, (551) makes *Larry* Compete in
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Nomaker District No. 2 (five seats)—Ed Bjaden, Alternative, Drew Breening, Reflection, T. C. Clonan, Avanti, Pan Karen Avanti, Jim Laskey, Alternative, Scott Avanti, Pam Karen Avanti, Jim Laskey, Alternative, Scott Avanti, Dan Parman, Independent, Christi Redlingham, Reflection, Alice Reynolds, Avanti, Karen Redlingham, Michael Schmidt, Thakur,pectrum, and Thomas Zuckery, Reflection.
Numerizer District No. 10. idis校班) - Catby Calley,
Avanti. Bill Gibson, Copenhagen spectator, Niace Diaz,
Bruce Lemiller, Reflection, Rohk Liik, independent,
Brave Lemiller, Reflection, Rohk Liik, independent,
Sedekov, Sedekov, Brad Sewardt, Kevin Swain,
Sedekov, Sedekov, Brad Sewardt, Kevin Swain,
Jordana M. Vilinski - Jim Akitov - Steven Rothman - Olivia Barras - Tom Heller
Journalism: UW Press Center, UW-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin
www.uwpresscenter.edu
Mark K. Avail - Peg Margolis - Reflection
Sciences: UW Press Center, UW-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin
www.sciences.uw.edu
Spectrum; Clairy McCray, Reflection; Sally McDonald,
Avene; Anne Mewari, Avant; Cynode Mcleathi, Avant;
Kristen Glander, Reflection; Nancy M. Park, Avant;
Jill D. McMahon, Avant; Cynode W. Scarr, J.
Scarr, Avant; Cynode W. Scarr, Spectrum.
Traunch, Reflection, and Mark Wendelman, Spectrum, H. Lee, W. L. Anderson, J. A. Alphagraga, J. R. Reagan, and B. C. Hood, *Spectrum*, H. Lee, *Reflection*, J. L. Long, *Avoid*, Scott Morgan, *Reflection*, J. Logo, *Awave*, Scott Morgan, *Reflection*, Sally Rock, *Spectrum*, Sam Shad, *Spectrum*, Bandy Rock, *Spectrum*, Sam Shad, *Spectrum*, Bandy Rock, *Spectrum*.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Numismatist District No. 5 (rkts site): Mark Burhanush, Spectrum; Tim Kelner, Specimen; Patty Cray, Spectrum; Mickey McGinnis, Specimen; Mark Huffman, Reflection; Mike Harper, Reflection; Mary Huffman, Reflection; Mike Harper, Reflection; Mary Huffman, Reflection; Clair Keltzer, Independent; Tim McCarthy, Avian Lama; O'Dell, Reflection; Julie Rigall, Avian Lama; John Dodds, Reflection; Marcel B赖安, Avian Lama; Ed Stucky, Reflection; Marcel B赖安, Avian Lama;
Brace Haflman, Reflection; Mark R. Hughes, Avant; Kenny M. Jackson, Reflection; Marc M. Matthysen, Midship J. Joseph, Reflection; Grant Larkin, Reflection; Jeff McKenzie, Reflection; Steve McMaryn, Avant; Bob McCormick, Reflection; Scott Medal, Navitas Neckacas
Dave Larkin, Sneetrum
Daryce (two seats) - Bella Rock, independent; and
Bradley
Accommodations, goods, services and employ-
ment facilities are provided to our customers.
Please contact us at EMPLOYMENT@WISDOMFIRM.COM
Avanti, Mike Bengston, Spectrum; Ruth Benish, Avanti; Melanie Hahn, Ruth Benish; William Clausen, Independent Hill, Hill Ribbon; Elizabeth Dahl, Hill Ribbon; William Willson, Koox, Koox; Avanti; Malone Martin, Spectrum; John Master, Spectrum; Mark O'Neill, Spectrum; Lisa Roberts, Reflection; Diane Schmidt; Laura Brown
CLASSIFIED RATES
Running for Senate seats to represent special students who aren't pursuing a major are Bombay dolehens, in the process of being demoted.
Liberal Arts and Sciences (15 week). Shannon Anderson.
one two three four five time times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Additional words .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 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 calls can be placed in person on behalf of the UDR business office at 864-3581.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
864-4358
Need Exercise? Damna Imat FI Figure Salon. Locate her office and operated. Monthly and day 28-31.
Enroll now at Doritas Decorative Arts for tull and decorative painting, pom-pom parade, doll draping, country caving, and design companies tul flowers (tinn) and marrane. Call 842-763-9011.
The concepts and programs of Democratize Socialism need a voice at K.U. If you are interested in participating in the Democratize Socialist Organizing Committee, call 842-8511, or 842-6935, or 823-7401.
AVANTL, avl. i dillongo (1 dilonggo) ahead; to go for
avortage (progredite, continue) to go on; to
avortage (progredite, continue) to go on;
Wanted—alive and on moving Christians. Join us in making a community center for the homeless in your city or your close Canteenbury House (Episcopal) 1101 Louisiana Holy Communion; Tuesday 8 p.m. – Thursdoy 8 p.m.
BOKONKO: Parathermalka for the commissione
of all big Smith Jeans. 12 Kwai. 841-1306.
841-1307.
ENTERTAINMENT
Desktop kitchens 2.9 cubic feet. Anderson
Desk tiles 812 New Hampshire. 835-244-04.
Anderson
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to
union, utilities paid, parking. 843-957-09.
3-night bedroom furnished house for 8 U. boys.
No pets. 1647 Murray, see owner. 1701 Murray.
Share 2-bedroom apartment, partially furnished.
公寓, air dishwashers, pool, on bus route 13
Q-2-3
Sublazing, 2-bedroom unfurnished apartment,
$145; store refrigerator W 218, W 205, Ai B 839;
$165; kitchen W 218, W 205, Ai B 839.
Gorgeous 1 bedroom apartment, dog拣 caring,
wifi internet, $400 per month房机 utilities. Available Now.
Available on request.
For Rent. Clean rooms and apartments. Lynch Real Estate, 843-160-2237. Easthan 2-4
Roommate prepped, large four bedroom apartment,
1820 sq. ft., utilities paid 1925 for
6833.6923 - 8107
---
**DRAWN BY**
One bedroom furnished apartment at 19 West
14th available immediately. Call after 5,
2-44-2430.
Sublease 2-bedroom in furnished apartment
with parking. Monthly rent of $1450,
nothing 16 month extra. Available immediately.
No deposit required.
Apartment and rooms furnished, utilities paid
not pets. 843-5767. tf
[Diagram of a helicopter]
Bubbaeze 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment for rent
furnished living room $200.00. Lyman 41-1796, (360) 857-8000.
www.bubaaze.com
Large, quiet, private bath, refrigerator, entrance
blocks of west for campus, for mature men, 18+.
Jayhawk Towers Apt. for rent-call 843-993 and
ask to see 003D2
Bulbies nise two new bedrooms in four-plex,
central air, wall to wall carpet. 8443-6449
2-001.
Private room for rent. Kitchen furniture 865,
utilities paid. 841-3237. Keep trying. 2-4
Sublease to May, 1 and 2 bedrooms April, 26,
Route. 841-8348 2-4
Park 25 2-bedroom, nubilecase $225, $0 reward,
large living room 814-558 or 913-659-6108
1-room apt 814-558 or 913-659-6108
One Room in Town House, call 681-255
One Room in Town House, call 681-255
HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service
1811 W. 6th
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes serious sense out of Western Civilization! Preparation 3. For Exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Toptier.com
INVENTORY SALE: Extra Stock and Demo Units
Prices Reduced to Sell Ten Many excellent on-
line sales of the same model. Unique pieces of Electronics as well. Now thru Feb fifth, Lay-Away Financial, Inc.
6000 W. 23rd St., New York, NY 10024. Buy 2-11.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
living room furnishings. The Furniture and Apartment Center, 7041; Mass,
Milwaukee. Call (866) 235-9222.
UNICORNS Mermaid wings in flight and other memorabilia in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to choose from. Stone cutting service. Re-working of stonework, satisfaction guarantee. 41-3883.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists.
ELECTRIC, 843-6009, 3000 W, 6th. BELL AUCTIONS,
ELECTRIC, 843-6009, 3000 W, 6th.
BATTERIES. Ton quality fully guaranteed battery for all of your cars and trucks. Electro-lite battery Shop, 548 Mint St. Just being the U-1fair parking lot at the Friars Square in Manhattan. Fridays and Saturday each week. Telephone: 212-670-7699.
Rodermey, Lutheran Church, Missouri. Synod membership (conservative). All students and faculty active youth groups. Place 300 and Haskell at a bible study. More information contact: MH Fredrickson at 101-758-3292 or school at 8 a.m. Bible class and Sunday school at 10:15. Lutheran Layman's League meets every week from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
AKC. Golden Retrievers. Excellent stock. 478-
235, Topeka.
ARA in daah AM-FM stereo 8-track, Realistic FM Cassette stereo B42-16274 2-4
Minolta camera SRT 101, film 52mm lens, case and extras, $200 firm; call 842-9001, day only 2-4.
1957 Chevrolet $700 or best offer. Call Baldwin 2-4
894-352. New engine and paint.
1-4
FRKD'S SPORTS SPECIAL-30% off on Winning Ways Warmup Shoes on raccoonball equipments
Guitars for sale—The best guitars in Lawrence are available at LMC, Bocchi Wiedeman, dealer. Low overhuddle means low prices for Alvarez Yatari guitar and other instruments. Come in 307 E. 9th, 843-8438. Phone: 211-843-8438
RADIATAL THE CLEARANCE Four sizes at close
price: PZS 125, 150, 175, 195, 215
PZS 225, 245, 265, 285, 305, 325,
345, 365, 385, 405, 425, 445, 465, 485, 505, 525, 545, 565, 585, 605, 625, 645, 665, 685, 705, 725, 745, 765, 785, 805, 825, 845, 865, 885, 905, 925, 945, 965, 985, 1005, 1025, 1045, 1065, 1085, 1105, 1125, 1145, 1165, 1185, 1205, 1225, 1245, 1265, 1285, 1305, 1325, 1345, 1365, 1385, 1405, 1425, 1445, 1465, 1485, 1505, 1525, 1545, 1565, 1585, 1605, 1625, 1645, 1665, 1685, 1705, 1725, 1745, 1765, 1785, 1805, 1825, 1845, 1865, 1885, 1905, 1925, 1945, 1965, 1985, 2005, 2025, 2045, 2065, 2085, 2105, 2125, 2145, 2165, 2185, 2205, 2225, 2245, 2265, 2285, 2305, 2325, 2345, 2365, 2385, 2405, 2425, 2445, 2465, 2485, 2505, 2525, 2545, 2565, 2585, 2605, 2625, 2645, 2665, 2685, 2705, 2725, 2745, 2765, 2785, 2805, 2825, 2845, 2865, 2885, 2905, 2925, 2945, 2965, 2985, 3005, 3025, 3045, 3065, 3085, 3105, 3125, 3145, 3165, 3185, 3205, 3225, 3245, 3265, 3285, 3305, 3325, 3345, 3365, 3385, 3405, 3425, 3445, 3465, 3485, 3505, 3525, 3545, 3565, 3585, 3605, 3625, 3645, 3665, 3685, 3705, 3725, 3745, 3765, 3785, 3805, 3825, 3845, 3865, 3885, 3905, 3925, 3945, 3965, 3985, 4005, 4025, 4045, 4065, 4085, 4105, 4125, 4145, 4165, 4185, 4205, 4225, 4245, 4265, 4285, 4305, 4325, 4345, 4365, 4385, 4405, 4425, 4445, 4465, 4485, 4505, 4525, 4545, 4565, 4585, 4605, 4625, 4645, 4665, 4685, 4705, 4725, 4745, 4765, 4785, 4805, 4825, 4845, 4865, 4885, 4905, 4925, 4945, 4965, 4985, 5005, 5025, 5045, 5065, 5085, 5105, 5125, 5145, 5165, 5185, 5205, 5225, 5245, 5265, 5285, 5305, 5325, 5345, 5365, 5385, 5405, 5425, 5445, 5465, 5485, 5505, 5525, 5545, 5565, 5585, 5605, 5625, 5645, 5665, 5685, 5705, 5725, 5745, 5765, 5785, 5805, 5825, 5845, 5865, 5885, 5905, 5925, 5945, 5965, 5985, 6005, 6025, 6045, 6065, 6085, 6105, 6125, 6145, 6165, 6185, 6205, 6225, 6245, 6265, 6285, 6305, 6325, 6345, 6365, 6385, 6405, 6425, 6445, 6465, 6485, 6505, 6525, 6545, 6565, 6585, 6605, 6625, 6645, 6665, 6685, 6705, 6725, 6745, 6765, 6785, 6805, 6825, 6845, 6865, 6885, 6905, 6925, 6945, 6965, 6985, 7005, 7025, 7045, 7065, 7085, 7105, 7125, 7145, 7165, 7185, 7205, 7225, 7245, 7265, 7285, 7305, 7325, 7345, 7365, 7385, 7405, 7425, 7445, 7465, 7485, 7505, 7525, 7545, 7565, 7585, 7605, 7625, 7645, 7665, 7685, 7705, 7725, 7745, 7765, 7785, 7805, 7825, 7845, 7865, 7885, 7905, 7925, 7945, 7965, 7985, 8005, 8025, 8045, 8065, 8085, 8105, 8125, 8145, 8165, 8185, 8205, 8225, 8245, 8265, 8285, 8305, 8325, 8345, 8365, 8385, 8405, 8425, 8445, 8465, 8485, 8505, 8525, 8545, 8565, 8585, 8605, 8625, 8645, 8665, 8685, 8705, 8725, 8745, 8765, 8785, 8805, 8825, 8845, 8865, 8885, 8905, 8925, 8945, 8965, 8985, 9005, 9025, 9045, 9065, 9085, 9105, 9125, 9145, 9165, 9185, 9205, 9225, 9245, 9265, 9285, 9305, 9325, 9345, 9365, 9385, 9405, 9425, 9445, 9465, 9485, 9505, 9525, 9545, 9565, 9585, 9605, 9625, 9645, 9665, 9685, 9705, 9725, 9745, 9765, 9785, 9805, 9825, 9845, 9865, 9885, 9905, 9925, 9945, 9965, 9985, 10005, 10025, 10045, 10065, 10085, 10105, 10125, 10145, 10165, 10185, 10205, 10225, 10245, 10265, 10285, 10305, 10325, 10345, 10365, 10385, 10405, 10425, 10445, 10465, 10485, 10505, 10525, 10545, 10565, 10585, 10605, 10625, 10645, 10665, 10685, 10705, 10725, 10745, 10765, 10785, 10805, 10825, 10845, 10865, 10885, 10905, 10925, 10945, 10965, 10985, 11005, 11025, 11045, 11065, 11085, 11105, 11125, 11145, 11165, 11185, 11205, 11225, 11245, 11265, 11285, 11305, 11325, 11345, 11365, 11385, 11405, 11425, 11445, 11465, 11485, 11505, 11525, 11545, 11565, 11585, 11605, 11625, 11645, 11665, 11685, 11705, 11725, 11745, 11765, 11785, 11805, 11825, 11845, 11865, 11885, 11905, 11925, 11945, 11965, 11985, 12005, 12025, 12045, 12065, 12085, 12105, 12125, 12145, 12165, 12185, 12205, 12225, 12245, 12265, 12285, 12305, 12325, 12345, 12365, 12385, 12405, 12425, 12445, 12465, 12485, 12505, 12525, 12545, 12565, 12585, 12605, 12625, 12645, 12665, 12685, 12705, 12725, 12745, 12765, 12785, 12805, 12825, 12845, 12865, 12885, 12905, 12925, 12945, 12965, 12985, 13005, 13025, 13045, 13065, 13085, 13105, 13125, 13145, 13165, 13185, 13205, 13225, 13245, 13265, 13285, 13305, 13325, 13345, 13365, 13385, 13405, 13425, 13445, 13465, 13485, 13505, 13525, 13545, 13565, 13585, 13605, 13625, 13645, 13665, 13685, 13705, 13725, 13745, 13765, 13785, 13805, 13825, 13845, 13865, 13885, 13905, 13925, 13945, 13965, 13985, 14005, 14025, 14045, 14065, 14085, 14105, 14125, 14145, 14165, 14185, 14205, 14225, 14245, 14265, 14285, 14305, 14325, 14345, 14365, 14385, 14405, 14425, 14445, 14465, 14485, 14505, 14525, 14545, 14565, 14585, 14605, 14625, 14645, 14665, 14685, 14705, 14725, 14745, 14765, 14785, 14805, 14825, 14845, 14865, 14885, 14905, 14925, 14945, 14965, 14985, 15005, 15025, 15045, 15065, 15085, 15105, 15125, 15145, 15165, 15185, 15205, 15225, 15245, 15265, 15285, 15305, 15325, 15345, 15365, 15385, 15405, 15425, 15445, 15465, 15485, 15505, 15525, 15545, 15565, 15585, 15605, 15625, 15645, 15665, 15685, 15705, 15725, 15745, 15765, 15785, 15805, 15825, 15845, 15865, 15885, 15905, 15925, 15945, 15965, 15985, 16005, 16025, 16045, 16065, 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18945, 18965, 18985, 19005, 19025, 19045, 19065, 19085, 19105, 19125, 19145, 19165, 19185, 19205, 19225, 19245, 19265, 19285, 19305, 19325, 19345, 19365, 19385, 19405, 19425, 19445, 19465, 19485, 19505, 19525, 19545, 19565, 19585, 19605, 19625, 19645, 19665, 19685, 19705, 19725, 19745, 19765, 19785, 19805, 19825, 19845, 19865, 19885, 19905, 19925, 19945, 19965, 19985, 20005, 20025, 20045, 20065, 20085, 20105, 20125, 20145, 20165, 20185, 20205, 20225, 20245, 20265, 20285, 20305, 20325, 20345, 20365, 20385, 20405, 20425, 20445, 20465, 20485, 20505, 20525, 20545, 20565, 20585, 20605, 20625, 20645, 20665, 20685, 20705, 20725, 20745, 20765, 20785, 20805, 20825, 20845, 20865, 20885, 20905, 20925, 20945, 20965, 20985, 21005, 21025, 21045, 21065, 21085, 21105, 21125, 21145, 21165, 21185, 21205, 21225, 21245, 21265, 21285, 21305, 21325, 21345, 21365, 21385, 21405, 21425, 21445, 21465, 21485, 21505, 21525, 21545, 21565, 21585, 21605, 21625, 21645, 21665, 21685, 21705, 21725, 21745, 21765, 21785, 21805, 21825, 21845, 21865, 21885, 21905, 21925, 21945, 21965, 21985, 22005, 22025, 22045, 22065, 22085, 22105, 22125, 22145, 22165, 22185, 22205, 22225, 22245, 22265, 22285, 22305, 22325, 22345, 22365, 22385, 22405, 22425, 22445, 22465, 22485, 22505, 22525, 22545, 22565, 22585, 22605, 22625, 22645, 22665, 22685, 22705, 22725, 22745, 22765, 22785, 22805, 22825, 22845, 22865, 22885, 22905, 22925, 22945, 22965, 22985, 23005, 23025, 23045, 23065, 23085, 23105, 23125, 23145, 23165, 23185, 23205, 23225, 23245, 23265, 23285, 23305, 23325, 23345, 23365, 23385, 23405, 23425, 23445, 23465, 23485, 23505, 23525, 23545, 23565, 23585, 23605, 23625, 23645, 23665, 23685, 23705, 23725, 23745, 23765, 23785, 23805, 23825, 23845, 23865, 23885, 23905, 23925, 23945, 23965, 23985, 24005, 24025, 24045, 24065, 24085, 24105, 24125, 24145, 24165, 24185, 24205, 24225, 24245, 24265, 24285, 24305, 24325, 24345, 24365, 24385, 24405, 24425, 24445, 24465, 24485, 24505, 24525, 24545, 24565, 24585, 24605, 24625, 24645, 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Used Magnawoo component system with 8-stecker
and M7 connector. Compatible with Gadgetron
component with Gadgetron for $149.99 at
www.gadgetron.com.
2-165-12 use Dumplon duilies only $3 for the pair. Also 1-pair 12R-14 for $3 at Ray '19. For 12R-14, use Dumplon duilies only $3 for the pair. Also 1-pair 12R-14 for $3 at Ray '19.
Cassette tape sale. Five 60-minute for only 84
or five 100-minute for $5. Ry石峰梁保 B4
81
Screw Components discounted 20-40%! All Major
Suppliers warranty claim, warranty call,
6006 anytime www.screwcom.com
STOR 5180, $50, STOR 5180 receiver, BSR kit
$25, $21, 841-6456, 2-7
Kodak载拥 76041 projector automatic focus new. Also Leite KXA3-94-8190 after 5-2
Refrigerator: $avey 123-844-2000; capacity $month. Cost $120, $150 or $444-2002. 2-7
SCUBA PRO MAKE for sale. Excellent condition,
used only twice. Call 841-6818. Ask for Lamar 2-
309.
4 cvs 72 Vega $100 or the best offer, 842-1703
after 7.00. 2-7
71. Gibson, Mebody makes with hardware case. Siemens
auto-mathematics software waits for MSX or 4-12th
auto-mathematics software.
Canon AE-1 camera with 28 mm lens and auto
motion Mikrotran trade for good receive acceptr
device
Color TV, 20 inch portable. Excellent condition,
very dependable ($80 or best offer) + 834-534-1988
Petri PTX 35 mm single-review camera, carrying
a full-length lens. Optional equipment for $25 or best offer. Call Jerry at (800) 467-6911.
Marshall 100 Amp Head, $75—(new) $750
Martial 100 Amp Head, $85—(new) $850
$360, three head units. Call 841-3459-260
$360, three head units. Call 841-3459-260
Royal Electric Typewriter with carbon ribbon Contact Benton Agency, Inc. 843-607-729
2-9
Skir's spalting (equip. 190 cm) with Salomon
444 Bindings; Call John 814-5725
2-8
Free stereo catalog lists incredible discounts on Yamaha, Advent; Blues, Crowd, Ska, Dahliq, Kaliq, Koto, Koto 2, Koto 3, Koto 4, Koto 100, koto 1000, koto 1000 other hi-fi and amplifiers. Write to Sound Values, E. Strd Street, Ed Strd Street, 606-855-0651, 2-4
19. Kawasaki KZ-750 twin luggage rack, padded
shack box, waist bag, crow bar, luggage
rack, hinge cover, front door handle
8. 1949-86-098 - 9-08-98-098
20. 1953-94-098 - 9-08-98-098
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
Kennedy 90 watt heat receiver $200 and Rela-
tory 35 watt heat receiver - old age 2-9
perfect shape. CALL 342-8484. Mike
19th & Mass.
2:00 p.m. Mon.-Sat
Quality stereo equipment. Retail 602 receiver;
speaker 159 speaker; 600 speaker.
Punnett turntable. Kit #682A
843-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
8:8 Sun
Pioneer XS26-接收器, pair of Ultralinx XS25
XS30-发射器. Components: silicone wristband,
Toshiba touchpad. Components: rubber wristband.
HELP WANTED
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy
PUT BEAN An Avon representative and make
the money you need selling quality products on
a daily time. Two openings in Lawrence
842-812-6956
EXPIRIBENCIED $25.50 LOW, LW addressenrgy &
addressenrgy in Jachayk, Printing
Inquire in person at Jachayk Printing
Office.
Part time help wanted. Phone work and light
hours. $2.30 per hour. 811-6412.
2-4
MEN-WOMEN, JOBS ON SHIPS American, Foreign. No experience required. Excellent job with $3 for information. SEAFAX, Dept. E-8, Box 204. Portland, Washington. HM862. 2-15
LOST AND FOUND
Least a man's wedding bout, made of yellow and white gold. A luxurious white gold pocket. Reward is offered. Call Bachman Jewelers 212-568-7090.
Loost - Jan 6. Coloured slides (about 20) in small mounts. Purchase at www.mountslab.com - L4-170 Street, Edinburgh or 86-444-4944.
Two yards of fabric at 12:30 AM, 24 near West Hail Hall Call (684-3100) to ask for Calculator, ask for Calculator.
LOST- Omega, gold ladies writewatch. Reward—12
If found, call 843-560. call for Cather. -2
Found set of keys in front of Jayhawk Towers
Call 842-2082 to identify
Found one pair sunglasses around 7th and Mats
Call to identify: 842-1033
2-4
Found ladies Times watch, turquoise band. Call
Gary 841-5295
2-4
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Aile at the House of Uberi Quick Copy Center.
Aile is available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Monday-Friday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday
at 10 a.m.
Kaw Valley Craft Exchange, quality handeraffairs (pursuit), well-trained staff. Merchant: Mercantile 841-842-9810
Free University needs class conversions for its SQA students available in SBAC (Bachelor's degree), Deadline February 13.
NOTICE
EUROPE, WORLDWIDE academic副院长
year-round
(808) 412-5961 First Ave. Fuchs
47th Street
New York, NY 10024
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
pad lamps, clock televisions. Open daily 12-
3pm.
A support group for women that have gone/are coming back from cancer started now through the Women's Center. If in need, please call 312-569-8700.
FREE! The Women's Resource Guide is now available through the Union, by 10am by 10th in the Union – below the Dell. 2-8
Steve Labsen and Ralph Munyau. Reflection courses for student body president and v-4 candidates.
KU. SAILING CLUB SWim up start tonight at
diners cruises. Everyone welcome.
Darling paras 4, Sea Level 5.
PERSONAL
YARN-PATTERNS - NEEDLEPOIN
NATIONAL MUSEUM
THE CREWEL
CUBBOARD
15 East 8th, 841-7265
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
HELLO!
10-5 Mon.-Saf. Till 8 on Thursday_
Owens Liquor Store
843-1186
KARATE—Improve yourself physically and mentally this semester. Study the Oriental combat art from national charities (Ash, SKU 3215), Massachusetts, Lawrance (Kansas) 913-824-824. 2-11
910 N. 2nd
Gay Counselling Service; Call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m. for referrals.
MAKIN MUSIC - We make it easier, Polk, blah,
blah, balah, balah.
mandolin, mandolins, autoharp, Mckinney
saxophone, mandolin, saxophone, saxophone.
To a nutty奶油 bar—happy anniversary—what a week-till tontine—the tough one 2-3
Kaw Valley Craft Exchange selling quality hand-
crafted, commission sewed new member baskets
482-600-8951
Hey! Introduce Pantomime classes!
Everyone welcome. Thank you for sharing the morning with Feb 8.
On a day like today wouldnt you enjoy a real-liance message on your desk? If you want to be at home and Reddish facets by appointment only. We also have for any time you want to give someone a special and approachable message, we are here.
RIDES——RIDERS
GCP~Sorry you haven't heard from me. I've been boy crying in bed nude my new escritura, and now I'm crying out loud, far it is be rough. Tell that pulvulus Meyer to check his engine—I am closer than he thinks.
AVANT avi 1. d(i)lougho; forward; ahead; to go
forward (progredie, continuate) to go; to go;
to move (e.g., over, across) to go
---
SERVICES OFFERED
Ride to N.Y.C. over spring break needing Share
gas and drive, Miritch 81-4005, Charlie 81-
4006, Michael 81-4007.
TYPING
Sewing, knitting, mending. High quality work,
reasonable price. Phone: 841-728-2-88
Babybaiting-Part-time or Droopy-are my home. Male or female.
Babybaiting-mother of two, Domina 843-923-2-4-
Math tutoring--complete courses, experienced tutors can help you through courses 600, 602, 105, 111, 121, 121, 122, 123, 142, 150, 589, 687 Regular results. Regular results. Call 642-2811 Reasonable rates.
Tuiter for Kern 621, 520 and Graduate Student Economics 641-871 after p 59
*Bibliography*: Loehring, J. (2013). *Economics*, pp. 141-150.
Typist editor, IBM PimCrite/calte. Quality work.
Research paper writers. Discussions welcome.
Address: 842-192-3720
Small delivery, or entire household free. Move estimate, call 831-8571. 2-7
Architecture Students Interested In Photographer.
842-9725. 2-8
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-476. if
Experienced typed—term papers, tests, misc.
materials. Write articles, spellings, spelling
curriculum. 843-852, Mr. Wrigley.
THEISIS BENDING COPYING The House of Uther's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you are a R&B Massachusetts or plum 412-848-7567. Thank you.
Will type your paper with TCL Term papers and
papers with TCL forms. Please include:
641-1789 evenings & weekends.
2-18
41-1789 nights & weekends.
WANTED
Roommate to share 4 bedroom. Must be clean and non-smoking. $50.60 and 1/3 unit.
Roommate: $55.00 Livingroom, 2 baths, large
garage, study, garage; new beds: $83-864 after 5 p.m.
Wanted female roommate, cheap place close to campus. Call 841-5264. 2-3
- Foosball
"A different kind of bar featuring rocking and quiet."
"enturing seclusion and quiet."
Bring Coupon in through the 15th
The Lounge
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
WATERBEDS
112 Open Daily 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Midnight
Mattresses - Liners
Heaters - Frames
Bedspreads - Fitted Sheets
712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Male roommate for 2-bedroom酒店 *78% plus 10%
utilities. 864-361 room. 842-752 night's.
I'll just use plain text for the rest of the image.
Compatible roommate to share 2 bedroom house
room, B103-8418-8418
One or two roommates wanted or will use
two-bedroom Towers apartments 843-465-7201
Male rostrum wanted to share two nice bed-
room sets with wife. The couple's $100 in a month includes utilities. Call Tom at (212) 384-2700.
NEEDED—one female roommate to share apart-
ment with a student for $100 a month. Utilize -
Included. Call 834-4871.
Flovd's Big House-needs rooms $55 and $65
110. Louisiana, come by.
24
Rescue wanted to share two bedroom apart-
ments with special usites, on bus line 842-897-9297
Part-time flight instructor immediately
absent at Lawrence Aviation, Municipal Airport
- Bud on Tap
Roommate for four bedroom townhouse with 2 roommates, 10 students. $2,980, utilities paid. 842-7371
- Pooi
Need a good typewriter-electric or manual
Call 843-6286
2-3
Graduate student needs pennant to share 2 packs of the same design. Call 641-358-0-9 or 641-358-2800 plus assistance. Call 641-358-0-9 or 641-358-2800 plus assistance.
Resident wanted for nice 2 bedroom apartment.
One block from campus, $83.30 and utilities,
$82.15.
Female roommate needed to share Jawkway Hawks
room apartments. $12 per month. Call 841-280-2-64
Permitted woman to share expenses with grad student. Required 2-bedroom apartment (G-8, 441-4753).
Want to be "TwoKnot of Medical Physiology" by Guyton, 3rd edition, #84-4830 for p. 5-2 m. 3-23.
ASSISTANT INSTRUCTORS. WESTERN CIVILLIANCE is seeking a graduate from any department or school; a broad liberal arts education is required. Please indicate the program at KU and must be progressing toward an M.S. in Education or Supervisory eight one-hour sections of the Ph.D. offered by the School. Applicants are asked to describe their tasks as described in the Instructor's Job Description. We expect to have very few openings. Please send resumes to Civilization 2108, Westford. Compiled applicable to position.
Female grade student, share house near campus
Color TV, laundry, cati, attitudes #18,
28
Guitar pickers, players, and listeners listen to
the show on Sunday evening from 6:18 to
8:00 on RAKU 11.
House resident for Canterbury Home. Rest and
care, apply online on or before Feb. 10.
Apply in person on or before Feb. 10.
Reinmeier wanted -female to share Towers
spareroom, all utilities paid, $72,
M43-109
M43-109
Young man with 6 yr old son wants 2 or 3 people for housekeeping. They need a full-time worker available excellent fringe benefit. Rent $75 per month plus help with groceries. For appointment call 843-598-1500.
30 preschoolers need their help. Children's Hour
provides preschool care and helps children to help a child
with a little of their needs.
1 male roommate to share 3 bedroom mobile
mobile home; dryer; water heater;
electric stove; Call Kit #411-6002
Call Kit #411-6002
Female roommate to share large 2-bedroom apartment at 841-7944 or inquire at 1142-8936.
Female to share gorgeous apartment. Prime location—one block from campus. Nice furnished, garden space, own private bedroom. 8100 acre宅业. Sites at 1826 Mammoron or phone 431-8732.
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
NAISMITH HALL
HEAD TO HEAD
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
The Chalk Hawk
Home of
The Cheeky Hawk
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
TRY
- Pool
- Snooker
Ping Pong
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEEP
- Foos-Ball
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl
9th and Iowa - No West of Hillcrest Bowl
Central Park North - No One Under 18 Admitted
3147 Days a week No One Ones Allowed
8
Thursday, February 3, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Full refunds end for University withdrawals
Yesterday was the last day University of Kansas students could withdraw from classes and receive a refund of their enrollment. So Ship, enrollment said yesterday.
The total number of students who have withdrawn wasn't available. More students withdraw from school later in the semester, Snoop said.
Refunds of $291.90 for in-state students and $88.90 for out-of-state students were given to those who withdrew a student identification picture nor a student identification picture weren't refunded.
Sapp said the admissions office
previously had received some complaints from students because the students didn't snow by what date they had to withdraw to receive a full refund of their fees.
A notice of the University withdrawal procedure, including fee refunds is printed on the back cover.
A notice also was sent to all academic deans at the University and to the offices of the dean of men and the dean of women of the university, the dean and withdraw and still receive a full refund.
Maggie Vargas, a spokesman from the dean of women's office, said, "I think there are quite a few (students) who don't know
Quitting Business Sale! LAST CHANCE!
30% - 50% off
ON OUR ALREADY
LOW PRICES
LOTS OF BASKETS & POTTERY
HOME GROWIN'
904 Vermont
ELECT MCKERNAN & RHOADS
STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT & VICE PRESIDENT
AVANTI
Paid for by Avanti
Now Open for Breakfast!!!!
University, Fred McElenbie, acting dean of men, said.
Grace Meets the Community
SUBMARINES FORMAL EXPENSE
1 Original Sub 1.39 19.49
2 Cheese 1.87 19.49
3 Boat Beef 1.87 19.49
4 Turkey 1.79 20.49
5 Ham Subs loton request 1.69 20.49
6 Corned Beef 1.69 20.49
7 Pastamai 1.69 20.49
8 Salami 1.69 20.49
9 Combination (any) 20.49 20.49
10 Super Soy 1.79 20.49
11 Tuna Fish 1.79 20.49
12 Meatball All combined with lettuce, tomato, onion, green pepper, cheddar and salad dressing
12 Pieces Each!
Onion, Green Pepper, Cheese and Sweet Dressing.
Delicatessen Drinks
on white, rye, pumpkinickel, or wheat
A Cheese 124
B Celeste Baby 124
C Turkey 159
D Roast Turkey 159
E Ham 149
F Beef Ham 149
G Corned Beef 149
H Salami 164
I Combination 164
J Tuna Fish 185
K Peanut Butter + Jelly 65
Coffee 25
Ladies Tea 25
Chocolate 25
Mr. Kibb 25
Mint Beer 25
Fruit Punch 25
Sparkling 25
Millie 25
Lancome 25
Cider 25
Hot Chocolate 25
Between 25 and 30 students have withdrawn this semester through the dean of men's office.
Fountain
Shakes 65
mintes
Grapefruit, strawberry
& vanilla
Flatbread 60
Sandwiches 65
Banana, strawberry
& pineapple
Caramel malt 85 nuts 10
Flavored Drinks 90 wt.
Pineapple, vanilla cherry
Soft serve Ice Cream
nuts 5 extra
Laken in Season Volt Group . 65
Homade Chorme . 1.25
Salads
Sauces Salad 145
Crisp Salad 60
Baker Beans 40
Herb Salad 40
German Reheat Salad 40
Jalapeño Peppers 15
Chops regular, fries, bar, B. G.
Chips regular, Fritus, Bar-B-Q
Dessert
Pasta dialloia, apple and pancin 65
Pisalanders 50
Chocolate Layer Cake 50
Cheesecake 75
Cake of the day
Ice Cream Cones 15 254
when the last day to withdraw and get back a full refund is."
14:20 Crescent - west of the Chi Omega fontain
New open for Breakfast 842-1117
Between yesterday and March 1, students who withdraw from classes will receive a 50 discount.
Approximately 15 women have withdrawn from the University through the dean of women's office, Vargas said, and more were expected to withdraw yesterday.
Men-Thurs 7am-9pm Fr. 8am-1am Sat. 11:30-1am
Sun. 12:30-4pm
By the end of last semester between 800 and 900 students had withdrawn from the
Need a Lifesaver for your Studies?
Apply at S.E.S. for supplemental academic assistance in the following areas:
Tutoring
Academic Advising
Counseling
FEB. 16TH IS THE DEADLINE TO BE
GUARANTEED A TUTOR
Supportive Educational Services
202 Carruth O'Leary
864-3971
"A WITTY,JOYOUS AND BEAUTIFUL FILM."
"The Marquis of O" should be to the new film season what Ingmar Bergman's "The Magic Flute" was to the last. In a production of breathtaking images...its a dazzling testament to the civilizing effects of several different arts, witty, Joyous and so beautiful." -Vincent Canby/New York Times
"IMPECCABLY REALIZED...ELEGANT, FUNNY ...exqulsite to behold." —William Wolf /Cue
"THIS SLY TALE IS ELEGANT AND TOUCHING
...telling parables of fallibility and principle so wit-
tily that they seem less like lessons than grace
notes...amused, compassionate, warm, full of
sinuous light and voluptuous colors."
"EXQUISITE...Rohmer has attained a new peak in his career."
—Andrew Sarria/Village Voice
"DELICIOUS IRONY AND WIT...breathtaking visual beauty...fascinating...gorgeous...a rare and rewarding experience."
—Bernard Drew/Gannet Newspapers
WIT BE MAG at
"WITTY AND CHARMING AND BEAUTIFUL AND SMART. Magnificent craftmanship and intelligence... at once comic and tragic. YOU'll FIND IT IMMENSELY SATISFYING."
—Frank Rich
New York Post
Directed by *ERIC ROHMER* based on the novel by H. von Kleist Starring Edith Cervé- Bruno Ganz. In color from *New Line Cinema*
Eric Rohmer's new film THE MARQUISE OF O...
WINNER
SPECIAL
JURY PRIZE
CANNES FILM
VIVA
1974
Fri., Feb. 4 and Sat., Feb. 5
3:30. 7:00. 9:00. $1
"B"" films of Edgar G. Ulmer
GIRLS IN CHAINS (1943) Dir. Edgar G. Ulmer, with Arlene Judge,
Roger Clark, AND
LEGOUR (1964) Dir. Edgar G. Ulmer, with Tom Neal, Ann Savage.
Perhaps the most Famous of all "B" films. Mon., Feb. 7, 10:30; 7:50
LANGER (1967) Dir. Luchino Visconi, with Marcelo
Mastroianni, Anna Karina, French subtitles. Wed., Feb. 9, 7:30;
9:30; 7:50
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM-KANSAS UNION
Saturday, Feb. 5, 12:00 noon at the Jay Bowl Sign up in SUA office by Friday, Feb. 4, 3:00 p.m.
Foosball Tournament $1.25 Entry Fee
DOUBLE ELIMINATION,
BEST 2 OUT OF 3 MATCHES
More info? Call 864-3477 The winning team receives an all expense paid trip to Cape Girardeau, Mo. for the Region XI Tournament, Feb. 10-12
SUA
SALE
"CLEAN OUT" SALE
Sweaters
Reg. *$8 - $2^{90}$ Reg. *$10^{-} $14 - $4^{90}$
Reg. $ 16-$19 - $ 6^{90}
Reg. $ 20-$25 - $ 9^90
Reg. *$27-$32 - $12^{90}$ Reg. to *$45 - $14^{90}$*
Pants $16-$18 - $6 90 $20-$24 - $8 90 PRIDES CROSSING AND HAPPY LEGS
Skirts to $^{18} - $^{690}$ to $^{21} - $^{890}$
PRIDES CROSSING - ROSE HIPS
Gauchos *$15-$18 - $6^{90}$ *$20 to $27 - $8^{90}$
PRIDES CROSSING AND HAPPY LEGS
"Happy Legs"' 3 Piece Suits Reg. $60 - Now $2490
Jumpsuits
Reg. $^{30}$ - $^{10}^{90}$
Reg. $^{33^{50}}$ - $^{14}^{90}$
Reg. $^{48}$ - $^{19}^{90}$
Shirts
Reg. to $17 - $3⁹⁰
Blazers Reg. $35 - $12$90 Reg.$40-$15$90
Nylon "T" Shirts
Reg. $6 - $290
This is our Final "Clean Out" Sale, any merchandise not sold by closing time Thurs., Feb. 17 will be shipped to a liquidator in Springdale, Ark.
1
SPRING SPECIAL!
Cowl Neck Sweaters Reg. $13
$9.90
THE A TTIC
927 Mass.
paid
n XI
490
990
490
Sale, Closing Shipped Ark.
Staff Reporter
Dope smoking often condoned in KU residence halls
By JOE RADCLIFFE
Mike sat in his black vinyl chair and adjusted his baseball cap. He lives in the big end room on the roof of his house.
Being an BA at a residence hall at the University of Kansas has its problems. Enforcing rules against
Mike doesn't want his real name used because he doesn't enlist the University policy on marijuana
"IF I SEE somebody smoking" he said, "I'm supposed to report it to the resident and doctor."
"I understand that they have to set a policy that够 along with state laws, but they ought to be"
Mike said that if he smells marijuana smoke in the hallway, he will tell the resident who is smoking to cover up the odor by putting a towel under the door by burning incense. He said he doesn't care whether residents smoke in their rooms, as long as he can't smell the smoke in the hallway.
"IT'S ONLY a problem where it is bothering other
people," he said. "Some people are sensitive to the smoke or they might be allergic to it."
Mike says about 50 per cent of the students in his hall smoke occasionally.
"If we would try to kick out all the people who are smoking, we'd get only a small percentage," he said. "It unfair, I don't think we have enough resources to tell people what to do with their private lives."
MIKE SAID PART of the reason that the marijuana policy issue is that dope season is going to be a big part of the war.
"I could understand if somebody was having a pot party and started getting rowdy and breaking up things," he said. "But usually when people smoke, you call for docile, sleepy, tired hurry." He sniled.
Ann Eversole, assistant dean of women, said the enforcement of marjuriana was a legal problem.
SHE SAID THERE was no real formula to deal with dope smoking.
"It's not a moral issue as far as I'm concerned," she said. "We figure it in violation of state law and University policy. As an agency of the state, we are obligated to deal with it.
Eversole admitted that kicking a few students out of a residence hall might not be fair when many other students were also breaking University policy.
"I don't know whether setting an example will change behavior," she said. "None of us are advocates of throwing people out. But nothing's perfect; sometimes there are some victim."
At home, associate dean of men, agreed. "Being fair doesn't enter into the matter," he said. "That's the way life is. Students who smoke are all taking a chance."
McElheney acknowledged the fact that some probably did not follow University policy exactly.
"I DON'T THINK the policy is unreasonable. If an it
way, I don't want to sniff it in the hallway.
I can't."
Although he says he supports strict enforcement of the university policy, McEhlene said that RAs could be charged for not adhering to the policy.
residents weren't required to open their doors if an RA knocks.
Tom Egan, an RA at Hashinger Hall, said that because the populations at different residence halls varied, so did the enforcement of University policy.
"This dorm may be a little more lenient because of the types of people who live here," he said.
Egan said the staff didn't take action unless it got a complaint. Staff members tell students to cover up the smelt so it isn't obvious, he said, because they can't stop them from smoking.
"THERE'S SO MUCH use of it," he said, adding that about 80 per cent of the residents of Hashinger have at least tried marijuana.
He echoed the opinions of other Ras who say they control dope smoking partly for the sake of other groups.
"A lot of people just can't stand the smell," he said. "Some are almost allergic to it."
A student who asked not to be identified and who the enforcement residence hull two years said the enforcement policy was over.
"Some tell you to stop smoking." he said, "and others just have you a pet towel under the door."
He said people rarely were reported for smoking in their rooms.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Use of dope may not be as widespread in other residence halls, though. An RA in Lewis Hall said that smoking was rare and enforcement policies were strict.
"I worked as a desk assistant for one year an- one only saw one report," he said, "and that was the best."
"IT HATT BEEN that much of a problem been," she said. "I don't think it's anything compartmented."
She said residents were warned the first time they were caught and received a written report after
A LITTLE WARNER
"Then we send the complaint to the judicial board and there's a possibility they can be found."
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.87,No.83
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
"Most people seem to be abiding by the policy," the SA said. "To the majority of the people here, she is not."
Fridav. February 4.1977
Why KU loses good concerts
Monetaru Explanation
See story page six
universities at a meeting of the American Association of University Professors last night in the Kansas Union.
State Rep. Michael Glover, D-Lawrence, explained some of the intricacies of the Kansas Legislature's funding for state
Bv JOHN MUELLER
Faculty group, Calgaard disagree on sabbaticals
Staff Reporter
Controversy over faculty sabbaticals surfaced yesterday at the University of Kansas in the form of an apparent disagreement between Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, and members of the KU faculty.
The disagreement stemmed from a faculty committee proposal to wrest sabbatical decision-making powers from the University Committee on Sabaticals (USC). Calgaird is chairman of the committee, which has 12 members, including 10 faculty and William Argeringer, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies.
The faculty proposal, written by the Faculty Senate Committee on Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities (FRPR), would return most sabbatical decisions, to the students and schools, relegating UCS to reviewing decisions instead of making them.
THE FRPR'S REPORT calls present sabbatical procedures "cumbersome—and difficult" to perform, receive sabbitals, not worthwhile. But Calgard has criticized the tentative plan for decentralization, saying it "would only allow more of layer review than we have now."
T. P. Srinivasan, professor of
Faculty pay hike approval likely
Staff Reporter
By STEVE FRAZIER
University of Kansas faculty members can expect at least a 6 per cent salary increase to be approved by the 1977 Kansas law, two local legislators said last night.
Representatives Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, and John Vogel, R-Lawrence, addressing the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors on issues related to education and Means Committee approved an increase in public school budgets, Board of
Regents institutions had a better chance of getting a faculty salary increase.
Glover and Vogel said many legislators were reluctant to grant salary increases to Regents' institutions unless state school received increases in their base support.
"There's so much talk in the legislature about treating them alike," Glover said. "But in the years when primary and non-primary candidates increased, higher education got nothing."
"Today the Ways and Means Committee crossed the hurdle of school finance."
The committee approved a 6 per cent base
support increase for primary and secondary education, Glover said, so chances are good that Regent's institutions will get the training they need to increase Gov. Robert Bennett recommended.
However, additions to Robinson Gymnasium and Malot Hall might not fare well.
"The Senate is anti-capital improvement in every area—not just higher education," she added.
Vogel said the people in the state might not approve of increases in the Regents institutions' budgets. Results of a questionnaire distributed to residents in his
district were surprising, he said, because they seemed not to support higher education.
"If people in this area think that, imagine what people in other areas of the state think."
The legislators and AAUP members discussed the need for finding a new funding formula for KU. Budget requests are now being funded in large numbers through enrollment plus a base cost, but the governor has said this was the last year he would accept requests based on that for funding.
Spring calendar change pondered
Bv KATHY GANNON
Staff Renorter
A recommendation for an earlier spring enrollment period in 1978 than that of this year, is discussed at the University Council meeting. The council mendation proposes that enrollment begin Jan. 12 rather than Jan. 18, as scheduled. Changes in the University of Kansas' board are necessary to comply with the Kansas Board's common calendar for all Regents' schools.
UMHOLT2 SAID that in recommending a new enrollment period for the spring the calendar committee advised that sufficient time be allowed for admissions and records to process class rosters and schedule cards before classes started.
CLASSES MUST begin Jan. 18, according to the Regents calendar. Previously, KU was scheduled to start classes Jan. 23. Complying with the Regents calendar will add three more class days to the spring semester.
ROBERT UMHOLTZ, chairman of the calendar committee, said an error in previous committee planning had caused the KU spring calendar to be in violation.
last September that KU's spring classes started three days later than the other
KU classes usually begin on a Monday, with enrollment the last three days of the preceding week. The Regents calendar the fall fall, on a Wednesday, in the spring
The University Senate Calendar Committee has recommended that seniors begin enrolling in the new schedule. Other undergraduates would enroll Jan. 11 and Jan. 16 with no enrollment during the evening weekend, Jan. 14 and 15. Class rosters and schedule cards would be processed Jan. 17.
When enrollment was Wednesday through Friday, the paperwork was completed over the weekend before the first day of classes, Umholt said.
Dyck said he assumed the Regents began the spring semester on a Wednesday because a certain number of teaching days were required in the semester.
The Regents have a policy of common starting and ending semester dates and holidays among Regents schools. KU has an violation of this policy for the spring semester starting date since the policy was adopted in 1973, the dean of admissions and records said W.
Umboltz said the basic problem the calendar committee faced was how to pattern the most desirable enrollment classes to begin classes to be prepared Wednesday, Jan. 18.
The Regents told KU's administration
The effects of KU's spring enrollment changes are being discussed by various committees.
Calgaard confirmed that he had discussed the report "with two persons by telephone." He said, "the discussions were of a general nature, and I stand on what I've said in the report. I suspect there are people who are dissatisfied on both sides of the issue."
mathematics and FRPR chairman, said yesterday that faculty members were "quite agitated" over criticism of the report and that several unidentified faculty members yesterday discussed the report with Calgaard.
Panhellenic has formed a task force, which includes Cinda Osness, Panhellenic Council president, Turney, three sorority presidents and three sorority rush chairmen, who will examine the options. The task force will meet on Wednesday of the Panhellenic Presidents' Council.
SHE SAID IT was possible that spring rush might be canceled because Panhellenic wouldn't be able to obtain grades of participants soon enough and because sorority members would have to be back so early.
"It is creating a problem for us," Mary Turney, Panhellenic membership chairman, said. "Our spring rush is usually held a week before the first day of registration."
J. D. CHRESTMAN, Kansas Union Bookstore manager, said the earlier spring schedule wouldn't cause a big problem for the bookstore.
"A decision will be made as soon as possible, hopefully within a month." Turney was.
"We'll have to prepare inventory orders a week earlier," Christman said, "and we'll be asking faculty members for textbook information earlier."
SRINIVASAN SAID a main issue in the FRPR report, which the Faculty Council will consider next Thursday, is that "the Faculty Senate Rules and Regulations article on sabbatical leaves has been slowly amended," the sabbaticals committee. There's already concern, and people are complaining that the process is highly centralized."
Dyck said the new schedule wouldn't affect intercession classes.
"It still allows students to take intercession classes and go through regular entreaties."
John Conard, Regents' executive officer, said the Regents were researching other budgeting methods. New methods that would consider the costs of educating a large number of students probably benefit KU, Vogel said, because of its high percentage of graduate students.
Conard said, "It's much more expensive to educate graduate students. We've found that we pay less money for more or for a graduate student than for an undergraduate. Other institutions get four, eight or 12 times as education costs or by the discipline a student is enrolled in."
Vogel said little progress would be made this session in meeting AAUP goals of increases in faculty fringe benefits and retirement programs.
Discussion of long-range legislative programs centered on the possibility of enrollment decreases. One AUAP member suggested the possibility of voluntary early enrollment to reduce the university's financial burden when it is faced with decreased enrollment.
"This has been given some thought by the Regents," Conard said. "It's not as expensive as it would appear at first glance. It should be given serious consideration.
Article VIII of the sabbaticals policy specifies criteria to be followed in awarding sabbaticals, usually defined as leaves of absence from the University to pursue advanced study or obtain professional experience not available on campus. Accreditation may be required and was replaced by the criterion of submitting a research proposal to gain a leave.
"Fort Hays and Pittsburgh have already experienced enrollment declines and it's been traumatic. Part of the problem is he said, "They are are draining off some of their money."
Junior colleges receive state aid for extension courses and Vogel and Glover said some legislators thought they were wasteful programs.
See FACULTY page 11
Srinivasan said, "Much of our proposal is taking a look at the spirit of the rules and regulations. Everybody realizes the number of leaves are limited, but it really makes people sore when UCS says to beat it and go."
The criteria, he said, "have been replaced by competition. We want decisions based on the merits of the proposal—nowhere in the world" (2015). He also about putting one person against another.
RATHER THAN having decisions controlled by UCS, he said, the FRPR proposal "will give us more input from many more users," he said. The FRPR layers, yes, but we're also more efficient."
SHINIVASAN SAID, "We've slowly changed to a research emphasis, without input from the local (departmental) levels. We still have room to improve our manuscript aren't looked on favorably."
ANOTHER CIRCUMVENTION of Article VIII, according to Srinivasan, has been in UCS' failure to follow the article's primary criteria for awarding leave—the merit of an application, and the record of a candidate's academic accomplishments.
dung favored scientific research proposals,
but Caligara said, ordering was "a
unpleasant experience."
A specific change that hadn't been approved by faculty government, he said, occurred in this year's faculty handbook, prepared by the Office of Academic Affairs.
Article VIII says that applications for sabbaticals should be accompanied by "a statement setting forth the objectives of the leave." The faculty handbook says the conditions should be accompanied by "a proposal setting forth the objectives of the leave."
A UCS memorandum, dated Sept 1, 1976,
says "candidates applying for a leave
should prepare their application as
well as preparing a proposal for any
other competitive award."
Srinivasan said that the change in wor-
FRPR's decentralization plan recommended that many decisions to grant leaves be made by four academic groups, including representatives from various KU schools and departments. The groups are in humanities, natural sciences, including autherties; social sciences; science; social and behavioral sciences; professional schools, and the library.
Srinivasan defended the proposed groupings, saying that some professional schools weren't large enough to successfully compete for sabbatical awards. Srinivasan said the larger professional schools had been able to maintain status as separate academic groups, and that such a modification might be considered at next week's council meeting.
Kansas faces the same bleak fuel outlook as the rest of the nation, William Hambleton, director of the Kansas Geological Institute and the University of Kansas, said yesterday.
Kansas gas situation mirrors U.S. scene
"NATIONALITY", the picture is similar to gas supplies will have little impact in 1977.
Hambleton returned last week from the Midwest Governors' Task Force on Energy and Natural Resources Conference in Iowa, where he represented Gov. Robert Bennett.
At the meeting, representatives of the nation's governors gave reports about critical shortage of heating fuels in their states.
Hambleton said that most intrastate gas in Kansas had already been contracted for and that the intrastate system probably still sells its gas to an interstate pipeline system.
Kansas' natural gas falls into two categories: interstate, or gas that is transported by the interstate pipeline system, and intrastate, or gas produced and used in Kansas that never gets into the interstate pipeline system.
"THE PRICE of intrasate gas is unregulated," Hambleton said, so the price of interstate gas often is much lower than intrasate gas.
Thirty per cent of Kansas' gas is intrastate. Hampton said.
"For example, intrastate gas costs around $2 per thousand cubic feet," he said. "Interstate prices are controlled by the Federal Power Commission (FPC), which sets the price limit at $1.42 for new and $2 cents for old gas per thousand cubic feet."
Hambleton has been a member of several national committees on geology and the environment. In 1975, he was acting director of the National Geological Survey still on that office's advisory committee.
INTRASTATE GAS is regulated by the kaleen Commission (KC), a regulatory hotspot.
"The KCC, unlike the FPC," Hambleton
does "do not have power to set the well
being."
"Wellhead" is the price of natural gas after it has been produced, and before it is purchased.
"CITIES SERVICE doesn't have the capabilities to supply all the demand for gas all the time." Hambleton said. "Cities in favor of its principl
Cities Service Gas is a regional supplier that provides 55 per cent of Kansas' gas. The priorities Hambleton mentioned in the commercial establishments and hospitals.
"A lot it depends on the weather and which it unfortunately isn't very good," he said.
8
Thursday, February 3, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Full refunds end for University withdrawals
Yesterday was the last day of University of Kansas students could withdraw from classes and receive a full refund of their tuition. In addition, enrollment supervisor, said yesterday.
The total number of students who have withdrawn wasn't available. More students withdraw from school later in the semester, Saop said.
Refunds of $291.90 for in-state students and $88.90 for out-of-state students were given to those who withdrew by daytime, when they had identified identification picture weren't refunded.
Sapp said the admissions office
previously had received some complaints from students because the students didn't snow by what date they had to withdraw to receive a full refund of their fees.
A notice of the University withdrawals procedure, including fee refunds is printed on envelopes.
A notice also was sent to all academic deans at the University and to the offices of the dean of men and the dean of women of the university and the dean withdrawal and still receive a full refund.
Maggie Vargas, a spokesman from the从院 of women of office said, "I think there is an issue."
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Approximately 15 women have withdrawn from the University through the dean of women's office, Vargas said, and more were expected to withdraw yesterday.
when the last day to withdraw and get back a full refund is."
Between 25 and 30 students have withdrawn this semester through the dean of STEM.
By the end of last semester between 800
900 students had withdrawn from the
Between yesterday and March 1, students who wish to join from classes will receive a 50 fee. The cost for all classes is $295.
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THE ATTIC
927 Mass.
1
U
can
crea
Leg
night
Ro
Law
addi
Ass
(AA
and
crea
sing ped k.
Dope smoking often condoned in KU residence halls
Staff Renorter
By JOE RADCLIFE
Mike sat in his black vinyl chair and adjusted his baseball cap. He lives in the big end and room on the lower floor of the mall.
Being an BA at a residence hall at the University of Kansas has its problems. Enforcing rules against smoking on campus is one such problem.
Mike doesn't want his real name used because he
don't enforce the University policy on marijuana
"IF I SEE somebody smoking," he said, "I'm supposed to report it to the resident director and counselor."
"I understand that they have to set a policy that goes along with state laws, but they ought to be."
Mike said that if he smells marijuana smoke in the hallway, he will tell the resident who is smoking to cover up the odor by putting a towel under the door by burning incense. He said he doesn't care whether residents smoke in their rooms, as long as he can't smell the smoke in the hallway.
"IT'S ONLY a problem where it is bothering other
people," he said. "Some people are sensitive to the smoke or they might be allergic to it."
Mike says about 50 per cent of the students in his hall smoke occasionally.
MIKE SAID PART of the reason that the hurrijuana policy change is that dope narcotics are not likely to have bad roads.
"I could understand if somebody was having a pot party and started getting rowdy and breaking up things," he said. "But usually when people smoke, you go to docle, sleepy, tired hungry." He smiled.
Annie Eversole, assistant dean of women, said the enforcement of martjana was a legal problem.
SHE SAID THERE was no real formula for dealing with smoke smoking.
Eversole admitted that kicking a few students out of a residence hall might not be fair when many other students were also breaking University policy.
"It's not a moral issue as far as I'm concerned," she said. "We figure it's in violation of state law and University policy. As an agency of the state, we are obligated to deal with it.
"I don't know whether setting an example will change behavior," she said. "None of us are advocates of throwing people out. But nothing's perfect; sometimes there are some victims."
therefore, associate dean of men, agreed.
"Being fair doesn't enter into the matter," he said.
"That's the way life is. Students who smoke are all taking a chance."
McElenie acknowledged the fact that some people probably didn't follow University policy exactly.
"I DON'T THINK the policy is unreasonable. If an
they, I don't want to sniff it in the hallway.
I have no business."
Although he says he supports strict enforcement of a the university policy, McElhene said that RAs were not required to do this.
residents weren't required to open their doors if an RA knocks.
Tom Egan, an RA at Hashinger Hall, said that because the populations at different residence halls varied, so did the enforcement of University policy.
"This dorm may be a little more lenient because of the types of people who live here," he said.
Egan said the staff didn't take action unless it got a complaint. Staff members tell students to cover up the smell that isn't obvious, he said, because they can't stop them from smoking.
"THERE'S SO MUCH use of it," he said, adding that about 80 per cent of the residents of Hashinger have at least tried marijuana.
He echeod the opinions of other Ras who say they control dope smear partly for the sake of other crimes.
"A lot of people just can't stand the smell," he said. "Some are almost allergic to it."
A student who asked not to be identified and who lived in a residence hall two years said the enforcement was very hard.
"Some tell you to stop smoking," he said, "and others just have you a towel at the door."
He said people rarely were reported for smoking in their rooms.
Use of dope may not be as widespread in other residence halls, though. An RA in Lewis Hall said that smoking was rare and enforcement policies were strict.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"I worked as a desk assistant for one year and I only saw one written report," he said, "and that was my job." He added, "We have always been on the same team."
"I HITTEN BEEN that much of a problem here," she said. "I don't think it's any improvement."
She said residents were warned the first time they were caught and received a written report after
A LITTLE WARNER
"Then we send the complaint to the judicial board and there's a possibility they can be dismissed."
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
"Most people seem to be abiding by the policy. The KSA said. To the majority of the people here, the smoke is a problem."
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Vol.87,No.83
CORNELIUS
Friday, February 4, 1977
Why KU loses good concerts
Monetary Explanation
See story page six
universities at a meeting of the American Association or University Professors last night in the Kansas Union.
State Rep. Michael Glover, D-Lawrence, explained some of the intricacies of the Kansas Legislature's funding for state
Faculty group, Calgaard disagree on sabbaticals
Bv JOHN MUELLER
Staff Renorter
Controversy over faculty sabbaticals surfaced yesterday at the University of Kansas in the form of an apparent disagreement between Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, and members of the KU faculty.
The disagreement stemmed from a faculty committee proposal to wrest sabbatical decision-making powers from the University Committee on Sabbaticals (UCS). Calgaard is chairman of the committee, and includes 12 members, including 10 from the faculty and William Argentinger, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies.
The faculty proposal, written by the Faculty Senate Committee on Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities (FRPR), would return most sabbatical decision-makers to events and schools, relegating UCS to reviewing decisions instead of making them.
THE FRPR'S REPORT calls present sabbatical procedures "numbersome—and in the view of some faculty members who work with students, Caraigh has criticized the tentative plan for decentralization, saying it "would only create more layers of review than we have
T. P. Srinivasan, professor of
Faculty pay hike approval likely
Staff Reporter
By STEVE FRAZIER
University of Kansas faculty members can expect at least a 6 per cent salary increase to be approved by the 1977 Kansas Legislature, two local legislators said last night.
Representatives Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, and John Vogel, R-Lawrence, addressing the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors on the topics of Student Means Committee approved an increase in public school budgets, Board of
Regents institutions had a better chance of setting a faculty salary increase.
Glover and Vogel said many legislators were reluctant to grant salary increases to Regents' institutions unless state school districts received increased in their base support.
"There's so much talk in the legislature about treating them alike." Glover said. "But in the years when primary and runoff elections occur, the number increases, higher education got nothing."
Today the Ways and Means Committee
The committee approved a 6 per cent base
support increase for primary and secondary education, Glover said, so chances are good that Regents' institutions will get the support they need to increase Gov. Robert Bennett recommend.
However, additions to Robinson Gymnast and Malot Hall might not fare well.
"The Senate is anti-capital improvement in every area—not just higher education," said Judge McCullough.
Vogel said the people in the state might not approve of increases in the Regents institutions' budgets. Results of a questionnaire distributed to residents in his
district were surprised, he said, because they seemed not to support higher criteria.
The legislators and AAUP members discussed the need for finding a new funding source to support the state's work made on the basis of full time equivalency enrollment plus a base cost, but the governor has said this was the last year he would accept requests based on that for-credit program.
"If people in this area think that, imagine what people in other areas of the state think."
Spring calendar change pondered
Staff Renorter
By KATHY GANNON
The University Senate Calendar Committee has recommended that seniors begin college work in January. Other undergraduates would enroll Jan. 13 and Jan. 16, with no enrollment during the intervening weekend, Jan. 14 and 15. Class members and schedule cards would be processed.
A recommendation for an earlier spring enrollment period in 1978 than that of this spring will be discussed at the University Council meeting Feb. 10. The recommendation proposes that enrollment begin Jan. 12 rather than Jan. 18 as scheduled
UMHOLTZ SAID that in recommending a new enrollment period for the spring the calendar committee advised that sufficient time be allowed for admissions and records to process class rosters and schedule cards before classes started.
The Regents have a policy of common starting and ending semester dates and holidays among Regents schools. KU has been in violation of this policy for the spring semester starting date since the policy was approved by the Regent board of admissions and records, said Wednesday.
last September that KU's spring classes
days later than the other
Regents schools
ROBERT UMHOLT2, chairman of the committee, said an error in previous committee planning had caused the KU spring calendar to be in violation.
CLASSES MUST begin Jan. 18, according to the Regents calendar. Previously, KU was scheduled to start classes Jan. 23. Complying with the Regents calendar will add three more class days to the spring semester.
When enrollment was Wednesday through Friday, the paperwork was completed over the weekend before the first day of classes, Umholtz said.
KU classes usually begin on a Monday, with enrollment the last three days of the preceding week. The Regents calendar begins on Thursday the fall but on a Wednesday in the spring.
Changes in the University of Kansas' calendar were necessary to comply with the Kansas Board of Regents' common calendar for all Regents' schools.
Unholtz said the basic problem the calendar committee faced was how to pattern the most desirable enrollment classes to begin Wednesday, Jan. 18.
The effects of KU's spring enrollment changes are being discussed by various sources.
Calgaud confirmed that he had discussed the report "with two persons by telephone."
The Regents told KU's administration
Dyck said he assumed the Regents began the spring semester on a Wednesday because a certain number of teaching days were required in the semester.
SHE SAID IT was possible that spring rush might be canceled because Panhellenic wouldn't be able to obtain grades of participants soon enough and because sorority members would have to be back so early.
Panhellenic has formed a task force, which includes Cinda Osness, Panhellenic Council president, Turney, three sorority presidents and three sorority rush chairmen who examine the options. The task force will then examine the options to the Panhellenic Presidents' Council
mathematics and FRPR chairman, said yesterday that faculty members were "quite agitated" over criticism of the report and that several unidentified faculty members yesterday discussed the report with Calgair.
"It is creating a problem for us," Mary Turney, Panhellenic membership chairman, said. "Our spring rush is usually held a week before the first day of registration."
"We'll have to prepare inventory orders a week earlier," Christman said, "and we'll be asking faculty members for textbook information earlier."
J. D. CHRESTMAN, Kansas Union Bookstore manager, said the earlier spring schedule wouldn't cause a big problem for the bookstore.
"A decision will be made as soon as possible, hopefully within a month," Turney said.
Dyck said the new schedule wouldn't affect intercession classes.
He said, "The discussions were of a general nature, and I stand on what I've said about the report. I suspect there are differences that we are dissatisfied on both sides of the issue."
SRINVASAN SAID a main issue in the FRPR report, which the Faculty Council will consider next Thursday, is that "the Faculty Senate Rules and Regulations article on sabbatical leaves has been slowly eroded by the sabbaticals committee; fearful concern, and people are complaining that the process is highly centralized."
"It still allows students to take intercession classes and go through regular courses."
John Conard, Regents' executive officer,
said the Regents were researching other
budgeting methods. New methods that
would consider the costs of educating
students in mathematics probably
benefit KU, Vogel said, because its
high percentage of graduate students.
Conard said, "It's much more expensive to educate graduate students. We've found that it's much more expensive for a graduate student than for an undergraduate. Other institutions get four, eight or 12 times as much. Education costs also vary by the discipline a student is enrolled in."
Vogel said little progress would be made this session in meeting AAPU goals of increases in faculty fringe benefits and retirement programs.
Discussion of long-range legislative programs centered on the possibility of enrolment decreases. One AUP member suggested the possibility of voluntary early return to university when it reduces the University's financial burden when it is faced with decreased enrollment.
"This has beef given some thought by the Regents," Conard said. "It's not as expensive as it would appear at first glance. It should be serious consideration."
Article VIII of the sabbaticals policy specifies criteria to be followed in awarding sabbaticals, usually defined as leaves of absence from the University to pursue advanced study or obtain professional training on campus. According to Srinivasan, on campus, a research proposal was replaced by the criterion of submitting a research proposal to gain a leave.
"Fort Hays and Pittsburgh have already experienced enrollment declines and it's been traumatic. Part of the problem is sheer number of agencies are draining af some of their money."
See FACULTY page 11
Junior colleges receive state aid for extension courses and Vogel and Glover said some legislators thought they were wasteful programs.
Srinivasan said, "Much of our proposal is taking a look at the spirit of the rules and regulations. Everybody realizes the number of leaves are limited, but it really makes people sore when UCS says to beat it and go."
SHRINIVAS SAID, "We've slowly changed to a research emphasis, without input from the local (departmental) levels. We've been working with manuscripts that manuscript aren't looked on favorably."
A specific change that hadn't been approved by faculty government, he said, occurred in this year's faculty handbook, prepared by the Office of Academic Affairs.
ANOTHER CIRCUMVENTION of Article VIII, according to Srinivasan, has been in UCS' failure to follow the article's primary criteria for awarding leave—the merit of an application, and the record of a candidate's academic accomplishments.
Article VIII says that applications for sabbaticals should be accompanied by "a statement setting forth the objectives of the leave." The faculty handbook says the conditions should be accompanied by "a proposal setting forth the objectives of the leave."
dimentified scientific research proposals,
but Calgary has written, "was a
native environment."
The criteria, he said, "have been replaced by competition. We want decisions based on the merits of the proposal—nowhere in the past." The same rule applies to about putting one person against another.
Srinivasan said that the change in wor-
RATHER THAN having decisions controlled by UCS, he said, the FRPR proposal "will give us more information from many more sources," he says. The layers, yes, but we are also more efficient."
A UCS memorandum, dated Sept. 1, 1976, says "candidates applying for a leave should prepare their application as well as propose a proposal for any other competitive award."
FRPRR's decentralization plan recommended that many decisions to grant leaves be made by four academic groups, including representatives from various KU schools and departments. The groups are in humanities; natural sciences, including biology; social sciences; science books and behavioral sciences; professional schools, and the library.
Sinivasin defended the proposed groupings, saying that some professional schools weren't large enough to successfully compete for sabbatical awards
Srinivasan said the larger professional schools could possibly receive their own status as separate academic groups, and he would be interested in considering at next week's council meeting.
Kansas gas situation mirrors U.S. scene
Kansas faces the same bleak fuel outlook as the rest of the nation, William Hambleton, director of the Kansas Geological Department, at the University of Kansas, said yesterday.
"Our gas production decreased by about two per cent last year," Hambleton said, "and our reserves decreased to a little more half of our peak reserves of 1958.
"NATIONALLY," the picture is similar. Gas supplies will have little impact in 1977.
Hambleton returned last week from the Midwest Governors' Task Force on Energy and Natural Resources Conference in which he represented Gov. Robert Bennett.
At the meeting, representatives of the nation's governors gave reports about critical shortage of heating fuels in their states.
Kansas' natural gas falls into two categories: interstate, or gas that is transported by the interstate pipeline system, and intrastate, or gas produced and used in Kansas that never gets into the interstate nineile system.
"The PRICE of intrasate gas is unregulated," Hambleton said, so the price of interstate gas often is much lower than intrastate gas.
Hambleton said that most intrastate gas in Kanaas had already been contracted for and that the intrastate system probably still its gas to an interstate pipeline system.
"For example, intrastate gas costs around $2 per thousand cubic feet," he said. "Interstate prices are controlled by the Federal Power Commission (FPC), which sets the price limit at $1.42 for new and $2 cents for old gas per thousand cubic feet."
Thirty per cent of Kansas' gas is intrastate. Hambleton said.
Hambleton has been a member of several national committees on geology and the environment. In 1975, he was acting director of the Geological Survey, still on that office's advisory committee.
INTRASATE GAS is regulated by the kansas Corporation Commission (KC), a state agency.
The "KCC unlike the FPC," Hambleton does not have power to set the wellhead.
"Wellhead" is the price of natural gas after it has been produced, and before it is prepared.
"CITIES SERVICE doesn't have the capabilities to supply all the demand for gas all the time." Hambleton said. "Cities are not responsible for its customers in favor of its proritions."
Cities Service Gas is a regional supplier that provides 55 per cent of Kansas' gas. The priorities Hambleton mentioned in commercial establishments and hospitals.
The future of Kansas' fuel situation is uncertain. Hambleton said.
"A lot of it depends on the weather good, but unfortunately it's very good," he said.
2
Friday, February 4, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Carter's economics disputed
WASHINGTON—Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur Burns said yesterday he would cooperate with President Carter and Congress to encourage
taxer economy. Burns told the House Banking Committee he didn't think Carter's $81-billion economic program would make much difference to the economy. He termed Carter's plan to give a $50 rebate to most Americans "an inefficient way to stimulate the economy."
Young begins African trim
ZANIBARZ 'Tanzania-Andrew Young began his campaign to forge new American links with black Africa yesterday on an island famous in history as a destination for African immigrants.
travel to the United States. She sold Young, America's first black U.N. ambassador, flew into the Tanzanian capital. Then a charter plane brought him to Zambaria, 59 miles off the coast.
He will spend the first three days of his 10-day African trip here, attending celebrations marking the merger of Zanzibar's political party with that of mainland Tanzania and meeting with several African leaders.
Conaress gets poor rating
WASHINGTON—Pollster Louis Harris told Congress yesterday that the public rates congressional涨跌 have no financial disclosure, limitations restrictions on "suspend" restrictions on "suspend" restrictions on "suspend" restrictions.
Harris summarized results of a new pool conducted for a House commission writing proposed, new ethical standards.
He said most voting-age citizens applied a higher moral standard to congressmen than they did to others. People also were unsure Congress actually would adopt these laws.
However, a separate poll of returning House members seemed to indicate broad support within Congress for widened financial disclosures and tighter rules on corporate taxes.
Ethiopian factions battling
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia - Rival factions in Ethiopia's ruling military council show that the leadership of the country and the chief of staff and other members of the council were executed afterward.
An official statement issued after the battle accused Brig. Gen. Terebi Fanteri of plotting to eliminate "progressive" members of the 40-mm Central Committee of the Communist Party of China.
The statement said the shooting took place after the seven were exposed as secret members of an underground political movement, the Ethiopian Peoples Liberation Movement.
Snow worsens gas plight
Bv The Associated Press
A new winter storm dropped snow on several areas in the Midwest and East yesterday as extra supplies of natural gas fuel the city. Because the angry crunch caused by the cold.
Federal authorities worked to allocate natural gas according to areas where it was needed most by the enactment of emergency energy legislation.
The worst of the frigid weather seemed over in some areas, but the after-effects lingered. Officials said plant closings and two million people could last until spring.
Richard L. Dunham, chairman of the Federal Power Commission, said the gas transfer had already started. He said gas intended for Oregon and Washington had been ordered diverted to Transcontinental Railroad in Texas, which serves states in the East.
Dunham said it should take only a few hours to provide a small amount of help to the family.
The industrial cutbacks, caused by the curtailment of natural gas to businesses, have increased incomes.
The fuel will be used to supply high-
quality customers such as homes and
hospitals.
The new storm was the result of a cold front from the Great Lakes into the middle Mesoamerica.
Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
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Stop by or call the SUA Office for more information 864-3477
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---
A page from Johannes Gutenberg's 1455 Bible and Issac Newton's "Principles of Mathematics" are just part of the Earth, Air, Water and Fire exhibition at the University of Kansas Spencer Research Library.
Spencer exhibition offers science collection
The exhibition, which started last Friday, will continue through commencement, May 23. Alexandra Mason, Spencer librarian, said there were three
The exhibition offers a collection of 80 rare books, engravings and letters on the history of science. Many of the books are either the first edition or early editions.
Spencer is one of 12 libraries in the United States devoted entirely to collecting old books, manuscripts and instruments, she said.
major exhibitions each year, one in the fall, spring and summer.
All the books and manuscripts in the library are open to public use.
"What good are they if they can't be used." Mason asked. "It's part of the culture."
Mont of the books and manuscripts in Spencer were purchased through cash purchases.
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Also on display is the 1678 edition of Euclid's "Elements," the oldest scientific textbook in the world, written in the third century B.C.
Foosball Tournament $1.25 Entry Fee
Many of the books on exhibit, such as Charles Darwin's "On the Origin of Species."
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Saturday, Feb. 5, 12:00 noon at the Jay Bowl Sign up in SUA office by Friday, Feb.4, 3:00 p.m.
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Also on exhibit is "Concerning the Revolution of the Heavenly Circles," through which Copernicus shook the world with his solar system theory in 1534.
More info? Call 864-3477 The winning team receives an all expense paid trip to Cape Girardeau, Mo. for the Region XI Tournament, Feb. 10-12
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Sponsored by the St. Lawrence Catholic Center Get your tickets now. They'll be on sale during the week from 9:00-3:00 at the Center,1631 Crescent Rd.
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Free introductory headphone offer:
To introduce you to the joys of private listening — Yamaha style—we offering a free pair of Yamaha Orthodynamic headphones with the purchase of any Yamaha stereo receiver or integrated amplifier. For all the details, drop by soon. But hurry! Offer ends March 31, 1977.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 4, 1977
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Patience wanted: RA jobs open
The next few weeks, the dean of men's and dean of women's offices will take applications for a job that requires a love of people and an ability to listen to others—resident assistant (RA) at a University of Kansas residence hall.
Ra's work with a hall's director director to help students with problems. They also
KU prof's wife dies in car-truck crash
From Our News Services
Athina Darr-Kumar, 28, wife of an assistant professor at KU, was killed yesterday in a car-truck collision on U.S. 40 west of Lawrence.
Highway patrolmen said Darr-Kumar's carveered across the center line and struck the front of a truck loaded with sand. The truck, operated by Earl Stowe, 420 North St., went out of control and struck the Allan Kirby home on Route 4.
Stowe escaped injury. Damage to the house, which was unoccupied at the time, was estimated at between $12,000 and $15,000.
The victim was pronounced dead at the scene. Her husband Raj, teaches in the school.
respond to hall emergencies and act as resource people for hall residents.
The job pays for fall and spring housing costs, plus $500. To qualify, a student must be a junior, senior or graduate student with at least 40 hours of A.A., and have lived in a residential group.
HOWEVER, THE most important qualification is the ability to work with and advise people in groups, Ann Eversole, a resident of the residence halls advises, said yesterday.
Each RA is responsible for 45-75 students in an assigned area of the hall
RA applications are available in 229 and 224. Strong Hall. References are also needed for selection committees of students and staff member then interview the applicants.
The last phase of selection is called group interaction. Eight to 10 applicants must solve a problem typical of life while a team of six other students learns. Then the hall makes its recommendations.
ALTHOUGH CURRENT RAs seem satisfied with the selection system, some said the group interaction phase wasn't worthwhile.
Baffolter, RA in Joseph R. Pearson Hall, also criticized the group interaction.
"To me, it seemed silly," he said. "I don'v
Eversole said, "Some people are wedded to group interaction, others are critical of it. It's something definitely to be considered, but if they don't hire or not hired just on that basis."
think they're really able to find out anything about you that way."
TO BE A good RA, Affolter said, one should be able to articulate his point of view, have strong opinions and be difficult to manipulate.
Another RA, Paula Toppkins of Lewis Hall, said that the qualities of being open and honest are important.
If students aren't satisfied with their KA, you can tell their resident directors, who are responsible for KA.
About 65 positions are open, Eversole said, and applicants are urged to apply as many halls as they want. Applications must be returned to 220 Strong Hall by March 11.
"A WITTY,JOYOUS AND BEAUTIFUL FILM."
"The Marquis of O" should be to the new film season what Ingmar Bergman's "The Magic Flute" was to the last. In a production of breathtaking images...its a dazzling testament to the civilizing effects of several different arts, witty, joyous and so beautiful."
-Vincent Canby/New York Times
"IMPECCABLY REALIZED...ELEGANT, FUNNY ..exquilite to behold."
—William Wolf /Cue
"THIS SLY TALE IS ELEGANT AND TOUCHING ...telling parables of fallibility and principle so witty that they seem less like lessons than grace notes...amused, compassionate, warm, full of sinuous light and voluptuous colors."
-Jay Cocka/Time Magazine
"EXQUISITE...Rohmer has attained a new peak in his career.*
—Andrew Sarris/Village Voice
"DELICIOUS IRONY AND WIT...breathtaking visual beauty...fasciating...gorgeous...a rare and rewarding experience." Bernard Drew/Gannet Newspapers
WITTY AND CHARMING AND BEAUTIFUL AND SMART. Magnificent craftmanship and intelligence... at once comic and tragic. YOU'll FIND IT IMMENSELY SATISFYING."
—Frank Rich
New York Post
Master Charge Welcome
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Lawrence, Kansas Phone 841-2995
Eric Rohmer's new film THE MARQUISE OF O...
919 Massachusetts
Directed by ERIC ROHMER on the novel by H. von Kleist Starring Edinburgh Clever-Brunz Ganz in color from New Line Cinema
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"B' films of Edgar G. 'Ulmer':
GIRL SIN CHAIN (1943) Dir. Edgar G. Ulmer, with Arlene Judge
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Perhaps the most famous of all "B" films. Mon., Feb. 7, 10:30, 75c
THE STRANGER (1961) Dir. Luchino Visconi, with Marcelo
Mamani, Anna Karina. French subtitles. Wed., Feb. 9, 7:30,
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WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM-KANSAS UNION
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.
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4
Friday, February 4, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Fee waiver needed
Classroom teaching by graduate assistants at the University of Kansas was one of the more volatile issues under discussion in the past year. We have promised to be a subject of much debate.
FOR KU to be able to attract highly qualified teaching assistants from throughout the country, a fee waiver for them, in line with that given by many other peer universities, is badly needed. Without it, University officials and departmental staff will graduate students may be lost to the University, to the eventual detritum of the institution.
CURRENTLY, more than three-quarters of lower division required courses are taught by graduate assistants, most of whom are living on salaries of $3,000 to $4,000 for a nine-month, half-time appointment depending on seniority and department.
Out of this, assistants working less than 40 per cent time (100 per cent time usually means 40 hours of classroom related activities) still must pay regular fees of $2.50 a credit hour, which in some cases, leads up to the regular enrollment fee of $21.90. Assistants working from 40 per cent to 90 per cent time receive staff fees of $14 a credit hour.
ACCORDING TO a faculty activity analysis prepared by the Office of Institutional Research, graduate assistants work an average of 23.2 hours a week in lower division courses and 4.5 hours in upper-level reactions, as compared to 11.1 hours for instructors and 5.2 hours for full professors.
In two successive years, proposals for fee waivers were placed in front of the Kansas Board of Regents by KU as high-priority budget items. Both in 1975 and 1976, however, the proposals received short-lived approval from the Kansas Board of Regents representing the five other state institutions said the proposals were designed to benefit KU.
LAST WEEK a glimmer of hope appeared when members of the Regents Coordinating Council, which sets the agenda for the Regents, decided not to reject the principle of fee waivers for graduate assistants, a consequence of being forced from university. Regents that their schools wouldn't be adversely affected financially by such a move.
AT THE University of Colorado, for instance, assistants receive resident tuition waivers three, six or nine hours depending on the percentage of time they are appointed. At Iowa State University assistants pay full-time resident fees of $258 each quarter, but receive partial scholarships to pay the fees. The University of Missouri also gives tuition waivers to assistants on at least 25 per cent time.
KU's proposal isn't a frivolous or excessive one. A number of fellow Big Eight schools that belong to the Association of American Universities already have full or partial-fee waivers for their graduate teaching assistants.
At present, the greatest stumbling block remaining before a system of fee waivers can be implemented at KU seems to be the Kansas Legislature, which would have to change a 1964 attorney general ruling saying it is unlawful to waive fees in the hope of attracting high caliber graduate students. If changed, the proposal would then need the approval of the Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature.
Both the University, by its past proposals, and the Student Senate, by its recent subcommittee report on classroom teaching, have shown that the University's tradition for academic excellence must be upheld by financial and administrative improvements for graduate assistants. It now remains for the Board of Regents and the legislature to give their complete support for this important and necessary action.
Carter needs trust
Jimmy Carter may not have succeeded in warming American hearts with his fireside chat Wednesday night, but he certainly gave it a good try.
There wasn't really anything new in the President's talk; no earth-shattering announcements or new policy statements. The only "news" items were that he would cut the White House staff by one-third and put a ceiling on the number of federal workers.
BUT THEN his talk wasn't designed to be a policy statement. It was designed to bridge the gap between the Presidency and the people. The object was to build trust. shorter terms talked casually and for some people talked was hokey; for others, however, it worked.
It would have been humanly impossible for Carter to have built trust in a very large number of Americans in one speech. It will take many years before Americans are able to trust a president. Gerald Ford, straight ahead, was the first president to believe the barrier that Nixon and Vietnam and other things have put between the White House and the rest of the country.
People have gotten into a habit of mistrusting and downgrading their leaders. They have gotten to finding all sorts of cracks in the image and dirt in the corners.
The public has grown to expect the bad and the selfish from politicians as a matter of course. Attempts by Congress to create new ethical standards are not taken seriously. The right-to-kill bill is big farce. Headlines on scandal in high places draw he's and hum's from just about
everyone. Politicians—and the U.S.
government—are only out to take us all for
all we're worth.
THE AVERAGE college student, weaned on Vietnam and nurtured on Watergate, finds it especially difficult to believe in anyone in power. He has been taught since the dawning of political awareness that politicians are a bunch of crooks whose motives are never as they appear to be. And he has learned the lesson well.
So well, indeed, that it is rare that he listens to a politician without waiting for a chance to loose a smart remark.
There is certainly a place in this society for a measure of healthy skepticism. And it certainly would be a bad thing if everyone was so respectful and trusting of their leaders that they frowned on satire and legitimate criticism. Our politicians and leaders are very human and very capable of evil.
BUT THEY can be—and this seems to be
torgoned sometimes—capable of good as
well.
Carter should continue to try to reach the people, regardless of how fruitless it may seem sometimes. And the people should give him a chance to succeed or fail before condemning him. Without at least some cooperation, a president is helpless.
Carter cannot even begin to fulfill any of the responsibilities he has undertaken as a publicist or as a thinker-publisher.
It's probably better to have believed and gotten screwed, than never to have believed at all.
WINDY WATER
WESTPHAL
WHATDAYA SAY WE JUST WALK?
TRY Snidly SARDINES
WESTPHAL
TRY Smidly SARDINES
WHATDAYA SAU WE JUST WALK?
Cold jokes lie in frozen state
Babv. it's cold outside
How cold is it? It's so cold that the newest drink sensation is antifreeze daiquiri.
How cold is it? It's so cold, that bun-warmers are now standard fare on every pair of Levi's.
Okay, so being cold isn't funny, and it hasn't been for some time now, if you get my (snow) drift.
'I c-can't remember w-w when it's been so — & 'i cuddle?' people blurt out as they hurry back inside, while the effects of the cold still anoint their frosthint features.
UPON HEARING this, others begin nodding their heads enthusiastically (perhaps they're shivering, too) and flip mental file cards to respond with a clever winter anecdote.
Cold weather makes even the most gregarious of people silent, recursive and surly. My
Weather, long the subject of the Johnny Carson joke routine, is not funny anymore. Never was it so been funny and so bum.
more ubiquitous than death or taxis (sic).
Suddenly, "winter's fricol"
has turned into "winter's warm-
weather famine." Weather
news has crowded out all other
PETER D. EASTMAN
the bus stop. But evidence of the cold on human behavior can be seen elsewhere. Bundles of unrecognizable humanity scurry silently across campus daily, their walks mimicking some early movie character's pantone.
Paul Jefferson
Editorial Writer
AND SNOW isn't funny anymore, either; 151 inches of it in some places—how funny is that? In fact, it's not even snow anymore. It doesn't have the unrecognizable hulks of blackish-grey matter that act like a second bulding seem
news in importance. It has put everyone in a state of suspended (read "frozen") animation. People are reluctant to leave the diminishing warmth of their homes, prisoners of ice, gauges and something called the wind-chill index.
IT'S MAKING us all older and more reflective. Already people are chronicing this season as the "Winter of 77," and equating it with the "Winter of 2015" because of feelings of mortality and helplessness, as the real "masters of the earth." Mother
Nature and her second husband, Old Man Winter, return to wreak their seasonal have on the creatures innumerable of all creatures.
In dealing with the unreasonably and unseasonally cold weather, government leaders are stymied. Any changes made will probably prove to be cosmetic.
PRESIDENT Carter put on some long underwear and toured a factory. Then he called an emergency session of Congress (maybe their hot air respirator) to respire from the freeze). Energy czar James Schlesinger mouthed the understatement of this still-your year, "I don't think the full seriousness of the cold weather) problem has sunk in. Well, that's because we only things sinking are temperatures and oil tankers.
from prolonged exposure to cold
in Ohio and New York.
reductions of a second Ice Age
will again more credence
every day.
PEOPLE in Ohio have gone back to praying for relief from the weather. It has restored the primal forces within us, returned us to the age of primates, when then-modern man had to use a basic means to fight the freeze.
The weather is currently a form of capital punishment that isn't affected by legislative changes. The court already 45 people have died
Even today, Man has his hands full (of snow) in trying to deal with the weather, to tame it and mold it as best as his hands can, but people are still freezing But people are still freezing their oranges off in Florida.
There is no doubt that the groundshog (and his shadow), in a display of common sense heretofore reserved for Christmas, was Wednesday. It's going to take more than just one day (and a perpetually cold one at that) in his honor to bring him out in weather until for men, beasts or cats, at least for another six weeks.
Seven-week drop time opposed
Letters
To the editor:
As a representative from the junior class to the College Assembly of Liberal Arts and Sciences, I am taking this opportunity to inform other LA&S students and representatives why I feel the proposed new curriculum will prove I encourage all students interested in this matter to contact their representatives,
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and if they feel capable of spending one or two hours every month in discussing issues such as this one, to run for one of the 117 Assembly seats to be filled in the coming elections (the filing deadline is Friday, Feb. 11).
The present drop policy, which allows a student to drop with a "w" until the 12th week of classes, has come under fire and faculty alike for its leniency. Unfortunately, the proposed policy, restricting withdrawals to the first seven weeks, is too extreme a remedy, considering that most students have little or no indication as to how they are doing until after midterms are graded. The proposed policy allows no input at all from an instructor, nor can students submit PROMPT review of withdrawal petitions. At the last Assembly meeting, the faculty members present tried to ignore these objections by implementing the yearlong proposal defeated only by the lack of a quorum.
I fail to see how an undesirable policy is made less objectionable when made temporary. Unless students act to protect their interests, must be taken seriously, so be passed at the next Assembly meeting. Therefore, I plan to introduce a compromise policy at the February meeting, one which would allow dropping with a 'W' through the seventh week (left up to the instructor) through the 10th week, and with a 'W' only for vital personal
reasons for the rest of the semester.
I urge all student representatives to fulfill their responsibilities and show up at the next Assembly meeting. I also hope that all who are interested in this issue—which affects all LA&S students either directly—to contact either my sister or their other representatives to the Assembly.
We should not have to rely on other members being absent from meetings as the only way to interest the interests of our fellow students.
To the editor:
In the past few weeks, I have heard about all the practical reasons for discontinuing use of the campus horn. What I haven't heard is the horn, and neither have my professors.
It seems that every instructor has a watch, and just as miraculously, they are all correct. This is fine and dandy except that according to my history professor's "correct" watch, class ends at 1:35, and according to my English teacher's "correct" watch, class starts at 1:37. Even Laverne Smith can't get from Learned to Wescos in two minutes.
Since I never have had any classes in Flint Hall, I don't know what it's like to be "blow out of my chair." I DO know how the horn affected the campus as a whole.
Although the fact that my grandfather set his watch to the horn when he was a student is irrelevant, tradition often is
It served as an alarm clock for mappers, a timekeeper for bus drivers, and more importantly, it was an excellent way to keep 22,000 students and instructors on time.
1
replaced by practicality. In this case tradition IS practicality.
The great horn debate brings to mind some great lyrics:
Does anybody really know what time it is?
Does anybody really care?
I'm beginning to wonder.
Omaha freshman
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 16th, 2018. Subject matter includes July and June excursion Saturday, Sunday and Holiday weekend and July expiration Saturday, Sunday and Holiday weekend. Subscriptions by mail are $ a member or $18 year outside the country. Student subscriptions are not eligible to be sent outside the country. Student subscriptions are not eligible to be sent outside the country.
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1
Fridav. February 4.1977.
K?
nure to cold New York.
and Ice Age credence
have gone relief from restored the within us, e age of en-modern c means to
1 has his in trying to t, to tame it will as his will allow. will freezing Florida.
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ility. In this
practicality.
bear brings
lyrics:
really know
Hot and cold room issue mixed
sally care?
wonder.
el Griffith
a freshman
By STEPHEN HESSE
Staff Reporter
Some University of Kansas faculty and staff members think some buildings are too old to be used.
Buildings and grounds personnel, who are responsible for the raising or lowering of water supply equipment to maintain an overall building temperature of 68 degrees, Rodger Oreke, director of buildings, Rockefeller University.
For the temperature to be raised or lowered, a letter must be submitted to Max Lucas, director of facilities planning, or Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, he said.
William Blue, associate chairman of the department of Spanish and Portuguese, be said thought no person could do much to change building temperatures.
"There's little that anyone can do," he said. "It's a hassle to get the buildings and grounds people over to Wescoe simply for a temperature change."
Carol Leffler, language translator clerk for the department of Spanish and Portuguese, said she thought different offices' resources needed to be heated differently.
"There is one thermostat controlling four or five offices, and offices with more than three offices."
Leffler said the office door to her
Wesco office was 10 degrees nother than
the room.
The "rooms downstairs are especially cool" she said. The temperature ranges and humidity vary.
"I think they ought to fix the temperature
Thermostats to stay at 68 for research
Campus thermostats won't be turned down to 65 degrees, as requested by President Jimmy Carter, because the lower temperatures might interfere with scientific research. Max Lucas, University of Kansas facilities planning director, said this week.
According to the KU energy policy, KU thermostats are set at 68 degrees from Oct. 15 to April 15. Carter, in connection with his proposed emergency energy legislation, has asked the nation to conserve fuel by learning to live with 65-degree temperatures
But Carter's request won't be a reality at KU, Lucas said, "unless there is a national mandate to go to 65 degrees. The change would be difficult and could affect our academic research."
Temperature reductions couldn't be made only in selected buildings, because according to Lucas, buildings and grounds require them and balance the entire KU heating system.
THE REDUCED temperatures, he said, could kill animals used in scientific experiments.
Lucas said he had discussed the effects of Carter's energy proposal on KU with Del Meyer. Mr. Oroke, director of facilities operations for the department of buildings
"We decided going to 65 would be a major undertaking," Lucas said. "Coot isn't a woman."
Oroke said that some colleges had converted their heating and cooling systems to electric.
"THE ULTIMATE system, of course, would be if we were equipped with central control," he said, "so that we could make momentary in buildings in building temperatures from a central, environmental location.
"That would require improvement in our building controls, monitoring system and related equipment. Also, this would allow us to move the buildings even within building location from a single point."
Carter's propasal calls for deregulation of natural gas shipped interstate and probably would increase prices on gas sold only in Kansas. Lucas said that because the gas is intrastate, the price increase could significantly affect this year's fuel budget.
"WE ALREADY have an inflation factor programmed into the fuel budget," he said. "But if gas prices would rise rapidly, we would not." He understands and understand and give us more money."
KU's energy shortage contingency plan wouldn't be affected by the Carter legislation, Lucas said. The contingency plan outlines procedures that would be taken if a severe energy shortage arose at the University.
control system at Wesco. But even though
they were heavily beaten overall, our
office is well-held.
KU has prepared for natural gas shortages by relying on fuel oil as a reserve fuel source. The reason is that you get a 40- to 90-percent supply of oil and that the emergency) plan is just if the worst happens."
George Byers, professor of entomology,
said the temperature in his office in Snow
Hall fell to 54 degrees and rose to 88
degrees.
The contingency plan is divided into three stages. If prolonged sub-zero temperatures should occur, one stage calls for temporarily closing the University.
"Carter's deregulation, as I understand him," said oil it wouldn't affect the plan." Legacy.
"Snow Hall has a more antique heating system than most KU buildings," he said. "The problem here is that the heating and cooling are no relationship to outside temperatures.
He said, however, that KU's intersession program might have to be modified during an energy shortage. An intersession month and a second month to discuss possible modifications.
KU was heated by steam heat before 1960, when it converted to forced-air heat. Temperatures tend to be more uniform in a system than under a steam system. Orose said.
"The heating is arbitrarily turned on and off at various times. Therefore, we may get heat on hot days and air conditioning on cold days."
"Generally, I have no complaints," Byers said. "I think the system we have now is pretty good, and I hope the buildings and grounds people will continue to be prompt aware of ridiculously high or low temperatures.
Dan Richardson, associate dean of the School of Education, said Bailey Hall's heating problems were because of construction work last summer.
"When I'm not happy, I complain and somebody does something."
"As of early spring, the pipes for the "heating and air-conditioning systems had been completed," Richardson explained. "There was accurate regulating of the water cooling of Halley, although there were inconveniences during construction."
"Then an elevator shaft was put in, and the construction company had to cut through the wall. We've had a lot of cold air coming into the building since then."
"When the ceilings were ripped out this summer, some of the instructors suffered intolerable temperatures," Richardson said.
Richardson said he thought heating problems were because of construction, not insulation.
Bailey Hall operates on a forced-air system that enables heat to flow through a register while hot water flows through the pipes, Richardson said.
"When they changed to air conditioning, we went on central temperature control, which we didn't need," she said. "Both systems are functional here." The temperature is more comfortable afterward.
"The temperature fluctuates throughout Bailey," he said, "but if office doors are closed, the people in these offices can be comfortable.
"I believe that the heating system here is more efficient than we've had in years."
Burdick named to head division
Robert Burdick, managing editor of the Coffeeville Journal, yesterday was named director of KU's Division of Information. He will begin his job March 1.
Burdick, 29, replaces Larry Knupp, who resigned Tuesday to become editor and head of the company.
Burdick received a B.S. in journalism from KU in 1969. Before he accepted the Coffeyville position in December 1974, he worked four years at the Kansas City Times and make-up editor and about two years as a make-up editor for the Detroit News.
University Daily Kansan
Sunlight, gas lights topics of proposed House bills
By STEVE FRAZIER
Staff Renorter
TOPEKA-A - House bill affirming property owners' rights to sunlight for solar energy and a bill prohibiting natural gas-powered yard lights were praised Wednesday.
The sunlight rights bill, written by State Rep. Jack Rodrock, D-Leo, set guidelines for property who apply for guarantees that unobstructed sunlight reach their solar collection panels. The panel would call on an easement, would mean that an attorney could wouldn't erect a building that kept sunlight from reaching a neighbor's solar panels.
STATE REP. Anita Niles, D-Lebo, researched by the Kansas Corporation Commission indicated that her proposal to ban decorative gas lamps in Kansas would save enough natural gas to heat 16,000 Kansas homes.
Moe Ryan, an assistant to Rodrock, based the solar easement proposal was based on the common-law right to air and light. Without an easement, he said, a property guard against sunlight interference caused by construction on adjoining property.
Owners of solar-powered buildings have received solar ewaters under common law, Ryan said, but Rodrick's bill would set up legal guidelines for owners and the courts.
THE SOLAR easement bill includes requirements that the person applying for the easement specify the angle at which
sunlight would reach his solar panels. Another section of the bill provides for compensation to the property owner if his solar eassert right is violated.
Ryan said Rodrock's bill would probably be debated on the House floor early next month, so we seem to be little controversy over the bill. Rodrick, who said "should飞 right through."
Niles wrote her bill to prohibit decorative gas lamps because, she said, "we're entering a period when we'll need to look at all wasteful uses of gas.
I DON'T expect people to take kindly to my bill. It will probably bring out the beast in me.
Most gas yard lights are used only for decoration, Niles said. Those who think they need the light for security, she said, should keep them on all day and usually aren't left on all day as gas lamps are.
William Salome, vice president and general manager of Kansas Public Service Corp., estimated that 120 lights used about 12,000 cubic feet of gas each year. Based upon these figures, more than 200,000 yard lights would have to be installed to meet the Niles projected would benefit from her efforts.
An average gas-heated home in Lawrence uses about 160,000 cubic feet of gas a year.
He said the Gas Service company quit selling gas yard lights two years ago as a business. However, he said customers who thought security at night still asked for the lights.
Notice to All Organizations
WISHING TO APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE STUDENT SENATE/STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE:
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, Level 3.
These requests must be completed and returned to the Senate office NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 28,1976.
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS
WORK FOR
YOU
HATTON W. SUMNERS SCHOLARSHIPS IN LAW
Southern Methodist University School of Law
Stipend
A Summers Scholarship provides a stipend in excess of $5,000 a year. It covers full tuition and fees, room and board in Lawyers Inn, and an amount for books and personal expenses. The Summers Scholar is also reimbursed at not more than the jet coach rate for his actual travel expenses to Dallas in the fall and to his home at the end of the academic year. The Scholarship is awarded initially for one year and is renewable for the second and third years of study, provided the Scholar remains in the upper third of his class and meets the other requirements of the program.
Purpose
The Sumners Scholarships are designed to aid young men and women who exhibit promise of becoming lawyers in the great American tradition of public and community service.
In addition to the rigorous legal education which the Scholars pursue, they participate in special seminars intended to develop capacity for leadership and responsibility. They are afforded unusual opportunities to meet leading members of the legal profession and other persons active in public life. Each Scholar is assigned a sponsor who is either a practicing lawyer or a judge.
Qualifications
An applicant for a Sumners Scholarship must:
1. Be a permanent resident of, or attend a college or university in, one of the following states: Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, Missouri, New Mexico, Oklahoma or Texas.
2. Rank in the upper twenty-five percent of his graduating class.
3. Be a citizen of the United States.
4. Take the Law School Admission Test administered by the Educational Testing Service, Princeton, New Jersey, not later than December preceding the expected date of entry into the Law School.
Applications due Feb. 7, 1977
Requests for additional information and application forms should be addressed to:
Summers Scholarship Committee
School of Law
Southern Methodist University
Dallas, Texas 75275
6
Friday, February 4, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Kansas City promoters steal the show from KU
By BILL UYEKI Entertainment Editor
One often hears these days that the era of the big rock concert is gone. The youth of 1977, some claim, aren't attracted to the sharing shows as were the youth of the late. 60%
To some extent, that's true. Booking rock concerts has become a big business. But the whole spectacle of seeing a live performance by one's favorite group through a veil of marijuana smoke remains widely popular—despite rising ticket prices and a surging discount. Fad. One only need look to recent Kansas City concertes for proof.
As one observer noted, "The age of rock music as an instrument of social and political change is gone. The music as an art form will always remain, yet the massive concert symbolizing radical change no longer exists as it did in the late '80s."
The Paul McCattney and Wings show had to be the top Kansas City concert of 1976. Not only did the 18,000 seats in Kemper Arena sell out, but the tickets were sold out and no more would be given to the summer's, the outdoor shows at the Truman Sports Complex have been most successful.
And more recently, concerts featuring tird the Eagles, then Linda Rondeau, both first.
This is fine for Kansas Citians, but for the avid concert-goer in Lawrence, the situation this school year has been hardly satisfactory.
Last fall marked probably the worst concert season for KU, not in terms of quantity, but quality. Sure, there were lots of concerts—five rock concerts and two pop concerts. But most were tasteless, decibel blow-outs with little to offer artistically or aesthetically.
The Leon Russell show proved how bad the sound in Allen Field House could be, while also proving that Russell wasn't the top draw he was once. Jimmie Spheeris still seemed to have a notable follow, but neither Lynard Skyrn nor Heart provided enough artistry to appeal to sophisticated Lawrence tastes.
In fact, the last three shows mentioned were hardly KU concerts. They were booked by a Kansas City promoter, who was not sure to fill at least half the concert hall's seats.
much of a success. Like most KU homecoming shows, the music catered to middle-of-the road listeners. Sedaka sold enough field house seats for SUA to make a profit and provided a glistening performance for his fans.
Only Neil Sedaka at homecoming seemed
Two jazz concerts, one sponsored by SUA and the other by an outside promoter, will be presented on Tuesday.
Intermission
success the year before, lost $1,000 last fall.
And a larger crowd shows up for a psychology lecture than the crow that saw
the Paul Consort in Hoch Auditorium.
Many dischented students who look for someone to blame point to SUA. They shouldn't. Under its present structure, the SUA staff is severely limited when it must compete with local promoters in the doge-dog business of concert promotion.
The familiar stereotype of the business or advertising executive, with a phone in each ear and two secretaries at his side eight hours a day, represents today's rock concert promoter. His concerns for a single concert are many—guaranteed base pay, sound systems, lighting systems, security, transportation and transportation are just a few.
When a group occupies to tour a certain area, promoters in that area are at each others' throats, each making offers to the group's agent over the phone. Often, with less than 2 minutes of notice, a promoter must up with thousands of people to a concert hall to schedule the group.
But the SUA Special Events Committee, which handles KU concerts, isn't set up for that kind of work. The SUA Special Events Committee chairman, says that as a part of the University, the committee must follow certain procedures to ensure approval comes too late.
"One of our problems is that we have certain bureaucratic steps to go through," Mason says. "We have to go to the Events Committee to get funds approved. Chris Fritz (one of two large Kansas City stormers) name us to do that."
In fact, Mason said, agents for Jethro Tull bypassed KIL because funds couldn't be found.
Speaking of bureaucratic channels, TI'll never forget that infamous incident about three years ago, when the then half-healthy and un-Chered Allman Brothers Band offered to play at KU. They were refused because their playing showed date fell into two weeks of a scheduled concert with the Miracles, without Smokey Robinson.
A Special Committee member, managing dealing with the "Ormond Brothers", it is said.
"The biggest misconception is that students believe we can bring in any act at any given time," Mason says. He noted the proficiency of Kansas City promoters, who simply outclass the Special Events Committee. From Jan. 1 to Feb. 15, there were nine shows scheduled in just six weeks in Kansas City.
Another factor affecting the Special Events Committee is that it supposedly should make revenue to finance other SUA programs. Mason said that had Leon and SUA combined, it would totally booked by SUA, there may not have been any film series this semester.
SUA's recourse, then, is to bring in outside promoters and supply the facilities, technical crews and ushers.
"We have to break even," says Mason.
Using outside promoters guarantees us of
housing.
To improve the situation, Mason says he hopes to collect enough revenue from externally-promoted shows to allow SUA to book more artistic and less commercial
This resulted in last fall's offering of more commercial and popular groups like Heart, Lynyd and Skynyrd - fine groups, but not all of them. You see in an academic environment like KU
Such acts have appeared at KU in the past—acts like Herbie Mann, the Mahavishna Orchestra, Weather Report, Makshima Band, Ratt, Jackson Browne and Phoebe Snow.
In the meantime, KU students should keep their eyes open for好 live music around Lawrence—it's often cheaper than the concerts on the hill. Also, there have been several Kansas City concerts which were worth the drive.
THE FABRIKELS
The final option would be to save your money. It's becoming more and more expensive.
Arts & Leisure
Old Times allows imagination
BY JULIE LENAILAN
Boulder
Reviewer
Sofa chat
Holding true to the noted playwriting style of Harold Pinter, "Old Times" gave the opening night audience a taste of bizarre contemporary drama in William Inge These.
Pinter's "Old Times," like his "The Homecoming," was successful as a play. But "Old Times'" lacks conformity with most of the conventional critical measurements. As a matter of certain element of the play is that it has three characters.
The cast of "Old Times," reminisces about events in London 20 years removed. From left are Bruce Jones, Topakia graduate
Almost nothing else about the play is definite on the surface. But the uncertainty works well
On Stage
for the play, allowing ample imagination and pre-calculated soul-searching on the viewer's behalf.
Set in a remodeled country farmhouse near London, the play opens as Kate, played by Barbara Rogers, Albany, N.C., to her brother Daniel, to her husband Deeley, played by Bruce Jones, Topeka graduate student. Kate and Deeley discuss Kate's friend and former roommate, Anna, whose French Louis senior, who has come to visit her "closest and dearest friend Kate" after 20 years. The reunion inevitably results in much reminiscent of old times, each character, including different version of the past.
The characters do a fine job of communicating the erratic tone of the play; bullying up to the conflicts and sauntering around it. r he rearse d colloquialisms with politeness and wit.
Rogers is a sly, subdued,
whimsical and dreamy-eyed
Kate. Kate is a fine arts consoieur, reveling in the theatres,
student; Catherine Rogers, Albany, N.Y. graduate student, and Joy Gaffey, St. Louis senior.
museums and concerts. Rogers does an exceptional job rebounding from the demure, mousy woman she appears as in *The Chronicles of Narnia*-spirited woman she is in one segment of the second half.
Guffey maintains a degree of cool assuredness and sophistication throughout the play, adjusting accordingly to the stage and other characters. Guffey's characterization is commendable, but obviously not as demanding as Rogers'.
Jones does a good job of rounding out the confusing trio. Spinning tales of lustful adventures, he antagonizes, sings with Anna in musical comedy style and playfully harasses his companions. Deeley, however, has always weaker character of the play.
Directed by Paul Gaffney, associate instructor in theatre, "Old Times" sports an impressive use of extended silences and sporadic pauses, pauses that Pinter purposely wrote into the play.
Serving at times as transitions, the silences seem to freeze the present action and move on to a new point in the play. At other times, however, the pauses are interspersed just when the action seems to be mounting. These pauses create the effective presentation.
Sets for the play are minimal, including only a black backdrop, matching sofa set and table. The sets and the play action take an opposite twist in the second half of the struggle into the struggle for possession of the whimsical Kate.
Pinter's "Old Times" is the first of the second semester offerings in the ILP theatre *The Inventor*, a work tonight through February 12.
Marquise of 0 premiere promises an altered tale
By CHUCK SACK
Reviewer
**Review**
"The Marshals of O ..."
begins with a local journal notice as bizarre as anything you might read in the columns of today's sexually-iliberated underground newspapers:
The undersigned declares that, without her knowing how, she became pregnant. The father of the child is being asked to come to school. We have, for family reasons, decided to marry him.
The Marquise (Edith Clever) is a virtuous widow who lives with her parents, brother and her two children in northern Italy during the Napoleonic Wars. Her father (Peter Luden) made of the M-*, which he invaded by Russian troops.
The events of Heinrich von Kleis's story, which premieres in the Midwest this weekend, have been adapted faithfully in his novel *Kleis*, and the Marquis is rescued from an attempted gang rape by a Russian count (Bruno Ganz), who carries her safely to her father's castle, where she is kidnapped by Albert's surrender, the Count reappears and asks for the Marquis's hand in marriage. First, social honor and then the unusual pregnancy impel his requests, and the Marquis places her in and adopts the paper.
Director Eric Hohner has written a book of "The Marquee of O . . ." but he has made major contributions to the world of Kleist. His wickedly clever novella concentrates on idiotic positions that the family's search for honor places them in history, architecture. Archy funny twins in the plot are the vehicles by which we examine the 19-code.
social customs. In films such as "Claire's Knee," "My Night at the Nightclub," and "Afternoon" he has dealt with characters torn between sexual passion and more moral reason. So he will never choose whom to choose film the lusty Kleist?
The closest Rohmer comes to answering that question is in the last third of the film. "It is not a question of feeling," declares
The Cinema
he heroine, "but of logical leduction."
There is such a character in "The Marquise of O . . ." but this time there are two differences. First, the Jean-Claude Briali, Jean-Louis Tritignant阻击,在 last three films all resisted the woman's advances. Here, the man succumbs. Second, the three previous films were all told from the man's side, in which he is the woman, the Marquise, who is the center of attention.
When the noblewoman protests her innocence, she is subjected to the accusations of her family, tormented by the girl who caused her marriage and slaughtered by the local gossips. She is cast out of her own home by her aristocratic parents, but in a town where she is advised by a midwife to ignore everything but the child.
The shifts in theme in Rohmer's version will not upset them much, because they embellish rather than supplant the originals. Yet over with themes and actions change is a marked change in tone.
point of being held immobile by their sense of what is proper. The author can be misled while posing gracefully and capturing the aristocratic character of the realism prose of this period (the father's anguish is a prime example), also display a cool and peculiar relic to Herron's work.
In the case of the characters, characters are vibrant, despite their shortcomings, but with Rohmer the main figures at play.
Finally, since the change in media dictates that many of Kleist's plot twists be toned down to a dramatically "flat" in places. Because the director is so adept at revealing his characters' personalities, he less and less and less important. The problem is that if you already know the plot, you run the risk of robbing the of Rohmer's achievements.
With the plot becoming increasingly transparent, Robher delves further and further into his characters, often in darker ways. Even after the Marquise again confronts her parents and the father's identity is obvious, Robher is getting portrayals from his aeors that are more intense than the scenes Kleist wrote.
When the Marquise is married and finally reconciled to her husband, the handling of his relationship achieves all the power that Kleist gave in his prose. What he has lost in irony and drama is a legacy of his resuscitated by Rohner's compassion and sure sene of psychology.
Even if you are enchanted with the original, there is still much to admire in the adaptations of Kleist's first settings and Nestor Almendros' beautiful camerawork. If you have never read the original, the first and only setting will be dual-screened by Kleist's descriptions. But if your are overly enamored of the sharp wilt of the prose, be prepared for a challenge at the theatre. Kleist knows you can't please everyone.
Courtship with Emmy Lou over
Bv TIM BRADLEY
Reviewer
most journalism course preach objectivity as a cardinal virtue, while many media theorists point out that pure objectivity is impossible. Let me begin this review by confessing my bias. You see, I'm Harris. I get a bad case of the slack-jawed feebles every time I hear her voice.
Because she is able to strike a subtle balance between vulnerability and assertion, and because of the emotional pain she causes in her songs, Harris could make a corpse tangle with the excitement of secrets revealed and experiences shared. When she sings a and song, I cry; when she sings me get my stempin and rinnin".
That is, till now. With Emmy Lou's latest vinyl visitation, "Luxury Liner," the ship hits the sand.
It's difficult to say exactly what went wrong. Harris is no novice. You can find her second-voicing on albums by Gram Parsons, Linda Ronstadt, Bob Dylan, Herb Pedersen, and
Riffs
Sky" and "Elite Hotel" on the Reprise label, are tasty little devils. These two were eminently satisfying because of the tenderness Harris was able to convey, and like any good album, its soulful album lyrics were sweetly sentimental and delivered as such.
The next two, "Pieces of the
The Hot Band, which backs the singer, is made up of crackerjack session players and various add-ons who definitely have their country licks down. With the exception of Mike Auldridge and country wizard JD Parton, the personnel and producers are the same on the previous two disks.
even Mary Kay Place, whom you may know as Loretta Strohker, a fourth album as leader. The first album, on the Jubilee label, is impossible to find, and I would admit to owning herself would admit to owning it.
So what went wrong? It sounds as if Emmy Lou is tired
of the biz, and the Hot Band is cooling off. Drummer John Ware sounds at times as if someone at the last minute handed him bananas instead of ice cream. The harmonica would be more at home in a dog food commercial than it is on this record. In most places, the backing vocals are adequate at beat, and the production quality is very low, without punch or presence.
The country licks the rest of the players are so good at are so cliched that they actually imitate them. The album, Guitarist Alber Lee and pedal steel player Hank DeVito, play very well, but they inspire inspiration. They have the feathers, but not the flight.
And if some of the lyrics were horses, you'd have to shoot them, they're so lame. The formula that worked so well before just doesn't make it this hard. The tempo tunes lack excitement and are so static that neither singer nor listener is moved to anything but yawns. In spots, Emmy Lou's voice sounds raw and
The album is not without some good moments. "Making Believe" and "When I Stop Dreaming" (by the famous Louvin Brothers) are tochy ballads that can mist the eye and warm the heart if the album has been too much. Chuck Berry's "Cest La Vie" is the only cheerful earl in the bunch.
barsh, and without the emotional support needed to keep "Luxury Liner" afloat.
It's saddening to exorcize the work of a favorite performer like this. It's impossible for the listener and reviewer to know what has happened and frustrations that went into the creation of this album.
But to fall back on this would be to cop a grievous out. I didn't like the album because of its lack of direction or sparkle. The band will be better, and Emmy Larkin has played a singer I'd most like to take a nap with on the basis of voice alone.
The moods and health of the performers, human relations in the studio, travel fatigue—all we have an effect on performers.
Weekend
Highlights
Nightelubs
Saxophonist GARY FOSTER and trumpeter BOBBY SHEW, two members of the Toshiko Akiyoshi-Lew Tabackin Big Band, play two shows tonight at Paul Gray's Jazz Place. The first show is from 6:30 to 8:30, the second show is from 9 to 10.
THE RIVER CITY JAZZ BAND plays from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at Paul Grav's.
FORT DODGE, a Kansas City city rock band playing from 9 to 10 AM. Visit Wall Hall. FROG tomorrow. Night at HALL. FROG plays from 9 to midnight.
GREG E. PROOPER R.
playing from 11 to 2 touches.
Spirit: MILLIONAIRE AT
midnight at the Opera House.
Concerts
ELECTRIC LIGHT OR CHESTRA-8 tonight Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City, Mo.
COUNTRY HEIR, a local
rock band, plays a benefit concert tonight for Kappa Sigma fraternity at Baker attending a 8 in Rice Auditorium.
PAUL WINTER CONSORT—
8 tonight, McCain Auditorium,
Manhattan
GENESIS—7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Municipal
Auditorium, Kansas City, Mo.
BENNY GOODMAN—8 p.m.
Safurday, Music Hall, Kansas
City, Mo.
Exhibits
NANCY HAUSER DANCE COMPANY - 8 p.m., Sunday, White Concert Hall, Washburn University, Topeka.
LAWRENCE ART CENTER
Two graduate students are new this week. Richard Bird shows his work on *Anima*. Kapuan shows ceramics.
LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIE-
BRARY—New February exhibi-
tions; paintings; Will Orvelad;
wooden works; Byron Sneegas,
powder and silverwork; and
Cramer paintings and prints.
Recitals
WATSON LIBRARY-"Women's Studies" in the foyer.
Theater
ROBERT GLASGOW, profs or music from the University of Michigan, will present an exhibition of light in Swarthout Recital Hall.
DANCE AND MIME IMPROVISATIONS with Mary Fulkerson, senior lecturer at Law University, Devon, England, and the MOvement CENTER WORKSHOP, resident dance and mime company of the Lawward Arts Center. 8 tonight.
Y
ill
"THE ORPHANS." 8 tonight through Feb. 26, Missouri Reporter Theatre, UMKC, Kansas City, Mo.
"THE MARVELOUS ADVENTURES OF TYL," KU Theatre for Young People, 2
Saturday, University Theatre.
'THE GLASS MENAG-
ER' through Feb. 26, alternating
with 'The Orphans,' Missouri
Reporter Theatre, Kansas
"Malo opera b Univers premier High Sc
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The o people, Kansas
"FACULTY FOLLIES," the
sixth annual School of Fine Arts
revue, 3:30 p.m., Sunday,
Swarthwout.
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The professor John Clit the Coroner of concerts each week.
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Books
HIGHLAND FIRE, by Abigail Clements (Gold Medal, $1.50)—One of those charmers who will join you in job with a mysterious man, in this case one who lives in isolation in the Highlands of Scotland. Our sweet young thing that she's a target for murder.
THE SEA-KING'S DAGGERER by Barbara K. Hansen Suspense in the isles of Greece, dealing with young Sandy Bishop and a treasure-hunting explorer, in all kinds of accidents begin to be placed. Michaelis is the place of the best' in the Gothic field.
Friday, February 4, 1977
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Young people's opera illustrates, calms fears
"Malaobyole and the Fear Monster," an opera by two Lawrence residents, one a University of Kansas professor, will be held at 9 p.m. Sunday at South Junior High School.
the opera, written by John Pordro,
professor of music and composition,
and John Clifford, 801 Mississippi St., is of the Concerts for Young People, Inc., a nonprofit organization that offers three opportunities of Lawrence for young audiences each year.
The opera, written especially for young people, is the first opera to be funded by a major donor.
According to Podzro, who composed the musical score, Concerts for Young People, inc. has previously used only translated, over original, operas.
Pordro and Clifford said they thought the opera would appeal to both children and adults.
"Children must be out of the nursery school to really enjoy the opera," said acid.
Pordro added, "If an adult is willing to save his carpenterate at home for a day, he will need to be very careful."
ACCORDING TO Clifford, the author of the drama, the opera is a double story about an angel who thinks be is human and a girl obsessed with fears.
Clifford and Pozdro the opera was as sophisticated as any written for an older
However, Podzro said the music was fairly simple, accompanied only by piano. "OPERA IS just music adding extra dimension to word," he said.
Clifford called the opera a community and University project because it involved
Clifford, a vice president for writing services at Centron Corporation and the author of more than 100 short films, plays and feature films, has previously received awards at the American Film Festival and the Columbus Film Festival.
Penglyang Baldwin, the stage director of "Malooley," founded the Hashinger Hall Theatre and has acted on and off Broadway and on television.
rozor, who has won 11 consecutive American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers awards and has solo sonata at Washington's John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
Lynn Shornick, music director, has been a leader of the University Soundboard Orchestra.
The cast includes Molly Soward Chabalowski, the Eliseen, the brightened little
Accent the ARTS
girl; Antonio Perez, assistant professor of music, as the fear monster; Thomas Harper, Oklahoma City graduate student, as Maloleo, an angel; Marilyn Michels, independence teacher, graduate student, as化学教师; John Lata, chemistry lecturer, as the doctor.
Pordio and Cliffard said they might collaborate on another project if this was a case.
Success is measured by audience response, they said. If the noise level is high and the audience laughs in the right places, Clifford and Fordro said, they would know the two years they spent writing the production were worthwhile.
Tickets, $1 for children and $1.50 for adults, are on sale at Dillons, Rusty's IGA and at the door, for the performance Sunday and a later performance Feb. 13 at 2 p.m.
Our teachers deadline has been extended to Mon. Feb. 7th!
ACCENT THE ARTS
Pick up your Course Description Form today and turn it in by Monday at the SUA office.
Anyone interested in working on publicity/promotion of
We still need teachers for many courses from bike repair to karate!
contact the SUA office 864-3477
'Boozer' works will be featured
SHARE WHAT YOU KNOW!
What Luck!
One of the men, Michael Hickam, will appear in Douglas County Court Feb. 7 for his hearing on the first break in. and Peter Gilliam, will appear Feb. 9, court officials said.
FreeUniversity
Two men arrested Saturday night in connection with the burglary of Gibson's Discount Center are still being held in the boulevard where two bombs of $20,000 each, according to police.
Complaints against the men for the burglaries, assaults and official inquiries, attorney's office.
Both men will appear in court next week for a preliminary hearing on an earlier case, Glennsons.
Two men held in county jail
The Sixth Annual Faculty Folles of the KU School of Fine Arts will be Sunday at 3:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
Faculty Follies, a musical lampoon, is sponsored annually by Pi Kappa Lambda, the national music honor society, to raise awareness of scholarships to outstanding music students at KU.
Tickets, which cost $1, can be bought from the faculty members and will be sold at the rate.
This year the KU music faculty will host a concert by American composer John Phillip Bozer.
V
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SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
- 4 Days Lifts - 4 Nights Lodging - 4 Days Ski Rental Round Trip Chartered Bus Transportation
5 Day Package includes: March 13-20 $166.00
4 Day Package includes: March 13-19 $137.00
Extra day skiing...Discounts for own equipment/own transportation
Deadline Feb. 4 That's Today!
Round Trip Chartered Bus Transportation
Options on both trips available
For more info. call Sua office 864-3477
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Friday February 4,1977
University Daily Kansan
KU gymnastics competition begins to roll in Robinson
So far this season there hasn't been much gymnastics competition at the University of Kansas. The only event held at KU was a women's meet Dec. 3.
But gymnastics will return to KU this weekend in a big way. The women's team has two meets scheduled in Robinson Gymnasium, and the men's team has one.
The women will start the competition with a meet against Emporia Kansas State College at 7 tonight. Tomorrow the women will meet Grand View College at 1 p.m., followed by the men who will meet Central Missouri State University about 3 p.m.
KU women's coach Ken Snow said he would enter a full team today and lack one routine Saturday, but would be weak on the uneven barrel bars.
"THE EMPORIA meet should be fairly competitive," he said yesterday. "We're not so strong that we're going to walk away from them."
While Snow is confident that the Jayhawks can beat Emporia, he is just as confident that Grand View will beat the Jayhawks.
"Grand View is super," he said. "They may be better than they were earlier in the season when they were ranked eight in the nation."
Tennis team opens season
Kansas will begin its indoor tennis season at 6:30 on闹 night with a match against Tulsa on Friday.
The Jayhawks will conclude their first
weekend of activity with a p.m. match
at home.
KU returned six lettermen from last year's squad, which placed fourth in the Big Eight with a 15-14 record. Coach Kirkland Gates said these lettermen plus two new squad members should give the team better depth than it had last year.
"I THINK from an overall standpoint we'll be a much better team," Gates said. "Last year, we were strong at the top, but had little depth down the line. This year, we're still strong at our top positions, and I have considerably at our overall depth has improved considerably."
Leading the Hawks for the third straight year will be senior captain Bill Clarke. Playing number one singles last year, Clarke established a 24-5 record and finished second in the Big Eight championships.
Also back from last year is sophomore Mark Hosking, Hosking, who won the No. 3 singles title in the conference last year, will be playing in the No. 2 lot this year.
THE BATTLE for the third spot on the six-man team is still undecided.
"I'd be disappointed if we don't improve in last year's finishes," Gates said. "We'll be very impressed if you can pick one. I don't think you can pick up as one of the conference favorites, but I think we need to win."
"Our matches this weekend should give us a pretty good idea of how good we will be,"."
Was quick to ask to add, though, that Kansas should look good against Grand View, and said that Karen Mundy, an all-age assistant coach, could connect onto the ranked team.
"IM LOOKING for a competitive meet Friday night," Snow said, "and Saturday, Grand View will throw some Olympic caliber routines. It'll be an exciting meet to watch, and the balance beam will be especially excellent."
The men's gymnastics team will be looking for its second dual meet win of the season when the 'Hawks meet Central Missouri State.
KU men's coach Bob Lockwood also is looking for a competitive meet but said that
CMSU was having some injury problems this season. He also said that Central Missouri was been the Western Illinois team for most of his time, but western IllinoisIllinois Illinois, 185, 81-182, 125.
LOCKWOOD SAID all-around Jody Summers would work all six events tomorrow, having recovered from a hip injury. Another KU all-around, Mike said, during the meet, Lockwood said, as freshman Chris Cohen, who will work three events.
"We'll be in the best condition we've been in all year," he said. "It should be an enhancement, but if it does, the Grand team must endure our after it. And I will be over in time for the basketball game."
DRINKS
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*Our new music mix provides a blend of light jazz, with some rock. The unique sound system produces a loud enough level for dancing, and a soft but audible volume for conversation.
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S
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A National Lampoon special edition. All new material. $2.50 at your newstand or bookstore. Deluxe edition, $2.95. Or send check or money order to: The National Lampoon, 635 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022
Kappa Sigma Benefit Concert
Rice Auditorium, Baker Univ.
featuring
Country Heir
Warm-up Band:
Pat & Gordon Cleveland
and
Brian Blais The Magician
between sets
tickets available at:
Klef's in Lawrence
McKinney Mason
Baker Union
Feb. 4, 8:00 P.M. McKinney Mason Baker Union
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
"WE ARE MY WITNESSES! Ismail 43:10. Again: "YE ARE MY WITNESSES!" So spake Christ in Luke 24:48 just as he did in John 14:50.
In 2nd Chronicles 16:9 The Spirit of God says: "FOR THE EYES OF GOD RUN TO AND FOR THROUGHOUT THE EYES OF GOD TO SHOW HIMSELF STRONG IN THE BEHALF OF ME WHO HEWES HEART IS PERFECT TO WARM HIMS!"
Have you taken the vows and joined some Evanuelian Protestant Church? If so, have you taken heed to Christ's where we lie? "TAKE MY YOKE UPON YOU. AND LEARN, TO strive to lestify and建立‘the things of Christ’ if not, and are you unwilling to sincerely undertake to carry out His instructions, this scribe would advise you to be careful." "FORBEAR THEE FROM MEDDLING WITH GOD" witness was born by the Pagan King Necho of Egypt against one of the best kings Judah ever had. Josiahjosh was born by the Pagan King Neccho to this witness warning him 12nd Chronicles 35:21-28.
All of us are striving to be sincere Christians should give
the CLEANSING OF CHRIST'S CHURCH
beginning with the Lord's Prayer.
said: "If I wash the tree not thou has no part of Me!" it appears that most of us are afraid to criticize others or kick the lawless out of the Church. Someone has said the Church has gotten so evil and weak and rundown she is not strong enough to 'take a bath'? Did not the Apostle Paul speaking by inspiration say: "DELIVER SHORE A ONE TO SATAN FOR DESTRUCTION OF THE FLESH, that THE SPIRIT WAS LIVED IN THE DAY OF THE LORD JESUS" — 1st Cor. 5.
We now quote Matthew *Matehew* 11:14-11:48 "AND WHEN THE KING CAME IN TO SEE THE GUESTS! HE SAW THERE A MAN WHICH HAD NOT A WEDding GARMENT AND HE SAID UNTO HIM, FRIEND, HOW CAME THOU IN HITHER NOT HAVING A WEDding GARMENT? AND HE WAS SPEECHLESS! THEN SAID THE KING TO THE SERVANTS, BIND HIM HAND AND FOOT, AND TAKE HIM AWAY, AND CAST HIM INTO OUTER DARKNESS;THERE ARE CLIPPING AND QNASHING OF TEETH. FOR MANY ARE CLIPPING AND QNASHING OF garments, or lack of garments that many professors Christian these days — even in high seats in the sanctuary and holy places — are good grounds for "SPEECHLESSNESS"
"BE READY WHEN HE COMES AGAIN, HE'S COMING
AGAIN SOOON!"
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MISTER GUY OF LAWRENCE announces: IT'S LARGEST OUTERWEAR SALE EVER!
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Friday, February 4, 1977
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9
Jayhawks out to stop Sooners
Associate Sports Editor
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
The Kansas Jayhawks so far have had little chance to savor their victory over Oklahoma State. They haven't had much time to think about the fact that they're just one game out of first place in the Big Eight conference race either.
After returning to Lawrence at 3 a.m. yesterday, the team was at practice at 3 p.m. learning to with consistency what they did in Saturday; they can do it again, against Oklahoma.
KU faces the Sooners at 7:35 p.m.
tomorrow in Allen Field House. So KU
coach Ted Owens worked with the 'Hawks
yesterday on improving their passing
back up in an open shot. He becked
tack and forth across the court, pleading
and over; and
"DON'T LOB IT! Don't float it! Do it like you don't last night. Nope... do it again, but then..."
So the Jaiyahaws did it, over and over and
over. Set, hand off, don't lie, to tip, up-in.
The Jaiyahaws didn't do it.
Sports
team's efforts during practice seemed spirited.
Maybe it was the enthusiasm of being back in the conference race and back into their form of flashy, stomach-knotting finishes that kept most of the team after practice, taking easy shots and free throws. KU is now in a three-way tie for third place in the conference with a 5-2 record, behind Oklahoma and Missouri, both at 6-2.
THE JAYHAWKS will have the home-court advantage this weekend, and they'll need to compete against KU in Lawrence. But that "once was last year; nothing seems to come easily for KU this season and the Sooners also have a "thing" for last-minute heroes.
The Sooners won against Missouri Wednesday night with a tip-in at the 15 mark to give them a 64-43 edge. The shot was made by Oklahoma freshmen starters on the Oklahoma team.
And the Sooners also seem to be good at ignoring sizable leaders established by the other team. Oklahoma disposed of an eight-man squad during the last four minutes of that game.
ALONG THOSE lines, the Jayhaws have been the ones who build up the comfortable lead, then let it get away—recently, as they did. The margin has failed to be sufficient leagway.
The Sooners have a young team, often called a bunch of inexperienced youngsters, but that alleged lack of experience hasn't been holding a leading team in the conference race.
"Oklahoma plays with great hustle," said Owens. "You cannot afford to have any lapses against them. That's what happened in Oklahoma when they went on, and we were never able to fully recover."
"You CAN'T" help being impressed with them. They have momentum and are playful.
This will be the third meeting between the two teams this season. KU defeated the Sooners, 74-70, in overtime in the opening round of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament. But Oklahoma got even with the Jayhawks later, with the 71-49 win at Norman.
Going into that game KU had at 3-4 record and had yet to start its loss streak on the road. Owens said he thought the 'Hawks' win over Oklahoma State, which ended the away-game nemesis, gave KU the combination and psychological boost they needed.
Fundamental change in strategy we'en't
necessary to win against Oklawana, Owens
Big Eight Standings
said, as he echoed a familiar assessment of KU's situation.
W 2
Missouri 6 2
Oklahma 6 2
KANSAS 5 3
Kansas State 5 3
Nebraska 5 3
Oklahoma State 2 6
Iowa State 2 6
Colorado 1 7
"IF WE DO the little things we can win. Like getting the ball in and protecting better when we get the ball inside. We still have increased patience and movement too."
The Jaybawks would seem to have an advantage over Oklahoma in shooting and rebounding—at least according to the statistics.
The Sooners' leading scorer, forward John McCullough, is shooting at a 15.9 average compared with a 17.4 mark for KU's top scorer, John Douglas.
The 'Hawks' leading rebounder, Herb Nobles, has an 8.1 average and tops Oklahoma's leader, Cliff Johnson, who averages 8.6 rebounds a game. But the Sooners' height advantage could cause problems for the Javahwks.
"THEY CAN match us inside which means rebounding will be crucial," said Owens. "I believe the ability to beat them in will make a significant difference."
The, Jayhawks are definitely back in the race. Douglas' prediction last week that KU's foes would "catch hell, cause we rolin' is 'holding good, so far anyway.'
PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS KANSAS
C-Herb Nobles, 6-7 Senior
K-Keen Noges, 6-10 Junior
W-Chit Johnson, 6-2 Junior
G-Husan Ghasan, 6-2 Freshman
G-Hasen Houston, 6-2 Freshman
OKLAHOMA
University Daily Kansan
F - John McCullough, 6-5 Sophomore
F - Terry Tootsie, 6-8 Freshman
F - Bean, 6-1 Freshman
G - Carroll, 6-3 Sophomore
G - Eddie Fieldis, 5-10 Senior
32 25
KU's June Koleber (32) pressures Phillips' Georgiana Corley.
KU women get shooting lesson
Karen Cannon gave the KU women's basketball team a lesson in shooting last night, as Phillips University defeated the Jayhawks, 88-73.
Cannon, a three-time All-American for the Phillies, hit 18 of 32 shots from the floor and nine of 11 from the free-throw line for a 74-60 victory. He scored 23-41 record, hit 47 per cent from the field.
Adrian Mitchell and June Kolebear each scored two points to give KU a quick 4-10 lead before Lynn Praile scored the first two points for Phillips. After Praile's basket, Cannon scored the next 16 points for the Phillies in six minutes.
PHILIPS BUILT a 15-point halffire lead during the last five minutes of the first
half. The Phillips outcored the 'Hawks 15 to the atfoul line in establishing their lead.
Mitchell scored the first four points for KU in the second half, but those points were behind by the Phillips' Katy Martindale who scored three long passes through KU's full-court press.
Each team continued to trade baskets as Phillips maintained a 16-point lead until the 'Hawks scored six straight points to cut the margin to 10 points with three minutes to play. But Cannon finished off the Jayhawks, scoring eight of her team's last nine points.
MITCHELL LED KU with 18 points, hitting eight of 18 field goals as the Hawks beat the Bulldogs 49-23.
KU head coach Marian Washington said she saw, maw, now, positive features in the loss.
"We played much better than against Claremore, a 73-41 wintu Tuesday night," she said. "The defense, especially the press, was much improved and we ran the offense."
Washington credited Cannon with her team's success.
"She (Cannon) is an excellent player and one of the best we will face all year." Washington said. "Our transition from Cannon to score was a tremendous Cannon to score that many break buckets."
Accent the ARTS
Clive Barnes, N.Y. Times
JOFFREY II
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10
Friday, February 4, 1977
Weekend Sports
Women get preview
The KU women's swim team travels to Lincoln, Neb., this week to get a preview of the upcoming season.
The Jayhawks will swim against teams from Nebraska, Missouri and Oklahoma universities. The meet will be scored like the NCAA tournament, though there will be fewer scheduled events.
"is definitely our most important meet so far," said coach Gary Kemp. "It will give us a chance to look at each school's depth and talent. And we can also make a comparison of the head-to-head races we'll face in the Big Eight."
Jayhawks face NU
The KU men's swimming team returns home for a meet tomorrow after losses on the road the last two weeks. The Jayhawks will face Michigan in the finals, included on 2 p.m. in Robinson Nationals.
Omana dealt KU a 73-40 defeat last Saturday but head coach Dick Reason said he was encouraged by the Jayhawks' performance.
Several Kansas swimmers set individual
season records in the meet against Oklahoma, so Reamon said he wouldn't make many position changes for the Nebraska meet.
Women's track starts
Ramon r朗 Nebraska out of the conference race at the beginning of the season, but said he expects a strong challenge from the Cormuskers.
The KU women's track team begins its indoor season today in a double-dual meet in Columbia, Mo., against Missouri and Kansas State.
KU starts the 1977 season with a big
squad and a new coach. But all three
teams have been under fire.
while both K-State and Missouri have already competed, we felt much ill. I felt much ill. I can see how we stand up in real competition."
"We need to continue our improvement and step things up a little," said Reasonam.
Lionaleva said he thought the joykays' strongest events were spirits, but Liora's
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A drastic drift in basketball season ticket sales wasn't caused by the new postseason Big Eight tournament, Doug Messer. The organization business punner, said this week.
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BvDAVID JOHNSON
Staff Reporter
The tournament winner will be in the National Collegiate Athletic Association playoffs, a spot formerly guaranteed the regular season winner.
About 4,000 season tickets were sold this year, 3,200 fewer than last year, and season tickets were up by 10%
Football season ticket prices also increased over last year from $10 to $20. But despite the increase, students bought 10,700 tickets, 200 more than in 1975.
Messer partly attributed the basketball sales decrease to the horse schedule. The horse sales decline is due to
the semester break, and one against Iowa State during enrollment week.
SALES PROBABLY were hurt also because KU didn't play a powerful non-
The nominal Big Eight champion still will be determined during the regular season, Messer said, but the tournament will give the noncontesting schools a shot at the top.
"The tournament gives the school that isn't going to win the conference a second chance."
For that reason, when the Big Eight Schools voted to hold a post season tournament, KU and Kansas State University, the two schools would have were the only schools to oppose it, he said.
MESSER SAID he favored the tournament because it would bring national prestige.
THE FIRST round of the tournament will pit the top four teams in the conference against the bottom four teams. The games are played on the top four teams' home courts Feb. 26.
If KU is one of the host teams, about 14,500 tickets will be available for KU to sell, Messer said. At least 1,000 tickets must be supplied to the visiting school, he said.
provide a lot of excitement for fans.
Aside from getting to attend the game at home, home team students will have the advantage of paying only $2.50 for tickets. Visiting team students will have to pay $4.
Tickets will go on sale Feb. 17 at the earliest, Messer said. Season ticket holders will get first crack at the tickets, he said, and then will go on sale to the general public.
ANGEL FLIGHT RUSH
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Feb.1-17
For further information contact 864-2073 or 841-6324
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PUBLIC NOTICE
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
RE: Training Session
FROM: Student Senate Treasurer's Office
All officers who are responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds must:
1. Attend a training session conducted by the Office of the Student Senate Treasurer. See the time listed below.
2. Sign an organizational management contract with the Student Senate
Obtain advance written authorization for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
4. Account for all inventory
Training sessions will be held approximately once each month. The training session has been scheduled for the following time:
Wednesday, February 9,1977 - 2 p.m.
International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
this session will last less than an hour. You must contact the Student Senate Office at 843.710 to sign up for this session or for additional information. The student senate office is located at 600 N. 9th Street, San Francisco, CA 94125.
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RA26A24
9th & Iowa
FEBRUARY
SUNDAY
6
Soviet Union forbids children to attend movies on school days (1944)
MONDAY
GIRLS IN CHAINS
(1943). DETOUR (1946)
*B' Films of Edgar A.
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THE COLLECTOR
(1965) Dir. William
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---
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THE STRANGER
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3
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THE MARQUISE OF O Mildest Premiere. Eric Rohmer's new film, 30; 7,00; 9,30; $1
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REMEMBER
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FAMILY PLOT (1976) Alfred Hillack
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O
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Ev
TO STRU
Kans
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PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TO FRE
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 4, 1977
[]
game at
save the
tickets.
pay $4.
7 at
the holders
he said,
general
Faculty . . .
From page one
*Perhaps the time is coming when university junior colleges should withdraw from our programs, continuing to offer extension courses, where, of course, they make a lot of state funds.*
Glover said, "The saying is that these junior colleges run ads advertising, say, advanced basketweaving, then on the other side of the ads they advertise for teachers. They pay students a fee, way, which draws from the money that would have been available to the Regents."
Glover said that if enrollments decreased on projections indicated, the need for more training must be addressed. He said, by avoiding unnecessary duplication of services at the Regents' in-
All budget increases might be opposed, Glover said, because the first Democratic majority in the Kansas House since 1913 would not show that it won't fiscally responsible.
"We have to prove we are a significant change toward providing a better state for our community."
Vogel replied, "I'm glad to hear you say that now that you're a member of the majority party your group has become more responsible."
On Campus
Events
TODAY: SOCIAL FIELD-WORK INSTRUCTORS will meet at 9 a.m. in the Kansas Union's Jayhawk Room. JOHN KRONIK, Cornell University professor, will speak on "Galdos and the Grotesque" at 4 p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room.
TOMORROW: A BASKEBALL FREETHROW TOURNAMENT for men and women will begin at 9 a.m. in the South Robinson Gymnasium. A MAKE YOURSELF PROMOTABLE SEMINAR, sponsored by Adult Life Resource Center, will begin from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4 a.p.m. in the Union's Walnut Room.
Announcements
BOOKS FOR ASIA, a project of the Asia Foundation, requests books and journals published in 1965 or later and in excellent condition. They may be sent to Books for Asia, 451 Sixth St., San Francisco, Calif. 94038.
KOU DEBATE TEAMS won honors at tournaments last week. Frank Cross and Robin Rowland, Lawrence seniors, won first place in a debate at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. The team of Sherry Wolfe, Blue Springs, Moe, sophomore, and John Lincoln, Neb, senior, won fourth place in Kansas State College at Pittsburgh debate.
The KANSAS RELAYS STUDENT COMMITTEE is accepting applications from freshmen interested in becoming members of the committee. The Relays Committee is responsible for most of the academic work required by the Application Department and to the Kansas Relays Student Committee, track office, Allen Field House by Feb. 7.
!!Weekend Special!!
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826 Iowa 842-1320
HEAVY EDDYS PIZZA
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CLASSIFIED RATES
At the Wheel 507 W.14th
Place an ad.
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Assocmntation, good, services and empio-
lyce in busiess for mktg clients in
NYC, New York, NY. reqs: Bach or
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prep, travel, tax, or relatign. PLUS
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Call 864-4358
AD DEADLINES
one two three four five six
times times times times times
15 words or
fewer $ 0.00 $ 2.25 $ 2.50 $ 3.00
Each additional
$ 0.00 $ 2.25 $ 2.50 $ 3.00
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online using the UDR business office at 844-8538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Need Exercise: Ramada Inn Figure Salon.
Need Exercise: Ramada Inn. Operated. Monthly. and 8-9
842-223.
Enroll now at Doritas Decorative Arts for toil and decorative painting, pom-pom parade, doll drapping, country carrying, sand design, composite coatings, nursing and护理. Call 815-723-806
106 New Hamphire.
AVANT, ave (1, dilaugh) forward; ahead; to go forward, *progression*, continue on; to go on; to walk forward.
Wanted—alive and on moving Christians. Join us at our quiet studio for a quiet study. We want to share our place Canterbury House (Episcopal) 1114 Leiksaua Holy Communion Tuesday 9 p.m. - Thursday 8 p.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
BOKONKO: Paraphernalia for the counsellor.
BOKONKO: All big Smith Jeans. 12. East 2-9.
841 - 30060
Want to be creative? Try to do something different, and perhaps bring your talents, and a desire to share and listen. The Ferry Furnace, 110th Louisiana. Friday and Saturday nights 9 p.m. Unders the same old agement.
FOR RENT
Desk top refrigerators 2.9 cubic feet. Anderson
Ribices. 812 New Hampshire. 843-2044.
Gorgoula I-bedroom, apartment, charfitting, carpet,
bathroom, kitchen, laundry, $140 per month, plus utilities. Available Now.
Call (855) 767-3222.
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished. close to
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For Rent. Clean rooms and apartments. Lynch Real Estate, 843-1601. 2237 Ohio. 2-4
Roommate need; large four bedroom apartment,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, paid tiles;应付面积 120-2-
448; 843-6023-8107
One Room in Town House, call 841-1734. 2-4
Sublease to May 1, and 2 bedroom Apn. On Buil-
route 881-6348
2-4
Private room for rest. Kitchen privileges. $64.
paid paid. $120. Kerry Living.
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
no pets, 843-5767.
ff
one bedroom furnished apartment at 19 West
10th available immediately. Call after 5.
825-426-3800.
Sublime 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment building with
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5060.
Jayhawk Towers Apt. for rent-call 843-4932 and
set to www.843.com
Park 25 2-bedroom, bedrooms $225, $40 reward,
large living room: 811-558, 811-659-1130;
small living room: 811-768-8430.
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central air, nice wall to carpet. 8430-64-
29-8
Sublease 2-bedroom unfurnished apartment
with balcony. Monthly rent $1500 more monthly.
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Most sublease to May 1st; 2 bedroom unfurn-
ished carpet, AC $170.00 + $84.92 Warehouse
$35.00
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6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
8.8 Sun
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
846 Illinois 843-7685
INVENTORY SALE: Extra Stock and Demo Units
Prices Reduced by 50% each. Large executive demand.
Realty Unique pieces of Electronics as well. Now thru
June, we have 150+ Electronics. E. Kit. No phone please. Thank you. - 2-11
FOR SALE
843-9891
Western Civilization Note—New on Sale! Make
your own note—New on Sale! Make your own note—
1. As study guide, 2. For Class preparation,
3. For Exam preparation, "New Analysis
of, Western Civilization" available, now at Town
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UNICORNS. Mermaids in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to choose from. Stone cutting service. Re-entry professional work, satisfaction guide. #181-388.
Redemere Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod member (conservative). All students and faculties are active youth group. Place 30th and Haskell. Attend college with more information contact: Mt Fredrickson at a.m. b. Bible class and Sunday school at 10:15. Lutheran Layman's League meet every month at a.m. b. Bible class and Sunday school at 10:15. Lutheran Layman's League meet every month at a.m. b. Bible class and Sunday school at 10:15.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists:
BELL AUDIO ELECTRIC, 845-309-2000, W 6th,
845-309-2001, W 7th.
Minolta camera SRT 101, 30 millimeter lens, can,
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Exclusive selection of new and used furniture and
furniture hardware. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704% Masonry.
www.furniturecenter.com
ARA in dash AM-FM store 8-track, Realtime FM cassette store. K46-8217-24
2-4
Guitars for sale—The best guitars in Lawrence are available at LMC, Bob Weidenman, dealer. Low overload humps low price for Alvarez Yarii Guitars. High overload high price for Cable Play 2-11 at 307 E. 9th, 83-491-96.
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1405, 1415, 1425, 1435, 1445, 1455, 1465, 1475, 1485, 1495, 1505, 1515, 1525, 1535, 1545, 1555, 1565, 1575, 1585, 1595, 1605, 1615, 1625, 1635, 1645, 1655, 1665, 1675, 1685, 1695, 1705, 1715, 1725, 1735, 1745, 1755, 1765, 1775, 1785, 1795, 1805, 1815, 1825, 1835, 1845, 1855, 1865, 1875, 1885, 1895, 1905, 1915, 1925, 1935, 1945, 1955, 1965, 1975, 1985, 1995, 2005, 2015, 2025, 2035, 2045, 2055, 2065, 2075, 2085, 2095, 2105, 2115, 2125, 2135, 2145, 2155, 2165, 2175, 2185, 2195, 2205, 2215, 2225, 2235, 2245, 2255, 2265, 2275, 2285, 2295, 2305, 2315, 2325, 2335, 2345, 2355, 2365, 2375, 2385, 2395, 2405, 2415, 2425, 2435, 2445, 2455, 2465, 2475, 2485, 2495, 2505, 2515, 2525, 2535, 2545, 2555, 2565, 2575, 2585, 2595, 2605, 2615, 2625, 2635, 2645, 2655, 2665, 2675, 2685, 2695, 2705, 2715, 2725, 2735, 2745, 2755, 2765, 2775, 2785, 2795, 2805, 2815, 2825, 2835, 2845, 2855, 2865, 2875, 2885, 2895, 2905, 2915, 2925, 2935, 2945, 2955, 2965, 2975, 2985, 2995, 3005, 3015, 3025, 3035, 3045, 3055, 3065, 3075, 3085, 3095, 3105, 3115, 3125, 3135, 3145, 3155, 3165, 3175, 3185, 3195, 3205, 3215, 3225, 3235, 3245, 3255, 3265, 3275, 3285, 3295, 3305, 3315, 3325, 3335, 3345, 3355, 3365, 3375, 3385, 3395, 3405, 3415, 3425, 3435, 3445, 3455, 3465, 3475, 3485, 3495, 3505, 3515, 3525, 3535, 3545, 3555, 3565, 3575, 3585, 3595, 3605, 3615, 3625, 3635, 3645, 3655, 3665, 3675, 3685, 3695, 3705, 3715, 3725, 3735, 3745, 3755, 3765, 3775, 3785, 3795, 3805, 3815, 3825, 3835, 3845, 3855, 3865, 3875, 3885, 3895, 3905, 3915, 3925, 3935, 3945, 3955, 3965, 3975, 3985, 3995, 4005, 4015, 4025, 4035, 4045, 4055, 4065, 4075, 4085, 4095, 4105, 4115, 4125, 4135, 4145, 4155, 4165, 4175, 4185, 4195, 4205, 4215, 4225, 4235, 4245, 4255, 4265, 4275, 4285, 4295, 4305, 4315, 4325, 4335, 4345, 4355, 4365, 4375, 4385, 4395, 4405, 4415, 4425, 4435, 4445, 4455, 4465, 4475, 4485, 4495, 4505, 4515, 4525, 4535, 4545, 4555, 4565, 4575, 4585, 4595, 4605, 4615, 4625, 4635, 4645, 4655, 4665, 4675, 4685, 4695, 4705, 4715, 4725, 4735, 4745, 4755, 4765, 4775, 4785, 4795, 4805, 4815, 4825, 4835, 4845, 4855, 4865, 4875, 4885, 4895, 4905, 4915, 4925, 4935, 4945, 4955, 4965, 4975, 4985, 4995, 5005, 5015, 5025, 5035, 5045, 5055, 5065, 5075, 5085, 5095, 5105, 5115, 5125, 5135, 5145, 5155, 5165, 5175, 5185, 5195, 5205, 5215, 5225, 5235, 5245, 5255, 5265, 5275, 5285, 5295, 5305, 5315, 5325, 5335, 5345, 5355, 5365, 5375, 5385, 5395, 5405, 5415, 5425, 5435, 5445, 5455, 5465, 5475, 5485, 5495, 5505, 5515, 5525, 5535, 5545, 5555, 5565, 5575, 5585, 5595, 5605, 5615, 5625, 5635, 5645, 5655, 5665, 5675, 5685, 5695, 5705, 5715, 5725, 5735, 5745, 5755, 5765, 5775, 5785, 5795, 5805, 5815, 5825, 5835, 5845, 5855, 5865, 5875, 5885, 5895, 5905, 5915, 5925, 5935, 5945, 5955, 5965, 5975, 5985, 5995, 6005, 6015, 6025, 6035, 6045, 6055, 6065, 6075, 6085, 6095, 6105, 6115, 6125, 6135, 6145, 6155, 6165, 6175, 6185, 6195, 6205, 6215, 6225, 6235, 6245, 6255, 6265, 6275, 6285, 6295, 6305, 6315, 6325, 6335, 6345, 6355, 6365, 6375, 6385, 6395, 6405, 6415, 6425, 6435, 6445, 6455, 6465, 6475, 6485, 6495, 6505, 6515, 6525, 6535, 6545, 6555, 6565, 6575, 6585, 6595, 6605, 6615, 6625, 6635, 6645, 6655, 6665, 6675, 6685, 6695, 6705, 6715, 6725, 6735, 6745, 6755, 6765, 6775, 6785, 6795, 6805, 6815, 6825, 6835, 6845, 6855, 6865, 6875, 6885, 6895, 6905, 6915, 6925, 6935, 6945, 6955, 6965, 6975, 6985, 6995, 7005, 7015, 7025, 7035, 7045, 7055, 7065, 7075, 7085, 7095, 7105, 7115, 7125, 7135, 7145, 7155, 7165, 7175, 7185, 7195, 7205, 7215, 7225, 7235, 7245, 7255, 7265, 7275, 7285, 7295, 7305, 7315, 7325, 7335, 7345, 7355, 7365, 7375, 7385, 7395, 7405, 7415, 7425, 7435, 7445, 7455, 7465, 7475, 7485, 7495, 7505, 7515, 7525, 7535, 7545, 7555, 7565, 7575, 7585, 7595, 7605, 7615, 7625, 7635, 7645, 7655, 7665, 7675, 7685, 7695, 7705, 7715, 7725, 7735, 7745, 7755, 7765, 7775, 7785, 7795, 7805, 7815, 7825, 7835, 7845, 7855, 7865, 7875, 7885, 7895, 7905, 7915, 7925, 7935, 7945, 7955, 7965, 7975, 7985, 7995, 8005, 8015, 8025, 8035, 8045, 8055, 8065, 8075, 8085, 8095, 8105, 8115, 8125, 8135, 8145, 8155, 8165, 8175, 8185, 8195, 8205, 8215, 8225, 8235, 8245, 8255, 8265, 8275, 8285, 8295, 8305, 8315, 8325, 8335, 8345, 8355, 8365, 8375, 8385, 8395, 8405, 8415, 8425, 8435, 8445, 8455, 8465, 8475, 8485, 8495, 8505, 8515, 8525, 8535, 8545, 8555, 8565, 8575, 8585, 8595, 8605, 8615, 8625, 8635, 8645, 8655, 8665, 8675, 8685, 8695, 8705, 8715, 8725, 8735, 8745, 8755, 8765, 8775, 8785, 8795, 8805, 8815, 8825, 8835, 8845, 8855, 8865, 8875, 8885, 8895, 8905, 8915, 8925, 8935, 8945, 8955, 8965, 8975, 8985, 8995, 9005, 9015, 9025, 9035, 9045, 9055, 9065, 9075, 9085, 9095, 9105, 9115, 9125, 9135, 9145, 9155, 9165, 9175, 9185, 9195, 9205, 9215, 9225, 9235, 9245, 9255, 9265, 9275, 9285, 9295, 9305, 9315, 9325, 9335, 9345, 9355, 9365, 9375, 9385, 9395, 9405, 9415, 9425, 9435, 9445, 9455, 9465, 9475, 9485, 9495, 9505, 9515, 9525, 9535, 9545, 9555, 9565, 9575, 9585, 9595, 9605, 9615, 9625, 9635, 9645, 9655, 9665, 9675, 9685, 9695, 9705, 9715, 9725, 9735, 9745, 9755, 9765, 9775, 9785, 9795, 9805, 9815, 9825, 9835, 9845, 9855, 9865, 9875, 9885, 9895, 9905, 9915, 9925, 9935, 9945, 9955, 9965, 9975, 9985, 9995, 1005, 1015, 1025, 1035, 1045, 1055, 1065, 1075, 1085, 1095, 1105, 1115, 1125, 1135, 1145, 1155, 1165, 1175, 1185, 1195, 1205, 1215, 1225, 1235, 1245, 1255, 1265, 1275, 1285, 1295, 1305, 1315, 1325, 1335, 1345, 1355, 1365, 1375, 1385, 1395, 1405, 1415, 1425, 1435, 1445, 1455, 1465, 1475, 1485, 1495, 1505, 1515, 1525, 1535, 1545, 1555, 1565, 1575, 1585, 1595, 1605, 1615, 1625, 1635, 1645, 1655, 1665, 1675, 1685, 1695, 1705, 1715, 1725, 1735, 1745, 1755, 1765, 1775, 1785, 1795, 1805, 1815, 1825, 1835, 1845, 1855, 1865, 1875, 1885, 1895, 1905, 1915, 1925, 1935, 1945, 1955, 1965, 1975, 1985, 1995, 2005, 2015, 2025, 2035, 2045, 2055, 2065, 2075, 2085, 2095, 20
PRED'S SPORTS SPECIAL--30% off on Winning Winnings. Diceware on racerboard equipment or tabletop. $25-$49. Free shipping. (US only).
1957 Chevy $700 or best offer. Call Baldwin 1-484-352-502. New engine and paint.
Used Magnaform component system with B-track
and unloaded Magnaform component with Garavard change for $1649.00 at
component with Garavard change for $1649.00 at
2-165-13 used Dudley radios plain $3 for the
$450-$750 17-15N for $3 at Ray 2-111
Switches 92M $3 Minus
$350-$850
STOP SONY, $50, STOP SYN 702 receiver, INSR
tank holder, $25, IBM 814-6456, 2-7
Support Services discounted 20-40% All Major factory warranty, call JIM, 866-355-1600 460 atm inbox
Cassette tape sale Five 60-minute for only $4,
or five 10-minute for $5. Ray Backstore $25.
Mattresses - Liners
Heaters - Frames
Bedspreads - Fitted Sheets
Kodak carousel 160H project automatic focus use
Also Leica M3, 84-9190 after 5.2
2-4
4 cyl 72 Vega $100 or the best offer, 842-1703
after 7.500
Refrigerator: Sanyo K12FII. capacity: Used 6
months. Cost $150, bac #84-2624. 2-7
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
21. Giamon Method maker with hardshell case.
22. Giamon Method maker with auto-mixer equality with RMS m=1-12 bins.
23. Giamon Method maker with auto-mixer equality with RMS m=1-12 bins.
PTX FTS 35 mm single-exen face cmepers, carrying
will sell for $29 or best offer. Call Jerry at
(800) 643-1234.
Marshall 100 Amp Head $735—(rear $750)
Marshall 100 Amp Head $725—(rear $225—
$390), three hours call Cal 814-361-2700
Free stree catale catalog lists incrced discounts on Vanilla, Kendall & Co., DHL JHL, Technif. IMF, Rabes Mamants, 100 other hi-fi and audiophile lines to Sound Values, 1525 E. St. No. 43, New York, NY.
1976 Kwasaki KZ-720 ninja luggage rack, packed ash wintail, new real fire, new chain brace, new spring bracket
Royal Electric Typewriter with carbon ribbon Contact Benton Agency, Inc. 843-607-67
2-9
**POTION BARONI** Natural body care products
Natural brittle brushes 12 East 80th Street. 814-769-3450
Quality stereo equipment. Rotel 602 receiver:
Rotel 601/602, 2000-9 2-0-9
Pourier turboverter. B141-6128.
Sir's, squalling (Equipe, 101 with Salmon
444 Holdings Call John 841-5252
2-8
Kerwood 90 waft stove receiver $200 and Hotel
Kerwood 100 waft stove receiver $300 and
profect shape Cul 542-2842, Mile 2-0
2-0
Gibson Leo Paul Deluxe, Deluxe Twinturn
Armp v2.04M, Mint Paint, Master set 825,
Mint Paint Set 825.
Pioneer SX-$2 receiver, pair of Ultrathin SX-$2
components. Toshiba touchscreen. Compatible sold together or
individually.
Banjó, new Alverez 5-string. Play to appreciate:
814-422 2-10
nursing leverage 842-7183
WATERBEDS
...
712Mass.St.
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts
in THE MARKET PLACE
Sales, Parts, Service
& Crafts 841-3522
big stud. Cuppert, drunk and aunt grand
HORIZONS HONDA
Sterio Quadrachase Music System includes M50
Stereo Music Center System, M60 Speaker
System, M70 Sound System.
Save up to £20 on Magnavox Digital Clock AM
Only $39 on Amps at Ray Stonebank $149.
Hampton-Beach Butter-Up Popcorn Poppers only
113 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 2-11
910, 245, 348, 456, 567, 678, 789, 890, 990,
diameter $1,500, 750, 182, 401, Olinte. 2-10
23 Channel C.I.B.'s, half price for $9.90.
Antenna for only 8¢, at $2ay Stonehole
Attenuation
Cassette store Sale 'Sony' S.C.E. Craig and
Bryan from at Ray Stonebacker, 929 Mass.
2-11
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only ones with a specification guarantee of ± 2 dB hear at Bay Auditorium at Bay Auditorium E. 80h, Prices from $175.
Advent model 300 Stere Receiver: designed to offer the kind of sound associated with far more complex performance compared directly, in every aspect. Its evaporative, chaise components. Ray Tomsen's innovative components. Hay
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy way. Become an Avon representative and make the money you need selling quality products on campus in time. Two openings in Licensing 2-16 842-8126
HELP WANTED
Part time help wanted. Phone work and light
hiring. $2.30 per hour; 841-6432. 2-4
MEN-WOMEN, JOBS ON SHIPS, American,
Forgery. No experience required. Excellent
pay for twelve days travel, Summer job or career. Send
Salary Offer to: EDDIE HAYES BOSTON 2-15
Port Angles, Massachusetts 98562 8-25
Node models租用 for air classes Monday-Saturday 10:30-12:30 Tuesday and Thursday 10:30-12:30 Wednesday 10:30-12:30 Thursday 10:30-12:30
Cahier-Hostess, beautiful area restaurant and club. Prefer over 21, part time. evenings. Phone (801) 694-3557.
Room and board in exchange for help around the home. Also sleep room, and are available on weekends. Ask for an exchange for photo work. Also need secretarial help 2-3 hours 2-3 days (revenues) per week. Call 825-697-4800.
LOST AND FOUND
Lead a man's wedding band, made of yellow and white gold. Wear it on his left wrist. A white gold pendant. Heward is offered. Call 825-769-1340.
Load- Jan 6, 6 colored slides (20) in small envelopes, perhaps near purg, research report (20)
to be filled in.
LOST - Omega, gold ladies jacket, Reward -
$25. If found, call 843-5660, ask for Cushion, 2-8
Found set of keys in front of Joyhawk Towers.
Call 842-2094 to identify
2-4
Found one pair sunglasses around 7th and Max.
Call to identify: 842-1063
2-4
Found ladies Timex watch, turquoise band. Call Gary 811-5295 2-4
Once one pair indices glacies (in orange) white/red
lastly. Correctly record the location.
Correctly. Reward Call at 864-1387 2-10
- 2-10
Found rat, brown and white with blue eyes
Found at 10th and Mice. 843-6685, or 8729-4898.
A black rat. 843-6685.
Found KU keys in Malot parking lot. Inquire
Loat & Found, Hoch.
2-8
Found Red Irish Setter pup with a nanetag of
14th, on 14th Horns 833-8071. 2-8
Found a red bone hat with name Cecil, in front of Kappasigma fraternity. 843-702. 2-8
Found a pocket watch in arkansas of Arkansas Call and describe: 842-7504, Syd. 2-8
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ubber Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass.
Free University needs class conventions for this
free seminar. Applications available in SA
80425-1163 or 80425-1172.
甲
RAASCH
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
-
842 8413
560699
Sat. 10-4
NOTICE
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
cookers, clock televisions. Open daily 12-
8:37-12:47. 842-307
EUROPE/WORLDWIDE academic discount year
round. S.A.T.A. 4228 First Ave. Tuck, Q4
616-790-5300 www.europaeo.edu
A support group for women that have gone /pure/ is designed to help them stay connected started new through the Women's Center. If you have an interest in the group,
FREE! The Women's Resource Guide is now available at the Women's Cooperation, Office Shop. Visit us at www.women'scoop.org.
The Dance You All Been Waiting For. Guy
Wilson, 78, of Brooklyn, New York,
Kansas Valley Ballet at 7.15 per
season. Tickets are $20.
PERSONAL
Steve Leben and Ralph Munyang Reflection session for student body president and vice president
Gay Counseling Service: Call 842-7565, 6-12 p.m.
tt
MAKIN' MUSIC! We make it easier. Fold, bake, cook, mix, prepare music for your band. Bind mandolin, mandolin piano, plains. McMinkey drum set. Mixed drum kit.
KARATE—Improve yourself physically and mentally this semester. Study this Oriental art form from national championships now form part of the curriculum. Lawrente, Karnas (913) 842-8244. 2-11
Hey! Introduction to Pantomime classes. Every-
day, welcome 'Ted', Daria, night 'Ted' and Fab.
The first class is on Friday, 13th Feb.
REFLECTION1
AVANTI awe 3 (dhangung) forward, togo; togo
forward (progressive, continue) to go; on; togo
forward (reversible) to go; on; togo
Schneider's Liquor Store invite you to come see the wines. We DO NOT want you to buy
Don't use an important class because you overdraw. Java does not get with you there on purpose, and it's more efficient to use it.
Happy Birthday Farah Fawcet-Radar. Don't get too dangerous for your own, Lee Majors. 24
RIDES ——— RIDERS
Mike, happy one year. Let's make it two. Tea,
Charlene.
2-4
SERVICES OFFERED
Ride to N.Y.C. over spring break break. Sharge
驾 and driveining M81-845, Charlie B. 845,
M81-845, M81-845.
Don't be fooled by colorful pictures and material. Don't be fooled by the color of the picture. Steve Laken and Hal Riley present for student body events a new look for their photography collection.
Selected Secondhand
Small delivery, or entire household free. Free
Knitteat, call 843-9571. 2-7
Babyitting-Part-time or Drops-in-care. My home is close to campus. Lots of toys, crafts and laundry facilities available. Call (843) 276-9010.
Math tutoring-competent, experienced, tutors can help you through courses 600, 602, 105, 101, 115, 116, 117, 121, 122, 123, 142, 144, 580, 582, 627. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681. Test preparation.
- Euroture • Retlques
Architecture Students Interested in Photographer.
842-9755. 2-8
Sewing, knitting, mending. High quality work,
reasonable price. Phone: 841-7238-2-8
Tutor for Econ 620, 630 and Graduate Student Economics courses 841-753 after 6 p.m. on Tuesday
HALF AS MUCH
**Women's Groups:** Psychobathra Workshop for women who count on women to startests. Workshop for women who count on women to startests. Womenwerkt Workshop for the conscious development of psychic skills--$25, starts Thursday, February 13.
TYPING
sister kettle cake
14th and Mass.
10% off dinner with coupon
through the 15th
- Imported Clothing
7308 Mass. 841-7070
Owens Liquor Store
843-1186
910 N. 2nd
Pool
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
Air Hockey
Ping Pong
Pin Ball
- Foos-Ball
Roommate wanted to share two bedroom apart-
ments with similar utilities, on bus line 41,
842-907-997 and 6.
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BFFF
THEISM BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us help you with $85 Massachusetts & phone number 284-715-3900. Thank you.
Pool Snooker
Experimented typed-term titles, thesis, title-
tips, and corrected 843-505. Mr Wright
Typtist editor, IBM Pitman-cite. Quality work.
Written by the authors. The dissertations welcome.
482-1927 482-1927
Will type your paper with TLC Temp papers and
paper clips. Use 80 lb. (345 g) - 643-1215
811-1790 evenings & weekends.
WANTED
One or two roommates wanted or will sub lea
two-bedroom Towers apartments 842-862-662
Floyd's Big House—need rooms rooms $55 and 105 Louisana, come by. 2-4
Part-time flight instructor immediately
advance, at Lawrence Aviation, Municipal Airpo
服.
Roommate for four bedroom townhouse with
three vacations, second year student, $245.
Roommate for four bedroom townhouse with
three vacations, second year student, $245.
Home of The Chalk Hawk
Male roommate will want to share site two bedrooms. Male roommate's 1100 sq ft includes Calm Temp
Roommate wanted for nice 2 bedroom apartment
block from campus. $250 and usages. $125
and usages.
Formal roommate needs to share Hawk-Tewk
Female apartment; $120 per month. Call 812-2800-264.
*See below for more details.*
Graduate education peds roommate to share 2 beds.
Room available to upstate students to utilize C84-858-0, S-842-250 or S-842-251.
ASSISTANT INSTRUCTORS, WESTERN CIVILIAN POLICE OFFICERS in any department or school, should not employ applicants from any department or school, if required. Instructors must be enrolled in the program and must be progressing toward an advanced position at KU and must be progressing toward an advanced position supervising eight one-hour sections of the Program. All instructors will undertake intensive tasks as described in the Instructional Activities package we expect to have very few openings. We expect to have very few openings. Civilization Office 2108, Wescott. Completed apply.
Female grad student; share house near campus.
Formal student; band, catches, utilizes
6305 TV, bandages. 24-8
Guitar pickers, players, and listeners, listen to
the show on Sunday evening from 6:30 to
8:00 on KANU-91.
Roommate wanted—female to share Towers
24, 843-1095; room, all utilities paid, $72,
843-1095.
Home resident for Cantonville Home. Reit and
Mary have been living in the area on or before Feb.
1995. Apply in person, on or before Feb.
1995.
Young man with 6 yr. old son wants 2 or 3裤.
Please call +1 (855) 441-9999 for partnership, e. C permanent position available, excellent fringe benefit. Rent $75 per month plus taxes.
Call 841-705-2551 for call description. Call 841-705-2551 after 5 p.m.
1 male rentmate to share 3 bedrooms mobile
room with 2 females. Costs $750 max plus 4% utilities. Call Kurt 610-692-209
or Kurt 610-692-210 for details.
Female roommate to share large 2-bedroom
room, 814-9184 or inquire at 1142-509
another, third floor.
30 professionals need your help. Children's Health
Guild. Give a gift of your time to help a child.
Give a gift of your time to help a child.
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12
Friday, February 4, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Glickman keeping roots in mind
BY YAEL ABOUHALKAH
Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON-Political discussions in the Dan Glickman household here have taken on new and increased importance in the last week.
Glickman and his wife, Rhoda, had occasional family chats about the activities of the Wichita Board of Education a year ago, when Dan was board president.
Today the discussion in the Glickman's three-story 1920s-style house houses on issues of rational significance, and the importance of expressives have taken on greater meaning.
That's because last November, 89,555 Kansans chose Glickman, a Democrat, as their new representative from the state's 4th District. He joined the president, Wichita lawyer and officer in a family business of recycling metal—packed his bags and moved east.
Glickman, 32, has obviously made a large political jump in the last year. But Mrs. Glickman says discussion remains civil around the family dinner table.
"THERE are no family arguments, really," she says laughing, "although we do have some strong discussions. I have a tendency to be more idealistic than he does. We discuss things. I don't know how much you like him or do after I tell him what I think, though."
Glickman refuses to be lumped into a strict, political classification.
"You cannot define where I am on the political spectrum," he says.
"That doesn't mean I don't have any principles. I would put myself in several categories: reformer and idealist, proletarian or modern liberal and populist."
MRS. GLICKMAN and the couple's two children—Jonathan, J, and Amy, 4—arrived here last Friday, barely missed a blizzard during their long drive from Wichita to the newly rented house, across the street from the Negaleese embassy.
JAMES M. POTTER
Rep. Dan Glickman
The Glickmans are no strangers to the city. Dan obtained his doctor of law degree from a local school and worked from 1969 to 70 as a trial attorney for the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. Mrs. Glickman, meanwhile, taught school.
The two are aware of the horror stories concerning high crime rates and expenses.
"It is an urban area," Glickman says casually. "There are high crime areas in Wichita that I have to be careful in. You have to get into judgment about where you are, and when here."
THEN HE SMILES and adds, "Now watch me get mugged tonight."
The city's reputation for high prices is well-earned in some areas, he says.
"A house here probably sells for twice as much as it would in Wichita. And restaurants, well, you just don't go to them."
Glickman enters the 6th Congress with some strong notions on what he wants to accomplish. He talks with unveiled enthusiasts and advocates he plans to introduce this term.
Robbery suspects charged
City before being arrested near the Ouahwa County town.
Despite those firm words, Glickman realizes that there's a pecking order in Congress and that he ranks low in the House of Representatives. The way to rise, he says, is to become competent in the eyes of his Congressional peers.
"I just don't think that's true," he says.
AND HE INSISTS that he's looking forward to playing politics with the "big boys" in the near future, saying, "It doesn't give me any scare."
He contends that he won't be stilled by the Capitol Hill adage that freshmen Congressmen should be seen and not heard.
The men allegedly took $170 from the Lawrence Ramada Ima, Malone said.
reie said that officials in Minneapolis would be the first to prosecute the three and that Douglas County would ask to prosecute the men after that.
Toward that goal, Glickman says he wants to support bills that would:
- Limit Congressmen to serving a total of 12 years.
- Fund research into the conversion of grain to use as fuel
- *Pass this year's major farm ap-
corplications bill.
- End mandatory retirement of citizens when they reach age 45.
Glickman's road to winning his seat was rocky.
He had to beat eight-term incumbent Garner Shriver, a Republican. He did it, Clickman says, by trekking 500 miles from Bakersfield to Los Angeles. Shriver had been an inactive congressman.
Glickman, for his part, notes, "I can see where some members of Congress get trapped here in the power dealings, and don't remember where they came from or
"I always hope I can keep that sense of where I'm from and whom I'm representant."
--a first afternoon One Acts will be Tuesdays
at 3:30. There will be 12 plays, a different
one.
Three Topeka men were charged in Douglas County yesterday in connection with the aggravated robbery Sunday of the Lawrence Ramada Inn restaurant, according to Mike Malone, county attorney.
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Theatre auditions set
Auditions for roles in two theater series, the Inge Theatre One Acts and the Afternoon One Acts, will be Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. in the Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall.
All who audition must give a two-minute prepared monologue from dramatic literature, Jack Wright, the director of the University Theatre, said yesterday.
Wright said more than 50 roles were available in the two serics.
The Inge Theatre One Acts will comprise four one-act plays: "The Sterile Lulaby," "The Fencers," "Untitled" and "Leda and the Swan," which will run April 4-9.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
City government could be altered
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, February 7, 1977
Vol. 87, No. 84
See story page three
Vice chancellor selection to be made public today
The new vice chancellor for student affairs will be named sometime today, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said late last night.
Although Shankd didn't reveal the name of the new administrator, it was learned that the replacement was from an in-house employee other than the University of Kansas.
Shankel said the announcement was to be made jointly with the other institution at an undisclosed time today. Richard Rundquist, chairman of the search committee to select the new vice chancellor, said that he expected the announcement would be made at 10 a.m. today.
The position of vice chancellor for student affairs was left vacant after William Bafour, professor of physiology and cell biology at UCLA, departed last May to return to full-time teaching.
Since July, a search committee to select a
replacement for Balfour has reviewed applicants.
From a field of 120 applicants, the 11-member committee selected 14 candidates. The group met on December, after personal interviews were held at KU with the finalists, the names of three candidates were given to Shankel and Chancellor Archie Dykes to make a final decision.
The vice chancellor position was advertised nationally and selection procedures were based on affirmative action guidelines.
After a decision on whom to hire was made, the Office of Affirmative Action had to approve the selection before a job offer could be made.
Balfour, who joined the KU faculty in 1975 as an assistant professor in the School of Medicine, was appointed vice chancellor for the University before by former Chancellor W. Clark Weree.
Bailorf, in his 20 years at the University, has been chairman of the College Biological Sciences Committee and director of a series of in-service institutes in physiology for secondary school teachers of biology. He has also helped to direct the science and mathematics camps in the KU Midwestern Music and Art Camp.
Debates scheduled for candidates
Since August, Donald Alderson, dean of men, has been acting vicechancellor for the university.
The vice chancellor for student affairs coordinates the functions of the offices of the dean of men, dean of women and dean of foreign students, admissions and records; student financial aid and housing; the Student Health Service; and the Kansas Union.
Earlier last month, Shankel said that the new vice chancellor probably would take office in April or earlier, but that it definitely wouldn't be later than July 1.
Bv MARSHA WOOLERY
Staff Reporter
Two debates will give University of Kansas students a chance to appraise the candidates for student body president and student senate. The student Senate election Feb. 16-17.
The first debate, sponsored by the Senate, will feature both presidential and vice presidential candidates. It will be at 7:30 in the Jawahir Kroon of the Kansas Union.
The Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity will sponsor a debate between the three presidential candidates at their house, 1918 Stewart Ave. at 8 p.m., Feb. 14.
Both debates will use a panel of three persons to ask questions of the candidates and a moderator to enforce a time limit on candidates' responses.
Sherri Grey, Spectrum presidential candidate, said, "Last year the questions from the floor were used to some detriment. These questions ought to reflect a little less experience in assessing the quality of the candidates better because of the quality of the questions."
KEVIN FLYNN, Elections Committee chairman, said last week that the committee had decided to use a panel because of the lack of evidence from the audience at last years' debate.
in the past those who've attended the debate have already had in mind whom they were supporting, and their questions showed it." she said.
TASHEFF SAID she thought the debate format would work well.
Panelists for the Senate debate will be Eldon Fields, SenEx chairman and professor of political science; Jim Bates, Professor and Tedle Tasheff, student body president.
Flynn said the committee had extended the duration of the debate to two hours this year because three teams, rather than two, were running.
Steve Leeben, Reflection presidential candidate, said the debate could be short.
"I think that's definitely too long a period for people to sit and listen," he said. "I think we could present our opinions in a shorter amount of time."
Although he said he approved the idea of a question asking, Leben had he hoped
the candidates could also question each other.
Flym said a moderator would be chosen from lists of 18 persons submitted by each of the 3 moderators.
The moderator chosen will limit candidates to three minutes in their responses and five minutes in their closing remarks. He will require candidates to answer questions directed to them, while allowing them to confer with their running mates.
For the first time, questions also will be directed to vice president candidates during the Senate-sponsored debate, Flynn said.
Charlie Mitts, Lambda Chi Alpha president, said his fraternity was spon-
sering a debate because members wanted to encourage students to vote.
"The goal is more student involvement," he said. "Last year, 20 persons attended the debate and about 20 per cent of the student body voted, which is ridiculous."
The fraternity hasn't set time limits, but it has selected three faculty members as panelists. They are Karlyn Campbell, professor of speech and drama; Ellen Gold, assistant professor of speech and drama; Emily Parson, professor of speech and drama.
VIRGINIA KRAMER
Like the Senate debate, no points or evaluations will be given for the candidates' responses unless the panel reviews the answers and answers in general, Mitta said.
Faculty Follies
Works by "John Philip Booster" were performed rather humorously by members of the KU music faculty, Kenneth Smith,
Staff photo by MARIANNE MAURIN
professor of performance and Antonio Perez, assistant professor of performance, among others made their debut Sunday at the University of Florida.
Bennett approves new student loan program
By STEVE FRAZIER
Staff Reporter
A nonprofit corporation willing to administer $20 million in federally insured student loans (FISL) for Kansas students, at no cost to the state, sounded too good to bear.
So last fall, when the Higher Education Assistance Foundation of St. Paul, Minn., offered to handle the Kansas FISL program, Jerry Bergen and John Conard, Kansas to hold of Regents officials, began to give some flaw in the foundation's offer.
The result: "The foundation seems to be as absolutely pure as the driven snow," Conard, Regents executive officer, said last week.
Richard Hawk, the foundation's director, and the program could be under way by
AND GOV. ROBERT Bennett, at the Rengest' request, has asked the U.S. Office of Education to approve the Minnesota loan program, the guarantor for the FISL program in Kansas. In addition to guaranteeing loans made by commercial banks, the Minnesota foundation also would finance money directly from the banks were refuted loans by a commercial bank.
The foundation would operate in Kansas as it has for several years in Minnesota by financing its activities through the sale of revenue bonds.
Students would pay 7 per cent interest on the loans either while they were in school or when they are graduating. Parents whose income is more than $25,000 a year would pay the loan's interest while in school. Students dependent on incomes of less than $15,000 a year will have the loan and the interest after graduation.
GUARANTEED STUDENT loans now are available through commercial banks, but Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid at the University of Kansas, said many banks are unwilling to handle such loans.
"There's little, if any, inflow in these loans." Weinberg said. "Plus, the paperwork required of the banks by the federal government is amazing. Banks would rather just loan the money out to someone else or student at a profitable rate of interest."
"Those who do handle student loans do it mainly as a service to their customers' sons."
Banks now handle **8 million** to **10 million** in FISL in Kansas, according to Hawk, but it hasn't been done.
about 20 million if the Minnesota plan is approved.
BCAUSEO of banks' reluctance to make federally insured student loans—which carry a maximum interest rate of 7 per cent—the Associated Students of Kansas (ASK), a Topka-based student laborbystudy agency, to administer the FISL program.
Doug Oblander, ASK executive director, said he learned of the Minnesota foundation that had created a program to prepare a bill that would establish a state FISL guarantor agency. After talking with Oblander, Hawk need the need for an expanded FISL program in Kansas, Oblander said.
Hawk wrote the Regents, and soon the Regents, ASK and Hein were exploring the area. He then moved to New York.
HEIN INTRODUCED a bill to establish a student FISL agency, but he said he recommended that it lied dormant because the Minnesota foundation was involved that his proposed agency was modified after the Minnesota foundation and could be self-supporting after four years, but that a number of other businesses vantages Hein and disadvantages included the initial costs $125,000 the first year—
and Kansas inexperience in operating a self-supporting guarder program.
"The only advantage my bill has over 'asking the Minnesota foundation to come in would be if there were a way for the state government to do that," But I don't think that would be very likely.
"When Richard Hawk was in Topeka, grilled him for two hours like Perry Mason, trying to find the catch. The reading I got interested in students and their problems."
HEIN SAID he wouldn't recommend that his bill to establish a Kansas FISL agency be killed until approval for the Minnesota plan was certain. Hawk and Bergen said approval of the plan was almost certain, but not automatic.
The Minnesota foundation operated as a state agency for several years. Hawk said the foundation switched its status from state agency to private nonprofit corporation because of a new law that allowed the foundation to both make and guarantee loans.
Berengh said that because the foundation was going to become a lender, the governor of Minnesota asked Hawk to make the foundation a nonprofit corporation. Revenue bonds then would become the sole responsibility of the corporation, not of the
state of Minnesota. The foundation now
makes about $600 million a year in FISL.
IF THE Minnesota plan is approved, Hawk said, the foundation would incorporate in Kansas as a separate organization. The bank would sell revenue bonds to finance its operations and would deposit the money in the bank that gave the best returns. Hawk said the Minnesota founders of the Chase Manhattan Bank in New York.
"Kansas banks always will have the opportunity to bid for the funds," Hawk said, "but to protect the program, we have a reasonable rate of return on our deposits."
THE FOUNDATION has never crossed state lines, Hawk said, because its previous status as a state agency made it impossible to move into other states. If the program is not successful, the state said, the foundation might consider opening offices in other midwestern states.
bergen said loans under the program would be available to any student in a Kansas public or private college or applied to Kansas public school and also to Kansas in-out-of-state schools.
it would be hard to predict how com-
I see LOAN PROGRAM mare two
Robinson can't handle increased HPER enrollment
1938
Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELI
Tiaht saueeze
Swim classes are held at the swimming pool in Robinson, with enrollment in physical education classes up 100 per cent in the last four years. The pool, the only one on the collegiate swim teams and recreational swimming.
campus, is used for physical education courses, practice of both men and women's in physical education classes up 100 per cent in the last four years. The pool, the only one on the collegiate swim teams and recreational swimming.
The class sections are crowded, with 49 students in dance classes for which the
By DAYNA HEIDRICK
Staff Reporter
Enrollment in activity classes in the department of health, physical education and recreation at Kansas has increased 100 per cent in the last four years, even though KU, unlike many other universities and colleges, doesn't require physical education classes for graduation.
"Students feel a need to develop as total individuals, to be complete persons. They are interested in a total education, not just a job orientation," Wayne Ossess, chairman of the American Education Association, explain the increase in the number of students taking physical education classes.
Oness said that the number of students would be even greater if the department could handle more space for travel from offering more vented the department from offering more classes of classes.
"WELL MORE than 50 per cent of KU students had no opportunity to take dance, music or golf—they were closed after the first afternoon of enrollment." Osness said. "We could double the number of activities sections and still not meet the needs of the student."
recommended number of students is 30, he said. Swimming classes that should have no more than 25 students enrolled have 30 in a beginning swimming class and 39 in a water
Closed class sections affect physical education majors, who need the classes for graduation and must wait until they are ready to enter. Should should have taken as sophomores, he said.
THE ROBINSON facility, which houses HPER classes was considered inadequate to meet future needs of KU students when it was built in 1966.
Because only $1.5 million was available at the time, the current structure was labeled Phase I and plans were made to build the second phase II, if when funds could be made available.
Three years ago, preliminary plans were made for the construction of the Robinson addition. Final planning was completed last summer, and some considerations regarding approval of construction funds.
EVEN IF the addition were built today, it would be 30 per cent short of the instructional space needed, as determined by guidelines for space requirements and established need. With the increased enrollment, 209,941 square feet are needed altogether, but the new facility would increase the space to only 151,760 square feet.
2
Monday, February 7, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
CIA nominee list narrows
WASHINGTON—The commander of NATO forces in Southern Europe is a leading candidate to be nominated by President Carter as director of the Central
In Eligence candidates assistant Hamilton Jordan said Adm. Stansfield Turner is one of the leading candidates to become Carter's second nominee to the post.
leaders. His first nominee was Theodore Sorensen, a top aide to former President John Kennedy, who widowed in the face of stiff Senate opposition.
Kennedy, who withdrew in the face of stir senate opposition, Turn, 33, was one of Carter's classmates at the Naval Academy.
Turner, 33, was one of the candidates. Sources inside and outside the administration said on Jan. 27 that Bill D. Mowers, former counsel to Linda Johnson, was a prime candidate.
a former top aide to the Defense Secretary. Others named in published reports have been Thomas Hughes and Ray Cline, former directors of the State Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research, and Enno Knoche, acting director.
mercial banks will perceive the foundation's presence in Kansas, Bergen said. Banks might abandon the FISL program altogether if they don't want loans from the foundation, he said. Or banks might be more willing to handle the loans because the foundation's guarantee agency would be in Topeda instead of Kansas, where the current government office is situated.
From page one
WHATEVER THE demand for loans, Hawk said, the foundation will be ready to meet students' needs. If approved, the foundation would advertise its services through financial aid offices and commercial banks throughout the state.
Loan program . . .
Weinberg said the Minnesota foundation could be of great importance to KU students, but not as much as at other institutions, where the loan resources aren't as large as KU's.
Weinberg said the financial aid office makes short-term student loans totalling about $1.5 million each year, using KU Endowment Association money.
KU students hold about $2 million in guaranteed student loans, which includes the National Direct Student Loans and FISL programs, Weinberg said. That $2 million figure might increase by 25 to 30 per cent, more than $500,000, if the Minnesota foundation is allowed to operate in Kansas, he said.
Tanzanian president lists step toward majority rule
DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania (AP)—President Julius Nyerere said yesterday the next step in the drive for majority rule in Rhodesia was for Britain and Rhodian slack nationalists to agree on what they wanted.
The Tanzanian president spoke with reporters after holding a second meeting in three days with Andrew Young, the new U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Young is on a mission to sound out African leaders about South Africa.
"After the British and the nationalists
agree, and if Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith proves to be the stumbling block, we hope the United States will take a leading role in seeing that Smith is put out of the way. "Nyerere told reporters gathered on an open veranda.
He suggested the means could be tailored economic sanctions and more careless.
Hussein, Arafat don't meet
Sitting at Nyerere's side at the news conference, Young had high praise for the effort that Nyerre has made.
DAMASCUS - A rumored meeting to reconcile the split between Jordan's King Hussein and Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat failed to occur yesterday. Both were in Damascus, Syria, but Arafat left shortly before Hussein arrived.
arrived.
If the two leaders were to reconcile their differences, the result would be a shift in power in the Middle East power balance. Hussein and Arafat have not met since the king's troops evicted Palestinian guerrillas from Jordan in a bloody crackdown in 1970.
The Arabs want the PLO represented at Geneva peace talks on the Middle East, either as an independent delegation or as part of a Jordanian delegation.
Police bias case closed
CHICAGO—City officials yesterday closed the books on a six-year police bias controversy, announcing they won't appeal a U.S. Court of Appeals order upholding a decision that imposed racial and sexual quotas for hiring and promotion in the police department.
promotion. It is the best interest of the people of Chicago and the police department that this matter be concluded, "acting Mayor Michael Blandie and Police Superintendent
In a 2-1 decision, the appeals court affirmed U.S. District Judge Prentice Marshall's ruling withholding federal revenue sharing slated for the city, as it had been under the prior administration.
Thirteen months ago Marshall ordered the department to hire 16 per cent female and 42 per cent black and Hispanic surnamed men as police officers. He also required that 40 per cent of policemen promoted to sergeants be minority members.
Leaders defer to party
JERUSALEM—Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and his chief rival, Defense Minister Shimon Peres, will leave up to the Labor party at its Feb. 23 convention to decide which of them should lead the party into the national elections.
Rabin originally wanted the leadership to be decided by the Central Committee, which will be chosen at the convention. It was believed Rabin's turnaround indicated that he believed he had a slight edge over Peres in last week's delegate vote.
On Campus
HOTEL & SUITES
Events
TOMORROW: A conference on AGING will begin at 1 p.m. in the Union's Big Eight Room. There will be a CRIME PREVENTION SEMIAR from 9 a.m. to noon in the Union's Forum on Health and the FLUKER, professor of business, who supervised the nation's World Development" at noon at the United Ministries building, 1240 Orest St.
TONIGHT: THE KU SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 in the Union's Oread Room, EDWIN GAUSTAD, professor of history at the University of California at Riverside, will speak on "Dissent in American Religion" at 8 in 100 Smith Hall.
TODAY: THE HEALTH CARE CONCENTRATION of the division of master's in public administration will meet from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Kansas Union's Jayhawk Room. KAU-WAI WONG will speak on the "New Method for Solving External Field Couplings and Boundary Effects to a Many-Body System" at 4 p.m. in 136 Malott Hall. NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in Alcove E of the Union.
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Student Union Activities
Accent the ARTS
February 10 — March 6
Accent the Arts is a collection of events that highlight the outstanding Fine Arts Department and programs at the University of Kansas
Information and brochures may be obtained at the SUA office 864-3477
Classified Advertising
Valentine's Day
Special!
15 word Valentine advertisements
for only $1 50
These advertisements will appear
on Monday, Feb. 14 and must be
placed at the Kansan Business
office, 111 Flint Hall, by
5:00 p.m.
Thursday,
Feb.
10
..
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: Student Senate Treasurer's Office
All officers who are responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds must:
RE: Training Session
1. Attend a training session conducted by the Office of the Student Senate Treasurer. See the time listed below.
1. treasurer. See the time listed below.
2. Sign an organizational management contract with the Student Senate.
Spring Break March 11-20 $125.00
3. Obtain advance written authorization for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
Padre Island
seven nights accommodations
No funds will be made available until these requirements have ben met. Even though you have attended a training session last fiscal year, you will still have to attend one during this fiscal year. Training sessions will be held approximately once each month.
trip to Mexico
4. Account for all inventory.
includes:
beer and soft drinks on bus
Even though you have your session last year (for the first time) during this fiscal, training sessions will be held approximately once each month. Training sessions will be held on Tuesdays from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
round trip bus
Wednesday,February 9,1977-2 p.m.
Stop by or call the SUA Office for more information 864-3477
international Room Level 5 Kansas Union
The session will last less than an hour. You must contact the Student Senate Office at 864-3710 to sign up for this session or for additional information. The Senate Funded Scholarship Program offers a variety of opportunities.
Still space available. Sign up deadline—Feb. 11.
---
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Salt
Monday, February 7, 1977
University Daily Kansan
3
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could be and more actions.
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Finals week problems studied
Commissioned by the Student Senate Calendar Committee and the Academic Policy and Procedure Committee of the University Council, the subcommittee has been studying finals week problems and possible solutions.
"It's a subcommittee to study the use and abuse of finals week." Don Marquis, associate professor of philosophy, said recently.
**WE WANT TO institute an exam-free period, last seven days before finals**, *Michigan State University*.
If the subcommittee's proposal is approved by both committees and the council, University of Kansas students will enjoy the first week before final start, possibly next fall.
This would mean that for this semester no tests would be given in classes May 4-10 before final begin. However, the proposal, which was presented earlier, effect earlier than next fall, Marquis said.
"The effect of this will be two-fold. First, that's the real pressure week for students and not giving exams that week would have been much less pressure." "Secondly, faculty who want to give exams during that week will have to put them off and give them during finals week, which would make those who complain about rooms during finals week very bumpy."
Under KU's current policy the schools individually decide whether faculty can give last week tests in classes where a final is required.
THE MOST serious problem is that the semester is supposed to run from Jan. 24 to May. 20, as established by the Board of Regents," he said. "If you faculty, 'Well, I do they're doing is cutting the semester short by a week and a half."
The University changed to a week and a half of fall in the final 1967 semester to give students more time to study and to give an additional hour for each exam period.
DESPITE THE SWICH, students still complain, according to Cathy Gorton, subcommittee chair, that they were speed during the last week of classes, at the end of final weeks or sometime in between, she said, although the Calendar Committee tries to spread them evenly.
This semester, student should be helped to "stop day" students, when no classes begin.
But Marquis said the "stop" day wasn't enough.
The proposed solution of a dead week isn't new. The Calendar Committee did an extensive study on finals in Spring 1873, but the same somehow disappeared, Marquis said.
"Because some faculty give finals during the last week of classes, students have a rough week—tougher than they should have," he said.
IN THE STUDY, both faculty and students in the Senate received question-aires, but less than half of both responded. The current three-exams-a-day schedule was based on the time available. Students preferred two-hour exams and faculty preferred three-hour exams.
Half of the faculty they always gave final exams in undergraduate courses and about 16 per cent said they either usually had to take them or two per cent said they never gave them.
Carlos Alberto Vasquez, Paraguayan classical guitarist, will perform at 8 o'clock in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union in a concert sponsored by the Kansas-Paraguay Committee, the Center for Latin American music education.
Guitar music by Vasquez at KU today
From 7 to 10 per cent of the faculty said
Vasques' concert program will include
musical music and Latin American folk
music.
Vasquez is a protege of Sila Godoy, Paraguayan classical guitarist, who toured Kansas in 1975, also under the sponsorship of the Kansas-Paraguay committee. The highlight of Vasquez' Kansas tour will be a concert with Godoy in Wichita later this month. Godoy is in the United States recording.
Vasquez, born in Paraguay in 1946, began playing guitar when he was 12. He now dedicates most of his time to music, practicing six to eight hours a day, even though he earns his living as a lawyer, specializing in civil law.
Vasquez will perform informally at Lawrence High School Wednesday and visit the Wednesday night jam session at Off-the-Wall Hall.
"Music is my vocation, but it's difficult to survive as a musician in my country," he said. "Because Paraguay is a small and developing country, it has been regarded as one of the United States."
we're at a stage that we can't think about art. I would like to live in the United States, to develop my art. There's a market for arry kind of music here."
Vasquez' tour of Kansas began with performances in Colby, Oberlin, Oakley, Hoxie and Goodland, sponsored by the Northwestern Plains Art Council. Hay Lawrence, Vasquez, Vasquez, Hay Lawrence, McPherson and Wichita, with performances scheduled at Kansas State University and the governor's mansion.
they gave exams in the last week or two of class but gave no final. Another 17 to 19 per cent said they gave exams both in the last week or two of class and during final week.
Gorton said this study and other data were reviewed by the subcommittee to decide on basic scheduling problems of the final period.
THE PROBLEM is hard to define, but we haven't got a better alternative to the one we know.
Marquis agreed. "One of the most difficult things was to find a course of action," he said. "I will be here."
"The problem is that people in this place do different views on what a good education can do."
feedback for it. I think we will first approach the dearness and then float it up before
Gorton said she thought it was important to get students' opinions because most department heads seemed satisfied with the system.
"As for students, there's really no way to satisfy everyone," she said.
Only 65 days are left until finals, and the groans are already being heard.
Snake found, locked in Fraser
Lawrence voters will decide in the April 15 general election whether they want to change from the current city manager—a mayor of a city government to a mayor-council form.
A petition containing 3,264 valid signatures was submitted to the county clerk's office Friday saying the current system should be changed. Only 2,960 signatures were needed to put the question on the April 5 ballot, the office said.
A 5-foot, 60-pound boa constrictor that had been missing from Fraser Hall since Wednesday afternoon has been located but not captured.
However, the student said that there never was any threat of danger, and that the snake was part of a traditional psychology experiment.
City rule change on ballot
The main item on the April 5 ballot will be candidates for three city commissioner posts. If the mayor-council form passes, the newly elected commissioners must step down before their terms are over. Frank Braschi was a member of the League of Municipalities, said Friday.
the day after the next general election, which would be in April 1979.
have to campaign for council positions from their respective wards. Bean said.
This means that the two newly elected commissioners who receive the highest number of votes would serve two years, the other four would serve one commissioner, the one who receives the least number of votes of the three, would serve a full term of two years. The two other commissioners, already elected, would serve out their full terms by April 1979.
The snake apparently escaped from its third-floor cage in Fraser Hall, where it was used in a psychology experiment. The snake was not captured when the water was found wedged beneath a cabinet.
The student said the cabinet would have to be dismantled to remove the snake.
Bean said the statue was sketched and could be interrupted several ways.
If the commissioners wished to be elected to the newly formed council, they would
Bean said that as he understood Kansas Statute KSA12-1019, Abandonment of the Commission Form of Government, the mayor-council form, if passed, would start
"Everything is safe now," a psychology student who asked not to be identified said. "The room where the snake was found has people who can't get to the snake, people and people can't get to the snake."
Mercer said she didn't think the council form would begin immediately because an accountant for the county and each council member elected from his own ward. The city commissioners aren't
If the mayor-council form is passed, the city manager would be replaced by a full-time mayor elected at large and the five council members appointed unanimously elected from at least four wards.
Lawrence Wrightsman, chairman of the psychology department, had requested all psychology personnel to remain silent concerning the disappearance of the snake. The student said Wrightsman didn't want newspaper stories about the snake that released such questions would create unnecessary problems with students and faculty using the building.
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4
Monday, February 7, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Electors lend order
Every four years this country holds a presidential election, and for four years after that election cries of banning the electoral college run rampant.
more recent supporters of the notion to ban the electoral college include Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan, and vice-presidential nominee of the losing Republican ticket in the 1976 election; and Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind. The senators basically support an Association Ban association contention that the "electoral college is selecting a President of the United States is archaic, undermocratic, complex, ambiguous, indirect and dangerous."
It was the founding fathers who, in the Constitution, provided that the winner of an election be the one receiving the majority of electoral votes. The Constitution also established that the number of senators each state holds must equal the number of senators and representatives from that state, selecting those electors "in such manner as the legislature thereof may direct."
BANNING THE electoral college would ruin the concept of "grassroots politics," or those politics close to home.
Under the present system, a candidate must gain the support of local and state party factions. The basis for this is to establish important coenities in order to maintain the region's popular direct system, important minorities in less-populous states would be ignored.
Black voters, who played a major role in the election of President Jimmy Carter, would be overlooked in the South, and the heaviest concentration of campaigning would on the eastern and western coasts and in northern industrial areas.
THEREFORE, THOSE minorities who've had a voice in certain regions in the past—blacks. Hispanics, Jews, labor, farmers would be overlooked in the direct-popular-
In this respect, it is rather ironic that Dole
favors abolishing the electoral college. Dole also has stated that Republicans need to gain support of Hispanics and blacks in rebuilding their party's the elec- tion polls, as well as Dole writes, his party in the long run, would be forced to ignore those very same groups.
Admittedly, there are faults with the electoral college. For one, it seems confusing to the common Americans. Many Kansans feel reluctant to vote for a Democrat candidate, because they know from Kansas that will likely be Republican.
THERE are faults with any system, however, and that includes the proposed system of electing a candidate by direct, popular vote. The side effects of any type of system are both hazardous and caution is needed when bringing in any new system, for it will have its failures, too.
When one looks back at nearly 200 years of presidential elections, there's been only one "runner-up" President as a result of the electoral college system. That was John Quincy Adams in 1824, when he was elected president. He drew dawn Jackson because of the close popular vote total. Such a vote by the House is stimulated by the Constitution.
THE IDEA of a runner-up presidency, therefore, has been preached only in a theoretical sense, rather than in a realistic sense.
If Congress should consider changing the election system in the future, careful attention should be paid to the problems that a popular-direct election would occasion.
As George Washington warned in his
Farewell Address:
"In all changes to which you may be invited, remember that time and habit are at least as necessary to fix the true character of government as of other human institutions; and the best standard by which to test the real tendency of the existing constitution of a country."
When my predecessor began these Editor's Notes last semester, she began them with the goal of increasing (for better or worse) the average knowledge of the Kansan.
As a result, there have been Editor's Notes on ethics, the Butz "loose shoes" quote, problems with sources, circulation and the liberal editorial page. And, before this semester is over, there will be Editor's Notes on the corring of the Kansan, the results of our readership survey and how the Kanan editor is selected each semester and why.
This column, however, will be devoted to answering trivial questions from imaginary readers about things that would never be worth a column of their own.
Trivial questions answered
I am ashamed to admit it, but the Kansas is the only paper I read. It'll do, I guess. I was just wondering when or if the weather birds "wear" a weather birds." Don't get me wrong—"wearthy birds" are great. It's just that I'm sick and tired of the birds you have now. I am especially bored with the skies on skis for A Lighter Warner.
Dear NOTE:
BORED
Dear BORED:
The "weather birds" are part of Kansan tradition. They were drawn by Kansan cartoonist Dave Sokolof during the early '70s and have been the heart and soul of Kansan culture, would be sacrilegious to change them. Besides, we don't have any others.
Dear NOTE:
DISGUSTED
editorial writers. The drawings are fine, I guess, but the subjects are downright ugly. Why are they the victims of their ego trips?
NOTE
meetings and Budget, budget,
budget. I want News, man. Why
doesn't the Kansan do
something?
You have a point. Many of the editorial writers are a bit unhandsome. The idea is that you will feel sorry for them and pay less attention to the flaws in their writing. Ego is not in-
Dear DISGUSTED:
Dear HUNGRY:
HUNGRY
We're trying. We're trying!
It's not our fault! The plain fact is that most of the time nothing happens that really deserves to happen, and we may remedy this situation soon, however. We are presently
Dear NOTE:
What kind of mail does the Kansan get? I bet you get all sorts of junk. Neat junk, probably, from all sorts of far-off PR men and exchange papers.
Editor's Note
EAGER
Jim Bates
engaged in financial negotiations with Tedde Tasheff, Chancellor Dykes, Bud Moore, Marian Washington and certain elements of the Mattsa program. At the latest, to break a scandal that will set the whole campus on its ear.
NOTE
volved. Ego would involve faked drawings.
NOTE
Dear EAGER:
Dear NOTE:
you bet correctly. Every day at 10 a.m., I pick up a huge pile of mail that takes a long time to sort through. This mail includes bad college exchange cards and laugh at, Good college exchange papers (from which to steal good ideas), syndicate ads “(Hey we know how really into music you music jokes!” “SuraRips” for “Huff,” “SuraRips”), press releases (“Kansas will benefit as a result of Sen. Dole’s latest . . .”), letters “Your editorial of the 3rd was insane, you doks . . .” and other assorted pieces of humor.
NOTE
The lack of news on this campus is an absolute disgrace. All we get are search committees, Student Senate
Dear NOTE:
Walking by the Kanaan newsroom the other day, I noticed vast collections of tripe pasted to the windows and the walls and, generally, to everyplace. These pieces of tripe included insulating clips from an explosion of paper, "humorous" pictures of staff members and high administration officials. There was also something called the Kanaan ear that was, I guess, an attempt to parody the famous Washington Star gossip column of the same name but using the staff members and the fodder. What are you running over there anyway, a day care center? This is college, you nits.
DISILLUSIONED
Dear DISILLUSIONED:
Awh. Can't a body have some fun?
Senior center good idea
senior citizens' projects it sponsors.
Two local leaders hope to receive city community development funds to remodel the former city police building at 745 Vermont St. Their plan- to provide a center for senior citizens and other social services- seems to be an excellent one.
COOEEMILLER, the other leader, is director of Penn House, an anti-poverty organization for agency needs rooms for room enforcement and clothing. The location of Penn House, 1035 Pennsylvania,
Douglas County Legal Aid, the Consumer Affairs Association and the Congregate Meals Program.
NOTE
Cal Broughton, one of the leaders, is director of Lawrence's Council on Aging. His agency maintains the Bus 62 system, which provides transportation for elderly citizens and serves the community and its agency currently is housed in the city's Community Building, but it needs more room for its buses and the
FIVE BASIC needs for such a center, as outlined by Miller, are:
- The United Fund soon will be asking social services to cut
Jay Bemis
Editorial Writer
People, not place, make sorority
To the editor:
Although editorial replies are generally indignant retorts meant to express violent dissatisfaction, they can be used to denote my support of, and agreement with, Debra Watson. In her letter, Debra gracefully explained that sororities are based on the principle of exclusion.
Linda Salger
Topeka sophomore
everyone in a residence hall is more liberal than anyone in a Greek house, and please don't make rash generalizations.
work' controversy is much to do about nothing. Dependent as we are on the government for regulation it is small wonder that a small number of students have complained of the campus whistle loss. All changes take time.
Farms feel pinch To the editor:
The American ideal has been to send persons to college to learn how to be better, perhaps
"glossy" and "slick" and an analogy of marketing Christ, like soap powder ignore the basic difference between "frosted" and "footprint" is footing the bill for what Josh is able to give away free.
Bill Sniffen's suggestion that business take its lumps uses
Love, not money, is the issue and the motivation, although Addison implies otherwise. (Josh announced public that
and as an office center for social services.
She's right. I'm duly embarrassed to admit it, but my sorority excludes certain categories of people. We exclude men. We exclude scoundrels, rogues and ruffians. We haven't opened our doors to any prostitutes lately, not have I seen any married women or mothers asked to pledge. Seven girls in her class are pregnant, only admitted a deep prejudice against pushers and child molesters. There you have it—the ugly truth of the matter.
their expenses. With several services in one building, it would be possible for them to do so.
$\textcircled{1}$Several services with several different locations within the city are a "terrible disservice" because the client, clients could remember one phone number and one building's location.
USING COMMUNITY development funds for the project is contingent upon approval by the city commission. Federal guidelines of the department of Housing and Urban Development would have to be considered before the commission makes a decision. The building would be designated of the building would be allowed under these guidelines, however, as would Penn House if it was determined to be a neighborhood service.
Secondly, Josh's talks weren't ultimately aimed at "inspiring nonbelievers or redirecting people in a manner beffiting a Christian." Somehow I missed the desperation Mr. Addison noted in McDowell's refutation of theories not his own. But he was an able self-defense者 are shallow and momentary goals. Josh has tried and tested Christ as Lord of life—the result is a desire to share his experience of wonder, joy, and growth with others.
*Telephone rates would be reduced considerably if six to eight agencies could be housed in one location. Each agency has 10% of the monthly costs of $4, excluding extensions and other extras.
Readers Respond
I wholeheartedly agree with another point that Debra brought up. You are right, Debra, you should not criticize a lifestyle which I think is too, believed that sororities were all very exclusive. I was under the impression that there is one certain type of girl who lives in a sorority. She had an open mind, generous persuasion, and it would be nice if her great-grandfather had a title. It seems that other girls have added "white" and "of american descent" to their name, but that I was wrong, because I have experienced this lifestyle
Thanks for the advice, Debra,
but I can provide better words
if wisdom. Don't assume that
- The police station building is much more secure than are some of the present office buildings. Penn House has been vandalized in the past and the building was damaged by fire last year. As Miller said, "I can't think of a safer place than a jailhouse." It should be noted that the senior center wouldn't be considered as a community center in a public meetings and community events setting. It's primary function would be as a senior citizen's center, since the Council on Aging would use most of the space.
What really affords me is the implication that a sorority is some kind of life form with an identity of its own. A sorority cannot be labeled "closed-minded." Granted, you will find sororities like these included, with absurd and baseless prejudices. That's sad, frustrating and ridiculous. It's just as ridiculous to hump sorority members into categories without looking at them individually. A sorority is nothing but a group whose houses sorority members
Another possibility for funding the center, if community development funds couldn't be revenue sharing money.
Although Broughton and Miller haven't discussed their plan with other social service agencies, they have other social service offices at the station. Examples of some agencies that might be housed there, and ones that are looking for people to fill these positions. Volunteer Clearing House,
The costs of refurbishing the station for use as a city hall has been estimated at $700,000. But, as Miller has explained, the costs of a senior center would be to much lower than that.
MIKE WILDEN, Lawrence assistant city manager, has said that the city is wary of giving too much revenue sharing money to people groups. Since revenue sharing isn't a permanent program, city officials are afraid that a large number might be dependent on such funds and then have them cut off. But the future of revenue sharing looks good.
what might be termed shotgun
reasoning. It may be sound, but
it's also not very discriminating.
Dotty Adams Gladwyne, Pa., graduate student
yes, pernaps government
should stop bailing out bus-
inesses. You have to pay
lesses should stop complaining.
Let Lockeheim and Exxon feel
the pinch. They're large, well,
sweet. And they may well survive the losses.
But when Sniffen proposes that farmers fend for themselves as well (and that's what happens if they don't combat the hand that feeds him) (and that's no figure of speech).
Congress renewed the program in its last session and Jimmy Carter said during his visit that he should "see the money fundled directly to cities rather than through state channels first."
So why shouldn't the farmer ask for government aid? And why shouldn't he complain when government proposes to give farmers a supportive to complaining, for many farmers, is to close shop and move to town. And I wouldn't blame them if they did, if they were doing it of the government try to feed regulations to a hungry nation.
"THEY (THE CITY) would need something much fancier than what we'd want," she said. She also said that she and Broughton were planning to visit later this week with the same architect that estimated city hall remodeling costs.
By the way, I'm not a Campus Crusader and I'm not defending an organization. As a Christian though, I'm advocating an honest examination of what McDewell is saying and why, rather than a gib dismissal of his experience.
This 'whistle while you
Russ Groves McPherson 50
I challenge Mr. Addison to write again.
Let the whistle die To the editor:
STATE OR federal grants also are open options in funding the center.
more regulated citizens. The Skinnerian dependence on an obnoxious factory whistle is a travesty in a system that is supposed to teach self-regulation and independence.
also makes it impossible for many of its clients to visit the center because of its distance from downtown.
I maintain that once the silence has been given a fair try—by KU students, along with the rest of that August institution's functionaries—the whistle will not even be missed. Only the unregulated, ignorant and basest of individuals will really be mourning its loss. Professors may lose their more accessible role and so will students in their time-keeping activities, and they will no longer have a steam whistle as a psychological crutch.
Wherever the funding might come from, there evidently is a need for such a center. Although the social service groups are important organizations, one would think it is the city's responsibility to make such a plan work. After all, problems of the poor and the underprivileged, the community, and Lawrence isn't immune to these problems.
The police station has been vacant since completion of the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center. The city had considered a new municipal hall, but it has since abandoned that idea in hopes of building a new one.
The wheat farmer at present faces prices that net him less per bushel than the cost of pro-
duction to any businessman, let alone one with the narrow profit margin of a farmer. And it's not changed a bit by any amount of surplus—the farmer still loses.
Jeff Latz 121 W. 14th
Keep the damn unhumanistic thing shut off!
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 10, 2015. Monday through Sunday, June and July are on Sunday and Saturday. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. Second-class postage paid at Dallas, Texas a year in Louisiana and County $1 at a member or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 per person, paid through $30. Editor Business Manager
be makes nothing off his books and offered to pay for his tapes for students who couldn't afford them). Would an inert public campaign and a shoddy performance have been preferable to convince the editorial writer of Josh's sincerity? I do not mind the editorial team of Addison's fervency by his ungrammatical "excesses ... cheapsens," although it does make his product less slick.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
It is evident that an "outider" will usually look at the outside of a package, a person, and be familiar with the unfair that he should then criticize that "outside" for being so carefully and purposefully done up. Instead of being careful with the purpose or motivation of Josh McDowell's three lectures, Paul Addison in Wednesday's Kansas (Feb. 2) has given us the style of Josh's message.
Editor Jim Bates
Josh attack trite To the editor:
First, why is organization, efficiency, and thoroughness deployed when applied to the most crucial area of humans' lives, their relationship to God? The implications of words like
Choice of topic is surely an editor's prerogative, yet McDowell's motivation and ignoring most of what he said, Addison reveals the super-confusion of his own viewpoint.
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Monday, February 7, 1977
University Daily Kansan
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Special Features
Interview questions must be fair, legal
When applying for or a job, whether through a written application or an oral interview, an applicant is asked many questions, but some shouldn't be answered.
Because of federal laws and regulations prohibiting discrimination, many questions asked by employers are illegal, according to Bonnie Ritter, director of Affirmative Action. The Equal Pay Act of 1963, Title VII of the CIVIC Code, requires education amendment of 1962 are only three such acts that set guidelines prohibiting discrimination.
The following questions are illegal for an interviewer to ask:
- The applicant's marital status
- Questions concerning pregnancy
* The number and age of the applicant's
ALTHOUGH AN interviewer can ask for general distinguishing physical characteristics, questions about an applicant's race are illegal. When information concerning height and weight isn't relevant to a job, it can't legally be required.
the interviewer may not ask the birthplace of the applicant nor may he request a birth certificate before hiring. The employer may request proof of age after the applicant is hired. Photographs may not be required before hiring.
The interviewer may ask an applicant's current address and how long he has lived there, but may not make specific inquiries. A lawyer may also indicate an applicant's national origin.
QUESTIONS ABOUT a person's academic career are legal but the interviewer may not ask about the nationality, racial or religious affiliation of the school attended. Requiring specification of religious preference is also illegal.
Specific questions concerning the mental and physical health of the applicant may be asked if relevant to work performance. However, general inquiries—"Do you have any health conditions that would affect your health conditions unrelated to job performance, are illegal."
All questions about a person's past work experiences are legal but questions about an individual's current life experience.
RITTER SAID if asked an illegal question, a person should "answer as defyly"
Full heating use of natural gas resumes at KU
as possible that question which should have been asked in its place."
The University of Kansas returned Friday to 100 per cent natural gas usage after alternating between oil and natural gas to heat KU buildings.
Kansas Public Service Gas Co., Inc., supplies KU with natural gas, Gas Orke, director of facilities operations, said.
"We're not using any oil right now, but I expect we may have some more changeovers, yet, depending on the weather." he said.
For example, many times when an interviewer asks an applicant's marital status, he is actually trying to find out whether the applicant is apt to move, she said. Often, employer favors married to single applicants under the same employment responsibility and therefore won't move if he has a job according to Ritter.
in a case where marital status is asked,
before, the applicant should state how
he or she would like to be married.
If illegal questions are asked, a complaint can be filed. Generally a complaint must be made within 180 days of the incident.
Legislation that prohibits the questions determines where the complaint should be made...
KU operated on 50 per cent oil and 50 per cent natural gas for two days last week and ran completely on oil during the previous week.
RITTER SAID many illegal questions are
RITTERED by the employer's ignorance
of the nature of the complaint.
For example, as prohibited under Title VII, a complaint about sex discrimination should be made to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Further information about filing a complaint may be obtained through the KU Office of Affirmative Action, 235 Strong Hall.
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Because of "great pressure" the current accelerated three-year curriculum places on medical students, the KU Medical Center is reintroducing a more traditional four-year curriculum in camouflage Archie Dykes said yesterday.
By BARRY MASSEY
Staff Reporter
Beginning this year, medical students will have the option to choose between the three-year program or to return to a more traditional program. You can also be reinforced on a staggered basis.
Old Med Center program returns
Dykes said the three-year program didn't give medical school students enough time to participate in research projects or to expire before next other than their required curriculum.
"STUDENTS AND faculty were unhappy with the three-year program," Kydes said, and "the vast majority thought that the program did not provide the best education."
"It subjected students to constant pressure and pressed them from getting nervous."
Since 1973, when the three-year program was introduced, Med Center students have been able to receive a M.D. degree after three years of continuous study, Dwight Mulford, dean of admissions at the Med Center, said last week.
But startting with the class of 200 students
WISHING TO APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE STUDENT SENATE/STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE:
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, Level 3.
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available
Notice to All Organizations
These requests must be completed and returned to the Senate office NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 28,1976.
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
Scholarship Hall applications due:
DEADLINE!
FEB. 15
that begins medical school d June 6, 80 will be in the four-year program. The 120 others will start in the current three-year program.
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IN THE CLASS that begins in 1978, however, 170 of the 200 students will be in the four-year program, Mulford said. From then on, only a few openings in a separate three-year program will be available to special students.
Citing much the same reasons for the change as Dykes, Mulford said that great demands placed on medical students by three years of continuous study were the primary factors in making the decision to change.
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"We changed because of problems students had having feet so much material they were not going to play."
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"We thought that the accumulation of knowledge would be greater if they had more time," he said. "Now they have no free time to do anything else."
Master Charge Welcome
THE THREE-YEAR program requires 18 months of basic science course work, 11 months in clinical training and a one month summer break. You must be the student's time, before he begins his
In addition, the four-year program provides a three-month summer vacation after each academic year, unlike the three-year program because it has only short breaks in semesters.
According to Mulford, a student will now decide on his program option during an interview at the Med Center. The student is then asked to choose which program he prefers, but is also told he might not get that preference.
Under the four-year program, a student takes two academic years of basic science work and two more years of clerkships, before receiving a degree.
internship, is open for elective courses or additional clinical clerkships.
IF SOMEONE isn't satisfied with his assigned program, Mullford said, he can either make a switch with someone from the other program who agrees to do so, or withdraw from the Med Center and go elsewhere.
Lykees had many medical schools that had adopted a three-year program have shifted back to a four-year program because the medical school lacked inability to adequately cover the required
material and give medical students the practical experience they needed.
HE SAID A four-year program would allow medical students more opportunities to gain practical experience in a working area outside the medical school.
Also, he said, a four-year program would be more conducive to attracting students to the areas of family practice and primary care. He also said that the program forced early decisions on specialization.
Mulfard said that although the number of doctors to graduate from the Med Center in the next few years would decrease slightly because of the new guidelines, both he and Dykes agreed that the decline wouldn't be very large in the long run.
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"Probably one difficulty with the changeover is that we haven't had the three-year program long enough to assess it," Mulford said.
"They may have to work harder in the three-year program, and put out more effort in a shorter time," he said, "but it doesn't mean they won't make as good a doctor."
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6
Monday, February 7, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Accent the ARTS
Accent the Arts' to focus on local talent
An arts festival for the University of Kansas is no longer a question very much up in the air. The name, content and focus have changed, and a new performer action will equal audience reaction.
By SHERI BALDWIN Entertainment Editor
Festival of the Arts has been replaced by Accent the Arts, a 25-day emphasis on what KU has to offer itself instead of a week long emphasis on what others have to offer KU.
Accent the Arts, Feb. 10-Mar. 6, features a minimum of talent from outside the Lawrence area. The largest of such events, the Jeffrey JB Company, opens the Accent program this spring.
Festival of the Arts began in 1967 as an offering of major films, speakers, popular entertainers and musical and dance performers thatstudied music simply by purchasing a book of tickets for all events.
Staff drawing by David Miller
Festival performers presented in the past included Ella Fitzgerald, Al Capp, Lou Rawls, the Dava Brueckner jazz trio, David Steinberg, B. B. King, Robert Moog, Gordon Lightfoot and the Tallerfingers, fullerting funds, broken contracts and rescheduled problems canceled the Festival in 1975.
Last spring, a partial Festival was offered because of last minute cancellations by Herbie Hancock and Loren Hampton. Ticket buyers had to pay the full price, as well as attendance and attendance at the concert given was poor.
After unsuccessful requests to several state and national endowment associations and local community sources for funding, Festival was killed and Accent became the best option.
in compiling the Accent the Arts schedule, SUA has included entertainment from about 20 KU music and forum series, or University groups that are a regular part of KU's fine arts community.
These include student and faculty recitals, the chamber music series, writers and poets, gallery exhibitions and Kansas Union art sales, theater productions, and performance workshops and music lectures and Rock Chalk Revue.
What SUA has added to KU's ordinary arts schedule is the real stuff of Accent.
the premiere of Paul Stephen Lim's third play, "Homeric—a Trilogy on Sexual Liberation," runs Mar. 1-6, ending Accent. Lim's first play, "Compassers," won KU the top prize in original American College Theatre Festival at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., last spring.
A critical symposium will follow "Honorica" featuring Henry Hewes of Saturday Review, Sylvia Drake of the Los Angeles Times and Giles Fowler of the Kansas City Star.
"Dames at Sea," tailored to a dessert-nut dinner—theater atmosphere, will run Feb. 12-20 in New York City.
Informal recitals by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts will be presented at noon each day of the festival (Feb. 10-Mar. 6) in Strong Hall lobby.
A bus trip to the Nelson Gallery and Akins Museum in Kansas City, Mo. will be led by KU professional artists who preview of the museum Art is also offered in addition to regularly scheduled exhibits.
Sequestra Cotta, professor of piano and a concert pianist will present a benefit performance for the pianist at the Winterfest.
And finally, there is Joffrey II, the only event booked and not just scheduled for Accent. The touring company of the New York City Center Joffrey Ballet, the third best ballet companies in the country, according to Joanna Miranda, publicity chairman for Accent.
In the booking terms, Joffrey II is smaller, more moveable and lower in cost—the exact characteristics and appeal to which Accent has been tailored.
Arts & Leisure
Foster's jazz challenges definition
By STEVE FRAZIER
Jazz fans, critics and historians have never agreed on a definition of the music they love.
Reviewer
In only 75 years, great innovators have blazed the trail from New Orleans to Chicago, New York and Kansas City; and then from there to Detroit. But each step encourages some to say that only what has gone before is jazzy, the new style is not.
Fortunately, few jazz musicians have slowed the process of perfecting their art long enough to become mired in the argument of what kind of hawaiian music, and today's listeners would be as shocked to hear the chord extensions of Charlie Parker and the off-bat" "bombs" of Kenny Clarke as were audiences a generation ago.
Gary Foster, who 15 years ago was a student at the University of Kansas, made one of his regular returns to Lawrence Saturday as he taught a jazz band to teach young musicians how to better approach jazz, but his performance at Paul Gray's Jazz Place Saturday night
was in itself a three-hour lecture on the meaning of jazz.
even those who hangle over drawing the fine line between jazz and its relatives could have little argument with Foster's lessons, for, above all, he is a master of improvisation. And improvisation, the instant creation of melody, is one of few constants in all the various styles of music rightly called jazz.
FOSTER, all-nall reedman whose specialty is alto sax, is a veteran-or perhaps one should say survivor—of the Los Angeles recording studios.
His jazz activities include records with Warne Marsh and Clare Fischer, and recently, with the brilliant Toshiko Akiyoshi-W Tabakin Big Band. With him at the Jazz Place were Bobby Show, lead and bass of Lawrence musicians who handled admirably the task of backing two gifted men with whom they'd never played.
To call Foster's solos merely improvisations would be to miss the beauty of his art, because his soles were marked with a sense of direction that made them actual compositions with definite beginnings, middles and ends.
This Week's Highlights
"RAISIN" the musical version of
the opera by Stephen Sondheim.
Feb. 12, Lyric Theater, Kansas City, Mo.
Theater
"OLD TIMES" 8 tonight through Saturday, William Ige Theatre.
Concerts
CARLOS VASQUEZ. South American guitarist, 8th. Kansas Union's Forum
EPHEMERAL FORMS; MOTHER MUSING'S FLIGHT PATTERNS," a concert in electronic sound and light by Ron Swartwhall. 8 tonight. Swartwhall Recital Hall.
"A CONCERT OF NEW MUSIC" woodwind, string and electric sound pieces performed by students and faculty. 8 p.m. Tuesday, Swarthout.
"A CONCERT OF NEW MUSIC," piano, vibraphone, film, flexiones, the Chamber Chair, percussion ensemble and electronic band, the band which features Ron Pellegrino, guest composer, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Swartwout, JOFFREY II BALLET COMPANY, 8
p.
INFORMAL RECITALS by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts at noon every weekday. Thursday through Mar. 4.
Strong Hall lobby.
Lectures
"NEW VOCAL TECHNIQUES IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY," associate professor of music history, who leads a series of lectures and concerts at Contemporary 10:30 am, today.
"A PHILOSOPHER'S VIEW OF NEW MUSIC," by Warner Morse, assistant professor of philosophy, 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, Murphy Lounge.
MUSIC, WAVES, ELECTRICAL ENERGY, SYNERGY AND PHYSICAL FORMOS, by Ron Pellegrino, guest speaker; 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, Swarthout.
"REAL-TIME COMPOSITION WORKSHOP," by Pellegroir on improvisation. 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, Swarthwort.
GIRLS IN CHAINS and DETOUR-Two
BILTS "B" Films, both directed by
Edgar Ullmer.
Films
Foster's soprano sax ride on Plas
Johnson's indignant "Parking Lot Blues"
was such a composition. He started his solo
solo in 1972 with the Choris, chords,
inviting the audience to join him.
THE STRANGER-beautiful color cinematography and fine acting convey the existential message adapted from Albert Camus' novel. A French film with subtitles. A 28-minute, 30-minute, black-and-white film on homosexuality in prison.
AS HE BEGAN to proch the chords more intently, the notes came faster, and then even faster, and his half-shut eyes opened wide for an instant as surprise as he watched his fingers handle speedy octave tremolas. He was overcome with delight and need to blastily dazzle his listeners, yet when his thought demanded space there were no barriers.
Other highlights included mastery of "All Things You Are," "Round Night, Midnight," and "The Spectator."
Foster's flights were made possible by the remarkable craftsmanship that complemented his creativity: his tone was clear, his swing relentless and he knew himself so well that the audience never heard hints of limits to his ability.
MORE SUBTLE delights, such as a highly selective and effective use of vibrato, and skilful creation and release of tension, added to the audience's joy.
Shew would have been a show in himself. He growled, leapt and stumped through "Parking Lot Blues," then showed his rical lyrical flegelform style on Traj Jones "'A Child is Born," one of the prettiest jazz ballads of recent years.
Maybe today, when record stores' jazz bins are stuffed with everything from Oscar Peterson to Herbie Hancock, Dizzy Gillespie to Chuck Mangione, and Count Basie to Weather Report, there is great need to decide how hard musicians should be fine musicians whose definitions agree with theirs and just call it music.
Chances are that Gary Foster would be counted in, no matter what.
No one was able to prevent it, and the sixth annual School of Fine Arts Faculty Folles was presented in grand style yesterday afternoon.
And notorius American composer John Philip Boozer, a faculty invention, was back again in this year in full force. Many of the same jokes were used from Boozer's first appearance last year (his opera "Salma" is performed at many other works). But encamel Daniel Politokos, associate professor of music, made the best of his script between the "zippy" acts.
The hour-long revue parodied music at the mercy of faculty members, which resulted in a number of "in" jokes and horrible puns.
Highlighting the follies was an orange etude by Richard Reber, assistant professor of piano, Reber jugged oranges, both in the air and on the piano. His orange arpeggios and trills enhanced an actual composition entitled, "Chopin in the Citrus Belt."
Another highlight of the show included non-music types. Ralph Christoffersen and Jerry Hutchinson, associate vice chancellors for academic affairs, teach in music history; and Dick Wright, lecturer in music history; combined to sing a quartet from Rigoloette.
Hutchison and Wright were beaked as females, which proved entertaining enough, but the four also managed to come closer to a polished musical sound than all other acts.
Larry Maxey, associate professor of clarinet, demonstrated trombone and did prove that Cole Porter's "Night and Day" might be a never-die song without his help. Maxey managed to get through the song playing only one note—in the proper places—and also finished with a thoroughly greased and deslobed instrument.
The revue began with a flurry of con-
Puns follies' backbone
Feb.1-17
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Bus leaves at 12:30, tour is being lead by instructors from the department of Art History.
HARVEST
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12 $4.00
Bus Trip to the NELSON GALLERY ATKINS MUSEUM
fusion from fluorescent kaftans and Santa Claus nuits to assorted Halloween masks and two steps. And so it ended, with a final one that was a combination arrangement of the "Star Spangled Banner" and "Stars and Stripes." At least the faculty proved consistent.
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Monday, February 7,1977
University Daily Kansan
city of the moon each strong Hall
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TERR. 1990
Boys Club to pick up newspapers
The Boys Club, rather than the Senate, will now pick up new publications in collection boxes in Lewis, Oliver, Olver and Burris.
A Student Senate newspaper reclamation service has been taken by the Lawrence Boys Club because of a bombing incident.
Despite a lack of funds, interest in the recycling project has been high since it was started as an experiment Sept. 9, according to Steve Owens, student body vice president. In addition to collecting newspapers at the residence halls and fraternity and sorority houses, the Senate collected papers from Watson Library, the archives in Spencer Research Library and faculty members.
THE BOYS CLUB will pick up papers only in the
the Senate sold papers to Whompier, Inc., a nonprofit reclamation center, but the $147 cost of building collection boxes, using a KU pick-up truck and hiring a delivery person, exceeded the papers exceeded the money earned, Owens said.
The senate considered the service important enough to students to continue it, he said, and he had hoped earlier this semester that University support could have been solicited to expand the project.
collection boxes in the residence halls, but other places wanting to use the club's services can call it at 814-5627.
But the Whompr closed down Dec. 18, after five years marked by debts because it was unable to collect more than 15 tons of paper a month to offset low market prices for waste paper.
THE WHOMPER was the only reclamation center in Lawrence, and the Senate did not have the funds to store paperats and transport them to the nearest reclamation centers, in either the Kansas City area or Wellsville.
Here's how the closest city area or Wellsville
Oversized temporarily turned over the collection to the
Boys Club before the spring semester began until
something could be arranged with the University.
The Senate had planned to petition Chancellor Archie Dykes to incorporate the reclamation project into its agenda after taking to Max Lucas, the director of facilities planning, Owens said, he realized the idea was impractical.
THE TRASH-BURNING facility won't be built for at least four years and the money now allocated for it is
designated only for research, he said. When the facility will take trash from the city's refuse department.
"They would have no logical reason to set up a recycling program," Owens said, "because they will be encouraging people to throw things away, not save them."
Tom Cormack, director of the Boys Club, said the club would continue to collect newspapers from residence halls the first Saturday of every month and at other times or places where people had large loads. The club has been collecting newspapers about two years, he said. It picks them up from residences and stores them in a barn outside of town to transport them by truck to Wilville.
COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES!
MID WINTER STEREO CLEARANCE!! Sale starts Tuesday, Feb. 8, and ends Saturday, Feb.12. Hurry, many items are one-of-a-kind and priced to sell.
SPEAKERS
| Item | Quantity | Suggested resale | Sale |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| ADS L-500 | 2 | 135.00 ea. | 119.00 ea. |
| L-700 | 2 | 175.00 ea. | 158.00 ea. |
| L-710 | 2 | 245.00 ea. | 226.00 ea. |
| L-910 | 2 | 560.00 ea. | 488.00 ea. |
| LV-1020 | 2 | 665.00 ea. | 565.00 ea. |
| Advent Large | 2 | 138.00 ea. | 98.00 ea. |
| AR 3A | 2 | 300.00 ea. | 165.00 ea. |
| Avid 100 | 2 | 95.00 ea. | 79.50 ea. |
| 102 | 2 | 139.00 ea. | 118.00 ea. |
| 104 | 2 | 179.00 ea. | 159.00 ea. |
| E-V Interface A Set | | 400.00 | 280.00 |
| ESS AMT-1 | 2 | 369.00 ea. | 249.00 ea. |
| Rock Monitor (Used) | 2 | 469.00 ea. | 300.00 ea. |
| Marantz HD-5S | 2 | 129.95 ea. | 77.00 ea. |
| Sony SSV 1250 | 2 | 100.00 ea. | 88.00 ea. |
| SSW 2000 | 2 | 150.00 ea. | 137.50 ea. |
| Infinity 2000 (Used) | 2 | | 150.00 ea. |
| Monitor Jr | 2 | 225.00 ea. | 149.00 ea. |
| Monitor II | 2 | 469.00 ea. | 300.00 ea. |
| Janszen 412 HD | 2 | 319.95 ea. | 199.00 ea. |
| 412A | 2 | 279.95 ea. | 189.00 ea. |
| 210AH | 2 | 149.95 ea. | 99.00 ea. |
RECEIVERS
AMPLIFIERS & SPEAKERS
| Item | Quantity | Suggested resale | Sale |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| JVC 4VR-5436 | 1 | 569.95 | 325.00 |
| 4VR-5446 | 1 | 679.95 | 388.00 |
| Marantz 2325 | 1 | 799.95 | 325.00 |
| 2240 (Used) | 1 | 449.95 | 299.00 |
| Sony STR 7015 | 1 | 220.00 | 179.00 |
| STR 4800 | 1 | 400.00 | 359.00 |
| STR 5800 | 1 | 500.00 | 449.00 |
| STR 6800 | 1 | 600.00 | 549.00 |
| Technics SA-5400 | 1 | 400.00 | 356.00 |
| SA-5560 | 1 | 500.00 | 444.00 |
| Kenwood KR-6340 (Used) | 1 | 450.00 | 275.00 |
| Harmen/Kardon 330C | 1 | 220.00 | 197.00 |
| 430 | 1 | 320.00 | 288.00 |
| 730 | 1 | 420.00 | 379.00 |
| Pioneer 450 | 1 | 225.00 | 148.00 |
| Sanyo DCX 3500 | 1 | 399.00 | 199.00 |
Item Quantity Suggested Resale Sale
ESS PRE-AMP (Used) 1 400.00 150.00
JVC VN-990 1 200.00 260.00
VMS 101 1 200.00 149.00
Maranitz 1200B 1 499.95 459.00
1070 2 299.95 188.00
1070 2 299.95 149.00
1070 2 299.95 149.00
240 1 339.95 225.00
125 1 1250.00 750.00
500 (Used) 1 299.90 249.00
Phase Linear 2000 1 299.00 339.00
200 1 299.00 339.00
700B 1 799.00 599.00
SAE MK.1M 1 450.00 549.00
WK-230 1 450.00 350.00
WK-230 1 450.00 350.00
Sony TAE 8450 (V-FET) 1 1300.00 1000.00
TAN 8550 (V-FET) 1 1000.00 700.00
ST 4950 (Tuner) 1 250.00 299.00
TAN 2850 1 220.00 199.00
TAN 3650 1 300.00 264.00
TAN 5650 (V-FET) 1 500.00 429.00
TAE 5450 1 450.00 395.00
Technics SU-8600 1 350.00 325.00
Crown IC150A 1 349.00 299.00
OC-150 1 329.00 239.00
OC-150A 1 349.00 249.00
D-60 (Used) 1 799.00 225.00
Oshiro 805 1 220.00 199.00
TAPE PLAYERS
TURNTABLES
Item Quantity Suggested resale Sale
Technics RS-263AUS 1 200.00 176.00
RS-625 1 300.00 225.00
RS-671 1 400.00 325.00
RS-630 1 250.00 225.00
RS-640 1 350.00 315.00
Item Quantity Suggested Resale Sale
AR XA (Used) 1 119.00 50.00
SON Ps I-1000 2 100.00 75.00
Technics SL-1100A 1 369.00 299.00
SL-1300 1 300.00 299.88
SL-23 1 149.00 192.98
Rabco ST7 1 430.00 409.00
Linn Sondek LP-12 1 389.00 225.00
Yamaha YP-701 (Used) 1 249.00 149.00
BSR 810-X (No Headshell) 1 1
Sale starts tomorrow at 11:00 a.m.
Car stereo
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Maxell Case
UD C-90 39.90
Band and PA equipment
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8
Monday, February 7, 1977
University Dally Kansas
KU's aggressiveness sinks Sooners, 91-81
3y COURTNEY THOMPSON Associate Sports Editor
The Kansas Jayhawks tried a different approach Saturday night and it worked.
They dispensed with the last-second winning shot at the buzer, the free throw derby and the tendency to allow comfortable takeover shots, which were played with an aggressive style that wouldn't quit and that gave KU a 91-81 win over Oklahoma.
And the season-high attendance of 14,120 fans in Allen Field House liked that style. KU is now back in the race for the Big Eight conference title, in a four-way tie for second place with Oklahoma, Nebraska and Kansas State. The foursome share a 6-3
Sports
conference record. Missouri now with a 7-2 record in conference play, has the top spot in conference play.
The Jayhawks scored the first six points in the game, while the Sooners threw the ball away three times before scoring their first two points. KU then built up a 14-point lead in the first half and led by 15 points five times in the second half.
HERB NOLEBS and Hasan Houston contributed career-high scoring efforts (Nobles with 26 points, Houston 18) in leading the KU offense. Johnson had a season-high with 18 points, and a total of five KU players scored in double figures.
The Sooners could get to within only eight or nine points of the Hawks before the Suns beat them 10-8.
Nobles, Houston, Johnson and Ken Koenigs took turns at scoring spurs and the Jayhawks scored their highest point total in 2013-14 with a 91.58 win against KState two years ago.
KU COACH Ted Owens was impressed with his team's performance and with Owens' leadership.
"We stay aggressive throughout.
I believe this is the best game we've played since the game against K-State in the holiday tournament." KU beat K-State 81-20.
"OU played a fine game. In fact, I don't
you'll see better game anywhere in the
eater."
Oklahoma coach Dave Bluss was also impressed—with KU as a team and with Houston, whose flashy style sparked the band and repeatedly frustrated the Sooners.
"I thought he was a hotdog." Bliss said, who indicated he thought such "cocky" playing would hurt KU in the long run. "But they have a stylish basketball team."
NOBLES LED the Jayhawks during the first half, scoring 20 of his 26 points, with an eight-of-eight record from the free throw line. John Douglas and Donne Van Moore were also perfect from the line as KU one-of-11 force throws in the first half.
The *Hawks* didn't completely throw all tradition out the window, though, as 15 feuils
during the first half were cause for concern about the staying power of their 48-38 half-time lead. At that time, Von Moore already had a win over Houston, Koenigs and Houston had three each.
BUT IN THE second half, the Jayhawks had only nine personal fouls and only Nobles fouled out—and when he did with '39 to play the final score was set.
Koenigs, 6-10 center, was the focal point of the KU offense in the second half and scored 11 of his 13 points during a five-minute spree early in the period. His streak came after Oklahoma's Al Beal and Aaron Curry had blocked the KU margin to just eight points.
Owens said the offense was geared to Koenigs because Beal and Cliff Johnson were in foul trouble (Beal with three and Johnson with four).
"THOUGH Ken did a super job in the second half, playing with three fouls on him and not getting into foul trouble. And some of them were very good, but his him were marginal, I think." Owens said.
Bliss didn’t agree. “The referees let Ken吉 play in the second half. They didn’t catch it. It was an error.”
The Sooners kept pace with KU in the second half, both teams scoring 43 points. Beal and Cary Carabine are the leaders for Oklahoma with 16 points each.
KU SLOWED the game twice in the second half, Owens said, because the Sooners switched to the zone defense, not an intentional decision to change the pace.
But the 10-point deficit at half was the nemesis for Oklahoma and the Sooners were still nine points behind with 4:05 to go. From there, things didn't get better.
Owens said, however, that he never felt competely "safe" about the Sooners. "I knew Okhaloma was too good not to make a mistake," he said, glad to have the 10-point lead at the half."
So KU's now definitely "in the thick of it" in terms of the conference race. And the team will be there.
"We're not going to let up," said Nobles. "We're trying to get to the point where we can get a big lead and hold onto it, 'cause lately we've been blowing our leads."
But that wasn't the problem this weekend as Johnson said after the game, "Tonight it didn't matter who had the ball. Everybody was hot."
★★★
RANNA5
| | FF | PF | RF | Pts |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Johnson | 9-14 | 0 | 1 | 8 |
| Johnson | 9-14 | 0 | 1 | 8 |
| Konigra | 6-11 | 1 | 2 | 18 |
| Konigra | 6-11 | 1 | 2 | 18 |
| Douglas | 6-11 | 1 | 2 | 18 |
| Douglas | 6-11 | 1 | 2 | 18 |
| Sanders | 3-2 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
| Sanders | 3-2 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
| Sanders | 3-2 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
| Tinkle | 6-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Tinkle | 6-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Tinkle | 29-11 | 13-14 | 42 | 21 |
| | FO | FA | R | R | PF | Pts |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| McCallough | 5.0 | 1.4 | 9 | 7 | 2 | 6 |
| Stiller | 3.8 | 0.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| State | 3.6 | -0.1 | 0.1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Finlay | 0.5 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Head | 0.3 | 0.0 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
| Headon | 0.1 | 0.0 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Headon | 5.0 | 2.4 | 4 | 1 | 14 | 1 |
| Carry | 5.1 | 1.4 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Carry | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Carry | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| TOTALS | 32-80 | 15-20 | 0 | 0 | 20 | 81 |
| TOTALS | 32-80 | 15-20 | 0 | 0 | 20 | 81 |
KANAS 48 43 = 31
ORLANDIA 48 43 = 31
Atlanta 14,120
Pistons whip KC Kings; Lanier whips Jim Eakins
"he faked that he was going to hit me with a punch," Lanier said later, fully drained. "I just lost it."
DETROIT (UFI) - Kansas City "Jim"
Eakins learned you don't must Bob Lanier
and then
Lanier, normally the peacemaker,
decked Eakins with one punch yesterday
when Kansas City's reserve center ball
tried to lift the 6-11, 285-foot Detroit center.
That triggered a general melee lasting several minutes and resulting in both benches emptying, for which the players had to be withdrawn with National Basketball Association rules.
Lanier was ejected but Eakins stayed when the game resumed with 6:25 left in the third quarter. The Pistons went on to injure the Clippers, and the Raptors would record a 130-111 victory over the Kings.
"YOU HAVE two choices when you think somebody's going to hit you," Lamar said, illustrating one by covering his face with his arms and saying the other was to "hit
towered over his questioners. "I think I hit Eakins with only two punches.
"We'd been playing well until this one. We got nothing off our bench," coach Phil Johnson of Kansas City, said, which had helped enter the game. He did not see the fight.
"I don't like to fight," Lanier said, "and this is the first one I've had in a long time. In fact, I think this is the first time I've been thrown out of a game."
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Anyone interested in working on publicity/promotion of
Herb Nobles pressured OU on offense and defense
ACCENT THE ARTS
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contact the SUA office 864-3477
BUY
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"We seemed to need more help on the boards in the second half," Nobles explained, "so I hit the boards while Ken got the scoring. He had the hot hand then.
noted Nobles' statistical run down on the game indicating eight-of-eight from the free throw line, 13 rebounds and six blocked shots.
"I wasn't out there, trying to break my career hard or anything, just get us a win."
TWO TACOS GET ONE FREE with COUPON Expiration date: February 28,1977
IN THE first half against the Sooners,
they put in 20 points before settling for
the third.
Although daily workouts have been shortened as the ruggers of the Big Eight basketball race take their toll, the hawks have certainly sharpened their game.
"Me and John Douglas talked about it a lot. My rhythm had been off and I wasn't squirting and looking at the basket. And I wasn't watching on the ball-the ball weren't any flinch on it."
But he could have continued to go to the hoop with his quick-release turn around jump shack which has been indolently unmanned — "unmanned" shot—now that he's regained his touch.
By GARY VICE
And it appears the revival of an exuberant Herb Nobles has been the key to KU's honoring as the 6-7 forward led the "Hawks" to Oklahoma Sooners, 91-8, Saturday night.
WHAT DID it take for Nobles to start connecting again? Well, the former metropolitan player-of-the-year from St. Louis offers two explanations. Choose one.
Nobles has now hit 16-of-26 from the field in his last two games to bring his once dismissal percentage of 34 per cent to a more respectable 41 in conference play. And with Nobles back on track, there now is no doubt that Nobles will be leading Missouri Tigers, who host the Hawks Wednesday night in friendly Hearnes Center.
"IN ORDER for us to win the Big Eight Championship," Nobles said, "I'm going to have to have more games like this. It was a complete game."
Sports Editor
If that was too complicated or too unconvincing, try this one.
Herb Nobles regains his shooting brillance
"I was down in St. Louis and I left my jumper down there. My mother finally matured."
wives, who has surmired through several poor shooting performances (including 2-0f 11 against Kansas State) since being named most valuable player at the conference preseason tournament, sparked KU's offensive onslaught with a career-high 26 points.
It was all said modestly by the smiling senior in response to queries of "Was this a real case?"
COLLEGE ASSEMBLY ELECTION
Election will be conducted February 16 and 17 by the Student Senate.
Filing applications available at 206 Strong Hall, Nunemaker Center, Student Senate Office, Graduate Student Office, Kansas Union. Filing deadline: 4:30 p.m., Friday, February 11 in 206 Strong Hall and Nunemaker Center.
Graduate and Undergraduate Representatives from Nunemaker Center and the Liberal Arts and Sciences
for
The College Assembly
for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
— Establishes procedures related to the maintenance of academic policies
—Sets requirements for graduate and undergraduate degrees
- Approves or disapproves changes in courses, or new courses offered for credit
IBM NEEDS OUTSTANDING PEOPLE
And we can offer outstanding career opportunities in Marketing Engineering or Programming We will be interviewing at
The University of Kansas on February 17, 1977.
To find out about IBM and let us find out about you, sign up for an interview at the Placement Office or write to: Mr. L.C. Pfeiffer, College Relations Manager, IBM Corporation, One IBM Plaza, Chicago, Illinois 60611.
IBM An equal opportunity employer
Seve perform nastics State 1
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Jody Nunley first p
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 7, 1977
9
down on the from the free six blocked
the Sooners, before settling final half.
help on the Nobles exs while Ken had the hot
to break my
me gain a win."
to go to the
turn around
ingloriously
""—now that
bakes to start the former an air from St. Clement. Choose one. Select ad about it in a book. Read and write about it. Booklet and I. be ball-Deree
ed or too un-
and I left my mother finally
new
y the
Gymnasts smash CMSU
By DAN BOWERMAN
Several gymnasts turned in outstanding performances as the Kansas men's gymnastics team defeated Central Missouri State by nearly 50 points Saturday.
Associate Sports Editor
the Jawhayks took first in six of the seven events and dominated the other placings, as KU scored 173.55, compared to CMSU's 137.15.
Jody Summers, Sean Williams and John Nunley led the dayhawks, taking all of KU's wins.
Summers won the all-around, scoring a
241 points in double-paralley shots,
paralley shots, 8.45, and horizontal bar,
8.65.
WHILA, 9.4, and floor exercise, 8.6. His vaulting mark was only .06, from his career high of 9.45, which is the highest score for vaulting in KU history.
"The vault went pretty well," Williams said after the meet. "Coach Bock Looock told me what to do and I did it. It felt better than my 9.45 did."
KU was defeated by K-State, 82-31, and Missouri edged the Jayhawks, 55-53.
The tennis team has five more indoor meets on its schedule before embarking on its annual swing through Florida and its outdoor season.
MUNDY ALSO won balance beam, 8.43,
and uneven parallel bars, 8.33, for KU.
Laurie Propt won the two other events—
in those two events, Mundy took second. In
those two events, Mundy took second.
KU's men's tennis team kicked off its season with an 8-1 victory over Tufts University Friday and then dropped a dual with Southern Illinois University Saturday,
KU'S LONE point in the doubles competition was picked up by Clarke and Iain Anderson.
Netters split dual meets
State," KU coach Ken Snow said Saturday,
"We did about as good as we could."
KU coach Tom Liomieu called the performance typical of a young team in its first season.
KU's only other first place finisher was junior Charmaine Kullian who run the 800-meter race.
In doubles, Clarke and Heeking won in straights, 6-4, 7-6. Collier and Russer won in singles, 6-4, 7-6.
Clarke defeated Tulsa's top singles performer Pat Richie, 6-4, 6-4, and Hosking, a sophomore, defeated Mike Van Zijphen, 6-2, 6-3. Clarke won up on for Tulsa's victorious doubles team.
MUNDY TOOK thru dn vaulting, 8.25, and
teams, 7.75; she also led Kansas in the
battle.
Women's track team drops double dual
The remaining indoor meet are: Feb. 12 against Arkansas in Fayetteville; Feb. 18 against Wichita State in Lawrence; Feb. 19 against South Dakota in Lincoln University of Missouri at Kansas City in Kansas City, Mo., and March 4-5 at the Nebraska quadrangular in Lincoln.
Clarke, KU's team captain, defeated Melam In amo in No. 1 singles, 6-4, 6-4 and 6-4. Hooked on No. 2 singles, 6-3, 6-7 and 7-5, the冠军 won at No. 9 singles, 6-2, 3-4 and 6-4.
Calmese won the 60-yard dash in 6.9 and the 300-yard dash with a record-breaking time of 36.1, trimming the old mark by .7 seconds.
qualify for regional competition in the all-around. She scored 32.89 to win the event Friday and needs to score 32 three more times to qualify.
Pegeen Murphy took second in the all-around, beam, and third on the floor. Rene Neville was third in the all-around and beam, and second on the unevens. Kim Grabau of Emporia State was third in vaulting and unevens.
Against Tulsa at Alvamar Racquet and Swim Club in Lawrence, only the 'Hawks No. 2 doubles team of Greg Buller and Mats Eunison lost, 7-6, 5-7 and 6-3.
Invale said yesterday that four girls were left behind for various reasons that included an addition 20 points, and could have greatly changed the outcome of the duals.
AT 10.3 singles, Jeff Thomas won, 26, 6-4
and 7-6. Joe Ryuser win, 6-2, 4-6 and
No. 4 singles. Eurienius won No. 5 singles.
No. 4 singles and Chel Collier took No. 6
singles. No. 4-6.
Senior Bill Clarke, playing No. 1 singles for his third straight year, and No. 2 Mark Haskins led the Jayhaws by winning all of their matches.
Southern Illinois and Kansas split the six singles matches Saturday in Carbondale, Ill., but the Salukis won two-of-the-three doubles matches for the 5-4 victory.
KU's women's gymnastics team had an easy time Friday night defeating Emporia Kansas State College, taking everything except two third places. But the opposite was true at Stanford, where Jayhawks met Grand View College and only Karen Wunny won two third places.
"I enjoyed it tremendously," he said.
"know where I can clean it and if I can hit them, I should be able to do that."
John Nunley tied his career-high on the still rims with a 9.28. That mark is the third highest in the league.
Noting that Grand View was just finishing up an eight-day road trip, Snow said Grand View wasn't at its best but that it generally was a good meet for both teams.
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Kansas defeated Emporia State, 117.99-99.77. But even that was disappointing as the dojhawks were 40 from the regional lead. The team won its first three meets left, KU has no chance of qualifying for regionals because the team must score 118 four times during the season.
Enclosed is $14.95. I understand that, if for any reason I am not comfortable with your phone to you at any time during the first 15 days and receive my $14.95.
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SUMMERS WAS also second in vaulting and third in floor exercise. Mike Hynes took second on floor and around bars and fourth in the all-around. Ford Culbertson took second on the horizontal bar and third on the pommel horse and parallel bars. Bert Nunley, John's brother, was third on still rings.
AS ADVERTISED IN
"We tried some new stuff," he said, "and it didn't work out really well. But this was the most to try it. I'm not concerned about it, but I am as I am about where we are as a team."
The Jayhawks' next competition will be the Big Eight Championship this Friday and Saturday.
Pommel horse was the only event that a
SOLITHERS LIVING MAGAZINE
STREET ADDRESS
The Jayhawks will get the chance to see where they are as a team when they meet Nebraska, one of the three Big Eight powers, Saturday at Lincoln.
By DAN BOWERMAN Associate Sports Editor
"We did a good job against Emporia
Lockwood was pleased with some individual performances for KU, but not with any of the other teams.
KU gymnasium didn't win. CMSU's Eric Jaycox was first in the event with 8.1. Jaycox was third in the all-around, and teammate John Bender was second.
STATE
However, Mundy still has a chance to
Women gymnasts win, lose big
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to gender or race. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FIALL HALT
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one two three four five time times times times times
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The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
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INVENTORY SALE: Extra Stock and Demo Units
*Prices Reduced to Sell Many excellent on-
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TABLE 4.3 BLOOMS AND LAYERS
1. TABLE 4.1 BLOSSOMS AND LAYERS
2. TABLE 4.2 BLOSSOMS AND LAYERS
3. TABLE 4.3 BLOSSOMS AND LAYERS
4. TABLE 4.4 BLOSSOMS AND LAYERS
5. TABLE 4.5 BLOSSOMS AND LAYERS
6. TABLE 4.6 BLOSSOMS AND LAYERS
7. TABLE 4.7 BLOSSOMS AND LAYERS
8. TABLE 4.8 BLOSSOMS AND LAYERS
9. TABLE 4.9 BLOSSOMS AND LAYERS
10. TABLE 4.10 BLOSSOMS AND LAYERS
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P1-4409, P1-4459, P1-4509, P1-4559, P1-4609,
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P1-4909, P1-4959, P1-5009, P1-5059, P1-5109,
P1-5159, P1-5209, P1-5259, P1-5309, P1-5359,
P1-5409, P1-5459, P1-5509, P1-5559, P1-5609,
P1-5659, P1-5709, P1-5759, P1-5809, P1-5859,
P1-5909, P1-5959, P1-6009, P1-6059, P1-6109,
P1-6159, P1-6209, P1-6259, P1-6309, P1-6359,
P1-6409, P1-6459, P1-6509, P1-6559, P1-6609,
P1-6659, P1-6709, P1-6759, P1-6809, P1-6859,
P1-6909, P1-6959, P1-7009, P1-7059, P1-7109,
P1-7159, P1-7209, P1-7259, P1-7309, P1-7359,
P1-7409, P1-7459, P1-7509, P1-7559, P1-7609,
P1-7659, P1-7709, P1-7759, P1-7809, P1-7859,
P1-7909, P1-7959, P1-8009, P1-8059, P1-8109,
P1-8159, P1-8209, P1-8259, P1-8309, P1-8359,
P1-8409, P1-8459, P1-8509, P1-8559, P1-8609,
P1-8659, P1-8709, P1-8759, P1-8809, P1-8859,
P1-8909, P1-8959, P1-9009, P1-9059, P1-9109,
P1-9159, P1-9209, P1-9259, P1-9309, P1-9359,
P1-9409, P1-9459, P1-9509, P1-9559, P1-9609,
P1-9659, P1-9709, P1-9759, P1-9809, P1-9859,
P1-9909, P1-9959, P1-10009, P1-10059, P1-10109,
P1-10159, P1-10209, P1-10259, P1-10309, P1-10359,
P1-10409, P1-10459, P1-10509, P1-10559, P1-10609,
P1-10659, P1-10709, P1-10759, P1-10809, P1-10859,
P1-10909, P1-10959, P1-11009, P1-11059, P1-11109,
P1-11159, P1-11209, P1-11259, P1-11309, P1-11359,
P1-11409, P1-11459, P1-11509, P1-11559, P1-11609,
P1-11659, P1-11709, P1-11759, P1-11809, P1-11859,
P1-11909, P1-11959, P1-12009, P1-12059, P1-12109,
P1-12159, P1-12209, P1-12259, P1-12309, P1-12359,
P1-12409, P1-12459, P1-12509, P1-12559, P1-12609,
P1-12659, P1-12709, P1-12759, P1-12809, P1-12859,
P1-12909, P1-12959, P1-13009, P1-13059, P1-13109,
P1-13159, P1-13209, P1-13259, P1-13309, P1-13359,
P1-13409, P1-13459, P1-13509, P1-13559, P1-13609,
P1-13659, P1-13709, P1-13759, P1-13809, P1-13859,
P1-13909, P1-13959, P1-14009, P1-14059, P1-14109,
P1-14159, P1-14209, P1-14259, P1-14309, P1-14359,
P1-14409, P1-14459, P1-14509, P1-14559, P1-14609,
P1-14659, P1-14709, P1-14759, P1-14809, P1-14859,
P1-14909, P1-14959, P1-15009, P1-15059, P1-15109,
P1-15159, P1-15209, P1-15259, P1-15309, P1-15359,
P1-15409, P1-15459, P1-15509, P1-15559, P1-15609,
P1-15659, P1-15709, P1-15759, P1-15809, P1-15859,
P1-15909, P1-15959, P1-16009, P1-16059, P1-16109,
P1-16159, P1-16209, P1-16259, P1-16309, P1-16359,
P1-16409, P1-16459, P1-16509, P1-16559, P1-16609,
P1-16659, P1-16709, P1-16759, P1-16809, P1-16859,
P1-16909, P1-16959, P1-17009, P1-17059, P1-17109,
P1-17159, P1-17209, P1-17259, P1-17309, P1-17359,
P1-17409, P1-17459, P1-17509, P1-17559, P1-17609,
P1-17659, P1-17709, P1-17759, P1-17809, P1-17859,
P1-17909, P1-17959, P1-18009, P1-18059, P1-18109,
P1-18159, P1-18209, P1-18259, P1-18309, P1-18359,
P1-18409, P1-18459, P1-18509, P1-18559, P1-18609,
P1-18659, P1-18709, P1-18759, P1-18809, P1-18859,
P1-18909, P1-18959, P1-19009, P1-19059, P1-19109,
P1-19159, P1-19209, P1-19259, P1-19309, P1-19359,
P1-19409, P1-19459, P1-19509, P1-19559, P1-19609,
P1-19659, P1-19709, P1-19759, P1-19809, P1-19859,
P1-19909, P1-19959, P1-19909, P1-19959, P1-19999,
P1-19999, P1-19999, P1-19999, P1-1999
Used Magnaflow component system with 8-Bracket
of Magnaflow component with L4-ladder change for $129.00
component with L5-ladder change for $139.00
Sierra Components discounted 20-40%. All Major
factory warranty, call JWL, 6458 6458
6458 as usual.
2-165-13 used Dudley radios only $3 for the
2-165-14 used 18R-14 for $3 at Axiom
929 MHz Dudley radios at Axiom 729
MHz.
Cassette tape sale. Pile 60-minute for only 84-
or five minute for $4. Ray Burbuckle 8-21
$35.
SONY STF800 $50, SONY STR 703 receiver, BSRI-
table for 25.5 $191,841-6456, 2-7
Refrigerator: Sanyo 43 cube ft. capacity. Used 6
months. Cost $150. Call 864-2242. 2-7
Color TV 20 inch portable. Excellent condition,
very dependable. $80 or best offer. 843-254-1297
4 cyl. 72 Vega $1100 or the best offer, 842-1703
after 7.00. 2-7
Royal Electric Typewriter with carbon ribbon.
Contact Benton Agency, Inc. 843-607-79.
2-9
Perl Tort P35 35 mm single-reflex camera, carrying lenses and accessories. You will sell for $29 or best offer. Call Gerry at (800) 746-1062.
Sit's, spelling (Edu, 190 cm) with Salomon
444 Binding. Call John 841-5725.
2-8
POTION PARLOR. Natural body care products.
Nature brite brush. 12. East St. Street. A76800.
1976 Kawasaki KZ-20 twin buggy rack, capped
and painted in black. 845/1250. $150 or
buyer discount. 845-1250-2-9
http://www.kawasaki.com
Quality stereo equipment. Rolon 602 receiver.
Quality stereo equipment. Rolon 602 receiver.
Punner turntable. K41-84283.
3-9
Flowerer K824-68 receiver, pair of Ultralinear and
K824-70 receiver. Components together by
Tuuba tubsrake. Components together or
combiners.
Gibson Lex Paul Deluxe, Fender Twist Reverb
Gibson Lex Paul Deluxe, Mint Pinster. Must-2
125 ask for Mint Pinster. Must-2
125 ask for Mint Pinster. Must-2
Banio, new Alvarez 5-string. Play to appreciate!
841-1422 2-10
Stereo/Quadraphase Mini System, includes MSS,
Dual Stereo Mini System, and Dual Stereo mini-
system condition. 99 Call 841-326-1006.
Condition condition. 99 Call 841-326-1006.
Hamilton-Batech Butter-Up Popcorn Poppers only 13 at Ray Stoneback's. 299 Mass. 2-11
Cassette recorder: Sale Sony, G.E., Craig and
Morgan, recordist. 1978-86. Rocky Mountain,
Rocky Stonebanks, 920 Mass. 2-11
Face 23-Channel C.B.'s, half price for only $4.90
Face 24-Channel C.B.'s, at $12, at Ray Toyco
99 Mats
89 Musts
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only ones with a specification guarantee of ± 2 dB at Audible, RD Audio, 13-4 E. Bth. Prices from $175.
Save up to $20 on Magnavox Digital Clock Ace
Pri radio. Only $29 at Ray Stonehouse 2-111
Advent model 300 Stereo Receiver: designed to offer the kind of equipment required for complex equipment. Its audible performances compare closely with output) to that of the most expensive special equipment. These are specialists in the trade.
1973 VW Fastback, beige, clean, dependable. Rail-
ing, 500, 1782-612, Olaine.
Fantastic airbnb for sale. All sizes. Call or write
to 416-583-7900 West 69th St. 60th St.
Minneapolis, MN 66208 2-18
Milton, KS 66208
Vahisha MAT 124M twin lens reflex with Reflex strobe. Excellent condition $100.844-000 of Bauri 2-11
67 Chevy 2-door Impala. Good condition Call
Hpa 864-2895.
2-11
643-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
8 a.m. Sun
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
HELP WANTED
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy way. Become an Avon代表venture and make the money you need selling quality products in small time. Two openings in Lawrence, B42-812-6812 2-16
MEN-WOMEN, JOBS ON SHIPS, American. Foreign. No experience required. Excellent pay. Job location: Boston, MA $2 for information. SEAFAX, Dep. E. Box 209. Port Angeles, WA8362 2-15
Node models needed for art classes Monday-that
week, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, 1:30 - 4:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Thursday and Thursday, 1:30 - 4:30 p.m.
Cashier-Hotels, beautiful area restaurant and
饼摊 Over 24, part time. evenings.
2-10
2-10
Room and room in exchange for help around the home. Also sleeping room, admits $50 per month. Room is available on request or for photo work. Also need secretarial help 2-3 days (evenings) per week. Call 62-98-4720.
SUMMER JOBH: Over 200,000 in all 50 states.
Your money back if you don't obtain yours through our COMPANY. Send us your resume and our COMPANY box, Box 645, State College, PA 18031. Act now for best selection.
LOST AND FOUND
Lest a man's wedding band, made of yellow and black metal, be a gift to his sister in law, a white gold pendant. Reward is offered Call 845-723-3600.
LOST- Omega, gold ladies writewatch. Reward=
25 If found. Call 843-560. call for Chicty.
Lost: One pair ladies glasses (in orange)/white
glasses. Received two pairs of glasses.
Recurrent. Reward. Call Susie at 654-2100. Z-10
Found KU keys in Malot parking lot. Inquire
Lost & Found, Hoch.
2-8
Found cat, brown and white with blue eyes.
Found at 10th and Mia. 844-6468, or 842-789
2-8-8
Found Red Irish Sett. pot with a numetof of
149, 843-751, 2-8
Fiona's Sigma fraternity 843-7102 2-8
of Kappa Sigma fraternity
Found a pocket watch in alley of Arkansas. Call and 842-7504. 2-8
Found - Tuesday, Feb. 1 at 9th and Ohio. Kitten fell into leg traction, leg tail, face, 2-9
842-287-266
Found—Small wire terrier one year old, if not
missing—a good home. 844.2602 2-9
Found -Bus Pass on Ridge Court bus. 864-
209 and identify. Call
Found—A rug in front of Summerfield between Hawthorn and Murphy. 864-2244. 2-9
Found-A key with chain in front of Wescoe.
Come to 113 Flint and Identify. 2-9
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uher/Quick Cop. Center Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 833 Mass.
NOTICE
铺 Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
plum pads, clock television. Open daily 15-
30pm.
- support group for women that have gone/remain unemployed or are currently in a marked move through the Women's Center. * Hire a therapist to help them adjust to life.
The Dance You've All Been Waiting For. Gax
York, NY. 304-219-7872. www.danceyork.com.
Kansas Union Ballroom, $1.75 per person. Elevator
and concession machines available.
FREE! The Women's Resource Guide is now online and available through the Women's Resource 1984-1988 in the Union behind the Dell. 2-8
]
O
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS,
BAGS, IWANS
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
BankAmeric
in THE MARKET PLACE 745 New Hampshire
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts
9. Crafts 841-3522
Arriving soon, copper, brass, and blown glass
Steve Leben and Ralph Moyanan Reflection for student body president and 2-8 president
KARATE~Improve yourself physically and mentally this semester. Study US history, current formulating, law, and immigration. Classwork: Gou-Jin Martial Arts, 833% Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kuira (913) 824-6522 2-11
Gay Counseling Service: Call 842-7505, 6-12 pm.
for referral.
MAKIN MUSIC - We make it easier. Foam, blues, jazz and pop tunes for you to play on. Banjo, mandolin, banquette, saxophone, piano. McKinney Sisters.
On a day like today wouldn't you enjoy a live valentine? A legitimate marriage and Redemption faits by applause, a romantic moment with your Valentines Day. birthday or any time you want to give someone a heartfelt Valentine's Day. Vermont. 843-289-8000 Vermont. 843-289-8000
Hey! Introductory Pantomime classes. Every-
day, every week. KIDS SHOW: Saturday 8. 2 &
8. 3. Starting Monday 8. 2 & 8. 3.
Don't miss an important class because you over-
loaded the function. Call 844-8238, or 844-8231.
2-10
REFLECTION! 2-17
Schuster's Liquor Store invites you to come see them on Wednesday, Oct. 2nd, between Griffin & Pizza Ruo-2.0. Entrance is free.
Don't be fooled by colorful pictures and handsome photos. Steven Leben and Malachim Mavurian for student body photography.
All my men get singing valentines or they get
nothing at all. 843-7670. 2-8
Operation Friendship would like to welcome all foreign students to a mixer at £50 West 9th, £20 East 1st.
VOICE YOUR OPINION—All freemium, sophomores, and juniors in Naurotes or LAKERS make your weekly Run for an hour at 8:45 a.m. Information is 208 Strong Hall or Naurotes Center.
...
Menno lieve! Praise Menno! You could become an apostle. Keep listening.
2-11
SERVICES OFFERED
Math tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 105, 111, 123, 134, 142, 160, 500, 583. Regular sessions or one time preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7681.
Architecture Students Interested In Photographer,
842-9735. 2-8
Small delivery, or entire household moving. Free Estimate. call 845-0571. 2-7
Sewing, knitting, meeding. High quality work,
reasonable price. Phone 841-7238
Tutor for Keen 622, 623 and Graduate Student Economics prefer 841-715-104 after 6 p.m. on Tuesdays through Fridays.
**Women's Groups: Psychedraulic Workshop for**
**women who counter women-8 weeks-starts a**
**workshop on psychedraulic development.**
**Womenstrucell Workshops for the conscious develop-
ment.**
**Tio Calco Pal Pat Henry, 842-279-region; to 210**
**100, Tio Calco Pal Pat Henry, 842-279-region; to 210**
Looking for an unusual way to tell him or her
to buy a ring, sending valentine. Only 26.
Call 815-707-7001
Decorated Valentine Cakes. Only $5.00. Call 843-213
8236.
TYPING
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mlsc.
Experienced typist—articles, letters, spelted,
scripted. 843-9549. Mr Wright.
VISIONS
nas the eyeglasses
you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 814-7421
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing
• Furniture • Antiques
• Imported Clothing
Selected Secondhand
730B Mass. 841-7O7O
THEISM BINDING COPYING The House to Uber's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us handle $88 Massachusetts or phone 352-7550 Thank you.
Will type your paper with TLC. TLM papers and
books will be available in 24-811-2480; 24-811-
1870 evenings & weekends.
WANTED
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
Gradeado student needs coordinate to share 28250
with other institutions plus 1 additional
unit: Call 863-2584-842520 after booking
Taptor/editor, IBM Pite/site, Quality work.
Cisco's diverse distractions welcome,
Call Joan. 842-912-7767
Female roommate wanted for 2 nice bedroom
block from campus, $845. 2-10
upholstered, 841-7120.
ABSTRACT INSTRUCTORS. WESTERN CIVILIANCE applicants from any department or school; a broad range of applicants must be enrolled in a postsecondary program and have completed at least two years of advanced degree, while teaching. Duties involve organizing and supervising students per week and assisting with other administration duties. Women and minorities are encouraged to apply. Women and minorities are encouraged to apply. Application forms are available in the Western Civilian Center. Completed appls. date: 5-17, 1997.
Guitar pickers, players and listeners, listen to
the band on Sunday evening from 6-8 PM.
On KANU-15 at KANU-25.
Roommate wanted-female to share Towers
Roommate wanted-female to share Towers
- room, all utilities paid, $721,
843-1933, 843-1934
Female grad student: share house near campus.
Color TV, landscapes, utilities include
28
House resident for Canterbury House. Retail and
services. Apply online, in person, or before Feb 31.
Apply at www.canterburyhouse.com.
Female to share gorgeous apartment. Prime location—one block from campus. Nicely furnished, garden space, own private bedroom. $180 a month for tuition. See at 1850 Mimco, or phone 434-8723.
1. male roommate to share 3 bedroom mobile
room, w/driver, laundry, grooming,
medicine, Call Kurt #41-6952 - 6006
9th and Iowa
Uscent Sunday
- Foosball
30 preschoolers need your help. Children's Hour
Gives a gift of time to help children
Give a gift of time to help children
Easy-going, female teammate to 2 bedroom apartment blocks from campus. 482-760-2100 2-16
Female roommate to share large 2-bedroom
apartment 841-7944 or inquire at 142-295-
third floor. Bird房.
Graduate Amstaffstudent three-quarter time
Graduate Amstaffstudent in apply 579 to
date 4-4060 by Feb. 18
Male roommate, 2 bedroom apartment, 17th and
Ohio, $60/month. Phone: 842-4537 anytime.
*monthmate wanted, 3 bedroom trailer, plenty*
*of space, carpet and dryer space*
*$6 month; 653-6074*
*5-18*
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CLOUD
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th, 841-2656
10-5 Mon. Sat., Tillie on Thursday
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
NAISMITH HALL
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
- Pinball
The Lounge
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
featuring seclusion and
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Bud on Tap
---
---
- Pool
The Chalk Hawk
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
TRY
- Pool
* Sneeker
* Ping Por~
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Foos-Ball
TE SELECTION OF BEER
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week. NO HOURS.
10
Monday, February 7,1977
University Daily Kansan
Women slam Grand View
By RICK BRYANT Sports Writer
The KU women's basketball team dominated Grand View College, Des Moines, Iowa, for the second time this season, when it was on Saturday afternoon in Allen, Field House.
Grand View dropped an 81-65 decision to the Laverne team, 10-13, on its home court.
few downfall of the Vikings, 1-19, was冷
wind second half as Grabian View
bit icmp 4-29 as seen in image
Kansas jumped to an 8-0 lead before
Garden View finally scored after almost
fourth.
A defensive lapse by KU allowed Grand View to pull within one point, 14-13, with 12-35 left in the half, but the Jawaharys failed to score. Theinder of the half to lead 45-33 at halftime.
IN THE SECOND half, Grand View hit only eight shots and one free throw for 29 per cent from the KU. However, ended in a narrowing second shootby by eight 38-of-49 attempts.
Adrian Mitchell led ISA in scoring with 25 points. Sue Berenks followed with 21, and June Koleber, who didn't play the ball, because of a bruised thigh, contributed 12.
"Tonight was a good win for us," KU coach Marian Washington said afterward. "We were aggressive and went after it tonight.
ALTHOUGH GRAND VIEW was taller than KU, the Jayhawks dominated the rebounding as Mitchell hauled in 16. Forward Anne Rose came off the bench in place of Koleher and collected 12 rebounds. KU outdistanced Grand View in the totals.
KANSAH
FIA FT PT PP Pt. 21
Bernera 10-20 1.3 1.3 2 21
Burnetl 3.0 0.0 0.0 0 4
Blassner 3.0 0.2 0.2 0 2
Lambon 6.0 0.0 0.0 4 12
Mann 9.1 0.1 0.1 3 12
Lota 6.2 0.1 0.1 2 12
Lotta 12-23 4.3 4.3 3 25
Moorei 0.0 0.0 0.0 1 0
Philipps 0.0 2.8 1.4 4
Philipps 1.6 2.3 2 4
Sanderl 1.1 1.1 1.1 4
TW.5 30-49 7-12 15 12
Stephanie Bingham scored 19 points to
Ruth Hibbler was the top rookie with
a bronze with 34.
"We won playing our game. Our front line of Berens, Mitchell and Koleber really did a great job. This type of point production from them is what we need to win as a
★★
Thursday KU is host to Central Missouri State in varsity and junior varsity games beginning at 5:15 p.m. in the field house. Washington said her team enjoyed
GRANDVIEW
Bingham 10.5 1.34 3 19
Cawell 8.5 -1 0 2 12
Cook 1.5 1.44 2 29
Gabriel 4.8 1.1 1 11
Cameron 5.0 1.1 1 9 9
Cameron 5.0 1.1 1 9 9
Hibberle 3.13 1.14 2 29
TOTALS 28.42 4.43 14 90
FREESALES 6.5 1.44 6 65
KANSAS 45 60 - 63
ORDVIEW 45 72 - 68
Men's swimming team ends victory drought
By KENDAVIS Sports Writer
Nebraska was a big change in competition for the Jayhawks, who had lost their last three duals to Big Eight teams from Missouri, Iowa State and Oklahoma.
Kansas dominated the Nebraska Cornhuskers, 76-37, and won 10 of the 13 events.
"I thought the meet was very predictable," KU coach Dick Reason said. "Nebraska is not a team of the caliber of Oklahoma or Oklahoma, but it never hurts to win."
The competition wasn't very tough and there were no broken records, but the KU men's swim team came away from Dec. 10 to meet with its first victory since Dec. 10.
THE DIVERS were impressive in the KU win. Kurt Anselmi won the three-meter diving with a point total of 232.8. Teammate Mark Hill followed in second with 363.3 points. Tom Antagon won one-meter diving by tallying 284.2 points.
"I was particularly pleased with the divers," Reason said. "They were quite sharp, I think we have three of the top four divers in the conference. In addition, Rocky Hart is really coming around. This is a credit to him. He's flush and the individual divers themselves."
Freshman Peter Bakker-Arkema continued to swim well as he won the 200-yard freestyle and took second to teammate Mike Alley in the 500-yard freestyle.
BILL DOSTERT also had a good day, picking up a first and a second. His time of 49.84 won the 100-year freestyle, and he placed in the 50-yard freestyle.
According to Reamon, Ansemli's and Hill's performances are the only ones to surpass the 300 point mark in the Big Eight this season.
Wagoner, 200-yard individual medley; Pete
Velasco, 200-yard butterfly; and David
Henderson, 100-yard long jump.
Dostert, Bakker-Arkema, Jesse Gray and Paul Carroll teamed up for the final win of the day for KU in the 400-yard freestyle relay with a time of 3:16.8.
"We're a lot more comfortable now," Reasonam said. "We're losing up and not forcing our strokes. Improvement involves giving them the chance to get up against a team like Nebraska."
"I hope that the fans will continue to come out and watch us now," she said. "The girls enjoyed the large crowd rooting for them. I think we will have larger crowds when people see the quality of the program we have at KU."
playing before the large crowd that was gathering before the varity game's game
Swimmers outdistance Big 8 foes
The RU women's swim team got a previews week of the upcoming Big Eight meet.
the Jayhaws took first place in a quadrangular meet Saturday with Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma in Lincoln. KU defeated Oklahoma 394, Kansas 309, Missouri 264 and Oklahoma 130.
The Jayhawk's 402-yard medley relay team took first place and set a Big Eight record with a time of 4.15.6. Swimming on that first place team were Susie Padgett, Julie Tully, Tracy Hagerson and Maureen Sheehan.
KU FINISHED first in four other events. Tully was first in the 50 breaststroke with 33.7, and Bunker was first in the 100 freestyle with 55.0.
Laurie Propt placed first in the one-meter diving with 205.6 points, and the 400 freestyle relay team of Bunker, Sheehan, and Reno. Walters swam a first place time of 3.341.
Sheechan took first place in the 50 freestyle and set a new KU variety record with 25.33.
KU coach Gary Kempf said he thought this win was a good indication of things to come in the Big Eight meet Feb. 17-19 in Lawrence.
New varietyars for KU also were set by Hagerson in the 200 butterfly (2:22.6, 3rd place), and Padgett in the 200 backstroke (2:29.9, 2nd place).
"We obviously had some outstanding performances on our team. This win definitely establishes us as the favorite in the Big Eight."
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Senate action lessens chances of death penalty bill
By STEVE FRAZIER
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-Kansas death penalty proponents yesterday leaf another battle in their three-year war against the death penalty.
The Kansas Senate approved, 22-17, an amendment to the proposed capital punishment bill, replacing the death penalty with a minimum 30-8 life sentence for anyone convicted of first-degree murder.
AFTER THE amendment was approved, death penalty backers tried to defeat the watered-down bill, but lost. 18-21. The Senate finally accepted by voice vote the bill as amended.
death penalty opponents introduced the compromise amendment because of the possibility that they didn't have enough votes to stop the bill outright.
Under current Kansas law, convicted murderers are eligible for parole after 15 years.
The bill will go to the House after the Senate takes final action on it today.
Another amendment to require a mandatory life sentence with no chance for parole failed.
Before it was amended, the capital punishment bill would have allowed the death penalty for premeditated murder or murder during the commission of an assault. In 1995, anarson. It proposed a two-trial system in which the first trial would have been to establish guilt and the second trial would determine whether to impose the death penalty.
THE BILL outlined several mitigating and aggrivating circumstances, that the second jury should consider when deciding whether to impose the death penalty. Aggrivating circumstances listed in the bill included past conviction for violent crime, for hire and murder committed while trying to avoid arrest. Mitigating circumstances should be one of the most mental or emotional disturbance at the time of the murder and acting as an accomplice or under another person's domination.
Also, the bill would have provided for automatic appeal to the Kansas Supreme Court in cases where the death penalty was imposed. The defendant have been able to select his counsel for his appeal.
THE HOUSE now can amend the Senate bill back to its original form or act on a House bill introduced last week that is nearly identical to the Senate bill debated yesterday.
Gov. Robert Bennett and Atty. Gen. Curt Schneider drafted separate death penalty bills for study by an interim Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee before the start of this legislative session. After committee hearings on the two proposed bills earlier this month, a subcommittee of the federal and state affairs committee wrote the compromise bill that was debated yesterday.
Each house of the Kansas Legislature passed a death penalty bill last year, but a conference committee couldn't produce a bill agreeable to both the House and the Senate before the session ended. Death penalty restatement also was attempted in the 1975 session.
DEATH PENALTY backers begin the three-hour floor debate yesterday with summaries of the bill's features, results of constituent polls in favor of death penalty reinstatement and stories of convicted murderers who committed more murders after they were paroled.
State Sen. Leroy Hayden, D-Santaura, said, "The people of Kansas are not bloodthirsty, not vengeful. They just want justice for the perpetrators of certain heinous crimes."
State Sen. Ed Reilly, R-Leavenworth, blamed the increased murder rate on the lack of a death penalty. In the '60s, when the use of the death penalty decreased, he said, "American society became the most ruthless and barbaric it has been in our 200-year history.
"CAPITAL PUNISHMENT is the mark of a society that holds life dear and protects its citizens. It is the society that holds life as cheap that has no death penalty."
Referring to the polls that indicated citizen support for reinstatement of the death penalty, Reilly said. "The people have spoken as clearly as they can without marching on the Statehouse."
should consider when deciding whether to impose the death penalty, and the other would have made it possible for a jurer to be excused solely on the grounds that he opposed the death penalty.
State Sen. Elwaine Pomeroy, R-Topke, introduced four amendments to the capital punishment bill that corrected small errors and made the state's 1992 death penalty change eliminated a limit on the factors a jury
ALL FOUR OF Pomeroy's amendments passed by voice vote.
An amendment by Hayden to require that a completely new jury be used to decide the sentence, is pending in Congress.
State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa, then announced an amendment that would replace the death penalty with mandatory life imprisonment and reduced the number of refugees to move that amendment be adopted.
After some confusion over what motion actually was before the Senate, State Sen. Don Allegruci, D-Pittsburgh, introduced the 30-year minimum sentence amendment that was finally approved.
ALLEGRUCCI SAID his amendment "offers a reasonable alternative, a humanitarian alternative to both the death penalty and mandatory life imprisonment."
A LITTLE WARMER
See DEATH page nine
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87,No.85
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, February 8.1977
Fake IDs court gambles, trouble
See story page five
By JOHN MUELLER Staff Reporter
David Amler says he'll keep an open door for students when he becomes vice president.
It was announced yesterday that he will replace William Balfour, who resigned as vice chancellor for student affairs last May to return to full-time teaching. Amber伯尔将president for educational and student affairs at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio.
Ambler yesterday said he "will definitely open an open-door policy with students at KU."
HIS KENT State position has "roles very similar to those at the University of Kansas," he said, "but we do have different problems here. Our enrollment declined after 1970, for example, and we had a retrenchment on our budget."
BARRY SMITH
HELEN CARRINGER, editorial writer for the Akron Beacon Journal, observed Amber at the time of the Kent State unrest. Carringer said that Amber had played "a tremendous role in trying to calm the situation."
At the time of the killings, Amber was assistant vice president and dean for student residence life. He said that during the campus unrest, "We worked overtime. We did everything we knew of to provide comfort, but obviously it wasn't enough."
Amberl partially attributed the enrollment drop to public reaction to the May 1970 killings of four students on the Kent State campus.
"He's a man who considers things very seriously. I'm sorry to bear he 'leaving,'
Ambler said Kent State in May 1970 "had an explosive atmosphere. Kent had not experienced any problems to speak of until then; it was a series of accidents."
David Ambler
SAYING HIS role during the Kent unrest had been "to promote communications activity with students." Amber called the event the "big moment in the future." We learned a lot of lessons.
Ambler said that besides communicating with students at KU, he planned "to assume a variety of roles. I'll be part of a management team."
One lesson, he said, was the need for close communication with students.
"That's one reason for the open-door
'ONE OF MY roles will be to provide
SIZE VICE CHANCELOR LAP page two
"Maybe if we had been able to do some things differently, the deaths wouldn't have happened. It's so easy to criticize now, but it would be even worse if then were directed by external forces."
policy. Students want a relationship based on honesty and integrity." Ambler said.
Woman brutally killed; police arrest two men
Two brothers have been charged in connection with the apparent mutilation and murder of a 46-year-old Lawrence woman early Sunday morning.
The brothers, James R. Gardner, 18, and Joseph Gardner Jr., 22, both of Lawrence, were charged yesterday with first-degree county sheriff, said last night.
Both men are being held without bond in Douglas County jail and probably will be in prison.
The woman's naked body was found yesterday morning near the railroad tracks at the north end of Connecticut Street by a friend. Fe employees. Her legs had been severed.
Mike Maleon, Douglas County attorney,
said the woman's legs were dumped in a large commercial trash bin behind a business near where the body was found.
Officials recovered the limbs at the city landfill, which is about two miles north of
According to Malone, the woman had been killed elsewhere and then dumped in a river. She has been ruled out, he said. An autopsy indicated she died of a stab wound in the chest.
Folice said they were withholding the woman's name pending notification of the report.
The two men charged in the murder were picked up at a local residence early the next day.
The body was found at 10:22 a.m. and police and sheriffs' officers picked up the body.
Local officers were aided in their investigation by James Wood, of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, and William Bridgens, Johnson County coroner.
In response to newspaper, radio and television reports about marijuana smoking in University of Kansas residence halls, KU officials yesterday issued a statement that no violations of the law are or will be confined or permitted by University officials."
The University's response to the reports
Officials deny dope story
United Press International later distributed a version of the Kansan story on its national wire, and the story was used in television newsagents in and out of Kansas.
"The residence hall contract that each resident signs specifically states that disciplinary action will be taken for illegal use of drugs," the statement said. "During the current academic year, five students were sentenced to residence halls for drug-related offenses."
The statement followed publication of a story in Friday's Kansan in which some resident assistants in KU residence halls were accused of stealing $100,000 and state regulations banning捣窃。
The statement also said that KU was "no different from other major universities or communities" of similar size. It said that University employees who condone inappropriate action face "appropriate action up to and including termination of employment."
was issued in the name of Chancellor Arche Dykes; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; and Donald Aiderson, acting vice chancellor for student affairs.
John Lennon
Sunthesized sound
One of the top composer-performers of synthesize music, Ronald Pellierron, played to an overflow crowd at Sairworth Recital Hall
last night. The show, which featured four synthesizer and a laser deflection system, was sponsored by the School of Fine Art 1977
Students attempt to lose weight because thin is in
By RICK THAEMERT Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
With "Joes runs" and "Big Mac attacks"
running amuck in Lawrence, fat often
Sydney Schroeder, psychiatrist at Watkins Hospital, said yesterday that obesity among students was often the result of anxiety.
"One very common way of making up for "one missing in life is to eat," Schreider said.
Consequently, many students seek dietary help and explanations through weight watching clubs, fly-by-night diet schemes and doctors.
HE SAID students who failed a test or had
broken often taken to boost his
performance.
Other students are motivated to diet because they set their standards of appearance too rigidly and cling to the misconception that women will lose weight. Schreiber says
on pounds, they often go to extremes to take them off, he said.
"The MOST severe kinds of eating problems we have are those who are not as well equipped."
He said many girls wanted to have a slim model image and, consequently, often diated even when they had no weight because of the need only in starving themselves, he said.
Despite "fatbobbia," many students can't refuse the delicacies of an affluent society. Consequently, they often gain weight and eventually diet.
Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins
Mary Hattfield, physician at Watkins, said the diet was the best she had seen, and she used the program for five or six overweight students a week.
y 3.4 ml of the implant on the Lily Diabetic Diet which, although designed for diabetics, was "a well-balanced nutritional diet for anyone."
THE DIET eliminates unneeded sweets and carbohydrates which, in excess, can cause added weight. Haemostasis requires about 1,000 calories to 1,000 a day for females and 1,400 a day for males. Those amounts are sufficient to help a person lose weight yet maintain enough energy.
Hatfield said she didn't want most
patients to lose more than 0 or 2½ pounds a week because fatigue could result from it.
Hatfield said the diet allowed items of the same nutritional value within a food group to be exchanged for others. For example, at breakfast, one-half cup of orange juice can be substituted for 12 grapes to achieve the same results.
EXERCISE IS also important, she said. Hatfield said she gave dieters a chart that showed the number of calories burned during different exercises. For example, the 115 calories in a serving of beer can be lost by running for 7 minutes, by bowling for 26 minutes or by sleeping for 84 minutes. A person loses weight through Hatfield said.
And although magazine diets, hypotism, diet pilots and operations such as wiring the
"They use the starches to stretch the meat further," she said.
jaws shut are available to dieters,
dieters and diets are a simpler and
beautiful solution to obesity.
"If you want to seriously lose weight, you must select a diet you can live with and follow."
Hattfield said residence halls offered balanced diets, but were responsible for some students gaining weight because of low calcium intake and only inexpensive carbohydrate meals.
ANOTHER REASON for gaining weight at college is "junk food." Hatfield said many students grabbed a b Hamburger, a sandwich, a good meal. Quick meals, soft drinks and munchies can contribute to weight gain if eaten in excess, she said.
Students who don't want to consult a physician often join The Weight Watchers club in Topeka, which operates a Lawrence chapter.
Ken Harding, manager of the club, said the club met twice a week, on Tuesdays and Thursdays in the United Methodist Church, to administer and discuss diets.
THE LAWRENCE club has 300 members, as many as 20 per cent of those are called lawyers.
The club helps people "get on an eating program, stay on it and keep a balance of foods."
Harding said it was important that people learned "eating management techniques." People can lose as much weight weekly as they feel comfortable with, be said.
2
Tuesday, February 8, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Carter picks CIA director
WASHINGTON—President Carter yesterday said he has chosen Adm. Stansfield Turner, an expert on Soviet naval affairs, as director of the nation's intelligence activities.
Turner, B3, now the commander-in-chief of the Allied forces in southern Europe, will be nominated to fill the dual positions of director of the Central Intelligence Agency and head of Central Intelligence. He is to oversee all operations by the U.S. intelligence community.
Guerrillas kill nuns, priests
SALISBURY, Rhodesia—Seven white Roman Catholic missionaries, including four nuns, were lined up and shot in a guerrilla attack that stunned Christian church groups in Rhodesia.
Officials said it was the worst group killing of whites in four years of war by black guerrillas against Rhodesia's white government.
The one survivor of the shooting said three German Dominican nuns, an English Dominican nun, two Jesuit missionaries from Germany and a lay brother from Ireland were executed inside the compound of their mistery at Salisbury on Sunday night by guerrillas who argued above them who would do the
snooping.
Rhodesian police said they collected 111 empty cartridges from Soviet-made machine guns at the shooting scene, the Catholic Masumi mission in lush, hilly country 36 miles northeast of the Rhodesian capital.
Vice chancellor . . .
From page one
encourager for campus attitudes," he said. "We are able to bring a unique perspective to the students."
The vice chancellor for student affairs coordinates the functions of the offices of the dean of men, dean of women and dean of foreign students, admissions and records, placement, student financial aid and housing, the Counseling Center, the Information Center, the Student Health Service and the Kansas Union.
Carringer said Amber's responsibilities at Kent State were equally comprehensive.
at Ren State were equally competitive.
"He has the official final say on all things," she said. "He's the top man who pulls it together."
CARRINGER SAID Ambler's present duties included supervising student records, programs and dormitories. Also, she added, "All student organizations that have petitioned for campus charters have had to go through him."
Ambler was instrumental in establishing coeducational dormitories at Kent State, according to Carringer, and helped reorganize the student government "when Junior Studies team was disbanded in September of 1974 He really worked on that."
Ambler, she said, is "really well liked."
He's very soft spoken, friendly and gentle."
A KU search committee chose Ambler from a field of 119 applicants, narrowed to 58. The team then met in December, after personal interviews were held at KU with the finalists, the names of
three candidates were given to Chancellor Archie Dykes and Dek Shanel, executive director of the Board.
Ambler was born in Hammond, Ind., and received three degrees from Indiana University. The degrees are a B.S. in business administration, M.P.A. with political science emphasis and a doctorate in education.
He held counseling and residence halls advisory positions at Indiana from 1961 to 1968, and in 1965 a research associate with Kentucky Commission on Higher Education.
AMBLER BECAME assistant dean at Kent State in 1968 and later became dean of men. He was named assistant vice president and dean for student residence life in 1969, and was promoted to vice president in fall of 1970. He has also served as:
- President of the Ohio Association of Student Personnel Administrators, 1978-1980
- *Chairman of the committee on student defenses of the Inter-University Council of OU*
- A member of the American Personnel and Guidance Association.
- Consultant on student personnel services and residence halls for Indiana and Iowa
- Provides counseling to students
- Supports student recruitment
- Works with student organizations
AMBLER ALSO has taught at Kent State an associate professor of educational ad-
Ambler and his family are expected to move to Lawrence in the middle of June.
The nation's storm-ravaged East, and Midwest continue to shake off the ravages of Hurricane Sandy.
New York's upstate region, hit hardest by the unusually severe weather, was bypassed by a weekend blizzard and got a boost with the promise of some needed natural gas from Canada and the West Coast.
Bitter cold follows storm in East, Midwest
Rv The Associated Press
Sunday morning temperatures were below zero in much of the Midwest—15 below at Lafayette, Ind., 12 below at Indianapolis, 13 below at Columbus, Ohio.
The weekend's winter storm was far over the Atlantic Ocean on Sunday, but the clear skies that trailed were accompanied by more bitter cold.
With the latest rush of cold air came new efforts to combat the winter. It was "Heat Sunday" in Rhode Island, for example, with hundreds of thousands of homes of their least fortunate neighbors.
Non-essential driving was still banned Sunday in Buffalo, N.Y., the snow-chilled city on the shore of Lake Erie as federal state and local crews kept digging through
President Carter on Saturday declared nine counties in western and northern New York State disaster areas, qualifying them for federal assistance.
the snow and ice, opening up more streets and roads.
So far, Carter has declared disaster areas in Maryland, Virginia and Florida, as well as New York, making them eligible for such benefits as unemployment aid, emergency food stamps, and low-interest loans for businessmen.
tario Hydro and Pacific Gas & Electric Co.
of California would allow more than 2,400
plants employing 220,000 to resum-
e electricity yesterday at 75 per cent capacity.
He has declared emergencies in Indiana and Maryland. The emergency designates the United States federal aid available, but to a lesser degree. In New York, officials said arrangements were made to help the victims.
In other weather-related developments: Interior Secretary Celia Andrus said his department was investigating charges that some producers have withheld natural gas. Andrus said he couldn't tell whether the charges were true, but he said he expected to report on the investigation early this week.
- Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland said he planned to develop a new, long-term national wetland plan to predict future natural disasters such as drought, floods and prolonged cold spells.
Plea of insanity entered by suspect in 5 killings
In New York, officials said arrangements worked out Saturday to get gas from On-
One of the women killed, Carla Baker, 20, Hays, was a student at the University of Kansas at the time of her death. She disappeared in June 1976. Her body was found three months later in a remote area of the Cedar Bldr Reservoir in TrGeo County.
SALINA (AP)-Francis Donald Nemecke was in a psychotic state when he killed four women and left a child to freeze to death in northwestern Kansas, his attorney contended in an opening statement yesterday.
"The evidence will show that when the
ROBERT L. Earnest, who is defending the 28-year-old WaKeeney man, argued during the first day of the murder trial that Nemecke was not aware of what happened during the three separate incidents and didn't know what he did was wrong.
Special prosecutor Randall Weller of Hill
city, called Nemechuck a plinyan plea
and calling him "the real conspirator."
proper elements are put together, he is turned off and goes into this psychotic state. said Earnest, the client has added five-dead murder charges to five first-deed murder charges.
Weller said that in October, 1976, two months after Niemecko was arrested for the killing of a police officer, the defendant signed a confession admitting he committed the other four murders.
THE FIRST DAY OF the trial before Judge Steven Flood, who is hearing the case on a change of venu from Trego County, moved to the courtroom and said he could be completed by the end of this week.
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LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
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FINE ARTS
.
Tuesday, February 8, 1977
3
electric Co.
than 2,400
resume
per cent
opportunities;
said his answers that
natural gas, whether the
expected
early this
Bergland new, long- system to such as old spells.
British Genesis, ELO rock KC
By PAUL ADDISON
Reviewer
In the short history of British rock, many diverse and identifiable brands of music have evoked that are representative of a particular genre or era.
In the 1960s it was groups such as the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Who and the Kinks which stamped their own indelible marks on much of the decade. In the 1970s bands such as Genesis and Electric Light Orchestra have been among the major innovators, leading "popular" music past old restrictions to new, exciting approaches.
Kansas City was fortunate the past
Review
weekend to have both groups perform. They showed why they are still leaders.
ELECTRIC Light Orchestra, appearing in concert with Steve Hillage at Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium Friday, dispelled the myth that classical and popular music don't go together well. On Saturday, Genesis, displaying a rare 1950s-era sound of blues, expertise and a tastelessly dawn light show, proved that maturity and discipline still count for a lot in the ever-changing musical world.
From the first beat of "Squank" to their note-perfect encore 90 minutes later, they play a series of improvisations music with a variety of tracks from old albums and their new one. "Wind and
Wuthering," until they had the partisan audience of about 7,000 firmly in their grasp. It was a concert that constructively showed off the virtuosity of the performers with vocalist and drummer Phil Collins and Mike Rutherford; Hackett and Mike Rutherford on electric guitar; acoustic guitars, and Tony Banks on synthesizer and keyboardes played backup.
THE BAND'S new percussionist Chester, Thompson also added to the performance with some perfectly synchronized drumming.
Genesis is a story band that competently wove its musical patterns around the lyrics on "Robbery, Assault and Battery," "Fifth of Fifth," "The Eileenth Earl of Mar," and "Ready," from the "Foxtrot" album, the music was complemented by patterns of red, white and green laser lights furiously spinning across the ceiling of the room, with the wood, bedecked in white, emblazoned to the bright light of lasers projected onstage.
Genesis finished its set with a combination of "Los Endos" and "Dance on a Volcano" from the "Trick of the Tail" album. The band's latest album, Lies Down on Broadway, for an encore.
IN A DIFFERENT vein, Electric Light Orchestra played a competent but sometimes labored set to an enthusiastic sell-out audience of 12.000 Friday.
The seven-piece band, formed in 1971 by composer, guitarist and vocalist Jeff Lynne, features a violin and two cellos in its line-up and integrates, without losing its
"Can't get it out of My Head" and "Show Down" from the album "On the Third Day" were played with little verve or excitement, as though the band had grown tired of endlessly repeating the same songs at every gg. However, "Living Thing," "Telephone Line," "Rockaria" and "Do Ya," from their latest album "A New World Record."
basic drive, orchestral pieces with
singalong ditties and heavy rock 'n' roll.
Cellist Hugh McDowell and violinist Mik
Kaminski gave short solo performances,
and the group's numbered Top 40 hits
and light show that got the crowt
to its feet.
were played with more guuto. As encores, EJL played "ma-msa-mna Belle" and the guoto played "Bella".
PRECEDING ELO and the giving a more sophisticated theme to the show was the Steve Hillage band. Hillage, formerly with Gong, played a tight 50 minute set of material from his "Fish Rising" and "L" albums.
The opener, "Salmon Song" was followed by "Solar Musick Suite" and Donovan's "Hurdy Gurdy Man." A faithful-to-the original version of George Harrison's "I's All Too Much" closed the set and brought a great ovation from the young audience.
Vote on new city hall on commission agenda
A vote on a proposal to build a new city hall at the northeast corner of Massachusetts and Sixth streets is expected by Lawrence's Lawrence City Commission meeting.
KU has few flu cases
An influenza virus noticed in Kansas City, Mo., two weeks ago, hasn't spread to Lawrence, Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Hospital, said recently.
The commission deferred a vote at last
the meeting to study the proposed more
careties.
Don Eubanks, director of Kansas City, Mo., immunization, said the health department noticed several weeks ago an increase in Kansas City schools and area schools.
"Here on campus we haven't had many cases of flu, but we always have people with sporadic flu-like symptoms," Wollmann said.
All the commissioners last week said they were enthusiastic about the proposal because it would enable the city to enhance the north entrance into Lawrence. It also spur private development of recreational sites on the Kansas River bank, they said.
A type B-birus is a less serious type of influenza, Eubanks said.
influenza it is it, but all the symptoms indicate that it's a type B-virus."
"There was a large increase of people with upper-respiratory illness reported by schools and by private physicians," Eubanks said. "We don't know what type of
If the proposal by Stephen Hill, president of Kansas Fibreboard Inc. and the owners and Power Co., is accepted, the site could be able to buy four acres at that site.
control of two acres just to the east of the four acres for about $20,000. The Bower sock Co. will remain owners of eight acres surrounding the two sites.
"The influenza has been confined mostly to school children who are more susceptible," he said. "Older persons who have had the flu before are less likely to get this influenza."
If the commission decides to put a new city hall there, rights to the four acres would cost $1. Otherwise, the site would cost $25,000. The commission must decide on the location within 60 days after acceptance of the proposal.
He said that he didn't think it was the swine flu but tests hadn't been completed. Symptoms of the influenza are headache, lightness in the eyes.
In other business, the commission is to receive a certificate on a petition to change the city government from the current commission form to a mayor-council form.
Symptoms of the influenza are headache, tread, lightness in the chest and congestion.
"Children who have the influenza shouldn't be sent back to school after one day of school." The virus takes anywhere from three days to a week to run its course," he said.
The petition was submitted Friday to the county clerk's office. It contained the required 2,960 signatures to be on the April 5 general election ballot.
Padre Island
round trip bus
seven nights accommodations
trip to MEXICO
beer and soft drinks on bus
Stop by or call the SUA office for more
information. 864-3477 Space still available.
Deadline Feb.11
Also in the proposal, the city would gal
Deadline Feb. 11
Spring Break
March 11-20
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Classified Advertising
Valentine's Day
Special!
15 word Valentine advertisements
for only $1.50
These advertisements will appear
on Monday, Feb. 14 and must be
placed at the Kansan Business
office, 111 Flint Hall, by
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Thursday,
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10.
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WE WIRE FLOWERS ALMOST ANYWHERE
Call 843-6111
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9th & Indiana Streets, Lawrence, Kansas 66044
FLOWERS SENT ANYWHERE
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THE MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLIC
Events
TODAY: AN AGING CONFERENCE begins at 1 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas University. A CRIME PREVENTION SEMINAR will be at 1:30 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. THE COLLEGE ASSKMBLY will meet at 4:30 p.m. in Woodruff hall. ALENTENES from 10:30 a.m. to 4:4 p.m. in the Union lobby and Wescoe cafeteria.
TONIGHT: A SPRING BREAK SKIP INFORMATION MEETING will be at
7:30 in the Union's Forum Room.
TOMORROW: THE AIGING CONFERENCE will meet at 8 a.m. in the Union's Big Eight Room. A CRIME PREVENTION SEMINAR will be at 9 a.m. in the Union's Forum Room. The HILLEL STUDENT-FACULTY LUNCH will be at 11:30 a.m. in alcove "D" of the Union Cateria. a faculty forum with JON MELIN will be at 12:30 p.m. in the Union's Holding Center. The Ministry Center. A COLLEGE CHARPERSONS会议 will be at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Centennial Room. AURH LEGISLATOR'S DINNER will be at 7 p.m. in Templin Hall. KU COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will hold elections at 7 p.m. in the Union's Council Room.
Sponsored by SUA travel
SUA
Bus Trip to the NELSON GALLERY ATKINS MUSEUM
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12 $4.00
Bus leaves at 12:30, tour is being lead by instructors from the department of Art History.
Contact the SUA office before Feb.9 864-3477
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Coupon Expires
March 20, 1977
$1.75
With this coupon
Reg. price $2.10
CATERING
4.
Tuesday, February 8, 1977
University Daily Kanram
Comment
Options on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Prairie park needed
One of the "sleeper" issues this year in the Kansas Legislature—but one that may end up grabbing everyone's attention—concerns the establishment of a Tallgrass Prairie National Park in the western Flint Hills region of the state.
The development of such a park has been opposed for many years by various interest groups, particularly cattlemen's associations, who say it would rob the state of needing grazing land and would increase the pressure thus running the prairie's ecological balance.
The cattlemen say that the presence of a national park will serve only as an impetus for further commercial development in the ever-diminishing virgin tallgrass prairie. Eventually, the limited grazing fortresses provide the quality of the area's cattle population.
SUPPORT FOR the park has come from state conservation groups and national societies such as Friends of the Earth, the Sierra Club and the Audubon Society. These groups say there is a need to set aside and preserve the natural prairie, so that both state residents and outside visitors could enjoy.
The prairie park movement received a shot in the arm recently when the Nature Conservancy, a private foundation which acquires and then leases land to public institutions to preserve the land, added 7,200 tallgrass acres to the already-existing 916-acre Kona Prairie Preserve Natural Reserve. It is also known as Dewey Ranch, is south of Manhattan and will be administered as a research facility by Kansas State University.
REALISTICALLY, the 8,116 acres are far too small for a national park, but it can
demonstrate that, if handled properly, some parts of the state can be preserved without seriously disrupting the state's other natural resources.
A victory in the Kansas Legislature, won by the necessarily mean victory for the proponents.
A good performance by the small area can and will be used as a weapon by conservationists during their ongoing fight with the cattlemen and other park opponents.
THE VARIOUS resolutions now being considered by the Senate that encourage or discourage development of the park are not legally binding. Only the federal government can create a national park. But the federal government would probably be greatly influenced by the Kansas Legislature's opinion and, therefore, the Senate's action would probably be an accurate barometer of things to come.
Preservation of land is essential. The tallgrass prairie is an important part of Kansas's heritage. It needs to be preserved.
It is true that Kansas cattlemans have done a good job of preserving the wildlife they encounter for doing so.
BUT IF ALL of the tallgrass prairie remains in private hands, there is no guarantee that the land will be preserved in the future. As long as the prairie is a part of a business operation, the possibility of commercial development or overdevelopment of the area.
Public ownership is the only way to make sure that the oripie will be preserved.
Politics, national food needs and environmental concerns may well dictate that privately owned cattle will be allowed to graze in any new prairie. But a park should have food sense and environmental concerns certainly dictate that a park should exist.
Jubilee rather tarnished
Twenty five years ago today Queen Elizabeth II acceded to Great Britain's throne, two days after the death of her father King George VI.
In a welcoming speech to the new queen, Prime Minister Winston Churchill said he looked forward to an era of prosperity because the reigns of previous British queens had been noted for their fame and fortune.
A LOOK AT Britain during her silver jubilee, however, doesn't reflect Churchill's optimism.
lower than that in the United States, has risen to more than 6 per cent of the labor force.
AMID THESE clouds of gloom, however, some rays of hope have appeared. A loan of $3.9 billion has been approved by the International Monetary Fund to help broaden the pound's position in the global economy, negotiating a 'safety net' loan which could tie them over any future crises.
The British, cheerfully carry on their daily lives as they have always done, despite rising prices and government cutbacks.
Ticket subsidy no dead issue Senate finds
It remains to be seen whether Britain has, at last, turned away from economic stagnation and political upheaval. Only by so doing will she be able to regain much of the respect and esteem that she, for so long, displayed as a leading world power.
PETER RUSSELL
Jerry Seib
Editorial Writer
The main characters in the production are the Student Athletic Corporation (KUAC). Other actors, such as the student body and the football and basketball teams, have
This semester promises to produce another act in that long-running drama known as The Ticket Subsidy.
The plot centers on the Senate's internal struggle to decide whether it should funnel money down from the power the cost of student tickets.
WHEN WE left our story last spring, the Student Senate had finally killed the ticket sub-committee. The vote had voted against continuing the previous year's $147,000 subsidy and, for lack of a quorum, failed even to vote on a nominee proposal to provide $80,000.
The KUAC, displaying the blase, damm-the-students attitude for which it has become well-known, promptly hiked the price of student football and basketball season tickets to $20. The team also donated Football tickets jumped to $20, and basketball tickets rose to $15; they had previously cost $10 apiece.
THEEN JUST last week, in another eleventh-hour move, out-going student body Tasha proposed taking the ticket subseqiue issue before the student body. Tasha proposed putting the question of a ticket subsidy into her ballot election later this month, along
Student senators mixed the proposal on the grounds that the question Tasfeh wanted put on the ballot was not confusing and also some confusion at the Senate's meeting about exactly how large a subsidy would be acceptable to the KUAC. But out of the conclusion, the Senate threw into crystal clear: the ticket inside isn't dead after all.
with other issues on which the Senate is sampling student opinion.
TEDDE TASHEFF now backs quietly out of the scene, having failed to provide any relief for student ticket buyers. But her proposal to put the ticket subsidy question before the student population shouldn't leave with her.
Her plan to let students, who have a vested interest in the matter, is a good one. The ticket subsidy issue has been a battle of pride between the KUAC and the Senate for too long.
The Student Senate won a moral victory of sorts last year when the KUAC and the KUAC had always leained on the ticket subsidy for additional revenue while holding the Senate's power over the student Senate's head.
THE KUAC had never been faced with the problem of having to decide now much it was possible to know what is supposed to be a student activity. The Senate forced the KUAC's hand last year, and we found out how much the KUAC expects students to attend. We thought it brought to
The whole affair brought into focus the KUAC's attitude
toward students. The KUAC doesn't care where the money is coming from, just as long as it keeps rolling in-KUAC officials have said as much. The bottom line rules.
BUT A moral victory didn't do students much good. The only effect was that they had to buy $1 more for tickets this year.
While student senators were pounding their chests in pride after squelching the subsidy, the thousands of students who pay for tickets were grousing. They feats the most students, the Senate had opted for a righteous rather than a practical stand.
What the Senate has failed to consider in the whole matter is the opinions of those who shell out the money for either a subsidy or tickets. Students pay for transportation should have a voice in deciding how they want to spend such a large chunk of their money.
PERHAPS A majority of students would like to forget about the subsidy, although that's hard to imagine in light of number of students who attend basketball games.
But the fact remains that, in all the time the ticket subsidy has been kicked around by the owner, never had a loud enough voice.
Any action on the ticket subsidy will now have to wait until after the new student body president is elected next week. Tedde Tasheff's successor would be wise to take the same course of action that Tasheff proposed as she left the stage.
True Catholics must obey Rome
To the editor:
I would like to respond to the obviously one-sided article in the Kansan concerning the ordination of women in the Church to present the orthodox Catholic position. Many arguments can be given in defense of Catholic doctrine but in the end it bolts down to this: those who wish to teach the Church a body must submit to the official teachings of Rome. It is this foundation upon which the unity of the Catholic Church rests. Now holding power in the Church of thoughts come to me after reading last Wednesday's Kansan.
Secondly, I read with disdain the statements by Catholics who tread close to this Protestant tradition. Rossiter said, the Catholic Church does not respond to the majority or to pressure. The beliefs of the church are based on the popular concernus, for truth is never
way we do, then only if we act accordingly can this struggle ever cease.
of women. I draw upon St. Thomas Aquinus, the greatest of the Catholic theologians, who wrote that women are not invalid to ordain women into the priesthood. In giving his reasons let it suffice to say that he read certain passages in John 2:12). The only conclusion that can
Kim Swenson
Kim Swenson Leavenworth sophomore
Josh brought unity To the editor:
First it makes me wonder what right people like Lynn Taylor or the Rev. Mr. Matthor, who have already violated that unity by adhering to a set of unacceptable private judgment, have to comment on the internal affairs of the Catholic Church.
Josh McDowell was advertising, Paul Addison.
Readers Respond
Finally I would like to comment on the scholarly community's disagreement with Rome concerning the ordination
democratic. I say to them that if they do not wish to follow the teaching of Rome then they have already severed themselves from that Church. There are numerous Christian sects of which, I am sure, one could also satisfy their subjective needs.
Alan Hicks
possibly be drawn from these passages is that which is the current position of Rome.
Lawrence graduate student
Through his advertising he did not bring disrespect to fellow Christians; instead, he brought unity among them.
For a month, "Josh is Coming" was written on many classroom blackboards and posters publicized his coming throughout this campus. This catches the eye of many of some people, which was the purpose of the advertising campaign.
at least three Christians present. Matthew 18:20 states, "For where two or three have come to me, I will forgive them; here I am in their midst."
WASHINGTON—We are hearing a good deal of yak-yakyak from the usual liberal circles about the Supreme Court in an Oregon case. The piteous哭 is that the Court further undermined the famous principles of "Miranda," and that we are hearing a new day of Torquemada, the Star Chamber, and the rack.
But this is nonsense. Much of the howling seems to emanate from persons who have read neither the Miranda case nor the Tinker Bell story, howling mainly because it seems fashionable to howl.
Miranda principles remain intact
Racist reasoning To the editor:
criminal cases bound into one decision. In each case the constitutional question involved the Fifth Amendment provision
Miranda principles were to apply to statements "obtained from an individual who is subjected to custodial police
THE LANDMARK case of Miranda v. Arizona. 384 U.S. 436, was decided on June 13, 1966. Actually, there were four
Paul Addison asked a question "Would Jesus Christ have approved?" He must have because He was there.
Loren Ogne Arlington Heights, Ill., senior Lillus Frost
My letter is in response to the uproar Nancy Tollefson's letter provoked.
James J. Kilpatrick (c) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Once Josh arrived, this campaign included posters, fliers in the Kansan, and buttons saying "That's Josh! Hang!" There were other who were worn by campers. On the third and final day of his visit, a student dressed up in a bear costume laid down in front of Wesco Hall and held up a sign that said "Facts" to promote Josh's "Maximum Sex" lecture.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansas City, Kan., sophomore
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 4, 2015.
Friday, August 4, 2015, and July 1st except Saturday and HOLIDAYS.
60644. Subscriptions to mail are $3会员或$18
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Campus Editor
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Stewart Branard
In reading and listening to people's comments on the absence of "the horn," I have noticed that they fall mainly into two categories: (1) those wanting the horn to resume its horrible hourly blast and (2) those proclaiming good dance to bad vibrations. This lack leaves a middle ground. I have many people rather unhappy, whatever the final decision on the horn's fate. I would like to propose a compromise.
Since coming to KU, I can recall at least two winters in which the horn partially lost its voice. Instead of a sudden blast it has softened and started rather soothingly, gradually building up to its normal pitch and intensity and then gently sliding back down to normal. It is because it since its normal intensity was reached for a second or two, but it no longer blew out the earrums of those in the immediate vicinity. It was unfortunate that good money was spared to "UK
Josh, in his lectures, covered the validity of Christianity from an intellectual basis and spoke to both the Christian and non-Christian audience, have the intention to or want to force Christianity on anyone.
News Advisor Publisher Business Advisor
Bob Hiles David Dary Mel Adams
So, if the crowd total for the three nights was about 4,500, it can be assumed that there were
The black-white conflict is of great concern to many individuals, understandably so. But I deploy the reasoning of so many of these people, black and white. The whites blame the blacks for the crimes. Initially, the white man may have created this problem, but today we are all bearing the brunt of the consequences. None of us is guilty for creating this struggle—it existed before we were ever born. And we cannot justly accept that the crimes within us. We can never hope to up with a worldwide cure.
Before this problem can ever begin to be overcome, each one of us must take a look, a serious look, at ourselves and see where our own problems lie. If each individual can be honest trying to evaluate why people act the way they do and why we act the
Miranda's conviction (and those of the other defendants) was reversed. A majority of the court asked Miranda to take a suspect into custody, the suspect must be given certain reminders and warnings—of his right to remain silent, of his right to counsel, of his right to be bailaed by civil libertarians as a tremendous leap forward in terms of the rights of an accused. The decision was made when four officers as one more obstacle to convicting the guilty.
IN THE very first paragraph of his opinion, Warren defined the limits of his leap. The
that no person "shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself."
THE MIRANDA opinion was Chief Justice Warren's particular pride and joy. Why, it is hard to say. As an example of the opinion-writing art, it had no faults; the opinion was long, diffuse, endlessly repetitions, plainly the product more of emotion than of reason. It split the Court wide-open. Clark wrote a strong dissent. Harlan wrote a second dissent joined by White and Stewart. Then White wrote a third dissent of his own, in which he roared his disapproval. Those who suppose that the "Miranda warnings are engraved in the law" would division in mind. Warren's great leap commanded a bare majority within the Court.
To say that Mathiason was thus "compelled to be a witness against himself" is humbly, but not necessarily wrong. Amendment remain unimpaired. All that is happening is that life gets a little tougher for the cop. And 1. for one, see nothing wrong with that.
Therefore my suggestion is to hit it with a sledge-hammer and turn it back on.
interrogation." The limitation as to "custodial interrogation" was expressed not fewer than 25 times. The warnings would be required "after a person has been taken into custody or deprived of his freedom in any significant way."
Warren's purpose was to prevent "menacing police interrogation procedures." In an interview with the brothers, he emphasized that "volunteered statements of any kind are not banned by the Fifth Amendment and their adjudication is afflicted by our holding today."
Mathiash telephoned the officer, voluntarily made a 5 o'clock appointment at headquarters two blocks from his home. Mathiash never was taken into custody; he was not arrested at the time. He went around and talked to the officer. They talked in a private room. The suspect's suspicethe suspect's fingerprints had been found—but such a ruse would have been disbanded by an innocent man. Mathiash was not innocent. Mathiash was not guilty.
KEEPING ALL this in mind, what of the Oregon case last month? The defendant Carl Ray Mathison was suspected of stealing a stereo set from a home in Pendleton. Mathison was a parole; he surely was not ignorant or a law enforcer, and never unavailably left for him, and finally left his calling card at Mathison's apartment asking the suspect to get in touch.
F
as sin. He admitted stealing the stereo, and disclosed where he had sold it. The conversation lasted no more than 30 minutes. He also owned its own record. He was not even aware until some time later, late.
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Kenneth Kinman
Keneth Kinnan Lawrence special student
SURGEONS LOST BEINGS MOST OF ALL
© 1977 NYT Special Features
KUAC money ising as it AC ofch. The
5
Tuesday. February 8, 1977
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successor
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horn of a fall mainly
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This ground is
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over the final
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repares a com-
panion.
to KU, I can two winters in partially lost its intensity, for force, it would soothely, ring up to its id intensity and bring back its intensity, still bear intense is cond or two, but saw out the ear the immediate unfurtunate that as spent to "if"
suggestion is to lge-hammer and
Kinman special student
Staff Reporter
信
HZT Special Features
By DEBI MORROW
NYT Special Features
Fake IDs mean trouble if caught
There comes a time in every student's life when "18" bars lose their appeal. Boredom with 3.2 beer can occur before the student is forced to force to find a twin who has an extra ID.
Many students don't realize that this seemingly innocent and routine action is illegal and punishable. it caught by a fine of $10,000 for two or three 30 days. This goes for the lender too.
"When lending their identification, most students don't think they're committing a crime," Bill Straker, chief enforcement officer at the Federal Trade Commission, said yesterday. "They're playing big shot and don't stop to consider the consequences—or they don't know them."
ACCORDING TO A Kansas statute, it is illegal for a minor to be connected with the purchase or possession of alcoholic liquor, or pretend to be of age to purchase it.
This creates a problem for both liquor stores and private clubs, although most local owners and managers interviewed don't seem very concerned.
"Sure we have minors that try to buy liquor," said Charles Borgner, manager of Borgner Liquor Store, 919 Iowa St. "But we have a reputation for being strict, and we are."
Borgen said his employees were instructed to check anyone whom they doubted. He told them that the new security
"I simply tell them to get out and be sure to come back when they are 27," he said.
DAVE FOSTER of Frey and Williams Liquors, 2242 Louisiana St., said he usually checked the age and caught about one woman who answered whether a "real problem" existed.
But Strukel said that there definitely was a problem and many retailers weren't cited
"A lot more could be done," he said. "When a person comes in and pulls the driver's license out of a shirt pocket—that's insulting to everyone, that's always almost abused in a wallet."
He said retailers and club owners should look more carefully for enuresis and check their inventory.
Steve Comeau of The Mad Hatter, 700 New Hampshire St. said, "sure, we catch minors all the time but we just tell them to not attend," he added. "They aren't 121 and in set on fake IDs though."
"YOU CAN also ask for more iden-
tity, but we don't know that someone will borrow the whole wallet."
Corneau said people used to come in to the Hatter with an ID, then passed it to the servers.
Corneau said that the big problem was fake IDs that looked authentic. He said he thought some people got blank driver's licenses, which were stolen from Hutchison this summer.
"We put a stop to that after a few visits from the police," he said. "We now have someone stationed at the door not only to check for age, but write down the name of everyone who comes in. This way an ID can't come through twice."
"THIS WAY they type in the information themselves, and sort of iden-
tify that by pack it up."
For these reasons, Strukel said, Kansas should have mandatory drivers licenses. Owners still should be careful, though, he said.
He also said students took expired driver's licenses from older friends to the examiners office and had new IDs made with their own pictures on them.
"These are almost impossible to catch," he said.
"I don't like to close liquor stores or clubs, but I do want them to be careless," what will happen?
Strukel said that if a liquor store or club were caught selling to a minor they were usually cited and had to appear before the Alcohol Beverage Control.
"THE MANAGER must defend himself as to why action shouldn't be taken against
He said that the minor got into as much trouble as the store, but that if the minor had fake identification, often the club or store would be arrested while the minor would be arrested.
him," Struckel said. "There is always the possibility of fining, sentencing, suspension of the license or the ultimate—revoking the license."
"That conviction will hold him the rest of his life," Struckel said. "Although a minor should be responsible, if the managers were careful, a lot of problems would end."
"We are pretty strict," Penny Sherman, manager for The Sanctuary, 1401 L. Seventh St., said. "It can only cause problems for the minor and us."
STRUKEL SAID that club owners surely
struktel and lose both their business
"I guess I like the business minors give." Cormeau said, "but I sure don't want to be closed down because of them. And because of that we have to be hard."
Strikel said most club operators and
quarter store managers understand and, for the
first time, are using the new system.
"By and large I'm content that the lid is on the problem," Strukel said. "Between local authorities and our agents, we keep things under control."
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8 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 10
Hoch Auditorium
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Tickets at SUA
Past Graduate Student Executive Council elections were held by mail ballot in March.
In the past, members were elected in the spring and began serving the following fall. Newly elected members now will begin serving on the Assembly immediately.
More elections scheduled
Elly Turk, assistant to the dean of the College, said recently the College Assembly elections were being held with the Senate and a majority of voters showing more student interest in the Assembly.
Student members on the College Assembly, the ruling body of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and the Graduate Student Executive Council will be
Elections for two student governing bodies in conjunction with Student Senate. Semester 1.
Any interested students, except seniors,
enrolled in the College or Nunemaker
Center are eligible for election to
the Assembly. Applications are available in 206
Strong Hall. The filing deadline is 4:30 p.m.
Friday.
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KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
David Wand, Hewlett-Packard representative, will be at the Kansas Union Bookstore on Wed., Feb. 23 to answer your questions.
6
Tuesday, February 8, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Knee injuries get jumper down
Sports Writer
By ROB RAINS
As a freshman, Keith Guinn appeared to have unlimited potential as a high jumper.
When Guen broke the University of Kansas indoor record in the high jump a little more than three years ago, there didn't appear to be anything that could stop
What wasn't foreseen, however, was the occurrence of knee injuries, which had occurred in many cases.
Sports
That trouble resulted in the second
operation of his career, forcing him to lavout all of last year.
Guinn is competing now, but he hasn't regained the form that allowed him to win the Pan-American game trials with a 7-4 leap in late 1980s year the KU outdoor record.
"IT'S GOT to come sometime," said Guin, who at 6'3", 175 pounds, is considered one of the strongest jumpers in the Midwest.
Guinn's best jump of the season came in Wichita, Jan. 14, in a dual against Wichita, Jan. 13.
"I don't have very good technique and quickness," Guinn said. "I'm
TIM ROBINSON
Keith Guinn
strong and I'm fairly fast, but I'm just not putting it all together now.
"I'm in a slump-my technique was better a few weeks ago."
Guinn's history of knee trouble started while playing basketball at Shawnee Mission North High School. First it was his broken right wrist, then having trouble with his right knee again.
"ITS BEEN swelling up some." Gunn
I have to bend it when I go to
the office and bring it to bent."
"The sport is 90 per cent mental and I'm not concentrating the way I should," Guinn said. "I take a little longer on my approach than most juniper's because there was a lot of competition. My juniper and I wanted to do my best on all of them. I need to do more of that now."
Guinn said that he thought a big part of his trouble right now was mental.
Assistant coach Gary Pepin, who handles the jumpers, said he thought Guinn had a problem trying to handle the work load because of the swelling of his knee.
"WEVE HAD to change his workouts, and modify them to fit what his leg can bandle. Pepin said: "He's a little behind us, but he gave me less; he didn't get to work hard in the fall."
KU has more than its share of outstanding high jumpers, with three having gone over the seven-foot mark and another having crossed it. The spirited competition has helped him.
"one reason I came here was because I
lost my team and was going to be good competition," Gwynne said.
Gunn lives with the frustration of not being able to compete as well as he'd like. He can't afford it, and his
"SOMETIMES I think that if I can just pop a good jump I'll be alright, and I try not to worry about it," Guinn said. "I just want to be consistent.
"I'm still learning. I've been out of
competition for a year, and it's gradually coming back, sometimes too gradually.
"Being out for a year has hurt me a little more than I expected."
Guinn will be leading the KU jumpers into tough competition this weekend—the United States Track and Field Federation Championships in Oklahoma City.
ensuing scuffle disturbs me equally. I don't want our league to develop into a boxing league. I'm not after Detroit, per se, but I am disturbed."
The USTFF was the site of Guinn's record-breaking jump three years ago, and Saturday also is his birthday. Maybe his luck is changing.
Kings request fight investigation
"This is the third incident involving Detroit in the last three games," Axelson said. "The fact that a lady spectator could have been severely injured during the
Tuesday Nite Bubbelf
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4 p.m. till 9 p.m.
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM: Student Senate Treasurer's Office
All officers who are responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds must:
RE: Training Session
2. Sign an organizational management contract with the Student Senate
1. Attend a training session conducted by the Office of the Student Senate Treasurer. See the time listed below.
3. Obtain advance written authorization for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
4. Account for all inventory.
No funds will be made available until these requirements have ben met. Even though you have attended a training session last fiscal year, you will still have to attend one during this cal year. The training sessions will be held once per each month. The training session has been scheduled for the following time:
KANSAS CITY (AP)—The Kansas City Kings requested Monday that Larry O'Brien, commissioner of the National Basketball Association, investigate an incident that occurred Sunday during the Kansas City Detroit game.
"But I did see the film clip last right on local television. This combined with what Coach Phil Johnson told me of the incident caused me to call Commissioner O'Brien and request that he conduct an investigation whatever penalties he sees fit to impose."
Wednesday, February 9,1977 - 2 p.m. International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
"I did not see the incident on television," I told Joe Axelson, president and general manager of the company.
Jim Eakins, Kings' reserve center, suffered a cut under the eye after taking what appeared to be a punch from Bob Cox. It was part of the game, which Detroit won, 130-111.
The session will last less than an hour. You must contact the Student Senate Office at 843-710 to sign up for this session or for additional information. The student senate is funded by a grant.
Advertise in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
Lanier was ejected after both teams emptied onto the floor for what almost became a brawl. Seven members of the Kings were among the members of the Kings were fined $150 each.
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801 Mass. 843-0200
University Dally Kansan
Tuesday February 8.1977
ery)um
Freshman Hasan Houston is seeing stars
Hawaii State
00
By GARY VICE
Sports Editor
When the Kansas basketball players are introduced just prior to tip-off in Allen Field House, don't expect to learn their names by listening to the public address system.
For everyone, that is, except one. Hasan Houston still needs an introduction—at least
Because if you don't know them already, the Jayhawk's starting lineup can't be heard over the roar of their enthusiastic followers. With only the slightest motion toward mid-court by a Herb Nobles or a Keno kniens, the cheering erupts.
He's a 6-2 freshman guard from St. Louis, Mo., who has worked his double zero uniform number into KU's starting lineup. He's also been the coach he has often played more like the floor leader he was at University City High School, where he averaged 31 points a game his senior year in being named the St. Louis All-Star and the St. Louis area, than like a freshman.
Houston is being groomed as the 'Hawks backcourt general by KU's coaching staff. And while they realize veterans like team captain Koenigs are the publicly-designated leaders, Houston has the confidence and ambivalent style to take charge on the court.
HOUSTON, WHO wears double zero to be different after being told zero wasn't acceptable, is gaming attention on the court with his flamboyant and aggressive play. Between raising his fist overhead, shouting commands and cheering on his teammates, Houston has extended his grip with his explosive percussion with the bucket. Such play netted the self-confident freshman 18 points Saturday against Oklahoma.
KANSA'SNEW point guard says he is going to be a star. If you're doubtful, listen in on the post-practice chatter in the 'baehwks' locker room.
Houston (to reporter): "Hey, don't talk to Herb (Nobles) or them, they all envy me.
Donnie Von Moore: "So you want to be a star!"
Houston:"Right. Dig it man. Me."
Staff photo by MIKE CA
And so you have it. Proof that he's headed for stardom—it's only a matter of time. And Houston has the patience to wait—for awhile anyway.
"I FIGURED I'd be starting here," Houston said, "but not right at first. When I first came up here, my only problem keeping me from starting was my defense.
"I thought they were just saying that they had been fainted, and then made me mad at first. The girl (assistant) coach (Sam) Miranda, and they encouraged me to keep working hard and make it better."
"My defense has improved a lot since the beginning of the year, but still it is not the best," she said.
His first start came against St. Louis university, and he drew another starting game in the Eight Holiday Tournament. Then, when the 'Hawks were suffering from the loss of Paul Mokesi and the shooting slump of Milt Lineup, they started lineup to stay against Iowa State.
SINCE THEN he has averaged 7.4 points
KANSAS
00
Guard Hasan Houston makes the play for KU
per game. Not much for a high school standout that once ripped the nets for 97 points in two games, but Houston isn't concentrating on scoring this season.
BUT HUSTON, who leads the team in doling out assists with 29, had to go for the boo himself in Lincoln, Neb., against the team where he led KU in scoring with 16 points.
"I'm not supposed to be carrying the scoring load," he said. "We've got some good shooters in John (Douglas), Ken and Ben." "And they're on there's no reason for me to shoot."
"Once they start hitting you like to give the ball. Part of my job is giving them the ball when they're open and beside it, put them in a position which is like two points for myself."
"When no one's shooting the ball it's time for me to take charge&go and do my thing. Not so much one-on-one, but still in the team concept."
His shooting skill, which he acquired in schoolyard playgrounds while growing up in Brooklyn, N.Y., is reflected in his accuracy and speed. He shoots from the line until an attempt against the
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Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
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"A STAR IS
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Eve. 11/15, 9:40am Satur. 1/14
Hillcrest
THE PINK PANTHER
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Eve. 7:25 & 9:20 Sat.-Sun.
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SENIORS
Come to the HARBOUR on Feb. 10th from 8-11 p.m.
10c
draws
Sooners failed to fall, dropping his average to .929.
for a
PRE-K-STATE FAREWELL TO THE HARBOUR PARTY
77
Pick up class cards for Westport trip, Perry T.G.I.F., Graduation Party.
(The HARBOUR isn't leaving . . . you are!)
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
"I was trying to catch Kenny's freshman record of 24 in a-row, "Houston" said. "That and not miss a free throw all year were kind of my goals."
SUA
We'll be skiing for 4 days, March 13-19. $137.00
ONLY 20 SPACES ARE AVAILABLE.
Deadline extended to Thursday, Feb.10 So sign up for this 4 day package.
Included are: 4 days lifts • 4 nights lodging 4 days ski rental round trip chartered bus transportation.
Options available
Extra day skiing...discounts for own equipment/own transportation.
For more info. call SUA office 864-3477
FINAL PAYMENT DUE TUES., WED. 2/8, 9.
MIRANDA BEAMS when he talks of Houston's potential, saying, "When I first saw him play you could see he was in a position we were going to take the ball away from him.
"One of the great attributes he has is lots of confidence in himself to play at this level. We want him to score when he has the op-portunity but we really want him to direct the offense."
ball. He can direct the other players on offense."
"It's hard for a freeshank to be a leader, but he should be. It's very important for a leader to act in the best manner."
Houston's ready to star right now, but he's complacency enough to work hard within KU's offensive design and give his foes fair warning of his imminent arrival.
Dons hold top spot
the unbeaten San Francisco Dons remained on top of the Associated Press college basketball poll, collecting 51-of-58 firstplace votes and 1,115 points to outpace the visiting team. The tucky stayed in its No. 3 spot, while Nevada Las Vegas plummeted from fourth to tenth.
But after that, just look for double zero, because you won't be able to hear his name.
OLD TIMES
Feb. 8 thru Feb. 12
Inge Theatre
8 p.m.
Tickets 864-3982
1. San Francisco (S1) ... 23-0 ... 1,115
2. USA (C4) ... 18-0 ... 1,115
3. Kentucky ... 16-2 ... 89
4. Tennessee ... 16-2 ... 89
5. Michigan ... 17-2 ... 696
6. Louisiana ... 17-2 ... 696
7. Alabama ... 17-2 ... 435
8. Alabama (1) ... 17-2 ... 435
9. Margarite ... 16-3 ... 355
10. Nevada Las Vegas ... 16-3 ... 355
11. Tennessee ... 16-3 ... 397
12. Connecticut ... 16-3 ... 397
13. Arkansas ... 16-3 ... 343
14. N. Carolina ... 16-3 ... 343
15. Clemson ... 17-3 ... 116
16. Providence ... 17-3 ... 116
17. Syracuse ... 18-0 ... 46
18. Arizona ... 18-0 ... 56
19. Detroit ... 18-0 ... 35
20. Wichita ... 18-0 ... 37
Tickets 864-3982
Give Flowers
to your Valentine
The gift that says
I Love You
Order early for a good selection
for that special
VALENTINE
Nye's Flowers
1939 Massachusetts • 843-3255
The flower shop in the center of downtown Lawrence
---
1977-78 SUA Officers & Board Selection
Applications and information booklets now available at the S.U.A. office.Main level. Kansas Union Building.
Informational meeting for all interested persons on Monday, February 21, 3:15 p.m. Parlor A, Kansas Union Building.
APPLICATIONS DUE 5:00 p.m., TUESDAY, MARCH 1.
SUA
---
SOPHOMORE CLASS
179 ku
FREE BEER PARTY
79 ku
For all those who paid class dues
CLASS BUTTONS
Available at the door or In the class office in room 113-8 Union
4:00-10:00 Friday, Feb. 11th
ICHABOD'S
North on Massachusetts
THE FIRST 200 PEOPLE WILL RECEIVE A FREE CLASS MUG
To receive free mug and beer your class button must be worn
CLASS DUES AT $3.00 STILL AVAILABLE
AT THE DOOR OR IN THE CLASS OFFICE
8
Tuesday, February 8, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Electronic music to be featured
By JULIE ROBINSON
Staff Reporter
With the idea that music is universal, the School of Fine Arts' "1977 Symposium of Contemporary Music" brings to the University of Kansas this week a guest composer with a brand of music anyone can enjoy.
Ronald Pellegrino, a composer-performer on electronic musical instruments, will present a multi-media show in which he uses four synthesizers and visual effects generated by a laser deflection system.
He further illustrates his music with a 18 millimeter and two 35 millimeter slide
The effect, according to Pellgrino, is two-dimensional music, manifested in a rhythmless, repetitive pattern.
"The visual material is just another type of music," he said yesterday.
PELLEGRINO SAID people were generally excited about his music because it appealed to all the senses. However, he said, "if find that person in the age of 14, I will be extremely excited. They are so bent on the material world, they don't have time for fantastic imagery."
Pellegrino said he was at the University of Wisconsin when synthesizers first appeared on that campus. He said he was audited by the instrument's sound and power.
"Composers can do so much with them,
they can combine them and make them sound like a full orchestra," he said.
A common misconception is that sym-
phonics are musical instruments, according
to which they are played.
"Different synthesizers sound different, and each person playing one sounds different. While they can be used to simulate musical instruments, they are really electronic instruments and that's the way I use them," he said.
SYNTHESIZERs have been around since 1970, according to Peligrose, and he says because of the "chronic influx"
"While rock and jazz put them in a more popular vein, there is nothing faddish about it."
Pellegrino has made "a fair-sized spiritual and economical investment" in traveling around the country conducting seminars similar to KU's, which demonstrate the use of light and sound electronically and emphasize improvisation.
He has been performing live electronic music since 1970 on Moog, Synta, ARP and Buchi synthesizers at museums, libraries, music festivals throughout the United States and Europe.
THE 36 YEAR-OLD Wisconsin native has published several articles, a book, "An Electronic Music Studio Manual," and has taught electronic music; music theory and composition; and electronic music studies at the Oberlin Conservatory and Ohio State University.
Last night, Pellegrino demonstrated his
concert 'Concert of Sound and Light' in
Swarburt Beach.
Today, Warner Morse, professor of philosophy will讲 on "A Philosopher's View of New Music," at 10:30 a.m. He will give a lecture-demonstration at 2:30 p.m.; and there will be "A Concert of New Music" at 8 p.m.
Three electronic music artists, Markwood Holmes, Lainie Jorge Gonzales and Mario Braga.
Two more days of activities are planned, free of charge, in Swarachout Rehall Hall.
MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES
Tomorrow, there is to be a "Real-Time Composition Workshop," at 2:30 p.m. in supernova improvisation by RU musician impersonation by RU musician of New Music" at 9 p.m. will be the finale.
- manage a worldwide inventory of over two million items
Get management experience in the Navy as a commissioned officer in the Supply Corps. The broad responsibility of managing the supply corps includes merchandising, transportation and purchasing. The magnitude of the Navy Supply Corp has grown to mighty proportions. The global scope of the supply corps constantly expanding in pace with the Navy. Supply Corps is responsible for controlling its
- manage food services to feed the entire Navy
THE FINAL concert features works by two students, one faculty member and performances by the KU Chamber Chair and KU Percussion Ensemble. Pellergino is to play compositions by KU students during the improvisation workshop.
Whatever the job, a Supply Corps officer's assignment is one of the most demanding and rewarding positions that could be offered a man or woman.
"Concerto for Timpani and Metal Orchestra" by Bruce Penner, Lawrence senior; "Songs of Dao" by Vicki Burkard, Manhattan senior; and "Arp Piece" by Edward Matttila, professor of music, are to be performed.
For more information, write L. Charles McDaniel, Navy Information Team,
420 Broadway, K.C. M. Moalton, or call collect (816) 374-237.
THE CONCERT of New Music features works by three KU students and one faculty member: "Hommage to Mendeleev" by Leon Burke, St. Louis graduate student; "Piano Sonata" by Steve Rice, Lawrence Hurson, St. Louis graduate; "Huron, Topeka senior"; and "Tennisonia; Three Impressions after Tennyson" by Charles Hoag, professor of music theory.
- operate one of the largest retail systems in the nation
NAVY OFFICER. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB, IT'S AN ADVENTURE!
C
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University Floral
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Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358.
BASKETBALL DOUBLEHEADER
KU WOMEN & KANSAS CITY KINGS
vs. Northwest Missouri State
TUESDAY FEB. 15 Sing up deadline FEB. 11
vs. Phoenix Suns
$850 Cost includes bus transportation and reserve seat ticket
EXPERIMENTS in TRAVELLING
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Order Your
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Cans
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D
Valvoline Cheese
2 lbs. box仅$1.69
Limit one with $10.00 in
other purchases ex-
cellent cheese, beer,
and this coupon.
Good thru Feb 31.
Satisfies a applicable
state and local tax.
SAVE
60c
Cole slaw, Roll and Fish Dinner 2 pcs. ea. $99^{\circ}$
PROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON
**Folger's Coffee**
Coffee 1979. Limit one with $10.00 in other purchases, excluding cigarettes and beverages. Good thru Feb. 13, 1977.
Subject to applicable state and local tax.
$2.16
PROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON
**Volvoa Cheese**
Cheese 1979. Limit one with $10.00 in other purchases excluding cigarettes and beverages. Good thru Feb. 13, 1977.
Subject to applicable state and local tax.
40c
PROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON
**Mr. Coffee Filters**
100 ct. only 79c. With this coupon on the purchase of 100 ct. Mr. Coffee filters per coupon. Good thru Feb. 13, 1977. Subject to applicable state and local tax.
5AVE
46C
PROGEP COST CUTTER COUPON
**Extend Mouthwash**
18 oz. Buy one at regular price, get one free. Subject to applicable state and local tax.
5AVE
46C
**SAVE**
$1.81
---
GS bus and ket
Tuesday, February 8, 1977
University Dally Kansan
OUDPON
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AVE:
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From page one
Death . . .
He said mandatory life sentences would leave prisoners with no hope and they would be dangerous to other prisons and prison employees. And as a former prosecutor, Allegracuel said, he doesn't want to place the responsibility of the death penalty in prosecutors' hands.
"It may be a prosecutor who determines life or death through plea bargaining," he said.
State Sen. Donn Everett, R-Manhattan, agreed, saying, "There are some prosecutors in the state whom I would consider on the take."
"I was content that each member would vote from the innermost depths of his feelings," he said. "Instead, we had polls where the officer we had the attorney general treated out."
STATE SEN. ARNOLD Berman, D-
Lawrence of the burglar's
death penalty.
Berman said he resented Schneider's interference with the Senate. Of the poll results referred to during the debate, he said, "Some members of the Senate have used their weekends prowling parking lots of shopping centers, some have resorted to walking and some have resorted to paying for ballots to be published in newspapers."
Another committee member, Mike Harper, said Walker couldn't participate in the discussions until after the football season. The two men met on Monday to collect fourth grade interest in athletics after the football season, he said. So the meetings were never scheduled.
Reilly said the 30-year minimum sentence amendment would "set the penal system back 100 years. He said prisoners who knew they would be in jail for at least 30 years would turn state prisons into slaughterhouses, and he offered to supply pictures of prisoners who had been murdered in jail.
"It's as if this question had no moral consequence than the selection of a beauty queen. The best we would unleash today as a woman is the one that feeds on innocence, love and trust.
State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Topeka, then formally introduced an amendment to require mandatory life sentences that also failed.
Berman asked the Senate to reaffirm the value of life by defeating the death penalty proposal because "we have a society sick to its soul with organizational and legislative powers" in the hood of thousands of souls who have died for reasons long forgotten.
`^ARE WE ONLY to be tabulators of`
`the computer. If so, computers could do the job better.`
"I ask this in the name of my religion and my conscience, because I can do no less."
AFTER ALLEGREUCCI's amendment was finally approved, a motion by State Sen. Neil Arasmith, R-Phillipsburg, to kill the amended bill failed.
Reilly said Hein's amendment would "set the penal system back 150 years," and called it "irritable, asinine, immature and childish."
Walker said he had met with some students several weeks ago, and had told them he would be happy to have the meet if enough students were in attendance.
THE STRANGER (1967)
SUA
MOVIES
There is still a need for open meetings with the athletic director, Harper said.
WED., FEB. 9
Dir. Luchino Visconti, with Marcelo Mastroianni, Anna Karina (French/Subtilies)
My attitude has always been, I'd be happy at any time and any place to meet with you.
7:30, 9:30 75°
A VERY NATURAL THING (1974)
THURS., FEB. 10
"It's no one's fault, really." I guess if it's
a fault, it's a mine," Grubbaugh said.
Dir. Christopher Larkin
UN CHANT D'AMOUR
Dir. Jean Genet
7:30, 9:30 $1
FRI.. FEB. 11
Dir. Martin Scorsesa, with Ellen Burstyn, Kris Kristofferson
SAT., FEB. 12
ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE (1975)
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 $1
FRI., FEB. 11
SAT., FEB. 12
Magical Mystery Tour With the Beattie (1967) Yellow Submarine (1968) BBC Concert (BBC Concert)
KUAC meetings may materialize
12:00 (Midnight) $1
football game to Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. Because of a controversy over the proposed site the sports committee said that they thought Walker, who favored playing the game in Kansas City, should met with students at an open forum.
Proposed monthly discussions between students and Clyde Walker, University of Kansas athletic director, haven't taken place because of foottrapping by their originators, Jld Grubaugh, Student Senate sports committee chairman, said yester-
The sports committee suggested the meetings last November during a meeting at U-Missouri (U-Missouri).
But the meetings have never materialized because of a communication breakdown within the sports committee, Grubaugh said.
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without regard to their residency status. BRIALL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FILTH HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
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
ERRORS
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.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or on the DUK website the DUK business office at 643-1538
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Need Exercise! Ramada Inn Figure Sail. Hotel operated and operated. Monthly and daily rates $49-$80.
Enrol now at Dorias Decorative Arts for tull and decorative painting, pom-pom parade, doll dragging, counting, covering and design, composite decoration, counting and maquette. K413-72-89 1066 New Hampshire.
Wanted—alive and on moving Christians. Join us in making a community center for relaxing and worship, at Centenary Cemetery (Episcopal), 1116 Louisiana Holy Communion House (Episcopal), 7 p.m. Thursday, 9 p.m.
If love potions and after shaves don't work, try a singing valentine. 843-7070. 2-8
Interested in juggling? Join us at thursdays at 2
p.m. 1118 Lomas, or call 843-8202
ENTERTAINMENT
KOKONOS: Paraphernial for the conusureus.
Ballroom at Big South Jeans. 12 East
Bath. 841-306-3490
FOR RENT
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to
Toronto, tennis courts, parking. 853-9797
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
nets, pads 843-7567 tf
25 Bed 2-2 bedroom, subsuite $225, $0 reward,
large living room. 841-558 or 913-619-0491.
BED & BATH - RENTAL
Sublease 2-bedroom, unfurnished apartment,
$365/month. Monthly rent $104. Available immediately.
Nitting $180/month.
Subsite nice new two bedrooms in four-piece,
central air, wall to walk carpet. 843-299-2
2.9
Must substitute by May 31st: 2 bedroom unfurn-
ished carpet, AC $70.00 $80.00 W-12
W-10
Large 1-2 bedroom apartment - 2 blocks from
large 1-2 bedroom apartment - 2 blocks from
large 1-2 bedroom apartment - 2 blocks from
FOR SALE
INVENTORY SALE! Extra Stock and Demo Units!
-Prices Reduced To Sell Many excellent books
-time offers At All-Time Low
-Admission to Electronics as well. Now thru
Feb 14th, Lay-A-Way Financial. Roy Ackman &
Randy W. Kroehler.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization guide. On course to sense to make sense out of Western Civilization guide. For examination. For examination. For Exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization available now at Towson University.
UNICORNS. Mermaids wings in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to choose from. Stone cutting service. Repair service. Professional work, satisfaction guarantee.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
appliances to suit your needs. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704% Mascot
Road, Suite 100, 215-638-9200.
Redeeman Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod memorial (conservative) at 120 S. 45th St., we have an active youth group. Place 50th and Hakenk, at 370 W. 15th St., more information contact Mit Fredrickson at 866-698-2150 or at a.m. Bible class and Sunday school at 10:15 Lutheran, Layman Church, at 2:24 of the month.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialities
BALT AUTOLITHIC BALT AUTOLITHIC
ELECTRIC B-463-960-590 W. 6th.
ELECTRIC B-463-960-590 W. 6th.
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service
T
Guitars for sale—The best guitar in Lawrence are available at LMC, Bob Wedman, dealer. Low overhead, low price for Alvarez. Come play at 307 E. 9th; 843-4916. 2-11
RADIAL, THE CLEARANCE. Your sizes at close
touch. 15-24, 25-30, 31-36, 37-42,
43-48, 59-64, 75-81, 85-91, 95-101,
105-111, 115-121, 125-131, 135-141,
145-151, 155-161, 165-171, 175-181
Used Magnavia component system with 8-bracket
component with 6-bracket bracket.
Component with 6-bracket change for $149.50 and
8-bracket change for $149.50.
2-165-13 use Dugald radios only $3 for the
2-165-13 use Dugald radios only $3 for the
Rail 2-11-14 to Rail 2-11-14
Bryant 2-11-14
Marshall 100, Amp Head. $238—new $700.
Attingc 600, Amp Head. $159—new $130.
Attingc 600, Amp Head. Call 841-545-8788.
Royal Electric Typewriter with carbon ribbon
Conflict Benton Agency, Inc. 843-607-971
2-0
Cassette tape sale. Pale 60-minute for only 84
or box 50 minute for $5. Rays Backbone B-211
Peter PTX, 35 mm single-eye camera, carrying a large lens for full-frame shooting of $290 for best offer. Call Jersey at (804) 671-1000 or visit www.peterptx.com.
19. Kesawati KZ-750 two lunge rack, padded slate hay, windshield, new rear seat 2004-11-08 8:56:38 - 8:58:08
19. Kesawati KZ-750 two lunge rack, padded slate hay, windshield, new rear seat 2004-11-08 8:56:38 - 8:58:08
POTION PAILHOU Natural body care products.
Natural brittle brushes. 12 East North Street. $29.00
SKA's, spelling (Equip. 100 cm) with Salomon
44 bindings. Clutch (John 841-7252). 2-8
Kentwood wint stereo receiver $200. and Rotel
turret wint stereo receiver 149. and Aeroflex Call 642-2548. MSA 43. and 2.9
1811 W. 6m
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Quality stove equipment. Hotel 602 receiver;
179 speaker; Hotel 500 speaker;
Purple turntable Call # 843-8581
Gibson Les Paul Deluxe. Fender Twist Reverb
80W Amp Kit. Mint Phaser. Must-21
12s ask for Mark. Mk4
Bauto. alver Alvarez 5-string Play to appraise! 841-4422 2-10
Pinnacle X52-4968 pair, pair of Ultralite 325
325-1028, pair of Ultralite 325
Toshiba Toshiba - Compounds weld together on
the same metal. Components used together on
the same metal.
Sterco Quadragram Music System, includes MS-
8800 and MP-3800. Suitable for classroom or
good condition. Graduation B14-81 242-81-2500.
Hamilton Beach Rutter-Popcorn Popcorns only
113 at Ray Stoneback). 292 Mass. 2-11
Save up to $20 on Marmorv Digital Clock AM/
FM radio. Only $95 am at Ray Stonebank* 211-864-7533
P23-Channel C.I.'s, half price for $0.90.
Aurora for only $12 at Ray Stone Mall.
Toyota for only $8 at Chevron.
1973 VW Fastback, beige, clean, dependable. 2-10
1500, 781, 1621, Olathe.
Cassette recorder 'Sale' Sony, G.E. Craig and
Nick Reeves in 'Kids Rock' 2-11
Rock Staplebox '2005' 2-11
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only ones with a specification guarantee of $\pm 2$ dB, like Riley Audio 3, E. 4th, Prices from $175.
Advent model 300 Stereo Receiver; designed to offer the kind of sound associated with far more traditional performance companies directly, in every respect, including captivated chassis components. Buy now to expand your
72 Chevy 2-door Impala. Good condition Call
Hpa 864-2695 2-11
Yashica MAT 124M twin lens reflex with Braun
stress. Excellent condition. $100. #649-8078
(300) 212-555-2030
Gigantic Garage and Antique Sale featuring clothing, furniture, appliances, vases, antiques, fine art, antiquities, fur, jewelry, crafts, linens, toys and many new items. Famous patrons include, Patricia Barnard, February 12 to 5 p.m. at Rockhill High School 980 State Line, Lake Michigan 494-636-7400, antiques and snack bar. 2-8
Fantastic airbnb for sale All sizes Cottage or Call
george 1:486-3191-1022. 519 West Bc. 68 W. St.
2:18 - 2:18
Pioneer CT-FB823 Cassette Recorder with built-
in Caterpillar CT-823 and Memo Station 6-month
> 2111
BATTERIES: Top quality fully guaranteed condition. Fit most auto and trucks. Electro-liFe Battery Shop, 540 S. 7th Ave. at 6th and 11th Street. Shop open on Friday and Saturday, or call office 2-14
Draft 300 skills, 195 cm, Solomon 500 bindings.
Nott points, 843-7807, or 841-7525. 2-14
73 Ford Econoline Van, AC, automatic, radians, 8
radiation. $2900 Phone-1-478-480-68
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy way. Be an Avon representative and make the money you need selling quality products on your own time. Two openings in Lawncrest. $2-16
MEN-WOMEN, JOBS ON SHIPS
Foreign, No experience required. Excellent job.
Worldwide travel. Summer job or career.
$3 for information needed. E4-Boar. 20-15
Job Number: 36362
Borrow: 20-15
HELP WANTED
1972. Vega, 4-speed, radial tires, $800, $825-7005
after 5 mph. 2-14
sister kettle cake
Node models are needed for art classes Monday-Retard
from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday, 10:30 a.m.
to 12:30 p.m.
sister kettle cake
14th and Mass.
10% off dinner with coupon
Bring Coupon in through the 15th
Room and bed in exchange for help around the home. Also sleeping room, army or 42 per room at night, or a second bed for photo work. Also need secretarial help 2-3 hours (evenings) per week. Call 42-296-0128.
Cashier-houses, beautiful area restaurant and club theater. Over 24, part time, evenings.
**SUMMER JOBS:** Over 200,000 in all 50 states.
Your money hack if you don't obtain yours through our college catalog. Send $2,000 to **COACHESIENCE**, box 43 for selection. **COLLEGE**, 2-9
1801. Act now for best selection.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost a man's wedding band, made of yellow and
white silk, at a 50-year-old gold white
purity. Reward is Awarded. Call 843-694-2710.
LOST- Omega, gold ladies wrinkle watch, Reward—2$
If found, call 843-560. call to Cathy. -2$
Locate: One pair ladies glasses (or white/wash)
locked. Save: Call Linda at 864-187-3897.
Restore: Call Susan at 864-187-3897.
Found KU keys in Malot parking lot. Inquire
Lost & Found, Hoch.
2-8
Found cat, found and white with blue eyes
in 10th and Miss. M64-6688, or Miss. 872494 - KA
for K8.
Found Red, II垦氏 Sitter pup with a namedet of Cound, on 14th and Ternesme. 833-807. 2-6
Found a red beanie hat with name Ceeil, in front of Kapaaigma fraternity. 863-7102 2-8
Lost-Feb 2. 2 men's white gold wedding band with four diamonds in the center. 812-607-3964
2-11
812-607-3964
Found a pocket watch in attic of Arkansas Call and
address: 842-7504, Syd. 2-8
Found - Tuesday. Feb. 1 at 9th and Ohio Kitten.
Found - Wednesday. Leg tilt, face, Blue
Kitten. 8:26 AM-12:56 AM.
Found—Small wire terrier one year old. It not
29.964-9027
Found - Bus Pass on Ridge Court bus. 864-
290 and identify
Found—a ring in the summit of Summerfield between Hearth and Murphy. 864-2244. 2-9
Come to 111 Flint and identify. 2-9
Lost! One rainbow now!
Found other river in bathroom of Wescoe Call to
Found silver ring in bathroom of Wesco Call to claim it 841-6180 2-10
silver lighter, Bram make; on Jan 28- sentimental value. Substantial reward for each day of the month. 2-14
Lost. 1974 High School ring, gold and ruby stone.
Call 834-5834 and ask for Janet.
2-14
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 9 a.m.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture. Open doors and panels. clock televisions. Open daily. 12pm-5pm.
A support group for women that have gone/are
stopped from walking has started through the Women's Center. If you are interested, contact the Women's Center.
New theatres and research in Homosexuality will be the topic at Gay Services meeting, Feb. 15, 7:30 p.m. Regional厅 room of the Union, Prof. Michael Storms is guest speaker. The p-215
FREE! The Women's Resource Guide is now available for download from 1481 and 1483 in U.S. under the Belt. 2-8
The Dance 'You've All Been Waiting For' Gay
Service Center, 108 West 67th Street. 819-734-
1928. Union Ballroom 81, 79 person. We are
in invited for a wild evening. Brighten up
the room with a print from our
brightening up poster. We have a large collection of
beautiful cushions, colorful pillows,
brown-eyes you're always welcome. 1405 Max-
sid Drive. You're always welcome. 1655 Max-
sid Drive.
PERSONAL
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
18th & 6th
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
843-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
9:00 a.m. Sun.
8-8 Sun.
YARN-PACTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
BOARD
10.4 Km Mon, Sat - Till on Thursday
Steve Leben and Ralph Munny Reflection courses for student body president and v.p. 8-24
KARATE--Improve yourself physically and mentally this semester. Study This oriental combat are national champion teams now form four teams in the world. Lawrence, Kansas (913) 842-8244. 2-11
MAKIN' MUSIC - We make it easier. Folk, blues,
blues-rock, jazz, pop. With our handmade
bamboo mandolin, piano, flute, McKinney
and a vibrating pick-up system.
Gay Counseling Service: Call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m.
for referrals.
On a day like today wouldn't you enjoy a vowel letter to your child? A legitimate marriage and Redken facilities by appointment are available. Valentine Day, birthday or any time you need them. Headmasters, 89 Vermont, 842-5060, headmasters. 89 Vermont, 842-5060, 842-5060.
Hey! Introductory Pantomime classes. Everyone welcome. Tickets from 10am on Saturday, March 8, 2019 at Starting Ball 8-2-3
S Schneider's Ligue Store invites you to come see
the team. On TER, between Gritze and Pizza Hut 2-8
ON YET, between Gritze and Pizza Hut 2-8
REFLECTION 2-17
Don't miss an important class because you over-
paid. Call 843-2823, or 845-6211.
2-10
VOICE YOUR OPINON—All freshmen, sophomores, and junior in Nunauemer or LAAS & College Assembly would run for election to the College Assembly at 206 St. Brine or Nunauemer Center.
all my men get singing valentines or they get
nothing at all. 843-7070. 2-8
Don't be fooled by colorful pictures and models of Lauren Kavanagh. She learns and habits小麦man for student life. She also helps students at the University.
I know there are some attractive 18-20 JESU
churches in the campus. Attractive JESU make me
feel welcome.
--math tutoring--comprehended, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 602, 102, 105, 144, 117, 121, 121, 123, 123, 142, 142, 600, 558, 172, 142, 117, 121, 121, 123, 142, 142, 600, 558, 172, 142, 117
Mom nivea live! Praise Mmone! You could become an apostle. Keep listening.
2-11
ISHAEMEL. Ab.) The sounds of horses signal the presence of Jael, who the Jescuans shoal still is. I am in town that Jael's horse sheds its hair. I am a vicious rumor that THEY are training perceptions and literature. It isn't that I have anything new about them; they are being over-looked for all but that they are being over-looked for as long can we treat on the porcupine? Porcupine perceptions will be taught in school.
EUROPE. When you want it, where you want it. Welcome to Europe! 17 European. No charter手機. call WYSE 17 European. No charter手機. call WYSE
Bamboo lessons (Bluestar's) *Now offered at Richards-Hernandez's Music* Call 842-0812, or Paul at Richards-Hernandez's Music 842-0812.
Happy Birthday, Toot! Joe. 2-10
10-5 Mon.-Sat. 8:49 AM 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 8:49 AM Thursday
SERVICES OFFERED
Architecture Students Interested In Photographer.
842.9755 2-8
Sewing, knitting, mending. High quality work,
reasonable price. Phone: 841-7238.
Tutor for Keen, 622, and 520 and Graduate Student in Economics preferred. 841-751-205 after 6 p.m. on Tuesdays.
**Women's Groups:** Psychodrama Workshop for women who health care women-weeks-starts-1
Workshop for women Health Care Womenworker Workstation for the conscious development
1. 7:30 Pt Pat Henry, #842-2279 to register: 2-10
2. 7:30 Pt Pat Henry, #842-2279 to register: 2-10
Looking for an unusual way to tell him or her of his love, calling valentine. Only 28 calls. Call 843-7070.
Grooming all breeds. Pet supplies, Poodle
Studs Stud Service. Paradise Grooming. 843-737-
5016.
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Bedspreads · Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Experienced typist—term papa, thesis, mike,
electronic paper, proofreading, spelling
writing. (Please note: no computer lab.)
TYPING
Decorated Valentine Cakes. Only $5.00. Call 843-21-
6236.
I do damned good typing. Poggy, 842-4476. 1
THEISM BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us help you with KR Massachusetts & phone 848-3567. Thank you.
WANTED
Typist editor. IBM Pixellite. Quality work. Please contact. Deserts, dissertations welcome.
482-921-8232
Guitar pickers, players and listeners, listen to
the concert from 6:30 to 8:30 on Sunday evening from 6:30
to KAMU-15.
Female roommate wanted for nice 2 bedroom apartment. One block from campus. $50 and 30 per week. Req's a high school diploma or equiv.
ASSISTANT INSTRUCTORS, WESTERN CIVILIZATION PROGRAM. HALF-TIME. 19TH-ALT. 20th-LEG. In the liberal arts education is required Instructors must be able to supervise students at RU and must be progressing toward an admission as instructors eight one-hour sections of the Program or performing eight one-hour sections of the Program tasks as described in the Instructor's guide. We expect to have very few openings. Civilization II and Civics. Civilization III and Civics. Complete appls. (2)
Female grad student share house near campus.
Color TV, handset, cuffs included. $85
$100
Roommate wanted-formal to share Towers apartments and dorms all ivil rights, #72
81
Home resident for Continental Home. Rest and
care of older home residents. Apply on person or before Feb.
15.
1 make roommate to share 3 bedroom mobile home, wiather, drier, air conditioning, furnishings, etc.
Young man with 6 yrs old son wants 2 or 3 people for housekeeping, cooking, child care, cleaning. Rent $75 per month + excellent triny benefits. Rent $75 per month plus help with催促. For appointment call St. Mary's at (800) 491-2222.
20 pre-school needs your help. Children's Hour
Gives a little of your time to help a child
Give a little of your time to help a child
Female residence to share large 2-bedroom apartment Call 841-7894 or inquire at 1142 Fondra Blvd.
Easy-going, female roommate to share 2 bedroom
appartment 4 blocks from campus. KA92-1895
TUFU University of Tokyo Campus
Male twentieth, 2 bedroom apartment, 17th,
Ohio. 868 month. Phone: 842-8371 anytime.
2-9
Graduate, Assistantship, three-quarter time
Chief of staff, Apply in 59th WM.
May 10.
Roommate wanted, 3 bedroom trailer, plenty
earmount, bathroom and dryer space.
2-11
853-607-641
Female nominee wanted for 2-bedroom apartments £525 a month. On bus line. Call Fenny at (03) 788-2212.
Female roommate to share two bedroom apartments can block from university $92 plus 1 yr tuition.
Female recruits wanted to manage 3-bedroom
unitries on a month-to-month plan plus
utilities. Non-member: 841-6290. **2-14**
Hier En Nu, Maarten de Raadt, Oundal Ik gek
2-8
hier en jablelle
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
NAISMITH HALL
NAISMITH HALL
The Lounge
- Bud on Tap
- Pool
AIRLINES
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl 9
862.8832 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Exc
- Foosball
843-9812 Open Daily 10 a.m. -Midnight Except Sunda)
WingsTo
EURQPE
Charter Flights
Lowest Travel Arrangements for Individuals & Group
quality travel arrangements since 1951
Youth Fares
KU Union Bldg./900 Mass.
Hillcrest & The Malls Ctrs.
843-1211
Maupintour travel service
Home of The Chalk Hawk
Bird
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Face Ball
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl!
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
10
Tuesday, February 8, 1977
University Daily Kansan
FALLEY'S
2525 Iowa Next Door to Gibson's Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days Prices good Tuesday thru Sunday Fob.8-Fob.13 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
Quarter Sliced 9 to 11 Chops
$ \dots 9 9^{\mathrm{c}} $ lb.
Pork
Riverside Tom Turkeys ... 18 to 22 pound avg. $49^{c}$ lb.
Country Style Spare Ribs... lb.$1^{09}$
Loin End Pork Roast... lb. $99^{c}$
Falley's Own Sausage... lb. $79^{c}$
Center Cut Ham Slices... lb. $1^{89}$
Swift Premium Sizzlean... 12 oz. $1^{29}$
Andy Griffith Sausage... lb. $1^{09}$
U.S.D.A. Choice Grade Top Round Steak $1 39 lb.
U.S.D.A. Choice Sirloin Tip Steak ... $1 59 LB.
U.S.D.A. Choice Bottom Round Steak ... $1 29 LB.
U.S.D.A. Choice Heel of Round Roast ... $1 09 LB.
U.S.D.A. Choice Rump Roast ... $1 19 LB.
Extra Lean Ground Beef ... 2 lbs. & over LB. 99¢
Ohse Luncheon Meats 5 varieties ... 12 oz. 79¢
IQF Turbot Fillets ... LB 99¢
Coors Beer
6 pack
12 oz.
cans $ 1 39
Totino's
Frozen
Pizza
4 varieties 69c
13 oz.
Coors Beer 6 pack 12 oz. cans $139 Totino's Frozen Pizza 4 varieties 13 oz. 69c
New Fangled Potato Chips Pringles Twin pack 9 oz. 69c
Libby Golden Corn...17 oz. 4 for $1
Libby Garden Sweet Peas...17 oz. 3 for $1
Libby Tomato Juice...46 oz. 49°c
Libby Yellow Cling Peaches...29 oz. 49°c
Libby Fruit Cocktail...17 oz. 39°c
Libby Chunky Mixed Fruit...17 oz. 49°c
Ore-Ida Frozen HashBrown Potatoes ...12 oz. 3 for $1
Parkay Stick Margarine...16 oz. 39°c
SWEEP STAKES
GRAND PRIZE
$ 5000
Los Vegas Hotel for 3
Friday
9:00 AM Cake Trail - 19 TV
Saturday
18:40 Channel CB Radios
Sunday
25 I/O Digital Watches
Wednesday
100 Minus Calculators
CALIBRING CANE IS AVAILABLE AT THE ASSOCIATED MACHINE.
Win INSTANTLY or COLLECT to Win!
INSTANT
CASINO CASH
To enter, collect 10 Sweepstakes jokers. See Collector ticker for details
SWEEPSTAKES
ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE JANUARY 20, 1977*
$5000
$ 500
Lake Vegas License for two
3 Piece 1000 Cushion TV
10-48 Inch
10-48 Computer CD Racks
10-48 Mobile CD Ratios
21 Wide Electronics
200 Water Calculators
CASING CODE
participating Attendance Wholesale
National Association of Television
Companies
| Id | Name | Price |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| 1 | Las Vegas Matterhorn | $299.00 |
| 2 | Priceline $1500 | $84.99 |
| 3 | RCA Color Trail K-19 TV | $76.99 |
| 4 | 10-40 Channel HD TV | $28.99 |
| 5 | 29.5 E-V Digital Wizards | $7.99 |
| 6 | 200 Neo Camera Calibrators | $299.00 |
GAME
VALUE
NO OF PAYMENTS*
0001 ONE STORE VISIT*
0003 13 STORE VISITS*
0008 28 STORE VISITS*
$1000 4 16 15000
$200 10 16 15000
200 100 16 15000
300 100 16 15000
1000 1 15000
1000 1 15000
1000 1 15000
1000 1 15000
1000 1 15000
1 4 17500
2 4 17500
3 5 17500
4 5 17500
5 10000
1 165 165 13
1 165 165 13
1 165 165 13
FREEDOM IS MY GAME
Jif Peanut Butter 18 oz. 89c
WIN
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Get your FREE
Game Ticket
TOTAL CASH VALUE
OF PRICES $160.000
58,495.000
AVAILABLE
Kraft Longhorn Cuts 10 oz. 89c
$1000
Golden Ripe
Golden Ripe
Bananas
5 Ibs. $1
Bananas
5 Ibs. $1
Falley's Fresh Glazed Donuts...Dozen 99¢
Fresh Sandwich Bread...24 oz. 49¢
Diane's Assorted Cookies ...Assorted Weights 3 $1 and Flavors Pkgs.
Falley's Fresh Baked Brownies...Dozen 98¢
Washington Golden Delicious Apples 15 for $1
Texas Sweet Juice Oranges ...5 pound bag 98c
Snow White Mushrooms...8 oz. box ..89c
Washington D'Anjou Pears ...pkg. of 8 for 89c
FALLEY'S
Wagner Fruit Drinks 3 32 oz. $1 bottles
Betty Crocker Layer Cake Mix 49c each
FALLEY'S SAVE
Wagner Fruit Drinks 3 32 oz. $1 bottles Betty Crocker Layer Cake Mix 49c each Delsey Bathroom Tissue 4 roll pkg. 69c
Delsey
Bathroom
Tissue
4 roll pkg. 69c
Delsey Bathroom Tissue
4 roll pkg. 69c
Trix
Belt Buckles
Belt Buckles
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Candidates give Senate views
STILL WARMER
KANSAN
See stories pages six, seven
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.87, No.86
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL
=
Lyrical messaae
Chancellor Archie Dykes received an early singing Valentine yesterday from a few members of Alphi Piority, Pam Davis,
Cimarron senior, and Megan Johnson, Short Hills, N.J., junior, delivered the message to the chancellor.
By JOHN McANULTY
Staff Renorter
City approves acquisition of Bowersock Dam area
After much debate, the city commission last night passed an alternate proposal to acquire six acres on the northeast corner of a building in the heart of on which a new city hall may be built.
The approved proposal, submitted by Steven Hill, president of the Bowersock Mills & Power Co. and Fibreboard Inc., was basically the same as an original proposal, but included several items that commissioners requested and agreed to.
The main item was that the city could gain ownership of the Bowersock dam after 50 years. It would also gain ownership of a maintenance shop and an electric generating power facility which Bowersock owns.
After 50 years, it was agreed, three appraisers will figure the value of the Bowersock property and offer it to the city at that price.
The Bowersock company now owns the dam and will continue to do so, but the city will maintain it under the proposal, to free the company from a $386,000 liability.
However, under the agreement, the city can decide not to maintain the dam at any time. The commissioners agreed that the city should consider increasing water supply and recreational purposes and
said maintenance of the two services would improve under city management.
The fact that the city can decide not to maintain the dam would be important, because it is a vital resource.
The city could also gain ownership of the dam and the other facilities if the electric power generating level fell below 1,000 kilowatts an hour. The city, under the agreement, also has the option to destroy the dam.
Another item added to the proposal and agreed to by Hill was that the city have the right to beautify the exterior of buildings on the Bowersock property.
Commissioner Barkley Clark said the provision would be important if the city was to remain a major power.
The commissioners said development of the area would eliminate unsightly buildings that have been eyesores at the north entrance of Lawrence.
The city is considering development of a new city hall, which could be built on four sides.
Under the proposal, if the city decided to build a new city hall on the site, it would have to be held in escrow 60 days while the commission decided on the matter. If at the end of 60 days the commission hadn't made a decision, it would go to the Bowersock company.
The petition calls for a change from the current city-manager form to a mayor-council form. The question will go before Lawrence voters April 5.
In other action, the commission received a petition, submitted to the county clerk's office last week, calling for a change in city government.
Clark said he hoped that he and Mibek, both of whom are running for reelection to the commission this April, will be able to discuss the issue with Lawrence residents. He said he wanted to make sure that the people didn't vote without knowing the full implications of the proposed change in government.
Tasheff, Owens evaluate service
By MARSHA WOOLERY
Staff Reporter
Tedde Tashfeff and Steve Owen, their feet at use if not still, reviewed their work as an aid to the clinic.
The toes of her moccasined feet curled
the hands of the dress, resting. His long
hikin's nails tugged at a dewy brush.
Elected Feb. 19, 1976, as Vox Populares, the voice of the people, they've been as much the legs as the voice, so the Student should learn to represent student opinion, both were unsure.
"I don't know if we always acted as the people's voice," Tasehfell said Saturday. "Sometimes it had to be more representational," the Student Senate had set its objections at.
"TFS HARD TO communicate what the Student Senate is doing and then get feedback on it. A lot of times you have to learn that a majority out there must not agree with."
Owens agreed and he hoped a poll conducted last semester asked student opinions about the KU-MU football game would set a precedent in Senate action. The Senate passed a resolution opposing a proposal to move the game to Arrowhead and later polled students to insure that it had actually represented student opinion.
"Almost every student is affected by at least one organization funded by the Senate," he said, explaining the Senate's dedication to keep in touch with students through newsletters and questionnaires despite student apathy.
Tasheff searched her desk for the last
cigarette and reiterated a promise to quit smoking. She burned a match from Owens as she analyzed the pair's fulfillment of campaign goals.
ONE MAJOR GOAL was more utilization of the 20 per cent representation allowed by the Plan.
'We wanted to increase the student's voice not just in their own organizations, but also within the area of academics,' Tasheff said.
The Academic Affairs Committee had a fall seminar to encourage student participation and knowledge about department committees.
A MAJOR academic goal the two think they have achieved is toward the attainment of a fee waiver for graduate students and assistant instructors, Tsaeff said.
"Our main objective was to get support from the five other Regents schools across the state and present KU's needs to the Board of Regements," she said.
The five other state institutions endorsed the waiver proposal at the Regents' Coordinating Council Jan. 20 and the waiver be brought before the Board of Regents.
Their administration also formed the satellite union task force and cut the tuition cost to students for the new union to $3 last year. They plan to add $6 to this semester for planning costs.
THEY REDUCED the activity fee to students by a small amount, about 15 cents, Tasheh said, and obtained a 28-day approval period for tuition raises.
Senate meeting for a minority affairs' center was also a landmark. Tafiled告
"The Senate has shown there are some more voices out there we should include in our affairs with the administration and other groups." she said.
Owens, sitting with neat piles of folders in his lap, said, "There's been a greater emphasis on committee structure instead of the administrative people run things."
The allocation of funds at last week's
THE COMMITTEE is trying to hire an agency to study Lawrence's transportation needs but has been delayed waiting for federal approval of the study. Tauscheff said,
TASHEH SAID, "In the past a few people not within the committees pushed the legislation. But a lot of young senators came in and went to work."
The Student Service Committee's work with the Lawrence community to establish a city transit system, a campaign goal of 50,000 students, identifies the importance of committee work.
Referring to a greater use of committees, Tashseff said, "I don't know that we've always been efficient but we've always been effective."
A study would prove to the city that they need to do something about parts of the city's transportation problems, Tasheff said, or show the Senate ways it can improve its routes to accomplish the same end.
the Kansas legislature and chief advisor to new senators.
and a couple of afternoon training See TASHEFF page nine
Preliminary hearing set in murder case
Preliminary hearing dates were set yesterday in Douglas County Court for two brothers charged by police in the murder of Dennis Margaret Luxe, 46, of 93 Kentucky St.
The brothers, dressed in gray prison coveralls, sat quietly in the courtroom as Mike Elwell, associate district judge, read a bill that would allow former Feb. 16 preliminary hearing for the two.
James R. Gardner, 18, and Joseph Gardner Jr., 22, were found indigent by the judge, and lawyers were appointed to defend them.
Elwell ordered that both men be held without bond in the Douglas County Jail.
A Santa Fe工夫 crew found Maixey's mule, legless body near the railroad tracks at the north end of Connecticut Street and where the legs were found by police, at the city landmark.
An autopsy later showed that Maxey had died of a stab wound in the chest.
Police said the murder allegedly took place in the Garden's home at 740 Rhode Island.
Island St. late Saturday night or early Sunday morning, Maxey had gone to the house with Joseph Gardner Jr. after at Quantilln's, a local bar, police said.
An argument, which started after Maxey and Gardner got to his home, ended in the stabbing of Maxey. The brothers allegedly cut off her legs later Sunday morning to make it easier to move her body in a shopping cart, police said.
Police said they followed blood spots trailing from the location of the body near the house.
Maxey was unemployed and had lived in Lawrence about a year.
According to police, the brothers haven't lived in Lawrence long.
Funeral arrangements for Macey will be made by the Gibson-Bonor Funeral Home in New York.
Mike Malone, Douglas County attorney, said he couldn't comment on whether any of the murder details were accurate. He said he had not been released and released them and called them unofficial.
Fan keeps Allen's flags waving
Bv JOERADCLIFFE
Staff Reporter
The flag poles perched on Allen Field House stood empty, their ropes blowing in the cold Saturday morning wind. A total of 14,000 fans would send Allen rocking that the only people around were a few skinny maniacs runningers and the maintenance crew.
Tony Ice joined the maintenance department about four years ago. If he's not helping a policeman play bodyguard for him, he'll be asked to find him raising the flags that wave over
Allen—overlooking the land where he has spent his 56 years,
"MR. WALKER (Clyde Walker, athletic director), told us a few months ago that it'd be nice to put them up every day." Ice said. "Todd Williams helps me out during the week, but I'm usually by myself on Saturdays."
Ice is a small man, most of whose tairs are still in place. On his head it is well-covered with a scarf.
smile that seems to say he knows something you don't.
Ice said he had been involved with sports all his life, and one look at him will confirm his statement. He hasn't let the pounds grow on him, but I doubt he could still fit into his high school clothes.
"I'll never leave Lawrence," he said. "It will always be my home."
AS HE MARCHED up the stairs with
eight conference banners and dinner
evenings, he said even if
though he wasn't born in Lawrence, he planned to die here.
I ice reached the second floor and headed to the second landing duct by the windows on the upper level.
Drug use report unlikely to hurt KU budget, two legislators say
By JOHN MUELLER
Staff Reporter
"I used to go out those windows over there," he said, "I'd use a chair to climb over. But now . . . " He walked behind the heating duct, revealing a small wooden staircase leading up to the window. "They built some steps for me," he said, smiling.
Reports of marijuana use at the University of Kansas probably won't affect the KU budget, two state legislators said yesterday.
State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta and a member of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, said the reports "certainly affect on the budget for higher education."
One legislator, State Rep. Mike Glover, *D-Lawrence*, said "the effects of the reports will be negligible, if there are any at all." The governor said that he just bearded three or four comments on it.
KU ADMINISTRATORS have denied that resident assistants in KU residence halls don't enforce University and state regulations banning marijuana. The speculation arose from a story published in Friday's Kansas.
J. J. Wilson, housing director, yesterday called the use of marijuana by KU students a complicated issue, because of the overuse of Teopka and the effect on the legislature."
The Kansan story, later distributed by United Press International quoted a resident assistant as saying that 50 per cent of the students in his hall occasionally smoked marijuana. KU officials Monday issued a statement saying "uniquely
"There wasn't that much in the Kansan story," Glover said. "We should be just a little aware of it, but to say that we won't get faculty salaries increased, for example, because of a few kids smoking pot, is a little much."
"I KNOW the attorney has gotten several calls asking when the next big raid would be." Glover said, "But Schulden told me that the wuesthest thing from his mind."
that no violations of the law are or will be condoned or permitted by University of Florida.
DONALD ALDERSON, acting vice chancellor for student affairs, was one of the officials who signed the statement. He said yesterday, "We want people to know that the administration isn't ignoring the situation. But it's not a great problem, or is not great as it is sounded (from the story)." He said that his staff members that KU officials had "overreacted" to it.
Glover also said KU students probably wouldn't have to worry about increased enforcement of drug laws by Kansas Attorney General Curt Schneider.
The University isn't planning a crackdown on drugs, either, according to Aldershot.
"We feel that the policy we have now is working, and we will make no change. We can't even go into a person's room without 24 hours notice," Alderson said.
Saying that "privacy is a basic need for students," Alderson also said he didn't think it was fair that residence halls had been out for alleged marjuna violations.
Caryl Smith, associate dean of women, said she didn't think fraternities and sororites had any major problems with students using drugs, either.
"I HAVE NO reason to think that the houses have problems with that," Smith said. "Each house, each individual living in our own standard procedures for dealing with them."
Aderson said residence halls "have no classic way to deal with an offender. If he's caught, there will probably be a discussion between the resident assistant or the resident director."
He said five persons left residence halls hasten semester after being caught using cocaine.
OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY policy on drugs in residence halls, as stated in next year's residence hall contract, says that the university will illegal drugs" violates residence hall rules.
Violation of residence hall rules, according to the contract, "may result in cancellation of the housing contract, revocation of future guest privileges, and or other disciplinary action." The other disciplinary action wasn't specified.
KU
Almost every day Tony Ice raises the flags over Allen Field House at 8 a.m. Ice must climb through a window to reach the flagpoles.
"I remember when me and my wife lived over where Naismith Hall is now," he said. "We didn't have much money then, but when we could, we'd come to the games."
HE PUSHED open the window, climbed the stairs and pulled his 56-year-old frame through the window and onto the roof within several seconds. He scammered around the floor, placing a flag at the base of each pole and leaving KU and KSU in the front.
The campus was empty except for some scattered students, silently plodding along to their Saturday morning classes. As I raised the flags and watched them catch in the early morning wind, he talked about his life and his family.
ICE SPOKE with pride when he talked of his daughter and four sons. One son is the head football coach at Kinsley High School, another is the head basketball coach, Mary of the Plains College in Dodge City.
'My youngest son isn't old enough to play (took it),' he said, 'almost almost molestively.'
warning for all adults.
"I officiated high school football and baseball since 1954," he said. "I did my last football game last year."
Living in or around Lawrence almost all his life, ice he said liked the atmosphere in a college town and especially the atmosphere in the field house.
Ice said much of his life had been spent working with and around kids.
"FIVE ALWAYS liked kids," he said. they're still kids, sometimes, they've still kids, but
Ice finished his work for a moment. As the flags flew in the breeze over his head, he walked back to the window. He would return from his work and the flags down after the game that night.
Ice said he had been working for the University almost four years, since he
See FLAG POLE page 12
2
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Topeka awaits Mondale
TOPEKA--Vice President Walter Mondale has been invited to address Kansas Democrats' annual Washington Day dinner here Feb. 26, but word isn't expected until this week about whether he can appear.
Jan Meyers of Overland Park, acting state Democratic chairman, said she had conferred last week and again yesterday with members of Mondale's staff. The Kansas appearance is on Mondale's schedule, she confirmed, but the vice president still must receive approval of the White House.
Idaho Senate rescinds ERA
BOISE—After five years of futile attempts, Idaho opponents of the Equal Rights Amendment scored a victory yesterday with narrow approval by the state senate of a resolution rescinding the ERA ratification adpied in 1972.
Outcome of the resolution, which last week was approved by the House by a 44-20 vote, became apparent when the Senate voted 18-17 against a ruling by the chair that passage would require a two-thirds majority.
Applaise broke out after the final vote, 18,17, was announced, but Democrat Sen. Norma Dolpher rose and said: "This day will live in infamy."
Voting breaches suspected
EAST CHICAGO, Ind. —Edward Sadowski charged yesterday that supporters of Lloyd McBride, his opponent for the presidency of the United Steelworkers Union, engaged in "ballot stuffing" in the USW national election.
Saldowski said observers discovered ballot stuffing and other violations at the Buchanan Contracting Co. union Local 15380 in Birmingham, Ala.
He said observer Brent Montrell arrived at the polling站 15 minutes before the opening of voting at 6:30 a.m. to find the ballot box already one-third full.
Youna. Neto likely to confer
LAGOS, Nigeria-U.-N. Ambassador Andrew Young joined Marxist Angolan President Agostino Neto and Natao African leaders yesterday on a trip to Lagos for the annual festival.
Diplomatic sources said Young, on a special fact-finding trip to black Africa on behalf of President Carter, might take the opportunity of the trip to center with the United States on bilateral issues.
Neto, who Cuban-born 1935 warlord,
Neto's government still relies on Cuban army support and has been at odds with
the United States since the victory of his Marxist Popular Movement for the
Liberation of Angola.
Bomb planted in gas truck
BELLAST. Northern Ireland-Police evacuated part of Belfast's city center yesterday when experts defused a bomb in a tank truck carrying 20 tons of gunpowder.
The truck was hijacked by armed men who put the bomb on board and ordered the driver to take the truck to the front of the Donegal Pass police station.
Bomb disposal experts said the bomb had been suspended by a fishing line into one of the tanker's chambers.
CINNAGITT (UPI)—Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt was found guilty yesterday of pandering obscurity and engaging in organized crime and was immediately sentenced to 7-8 years in prison and fined $11,000.
Publisher of Hustler fined, jailed
A request by Flynn's attorney that the sentence be suspended pending appeal was denied and the 34-year-old publisher of the *The Times* was immediately handcuffed and taken to jail.
The seven man, five woman Hamilton County Common Pleas Court jury also found the Hustler magazine corporation guilty of the same charges, but found three magazine staffers, including Flynt's wife and brother, not guilty.
THE "ENGAGING in organized crime" charge stemmed from distribution of Hustler, alleged to be obscene and therefore illegal, in Hamilton County.
rytnt tainted Judge William Morrissey
just before the sentence was handed down.
"You haven't made an intelligent decision during the course of the trial and I don't expect one now," declared Flynt. "I want you to stop." So what, going thing Gary Glmire said, "Let's do it."
Flynt referred to the last words uttered by Glimore in Utah, before he was executed in Utah. before
THE HUSTLER magazine corporation
announced a total of $11,000 on the two
conventions.
scenity conviction and tacked on a $1,000 fine.
As Flynt was taken to jail, his wife, Althea, a statement from her husband.
"I'd like to leave the whole world with one question," Flynt said in the statement. "Murder is a crime, Writing about it isn't, not a crime, but writing about it is. Why?"
--use the combined swine flu and A-Victoria flu vaccine. It also allows the use of another vaccine intended to protect against the milder Hong Kong flu.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Simon Leis said he was "very elated" with the jury's decision and predicted it would have national implications.
"I think it's going to set the trend in this country as how far horn pornographers can go with their magazines," said Les, who prosecuted the Flynt case. "Hamilton is a pretty cool character and we stand up and be counted and let's put limitations on what they can publish."
FLYNT FACES pandering obcacity charges in Cleveland Municipal Court Feb. 11.
American Civil Liberties Union officials complained Flynt's conviction "shocks the conscience of all who believe in the freedom of the press."
"That any political official of narrow mind takes offense and can prosecute someone for selling materials viewed by adults only is offensive in itself, but to reach the point where it becomes effectively prevent the materials from being published in all their communities is
HEW lifts flu vaccine moratorium
The department recommended that elderly people and people with chronic illnesses get a shot to protect them from both the swine flu and the A-Victoria strain.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department Health, Education and Welfare lifted its restrictions on abortion in the United States.
The moratorium remains in effect, however, for the swine flu-only vaccine.
The action allows health officials to again
an outrage upon the First Amendment." ACLU National Director Aryeh Neler and Ohio ACLU Executive Director Benson Wolman said in a joint statement.
"BUT I CAN'T go in with armed forces and try to change the internal mechanism of the Soviet government," Carter said and cautioned that the improvement of human rights in repressive regimes would be a "long, tedious" process.
The President repeated his support for the long-range objective of complete nuclear disarmament and expressed willingness to compromise now with the Soviets in order to achieve a second-stage Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Carter, calling U.S. nuclear power superior to the Soviet's, invited Moscow yesterday to conclude "a quick agreement" on strategic arms limitation by setting aside differences over particular weapons.
"I would be willing to go ahead with the Soviet Union and conclude a quick agreement, if they think it advisable, and omit the cruise missile and the Backfire bomber from the negotiations at this stage," he said.
—Defended his choice of Paul Warnke to chief U.S. disarmament negotiator and predicted the Senate would confirm Warnke "overwhelmingly" despite critics' claims be favors some unilateral defense policies that have been ordered by me and I have accepted them." Carter said.
As if to hammer that point home, he deplored on the spot the recent Soviet arrest of dissident Alexander Ginzburg and the explosion of an Associated Press reporter.
Carter appeals for arms limits
completion of a SALT II treaty limiting nuclear delivery systems has been blocked for more than two years because the United States has refused to include its cruise missiles and the Soviets their bomber within the treaty limits.
During a 30-minute news conference that ranged over many topics, Carter also
an us first news conference as President, Carter also said he would continue to speak out "strongly and forcefully" in defense of human rights, and said he considered that topic completely separate from other U.S.-Soviet negotiating issues.
"Said he reserved the right to veto the sale of concussion bombs to 'a foreign country' after further review. He said previous announcements the United States sold such bombs to Israel had not been cleared with him or the State Department.
the $3.2 billion, two-year program he submitted. But he made clear he considered that unlikely, because his proposal was "well balanced," between tax breaks and job programs, and because he had consulted closely with Congressional leaders on
SAID HE reserved the right to veto the economic stimulus package approved by the governor.
CARTER SAID THOE items could be put up again "in the Sail III talks, if necesaes.
—Said he believed the nation "has learned a great lesson from Watergate, and there is little danger of recurrence." He pledged continued "openness" in government and strict ethical standards for officials.
—Pledged again to have a long-term, comprehensive national energy policy ready for public scrutiny by April 20. "It's going to require substantial sacrifices on the part of the American people" in the area of conservation.
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"Putting Mr. Flynt in jail would accomplish absolutely nothing," he contended. "No man should go to jail for publishing a magazine."
THEY ADDED that the prosecution of Flynt "makes Cincinnati a laughing stock." Just before the jury returned its verdict for the shooting, which he and his magazine were named in a new 12-count indictment returned by the Hamilton County Grand Jury.
AS ADVERTISED IN
SOUTHERN LIVING MAGAZINE
That indictment stems from a pamphlet depicting war atrocities that Flytn mailed to Hamilton County residents last December. The indictment accuses Flytn of "disseminating matter harmful to juveniles."
AS ADVERTISED IN
indicated he might lean toward making one-sided arms reductions without winning against them.
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Although *Flynt* said he wanted "no mercy" from the judge, his attorney pleaded with Morrissey not to send his client to jail.
ryant's attorney, who is appealing the convictions, also said he considered the "engaging in organized crime" conviction illegal.
STREET ADDRESS
NAME
"For there to be a conviction of engaging in organized crime there has to be five or more persons involved," the judge, pointing out that the jury convicted only two defendants on the charge. "There's a question as to whether this conviction can stand."
---
Before being sentenced, Flynt told the judge that Huster has just passed Reader's Digest to become the nation's 10th best-selling magazine. He said 3 million copies of the magazine are sold each month and he estimated monthly readership at 15 million.
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WASHINGTON (UP1)—Paul C. Warnke, President Carter's controversial choice as chief U.S. arms negotiator, acknowledged yesterday his top-secret copy of the Pentagon Papers found its way into the hands of Elsberg, who leaked it to the press in 1971.
Giving you the Opera House, 7th Spirit Private Club (balcony & basement), Daawaqes, and Professor Katz Arcade
But Warnike told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee he had never anticipated Ellsberg would try to get the document.
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Warken went before the committee with a ringing endorsement from Carter who told a news conference he saw no conflict between his own views of arms reduction and those of Russia.
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12
R
(measurement).
students 664-3477
ION
vaganzas!
Staff Reporter
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
Drop policy vote to be by mail
Bv JOERADCLIFE
The College Assembly day decided to vote by mail ballot on a proposed withdrawal policy that would stop pimilated awakens after the seventh week of classes.
If the proposal passes, students in liberal arts and sciences wouldn't be able to drop a week of school unless they filed a petition with the Commission of the voting won't be known until the March 22 meeting of the assembly, and the students wouldn't take effect until the fall semester.
The proposal was amended so that it would be in effect for only one academic year, until May 1978, at which time the policy would be reviewed by the assembly.
EARLIER IN THE meeting, the assembly narrowly defeated an alternate proposal that would have left requests for withdrawals after the seventh week up to individual departments in the College. The alternate proposal was voted down. 57-52
Advocates of the alternate proposal said it would allow the student-instructor relationship concerning drops to continue. He argued that sometimes a student had
Dennis Embry, Lawrence graduate student, said several personal problems once caused him to drop some courses late in a semester.
personal reasons for dropping a course that he would rather not write on a notion.
"I WOULD BE reluctant to write a petition to a committee," he said.
The University Educational Policies and Procedures Committee would read the Policy Statement.
Phil Kaufman, Memphis junior, and a committee member said he thought that under the Buckley Amendment, faculty members on the committee would be able to deter students' personal files when trying to deter them from student should be allowed to drop a class.
"We don't feel the committee has a right to look at those files," Kaufman said, expressing his favor for the alternate proposal.
"OUR MAYOR argument is that it should be a student-instrument "thing," he said. "The alternate proposal was acceptable, but it was voted down by the faculty."
Faculty members account for about 75 per cent of the assembly.
Richard DeGeorge, professor of
philosophy, which he favored the original proposal, that he was intruded of com- junction betweendeparture.
"One department can advertise—subby, of course—that its policies are more liberal," he said. "We need a uniform policy, uniformly implemented."
THE DROP policy in liberal arts and sciences says a student who draws a course by the 12th week of class will receive a “W.” If a course is dropped after the 12th week, the instructor decides whether to give the student a “W” or an “F.”
If the proposal being voted on by mail has passed, students will inform the instructor and drop course by the seventh week. Students who wish to drop a course after that time will have to petition
The proposed policy wouldn't change a current ruler that allows students to drop a course within the first four weeks of class. The class showing up on their transexists.
OPPONENTS OF A liberal drop policy
argue that a current policy has
been too rigid.
But John Wright, professor of human development, disputed that argument.
Dole promotes 'Moonies' inquiry
By YAEL ABOUHALKAH
Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON-Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan.
has received tentative approval to use a
Senate subcommittee to investigate the tax
exempt status of the Unification Church.
Dole wants the subcommittee on administration of the Internal Revenue Code to see whether the Church has helped in political campaigns, tried to influence legislation or used its funds to make a profit. All three activities are banned for tax-exempt bodies in the Internal Revenue Code.
A spokesman at the Church's main office in New York City yesterday denied that there was any reason to investigate the organization.
The Church, led by the Rev. Sun Myung Moon, operates religious centers across the country.
"Without infringing upon the religious beliefs of the Unification Church," Dole said, "there have been enough questions raised in the media, in congressional debates by private individuals ... to warrant looking into the possibility of tax law violation."
The Unification Church spokesman said that all its fund-raising was legal and that the church's actions were justified.
cleared by recent IRS and Justice Department investigations.
Spokeness for both government agencies and the media. Dole said he requested the subcommittee hearings to produce enough evidence to force investigations by one of the govern-
"Reportedly in 1974, the Unification Church voluntarily filed a tax return stating total assets and net worth equal to $800.64, and no income." Dole said.
"When the church apparently owned millions of dollars worth of property, the $500 net worth and no income seems highly improbable."
An aide to Dole said cooperation from the IRS and the Justice Department would be sought, but he doubted either would reveal involvement or involved in even if the subcommittee tried.
The IRS and Justice Department spokesman declined to comment on that
The subcommittee won't have prosecuting or other legal powers, but will be able to publish its findings after hearings are held.
A year ago Dole was host to a "Day of Affirmation and Protest" here, which drew 400 people. He sponsored the meeting after a petition signed by 14,000 parents asked for a chance to express their grievances against the Church.
"I do think the meeting did open a lot of
Tuttle, whose 27-year-old daughter has been a Church member for four years, said: "If we can attack them on the laws we have given, then they will be on the illegal things they are doing."
people's eyes," said Jean Tuttle of Manhattan. "And who urged him to sponsor the meeting, the president?
Tuttle said many young adults were being brainwashed into joining the Church's
Dinner planned
About 100 state legislators will attend the annual residence hall Legislators Dinner at Tempel Hall tonight, according to Carolee Miller, Cheyenne, Wye, soophore.
The dinner will start at 7 p.m. in the Tempelin Hall cafeteria. Students planning to attend should be there an hour early, and the banquet planning committee, said yesterday.
She said all Lawrence legislators planned to attend the dinner, sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH).
Chancellor Archie Dykes will speak at the banquet, the sixth sponsored by AURH.
Mike Tarabulus, AURH president, said the banquet gives state legislators an opportunity to see how KU's residence hall system was organized.
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The average GPA went down after the liberal drop policy was enacted," he said. Standards of excellence are not produced by the school but by a good educational environment."
University Daily Kansan
$894 stolen last week from Union cash box
In other business, the assembly defeated by mail vote a proposed change in the bylaws that would have allowed student members of the Committee on Faculty Appointments, Promotions and Tenure to have a final vote on individual cases of or tenure. Students now take part in discussion and formation of general policy.
Almost $000 was stolen from a cash box behind the check-cashing window on the main floor of the Kansas Union Friday night.
Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, said yesterday that 8944.07 was taken from the steel cash box before it was found to be safe, sometime between 6 and 7 p.m. Friday.
The cash box was unlocked at the time of the theft, Ferguson said, and not all the money had been with it.
wanted to make a thorough audit and check before going to the police.
The theft wasn't reported until Monday, Ferguson said, because Union officials
Kansas, which ranks 28th in population nationally, has the fourth largest number of people over 65, according to Ron Servis, an assistant巡视员 to Gov. Robert Bennett.
This was the first time money had been taken from the Union's cash box, Ferguson said.
According to police, the area where the theft occurred was under constant observation by Union employees when the money was stolen.
Servis spoke at the 27th Annual Conferences last night in the Kansas State University building.
Older citizens important, conference says
Servis discussed current legislative programs that try to aid senior citizens, including the Homestead Property Relief Act, which is intended to help older citizens stay in their homes and, according to Servis, "allow them to be respectable lifestyle in their own homes."
"I the inability of many to cope with inflation and yet remain in their own homes or apartments is a most distressing situation," he said.
Expansion of Home Health Care, operated by the department of health and environment, has been recommended by Bennett.
The state departments of social and rehabilitation services (SRS) and health and environment have been involved in the creation of community centers for the elderly.
Bennett has recommended that $70,000 be appropriated in the 1978 budget for the program. Services will, to make new homes available in five to seven counties,
Additional programs are being developed to help older people continue living in their homes rather than being moved to nursing homes.
"All these programs will be especially
advantageous in the more isolated rurals areas where medical aid facilities may be understaffed or where doctors or adequate staffing might not be available." Servs said.
Also at the conference, Mary Border was named the Distinguished Older Kanesian of Canada for her many years of service. Three times, was commended by Servis for having "seen more than anyone else the challenges of bus life."
About $4.7 million in federal funds will be directed through the SRS to local care agencies on aging, he said, to aid such groups on wheels and Wheels on Area. Wide, transportable
The next meeting on aging will be the Governor's Conference on the Aging, May
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Wednesday, February 9, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Comment
opportunities on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
The United States and the Soviet Union are battling over issues again, but the most recent meles doesn't deal with matters of SALT negotiations or involvement in African affairs. This time it's over the question of human rights.
And the matter has turned into literally a "one-and-dow-derive-another" contest.
"one-good-turn-deserved-another" contest.
Last week George Krimsky of the Associated Press was given a week to leave the Soviet Union after being accused of espionage activities and violation of Soviet currency regulations. Both Krimsky and the AP have denied the charges, however, and have inferred that the dismissal was the result of Krimsky's extensive reporting on Soviet dissidents.
SO IN A similar move, Vladimir Alekseyev, a Washington correspondent of Tass, was told by the State department to leave the United States within one week.
Frederick Z. Brown, a State department spokesman, said, "... We regret this course of events, which is a step backward from the objective of improving working relations for journalists contained in the Helsinki final act, and from the more fundamental interests of promoting a freer flow of information."
But the root of the problem doesn't lie with the Krimsmy and Alekseev dismissals. Rather, it lies with a recent State department statement concerning Andrei Sakharov, Soviet nuclear physicist, who won the 1975 Nobel Peace Prize for speaking out against Soviet treatment of political prisoners. Sakharov was unable to accept the prize because of Soviet government pressure.
DEFENDING SAKHAROV as "an outspoken champion of human rights," the statement warned the Soviets that any attempt to "intimidate" Sakharov would "conflict with accepted international standards of human rights."
By many political observers, the Soviet dismissal of Krimsky is viewed as a retaliation of the statement defending Sakharov. Observers also note that the
statement has come at a difficult time for Jimmy Carter. Although release of the statement wasn't authorized by Carter, he said its elements were basic to his thoughts
All of this has occurred while a “new”
Washington de oration relations with Moscow
(which is the goal)
BUT RUSSIAN treatment of political prisoners should be deployed by others, it seems, when reviewing Russian treatment of some of its more creative citizens in Ukraine.
Besides Sakharov:
Sakharov himself, in a recent letter to Carter, has said that disidents had “a hard, almost unbelievable situation” in East Bec land and “our duty and your duty to fight for them.”
● Aleksandr Solzhitsyns was forced to die the 1970 Nobel Prize for Literature after being told he could never return to the Soviet Union from Stockholm if he accepted. Solzhitsyns, who once was acclaimed by his Soviet comrades, wrote extensively about Soviet labor camps from his own experiences and from interviews with others.
● Dissident-writer Andrei Amalrik and his wife were exiled to Israel after continual betrayals by the Soviet Union. Amalrik explained, "This is not a decision taken freely . . . When a man is born in a country and is a writer, he does not want to leave—not ever."
Soviet pilot Viktor I. Belenko flew his MIG25 jet fighter to a northern Japanese island in an independent, voluntary move to leave his country. He later was granted asylum to the United States. Belenko applauded it was fed up with Soviet military policies.
The Soviets could have asked Sakharov to leave the country, too. But there seems to be one snag—Sakharov's knowledge of military secrets.
Perhaps the Soviets are justified in asking others not to meddle in their internal affairs; but as far as human rights are concerned, their treatment of dissidents is deplorable.
KINCOLN CO.
RAND TETRO
" 'ROOTS' IS CERTAINLY GETTING A LOT OF REACTION!"
©1977 NYT Special Features
Freud finds cause of everything
It's been a while since I've had to suffer through a study of Freudian psychology. But thanks to the wishes of two of my instructors this semester, I have been able to my Freud texts out of mothballs. Once again I'm reminded of how sick we really are.
Before we proceed any further, perhaps we should define our terms. Sigmund Freud is
Ma Bell's junk mail jag
I love getting mail—just love to see the old mailbox stuffed with stuff.
know-what. Your id is much too crafty for such banalities. Instead, you very likely dreamed of something nice and sedate
I especially love junk mail—advertisements proclaiming the magnificence of the military, the bliss of early retirement, the security in owning life insurance.
The problem is I haven't gotten any good junk mail later. That is, until this week. When I go to work, Insurance Co. blew it. I didn't mind being addressed "Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sniffen." A small oversight on Globe's part, no. Then I opened the envelop:
"Dear Mr. and Mrs. Sniffen:
The YOUNG AMERICAN
Plan is designed especially for
young people such as your son
If there is a Mrs. Bill Sniften somewhere, I'm not aware of her. And if I have a son, I'd rather not think about him. I threw the letter away, with gusto, like some graceful flowers. Never for the Los Angeles Lakers — a Jabbar of Junk Me.
junk mail. I can throw it away.
No skin off my nose; no money out of my pocket. To read, or not to read.
And that's why I used to love to get my monthly telephone bills. Inside is "Telephone Bank." You can find a full of regional history, tips on how to save money while using the telephone, an occasional
dividends,"" a Bell Co.
spokesman in Topeka told me,
"I's worth reading on an
ongoing basis. And it's the most
inexpensive way of reaching
customers."
THE SPOKESMAN went on to explain that the phone company was competing with the bank. The bank wasn't included in my bill,
That's part of the reason I like
Gone was my right to decide whether to read it or not. I was paying for it; I had no choice.
That's like the owner of the only drinking fountain in town telling his customer to either call for a chip charge or dig his own well.
joke. Just the thing to take the sting out of the enormousness of my phone bill.
Bill Sniffen
Editorial Writer
IT WAS, until I discovered I was paying for it. Based on Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. estimates, "Telephone Talk" costs each Kansas customer eight cents a year. Small change? statewide is $60. Big change? big change to right decide whether to read it or not. I was waiting for it. No bad choice.
I bear no grudge against the telephone company. They shut us out of our house when they feel you have to. And those blue late-payment notices, containing only a warning, don't bother me all much.
Why does the only phone company in town have to advertise?
that bearded guy (now dead)
from Vienna who revolutionized the world of psychology with his revelations in psychoanalysis.
"BECAUSE," the spokesman replied, "We're not."
business would be lost to retailers who sell decorator telephones thereby boosting sales. The additional added, is especially keen in the commercial sector. A business-oriented insert, "Business Communications", is thereby used as the battle for the commercial buck.
'' 'Telephone Talk' pays great
The old mailbox just isn't the same.
Nor do I suspect a conspiracy between the U.S. Postal Service and Southwestern Bell, despite subtle similarities and the apparent union with which they work—my phone bill comes by the end of the month, so call to call the phone company to tell them why I can't pay it.
So keep those cards and letters coming in, folks.
ITS 'JUST that I miss the good old days when I had the great-grandchildren to Talk' away, but with a gut-gunning guilt that somehow all the starving children in China were worse because of my callousness.
Stewart Brann Editorial Editor
Freudian psychology is a school of thought that is based on the premise (in a nutshell) that everything we do, say, think, write, feel or wish, and everything we don't do, say, want, need, want to do, derives from our need for sex and aggression. Mainly sex.
I DON'T know a great deal about psychological concepts, but I am very interested in about the intricate workings of the human mind, but there is one thing of which I am certain: According to Freud, I am a very hard-working man.
Don't laugh. So are you. But don't take my word for it; see for yourself;
such as dancing with a beautiful woman (or man) on a dance floor of foggy nothingness taking twisted about that, right?
What did you dream of last night? Bananas, trains and Goodyard blimpets Probably not obvious symbols for the you-
Oh! how wrong you are!
THE WOMAN (or man) in your dreams signifies your mother (or father); the dance symbolizes your unconscious need to be loved by that person. It is in the form of invest, that is.
But you say you never in your life have had even an ounce of desire to "love" your parents? Touch. Dreams don't lie.
generous when a boy of 10 comes to your door soliciting magazine subscriptions so that he might attend summer diction
And by the way, the foggy nothingness is obviously your craving to crawl back into the worm, whence you came.
And what of your waking hours? Do you find yourself speeding through 20 m.p.h. school zones? Are you less than
DO YOU know why? Your unconscious intent is to eliminate a piece of child behavior (money). Do you know why? You are symbolically trying to exercise unpleasant childhood memories from the deep recesses of your mind. Because you were an unhappy child, because you hated your father, because he had something you didn't have (and would be talking about his coin collection).
You say its uncongruous that you would unconsciously love your father in your dreams and unconciously hate him while awake? Nonsense. It makes all wrong. Stop asking inane questions.
is rightfully yours. Do you know what that means? It's apparent that you underwent a severely deprived childhood—deprived of happiness, deprived of a stable emotional environment and most of all, deprived of sex in all its glorious forms.
**HOW ABOUT your habits in the kitchen?** Yes, it is a sensitive subject, but something more important is theeless. Have you ever marveled at the fact that you can go for hours without having to wash dishes or get dressed, nor marvel. You obviously don't want to give up that which
Are you "regular"?? You are?! So why do you insist on making something as mundane as using the restroom into such an exacting and precise science? Food for thought.
AND SPEAKING of which, what do you have in your mouth right now? Chewing gum? A cigarette? A finger? Bingers? Your toothbrush? Jerk it out now. You've already proven to the world that you were weaned too early. And that's why you hate your mother (though you idolize her) because beautifully does it not?
Are you laughing at all this?
Why? Did you know that laughter is merely an outlet for releasing the basest of id impulses? The heartier the laugh, the inhibited the impulse has been.
Are you not laughing? Why?
What are you trying to hide?
C'mon, you can tell me. I'm only here to help.
Letters
To the editor:
Dope policy isn't news
This letter concerns Joe Radliffe's article, "Dope smoking often condoned in KU residence halls," which appeared on the front page of last Friday's Kansas. It was a very
Let's keep our city government
By BRENT ANDERSON
Guest Writer
Who cares? Students of University of Kansas who are here now not be here in April 1979, and most probably aren't even aware that Lawrence has a commission-manager form of government. So what would it matter whether Lawrence had a mayor-council system? I think it would matter a lot.
The voters of Lawrence will decide April 5 whether to change the form of their city government. Lawrence now has a commission-city manager form of government, but if a proposal for a mayor-council form is approved, city government will have a new look in April 1979.
When Joe College thinks about city government, he is most aware of those services the city is supposed to provide him. He is upset, for example, when he is told that the city is not because the bin is full or his only can is outside, waiting to be emptied.
SALLY COLLEGE doesn't have much contact with city government either. She knows that when that man came to turn off the water last week because she "forgot" to pay the bill, she had to write out a check to the "City of Lawrence."
So when Joe or Sally were asked to sign a petition to change the form of city government in Lawrence, they might
have thought about that overflowing trash can or that water bill and decided to sign it, as if that would be a way to redress the city.
The motives of those who organized the petition drive to put the question to a vote are less clear than those of Joe or Sally. They are more motivated to improve city services? Will it make the city more responsive to the needs of its citizens? Will it increase citizen participation in local government in making decisions that affect the city?
"Say, why not?" I heard one student say when approached at Allen Field House after enrolling to sign the petition. It as good a reason as any, it suppose.
IF THE answer to one or all of these questions is yes, then maybe changing to a mayor-council form of city government is a good idea. It is no secret that the city has had and is having serious management problems, the symptoms of which can be seen on almost any street in Lawrence.
WHATEVER THE reason, 3264 registered Douglas County voters signed the petition, which puts the question of whether to change to a mayor-council form of city government on the April 5 local election ballot.
Personnel problems, trash problems.
AS A RESULT of the new maintenance garage finally opening, trash service has improved, though the commission's indecision on the matter has already cost the city thousands of dollars. In the face of the worst winter in at least 20 years, the city has been forced to take safe, and dangerous traffic situations have been handled well by the police.
sidewalk problems, maintenance problems have kept the city commission and the city manager busy, especially in the last year. It is possible to blame someone for these problems. Stray dogs have even been accused of being the cause.
Nevertheless, we must look to the commission and the city manager to solve these problems, under our present form of government, regardless of whether they caused them. In my opinion, they seem to be solving them.
The basic question is this: How would things be different if Lawrence had a mayor-council form of government? I doubt that they would be better, and I can think of several reasons why they would be worse.
UNDER LAWRENCE'S present form of city government, five commissioners, elected at large, make decisions concerning the city's affairs, which are to be carried out by the city manager, whom the commission has hired for that purpose. The city manager isn't elected, but rather is selected by the commission, based, hopefully, on his qualifications to manage effect, a multi-million dollar business.
The mayor-council system replaces the city manager with a full-time mayor and the commission with councilmen elected from wards in which they live.
I SEE TWO distinct disadvantages to the mayor-council system. First, the city manager, a man trained to run city governments, is replaced by a full time mayor, who might be trained to do what the council wants. Second, the councilmen will be elected from the ward in which they live and have no reason to worry about any other ward or the city as a whole. The result, I'm afraid, would be a mayor concerned with enforcement and councilmen trying to get the most for themselves and their neighbors.
Certainly the commission-manager system has the same flaws to some extent, but they are minimized by the structure of the system. That structure, which encourages compromise and consideration of the problems of the city as a whole, would be lost if we were to adopt a mayor-council system.
Brent Anderson is a senior majoring in journalism.
interesting article, but it was not news. This is my ninth semester in my third KU residence hall and the five hall staffs with which I have lived have all had the same "policy" of which Tom Egan spoke in the article.
Drunkenness is common in residence halls. I have yet to see or hear of anyone getting kicked out of the residence hall system for drunkenness. Also, I have yet to see or hear of anyone getting kicked out of the system because noise from their beddings leaked under their door into the hallway.
Another perversion of truth is many readers' misinterpretation of Egan's statement "... that about 80 per cent of the residents of Hashinger have at least tried marijuana." This was Radden's interpretation—not a quotation.
Anyone who thinks this situation is scandalous must have just decided so since reading Friday's Kansan, as he said in his book, the resident of the residence hall system in recent years. If this is news to you, welcome to the big bad world of KU where people mind their own business until they are judged by the media. (If you want a real story, I'd like to know where every dollar of my contract money goes). In the meantime, SCA-seekers and your personal judgment on other people's business.
Egan didn't say 80 per cent of Hashinger users use marijuana. He said they have tried it. There is a difference. Not that it matters, but he didn't say that that 80 per cent tried marijuana. No, that's not the lot of Egan's speculated 80 per cent it tried during high school.
One last response to Radcliffe's article is in regard to the effect it has had on Hassan Ali. He has large arms under attack. I challenge anyone to deny that Hassinger Hall is the most positive, active, and creative residence hall in the Middle West, perhaps in the entire Midwest.
Jim Stringer Prairie Village senior
President Carter has made several good decisions recently,
Those of you with mouths agape at Radcliffe's little expose, please close them. Your naivete is showing.
I.
Pardons judicious To the editor:
e. g., his pardon of war resistors is particularly judicious especially given the treatment of Col. Calley, and the virtual military officers of the honor code at the nation's military academy.
But, owing to the comparative silence of the media on the matter of his pardon of a convicted murderer (or so it has been reported) I think that in keeping with the need for criticism of any impropriety, it is reasonable to argue of life and death, the moral issues should be exposed for public scrutiny. One might be inclined to argue that rehabilitation is the issue. This may be the case. This defense rings, however, of artificially, mainly because the same persons who would make it are those who were critical of Ford or Rutherford. Strictly, they well should have, no one then seemed concerned about Nikon's rehabilitation.
To use the words of another expert on cronymism at its 'best,' the late mayor of Chicago, Richard Daley: "I tink deee people are talkin out both sides of der mout."
Steven Bayne
Steven Bayne Chicago graduate student
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Publicized at the University of Kansas daily August 14th, 2013. Subscriptions are $50. June and July joe accepted Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscriptions by mail are $15 or $18. Subscriptions by mail are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county.
Editor Jim Bates
Business Manager Jantee Clements
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
5
MINIMAL NEWSPAPER
Features
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duate student
University Daily Kansan
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6
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Committee could deflate campaigning by balloon
Staff Reporter
By MARSHA WOOLERY
Whether a hot air balloon adds a carnival atmosphere to the Student Senate elections will be decided in a hearing by the Senate President. In the Cork Two room of the Student Union.
The committee will hold the hearing because of a resolution submitted yesterday to Kevin Flynn, committee chairman, by Lynne Garrell, Senate candidate, and Don Green, vice-presidential candidate, both of the Spectron coalition.
They submitted the resolution after hearing rumors that some candidates were planning to use balloons and parades in their campaign, devices they thought were illegal according to the Senate Rules and Regulations.
THE SECTION that pertains to the "carnival" atmosphere says, "While political parties have proven themselves valuable vehicles for the accomplishment of these ends, experience has also shown that nonpartisan supervision of election is necessary and expensive, excesses accumulating the electoral process with a carnival air through the introduction of gimmicks which have no proper place in that process."
Green said, "We just felt in general that balloons and parades were of the carnival spirit. We just want to make it specified before anything gets out of hand."
The Avanti Coalition sophomore class candidates had planned to inflate the balloon in question in front of Strong Hall sometime this week.
Greg Schrauck, candidate for sophomore class president, said use of the balloon had not been a concern. The balloons. The candidates had planned to inflate the balloon to attract attention.
"THE BALLOON is merely a gathering point for people to see the issues," he said in a letter to the committee. "As a service to the election, the balloon will help the Election Committee attain the goal of 5,000 voters."
Schinacks said that the University Events Committee had approved the balloon last week and that he thought the committee made the final decision. He said the class candidates had been planning the balloon event for about three weeks.
Flynn told all the Senate candidates last night that the committee for the first time was going to emphasize its regulatory role in the elections. Because the committee had interpreted the Rules and Regulations as giving the committee a greater atmosphere campaigns, be said, the committee would "enforce the regulations to the hit."
CANDIDATES PLANNING an event for the campus that might be considered to have a carnival atmosphere must submit a statement to the committee. Fluyt's campus will accept this during the 24 hours after its submission to decide whether the event is legal under Senate rules.
A candidate disregarding the committee's ruling may be subject to a fine of from $5 to $50 or be removed from his seat if elected. Flynn said.
He said the committee's new stance on prior approval wasn't announced to the candidates until last night's meeting in the Jay Hawk Room of the Union.
RANDY McKERNAN, Avanti presidential candidate, said he thought the committee was overstepping its powers as a "superintendent" in violation of personal rights."
Steve McMurry, rights committee chairman, said, "I'm extremely concerned that a change in rules and regulations was not set through the proper channels."
He and McKernan both said they didn't know how the committee could give itself the power to grant prior approval in addition to the rules made following infractions in the past.
Flynn said he didn't think the committee had overstepped its powers. "I think we have to consider that supervisory power over the elections and that supervising can be prior approval."
Open communication is the key to representative student government, Steve Leben, student body presidential candidate, said yesterday.
Staff Reporter
Reflection goal is communication
By SANDY DECHANT
If elected, Leben said he and his running mate, Ralph Mumayan, Kansas Mo., sophomore, would conduct frequent opinion polls and open forums to open lines of communication between students and the Student Senate.
"If opinion polls are taken on a frequent basis, we will have comprehensive input on what students think," Leben, El Dorado junior, said.
Leben and Munyan are running on the Reflection ticket.
AS CHAIRMAN of the Senate Communications Committee, Leben conducted a Senate poll last fall about Feedback and the proposed move of the KU-MU football game. He and Mumuny also conducted a poll in which they asked students to rank a list of items they wanted to see improved.
1978
Steve Leben
Leben said that as president he would
meet each month with living group
executive boards and would hold open
weekly meetings.
Leben is a member of the KU Long-Range Planning Committee and has been KU-Y treasurer the last two years. He is a former student senator and StudEx member.
MUNYAN IS Siphomore class vice president, a senator, a member of the committee and the SIL Society, and was director of the Jayhawk College Quiz Bowl.
Leben and Munyan are spending about $800 on their campaign. They said issues, not money, would make the difference in the campaign.
According to the Senate Rules and Regulations, candidates cannot spend more than $100 on a ballot.
Leben said the most controversial issue was the fate of the $180,000 Student Senate
LEBEN SAID he wanted to use the $108,000 to improve recreational facilities and devise a new system of teacher and course evaluation. If these weren't approved by the Senate, Leben said, he would reduce the student activity fee.
"Everybody is aware that KU's recreational facilities are among the worst, the most hazardous."
LEBEN SAID that improving recreational facilities would include lighting and resurfacing tennis courts, resounding baseball fields, improving soccer fields and putting backstops on softball and baseball diamonds.
He said some KU administrators had proposed a $2-$4 increase in student activity fees to improve recreational facilities. But, depending on the amount of money spent on teacher and teacher evaluation, Leben said, the increase could be reduced to $1 or eliminated.
He estimated the cost of a teacher and course evaluation si. iliar to Feedback, which the University stopped publishing in 1974, at between $50.00 and $60.00.
In a poll of 1,185 students, academic admissions was listed as the number one area of interest.
He said that in the Senate poll he coor-
Involvement is Avanti approach
High quality representation for and communication with all students. It sounds idealistic, and Randy McKernan and Katie O'Reilly, but they still think it is a worthwhile goal.
Running for student body president on the Avanti tank, Mckennan, a Salina junior, said, "It sounds really idealistic to get everybody involved, and people told us we'd have to change our approach—that it was too hooky."
But he and his running mate, Rhoads, Leawood sophomore, decided instead to focus on areas where communication and interaction could be improved by the Student Senate.
She and McKernan don't want to be campaigners who promise to check back to the students but never follow through on them. They don't call on students to get them involved.
THE TWO WANT to publish a weekly Senate column in the Kansan that would report all committee work and the major Senate actions.
Bv MARSHA WOOLERY
"Sometimes it seems like a long walk to the Union to pick up that application." Rhoebe.
ROHAOS ALSO a stud *SExlA* committee would set up an area in the Kansas Union Deli once a week to be more accessible to students because the Senate office was "too formal."
"The whole idea is that once you initiate something like that you've obligated the Senate to provide results to the student body," Randy said. "The more the Student Senate does, the more the students know about it."
They also would expect senators to set up tables in their schools twice a month where students could meet to ask them questions and make suggestions. Lists of senators and their phone numbers would be published so students would know whom to contact.
Better communication within the Senate also is a concern of the team. As vice president, Rhondas said, she worked with the committee and continue issuing them charges throughout the year.
unlimited," she said, "and I would like to make them push to their potential."
Staff Reporter
"It's difficult for students to see what the Student Senate does and how they can get it done."
The team also said it thought the Senate should more closely monitor the activities of the organizations it funds, because no one asks what they are doing until they ask for
THE POWERS of the committees are
"We ought to know instead of going by what they say." Rhhouds said, "even if it was a simple fact."
Randy McKernan
The team formed the Avanti coalition.
1978
comprising 89 candidates for Senate seats and class offices, all of whom say they are interested in solutions to communication and representation problems.
He and Rhoads said they hoped to direct the Senate to have a more activist role, dealing with external problems once it had worked out internal problems, he said.
MKERNAN SAID, "I feel that the Senate seems to have reached a plateau. It was created in a time of turmoil and progressed a lot further in the first few years. In the last two or three years, it was bringing out the activities it was given before."
Avanti is "an Italian word meaning 'moving forward' in a loose translation." Rhoads said. "We choose it because it represents what we want to do with the Student Senate—a word that was more than a gimmick."
Two academic goals the two said they would pursue were improvement of the Student Employment Center and exposure to opportunities for TAs and AEs within departments.
The job center for students, in the Office of Financial Aid, is inadequate, the team said, because funds were insufficient to cover all of the student merit transactions for available part-time jobs.
AVANTI WANTS to see pay discrepancies, of graduate assistants exposed by the task force on AI and TA teaching for the same reason that they would continue to support the graduate fee waiver, the two candidates said.
"I personally feel that undergraduates are affected because if employees are unhappy they obviously aren't providing the best service they can and that's when the undergraduate as the consumer of education is losing out," McKernan said.
"MAYBE TO someone who doesn't live there it seems insignificant," McKernan said, "but the problem has been there for years."
Avant's platform also proposes using Senate influence to lobby with the city in response to students' needs, such as a stop shop on the street by the GOR-Corpin residence hills.
McKernan said his coalition's proposal on use of the Senate's extra $100,000 from the budget bill to help build schools.
"ALL THE student organizations the district has supported," she added. "Money. Some people on the budget committee have never worked with budgets and need direction as to what organizational structures are needed."
dinated last fall, 40 to 50 per cent of those
women who had said academic advising was
adequate.
They propose transferring the money to the Endowment Association to draw interest, and using the money earned for scholarships.
The money would still be controlled by the Senate and if it wished to use it for a worthwhile project it could withdrawn any time, McKernan said.
Leben and Munyan said they hoped to improve Senate budget hearings. The Senate annually allocates money to about 50 student organizations.
"We've both worked with budgets," Leben said. "As KU-Y treasurer, I formulated the budget, presented it to the Senate and then made sure we stayed within it. Ralph worked with the sophomore class budget and managed to stay within it."
Leben said that his proposed evaluation would include not only students' evaluations of courses and instructors, but also requirements of courses, textbooks needed and summaries of students' comments about the course or instructor.
"I don't think we should volunteer to pay for something until we are assured that the faculty using it will also be paying," he said. The administration is saying the building is up to it and not recreational, so I don't think they should ask us to pay the upkeep on it."
"ONE THING Katie and I are opposed to
starting something that would assess the
ability of the company."
Such a project, he said, was the planned additions to Robinson Gymnasium, for which the Student Senate already pays $35,000 annually.
Leben said that if the course and instructor evaluation wasn't approved by the Senate, more money would be spent on improving recreational facilities.
Steve McMurry, campaign manager, said
Munyan said, "When we organized our campaign we wanted as good a campaign as possible with the least possible money. We'll do the same with the Senate—spend money only when it is absolutely necessary."
The recommendations made by the Academic Affairs Committee are intended to improve the selection, training and accreditation of assistant instructors and teaching assistants.
Muyan said that as an umbudman he *would help students solve their problems* in this way.
LEBEN AND Muyan said they also would stress the improvement of classroom teaching by implementing recom-
mendation in the Senate Academic Affairs Committee.
Leben and Munyuan they would attempt to start a "serious lobbying organization to get University-related information" on the Board of Regents and the legislature."
SENIORS
Although the position of University ombudman has been discussed by the administration, funding for one isn't available.
Come to the HARBOUR on Feb. 10th from 8-11 p.m.
Leben said that although a lobbying group wouldn't affect this legislative session, "a strong lobbying group will be working before we leave office."
Leben and Munyan said that they had been speaking to living groups and would hold open forums at apartment complexes to increase voter turnout for the election. Leben is a journalism major and Munyan is a political science and history major.
10c draws
would work as a student ambudsman until the University hired one.
for a
PRE-K-STATE FAREWELL TO THE HARBOUR PARTY
that McKernan's and Rhoads' campaign would cost about $600.
MUNYAN SAID that as vice president, he
McKernan, a business major, has been a member of the Senate Finance and Auditing Committee two years and is committee chairman. He also was a member of the University Organization and Maintenance Committee and is a member of Sigma Nu fraternity.
BESIDES THE issues, McKernan said, the "major plank of our platform would be experience. The more experience you can draw on the better decisions you can
77
(The HARBOUR isn't leaving . . . you are!)
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Spectrum stresses qualifications
By SANDY DECHANT
Staff Reporter
Their team is united, right down to the names, Sherri Grey, student body candidate, and said yesterday. Grey's running mate is Dot Green, Ablene sophomore.
"We've been kidded that the only reason I asked Don to run with me is because of his name. He said, chuckling. "But without it, I would not." He asked he's the 'student Senate part of the ticket.'
Green, a senator for two years, is also a member of *Dex Sen; Ex*; the Senate Rights, Responsibilities and Privileges Committee, and the Elections Committee. Last year, he was chairman of the Senate Title IX subcommittee.
Grey, who called herself the administrative member of the committee in Scholars.
1976
Sherri Grey
"OUR QUALIFICATIONS and the diversity of our coalition are our greatest strength," Grey, a Manhattan senior, said recently.
Hall Council and a member of the Senate Student Housing Board, the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation Board of Directors and the Administrative Housing Board.
She said that of the 74 people running for the Student Senate under Spectrum, her coalition, 29 were from fraternities and sororites, 25 were from residence halls, 10 were from scholarship halls and 10 lived off campus.
Grey said that in selecting people to run on their ticket, emphasis was put on finding a "diverse group of people" because, she said, 65 per cent of the current Senate members are from fraternities and sororites.
Grey lives in Miller Scholarship Hall and Green lives in the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
As vice president, Green said, he would work as a KU lobbyist in the Kansas legislature and as a student ombudman.
"THE BUSINESS of the Senate is student services," he said. "Creating the position of student ambudsman would increase those services."
Green said that as student buddismman he would relay students' complaints about the University to the administration, where they could be resolved.
Among the issues on which the Grey-
green platform is based is efficient
processing. It uses a high-end,
superplus,
improvement of library facilities and improvement of student advising.
Grey said the $108,000 surplus would be partly used to increase allocations to about 50 student organizations funded by the Senate. She said it also would be useful for recreational facilities and possibly help finance construction of the satellite union.
"THAT MONEY is the students' money and it can't possibly be wasted by giving it to the teacher."
She said that possible recreational improvements included purchasing basketballs and volleyballs and hiring more players to improve the lighting on KU tennis courts.
"1. legalities permitting." Grey said, part of the money also could be used to finance the project.
Grey has served on both the satellite
unit and the satellite union
facilities advisory committee.
Allocations of money to the satellite union would have to be approved by the Senate, the administration and the legislature, Grey said. The satellite union, to be near Allen Field House, is expected to be completed in 18 to 20 months.
GREY SAID that she supported the idea of a centralized library, an idea that recently has been discussed by KU advisors. The Library also was involved in construction of a refreshment area in Watson Library if students supported it on a questionnaire to be included on the Feb. 16 and 17 election ballots. She said she also supported the use of a credit course on using University facilities.
"That's the philosophy of the student as a consumer," she said. "Many times the student doesn't capitalize on the resources at his disposal."
"YOU CAN'T expect faculty members to pat a lot of effort into something that they're not paid for," Grey said. "I worked at enrollment this semester, and the number of students who advised themselves was phenomenal."
Grey said she and Green intended to seek payment for faculty advisors, a move she said could help her work.
*budget hearings are probably the biggest administrative function students at UCLA are exposed to.*
Grey said she would also try to involve more students with the administration and staff.
Grey said she wanted students to help with budget preparations both to see how they worked and to make sure they kept the priorities once the legislature allocated money.
She said that if students had sat on some city bus lines she would have understood such as fire safety inspections, landlord-tenant relations and problems with fraternity parking on buses.
In the past, the Senate has declined positions on city committees, Grey said.
"I GET TIRED of hearing that students are responsible people," she said. "They need to be more aware."
Grey, who transferred to KU two years ago after a semester at Kansas State University.
"I TRANSFERRED here because my parents wanted to send me back east," Grey said, stifling a giggle.
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Although many of their posters have been vandalized, both candidates said they didn't.
"I JOKE about it, but I thought about that more than anything else before I decided to run," she said. "I work with top ad-creatives, they're all male. There are no women."
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Grey said Tedde Tasheff, current student body president and the first woman in that position, "softened the blow" of a woman becoming president.
By the electors, Green and Green said, they will have spent about $1,250 on their campaign. Much of that, they said, was spent on multicolored campaign posters, matching T-shirts and stationery with grey and green printing.
"Perhaps our t-shirts are indicative of the personal level of our campaign," Green said. "We have a very diverse coalition. It that influences people to get out to vote."
GREY SAID all the presidential and vice presidential candidates had agreed to ask members of their coalitions to vandalize or take down opposition posters.
"I decided to stay a year longer even before I decided to run for president," she said. "I'm running back here and I might pick up a doublem娇—increase my marketability."
Grey is a political science major. Green is a journalism and history major.
Grey, who would be KU's second woman student body president if elected, said her sex was her bigest consideration before running.
"One of the girls on our coalition wore her T-shirt to class, and somebody wanted to know if Grey and Green were real candidates. We are."
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University Dally Kansan
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Staff photos bv JAY KOELZER
Against Oklahoma, Ted Owens talked to his players, to the referees and finally in silence to himself.
Conference lead rides on game
Rv GARY VICE
Sports Editor
No one needs to remind Kansas basketball coach Ted Owens of the importance of tonight's showdown with the Missouri Tigers in Columbia. He knows.
"They are in command of the conference race at this point," Owens said yesterday, "and it's simply a matter of someone beating them in Columbia. You simply can't lose there and be thinking about a championship now, that's what we're thinking about."
So if the Jayhawks, 8-3 in conference play, want the Big Eight title, they can't afford to toe the front-running Tigers, 7-2, with four other games remaining this season.
THE 'HAWKS have had their backs to the wall for some time now, however, and have responded to the pressure well in winning Colorado, Oklahoma State and Oklahoma.
But they haven't had to win in Hearns Center, which can be intimidating since the Tigers have been beaten only once in 36 games. Missouri's fans, no doubt, are hoping for a repeat of last year's contest, when the 'Hawks were ambushed, 99-68.
The 7.35 tip-up will mark the third meeting for the two teams. Missouri won by a score of 2-1.
nament's championship game - 69-65, in Kansas City, M., while KU won round two, 77-72, in Allen Field House. Round two was also a boxing match in which KU's Donnie Wiley lost to Jim Kennedy were ejected for participation in a fight that cleared both team's benches.
OWENS DOESN'T expect any problems keeping things under control this time, saying, "We've discussed all of our floor layouts and we don't plan to say anything special now."
"I'm confident that our players are going or one purpose and that's to play a good game."
What the Jayhawks will be trying to do,
Owens is, duplicate the offensive explosion they erupted upon the Sooners last Saturday in winning, 91-81.
"I'm pleased that we're coming off such a good game going into this one. Defeating Missouri on their home floor is a task for anyone. Hopefully our performance against Oklahoma will give us the momentum that could make a difference.
"WE'LL TRY to fast break every time we can as we did against Oklahoma. And when we can't, it's important we have good ball movement and shot selection."
Statistics indicate the 'Hawks have been improving their射击 touch in recent weeks.'
In the only roster change, the Royals said designated hitter Tommy Davis, a 37-year-old veteran of 17 major league seasons, was given his release. Davis, purchased from the California Angels last Sept. 20 to give the Royals added pinch hitting during the
Western Division title race, appeared in eight games for Kansas City, picking up five hits in 19 at bats. He had a lifetime batting average of .295.
The 29-year-old Shanahan, signed by the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1970, was recently signed as a free agent after pitching for the Mexico City Reds the past season, where he compiled a 12-8 record and 2.34 earned run average.
Gaudet played for the Royals' Sarasota and Jacksonville farm clubs last year. In his first professional season, the 21-year-old was a second-rounder for Sarasota and 300 in 15 games at Jacksonville.
Davis released as Royals set spring training roster
Missouri leads the conference in scoring averges over 76.1 points per game (KU is second at 70.1), hits nearly 52 per cent from the field and 69 per cent from the line.
field-goal accuracy (458) and first in free throw (7.38). But, the Tigers have been just well below that.
Nonroster players invited to camp were pitcher Greg Shanahan, catcher Jim Gaudet and outfielder Clint Hurdle. Royals officials said pitches and catchers were invited to report Feb. 27 with the rest of the team to meet March 2.
THE TIGERS' offense is led by 6-8 senior Kim Anderson, who scored a career-high 35 points against Oklahoma State last weekend. Anderson ranks second in conference scoring, averaging 22.1 points a game.
Hurdle, 19, was the Royals' top pick in the 1752 June free agent draft and last year hit 19 home runs with 89 runs batted in at Waterloo.
Tiger coach Norm Stewart said, "No one ever needs to say much about the Kansas game when our two teams get together. We beat them once and they beat us once, so I guess you could call this one the rubber game of the series. John Douglas did a lot on us over in Lawrence, so he'll be one person we'll be trying to contain."
KANAS CITY, Mo. (OUP1) —The Kansas City Royals set their spring training roster at 36 players yesterday and announced that three nonroster players were invited to work with the major league team during the training session at Fort Myers, Fla.
Probable Starting Lineups KANSAS
Douglas, who leads the Hawks in scoring with an average of 17 points per game.
scored 11 kUUs final 12 points in the come-from-behind victory over Missouri in the
In that Jan. 8 contest, the Jayhawks were without center Paul Mokeski, who was recovering from a broken ankle. Although it's unlikely KU's seven-footer will play tonight, he'll be sued up for the first time in nearly two months. Indications are that Mokeski might see limited action this Saturday against Kansas State.
Harb Nebles, 6-7, Senior.
F-Clinton Johnson, 6-2, Junior.
K-Keen Kemons, 6-30, Junior.
G-Hasan Houston, 6-2, Freshman.
G-Hasan Houston, 6-2, Freshman.
MISSOURI
F-Clay Johnson, 64. Junior.
F-Jim Kennedy, 66. Senior.
C-Kim Anderson, 68. Senior.
G-Larry Drew, 61. Freshman.
G-Larry Drew, 61. Freshman.
---
ROCKY
"Best Picture of the Year"—Golden Globe Awards Now Showing
Eve. 7:30 and 9:40
Sat. Sun. Matinee
ROCKY
Varsity
United Artists
Walt Disney's
"The SHAGGY D.A."
Eve. 7:30 and 9:30
Granada
Ench Thursday
"CARRIE"
Eve. 7:35, 9:30
Hillcrest
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"A STAR IS BORN"
Eve. 7:15, 9:45, Sat.
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997 (plus transportation and some meals) Act now! The registration deadline's Tuesday, Feb. 15. A meeting for those interested in attending will be held Thursday, Feb. 10 at 6:30 p.m. on the Harbison Hall. For more information call Barb Jensen - 843-8505.
MEXICO CITY
now only 99c
Accent the ARTS
Offer good Mon., Feb. 7—Thurs., Feb. 10
1528 W. 23rd across from Post Office 842-8861
KU signees kept secret
Student Union Activities and Accent the Arts present:
"Joffrey is a time for joy . . . "
JOFFREY II
Yesterday, the first day that Big Eight Conference letters of intent could have been signed, came and passed without KU announcing its high school football signings. Kansas coach Bud Moore has opted to withhold any announcements concerning new recruits until one week from today when national letters may be signed.
Moore said his decision to wait a week is because the conference and national letter are still being finalized.
8 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 10
BACKGAMMON Tonight, 7 p.m. Kansas Union
Hoch Auditorium $4.00 General Admission
Harold Pinter's
OLD TIMES
Feb. 8 thru Feb. 12
Inge Theatre
8 p.m.
Tickets 864-3982
Tickets at SUA
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FREE Introductory Lecture TODAY Wednesday 8 p.m. Kansas Union Governor's Room 4th Level
YOGA LIFE SANCTUARY
©1970 World Plan Executive Council—U.S. All rights reserved.
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CARP
Instant replays testing officials
From Our News Services
Three weeks before the Oakland Raiders won the 1977 Super Bowl game, they were almost knocked out of the playoffs by New England. Quite possibly, the Patriots would have upset the Raiders that day if the officials had made the right calls on a crucial play or two in the fourth quarter—according to instaplay.
The Los Angeles Rams and Minnesota
Vikings were also fortunate to advance
in the same tournament when the officials
made three or four wrong calls in Dallas
and Minnesota—according to instant
replay.
Most professional football games are remarkably well officiated—according to instant replay—but a handful are decided incorrectly on mistakes by the officials.
N sport whose officials have been empaired in the game, adopted an officiating tool. But so does an officialting tool. But so does an officia
the impact of repeatedly featuring bad calls on TV that sport executives can't long
THE AVERAGE spectator puts more faith in the technique known as instant replay than in the judgment of humans on the field.
Has TV change the nature of football, providing a nationwide court of appeals? Is the National Football League concerned? What can or should it do?
Increasingly, those questions have been raised in NPL cities. Three proposals has been made.
Full-field closed-circuit television. The systems now under discussion would use many cameras and technicians to monitor every play from a variety of angles and settle virtually every dispute for the officials.
Partial dependence on television. A
Bad weather hampers soccer club practices
By DENNIS MINICH
Snorts Writer
The KU Soccer Club, whose practices have been hampered because of the cold weather, begins with coach Berrin Mullin a pretty adventurous schedule" this weekend.
The Jayhawks, last spring's Big Eight champions, open against the Wichita Wheathawks Sunday. Their season includes games with such national powers as the University of Houston, Rockhurst College and Benedictine College.
Houston is ranked in the NAIA's top 15
Sports
teams and Rockhurst lost in last year's NAIA championship game.
Mullin said yesterday that many people had tried out for the team in recent weeks.
The team now has much more talent, which has greatly added to its depth, Mullin in 2015.
BUT WITH the new depth, cold weather and snow have forced indoor practices and Mulin said he believed the team wasn't as ready for its first game as he'd like it to be.
"We've been able to work outside a couple of times, but it wasn't really soccer, it was more or less just guys kicking the ball around on the jac." he said.
Mullin explained that the team had been oriented on the structure of play he employed, but the players hadn't been able to practice what they had learned.
Several players from last fall's ball, which finished 8-3, return to help the 'Hawks
this season, Freshman Mohammed Alt-Ameur and junior Monsour Taherzadeh, termed by Mullin last fall as his one-two striking punch,回回. Taherzadeh will miss the first couple of weeks, however, because of his class load.
Joining the club is German Paz, a Hon-duras freshman, who Mullin said was a small, but solid, player who plays very aggressively.
FRESHMAN ROEL Vanderven and graduate student Steve Jones are backbacks that Mullin said improved greatly during the fall.
"David was the best goalkeeper in the Big Eight championships last year and looks real good now. With a little work he can be back in last year's form." Mullin said.
Two players in contention for the squad are Kees Bouter, forward, and Roel Andriessen, fullback, both from the Netherlands. Mullin said that they would acc to the size of the club. Boater is 6-1, 10-8, and Andriessen is 6-4, and over 200 pounds.
Besides its regular schedule, KU will be sponsoring the Big Eight championships in April. Mulin said that negotiations were underway for the Pizza Hut Corp., to sponsor the event.
AFTER MISSING last semester because of personal reasons, David Boyles, a sophomore goalkeeper from Wichita, will return to the nets for the Jawhakes.
"If they could, it would save each team $350 to $400, and it could bring the championships to Lawrence or Kansas City every year," Mullin said.
Instead of television, the NFL could rely on other technological aids and better-trained officials.
"There is probably more interest in soccer here than anywhere else in the Big League."
closed-circuit system could be combined with comment pictures settle some dispute.
DALLAS COWBIES president Tex Schramm noted that it would be possible to install electric eyes on goal lines (plus a tipping tip on footballs) to certify touchdowns.
And, there are numerous ways to improve recruiting and training of ficials.
Anything less than all-out closed-circuit television wouldn't, however, end all the arguments. A football fan's faith in instant replay is rooted in what he believes he sees. And if decisions are left to officials, there is no room for them. Others are human, and to er is human.
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle, said, "For the present there isn't a great deal more we can do beyond what we've been doing—the Dallas experiment (with closed-circuit television) and so forth. We can improve the officiating, we work on it all the time, but bringing in TV is a lot more complicated than it sounds."
SCHRAMM, WHO often leads (and sometimes reflects) the sentiment of the NFL's majority doubts if the football public wants mistake-proof electronic officials.
"Fans go to football games to see people, not robots," he says. "It would be possible to have not only computerized officiating but also mechanical men playing football at the direction of a computer center, but I don't see that as a great improvement."
One potential improvement for both football and baseball can be reduced to a question: Should sports leagues equip their fields with TV equipment to aid officials?
Most executives in both sports oppose the idea. Peter O'Malley, president of the Los Angeles Dodgers, said, "When you think of all the cameras you need to do a perfect deal with them, the delays you'd have when the umpires consulted their TV sets probably outweighs the problems caused by an umpire's occasional mistake. Baseball's answer is to pay the players well and train them well. I believe the integrity of the game is safe in hands."
JIM KENILS, the NFL's executive director, tends to agree with that assessment. But to get more evidence, he ran a secret experiment at the Dallas-Buffalo game in Dallas last fall with four Sony cameras operated by two coordinators, including art McNally, the league's supervisor of officials.
Kensil, said, "We're still analyzing the tapes of that game, but we know already we'd need more than four cameras to do the job right."
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Schramm, added, "... there would have to be two cameras on each sideline plus two cameras shooting up and down each goal line and on two on each end line. That's 12 camers ... if the field is divided into quadrants, that's four more cameras."
The TV equipment bill for each NFL stadium would cost about $2,658,000. If installed in all 28 parks the total would come to $74,388,000.
AT THE DOOR OR IN THE CLASS OFFICE
CLASS DUES AT $3.00 STILL AVAILABLE
BECAUSE ONLY half the stadiums are used in any one weekend, only half of this equipment might be necessary, at a cost of only $71,840.00 (the weekly costs of removing, transporting and re-installing it,Officiating experts believe, however, that the more be more efficiency if the equipment were permanently placed in the 28 stadiums.
Kensil used the time lag in Dallas was up to 90 seconds a play. It sometimes took that long to run back a disputed play on the recorders and analyze it.
Schramm, said, "... where the justice in correcting what seems to be a big mistake while ignoring others you don't see immediately but could prove decisive." And to check every play for every official's game would destroy the pace of the game."
University Daily Kansan
Tasheff . . .
sessions for new senators to counsel them and help fight their disillusionment, and Senate meetings saw the success of his advising...
From page one
"The fact that they are making significant contributions to debate is something."
HIS ROLE AS a lobbyist is now just PLEASON, he said, because the legislature is last beginning and during Christmas break he waged a private campaign to encourage senators to talk to their legislators and contacted legislators and Gov. Robert
About the Association of Students of Kansas, an official lobbying group of Kansas colleges, Owens said, "We gave it its first rational evaluation of what it would do for us. The conclusion was it wasn't worth the money it would involve.
longnying has to be done tacfully and low key so it doesn't look like the administration is forcing students on the legislators."
The Senate also operated under the misconception that the University could use a recycling program to help feed the proposed trash-burner facility, Steve said, thinking that KU would be paying for trash instead of being given trash.
BOTH TASHEFF and Owens are disappointed about what hasn't been accomplished. Both had wanted to put a question before the students about their subsidy, and both had wanted to extend library hours for students.
Steve also mourns his pet project, the
OWENS ISN'T running for a Senate seat because he doesn't want to influence the election, but he will run for a holdover seat and will serve for 21 hours of classes next fall allow it.
Tashef is undecided about law school or any other plans except for an intensive language program in Chinese or Japanese this summer.
As KU's first woman Student Senate president, she said, "I've never felt inhibited or advantaged because of my sex."
IT BEGAN Sept. 9 as a collection service to students with the ideal of incorporating it into the University energysaving camp. The new paperboard bags, December the Senate couldn't afford to transport the newspapers to sell and turned the project over to the Lawrence Boy's
Senate reclamation service, which he described at the last Senate meeting as "a big accomplishment."
Owens laughed and said, "Tedde is a very persuasive young lady but I don't know if that has to do with her sex. She doesn't even cry when things don't go her way."
SUA
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
Deadline extended to Thursday, Feb. 10
So sign up for this 4 day package.
ONLY 20 SPACES ARE AVAILABLE.
We'll be skiing for 4 days, March 13-19. $137.00
Included are: 4 days lifts •4 nights lodging 4 days ski rental round trip chartered bus transportation.
Options available
Extra day skiing . . . discounts for own equipment/own transportation.
FINAL PAYMENT DUE TUES., WED. 2/8, 9.
For more info. call SUA office 864-3477
Located at
7th & Mass.
CINEMAS
Total Entertainment in One Location
THE LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE
THE ENTERTAINMENT CENTER OF LAWRENCE Presents This Week
THE OPERA HOUSE
(7th Spirit in the balcony)
The Opera House
$1.00 cover
25c draws
Wed—"BLAK FROST" fine rock from Manhattan
Thur—LADIES NIGHT DISCO (Busy's) People Book coupon's honored for
Fri.—"The JOHN ROLLER BAND" from K.C.
live entertainment at its finest
Sat.—DISCO EXTRAVAGANZA Drink and Dance the night away
Give-away Specials
Everynight—PITCHERS $1.25 7:30 'NII 9:00
We feature a full list of hours
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7th Spirit Extending from the Basement to
Extending from the basement to
The Balcony (overlooking the Opera House)
Offering Fine Cocktails and Friendly Folks 'filt 3; 00 a.m. m.night!
Featuring the NAIROBI TRIO Sat., Feb. 12 10 'filt 1
Contemporary Jazz in the basement
NO COVER CHARGE for members in the balcony
Open for Lunch Monday thru Friday starting Monday, Feb. 14
Daaqwud's
Exceptional sandwiches & side orders
Check for the 2 for 1 coupons in this week's Kansan
Open Daily: 1 a.m. - 2 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 1 p.m. - 10 p.m. Sun.
FILM GUIDES UNION
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ARCade
Professor Katz Arcade
Open daily Dunday 1-10, Mon. thru Fri. 3-10, Sat. 11 a.m.-12 p.m.
Lawrencio's largest and most extensive machine arcade
---
10
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Jury summons not all bad news
By NANCY TEETER
Staff Reporter
"Summoned for jury duty," the paper says. For KU students and faculty receiving such a notice, images may be missed. Missed classes and weeks of deliberation.
But it's not that bad, court officials and people who have been summoned say.
The longest trials seldom last more than two days, and the chances of being selected for a jury are fairly slim anyway, according to Sherlyn Sampson, clerk of the district
Jurors are picked randomly from the county's list of registered voters so that students who have transferred their voting status may also be summoned for jury duty here.
**SAMPSON'S SAID** she sends out 200 summaries every two months, about 25 per cent of them, then a third, about 10 per cent, summoned, one could be called to serve on a jury during a two-month period.
She said that students used to be automatically excused from jury duty because of their enrollment, allowing them to establish residency and register to vote in Douglas County, judges have cracked down.
"The judges feel that if students can do their duty and be served on a jury, their civic duty by serving on a jury.
People summoned must report for jury selection before each trial, she said, but only about 50 to 60 of the 200 originally summoned show up.
a physical disability, Sampson said, and judges also can excuse a person for what they consider valid reasons.
People may have to report as many as five times before they are reported. "They said, 'The girl," she said.
Many times a case is settled out of court and prospective jurors don't find out until the night before that they don't have to come in the next day, she said.
Sampson said judges had found that students usually had to miss only a few days of classes and that professors usually were understanding.
BUT SAMPSON said she tried to be cooperative and reasonable. Students usually are excused during Christmas vacation and finals week.
"I was a student once, and I know that classes are skipped," she said. "Unless someone is going to flunk by missing one day of class, we'll make them come in."
"The judges usually make students serve on one jury and then excuse them, but we've had a few students who liked it so much that they wanted to serve again," she said.
The $10 paid for each trip to the courtroom and 13 cents a mile paid to persons who live outside the city limits is welcomed by student jurors, she said.
Melanie Reeder, Prairie Village junior, who was chosen for jury duty, and the worst part of duty, was going to the selection proceeding. She was asked to have an appointment and have to stay all afternoon. She has reported three times for jury selection but hasn't been chosen.
BEST BUILDING IN THE WORLD
TONIGHT: AURH LEGISLATOR'S DNNER will be at 7 p.m. at Templin Hall. KU KAMES will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Walkins Room. UNDERGRADEATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will meet at 8 p.m. in the Union's INDEPENDENCE CLUB, where he will learn SACREDENCIAL MEDITION will be at 8 p.m. in the Union's Governor's Room.
TODAY: JON MELN will speak at a faculty forum at noon at the Mount Mercy University SMOHS meeting will begin at 3:36 p.m. in Centennial Room of the Kansas University.
TOMORROW: WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE Foundation Board will meet at 10 a.m. in the Union's International Room, followed by a lunch and lecture at noon in the Kansas Room. ALCOHOL ABUSE will be the topic of a lecture by Fred McEllenbie, associate dean of men, at 7 p.m. in the Union's International Room. IN THE UNION'S Jiahawk Room. KJIR radio station will air the debates. Hillel Israel FOLK-DANCING will begin at 7:30 p.m. on the 10th floor of McCollum Hall. DAVID PEARE, of Oxford University, will present a paper on "Russell's Unpublished Theory of Judgment and Wittgenstein's Picture Theory" at 8 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room.
On Campus
Cayton Kirkpatrick, editor of the Chicago Tribune, will receive the 1972 Award for Journalistic Merit from the William Allen White Foundation at a noon luncheon tomorrow in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
SHE SAID that the trial she served for concerned a minor traffic violation and that the jury had to decide who was the negligent party.
He will be a guest today at a dinner for the executive and citation committees of the foundation.
Events
Peter Macdonald, chairman of the selection committee and president of Harris Enterprises, Inc., has said two facets of Kirkpatrick's career stand out: Kirkpatrick rose from a reporter on the Tribune to editor, and during the past three years he has been on most of the "freedom of the press" committees in the country.
"I didn't try to get out of it (jury duty). I wanted to serve," he said. "It was the first time I had been called and I was curious about it."
Larry Poins, Julesburg, Colo., senior,
served on a jury thought it was enjoya-
tive.
Foreign aid funds meager business consultant savs
He said his main problem was finding someone to teach his classes, although his appearance made him miss only one day of class.
of Information Committee of the American Society of Newspaper Editors.
"I was very educational," she said. "I felt I had a say in something. Eleven of us agreed, and we spent three hours convincing agreed, and we spent three hours convincing the twelfth juror that we were right."
Kirkpatrick, 62, will be the 28th recipient of the citation, given each year to a journalist who exemplifies William Allen "service to his profession and to his country."
Richard Givens, professor of chemistry, who was called to serve, was a graduate student who didn't want to be.
"IM REALLY hoping I don't have to serve, because it could tie up two full days."
Chicago editor honored
of the current needs of countries requesting aid.
Aid for less-developed countries must be increased and managed more effectively, an international business consultant told a group of about 75 yesterday at a United Nations Association meeting at United Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Fluker said there wasn't sufficient effort on the part of recipient countries to make the transition.
"There's not enough effective administration," he said. "A great proportion of the aid is insufficient." These students show how and well maintaining projects once they are set up.
Fluker, who has worked for the State Department in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nepal, India, Indonesia, Thailand, Australia, and Britain. He also provided bureaucratic management and lacked principle in the criteria used to determine allocation.
Fluker said there also was a need to distinguish the 25 or 28 least-developed countries from the 86 partly-developed countries and was going to the least-developed countries.
J. Robert Fluker, visiting lecturer at the University of Kansas School of Business, said $43 billion in assistance in 1975 from the United Nations, men and women and agencies volunteer groups and private agencies was "not bad, but not enough."
"We gave so much last year, so we'll give the same this year" is the criteria often used to decide amounts of assistance, Fluker said, instead of a critical evaluation
Kirkpatrick will receive an honorarium which he is expected to give to the Freedom
"international business is doing well in many countries, but very badly in the least-developed countries," he said. (221) A survey of five countries, he goes to the 25 least-developed countries."
By STEPHEN HESS
New KU roofs lack old style's reliability
modern roofs on University of Kansas buildings may be simpler and less expensive than those of the older-style, but the old, arch-style roofs seem more reliable, according to Joe Christy, buildings and grounds foreman.
"It wasn't installed properly to begin with, so we were trying to keep it up until a wallpaper company came in."
'THE NEWER buildings, because of their flat, gravel decks on the roofs, are designed to have wet tar, felt paper, gravel water. Some of them are designed to hold water; others aren't.
Staff Reporter
“ONE OF THE biggest problems we’ve had, recently, has been at the KU printing service,” he said. “I’ve been working on it for the last six years, and it’s about it.”
"We've had problems with most of the newer buildings because of their flat-top construction, compared to the older, arch-type structure, more moisture would drain off the roofs."
"This kind of roof we must get away from. Although new roofs may be cheaper initially, there will be more costs in bringing them (than in maintaining old roofs)."
Leaks are the biggest problem of the new roofs, and they have kept the KU construction crew working overtime this month, Christy said.
Christy, 55, has been here 14 years and began working in construction in 1947.
Fluker is a KU graduate of the School of Business. He received his master's degree in economics from Princeton University and then attended the Russian Institute of Columbia University.
Gottschalk Roofing Co. of Topeka has
"Another thing (to improve new roofs) would be to have better dispersal of drains, more of them and have the drains dispose of more moisture," Christy said.
Roofs are constructed with tar poured over a paper base. Gravel is spread evenly
contracted to build a new roof at the printing service for $9,844.
"The printing service is the major problem, but we've had problems with roof leakage at Spencer and Watson libraries and Robinson Gym," Christy said. "The new edition on Haworth (Hall) and Watkins Hospital have also leaked.
"IMPROVEMENTS IN flat-top roofs could be made if the materials used were put on more heavily and thoroughly." "Two layers of tar on the root wole help."
WATKINS HAS leaked from the masony, which is the walls and around the tops of windows. Allen Field House was leaky, too, has been renewed and is all right, now."
Chrisy said Hoch Auditorium, Wescoe,
halls held balls up best, primarily because
he was the only one.
"I don't understand why Wesco has held up so well, with that flat top roof," he said. "We had to get it out before the storm."
Roofing can be costly, too.
Christy said there were three causes of building problems: A building inspector wasn't doing his job, construction specifications were unclear or shoddy work was done. An inspector may also be responsible for bad construction, he said.
"The crew works on an average of $5 an hour," he said. "One day we worked 8 hours and used 2,000 pounds of asphalt, and it cost $3 per pound of pounds. So you can see the costs add up."
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COLLEGE ASSEMBLY ELECTION
for Undergraduate Representatives from Nunemaker Center and the Liberal Arts and Sciences
Filing applications available at 206 Strong Hall, Nunemaker Center, Student Senate Office, Graduate Student Office, Kansas Union. Filing deadline: 4:30 p.m., Friday, February 11 in 206 Strong Hall and Nunemaker Center.
—Approves or disapproves changes in courses, or new courses offered for credit
—Sets requirements for graduate and undergraduate degrees
—Establishes procedures related to the maintenance of academic policies
for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The College Assembly
Election will be conducted February 16 and 17 by the Student Senate.
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Skiing
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11
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
Reviewer
By CHUCK SACK
'Rocky' a cut above the usual tear-jerker
"Rocky" is that rarest of movies—a sentimental tale that is greatly affecting without resorting to gross emotional manipulation.
The credit for this must go to Sylvester Stallone, a previously obscure actor who not only plays the title role, but also wrote the screenplay. He has created one of the most satisfying entertainments you're likely to see for quite a while.
The Cinderella story centers on Rocky Balboa (Stata), a young unemployed rocker who becomes Philadelphia's circuit. When Rocky wins a match, usually through raw power, he can expect a purse of
Review
$40.5 after taxes, deductions and locker money. If he loses, which is as often as he faces a disciplined opponent, his share falls off to $17.50. And because his bouts are rare, Rocky puts his muscle to work collecting money for a small-time gangster.
There is Paule (Burt Young), Rocky's dall best friend whose one desire is to become a bone-breaking foroon for Rocky's gangster employer. Paulie's sister, Adrian (Talia Shire), is the homely wallflower with whom Rocky falls in love. Finally, there is Mickey (Burgess Merideth), the 73-year-manager of the gym where Rocky trains.
EVEN WITH all the gritty detail that director John G. Avildsen can muster, "Rocky" is a fantasy. Apollo Creed (Carl Weather), the world heavyweight champion, decides to kill the land of opportunity by unknown an enemy. By a quirk of fate, it is Rocky Balboa, the "Italian Stallion," whom Creed selects as his challenger.
The champion and his retinue of promoters are cardboard villains, mercifully relegated to the sub-plot. But in description Rocky's small band of supporters sound like stereotyped second bananas, too.
A WRITER, Stallone doesn't show any flair for brilliant dialogue, or for creating situations ripe with overtones. But he has a sure sense of light, natural street humor, and a witty sense of humor, overwhelming aura of frustration that is the key to Adrian, Pauline, Mickey and Rocky.
These characters feel trapped by their inadequacies and lack of luck, yet they all dream of that day when they will be able to overcome these obstacles. Sylvester Shure deliver wonderful performances, giving substance to their finely written parts through careful nuance. But even with a strong supporting cast, "Rocky" depends on the acting of Sylvester Stallone for its success.
WHEN ROCKY'S shot at the title comes, Paulse and Mickie recognize what it means being best in the sport. "Everyday we every way she can, her brother scramble to cash in on Rocky's name,
using the hulking boxer as a billboard to advertise the meat packing plant where he works. Mickey, long disaffair of Rocky's brute force, seizes the chance to showcase his 50 years' experience by becoming Rocky's trainer.
The explosion that follows Mickey's offer to be Rocky's trainer is the crucial point in determining whether the man seems to be an easy-going loser, an oaf who has become accustomed to his loss. Suddenly his suppressed rage fills the screen and he becomes a villain, bitterness at the old man for his neglect.
THE DIALOGUE is primitive and halting, punctuated by punches thrown against a door that are Rocky's only way to get out. When he scene concludes with the obligatory soapy recompilation with the music swelling inappropriately to confirm that, yes, this is a tender moment. "Rocky" crumples over these occasional lapses because Stallone has his writing and acting with honest emotion instead of cynical manipulation.
"rocky," despite excellent acting of a simple story, is much greater than the sum of its parts. From the opening scenes of Rocky talking to his pets to the brutal murder of his friend, it never loses its sense of compassion. And, for once, it is compassion born of knowing failure so long that you desire success for anyone, because it gives you hope.
Quota rule fails to pass
A bill to eliminate alleged University of Kansas domination of the Board of Regents died Monday in a Kansas Senate committee.
The bill, introduced by State Sen. Donn Everett, R-Manhattan, would have required that Regents' membership be controlled so that the institution could serve on the board.
The Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee, by a 5-4 vote, failed to favor the bill and amendments that could increase the size of the graduate from any one institution also failed.
Everett has said the fact that seven of the nine current Regenta he has KU degree institutes are still in training.
However, the committee voted to introduce a resolution asking the governor to consider where a prospective Regent went before he made appointments of Regents.
Gov. Robert Bennett is expected to announce soon whether he will reappoint Regents Jes Shwart and Paul Wumph, both PhD and MA graduates. Their terms expire Jan. 1.
Everett said that he knew his bill was unrealistic and had little chance of passing, but he introduced the bill so the issue of KU domination could be made public.
Artists offer Hashinger classes
Students who live in KU residence halls will have a chance this month to visit with and learn from working artists who will teach and teach at教研学院 at Hashinger Hall.
Anita Kapau, a Lawrence artist, will
leave classes tonight, Feb. 14-18.
and 21-23.
Lorey I Hirschman and Jeffrey Hessing, Boston artists, will teach classes in drawing Tuesday and Thursdays in February under the program, which is sponsored by a grant from the Pearson Cultural Enrichment Committee.
According to Anne Abrams, Hashinger program coordinator, students have enjoyment.
Hirschnan and Hissing, who will live in a guest apartment in Hashinger, will be the first professional artists to live in the hall while teaching. Students will be able to drop in and talk with them and the artists possibly will take students on field trips to
the Nelson Art Gallery-Akins Museum in Kansas City and other area attractions.
"Students don't have to worry about grades, so they like to come to classes,"
Hashinger has previously offered guest artist classes in stained glass, bluegrass music, tap dancing, modern dance, photography, pottery and watercolors.
Abrams encouraged residents of other halls to come to the art classes.
Hashinger is planning a panel discussion for late February in which Hirschman, Thomas Ahrams and artists will discuss the merits and disadvantages of a career in the arts.
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winteriness has slowed with oncoming warm weather, Mount Bleu ski area experienced a booming season thanks to cold weather and plenty of snow.
Successful slope
Black awareness activities begin
Activities and programs planned for KU's annual Black Awareness Week, Feb. 7-13.
The dean of women's office is working with black staff members in residence halls to stage a week of activities open to the public.
The programs began last night with a slide presentation, "Black Values and Public Policy," produced in Oliver Hall by the African Studies department. Students also read poetry and prose and performed songs.
McColm Hall will sponsor a lecture entitled "Myths in the African Past," by Thomas Lewin, professor of African studies, at 8 tomorrow night. "Lost, Stolen, and Strayed," a film, will follow Lewin's speech.
A soul food dinner will be served Sunday at 6:30 p.m. in the Ellsworth Hall cafeteria to culminate the week of events. Dinner reservations can be made through the following resident assistants in residence halls: Edward King, Sharron Parker, Bonta Gocken and Ken James.
A Kansas City, Mo., dance troupe, "Black Exodus," will perform at Friday night in the Lewis Hall cafeteria. A disco dance will begin at 10 p.m. in the cafeteria.
Funding for Black Awareness Week is provided by the Pearson Trust Fund, which funds cultural activities in residence halls.
An independent group of minority students,
sponsored by the Office of Minority Affairs,
also plans to present a revue of black music,
and interpretive readings Fcch 20 at Lewis.
The last four years, Black Awareness Week has been a project of the Black Caucus of Women's Affairs at the Women's office and the Office of Minority Affairs in sponsoring the week.
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Rolling Kansas plains conceal skiing haven
If you didn't get enough skiing in during Christmas break or if spring break seems just a little too far away, you can still enjoy the slopes. Bleu, five miles southeast of Lawrence.
Mont Bleu, which has been operating about 10 years, has experienced a 25 percent increase in business this year over last year. And even though the mountain isn't well-known as a ski resort, it's the closest resort around.
"Our greatest amount of customers are students," Jim Chim, Mont Blenie employee said. "But we also get a lot of people from Kansas City and Topika."
Skiing lessons are offered every day by the staff. Beginning lessons teach the
If you are a beginner and want to find out whether you like skipping, Mont Bleu may be the right place for you. Without having to travel or to travel to Colorado you can learn to skip.
basics, such as how to use a rope tow, snow plowing and skiing turns. Lumbercoat cost $25 per hour.
Despite unpredictable Kansas weather, asking is continually offered because much of the weather is predictable.
Mont Bleu is open throughout the week and on weekends from 3 to 10 p.m. On Sundays, there are $2 for rentals and $3 for a tour. During the week the cost is $4 for rentals and $7.5 for a tow.
Artificial snow is made by mixing air and water in a large compression system and forcing the mixture out, at low temperature of about 20 degrees under low humidity.
A ski lift may possibly be installed next year.
So if you are tired of your nose bleeding, ears popping and car sputtering on the high Colorado peaks, stick to Mont Bleu, elevation 625 feet.
SPEED READING CLASS TO BE TAUGHT IN LAWRENCE
This famous course has taught many thousands of people to read over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and retain what they have read much more effectively. Average graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.
The United States Reading Lab Mid-West Division is offering their famous speed reading course to a limited number of qualified people. The course averages average person who completes this course can read 10 times per week with substantially improved comprehension and better concentration.
For complete details about this famous speed reading course be sure to attend one of the free one hour orientation lectures that have been scheduled. These lectures are open to the public, above all students. In addition, there is a possible.) and the course will be explained in complete detail, including class schedules, instruction procedures and a tuition that is much less than similar courses.
These meetings will be held on campus at the Lutheran Student Center, 15th and Iowa, on Wed., Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 3:00 p.m. and again at 7:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m. Sat., Feb. 19 at 10:30 a.m. and again at 1:30 p.m. Mon., Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. and TWO FINAL MEETINGS, Tues., Feb. 22, 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Classes are limited and class places will be filled on first come-first serve basis only. Be sure to attend the earliest meeting possible to ensure a class place. Group classes may be held on alternate days.
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12
Wednesdav, February 9, 1977
University Daily Kansan
KU helps young pupils catch up
Bv KATHY GANNON
Staff Reporter
The War on Poverty, declared by the late President Lyndon Johnson in 1964, inspired a campaign to help children from poor families achieve academic success so that as adults they might improve their social condition.
The University of Kansas department of human development undertook to help win that campaign in 1988 by devising and implementing national strategy called Behavior Analysis.
Behavior Analysis is one of 20 academic models or sponsoring organizations in a nationwide program called Follow. Following a pilot study in 67 under the Federal Office of Education.
FOLLOW THROUGH is an extension of Head Start, a federal program that began in 1964 to give preschool children from poor areas access to school that would bring them in elementary school.
The success of the Head Start program was uncertain, partly because improved academic performance of Head Start students were collected in the early elementary grades.
In 1867, Congress amended the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, which provided the funding for Head Start. The amendment was the birth of the Follow Through program to aid children from kindergarten through third grade.
KU'S BEHAVIOR Analysis Follow through program, begin in 15 projects (schools across the nation) that are rated at least five thousand of children during its nine-year existence.
The Behavior Analysis approach is the brainchild of Don Bushell, professor of human development at UF. Follow Through program. He is now program adviser.
No $n$ program primarily emphasizes new educational techniques to encourage young children to learn basic skills—reading, writing and articulating words; reinforcement, team teaching, individualized instruction and parent participation in the classroom.
THE PROGRAM set up special types of teaching programs and creates a classroom
environment that permits and encourages learning, "Eugene Ramp, director of the KU Follow Through program since 1974; since Friday.
"Just making the children literate it isn't enough," Hump said, "but what we're doing is getting better."
The aim of the Behavior Analysis program is to make the academic performance of poor children in the program better. The goal is to increase on national achievement tests, be said.
POOR CHILDREN generally progress three months behind the average middle-aged child.
Studies by the KU Follow through staff show that while children are in the Behavior Analysis program, they function at or above the optional standards.
KU's Follow Through program now serves about 7,000 poor children in 15 schools in the following districts: Hopi District, Lake County District, Illinois, Waukegan, Ill.; Indianapolis, Ind; Louisville, Ky; Pittsfield, Mass; Karas City, Mo.; Portageville, Mont; Northern Cheyenne Reservation, Mont; Trenton, NJ; Bronx, N.Y., and New York.
VIVIAN FUEYO, district adviser for three Behavior Analysis ghetto schools in Philadelphia, said vandalism and absenteeism had decreased at the Philadelphia schools since KU introduced the Behavior Analysis program there.
Children at these three schools also are meeting national average in stan- dard achievement.
One of the Philadelphia schools was voted the best urban elementary school in Philadelphia because of the academic results of test scores.
"The key to the Behavior Analysis program is that we know the progress of each child." Fueyo said. "The analysis makes this program the only educational model that bases everything that goes on in the classroom on the outcomes of each child's progress rather than just an educational theory."
THE JOB OF a district adviser includes planning monthly visits to the project site, compiling reports and preparing reports.
classroom and in special workshops and
analyzing computer printouts of each
Evaluation aides in each district transit individual achievement reports to the KU computer at Summerfield Hall biweekly. "The computer is the heartbeat of our
"The computer is the heartbeat of our kids," Ramp said.
According to Randy Williams, district adviser for Waukegan schools, school staff members said there had been a major disruption. "We followed Through program was established."
One aspect of the positive teaching approach is the token system, which is used to motivate children, reinforce good behavior and teach independence.
"CHILDREN STARTED enjoying school and studying," Williams said. "The positive approach to teaching makes the children like school more."
Tokens or dacs are awarded for good behavior such as responding correctly, paying attention and working on assignments.
Children can exchange tokens for games, play materials or recess time.
Williams said parent participation was also an important factor of the Behavioral Assessment.
PARENTS ARE trained in fairly intensive workshops, Ramp said, before qualifying as Behavior Analysis teacher's aides.
Fueyo said individual instruction and a link between the school and the home was accomplished through parental involvement in the classroom.
Some parents in Williams' and Fueyo's districts have returned to high school or college to complete their education. A few parents have received teaching certificates. And parents have continued their education in other KU Follow Through districts.
Interpreting data from comparative studies of Behavior Analysis children and non-Behavior Analysis children with similar backgrounds, Fuey and Williams agreed that the Behavior Analysis children had been taken without KUJK: Follow Through program.
I DON'T THINK all our kids will be rich, "Ramp said, "If I love them I have a
Flag pole foreman . . .
From page one
retired from a job with the Lawrence post office.
"I didn't know what to do, but I figured I'd find something," he recalled. "I couldn't stay at home doing nothing for even two weeks." I go crazy.
Ice isn't an usher anymore. Now he helps a policeman "escort" officials between the狸 multitude in Allen and their quiet locker room in the field house annex.
SO WHEN John Novotny, assistant athletic director at that time, offered him a job, ice accepted. Ice knew Novotty from an asus as an usher during basketball games.
The sign on the door where they stood said
"NO ADMITTANCE"-underlined twice.
The largest crowd of the year poured into Allen later that night, and Ice stood with the policeman at the end of a long white corridor in the annex.
The policeman walked in front and Ice walked behind.
Ice had changed into a better uniform for the game. He now wore a new blue and red Kansas Jayhawks cap, and carried a Hershey bar in his shirt pocket for dinner.
FINALLY, TWO officials emerged from their sanctuary, cracked several nervous jokes with their escorts and started down the long white corridor.
Ice said there usually wasn't any trouble until the K-State game.
ONCE IN THE white corridor, they started congratulating and joking with each other. Ice left the policeman alone and went to chance into his work clothes.
"Everything will happen then," he said. Two hours later, the final buzzer sounded and the officials quickly slipped off the court with their escorts. Because the home win, the multitude had no wrath in their仇es and the officials left unnoticed.
As the crowd filed out, he went to the east side of the field house and a small crawl-stair.
Ice was just small enough to stand up straight in the room. It was a small office,
with an old cluttered desk sitting in one corner and an ancient refrigerator in the other.
He left on his Kansas Jayhawks cap but changed into a grubby pull-over shirt and was the best of them.
AS HE LEFT the room and walked up to the desk, he spoke about his past life in Kansas.
He remembered working in his father's store in Big Springs during the depression and "selling anything we could to make a nickel."
He said he gave up a scholarship to K-State after the war, and chose instead to go to college.
"You never make a lot of money working for the government," he said. "But you'll get richer and feel like a millionaire."
In 1952, he married, and he said he had never retested that either
THE WINDOWS ON the east side of Allen were dark now, except for a spotlight on the roof that illuminated the front of the field house. As ice stepped through the window and onto the wall last time that day, the unknownly light off the light, leaving him in the dark.
The cars began to pile up on Naimshi Drive, while below him people were still filtering out of the field house. A plastic cup lies near him, breaking the rooftop silence.
As ice started to untie the ropes, he said that if he didn't like working at Allen, he wouldn't be there. And he said, he didn't mind the responsibility of hoisting the flags.
Nemechek confession read
"Somebody has to do it."
SALINA (UPI) — In a signed confession admitted as evidence at his murder trial yesterday, Francis Donald Nemechek said he was convicted of killing another, a KU student, before killing them.
The KU student, Carla Baker of Hays, 20, disappeared June 1976. Her body was found three months later in a remote area of Cedar Bluff Reservoir.
Nemechek's confession, made to officers and his lawyer last October, described how he stabbed two women to death and killed two Iowa women with shotgun blasts.
The 26-year-old Nemechek, of WaKeeny, has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to five counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of the four women and a small boy, who died of exposure after his mother and another woman were killed.
Lawyers for both sides asked that the confession be read at the trial. As it was read, Nemechek sat staring impassively toward the front of the courtroom.
30, depressed because he could find none of his friends, when he saw Baker riding her bicycle beside the highway. He stopped his pickup and exposed himself to her.
the document said Nemechek grabbed her and drove in his pickup to Cedar Bluff Reservoir 50 miles away. When there, the man knocked on the door of her in the carpeted back of the pickup, ripping off some of her clothes and trying to rape her before she kicked him between the legs. He grabbed a knife and stabbed her when he tried to run away, the confession said.
The confession included these points:
* Nomeckek was driving to Hays on June
He was angry and depressed after a fight with his ex-wife about visitation rights with his child in December 1974, when he stopped her from coming to his house. And Diane Lovette, 19, change a flat tire.
Lovette began cursing him, so he kid-naped them, took them to an abandoned farm house near Hill City and raped Miss Lovette before shooting them.
The 3-year-old son of Miss Young, Guy
Young, died of exposure at the scene. The
son was 15 years old.
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But the KU staff has data showing that Behavior Analysis children continue to perform better in later elementary grades. In contrast, Analysis children with similar backgrounds.
KU's Follow Through program isn't funded to monitor the progress of Behavior Analysis children after third grade when they enter the program to enter regular classrooms.
843-2139
Congress allocates $59 million annually for the 20 Follow Through program sponsors and 185 projects across the nation, which serve about 70,000 poor children.
The KU Behavior Analysis Follow Through project has received from $460,000 to $500,000 each year to direct its 15 projects, with funding from the fund, ranging from $200,000 to $800,000.
The 1967 legislation that started started Through expires on July 1, but Ramp said the program is funded through fiscal year 1978.
RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
Expanding Lawrence Memorial Hospital has a part-time opening for a registered or registry-eligible X-ray technologist. Hours are 3:30-midnight, Saturday and Sunday. Please contact the Personnel Office, 843-368O, ext. 391.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Reflection
Steve Leben and Ralph Munyan, candidates for student body president and vice president, and the REFLECTION candidates, will be students on Senate issues, because they are their desire to open new lines of communication between the Senate and the part survey.
STUDENT ATTORNEY
Yes - 53% No - 36% No opinion - 9%
G—Some universities, including K State, have an attorney available to help any student who needs legal advice or other legal assistance. You can call them at (801) 327-5000 each semester to have legal help available to you at no additional cost; would you want such an attorney available at KU?
We will examine carefully how students' attorneys have been utilized at other schools and establish a student attorney program at KU as soon as possible.
TICKET SUBSIDY
Q - Would you like to have an opportunity to vote in a referendum on whether or not student fees should be used to subsidize season tickets to basketball and football games?
The Head good
Q - Based on what you know about the ticket subsidy question, would you favor the use of general student fees to subsidize the prices of season football and basketball tickets?
Yes — 62% No — 26% No opinion — 11%
We would propose a referendum on the ticket subsidy as soon as possible, because that is the only way to put this issue back us once and for all. We will do our best to present the pros, cons, and facts of the issue to the voters before the election.
WATSON LIBRARY
"N
traor
cooki
Q- If it's generally agreed that Watson Library has many problems because of a lack of funds, Which problem has been the most troublesome for you?
35% — not being open when I want to use the library
C i
8% — other
After examining the present lobbying efforts of KU and other Kansas schools, we have concluded that we must organize our own organization on this campus if the student body is to be effectively represented in Topeka. We will try to work first to make sure we get national attention on our website.
Steve Leben and Munyan—they care enough about you to ask your opinion. Vote for them on February 16 & 17.
Paid for by *Leben/Munyan*
The only way to improve our libraries is to get more money to keep them open and to purchase materials. This requires a functional lobbying group on the KU campus to convince the Legislature of the seriousness of the problem.
<1% — neither, no major problems for me
Leben - Munyan
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Wednesday, February 9, 1977
13
University Daily Kansan
al or
ers
ly.
Children's chef can turn 'icky' dishes to delights
By JOANNE LOFLAND
Staff Reporte
Phil Minkin has to cook a lot to feed 34 children
Staff Reporter
KRAFT
This man fed 34 children prunes filled with peanut butter one day, and they asked for more. The day before he served liver and they loved it.
"Nothing fancy," said chef exordian,
"but he said "Basic home
work." You might call him.
The staff and children of Children's Hour-
headstart preschool in Lawrence call it
Since it is Phil Minkin's job to serve a snack and lunch five days a week to the two classrooms of three- and four-year-olds, 10 staff members and occasional volunteers that compose Children's Hour-Headstart, Minkin said he was glad they liked his
"I HAVE ALWAYS enjoyed cooking."
Minkin, said.
After receiving a degree in restaurant management from Michigan State University, he spent seven years managing a restaurant in Chicago, Los Angeles and Kansas City.
But his work with the Headstart program brings with them a greater sense of accomplishment, he said. "I feel like I'm doing some good for somebody rather than just working in the restaurant business to make money."
At Children's Hour-Headstart, Minkin's responsibilities extend beyond simply cooking and serving. Headstart's nutrition program is an important part of a larger scheme to involve the children and their parents in the educational process.
Each month a parent assistant is asked to join Minkin and Gretchen Gahagan, nutrition adviser to the program, for a menu planning session.
CHILDREN'S HOUR meals must meet standards for balanced nutrition set by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare as well as those of the Department of Agriculture because the program is federally funded.
Scrutinizing menu ideas for the right ratio of vitamins, minerals and protein to meet these standards is meant to be beneficial for the parents who help, according to Minkin.
Besides nutritional value, factors such as cost, color, "crunch," or texture, the time and equipment necessary for preparation are the skills required are all considered.
VARIETY IS another important element in cooking for preschoolers, according to Minkin. "We try to broaden their horizons with food they might not get at home," he said as he dished out ruhbarb cobler for dessert.
The meal planning, ordering and cooking are the obvious facets of Minkin's work. He
also has a responsibility to reinforce the teachers and help them work toward the goals of the school.
The preschool's program is aimed at preparing children for kindergarten, socially as well as educationally. Working and playing with other children and adults is underscored along with learning colors, numbers and letters, Minkin said.
Minkin's kitchen becomes an extension of the classroom when he invites helpers to wash vegetables and assist with other tasks. Helping out in the kitchen is considered a special treat by the children and Minkin takes the opportunity to impress them with the value of foods and the excitement of trying something new.
AWARENESS OF good health and hygiene is stressed. The children receive regular dental and medical checkups as part of the program.
After a field trip to a dairy farm, where the children had their first exposure to cows, they gathered in the kitchen for a meal from all the foods that come from dairy cows.
HOLIDAYS PROVIDE another opportunity to draw the family into the school experience. Minkin's most recent seasonal holiday event was the visit of children along with the staff and board
The effort to make Headstart a family program means finding solutions for individual problems, Minkin said. For example, a language tutor who has three children enrolled in Children's Hour-Headstart. She is an active volunteer in the classroom now and it is hoped that she will be the first of a full-time position as a teacher's aid.
members. In the spring, picnics are
children and their families, Minka aid.
But the school itself suits him, he said, for he is a low pressure person and he likes time off during the summer to tend his garden. He has been the school's cook for two years. For the past 4 years, Children's Hour-headstast has shared Jillife Hall with part of the radio television/film department at the School of Journalism, there is speculation that the department may take over the entire building next fall. Although these plans aren't definite, the preschool is looking for a new home, Minkin said.
Wherever the new home may be, the children will be assured that Phil Minkin will be there to serve up peanut-butter-filled prunes, liver, and even hot dogs, a favorite food of the children who eat at Minkin's table.
B.
BRING YOUR OLDEST, SCROUNGIEST SHOES IN AND SAVE $2.50 ON THE PURCHASE OF A NEW PAIR.
THE WORST SHOES WILL WIN A $25.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE.
CONTEST ENDS FEBRUARY 19TH.
stomp out old shoes contest
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919 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas Phone 841-2995 BankAmericard and Master Charge Welcome
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Wednesday, February 9
6 hr. SALE
12 - 6
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All sales final – No alterations
Bank Americard - Master Charge - B.C. Charge - Cash
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Receipts cashed on Lower Level of Bookstore at Textbook Dept. counter
REBATE
Attention Students:
Period 60-5% thru Dec. '77
Cash in Last Year's Union Bookstore Receipts beginning Wed., Feb. 9
Period 59----5% thru June,'77
DEBATE
演讲台
Candidates for Student Body President and Vice-President
GREY-GREEN LEBEN-MUNYAN MCKERNAN-RHOADS
THURSDAY Feb.10th 7:30 P.M. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
To be broadcast on: KJHK
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
14
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Medical training program aim
By BARRY MASSEY
Staff Reporte
For more than 25 years, students at the KU Medical Center have been participating in a program that until this decade has been taught by many medical schools in the United States.
Designed to allow students to train under a practicing physician outside medical school surroundings, preceptorship programs have become an important part of the curriculum at an increasing number of medical schools.
A preceptorship program was begun at the Med Center in 1851, and Ralph Reed, director of the Kansas preceptorship program, said recently that since about 1969, preceptorships have been one of the 'hottest tools' in medical education.
At the Med Center, the present four-week program is a graduation requirement that senior students usually take during the last months of their third calendar year of study.
THE REASON FOR this newfound interest, Reed explained, is that in the late 60's the federal government increased its investment in education, which included predecessor institutions.
This means that it follows two years of basic science courses and usually the 11-month clerkship period: 12 weeks in medicine and eight weeks each in surgery, pediatrics, psychiatry, and gynecology and obstetrics.
STUDENTS NOW take preceptorship in teams that range from less than 5,000 to more than 10,000.
The preceptorship program originally was limited to work with a practitioner in towns of less than 2,500 for three months. The length was eventually cut to two weeks and expanded to one month. Reed said that the program may again be expanded to two months.
They work with physicians whose specialties include: family practice, internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, general surgery, psychiatry, radiology, anesthesiology and orthopedic surgery, according to an article by Christiane Norrlinn, teaching assistant at Med Center of Calif. Chief for professional development at the County department of health in Fresno, Calif. The article appeared in the September 1976 issue of a Med Center publication, "Dialogue."
Another change was initiated in the program in 1972 when the Med Center developed a separate Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) for starting a regionalized preceptorship program. Federal funding of the program has continued the last four years.
Today, six regions of preceptors have been designated: (1) Southeast, centered in Independence; (2) Northeast, centered in Hiawatha; (3) Manhattan area; (4)
Plainville area; (5) Beloit area; (6) South-central, centered in Harper.
The reason for the regionalization, Reed said, was to try to improve the communication and understanding between the region and the community, or general practitioners.
EACH OF THE regional groups of preceptors is required to form its own objectives for the program. Reed said, and to adopt the method of evaluation and supervision.
Essentially, the duties of the student, although they may vary, are to follow as closely as possible the day-to-day life of his preceptor and to observe and assist him in his duties. Sometimes the student lives with his preceptor.
Reed said the main objectives of the program were to give students practical and humanistic experience and to expose them to the needs of rural health care.
“There is a necessary schism between practicing physicians in the field and the academics of research projects and specialists.” Reed said “Preceptorships are a prerequisite for practice and knowledge required on a practical basis and test their theoretical knowledge.”
IN ADDITION, because the federal government has funded preceptorship programs, more interest has been shown in his ability to redistribute health manpower.
Reed said that even though he didn't emphasize this aspect of the program, many people thought that this was an imam problem. He also hoped to attract physicians to rural areas.
Rede said studies done in 1961 and in 1975 indicated that preceptuous ladies had little affect on their child's health.
"I think these studies are somewhat misleading," Reed said. "There are a number of things that influence what students do with their careers, and I think that as more research is done on this subject it will appear that preceptors have
ANOTHER IMPORTANT function of the preceptorship program is community-*
*involvement.*
at least something to do with it (manpower distribution)."
Preceptorships improve understanding between community and university (please contact).
Through interaction among the three groups involved in the precepterhips program-students, medical school faculty and practicing community physicians—both the educational and health care processes can be improved, Reed said.
Additional objectives of the preceptorship program include primary care, a practice that covers the general needs of entire families; community health resources; personal and social aspects of community health; and management of private office practice.
"We want to make students aware of the health care needs of a community, as well as the health care demands of that community." Reed said.
"THEY SHOULD be able to respond to these demands and become one of the best leaders in the world."
Despite the recent interest in preceptorship programs, Reed said, the preceptorship idea is the "oldest, yet newest" in the medical education.
Until the era of the modern medical school in the early part of this century, the concept of preceptorship was the basis of medical education. First taught by Hippocrates, a Greek physician who died in 357 B.C., preceptorship gradually gave way to the more formal education process that is currently being offered at University Wisconsin made a preceptorship program a mandatory part of its medical school curriculum.
A RAPID REVIVAL in preceptorship programs took place once federal money was available for medical education, Reed West offered a "new way" to best "wet" tools available to medical schools.
Hang Gliding Club Meeting
Call:
864-3596
842-4787
Tonite! 7-8pm 2002 Learned
71
1:30 - Beginner Basics
2:00 - Meet Starts
ORIENTEERING COMES TO KU . . .
SUNDAY, FEB. 13
WEST CAMPUS(North of Pioneer Cemetery)
50c Entry Fee
For Info: Paul Jordan, 864-4321 or 842-4388 Sponsored by Student Union Activities, KU Div. of Recreational Services, Dept. of Geography, and Possum Trot Orienteering Club
一
We need certain college majors to become Air Force lieutenants.
Put yourself on the map.
Mechanical and civil engineering majors . aerospace and aeronautical engineering majors
and economical engineering majors
electronics science . mathematics majors.
The Air Forces is looking for young
engineering majors, such as the
majors such as these. If you are
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you will be eligible for either the
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Become a navigator with the United States Air Force. Air force navigators are among the finest in the world. They T43J train at Mather AFB, Sacramento, California.
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Force ROTC is a great way to serve your country.
Find out about the programs today and chart a secure future for yourself. Your destination is our location. Checkpoints are excellent salary, promotions, respons- bility, and Air Force opportunities.
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SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS: If you are a physical science, math or engineering major designated lofs are available in the following categories:
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Apply THIS WEEK. See Capt. Macke, Military Science Building, Room 108, or call 864- 4676.
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Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358
ELECT McKERNAN & RHOADS
TOTO
AVANTI
MOVE FORWARD WITH AVANTI · OLD FEMALE 67
AVANTI
NOT FOR MORE THAN 6.7
CANDIDATES MOVING FORWARD WITH AVANTI
NUNEMAKER 1
Cathy Bailey
Nancy Dressler
Ed Duckers
Sheila Everhart
Susan Rieger
Brad Sterrett
NUNEMAKER 2
Ladonna Hale
Pam Kern
Ed Mick
Allen Reynolds
NUNEMAKER 3
Lance Armer
Ruth Benier
Jeff Knox
Kathy Pebley
Diane Scheuchl
NUNEMAKER 4
Allen Gilstrap
Loslie Anne Graves
Julie Long
Sarah Toevs
Tom Werth
NUNEMAKER 5
MARY MAKER
Mary Huffman
Tim McCarthy
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Ladd Welch
LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
Sharon Anderson Mark Bolton Corliss Chandler John Esau Lisa Friday Mark Hughes Ken Idleman Steve McMurry Andy Ramires Dave Ramires Jim Ruane Jake Thompson Jim Willis
ARCHITECTURE
BUSINESS
Rick Chambers
Dave Dyers
Todd Hunter
Kenneth Leathers
ARCHITECTURE
Joe Bandy
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EDUCATION
Jan Davidson
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ENGINEERING
Barbara Brussell David Fuchs Ed Hite Jim Jandt Rhonda May Jim McCarter Weezie Purzer Scott Stallard
FINE ARTS
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Nancy Park
Scott Ward
JOURNALISM
Marsha Bjorkan
Jack Marvin
Dan Terrill
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
15
Relief forecast from bitter cold
Weather services forecast a change to milder temperatures later this week, bringing Kansas temporary relief from frostbite, stalled cars and slippery roads. The state will moderate temperature last, they will break the coldest winter in this area since 1937.
A meteorologist at the University of Kansas said Monday that this abnormally cold weather was caused by sluggish air troughs in the upper atmosphere.
"WE HAVE BEEN lucky," Larry Coegrove, graduate student in meteorology, said. "could have been a ld word, conditions could have right through her to have dropped to 30 below zero or less."
Over the Yukon the air cools and is suddenly forced south.
He said that warm Pacific air had been circulating over Alaska, bringing that state an unusually warm winter. Because the air was dry, it allowed snow to near the pole, air masses were being bunched together and crowded eastward. Over the Yukon the air cools and is
Western Kansas, however, has managed to escape this frigid air wave, which has plagued the eastern, southern and mid-western portions of the United States.
A COLD HIGH pressure ridge has settled east of the continental divide. This has kept western Kansas and the Rocky Mountain region, little moisture and higher temperatures.
The absence of snow in the mountains has resulted in a drought, which has slowed business in the ski resorts and hampered the winter wheat crop.
Library alters magazine rule
Students at the University of Kansas can now check out periodicals from Watson Library's Periodicals Reading Room for use outside the library.
But Crosgrove said that this phenomenon would be breaking up soon, returning Kansas to its highly changeable weather. Crosgrove said that this past summer's weather activities might have been a forecast of a severe winter.
The new policy went into effect this semester with the approval of H. Robert Brown and James B. Sargent.
Periodicals must be returned to the periodicals Service Desk by the time indwelling service is completed.
Periodicals may be checked out for two hours at a time during library hours. Previously, periodicals could be checked to be photocopied or used in a classroom.
Sarah Couch, Periodicals Reading Room supervisor, said recently that the new policy was started to adjust to the circulation policy of the Reserve Reading Room.
SUA
MOVIES
Borrowers of periodicals not returned on time will be fined 30 cents for the first hour and 60 for the second.
THE STRANGER (1967)
A VERY NATURAL THING (1974)
WED., FEB. 9
Dir. Luchino Visconti, with Marcello Mastroianni, Anna Karina (French/Subtitles)
THURS., FEB. 10
7:30, 9:30 $ 75^{\circ} $
Dir. Christopher Larkin
UN CHANT D'AMOUR
Dir, Jean Genet
7:30, 9:30 $1
FRI., FEB. 11
SAT., FEB. 12
ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE
ANYMORE (1975)
Dir, Martin Scorsesa, with Ellen Burstyn, Kris Kristofferson
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 $1
FRI., FEB. 11
SAT., FEB. 12
Aagical Mystery Tour With the Beake (1967) (allow Submarine (1968) BBC Concert)
12:00 (Midnight) $1
Woodruff Auditorium
Kansas Union
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daly Kaanan are offered to all students without regard to race, color or national origin. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAINT 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 word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
... 01 02 03 04 05
ERRORS
go run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
the IUD 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 be called the UDK business office at 843-4388.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Wanted-alive and on moving Christmas. Join us in our annual Christmas celebration at the old auditorium. We want to share your piece of Cancun House (Episcopal) 1114 Louisiana. Saturday, December 9: 9 p.m. - Thurs., 5:30 p.m.
Interested in juggling? We join Us at 2 p.m. 11:14, Illinois, or call 813-825-2-12
Give away $10 per week and $20 each, plus cash.
More wage: $40. 30 R.U. Telephone Directory
Phone number: 516-749-7800
this Friday, the $180 index,页. page 39, KU
until
ENTERTAINMENT
BOKONO: Paraphernula for the coulseurii
Two off-campaign all Big Smith Jeans. 12 East
Washington.
FOR RENT
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished. close to
unilines, utilities paid, parking. 843-9799
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
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ff
Sublease $ 5-bedroom unin furnished apartment
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Price subject to availability.
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Large 1-2 bedroom apartment - 2 blocks from
large 1-2 bedroom finished floor - floors in-pat-
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Large 2-bedroom apartment in North Lawrence,
$140 per month * 2* utilities. Small default. Also
Roomsmatter wants to share 3 bedrooms.
No smoking or non-smoking room or woman
842-5498
FOR SALE
INVENTORY SALE! Extra Stock and Demo Units!
Prices Reduced to $100. Many excellent copies on
Unusual pieces of Electronics as well as New
Unusual pieces of Electronics as well.
8th Phone calls please. Thank you.
9th Phone calls please. Thank you.
2-11
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization materials. Make sure you prepare 3. For Exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Towne '14
Redeemer Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod membership (conservancy) All students and faculty active youth groups. Face-to-face tutoring 843-1818 for more information; MIT Fredrickson at 9 a.m. b.i.b. Class and Sunday school at 10 a.m. b.i.b. Bible class and Sunday school at 10 a.m. Layman's League meets every week.
UNICORNS, Mermails, wings in flight and other imaginings in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to choose from. Stone cutting service. Repair of stoneware, satisfaction gift, 841-2883.
Excellent selection of new and旧 furniture and
additional furniture. The Furniture and Appliances Center, 904# Mason
Street, San Francisco, CA 94127.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists
Electricians, Welders, BELT AUCH,
ELECTRIC 843-9065, 2000 W, 6th.
Royal Electric Typewriter with carbon ribbon.
Contact Benton Agency, Inc. 843-607-7
2-9
Doc Datsun's Drive-in Clinic for most importe
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redehn
cars TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN
a
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Goods • Vintage Clothing
Selected Secondhand
- Furniture - Antiques
Guitars for sale - The best guitars in Lawerence are available at LMC. Bob Woideman, dealer. Low overheat models low prices for Alvarez Yanni Guitar; high prices for Playmusic. Come play. 2107 E 9th, 843-4918.
RADIAC THE CLEARANCE. Your price at close
outage: 150, 175, 190, 200, 210, 220, 230,
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5490, 5500, 5510, 5520, 5530, 5540, 5550, 5560, 5570, 5580, 5590, 5600, 5610, 5620, 5630, 5640, 5650, 5660, 5670, 5680, 5690, 5700, 5710, 5720, 5730, 5740, 5750, 5760, 5770, 5780, 5790, 5800, 5810, 5820, 5830, 5840, 5850, 5860, 5870, 5880, 5890, 5900, 5910, 5920, 5930, 5940, 5950, 5960, 5970, 5980, 5990, 6000, 6010, 6020, 6030, 6040, 6050, 6060, 6070, 6080, 6090, 6100, 6110, 6120, 6130, 6140, 6150, 6160, 6170, 6180, 6190, 6200, 6210, 6220, 6230, 6240, 6250, 6260, 6270, 6280, 6290, 6300, 6310, 6320, 6330, 6340, 6350, 6360, 6370, 6380, 6390, 6400, 6410, 6420, 6430, 6440, 6450, 6460, 6470, 6480, 6490, 6500, 6510, 6520, 6530, 6540, 6550, 6560, 6570, 6580, 6590, 6600, 6610, 6620, 6630, 6640, 6650, 6660, 6670, 6680, 6690, 6700, 6710, 6720, 6730, 6740, 6750, 6760, 6770, 6780, 6790, 6800, 6810, 6820, 6830, 6840, 6850, 6860, 6870, 6880, 6890, 6900, 6910, 6920, 6930, 6940, 6950, 6960, 6970, 6980, 6990, 7000, 7010, 7020, 7030, 7040, 7050, 7060, 7070, 7080, 7090, 7100, 7110, 7120, 7130, 7140, 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8810, 8820, 8830, 8840, 8850, 8860, 8870, 8880, 8890, 8900, 8910, 8920, 8930, 8940, 8950, 8960, 8970, 8980, 8990, 9000, 9010, 9020, 9030, 9040, 9050, 9060, 9070, 9080, 9090, 9100, 9110, 9120, 9130, 9140, 9150, 9160, 9170, 9180, 9190, 9200, 9210, 9220, 9230, 9240, 9250, 9260, 9270, 9280, 9290, 9300, 9310, 9320, 9330, 9340, 9350, 9360, 9370, 9380, 9390, 9400, 9410, 9420, 9430, 9440, 9450, 9460, 9470, 9480, 9490, 9500, 9510, 9520, 9530, 9540, 9550, 9560, 9570, 9580, 9590, 9600, 9610, 9620, 9630, 9640, 9650, 9660, 9670, 9680, 9690, 9700, 9710, 9720, 9730, 9740, 9750, 9760, 9770, 9780, 9790, 9800, 9810, 9820, 9830, 9840, 9850, 9860, 9870, 9880, 9890, 9900, 9910, 9920, 9930, 9940, 9950, 9960, 9970, 9980, 9990, 10000, 10010, 10020, 10030, 10040, 10050, 10060, 10070, 10080, 10090, 10100, 10110, 10120, 10130, 10140, 10150, 10160, 10170, 10180, 10190, 10200, 10210, 10220, 10230, 10240, 10250, 10260, 10270, 10280, 10290, 10300, 10310, 10320, 10330, 10340, 10350, 10360, 10370, 10380, 10390, 10400, 10410, 10420, 10430, 10440, 10450, 10460, 10470, 10480, 10490, 10500, 10510, 10520, 10530, 10540, 10550, 10560, 10570, 10580, 10590, 10600, 10610, 10620, 10630, 10640, 10650, 10660, 10670, 10680, 10690, 10700, 10710, 10720, 10730, 10740, 10750, 10760, 10770, 10780, 10790, 10800, 10810, 10820, 10830, 10840, 10850, 10860, 10870, 10880, 10890, 10900, 10910, 10920, 10930, 10940, 10950, 10960, 10970, 10980, 10990, 11000, 11010, 11020, 11030, 11040, 11050, 11060, 11070, 11080, 11090, 11100, 11110, 11120, 11130, 11140, 11150, 11160, 11170, 11180, 11190, 11200, 11210, 11220, 11230, 11240, 11250, 11260, 11270, 11280, 11290, 11300, 11310, 11320, 11330, 11340, 11350, 11360, 11370, 11380, 11390, 11400, 11410, 11420, 11430, 11440, 11450, 11460, 11470, 11480, 11490, 11500, 11510, 11520, 11530, 11540, 11550, 11560, 11570, 11580, 11590, 11600, 11610, 11620, 11630, 11640, 11650, 11660, 11670, 11680, 11690, 11700, 11710, 11720, 11730, 11740, 11750, 11760, 11770, 11780, 11790, 11800, 11810, 11820, 11830, 11840, 11850, 11860, 11870, 11880, 11890, 11900, 11910, 11920, 11930, 11940, 11950, 11960, 11970, 11980, 11990, 12000, 12010, 12020, 12030, 12040, 12050, 12060, 12070, 12080, 12090, 12100, 12110, 12120, 12130, 12140, 12150, 12160, 12170, 12180, 12190, 12200, 12210, 12220, 12230, 12240, 12250, 12260, 12270, 12280, 12290, 12300, 12310, 12320, 12330, 12340, 12350, 12360, 12370, 12380, 12390, 12400, 12410, 12420, 12430, 12440, 12450, 12460, 12470, 12480, 12490, 12500, 12510, 12520, 12530, 12540, 12550, 12560, 12570, 12580, 12590, 12600, 12610, 12620, 12630, 12640, 12650, 12660, 12670, 12680, 12690, 12700, 12710, 12720, 12730, 12740, 12750, 12760, 12770, 12780, 12790, 12800, 12810, 12820, 12830, 12840, 12850, 12860, 12870, 12880, 12890, 12900, 12910, 12920, 12930, 12940, 12950, 12960, 12970, 12980, 12990, 13000, 13010, 13020, 13030, 13040, 13050, 13060, 13070, 13080, 13090, 13100, 13110, 13120, 13130, 13140, 13150, 13160, 13170, 13180, 13190, 13200, 13210, 13220, 13230, 13240, 13250, 13260, 13270, 13280, 13290, 13300, 13310, 13320, 13330, 13340, 13350, 13360, 13370, 13380, 13390, 13400, 13410, 13420, 13430, 13440, 13450, 13460, 13470, 13480, 13490, 13500, 13510, 13520, 13530, 13540, 13550, 13560, 13570, 13580, 13590, 13600, 13610, 13620, 13630, 13640, 13650, 13660, 13670, 13680, 13690, 13700, 13710, 13720, 13730, 13740, 13750, 13760, 13770, 13780, 13790, 13800, 13810, 13820, 13830, 13840, 13850, 13860, 13870, 13880, 13890, 13900, 13910, 13920, 13930, 13940, 13950, 13960, 13970, 13980, 13990, 14000, 14010, 14020, 14030, 14040, 14050, 14060, 14070, 14080, 14090, 14100, 14110, 14120, 14130, 14140, 14150, 14160, 14170, 14180, 14190, 14200, 14210, 14220, 14230, 14240, 14250, 14260, 14270, 14280, 14290, 14300, 14310, 14320, 14330, 14340, 14350, 14360, 14370, 14380, 14390, 14400, 14410, 14420, 14430, 14440, 14450, 14460, 14470, 14480, 14490, 14500, 14510, 14520, 14530, 14540, 14550, 14560, 14570, 14580, 14590, 14600, 14610, 14620, 14630, 14640, 14650, 14660, 14670, 14680, 14690, 14700, 14710, 14720, 14730, 14740, 14750, 14760, 14770, 14780, 14790, 14800, 14810, 14820, 14830, 14840, 14850, 14860, 14870, 14880, 14890, 14900, 14910, 14920, 14930, 14940, 14950, 14960, 14970, 14980, 14990, 15000, 15010, 15020, 15030, 15040, 15050, 15060, 15070, 15080, 15090, 15100, 15110, 15120, 15130, 15140, 15150, 15160, 15170, 15180, 15190, 15200, 15210, 15220, 15230, 15240, 15250, 15260, 15270, 15280, 15290, 15300, 15310, 15320, 15330, 15340, 15350, 15360, 15370, 15380, 15390, 15400, 15410, 15420, 15430, 15440, 15450, 15460, 15470, 15480, 15490, 15500, 15510, 15520, 15530, 15540, 15550, 15560, 15570, 15580, 15590, 15600, 15610, 15620, 15630, 15640, 15650, 15660, 15670, 15680, 15690, 15700, 15710, 15720, 15730, 15740, 15750, 15760, 15770, 15780, 15790, 15800, 15810, 15820, 15830, 15840, 15850, 15860, 15870, 15880, 15890, 15900, 15910, 15920, 15930, 15940, 15950, 15960, 15970, 15980, 15990, 16000, 16010, 16020, 16030, 16040, 16050, 16060, 16070, 16080, 16090, 16100, 16110, 16120, 16130, 16140, 16150, 16160, 16170, 16180, 16190, 16200, 16210, 16220, 16230, 16240, 16250, 16260, 16270, 16280, 16290, 16300, 16310, 16320, 16330, 16340, 16350, 16360, 16370, 16380, 16390, 16400, 16410, 16420, 16430, 16440, 16450, 16460, 16470, 16480, 16490, 16500, 16510, 16520, 16530, 16540, 16550, 16560, 16570, 16580, 16590, 16600, 16610, 16620, 16630, 16640, 16650, 16660, 16670, 16680, 16690, 16700, 16710, 16720, 16730, 16740, 16750, 16760, 16770, 16780, 16790, 16800, 16810, 16820, 16830, 16840, 16850, 16860, 16870, 16880, 16890, 16900, 16910, 16920, 16930, 16940, 16950, 16960, 16970, 16980, 16990, 17000, 17010, 17020, 17030, 17040, 17050, 17060, 17070, 17080, 17090, 17100, 17110, 17120, 17130, 17140, 17150, 17160, 17170, 17180, 17190, 17200, 17210, 17220, 17230, 17240, 17250, 17260, 17270, 17280, 17290, 17300, 17310, 17320, 17330, 17340, 17350, 17360, 17370, 17380, 17390, 17400, 17410, 17420, 17430, 17440, 17450, 17460, 17470, 17480, 17490, 17500, 17510, 17520, 17530, 17540, 17550, 17560, 17570, 17580, 17590, 17600, 17610, 17620, 17630, 17640, 17650, 17660, 17670, 17680, 17690, 17700, 17710, 17720, 17730, 17740, 17750, 17760, 17770, 17780, 17790, 17800, 17810, 17820, 17830, 17840, 17850, 17860, 17870, 17880, 17890, 17900, 17910, 17920, 17930, 17940, 17950, 17960, 17970, 17980, 17990, 18000, 18010, 18020, 18030, 18040, 18050, 18060, 18070, 18080, 18090, 18100, 18110, 18120, 18130, 18140, 18150, 18160, 18170, 18180, 18190, 18200, 18210, 18220, 18230, 18240, 18250, 18260, 18270, 18280, 18290, 18300, 18310, 18320, 18330, 18340, 18350, 18360, 18370, 18380, 18390, 18400, 18410, 18420, 18430, 18440, 18450, 18460, 18470, 18480, 18490, 18500, 18510, 18520, 18530, 18540, 18550, 18560, 18570, 18580, 18590, 18600, 18610, 18620, 18630, 18640, 18650, 18660, 18670, 18680, 18690, 18700, 18710, 18720, 18730, 18740, 18750, 18760, 18770, 18780, 18790, 18800, 18810, 18820, 18830, 18840, 18850, 18860, 18870, 18880, 18890, 18900, 18910, 18920, 18930, 18940, 18950, 18960, 18970, 18980, 18990, 18900, 18910, 18920, 18930, 18940, 18950, 18960, 18970, 18980, 18990, 18900, 18910, 18920, 18930, 18940, 18950, 18960, 18970, 18980, 18990, 18900, 18910, 189
2-165-13 used Dump rails only $25 for the pair, a pat. pair 124-13 for $38 at Ray 129-13 for $38 at Ray 129-13.
Used MagnaVox component system with a tran-
port adapter (e.g. Motorola TRANSPORT)
component with Garand charger for £299 at
www.motorola.com/magnaovox/transport.
Cassette tape sale. Five 60-minute for only $4
or 30 minute for only $4. Rocky Bay Storebill
POTION PARLOR Natural body care products
Natural brittle brushes. 12 East Bath St. 841
320-679-5200
- Imported Clothing
Kinemo 100 watt stereo receiver $300 and Roleset turntable. 90 watt than year old and 150 watt than year old. Call 844-226-5767.
1976 Kawasaki KZ-750 twin luggage rack, packed
1976车, windshield, new rear view mirror,
1976车, windshield, new rear view mirror,
Quality stero equipment. Rotel 602 receive;
pair bose 501, speaker pair, hall 500, speaker pair.
Pioneer XR-826 receiver; panel of Unilabronc 255
Toshiba Toshiba components and together with
System QuickBooks Music System, includes MS-
Stereo, QuickBooks, Good condition.
System good condition, Good Call: 614-230-7166.
Gibbon Les. Paul Deluxe. Fender Twenty Reverb
Arpege. Wee Wee Mini. Mindfair. Must sell.
$699.95
Save up to $20 on MagnaVox Digital Clock AM
Only $29 on RV5 at Ray Stone Mall
2-11
Banco, new Alverze 5-string. Play to appreciate!
841-1422 2-10
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only ones with a specification guarantee of ≥ 2 dB hear from Ray Ackel at Rail Attack E. 8th. Prices from $175.
Hampton-Beach Built- Up Popcorn Poppers only 813 at Ray Battenbuck's. 292 Mass. 2-11
7308 Mass. 841-7070
Advent model 300 Stereo Receiver; designed to offer the kind of sound associated with video performance, compared to our output to that of the most advanced models. We are specialists in the trade. Audio 15 is available.
P23-Channel C.B.'s half price for $9.90.
P23-Channel C.B.'s for only $12 at Bay Stoneback
922 Mass
1973 WV Fartkick, beige, clean, dependable. Rail-
1-20
1953 KR 750, 1682-712, Olathe.
Cassette recorder: Sales Sony, G.E., Craig, and Chooseman. Send Cassette to Rock Starpress, BD Mp3.
Yashen MAT 124T twin lens reflex with Braun
telescope. Excellent condition. $100, #840-0577 or
http://www.yashen.com.au/
71 Chevy 2-door Impala. Good condition. Call
Bpu 864-2895
2-11
73 Ford Econoline Van. AC, automatic, radial, 8 car.
$2900 $2900-147-688-00
Plimmer CT-FB282 Cassette Recorder with built-in Dohy System and Memory. Stop 5 minutes. $119
Pantheon airline for sale. All allen. Call or write
Groth 1-483-1022, 567 West 68th St., Sharon.
518-755-9238
Skole 360 skils. 195 cm. Solomon 505 bindings.
Scott polets. 843-7897, or 841-7535. 2-14
BATTERIES: Top quality full guaranteed free-condition batteries, $1.50 @ $19.99 with exchange. Fits iPhone 6s and 6s Plus. Battery Shop, 45 Minn. Street, just behind the Mint and 45 Minn. Street, seen on right.
Cutlass Supreme 75 Excellent condition All power Must sell now Call 841-6740 2-16-16
Battery Shop, 540 Milwaukee Street just behind the building on Friday, or on Friday and Saturday, or call forth 212-768-5911.
Planters and pots! This is our last week of business. Get a Valentine delicade at our closet — $3.50 each.
Only $899 - 1972 Vegan, 4 cyl. 842-1703. No calls.
2-15
1-25
Datan. 741 B. 8210, Grace, matchback, AC, sponsor,
Michelson, $250 841-6166
2-11
Garage sale! We've got everything, including
250 Redbud Lane, 814-4539
2-15
HELP WANTED
Technol SL-1800 Direct Drive TurboDial 92,247
AT 145,266 AT with AT 145,266 & $88.88
AT 145,266 AT with AT 145,266 & $88.88
For Sale: 2 student season tickets for K-State and Nebraska games $10 each. 842-893-09
2-10
京
1963 Corvair 45,000 miles. Built engine
excellent condition and very economical.
Parking 2-10
PIONEER
Waitress needed. Apply at Daagwud's. 644 Mass.
between 2 m.p.-5 p.m. 2-15
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
...
-
BankAmericard Mastercharge
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts
& Crafts 841-3522
in THE MARKET PLACE
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy
WAY Become an Avon代人 association and make
the money you need selling quality products on
the internet. Two openings in Lawrence.
842-812-692
842-812-693
2-16
MEN-WOMEN. JOBS ON SHIPS. Foreign. No experience required. Excellent pay for position or career or salary $3 for information, SKAPA/J F., E4. Box 204. Port Angeles, Washington 98362 8-219
Nude model is involved for art phones Monday-
Friday 10-8am, Tuesday and Thursday 10-9am,
Saturday 10-30am, Tuesday and Thursday 10-5-20-
21am.
Room and Room in exchange for help around the house. Also sleeping room, add bed per month. All photos submitted via email for photo work. Also need secretarial help 2-3 hours 2-3 days (events) per call. Call 864-553-9011.
Cushier-Hunter, beautiful area restaurant and
club Prefer over 24, part time, evening. Fax
718-530-7478.
SUMMER JOB: Over $20,000 in all 50 states.
Your money hack if you don't obtain yours.
Through our comprehensive catalogue. Send $250
to: Accounting Department, College of
Administration, 1681st Avenue, 2-9
Graduate
Assistance, three-quarter
time
Chemistry-education affairs. Apply to 370 Mauro
LLP. Send resumes to: LLP@univar.edu.
Part-time exerts in math and science. High scores in mathematics, English, or德语. Desirable. Torrent phone (912) 308-8097
Graduate assistants are available for science and engineering students leading to MS and Ph.D. degrees in the field of material science nursing. The newly formed Materials Research Center at Iowa offers an excellent opportunity in providing research training, information, write Professor Sun-Tik Hwang. Division of Materials Engineering, University of Iowa.
LOST AND FOUND
Post-tort, male or female, approx. $47.75 hr, 20 wk, over 18, ear experience. Call for appointment.
Lest a man wipe wedding band, made of yellow and silver beads, off his neck. A gold white gold pendant Reward is offered. Call 845-327-6900.
Love. One pair, ladies' shoes, the linen, white/red,
partially, red. Call Answer at 864-312-2500.
2-10
Rollback. Call Answer at 864-312-2500.
Found - Tuesday, Feb 1 at 9th and Ohio. Blinken
- Thursday, Feb 2 at 5th, fall, tail. Blinken
- Friday, Feb 3 at 8:26 after.
Lost-Feb. 2. men's white gold wedding band
Mahomet-Rock. Robinson and Matsuwa-
Reward award. Call 612-543-8900.
Found- Small wire terrier one year old, if not
claimed to: a good home. 846-2620 2-9
Found… Bus Pass on Ridge Court bus. Call 64-2
309 and identify
Found—A key with chain in front of Wrecke.
Come to 111 Flint and identify.
2-9
Light silver lighter. Brain maker. Jan 28 -
acoustic valve. Substantial reward 2-14
Foal silver ring in bathroom of Wescoe. Call
claim it. 841-6180.
2-10
Lost 179 High School ring, gold and ruby stone.
Call 843-5893 and ask for Jamel. 2-14
Harder, Colleen-black and White. Barkley,
Buckley, Harder and Harder. Last on been Jabar Black
twelve pounds. Last on been Jabar Black
twelve pounds.
Lot Tweed hat first week of February. A present has sentimental value John at 841-356-2166.
Found a box marked "Sweetmum" Call either:
813-5037 or Don 813-509
2-14
Found. Watch on the floor of Wescoe first floor hall. Call Mill Hale and describe to claim 813-275-0942.
Lost: White dog. 2 months, mixed breed, no collar or tags, asks to Matilda. 813-514-0
Found: Basketball Rocket between Allen Field House and Roohua. 844-3126 2-11
Found: Hanky, male, black and white. Call 1-298-8101 after 5:30
2-11
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uniter Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 8 Mass.
NOTICE
Jump Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
palm lamps, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12
pm-5 pm.
EUROPE WORLDWIDE academic year 2018
SAT A 4225 A 2128 First Ave. Tucker, GA
The Dance You Are All Been Waiting For. Gap
dance class, Kansas University Ballroom, $7.19 per person,
Kansas University Ballroom, 504 East 32nd Street, New York, NY 10024.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
10th & 11st
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat
0.8 Exm
Eyelooker Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
MAPPING ROUTINES
PERSONAL ORGANIZATION
MATERIALS & METHODS
COMPUTER-ASSISTED OPERATIONS
COMPETENCY AND EXPANSION
CONTEXTUAL LEARNING
CORE VALUES & PURPOSE
Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen.
& Sandwich Skop
PERSONAL
Brighten up your surroundings with a print from B Wood. Weave. We have a large collection of fabric embellishments, such as engravings. Matting is available. Come in and browse we're always ready. 1455 Marechal 3-14
New theories and research in Homosexuality will be the topic at Gay Services meetings. Feb. 15, 7:30 p.m. Regional House of the Union. Prof. Marvin Storm is glad speaker. The path 2-15
invited.
**MAKEN** MUSIC - We make it easier. Felt, blahs, music that we can play in a way that we like.
**BAND** bandify, banquette, piano, plano, McKeeps.
**GARAGE** garage, guitar, organ, piano, drum.
Gay Counselling Service; Call 842-7500, 6-12 pm,
for referrals.
REFLECTION!
Schneider's Lipsore Village Invites you to come see the wine. We DL NOT want you to buy. You can do it yourself or call us at (800) 269-4755.
Do not note an important class because you over-
call it. Call 843-2852, or 843-6212.
Call 843-2852, or 843-6212.
843-7685
VOICE YOUR OPINION—All freshmen, sophomores, and niners in Numerator or LAASB make your views known Run for election to the 2016 U.S. House at 20% recount on St. 21-1
I know there are some attractive 19-20 JSD players, but the team has not interested in meeting them. Scaur 841-1800. - 2-11
Menno live! Praise Menno! You could become an apostle. Keep listening.
2-11
Bain leans from (Blurgens) "N" offered at Richardson's Music, Call # 842-0012, or Pat # 842-1032.
846 Illinois
Happy Birthday, Toot! Joe. 2-10
Dan Pearman for Student, Senate, 2nd District
Nomenaker
2-15
VOLUNTEER-Invest yourself in humankind
VOLUNTEER Clearing House 864.380-299
2-9
Reflections of my life. It is not "forward" but
"backward." A balloon and throws your money and mine in
the water.
WRITING ASSISTANCE. Get an early start on
your work. Call Now. Give me a call. Call
Now. Believe you can help. You'll be
happy.
图示:直升飞机飞行示意图
Susan Lynn is studying in England this year but she is still celebrating her 21st birthday. Feb. 3 is her birthday. B1-11, Gritzelidge College, University of Lancaster, Burlington. Lancaster LA4Y7, Lancaster LA211.
2-11
1. 185 KU students have been surveyed in the past two weeks by Steve Laben and Rahm Miyan, candidates for student body president and chairperson of the school survey results appears in today's paper. 2-9
SERVICES OFFERED
Women's Groups, Psychodrama Workshop for women who contend women at a week-starts seminar. Woman's Groups Workshop for the conscious development Women's Workshop for the conscious development 7, 12, 7. 10, 7. 30, Call Pat Henry, 842-2299; register: 2.10
Grooming all breeds. Pet supplies, Poodle
Stud Service. Paradise, Valleys. 843-297-0
518-896-9272
mat tuition-faculty.com, experienced tutors can help you through courses, 600, 602, 102, 105, 113, 114, 116, 117, 121, 122, 123, 124, 142, 150, 588, 627
Reasonable rates. Call 842-7881. proffessor tf
Decorated Valentine Cakes. Only $5.00. Call 843-21-
6236
Aspiring young artist will design and create modern jewelry origins especially for you. Reasonably priced, your piece is ready to ship.
TYPING
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mike,
meteor, mgf typewriter. Expandring, quelling
colleagues' complaints. Resume required.
NAISMITH HALL
WingsTo EUROPE
Low-cost Travel Arrangements for Individuals & Groups
quality travel arrangements since 1951
Maupintour travel service
THENIS BINDING COOPER, The House,
Ursula's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for
binding & copying in Lawerney. Let us
help you with 8 Massachusetts phone # 484-3150.
Thank you.
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4470. t
Typist/editor. IBM Pica/cite. Quality work.
Distinguished faculty, dissertations welcome.
Mahony, 842-912-2717
Will type your paper with TLC. TER paper and
paper with LTC. 4831-6431; desk size
41-1780 inches & worksheets.
Charter Flights Youth Fares
WANTED
Female students wanted for two 2 bedrooms
a block from campus. $82.50 per
dollars. 641-7120
Home Insured for Canterbury House. Rent and
Insurance Claims. Apply online on or before Feb. 19.
Apply to Canterbury House.
Guide, pictures, players, and listeners. listen to
the play on Monday evening from 6:18 to
9:00 on KANU-85.
Roommate wanted - female to share Towers
room, 843-1033, all utilities B72, $115
www.roommates.com, 843-1033
1 male roommate to share 3 bedrooms mobile
room. Max occupancy is 650 people.
735 person plus, utilization Call Host 614-891-209
or visit www.airportmobil.com
Male roommate, 2 bedroom apartment, 17th and
Ohio. 86th month. Call 842-5357 anytime.
KU Union Bldg./900 Mass.
Hillcrest & The Mails Ctrs.
842 1031
Young man with 6 yr, old kid and 2 or 3 people for homeliness, cooking, child care, community service. Call 718-549-5055 or visit frence.brite. Reft $75 per month plus a monthly fee. For appointment call Sleeper at 841-2057 after 2 p.m.
--on commute for three bedroom townhouse
formal residence except for bedroom. Call 841-734-2-15
www.greathomesforsale.com
Roommate wanted, 3 bedroom trailer, plenty
of space, with laundry and dryer room.
388 month, 843-671-0
2-11
Female roommate to share large 2-bedroom
apartment, 841-794-894 or inquire at 1142-894-
north, third floor.
Early-aging, female teammate to share 2 bedroom
department 6 from camps in Bayside - 84205-8975
and St. Mary's - 84205-8183
30价儿童居家点缀团队 Children's Hour
给孩子们提供一个丰富、充满乐趣的时光。给予它们 of your time to help a child
和 their family.
Wanted KU-K位 badcash tellin) in student section. As many as possible. No reasonable offers refilled will pay accordingly 812-459-459
2-15
SR-16 Calculator SR-11 Alight, 11right, 10left
Female roommate wanted for 2-bedroom apart-
ment in a 52nd month. On bus route Call 2-411
482-8872
Female roommate to share two bedroom apartm
one block from campus $82 plus 15 utilitie
payments.
Need 9 tickets to KU-KSU game. Call 843-7706.
Nice room for one person beginning June 1.
Room size: 24' x 30'.
864-498 (campus), or B2-854-2 (home), 2-32.
Male roommate for 2 bedroom duplex. Furnished
unfinished, $875 per month, plus 1g unit
charges.
Node role to: Worlds of Fun callbacks. Sat. Feb.
12. Share information. Call: Sin 811-7459
6. need 1 iLocks to KU-K-State game. Willing to
pay extra. Call 842-7575
2-11
- Pool
- Smoker
- Ping Pong
Female to share nicely furnished 2 bedroom
公寓. Washroom and dryer. 482-9012 evenings.
Female roommate wanted. Large apartment. Just
roommates up to 1/8 each; 1-25 and 2-15
433 802 after e.
has the eyeglasses you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 841-7421
The Chalk Hawk
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
The Chalk Hawk
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Fees-Ball
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
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16
Wednesday, February 9, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Commission candidates air views
By JOHN McANULTY
Twelve candidates are vying for three seats on the Lawrence City Commission, making a primary election necessary to reduce the field.
Six of the 12 will be eliminated in the primary March 8.
At stake are three seats now held by
Mike Freed Pence, Barkley Clark and Carl
Milneck.
The general election will be April 5.
Pence announced in December that he would seek re-election. Clark and Millebek were indicted.
The 12 candidates, in the order that they filed with the city clerk, are:
*JACK ROSE*, 45, 3430 Camelback Drive. He is business manager of the department of chemistry at the University of Kansas. He served on the city commission from 1971 to 175 and was mayor of Lawrence from 1974 to 175. He didn't seek re-election.
Rose is a 1953 KU graduate with a degree in industrial management from the School of Business. He said in early January that trash collection in the city was a major problem and that it was symptomatic of larger problems in city government.
*JERRY ALBERSON*, 36, 2010 Clifton Court. He is an employee of Hallmark cards in Lawrence. He ran unsuccessfully for a seat on the 1973 primary election.
He is a native Kansan who has lived in Lawrence for 20 years. He managed Albertson Dairy from 1962 to 1967. He also said trash collection was a major problem in the city and called for sound and efficient operation in city hall.
**ED CARTER,** 34, 1115 W. 27th St. Ter.
*ED BIDEN,* district manager for Southern West Bell Telephone Co. since 1968. He is 1968 Bachelor from Kansas State College at Pittsburg.
Carter is president of the Lawrence Rotary Club, director of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, and chairman of the board of the Lawrence Junior College. Carter called for competent, responsive, and fair minded management of the city.
**CARL MIBEK, 46, 1208 Delaware St. He was elected to the commission in 1975. He is the head of the social studies department and teaches school and coach of the debate team there.
Mibeeck is a 1954 graduate of Wichita State University and has earned masters degrees in Electrical Engineering at the University of California at Los Angeles and KU, respectively. On the commission he has stressed the need for neighborhood news agencies and said he would run on his record.
BETTE MALLOONE, 34, 400 Locust St.
She is a housewife, secretary-treasurer of the North Lawrence Improvement Association and the Lawrence Parent-Teacher Association.
She is a life-long resident of Lawrence and said the city government needed to be more responsive to its citizens and to its employees.
**BARKLE CLARK, 37, 1511 Crescent Road.** He is an incumbent commissioner and served as mayor in 1975 and 1976. He is a professor of law at KU who graduated from Amherst (Mass). College and from the Harvard University. School of Law.
He said that he hoped he attained his goal of a commissioner who listens to both sides of any issue, who seeks workable solutions and who has no conflicts of interest.
$\textcircled{5}$ PHILLIP PERRY, 27, 932 Rhobe Island St. He is employed in the commercial department of the Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. and as a steward for Local 6407 of the Communications Workers of America.
Perry cited trash problems, the crisis within the city planning staff and the resignation of the community development boards as shortcomings in city government.
*MURIEL PAUL, 438 Elm St. declined to give her age because she said it was "ageist to ask." Paul is now giving all of her time to civic activities including the Lawrence Voices, of which she is co-chairman, and the North Lawrence Planning Council.
She has worked as a psychiatric social worker, probation officer, college counselor, teacher and assistant director of the School of the University of Missouri at Columbia. She said she had elected, she would work to make Lawrence free of favoritism and exploitation.
She holds a bachelor's degree from KU and a master's from the Teachers College of Columbia University.
MARGARET BRUN, 52, 2012 N Fifth St.
BAY is a homemaker who has lived in
the Bronx for over 30 years.
She said her candidacy stemmed from her observance of disregard and lack of responsibility to the citizens of Lawrence by the commission.
graduate of Mount St. Scholastica's Academy in Atchison.
- FLOYD COBLER, 47, 1800 Haskell Ave. vice-chairman of the Edgewood Homes Tenants Association (ECKAN) and a freshman at KU studying accounting and public policy. Duluth County Community Resource Board of ECKAN, an anti-poverty agency.
- Cobler said city government needed to bring the public decisions and issues back to the people. He also said the city's Community Development funds should be used to improve the transportation system. One good use of the funds, he said, would be to provide public transportation.
- DAVID HANN, 32, 1508 E. 13th St. He is coordinator of ECKAN's weatherization program, which upgrades the insulation of poues in low income areas.
He has lived in Lawrence for 6½ years and received a bachelor's degree from KU in 1970 and a master's degree in public administration in New York. He group. Hamm said his main goal was to have the city emphasize neighborhoods more and live up to the commitments it has to the citizens in them. **JERRY RILING, 22, $50 Pioneer Road.** He is a part-time junior at Sandy's Drive-In. He works as the employee worker at commission meetings.
A graduate of Lawrence High School, Rilking has attended KU. He said his main purpose in the environment, more jobs and a continuation of the "excellent performance of neighborhood." He said his attendance at all but one class helped him be helped him for the commission.
According to the city clerk's office, only three persons who are registered voters of New York and New Jersey are eligible.
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Feb.1-17
For further information contact 864-2073 or 841-6324
Applications and information booklets now available at the S.U.A. office.Main level.Kansas Union Building.
1977-78 SUA Officers & Board Selection
Informational meeting for all interested persons on Monday, February 21, 3:15 p.m. Parlor A Kansas Union Building.
SUA
APPLICATIONS DUE 5:00 p.m., TUESDAY, MARCH 1.
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See stories page eight
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Editorial focus on South Africa
Vol.87
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
See page four
2 KU Regents replaced by K-State alumni
Per Cent Budget Increase Approved
WSU
FHKSC
KSU
KU
EKSC
PKSC
EKSC
EKSC
KSU
PKSC
PKSC
EKSC
FY1970 FY1971 FY1972 FY1973 FY1974 FY1975 FY1976 FY1977
Statistics refute Everett's charge
By BILL SNIFFEN Contributing Writer
Although State Sen. Donn Everett, R-Ranhamtah, has said that the University of Kansas seemed to fare better at budget time than the other Board of Regents institutions because of KU dominance on the Board, statistics disagree.
Data collected from the minutes from Regents meetings during fiscal years 1970 to 1977 indicate a flip-flop pattern between KU and Kansas State University. Over-all percentage budget increases for both institutions were shown, despite KU's dominance on the Board.
Everett introduced a bill in the Senate in December that proposed limiting to one the number of board members from any one Regents institution. KU, K-State, Wichita State University, Emporia Kansas State College, Kansas State College at Pittsburgh, Kentucky College and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina are the seven Regents institutions.
THE BILL WAS KILLED Monday in a Senate committee, but a resolution was
adopted urging Gov. Robert Bennett to sound as a callerion when selecting Reporter
That resolution seems to have been taken seriously. Bennett yesterday appointed two K-State alumni to the Board, replacing two KU alumni, both seven-year veterans of the Board, who had made known they were available for reappointment.
Although more Regents have graduated from KU than any of the other Regent institutions (36 during the eight-year period studied, as compared with 11 from K-State, 10 from Wichita State and four from the other Regent institutions or outside the state) they emerged in the amount these eight boards recommended to the Kansas Legislature.
THE LARGEST differences in funding between the two institutions occurred in fiscal year 1971, when KU received a 14.9 per cent increase and K-State received an 11.3 per cent increase. The smallest difference was between KU received a 10.6 per cent increase and K-State received a 10.5 per cent increase over their past year's operating budgets.
In two other fiscal years, 1973 and 1976,
the largest a percentage increase than
KSLover.
KU received more money during the eight-year period because of its higher enrollment, making comparisons based on percentage increases (see graph) more valid than comparisons of total budget dollars.
K-STATE received a greater percentage increase than KU in fiscal years 1970, 1972, 1974 and 1977. The academic makeup of the determined those year's buddies were:
1790: four KU alumni, four KSU, one WSU
1972: five KU, two KSU, one HSA.
1974: four KUSI one KSU1, one Fort Hays
1975: four KUSI one KUSI1, one Fort Hays
State received the highest percentage budget increase recommendations, although only two WSU alumni were on the Board.
● 1974:八KU, one K-State, one WSU and one out-of-state. (Each Board has nine members.) ● Only the meetings are presented at the meetings are listed above.)
From fiscal years 1970 to 1975, Wichita
Wichita received more during this period, a Regents spokesman said, because the school had just become a Regents institution and needed more money, and because WSU trained many people in pharmacy and laboratory technology.
IN A TELEPHONE interview last night, Everett, a KU graduate, said, "I don't want to enter in a debate about who got what, when or where. That isn't the point."
Everett he wanted only to bring attention to what he called "a long-standing tradition of KU dominance on the board that intimidates other members."
Everett said the statistics gathered from
past meetings of the Regents meetings proved
nothing.
"Figures don't impress me," he said. "As far as I'm concerned, that's a matter for you folks and history to decide. I have my own opinions."
TOPEKA-Gov. Robert Bennett was so "profoundly affected" by charges of University of Kansas domination of the Board of Regents that he refused to reappoint Regents Jess Stuart and Paul Wunsh, both from a source close to Bennett yesterday.
Bennett yesterday appointed two Kansas State University graduates, Frank Lowman of Hays and Marshal Reeve of Garden City, to succeed Stewart and Wunsch, who both made it known they were available for reappointment. Bennett, at a press conference, denied he didn't appoint Stewart densh because they were KU graduates.
HOWEVER, the source, who asked not to be identified, said Bennett's decision was a direct response to reaction over a bill by Sen. Don Everett, R-Manhattan, that would have required that only a single member of one Regents institution be on the board.
After Everett announced in December that he will bill, the source said, Bennett felt pressured to give him from citizens who agreed with Everett that KU dominated the board. At the time, seven lawyers were involved.
by STEVE FRAZIE
Staff Reporter
Bernett also believed, the source said, he needed more political support in Western countries.
Candidates set to spar tonight
Bennett said to bow to political pressure
A debate between the three student body president and vice president teams is to be at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas University. The debate will be broadcast live by KJHK. 90.7 FM.
During the two-hour debate, the candidates will be asked questions by a panel composed of Eldon Fields, SenXen Killian, and Sara Hicks. science; Jim Bates, Kanan editor; Teddash Tessell, student body president. Kathy Hoggard, director of the KU
By STEVE FRAZIER
Each team will be limited to 10-minute open remarks, and 5-minute closing remarks. Responses will be limited to three minutes and questioners are allowed to repeat a question, if the candidate avoids an answer. All candidates must answer all questions asked them, but they are allowed to confer with other teams.
the presidential and vice presidential candidates are Sherri Grey, Manhattan lawyer Sharon Levine and Sophonore; Steve Leben, El Diante Junior, and Alpain Miyan, Kansas City, Mo., sophonore; and Randy McKernan, Salina junior, and Katie Rhoads, Chicago.
Hot air balloon idea fails to get off ground
student Senate elections will be Feb.16 and 17.
Bv SANDY DECHANT
Staff Reporter
The use of a hot air balloon as a campaign technique was overruled last night by the Student Senate Elections Committee, which will hold a debate with a "carnival air" to the Senate elections.
The balloon was to be sponsored by the Avanti, coalition sophomore class candidates. It would have been inflated in front of Strong Hall within the next four days.
Today is the 10th anniversary of the birth of William Allen White, the Pulitzer Prize winner editor of the Emporia Gazette and a founder of the KU School of Journalism is named.
Clayton Kirkpatrick, editor of the Chicago Tribune, will become the 28th recipient of the William Allen White Foundation's annual Merit at a noon luncheon today.
Chicago editor honored today
The Award for Journalistic Merit annually goes to a journalist "who exemplifies William Allen White in service to his profession and to his country." The 1976 recipient was Peter Lisagor, the late Washington columnist.
The luncheon will be in the Kauas Room of the University of Kansas will speak on the *Ploesse of Journalism*.
Despite an argument by Greg Snackne, Avanti candidate for sophomore class president, that the balloon was intended to increase voter turnout and to emphasize the issues of the Avanti class candidates, the event would have been a "political gimmick that would lend a carnival atmosphere to the campaign."
The resolution asked the Elections Committee to "bar parades and large balloons from student elections" because of a clause in the Senate Rules and Regulations restricting campaign activities.
According to the Senate rules, "It is necessary to prevent political excesses from surrounding the electoral process with a carnival air through the introduction of gimmicks that have no proper place in that process."
THE COMMITTEE'S action was the result of a resolution submitted Tuesday afternoon to Kevin Flynn, Elections Committee chairman, by Lyle Lyne Garell, Senate candidate, and Don Green, vice candidate, both of the Spectrum coalition.
GARELL AND Green said they submitted the resolution after they had heard rumors about their plans.
See BALLOON DIES page nine
Senate elections will be Feb. 16-17.
EAGLE
Student hostess
It wasn't all politics at a state legislator's dinner last night at Springs sophomore, politics didn't even enter the picture.
Templin residence hall. At least for Debbie Sedorek, Bonner Springs sophomore, politics didn't even enter the picture.
BENNETT thought to win Senate confirmation of his appointments he would need every Republican vote, including Everett's, if the Democrats decided to block him. He said the Republicans hold a slight edge over the Democrats in the Senate, 21-19.
EVERETT HAD said that he knew his book was unrealistic and wouldn't pass, but that he didn't.
"I think the governor did a hell of a good job on his appointments." Fowett said.
At the news conference yesterday, Bennett said, "I felt inclined to appoint two K-Staters because they are good men from the school system," and they will be credit to the Board of Regents.
Everett's bill to limit Regents memorial died in a Senate committee Monday, after Republicans resolution asking the governor to consider where a prospective Regent went to.
Everett wouldn't speculate on whether reactions to his bill had affected Bennett's decision because, he said, "What the governor said about business. I find him pretty independent, perplexed."
"IREALLY don't think the governor had that in mind," he said. "I think Bennett is hoping both of his appointments will represent all the Regents institutions."
Lowman said he didn't think he was appointed because he was a K-State graduate or because he was from western Kansas.
Reve couldn't be reached last night for comment.
Wunsch said he didn't know why he wasn't reappointed. Stewart reportedly was out of town and couldn't be reached for comment last night.
Chancellor Archie Dykes said, "These new appointments will serve with the same enthusiasm."
"I don't think it'll have any effect on the University of Kansas. The Regents in their deliberations have never been influenced by the school from which they took their agents."
DVKES SAID he didn't think Everett's assertion of KU domination on the board had been so clear.
Duane Acker, president of K-State, called Lowman and Reeve "two very fine men who will serve higher education in Kansas very well."
"I don't know his reason for not reap-
pointing Mr. Wuruch and Mr. Stewart," he
See BENNETT page seven
Kansas state legislators halted work last night to attend the sixth annual University of Kansas legislators' dinner in Templin Hall.
The Association of University Residence
Balls (AURH) last sponsor the dinner
for the annual reunion.
Legislators visit dorm for dinner
State Sen. Joe Warren, D-Maple City, said that only 30 legislators attended the first dinner, but that they had such a good time they talked others into going to the next one.
Mike Taraboulos, AUHR president, said about 180 legislators usually attended the session.
The legislators' evening began with a bus ride from Topeka. Then, in the Templin Hall lobby, legislators and KU administrators hired with student hosts and hostesses.
As people rulled in the lobby, a string quail played softly to the accompaniment of drums.
Several speeches and a short movie about KU students followed dinner.
At each table, people from varied backgrounds met for the first time. Warren, for example, talked with Donna Holmberg, Overland Park junior, and Becky Taylor, Overland Park senior, about topics ranging from Warren's childhood to medicine.
Even an ardent assistant of Kansas State University, State Rep. Don Crumblicker, R-Iowa, served as chair of the committee.
A student at Crumbaker's table brought him a cardboard Jayhawk, Crumbaker, dressed in K-State colors of purple and white, accepted.
State Rep. Clarence Love, D-Kansas City, said he liked coming to the University more than the University's coming to Topeka and asking for money.
Tedde Tashheff, student body president,
had a simple reason for attending.
"It's a free dinner," she said.
2
Thursday, February 10, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Rubin Carter resentenced
PATERSON, N.J.- Former boxer Rubin 'Hurricane' Carter was sentenced last to two consecutive life prison terms and codefendant John Arts was given three concurrent life terms for their second conviction on triple murder charges. The former middleweight boxer's sentence of two consecutive and one concurrent life term was the same sentence for the first trial with three consecutive and one persons inside a Peterson bar. Carter will be eligible for parole in 1983. Arts will be eligible in 1981.
Castro seeks U.S. trade
NEW YORK—Cuban President Fidel Castro said in an interview yesterday he would begin to trade with the United States as a means of normalizing relations between the two nations.
sent the U.S. CBS interviewer Bill Moyers, who met with him in Cuba, that trade was the best way to restore relations between Washington and Hawaii to normal. "Both Cuba and the U.S.A. will be benefitted by a commercial exchange," he said through an interpreter.
tend through an inventory of important sugar producers and you are important sugar consumers, he said. We are close to him. In one a few hours, any of our customers may call us.
ships could take sugar to the USA.
Castro's remarks were made after Secretary of State Cyrus Vance suggested at a news conference that Washington might be ready to improve relations with Cuba, broken in January 1961.
Crash kills Alia Hussein
AMMAN, Jordan—Queen Alia of Jordan, 28, tandem wife of King Hussein, was killed yesterday in the crash of a Jordanian military helicopter caught in a violent raidstorm.
His voice breaking with emotion, King Hussein went on national radio to announce the queen's death.
"I mourn my Alia, the queen, my precious companion," Hussein said in a deep, trembling voice.
Amman radio said the crash, which also killed Minister of Health Mohammed Al Bashir, occurred near the town of Taflai, about 140 miles south of the capital.
The king said Alaa spent the day expecting a hospital in the southern Jordanian city of Amman returning home to Armenia. he said.
The king said Alaia spent the day inspecting a hospital in the southern Jordanian town. Her aircraft crashed as she was returning home to Armenian, he said.
Pearson among politicians on illegal contribution list
WASHINGTON (AP) - American Airlines made public yesterday a list of 71 current and former members of Congress, including Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., who received about $40,000 in illegal corporate contributions between 1971 and 1973.
Federal law forbids corporate contributions to political campaigns.
Pearson said yesterday that he
unknowingly received $300 in illegal
contributions from American Airlines but that
the money was returned last month.
The donations, according to American, included $400 to Pearson at a reception in December 1971, but Pearson said the actual figure was $300.
Pearson said he was notified Jan. 11, 1977, by Jim Bass, a vice president of American, that the donation had come from illegal corporate funds.
"Mr. Bass advised my staff that there was no way that I or any of my staff could have known that this contribution had been drawn from illegal funds," Pearson said in a statement.
Pearson said a check for the amount of the donation was sent to American Jan, 25 after he notified Sen. Howard Cannon, D-Mass., that he had received Ethical Election Committee, of his intentions.
recipients included former President Gerald R. Ford, $100; Transportation Minister Richard S. Warnock; Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, $100; Senate Republican Minority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., $200; Rep. Al Ullman, D-Ore, Chairman House Ways and Means Committee. $400.
Others included Rep. Peter Rodino, D-
chairman of the House Judiciary C
committee and Rep. Robert O'Reilly.
D-W.V., chairman of the committee on interstate and foreign commerce, $250; Jennings Randolph, D-W.V., chairman of the Senate Public Works Committee, $500; and Robert G. P Griffin, R-Mich., former Senate minor whip, $1,000.
The only current or former member of Congress to receive $1,000 or more was former Rep. Ed Edmonson of Oklahoma, who received $1,100.
The payments were disclosed in an American Airlines' filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission as part of an administrative settlement of the airline's failure to reptit stockholders its political activities from 1964 through 1973.
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1977-78 SUA Officers & Board Selection
Applications and information booklets now available at the S.U.A. office.Main level.Kansas Union Building.
Informational meeting for all interested persons on Monday, February 21, 3:15 p.m. Parlor A Kansas Union Building.
SUA
APPLICATIONS DUE 5:00 p.m., TUESDAY, MARCH 1.
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SUA
QUALIFICATIONS
Sherri Grey
President, All Scholarship Hall Council (ASHC)
Member, ASHC Contacts and Finance Standing Committee
Student Senator
Member, Student Senate Student Housing Board
Member, Student Senate Satellite Union Task Force
Task Force Member, Kansas Union Memorial Corr
Member, Merchandising Memorial Board of Directors Member, Merchandising Policies and Membership
Member, Satellite Union Facilities Advisory Committee
Member, KU Administrative Housing Board LLP & University Title IX
Co-chair, AURN/ASHC Additional Comprehensive Education (ACE) Program
Member, Search Committee for the Vice-
Chancellor for Student Affairs
Member, AHB Subcommittee on Title IX Member, Pearson Trust Committee
Member, College Assembly (Senior Representative)
Staff, KU Summer Freshman and Transfer Student Orientation
Don Green
Student Senator
Member, Student Rights, Responsibilities and Privileges Committee
Chair, Title IX Subcommittee
Member, Elections Subcommittee
Member, University Council
Member, Planning and Resources
Member, University Council Member, Planning and Resources
Committee
Member, SenEx
Member, StudEx
Member, Jayhawker Business Staff
Headquarters Volunteer
KU Debate Squad
Treasurer, SIL Society
(Sophomore Honorary)
Two years Student Senator Chairperson, Finance and Auditing Com-
McKearnan & Rhoads
Two Years Student Se.am
Chairperson, Finance and Auditing Commitee
University Council
Student Executive Committee
President, GSP-Corbin
AURH President's Council
Higher Education Week Steering Committee
President, SIL Society
SA
Nem
killed
yested
Nem
Steve Leben
- Chairperson, Student Senate Communications Committee
- Member, KU Long-Range Planning Committee
- Former Member, Student Executive Committee and Student Senate
- Treasurer, KU-Y McKearnan-Rhoads
McKearnan-Rhoads Campaign Literature 1977
Ralph Munyan
-Vice President, Sophomore Class
- Vice President, Sophomore or
- Member, Student Senate
- Member, Student Senate Communication
- University Relations Director, SIL Society (sophomore honorary)
- Director, Jayhawk College Quiz Bowl
Campaign Literature 1977
S
COMPARE
SPECTRUM
PAID FOR BY SPECTRUM
Thursday, February 10, 1977
University Daily Kansan
3
Monday
IC
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Com- nanning executive
Rhoads
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munica-
IL Soci-
Bowl
Munyan
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Nemechek defense rests with psychiatrist's views
SALINA (AP)—Francis Donaln Nemechek was in a psychotic state when he killed four women, a psychiatrist testified in Nemechek's murder trial. Its case in Nemechek's murder trial.
M
Cody said the 26-year-old defendant "was not in touch with reality in an emotional state," he said.
The psychiatrist, John Cody, of the High Plains Mental Health Center at Hays, also testified that Nemechok left a little boy to stay with his mother for a patred he felt for his former wife.
His testimony ended a day-long presentation by the defense in which eight
"These women were not substitutes for his wife, and the rage he felt for his wife was substituted on these women whom he had no intention to kill." Cody said.
Prosecuting attorneys indicated they intended to offer rebalanced testimony today in a hearing that was scheduled for next month.
Namechek, from WaKeeney, has pleaded innocent by reason of insanity to five first-degree murder charges resulting from separate incidents during a 21-month soon.
Cody acknowledged under cross examination that "no one can be 100 per cent sure in matters like this." But he said it was unlikely that Nemechek lied to him during a psychiatric examination last November.
The psychiatrist said Nemechek's actions at the time of each murder were "a tremendous outburst of uncontrolled rage" precipitated by rejection by his former wife, Cindy. There were divorced in October 1974, two months before the first murders.
"He was not really able to tell whether they—the victims—were his wife or not," Cody said. In each instance, "he had a feeling of punishing Cindy."
Nemechek was arrested last August for the stabbing death of Paula Fabriza, 16, of Ellis. She was killed after her abduction by a man she encountered there, where she worked as a park rangerette.
Spain ends rift with U.S.S.R. after 40 years
MADRID (AP)—Spain-established diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union yesterday, ending a nearly 40-year rift that won the Spanish Civil War.
A few hours after the announcements in Madrid and Moscow, King Juan Carlos began a mission to another riff of the Franco years by flying to Rome for a visit to the king under Paul VI. The first visit by a Spanish ruler to a Roman Catholic pontifex since 1923.
E-reestablishment of the Soviet diplomatic tie came just a day after the Spanish government decreed a law that could result in legalization of the Communist party. It allows the supreme court to decide the legal fate of political parties instead of the cabinet.
Spain also renewed relations yesterday with Czechoslovakia and Hungary, the last two countries in the Soviet Bloc without diplomatic ties to Spain.
Six weeks later, Nemechek signed a confession that he killed Carla Baker, 20. Baker was a KU student. She disappeared on June 30, 1976, after setting out on a motorcycle to her home in Hays. Her body was found three months later at the same reservoir.
King Juan Carlos and Greek-born Queen Sofia arrived in Rome yesterday afternoon and were to be received by the Pope today. The King will send a royal ruler to visit a pontiff, seeing PXI.
Relations between the vatican and Spain, a Roman Catholic country, improved suddenly last year when the king gave up the 500-year old right of Spanish rulers to the pope. The pope, in 2016, bishops. Franco had repeatedly refused Pope Paul's request for this.
Nemechek's confession, introduced into evidence Tessyk, also related that he shot to death Chryslin Lymen Young, 21, and Diane Lovette, 20, both from Fort Madison, Iowa, at an abandoned farm house in December 1974. He is also charged with the murder of son, Gayy, who died of exposure in freezing temperatures outside the house.
Cody testified at the time of the killings Nemechek didn't understand the nature of his acts and wasn't able to explain what he did, which is necessary to a legal defense of insanity.
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Lloyd McBride, who left school at age 14 for a factory job, was the apparent winner over rebel Edward Sadlowski yesterday in a bitter contest for the presidency of the United Steelworkers union.
Steelworkers pick president
An unofficial survey by the Associated Press gave the 69-year-old St. Louis native a 65 per cent plurality. Almost 490,000 votes were cast in the 1.4-million member union.
"We could claim victory now and be safe," McBride said by telephone from his home. "We've agreed we will not make an official claim to victory until Thursday."
The AP figures, compiled from reports to the union's district offices, gave McBride 286,963 and Sadliowski 193,192 at 3,593 of the union's 5,000 locals.
MrBride's major support came from the South and the West, where most of the locals are small and outside the basic steel industry, he won a sizeable 38,000-vote plurality.
Retiring President I. W. Abel, who had embroiled Mr. Bride, said "He has a victory.
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)—Authorities backed down last night and offered "complete and total" immunity from prosecution to a gunman holding a real estate executive hostage at gunpoint for an apartment believed wired with dynamite.
"As I understand the grant of immunity, it is complete and total if he releases the hostage unharmed," Deputy Marion County prosecutor George Martz said.
Martz said the offer had been delivered to Anthony 'Tony' Kirkess, 44, who Tuesday morning took Richard Hall hostage after complaining that Hall had cheated him on some real estate he was trying to develop as a shopping center.
Arritis demanded immunity from prosecution and cancellation of a $130,000 mortgage that he said Hall's two real estate firms were foreclosing.
The grant of immunity was a key demand made by Kirstis, Asked if Hall might decide to press charges after being released, Martz replied, "As I understand it under the terms of the grant he could not do that."
Hall was permitted to speak to his wife on the telephone Tuesday night. His father, John Hall, said he was saying the mortgage would be canceled. He also confirmed that the firms had influenced two grocery stores and a real estate firm to locate on property owned by Kirstie.
Kurtis, who earlier yesterday boasted that police "are lucky they're dealing with me and I'm stable," was said to be considering the offer. He also had said the officers were "very helpful" at Hall's companies, Hall Hotell Co. Realtors and Meridian Mortgage, was not adequate.
Assistant Teacher Chief William Pond appealed to news media and spectators to stay out of the line of Kirtas' third floor and think over the offer, without distractions.
Authorities offer gunman immunity
In a telephone conversation released by police late yesterday Hall said, "This is Dick Hall. I have food and I have water. I have been treated all right."
"This guy (Kirstis) is tired. He hasn't
saw him. I think he at a critical site.
Pond said.
Kurtis was described by his brothers and friends as an expert in weapons and exposition.
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Reflection
Steve Leben and Ralph Munyan, candidates for student body president and vice president, and the REFLECTION candidates for Student Senate have surveyed 1,185 KU students on Senate issues, because they are sincere in their desire to open new lines of communication between the Senate and the students. Here is the second of the three part survey.
Q- Planning is underway to make improvements in KU's recreational facilities. It is being proposed that a new fee of $2 to a 54 semester be assessed for these improvements. Would you favor making such improvements in recreational facilities?
RECREATIONAL FACILITIES
BUS SERVICE
O= If the KU bus system could have more night service and/ or Saturday service through an increase in bus pass price of $24 from its present price of $18, would you favor the additional service?
We will begin a program of recreational facilities improvements at the beginning of the Senate session in March. This will be done as much as possible within the $10,000 surplus the Senate has built up from student activity fees. We would oppose any increase in fees until the surplus has been spent, and then we will make sure that fees are not increased unless absolutely necessary.
Yes — 55% No — 32% No opinion — 13%
Yes — 40% No — 37% Oppose all bus routes and their costs. We will then survey users of the bus system as we see whether they would be willing to pay for the extra service. Additionally, a federally-funded study of Lawrence's transportation needs is scheduled for this semester. We will include any modifications suggested by that study in our survey of bus users.
Steve Leben and Ralph Munyan—they care enough about you to ask your opinion.
Vote for them on February 16 and 17.
Leben-Munyan
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small arms instructor while he was a corporal at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. However, West Point said it might had no records of his service there.
West Point spokesman Maj. William Smullen said Kirtisis was not employed there "as far as we have been able to determine."
Smullen said that the academy's personnel records go back only three years, and that none of the faculty and staff were present. The academy in the 1905 remembered Kirtsia.
Smullen said a search of military records in Washington would be required to discover if Kiritsis had ever worked at West Point.
An Indianapolis radio station carried a report that the bomb is displayed ready to explode.
The bomb squad went to the scene
Tuesday evening, several hours after Kirkitsa kidnapped Hall from his downtown office and barricaded himself inside the apartment. He told police that apartment was wired to explode if they shot through the windows or tried to force the door.
Kiritis had been using dynamite to clear
a 18-acre plot he wanted to develop into a shopping center.
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4
Thursday, February 10, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Focus on Southern Africa
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Roaring lions and Tarzan yells. Safaris and tribal rights. Dark steamed jungles and wallowing hippos. This is the Africa of the movies.
Oppressed blacks and frightened whites. Posturing two-bit dictators and attempts at democracy. Fledgling industries and hopeful masses. This is the Africa of the Six O'Clock News.
The first set of images was, of course, a stereotyped caricature. Hollywood took little bits of reality and blew them out of all proportion.
BUT THE second set of images is also an oversimplification. All through Africa, there are families going through their day-to-day affairs as if Vorster and apartheid were just different experiences in southern Africa. N everyone in Africa—or even in southern Africa—a guerrilla or a racist.
Still, there are racists and there are guerillas. And both of these groups are making news. They are governing and killing and steadily affecting the lives of all Africans.
And, to some extent, they are affecting the lives of all Americans. It's not that it is another us vs. the communists, with takeovers imminent in all sorts of unproven societies. It is more that takeovers are often imminent there and that there are Cuban and Chinese advisers dotting the landscape. It is, more important, a social and a moral matter.
Whites slipping in Africa
THE UNITED States, as a nation of many races, cannot stand by and ignore racial wars in any part of the world. Racial hatred and strife are contagious, and need to be understood and, if at all possible, prevented. For problems "ignored" in Southern Africa will eventually come and haunt us here.
In South Africa and Rhodesia the dream of black majority rule every day becomes more of a reality as white governing forces slowly recognize that their much maligned imperialistic reign is eroding in many ways. Children begin to gain widespread support.
Jim Smith and his embattled Rhodesian Front party should do the world a favor right now and work quickly to come to a satisfactory agreement with British, American and Zimbabwean (Zimbabwe is the African name for Rhodesia) for the next decade. But the century colonial enterprise won't become another excuse for international war.
Rhodesia's demise has been a virtual inevitability for more than a decade. Since illegally decaring unilateral international sanctions against the country's 720,000 whites and more than six million blacks have been living in twilight world, with both the Organization of African Unity and National imposing trade embargoes and membership exclusion.
SEVEN TIMES since the mid-60s efforts have been made to resolve the dispute. Seven times, Smith's stubbornness and have led to negotiation breakdowns.
Today, the boot is on the other foot and the desperate Smith must look for sympathy from those nations whom be once rejected. With Indonesian nationalists in such Mozambique, guerrilla forces are operating which daily find more and more recruits willing to fight for their nationalist cause. Two groups, the ZAPU (ZAPU) led by Johana Nkoma and the Zimbabwe African National Union
(ZANU) led by Robert Mugabe and the N, Nabauhadi Sithole coalesced in October 1978 to form the Patriot Front. Other leaders include Ralph Smith, who are tools of Russian imperialism.
Another black nationalist group is the African National Council (ANC) led by Bishop Ablel Muzorewa, which has a popular following in Rhodesia and has
BABY SUE
Paul Addison
Editorial Writer
be called the most responsible body of all, hv Smith.
In the past year, white Rhodesia's downfall has been precipitated both by an increase in guerrilla warfare and international talks in Zambia and South Africa, which have led to settlement. Having rejected both British and black nationalist proposals for a constitutional settlement in March 1976, Smith accepted in September the "Kissinger" plan for a bracial government within two years, saying it had been made clear to him that Rhodesia couldn't possibly any help or support from the free world.
NEITHER LEADERS of ZAPU or ZANU, or presidents from five邻igrating countries, however, accepted the invitation to convene a conference to work out a substitute. The subsequent meetings at Geneva from October 1976 through January 1977 broke down on Jan. 24, 1977. They convened a conference of Smith's hard-headed myopia.
Smith, while grating the repeal of several segregationist laws, no longer really has control of Rhodesian events and that has resulted in Rhodesia is estimated to have over 50,000 men under arms, half of them black, and about 1,200 whites are leaving the country every month, thus aggravating the nation's shortage of skilled man-
Recent reports also indicate that army officers are gradually realizing the improbability of victory in a protracted guerrilla war and believe that either provincialization—splitting Rhodesia into three developed areas, two black or one or a radically larger constitution is necessary to avoid a bloodthatch.
NEITHER SMITH nor Rhodesian whites can expect any help from their equally embattled racist neighbor, the Republic of South Africa. There, where Mr. Obama and his team have their superiority over the rest of the nation's 21 million people, John Voster and the National Party remain convinced that South Africa can resolve remaining colonial issues and balance her economic role against black political demands.
Vorster's assertions contain a veneer of truth. Both Malawi and Zambia need new outlets to the sea, which South Africa could possibly provide in the future, and all South African nations need economic biological assistance from elsewhere.
BLACK RESISTANCE to white supremacy has been slowly but surely erased. The riots and job boycotts, were feeney and successfully carried out through the
latter half of 1976 in protest of the nation's apartheid policy.
The United Nations General Assembly meanwhile has reaffirmed the legitimacy of the "struggle of the oppressed people of South Africa for the rights of the people and the exercise of their naïve right to self-determination."
The South African issue isn't simply a matter of apartheid and equality but is also a matter of economics. White South Africans contend that black male wages are lower than white males in most other African nations. White male wages, however, average $600 a month.
ALREADY, WAYS in which to divide fairly the country's rich gold, diamond and mineral reserves have been suggested. Many blacks have suggested a "proportion" scheme where whites would receive a proportion of the land and wealth based on their numbers. Blacks are thus expected to construct a confederate-type structure guaranteeing regional autonomy under a loose national government.
Besides her own inner trauma South Africa is beset by problems in Namibia (South West Africa), a country adjoined to Swaziland. War I though repeatedly condemned by the United Nations for illegal control. For South Africa and Rhodesia, the changes that currently affect the balance of power have made the irreversible and the need. The dream of black majority rule everyday becomes more of a reality and both Africa and the rest of the world will sleep with a more profound conscience when that day dawns.
SOUTHERN AFRICA
ANGOLA
ZAMBIA
area: 290,724 sq. miles
population (1975): 24,900,000
Lusaka
NAMIBIA
(SOUTH-WEST
AFRICA)
area: 318,261 sq. miles
population (1975): 850,000
Salisbury
MOZAMBIQUE
area: 303,373 sq. miles
population (1975): 9,240,000
RHODESIA
area: 150,333 sq. miles
population (1975): 6,420,000
exports: tobacco, asbestos; meat
President: Ian Smith
Windhoek
BOTSWANNA
Pretoria
Johannesburg
INDIAN OCEAN
SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN
SOUTH AFRICA
area: 471,819 sq. miles
population (1975): 25,470,000
exports: gold, diamonds, minerals
President: John Vorster
Durban
SWAZILAND
LESOTHO
Cape Town
Internal and external pressures slowly causing apartheid's death
apartheid, n. (So. Afr. D. separatement, africas, Afrik. Lt. apartness, apart and -helt-,hood.) The governmental policy of separation of the racial groups and discrimination practiced in the Republic of South Africa; racial segregation.
This 23-write description of a way of life is taken for granted in some parts of Africa, a land known as the "dark continent."
South Africa, a nation where non-whites outnumber whites by a ratio of 5 to 1, has maintained its system of separate existence between the African and Coloured 'nations' in 1948 when the Nationalist party, supported by Dutch and British descendants, came to power. This rigid racial cast envelopes virtually every phase of society: Education, employment, housing and polio, non-enforced labor are delegated by law to lesser, substantial fare in each area.
The nature of South Africa's exclusive society has been exorcized by other countries and the world. The country still needs its own
course of having a government ruled by and for the minority of the population. In 1961, the nation withdrew from the British Commonwealth because of constant criticism.
SOUTH AFRICA'S prime minister, John Vorstor, has remained a stalwart defender of the country's policy, and has
commodate and contain black aspirations.
THE UNITED States has once again taken the lead in seeking a solution to another nation's internal conflict. Fearful of another abortive involvement such as Angola, the United States is taking a firm but cautious role in efforts
M. M. RASUWA
One of Vorster's closest confidants, Pik Botha, his ambassador to the United States and United Nations, recently compared the man with a community to that of a "man in a death cell." He said that the country now depends on the timing and extent of change to ac-
blacks into specified areas while giving them the appearance of independent and free nations.
been agonizingly slow in acceding to external pressures.
Paul Jefferson
Editorial Writer
But it is the internal pressure being exerted by the rising tide of black nationalism in the country that may ultimately spill his fate and the fate of the vastly outnumbered white communities. Already many white communities have come under both verbal and physical attack by native blacks as efforts to undermine their problems peacefully have proven inconsistent.
to bring about majority black rule in Southern Africa.
Some inroads have been made into eliminating the oppression situation in South Korea, and there are some in his last official duties, provided a forum for black leaders to redress their grievances with the president of shuttle diplomacy. But radical changes (for the better) still must be sought by his successor Cyrus Vance, and Andrew Young, United States advisor to the United Nations.
This tactic, already apparent with the birth of the independent "nation" of Transkei last October, seems a cheap way to win a minority rule. In any event, no other nation has formally recognized the new country, and hopefully none will.
ONE PLANNED solution to the problem has been submitted by the South African government and eventually granted each country into nine different homelands for the native blacks and eventually granting each country the white minority Africa the white minority hopes to still segregate the
BUT THE bane of South Africa's solutions to its perennial problems will continue to be the government sanction of apartheid. In view of current conditions, the bane has been (and still is) economically, socially and morally indefensible.
Last week it was learned that some private Catholic schools in South Africa have begun ad-hoc violation of government order. Government officials continue to criticize the institution, but because it is private, the school cannot comply at least not without force. After flying in the face of world opinion by condoning segregation, they may be reluctant to take on the Pope.
Young's approach encouraging
Settlements between the minority white governments in California proceeding with all deliberate speed, but, unfortunately, in light of current events, the dark remains still to remain so for some time.
Jimmy Carter's administration has yet to formulate any plan for the country of African nations; but in Andrew Young, Carter has sent perhaps the most able man on a fact-finding mission to that continent.
Young, who as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations is Carter's only black male cabinet member, has well demonstrated his leadership abilities to his own countrymen.
His credentials are too numerous for one listing, but among the most important are: He holds doctorate degrees in laws and divinity; he's been a member of the National Board of Representatives, where he was a member of the powerful committee on rules; and he's been a leading figure of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference since the early '60s, from which he to become one of the closest confidence to Martin Luther King, Jr.
YOUNG'S ROLE in Africa will be much different from the one he's played in the United States, however. Here, blacks are finally beginning to gain some of the freedoms they've
wanted so badly over the years.
In Africa, blacks are only looking for a beginning. And it's in Africa that Young's leadership abilities will be tested.
So far on his African trip,
Young in particular have much to learn about the ways of Africa.
Guns are likely to prevail in Southern Africa soon if Rhodesian Prime Minister Iwan Smith doesn't give in to
---
Young has been greeted generously by top black leaders. Basically, he has found himself the target of Rhodiesia to return to negotiate a plan for black majority rule and a willingness for the United States to take the country out completing such negotiations.
BUT IN the highest aspects of aparthid, Young was greeted by the public in a white newspaper, the Rhodisa Herald, which called Young a "strolling player from the mountains" and one of its editorials last week.
The editorial pointed out that, in white Rhodesia's opinion, the Carter administration and "Mr.
Jay Bemis Editorial Writer
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during daytime. Second-class payments paid at Lawrence, Kan., a day after the commencement. Four-day payments in Douglas County and $1 a semester or $20 a semester. $1 a semester, paid through the student activity fee.
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pressure for negotiations.
Young supports a call from U.S. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim for a revival of talks
that the US has had, but it isn't Young's duty to take part in the Rhodesian talks.
He does sympathize with Africans whose intentions are for the United States to play a major role in bringing Smith toward black majority rule. But neither Young nor the Africans know how to do this. Young is affraid of the American people would be ineffective in dealing with Smith.
MANY ARE afraid that if something isn't done soon, many African countries will resort to Soviet-backed Cuban forces and subsequently become black-majority-ruling nations with Marxist ideologies. Such was the situation in Angola, and the same situation has begunnings in Rhodesia, the capital of a number four Jesuit priests and three mons last week is a more recent example of the Rhodesian problem.
governments in Africa doesn't worry Young, however. He believes that such countries will turn to the West for assistance.
The prospect of Marxist
Many criticisms have been leveled at Young since he was appointed in December, because of what many term as his lack of experience in foreign affairs. Those criticisms should be ignored, and may lack in experience, he gains in enthusiasm.
Young has noted significance in the success of the television version of "Roots," which was aired shortly before Young began his African mission. That program was based on the Alex Haley novel, which traces a race through time and Africa through four generations of slavery in this country. Young believes that the program may have opened Americans' eyes to Africa.
And it's those same critics who should remember that Young has a deep concern for the rights of blacks, blacks in this country and those in Africa, where he's already shown his concern by making several previous trips. One of those trips was to a company called Arthur Abbe, a black tennis star, to compete in the segregated country of South Africa.
IT'S THESE same critics who should remember that Young President Obama is "Africanizing" "American foreign policy, throwing away years old of bright political future and giving seniority in Congress
"It's a continent that has been ignored for a long time."
about his new position and its relationship with Africa:
As Young himself has said
He is the man toward whom South Africa's blacks, those long-suffering victims of apartheid, vent their anger. He is the man who symbolizes for Western world leaders the need to be the man who grudgingly holds shut the gate of progress in South Africa.
He is a man well suited for a hot kitchen.
Vorster prevents change
Balthazar Johannes Verster is the 60-year-old prime minister of South Africa. He is a stocky man, a political patriarch and an island so strong that he was once a leader, of pcr-Nazi forces.
When the South African pot bolls, as it so frequently does, the man closest to the heat is a politician named John Vorser.
VORSTER IS the son of a Transvail farmer. His political profile was cast early in life and he joined anti-English Afrikaaner nationalist movements as a young man.
During World War II years, he became a "general" in the terrorist warfiction of the so-called Ox Wug Guard, a pro-Nazi organization, positioned to the Allied war effort cost him 20 months in jail but he still asserts that what he did during the war was correct.
Yet those realities have never prompted Vorster to face the ultimate reality of his political life—that apartheid is destined to die. Whether its death is bloody or peaceful is incidental.
BUT PERHAPS Vorstier, staunch nationalist and right-winger that he is, isn't entirely to blame. He has been critical of the US government, he forced to balance overwhelming world opinion against him and internal pressures from the Nationalist Party. In fact, far right-wing whites have accused us of soft on the subject of apartheid.
IN 1968, a demented clerk stabbed and killed Verwoerd in the South African Parliament.
Vorster, his reputation as an avid nationalist already established, rose through the establishment to become Justice Minister under his predecessor, former Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoer. His iron-fisted tactics earned the name "Jack Boot Job."
DANNY
Jerry Seib
Editorial Writer
Vorster inherited an antiquated social caste system whose day had obviously passed. Yet Vorster himself supports apartheid out of deep Afrikaner convictions.
His inauspicious takeover should have given the world a hint of things to come.
The most striking aspect of Vorster's political fabric is his intense nationalism. He has had to educate the whites of South Africa about the realities of life on a black continent.
And Verster did open up political and economic avenues between South Africa and black African nations two years ago. It was her as a crossroad for him, even as he even black leaders called Verster a "voice of reason" for making the charge.
Vorster became prime minister
BUT VORSTER remains the man who rammed through a geographic separation policy that moved blacks and whites to separate, unequal areas of the country. Any attempt to color Vorster as a champion of liberty is doomed to fail.
In the next year, Vorster flew to three black countries to discuss political and economic
ties. His government has, in recent years, given financial help to black regimes in Zambia, Malawi and other black countries. He has helped eliminate some of the humiliations that black living in Africa have had to endure.
Perhaps apartheid can be eliminated in Vorster's time—but it is doubtful that it can be eliminated. As the leader of South Africa, Vorster is, after all, the man who said such incredulous things as, "The white of Africa unites the mentality of the black man."
Perhaps something Vorster said after the riots in Soweto last summer, in which 100 persons were killed and 1,000 injured, best summarizes his attitude. After the riots he was quelled, Vorster assured British officials that "there is definitely no reason to panic. This government will not be intimidated."
Thursday, February 10.1977
5
a
protest of the
General Assembly affirmed the抬帑 of the opium Africa for the people and the right to self-
we isn't simply a
male equality but is
black male wages
he reefer higher in,
White male
ge $600 month,
month.
which to divide
gold, diamond,
crystals have been
have suggested
whereby whites
restriction of the land
numbers.
ideal idea for a type-
structure
autonomy under a
agent.
terra trauma South souls in Nambia in a country addicted to alcohol, which is conditioned by *ir illegal control*, and Rhodesia, the affect the balance between Africa and Europe, the dream of everyday becomes both Africa and the sleep with a more睡 when that day
ath
specified areas them the apindependent and
already apparent birth of the in- formation of 'Transake seems a cheep snake in any event, no n has formally the new country, none will.
bane of South solutions to its problems will con-
serve the governmental parachute. In view of id conditions, the seen (and still is) sufficiently and firmly
it was learned that Catholic schools in a have begun ad-hoc government order, officials continue the institution, but is private, the least not without flying in the face of objection by condoning it, they may be take on the Pope.
nations between the white governments lack majority are with all deliberate, unfortunately, in eventings, the dark will remain so for
ge
government has, in irs, given financial blag regimes in Malawi and other tries. He has helped some of the as of the that black driving Africa have had to
RSTER remains the rammed through a separation policy blacks and whites to unequal areas of the any attempt to color a champion of liberty to fail.
apartheid can be in Vorster's time—bubbly that it can be in South Africa, Vorster will, the man who has incredulous things as site of Africa unbridled mentality of the
something Vorster the riots in Soweto in, which 100 were killed and 1,000 been summoned to a bloody had been quelled, assured British officials are definitely not panic. This government not be intimidated."
Jobs not aim of art department
By LEROY JOHNSTON
Staff Reporter
If recent years are any indication, nearly 2,000 seniors will graduate in May. Most of them either will be starting work or looking for it, and if they are in a "practical" field, such as engineering, their job chances may be good.
"THE ART MAJORS that complete the program know what they're doing." Richard Gillespie, assistant professor of art, said yesterday. "They've all made a commitment to what they're doing or they wouldn't be here."
But some have majored in art. Have their professors prepared them for the probable unemployment that awaits them? Have they prepared themselves? Do they care?
Mike Okt, chairman of the department of art, said that the department had a different approach to its students from the approach offered by most colleges, which are more geared to get jobs.
Ot said that, in the past, having an education put a person ahead of the pack, but now it left a person in the middle of the pack.
"We don't promise, promote or other wise help people get jobs," he said. "Our empire doesn't accept that."
THE ART DEPARTMENT is not turning out identical professionals of identical qualifications," he said. "It's turning out individual."
Ot said the department's purpose was to stimulate people and give them a place to work.
The curriculum of the art department was changed last fall to make it more flexible. Ott said, so a student can get a degree in art that includes 27 hours of electives.
"We did this because art can just feed off itself," he said. "This allows the student flexibility to pursue a practical area that interests him."
One problem that has always faced
American artists is a lack of control over their work once it has been sold. Even if a piece is resold at a much higher price, the artist can't get a penalty of the newly earned profits.
In addition, Ott said, there are no copyright laws to protect an artist from commercial use.
Ot said he thought a new California law that gives an artist five per cent of the money every time his piece is resold, was a step in the right direction.
But John Tallure, professor of art, said he wouldn't make any difference to the artist.
"EACH PERSON HOW to make the decision to go into art himself," he said. "I would never try to persuade anyone in that direction."
nailure said he could never be sure which of his students were going to "make it" in art until they had been out of school about half a year. He actually became full-time artists, he said.
Five honored by Mortar Board
Five University of Kansas professors have been recognized for teaching excellence by the KU Torch Chapter of Mortar Board, whose members reviewed nominations by students to make the selection.
The professors are David Holmes, professor of psychology; J. Elden Fields, professor of political science; Robert Spires, associate professor of Spanish and French; Michael O'Neill, professor of English; and Paul Friedman, assistant professor of speech and drama.
Brad Max, chairman for the Outstanding Educator Committee, said yesterday, "The basis of these awards was on professors that took an active and genuine interest in the students' experiences, beyond just teaching them."
Mortar Board is a senior honor society, which annually recognizes outstanding work by students in the field.
satisfaction with teaching excellence. It honors five professors each semester.
'Drys' attacking KU drug policy
Holmes won the Standard Oil Foundation award in 1972. He has served as consulting editor for the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
Fields received the 1986 HOPE award. He has been on the KU staff since 1946 and has worked 20 years on the staff of the KU Orientation, Center for Foreign Students.
Boyd has published three books and several articles on Middle English. She has received grants from several literary organizations, including the American Council of Learned Societies. She also wrote a book about John Simon Guggenheim Foundation in 1969.
The Rev. Richard Taylor Jr., director of Kansans for Life at Its best dry forces organization, yesterday asked Chancellor Archie Dykes to explain why the University of Kansas doesn't have the same policy as it has toward marijuana usage.
"Kansas University recently changed its policy and now permits the pushing and consumption of our most abused drug on campus, but is going to end pot smoking in dorms. Why?" Taylor said in a letter to Dykes.
Spires was codirector of four summer's of the KU Summer Language Institute in Spain and is active in the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese.
Friedman was a semifinalist for the 1976 HOPE award. He has served as vice president of the International Communication Association, and has led human relations workshops for groups on campus. In April, Mortar Board will sponsor a
Dykes was unavailable for comment on the letter last night.
"Informed youth and concerned adults p.促要 freedom from all recreational drug use and dependence," Taylor said. "We want to know why Kansas University is concerned about a less dangerous drug under the use of a more dangerous drug.
CAR RALLY
Kansas Region Winter Car Rally
Sponsored by
Kansas Region Sports Car Club of Am., Inc.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13
Centennial Park - West 9th and Iowa
Lawrence, Kansas
I am a car driver.
1ST CAR OFF AT 1:00 P.M.
1. Navigator and driver required
2. Only route on paved roads only
3. Rental car required
4. Entry fee
5. 520 club members
6. 48 club members
For more information call 843-9514.
THE sirloin
We will be open for Valentine's Day Monday, Feb. 14th
Lawrence, Kansas' Finest Eating Place
Our motto is and has always been . . . "There is no substitute for quality in good food."
Make reservations now to bring your special valentine out to dinner that evening!
1 and $ _{1/2} $ miles north of Kaw River bridge Phone 843-1431 for information.
SO . . .
A graduate program in art will be available to students in the fall of 1978. According to Nick Vaccaro, professor of art and chairman of a committee to draw up application guidelines for the program. He also may be the only entrance requirement.
"Creative people are misses in our society," he said. "In order to provide a meaningful curriculum for them, it must be unique to each person."
The Sirloin
Gramercy High
DINING
TREASURES
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND
DAAGWUD'S
2 FOR 1 Coupon
GOOD FOR ANY SANDWICH
Thursday thru Saturday Feb. 10-12
Located in the
LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE
7th & Massachusetts
THE ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
OF LAWRENCE
Giving you the Opera House, 7th Spirit Private Club (balcany & basement), Daqwagds, and Professor Katz Arcade
IT'S TONITE, SENIORS!
10c draws at the HARBOUR from 8-11 p.m.
(The HARBOUR isn't leaving . . . you are!)
FAREWELL TO THE HARBOUR PARTY
for the Senior PRE-K-STATE
77
1 Pick up class cards for westport trip. Lake Perry T.G.I.F., Graduation Party.
Come 'n Get It... King of Jeans
Levi's "Moving On" Sale
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WE'RE OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS
BANKAMERICARD
6
Thursday, February 10, 1977
University Daily Kansan
A model of a modern house with a sloped roof and large windows. The model is surrounded by water droplets, suggesting rain or dew.
Staff photo by BARRY MASSEY
Model of the solar house to be built in the Pioneer Ridge housing development
Plans for solar house complete
By DAYNA HEIDRICK
Staff Reporter
Preliminary plans for Sunpower House, a solar energy house to be built in Lawrence by the Kansas Power and Light Company (KPL) to test the feasibility of solar energy, were completed this week by Design Build Architects of Lawrence.
Construction on the three-bedroom family dwelling will begin March 15, and occupancy is scheduled for July 15 for a family that KPL will select.
The home will be built in the Pioneer Ridge housing development in west Lawrence and is designed to blend with the surrounding suburban context, according to the architects. Architects are a professional professor of architecture and urban design at KU.
KPI will use Sunpower House for
their equipment years, after which it will
sell the brass.
THE $70,000 house will have 2,200 square feet of space and is designed to use solar energy to heat space and water, and energy conserves energy by gain in heat and heat loss in winter.
KPI, officials said that obtaining information for the Lawrence area was extremely important. They said the weather here is different from the weather in other areas where solar energy homes have been tested, and solar energy and energy conservation methods must be adapted to climatic conditions.
"WE HAVE bigger weather 'swings' here." Bill Woolfhl, KPL director of marking services, said, recalling a time last December when the temperature dropped from the '60's to the teens within 24 hours.
William E. Wall, KPI president, said when the project was announced in January that his company was optimistic that solar energy is a practical source of energy for home use.
"The project is designed to prove that proposition," he said. "On paper, the feasibility of solar power for the future is very promising. Now at Sumway Power House, we have only a handful of panels in Kansas, we've put only pencils to try to prove that solar energy will work."
WALL SAID that one important aspect of the project for KPL was the potential offered by the research for reducing air pollution and the utility's summer peak electric demand.
Cooling for Sunpower House will be stored during off-peak hours using a chiller-type air conditioner that uses stored water. When electric demand is greatest, the stored, chilled water will be used to cool the home without running the air conditioner.
The more efficient use of utilities would
benefit both the consumer, whose bills would be lower, and the company, which wouldn't have to invest capital to build more power plants to meet demands at peak periods. The sizeable investments to build the new plant are not fully used during the rest of the year.
SOLAR COLLECTORS in the roof of a pumpower House will be used to heat water
Gould said designing a tight house to minimize the heat loss and gain was a challenge.
The heat loss in Sunpower House will be one-third that of a conventional house, he said, and the heat gain will be less than one-half of a conventional house.
Gould said all surfaces that make contact with the air or earth will be insulated. Some 2" by 6" stud walls will be used rather than a 4" wall; by 4" and 6" bat insulation will be used.
exposure to the north to avoid heat loss through windows and openings. Evergreen trees will be planted at the northeast corner of the house to reduce air movement, which increase heat loss. The garage and mechanical equipment, on the north side of the house, will act as buffers for the living areas, all of which are on the south side of the house.
GOULD SAID the house would have little
The south side will have two levels of windows and deciduous trees to protect the house from the summer heat and allow as much sun as possible in the winter. Overhangs, or "permanent awnings," will keep the sun out of the windows in the summer months, but allow needed sunlight to enter in the winter, when the sun is lower.
There will be only one opening on the north—a high window used to ventilate the house. The east and west sides will also have only one opening each: doors with an air lock, or an untreated hallway leading to another door.
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Joffrey II Ballet opens tonight
The touring company of the New York City Center's Joffrey Ballet, Joffrey II is the only entertainment in Accent the Arts Department from outside the Lawrence community.
The Joffrey II Company's reputation is that of a spirited, technically proficient and captivating group capable of performing a varied program. The group prefers to announce its program immediately before each performance.
The Joffrey II Ballet Company opens a
variety of dance programs at 8 noon in
Hoch Auditorium.
Tonight's program will include classical and neoclassical ballads chosen from settings including classical and operatic themes, and delicate poetry, illustrations.
Tickets cost $4 and are available at the SUA office.
100%
Our Bridal Registry has a Lenox Wish Book
RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
And if many already welcomes me to let your friends and family know that you are a special person, I will invite you to our Crystal Ball with our Bristol Coordinates. They be grateful for your thoughtfulness, and we look forward to seeing you soon. We hope to give you the heart and mind beyond the wedding gifts because of them.
Come in today and select the Linux pattern you love most, and tell them to sign up your wish list. You'll be glad you did.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Expanding Lawrence Memorial Hospital has a part-time opening for a registered or registry-eligible X-ray technologist. Hours are 3:30O-midnight, Saturday and Sunday. Please contact the Personnel Office, 843-3680, ext.391.
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Located at
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Mass.
Total Entertainment in One Location
THE LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE
THE ENTERTAINMENT CENTER OF LAWRENCE Presents This Week
THE OPERA HOUSE
(7th Spirit in the balcony)
The Opera House
Thur--LADIES NIGHT DISCO (Bugsy's People Book coupon's honored for men)
Fri.—"The JOHN ROLLER BAND" from K.C.
$1.00 cover
25c draws
live entertainment at its finest
Sat.—DISCO EXTRAVAGANZA Drink and Dance the night away Give away Specials
B
Everynight—PITCHERS $1.25 7:30 "HI"9:00
7S TH SPIRIT
We feature a full line of beers
7th Spirit Extending from the Basement to
THE SPIRIT Extending from the Basement to The Balcony (overlooking the Opera House) Offering Fine Cocktails and Friendly Folks 'firl 3:00 a.m. nightly Featuring the NAIOBI TRIO Sat., Feb. 12 10 'firl 1 Contemporary Jazz in the basement NO COVER CHARGE for members in the balcony Open for Lunch Monday thru Friday starting Monday, Feb. 14
1.
Daagwud's
FILM AND GAME PROF.
KATZ
ARCADE
Exceptional sandwiches & side orders
Check for the 2 for 1 coupons in this week's Kansan
Open Daily: 1 a.m. - 2 p.m. Mon.-Sat; 2 p.m. - 10 p.m. Sun.
Professor Katz Arcade
Open daily Dunday 1-10, thru thru Fri. 1:30-12, Sat. 11 a.m.-12 p.m.
Lawrence's largest and most extensive machine arcade
1
Thursday, February 10, 1977
7
capital need or hours day.
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hair and le your d under lly your y the directly of your les are titicated oscope, osope, treatment hair."
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From page one
"They represent geographic areas in the state we don't have now," he said. "That does contribute to geographic breadth, diversity and advisory board like the Board of Regents."
Acker said he didn't know whether Lowman and Heeve were picked because they hadn't signed.
Acker called Wunsch and Stewart "really fine people."
"I think the state owes them quite a lot," he said.
IN A STATEMENT released yesterday, Bennett said, "Kansas education has benefited greatly from the dedicated efforts of Jessel Stewart and Paul Wunsch.
"Both have usselfly contributed their time and service to the people of Kansas in the interest of education. They richly deserve our gratitude."
Bennett appointed one Republican and one Democrat because of a requirement that no more than five Regents be of the same political party. Reeve, a Democrat, replaced Stewart. Lowman, a Republican, replaced Wunsch.
Wunsch's and Stewart's terms expired
dec. 31, Lowman and Reeves if approved by
the committee.
REEVE GRADUATED from K-State with a degree in veterinary medicine, and was a practicing veterinarian in Garden City from 1980. He is now a stockman and banker.
Reeve was president of the Kansas Livestock Association in 1975, and is now regional vice president of the American National Cattlemen's Association. He served on the State Board of Veterinary Examiners from 1959 to 1967.
Lowman is president of Heritage Savings Association in Hays. He has been a member of the Board of Trustees of Elk Grove Alumni Association, the Governor's Housing Task Force, the Hays-Ellis County Urban Renewal Commission and the Board of Trustees of Hadley Regional Medical Center.
Lowman has served as president of the Hays Chamber of Commerce and chairman of the Hays American Revolution Bicentennial Commission.
Forum centers on Europe
The European Economic Community (EEC) still suffers many teething pains but is gradually working out its problems and being united, a representative of the European Union, in a debate about fourteen 40 persons yesterday at a Faculty Forum in the United Ministries Center.
The representative, Jon McLain, who has been reporting to the AUFS since 1968 on European integration and Europe-centered activities of the United Nations, has written an essay about the community's functions were irrelevant.
In spite of the recession, which caused divergences in inflation and unemployment
between member nations, impressive achievements and breakthroughs have been achieved by the community acting as a single unit, McLin said.
A fishing rights policy, a consultative mechanism to bring closer coordination between countries; a common value-added tax system; and conventions with about 50 countries to facilitate trade have been positive accomplishments, McLin said.
However, he said, the imbalance between Germany and the eight other EEC nations, Euro Communism and Europe's heavy dependence on energy imports were due to the fact that might prevent the community from carrying out its intentions at the expected rate.
DON'T MISS THE BOAT!
SUA. in cooperation with the KU. Residence Halls presents a 'dessert theatre'
DAMES AT SEA
DAMES
AT SEA
FEB 17, 18, 40
SUNDAY
FEB 20
2:30-7:50
PM
TAP DANCING
MUSICAL COMEDY & REVUE
FEBRUARY 17, 1929
SUNDAY
FEF 20
2:30 - 7:00
PM
TAP DANCING
MUSICAL COMEDY & REVUE
$3.00 general admission $2.00 residence hall students
$9.00 SAUA office for information call 864-3477
informed in the kansas union "Big Eight"
Spoof of the 1930's Busby Borkley Hollywood Extravaanxas1
Announcing
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We also feature our Daily Buffet
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Cancer researcher becomes acting dean
Officials of the KU Medical Center yesterday announced the appointment of James T. Lownman, director of the MH Center, as acting ce舟 of the School of Medicine.
The dean's position was established about two years ago when reorganization of the Med Center created three schools in the College of Health Sciences; the School of Nursing, the School of Allied Health and the School of Medicine.
Having no specific plans for changes in the school's programs, Lowman said his goals as the new dean wouldn't differ from his goals he had as director of the cancer center.
Lownan said last night his primary duty responsibility for all academic prosecutions.
His principle concern now, the 40-year-old physician said, is to become more familiar with his job and the workings of the Med Center.
"Our goals were to develop programs that were both academically high quality and
Besides being director of the cancer center since its inception in 1973, Lowman is a major contributor to research.
appropriate to the state," he said. "They'll continue to be my goals, but applied to a different group."
He received a B.S. degree in 1955 from Quachita College in Arkadelphia, Ark., and an M.D. degree from the University of Arkansas Medical School in 1958.
Lowman took postgraduate training as a pediatric intern, medical fellow in pediatrics and medical fellow specialist in pediatrics at the University of Minnesota, and in 1964, was named an assistant professor of pediatrics and radiology there.
Lowman joined the KU faculty in 1968 as an associate professor and director of pediatric hematology, a specialty relating to the blood and bloodforming tissues of children. His primary research interest is cancer in children.
Lowman's appointment as acting dean is effective immediately.
Padre Island
round trip bus
seven nights accommodations trip to MEXICO
beer and soft drinks on bus
beer and soft drinks on site Stop by or call the SUA office for more information. 864-3477 Space still available.
Deadline Feb. 11
Deu
Spring Break March 11-20 $125
Accent the ARTS
SUA presents TONIGHT:
JOFFREY II
"The best small classic ballet in the country."
Clive Barnes, N.Y. Times
$4.00 General Admission
8 p.m. TONIGHT Hoch Auditorium
Tickets at SUA and at the door
Classified Advertising
Valentine's Day
Special!
15 word Valentine advertisements
for only $1 50
These advertisements will appear
on Monday, Feb. 14 and must be
placed at the Kansan Business
office, 111 Flint Hall, by
5:00 p.m.
Thursday,
Feb.
10
Need a car, a stereo, a job? Look in Kansan classified.
EASY GRADES?
That's right! Better grades with less study time are possible with this proven "Easy Grades" Method Study less, have more time to enjoy college by mailing $5.00 today to: JML and Assoc., P.O. Box 3744, Lawrence, Ks. 66044
Special Student Weekend
February 11-13
YOUTH SERVICES LED BY COLLEGE GROUP
Guest Speaker and Music
BY SOUTHWEST MISSOURI STATE STUDENTS
Friday and Saturday - 7:00 p.m., Sunday - 11:00 a.m
FAITH SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH
10th and New York
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"The first significant film of the year!"
—William Wolf, Cue Magazine
"Thoroughly enjoyable:
Funny,
absorbing and intelligent."
—Pauline Kael, The New Yorker
"A film not to be missed."
—Jeffrey Lyons, WCBS Radio
ELLEN BURSTYN
KRIS KRISTOFFERSON IN ALICE
DOESN'T LIVE HERE
ANYMORE
PG A DAVID JACKSON PRODUCTION
ne
FRI., FEB. 11 AND SAT., FEB. 12
7:00, 9:30 p.m. $1
PLUS 3:30 MATINEE BOTH DAYS
A VERY NATURAL THING (1974) Dir. Christopher Larkin.
UN CHANT D'AMOUR (1992) Dir. Jean Genet. Thurs., Feb. 10 7:30; 9:30 10
MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR WITH THE BEATLES (1967)
MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR WITH THE BEA
YELLOW SUBMARINE (1968)
AROUND THE BEATLES (BBC Concert)
Fri, Feb. 11 & Sat, Feb. 12 12:00 (midnight) 51
FOREIGN DIRECTORS' FILM WEEK, FEB. 14-19
ZERO FOR CONDUCT (1933) Dir. Jean Vigo, with Louis Lefebre, Gilbert Pluchon (French/subtitles)
L'ATALANTE (1934) Dir. Jean Vigo, with Michel Simon, Dita Parlo (French/subtitles)Mon., Feb. 14, 7:30 75c
ZVENIGORA (1928) Dir. Alexander Dovtenko (USSR)
APSENAI (1929) Dir. Alexander Dovtenko (USSR)
AZENEMEI 1929, Dir. Alexander Dyvethenko (USK)
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM-KANSAS UNION
8
Thursday, February 10, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Douglas, KU can't catch Tigers
MISSOURI 4
KANSAS 10
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
By GARY VICE
Sports Editor
MU's Kim Anderson leaps to stop Milt Gibson
COLUMBIA, Mo—John Douglas led his teammates on a chase of the Big Eight and the Missouri tigers but MU's Kim Anderson wasn't caught last night.
The two performers both fired in career scoring highs to pace their teams, as the Tigers retained their conference leadership with an 87-79 victory over the Hawks before a near-capacity crowd in Hearnes Multipurpose Center.
Missouri, 8-2 in conference play and 18-4 over all, has won 36 of its last 37
Sports
contests and is in a commanding position for its second consecutive championship
Kansas, 64 and 15-7 overall, fell out of a four-way tie for second place by losing into a fourth place with Nebraska. Oklahoma and Kansas State, both winners last night, follow the Tigers with 7-3 conference records.
Douglas almost single-handedly kept the Jayhawks in the game with scoring spikes of 11 and 12 straight KU points. He finished with 34 for the game.
The game score was tied nine times in the closely contested game, with the last tie winning. The team dorsum had mounted the score with the tip-in at that point and then he went on to score his team's next eight in building up a six-point lead before fouling out with 33 seconds to go.
Yet his main adversary, Anderson, turned in two 19-point halves for a commanding 38 points, which eclipsed his 35-27 Oklahoma State just four nails earlier.
Kansas coach Ted Owens billed KU's inability to hold onto a 70-47 lead as the
It was all over for the "Hawks by then, according to Anderson, as MU stretched its lead to eight points, its largest of the night for the game's final score.
"We had a chance to do something when we got that three-point lead," Owens said. "It was the first time we had control of the game. I thought we had made a great comeback and we had a chance to win, but we missed the ball over the next three times."
Turnovers aided the 'Hawks the most then, but both teams had been the victim of sloppy play. KU committed 23 turnovers with Mizuari adding 20.
An error-filled opening half, which ended with the Tigers in front 39-36, was not a pout moment for booster shots and violations, poor shooting, fouls and errant passes better depicted Big Eight Grade basketball, by only Anderson and Ken Koenigs absent
Keenigs, who was 6-for-11 from the field in
scoring 14 points, explained the first half of play, saying, "Everyone was playing hard and there was a lot of tension, but we were able to lose up in the second half.
MU coach Norm Stewart was even more critical of his team's play.
"That's not much consolation because our
BIG-fit title was on the line tonight."
"We played poorly." Stewart said. "We were fortunate to win. I'm highly disappointed in the way we played. It doesn't have anything to do with who we played. A veteran ball club shouldn't play that way. It was a terrible game."
The exception - Anderson-was enough,
as the 6-8 senior center hit 16 of 21,
from the first half.
"When a few start going in," Anderson said, "you start looking at the whole a little more and as along as they fall you keep shooting them."
☆ ☆ ☆
| | KANSAE |
| :--- | :--- |
| | PG |
| Johnson | 4-12 |
| Kellogg | 4-12 |
| Kentoga | 6-11 |
| Kenanga | 11-80 |
| Houston | 13-80 |
| Houser | 10-9 |
| Iowa | 5-10 |
| Gibson | 3-4 |
| Glenn | 3-4 |
| Garrett | 0-1 |
| Barbosee | 0-1 |
| 27-78 | 15-21 | R | PP | Pd |
| 8-12 | 0-1 | F | 3-4 | Pd |
| 8-12 | 0-1 | F | 3-4 | Pd |
| 8-12 | 0-1 | F | 3-4 | Pd |
| 8-12 | 0-1 | F | 3-4 | Pd |
| 8-12 | 0-1 | F | 3-4 | Pd |
| 8-12 | 0-1 | F | 3-4 | Pd |
| 27-78 | 15-21 | R | 4-1 | Pd |
| 27-78 | 15-21 | R | 4-1 | Pd |
| 27-78 | 15-21 | R | 4-1 | Pd |
| | Setback DRA | | Setback DRA | | Setback DRA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kennedy | 3-1 | 6-1 | 11 | 4 | 11 |
| Johnson | 2-1 | 3-1 | 8 | 5 | 18 |
| Anderson | 1-1 | 8-1 | 9 | 4 | 18 |
| Cox | 1-1 | 8-1 | 9 | 4 | 18 |
| Draw | 2-4 | 4-4 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Drive | 2-4 | 4-4 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Drury | 1-4 | 4-2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Dryy | 1-4 | 4-2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | 39-47 | 19-47 | 19 | 18 | 87 |
MISSISSIPHI 89 82 - 87
ALbany 19.607
'Cats, Sooners win, tie for 2nd
Rv The Associated Press
Larry Dassie's 28 points led Kansas State to a 67-42 victory over Nebraska last night in Manhattan. In other Big Eight action, Larry Dassie scored 10 goals and Colorado nined Iowa State, 64-63.
Evans, bothered by the flu, hit his first five shots while Dessie sank nearly every shot he took in the second half. Together they hit 20 of 27 field goals.
Lasse scored 10 of his points during a 15-3 spurt by the Wildcats that gave him a 55-47 lead with 8:08 left to play. K-State guard Mike Evans helped out with 22 points.
At normal, center AI Beal poured in 20 points and had 11 rebounds to lead the Sooners. The score was tied 14 times in the first half, and Oklahoma was ahead 28-25 at篮球.
The Sooners were ahead only 45-44 with nine minutes to play, but they dominated the Cowboys the rest of the way. Olus Thompson of Oklahoma State's leading rookie with 16.
Thei victories gave K-State and Oklahoma 7-3 records in the Big Eight and a tie for second place. Nebraska, now 64, is tied with K for fourth place.
Moore said he thought it was too early to say whether he was completely satisfied with the outcome of the signings because many prospective players intended to stay uncommitted until Feb. 16, National letter-of-intent day.
Two of the state's top high school quarterbacks, Steve Smith and Frank Wattelte, were among those who committed themselves on Tuesday. That was the first day in which he won six games with letters of intent, which prevent them from attending any other conference school.
Moore said he thought the two recent changes in the football coaching staff had no impact.
Smith, of Emporia, is an all-stater who led his team to an undefeated season and the Class A-4 state championship. Watelet won two games in offense. Both are 6 feet 1, 185 pounds.
Big Eight Standings
The University of Kansas' head football coach Bud Moore said yesterday that the majority of KU's recruiting prospects were still uncompleted, but a report in the Topeka Capital-Journal said eight players signed letters of intent with the University.
KU signs two top quarterbacks
effect in one situation or two where the player was a friend of or had a close connection to one of the former coaches. But the majority of players choose an institution on the basis of more factors than just the coaching staff."
Kansas State won seven letters of intent from high school players. None were allstars.
Other players signing letters of intent with KU were: Donald Hicks of Wyandotte, a 6-foot-2, 159-pound lineman; David Lawrence, a 6-foot-4, 215-pound lineman from Parsons Foundation and Bendell Fulkback from Rockhurst in Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Lowrey from Wichita Heights, a 6-foot-2, 220-pound lineman, Tom Morrison from Winnetown High School in Kansas City, Mo., a 6-foot-4, 215-pound lineman; and Bob Whitten of Bendell Fulkback from Rockhurst. In addition to Smith, Lawrence and Hicks were also all-state selections.
According to the paper's report, neither KU nor K-State was able to attract the two players considered to be the top prospects in the Shawnee Mission school districts.
Jeff Gaylord of Shawnee Mission South and Jay Jeffrey of Shawnee Mission West
"It (staff turnovers) might have had an
W L
Missouri . 8 2
Kansas State . 7 3
Oklahoma . 3 2
KANSAS . 6 4
Nebraska . 6 4
Colorado . 2 0
Oklahoma State . 2 8
Iowa State . 2 8
SUA and the contemporary writers & poets series present:
Accent the ARTS
MICHAEL JOHNSON, POEI
4 P-M., Friday, Feb. 11 Parlor A, Kansas Union
TOM RUSSELL, fiction writer
Ski-Wear SALE 30 to 50% Off
COLUMBIA, Mo.—All the spectators who come to the Hearns Multipurpose Center last night to see a rough and tumble game between the Kansas Jayhawks and the Missouri Tigers had to settle for a shooting between John Douglas and Kim Anderson.
Anderson and company won the battle but Douglas kept KU in the game by scoring 26 of his career high 34 points in the second half, highlighting 12 of the last 14 points for the Hawks.
However, there was no fighting last night except for the shooting contest between Douglas and Anderson. Anderson scored a goal at 87-74 victory over the Jayhawks.
The contest, the third meeting of the season between the two schools, was to be a continuation of the intense rivalry that grew more intense after the Jan. 15 meeting of the teams in Allen Field House. In that game, a fight broke out in the first half, and Donnie VonMoore and Jim Kennedy were ejected.
both signed letters of intent to attend Missouri. Gaylord, a 5-100t, 21boun lineman, had narrowed his choices to KU and MU but Kansas was never in the run for Jeffrey, who picked Missouri over Baylor.
After scoring eight points in the first half,
Douglas came out shooting, and from 14:28
on, Douglas had the hot hand on the KU
offense.
Kansas wasn't out of the game until well into the final minutes, however, and the main reason for KU's staying power was Douglas.
4 p.m., Monday, Feb. 14
Fans watch shoot out instead of knock outs
Parlor A, Kansas Union
BY DAN BOWERMAN Associate Sports Editor
On such name brands as:
Skiing
HEAD
WHITE STAG
PROFILE
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"It was just a lucky night," he said after the game. "I think I get up better for them (Missouri) than anybody else in the concession." We play Missouri, I always set up."
Douglas has demonstrated his ability to get up against Missouri this season in previous meetings with the Tigers. In the finals of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, he scored 25 points in the Jan. 13 meeting in Lawrence, he had 25 points, which was his career high.
Sale days are Wed., Thurs., Fri., and Sat. Feb. 9-14.
He broke that record last night, though, hitting on 13 of 20 field goals from all over the court and eight of 10 free throws. He also led the team in rebounding with 10.
"For some reason, I get the open shots against them better." Douglas said. "And when I get 'em, I just put 'em up."
first serve
TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE
1119 MASSACHUSETTS 842-8845
Douglas kept getting the open shots and
Kansas coach Ted Owens said, "We wanted to get John open as much as possible. He has good moves that cause people to foul him. I was really hoping John would miss the shot and fouled so we could get to the free throw line.
the rest of the Kansas players kept feeding him the ball.
KU, now 9-13, will have its hands full with 8-5 center Candy Rangler, according to KU coach Marian Washington. Rangler is a two-time All-Star and is an impressive player, she said.
"Then we could score and put in the press without having to call time out. I think I had
Forwards Marilyn Carlson, CMSU's all-time leading scorer, and Taffy Anderson lead the Jenkins, 154, in scoring with 16 points. Carlson scored over 50 per cent of its shots from the field.
C
Jouglas said that during the last minutes he was going to the bucket to get a score when he came back.
The KU women's basketball team hosts Central Missouri State University in the only meeting of the season between the two schools at 7 tonight in Allen Field House.
"I didn't think I had that many," he said.
"They were just falling."
But there was at least one person who
same surprise with Douglas's performance.
"I was going for the goal," he said. "If it
the open shot, I put it up. But if I
the open shot, I put it up."
KU women play CMSU tonight
Douglas was surprised at his performance, though.
"Against our defense, that's (34 points) not much," Missouri coach Norm Stewart said. "That will make him feel good. If we play once more, he'll get 50."
"Our main objective on defense will be to clog the middle and force Rangler's teamsmates to take outside shots," Washington said. "We will also have to limit the number of shots CMSU will be able to take with our defense."
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 10, 1977
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Congressmen assure own raises
By YAEL ABOUHALKAH Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON—Congressmen have virtually assured themselves of a $12,000 pay raise, effective Feb. 20, by going on vacation and not acting to stop the raise. Four of the five Kansas representatives, and Senators Bob Dole and James Pearson, they oppose the raise. Representatives who say Democrats Martha Keys and Dan Glicken and Republicans Joe Skubitz and Kate Sebelius, Only Republican Larry Winn, who represents the district that includes Lawrence, supports the raise.
A civilian commission recommended on Dec. 6, 1976, that for pay about 23,000 federal employees—including members of Congress—be raised by an average 28 per cent. President Gerald Ford made cuts that ranged from $45 million in salaries and submitted his proposal to Congress. It automatically becomes law Feb. 18 unless Acts act.
"DOUBT that many Kansans feel that my current salary is inadequate," Dole said. Dole's $44,600 salary will go to $75,500. Opposition by Kansas members and other congressmen has been stopped in recent weeks in both houses of Congress.
Yesterday, a House Post Office and Civil Service subcommittee heard final testimony on the raises, before the House recessed for a week. The full committee is to act on the pay raises Feb. 16. It could apply such a resolution until after Feb. 19—after the raise takes effect.
THE RULE SAYS THE House can't approve a committee measure until three days after the committee's report on the measure has been printed.
Last week, an amendment blocking the increase was added to a Senate reorganization bill. The amendment was signed in 19642 with Dole and Pearson voting for the measure.
The vote ended the Senate's chances of voting the pay raises, because resolutions opposing them have been bottled up in several committees by Democratic leaders. The Senate leaves tomorrow for its winter recess and members won't return until Pobl
Sebelius said, "By allowing the recommended pay increase to take effect without a public vote, I believe this Congress will demonstrate confidence and trust in their elected officials."
Sebelus said he had opposed pay increases since entering Congress in 1969.
MY POSITION remains unchanged today and the issues have not changed," he said. "If anything, our economic problems are worse."
"We continue to be plagued by huge federal deficits, high taxes, inflation, unemployment, and a growing energy crisis. The citizens of my district are experiencing a farm price crisis and tight credit."
The increases recommended by the civilian commission would have cost $118 million in the increase in the increases would cost, but it has been estimated they will total $85-90 million. Total salaries just for all the federal branch employees last year were $35.44 million.
Keys said Congress was setting a bad example by accepting the extra money. She called the raise unjustified because it was not necessary, and than those of 97 per cent of Americans.
THE 23,000 employees, who include federal judges, cabinet officers and top executive civil servants, have received only a 4 per cent return. The numbers were gone by almost up to 70 per cent since then.
Keys rejected the argument that raises would attract and keep more talented people in government rather than in private industry.
"As a matter of fact, some of the wizest people I know here (in government) are not
Dole said he supported an intensive study of salaries for top federal employee bureaus.
'IT IS iniquitable, and illogical, to tamper only with one small portion of the pay structure without taking into consideration all other federal employees.
in the upper income levels," she said.
ANGEL FLIGHT RUSH
A Service Organization of Arnold Air Society
"Salary increases may be warranted for some executive and judiciary appointments, but I believe additional investigation needs to be undertaken to determine what warrant increased compensation ... to attract the most qualified personal."
For further information contact 864-2073 or 841-6324
Skulztz said, "I'm opposed to a pay raise now, as I have been in the past. I haven't supported an increase in the past and I don't intend to support this one."
WNN SAID HE supported the raises because they were approved through proper channels, and were especially needed to maintain high quality judicial apprentices by offering them salaries comparable to private business.
Glickman, in his first term, said he was appalled that Congress has had little chance to pass the bill.
Feb. 1 - 17
"I think it's going through the back door. I don't see him, he said. "I'd like a chance to debate that."
A Pearson aide said Pearson's opposition to the raise had been expressed in his vote last week on the unsuccessful amendment to block the increase.
balloons and parades in their campaigns.
At a meeting Tuesday night of Flynn and the presidential and vice presidential candidates, Flynn told the candidates that the Elections Committee had interpreted the rules for the committee the authority to pass prior judgment on anything that seemed to lend a "carnival atmosphere" to the elections.
Balloon dies .
From page one
Schucke said he was surprised at the Elections Committee's decision.
Schneckner at that time he decided to use the balloon, the Elections Committee hadn't made its interpretation and that on Feb. 2 the coalition received University Events Committee approval to have the balloon on campus.
Flynn said last night that a statement of intent to hold any event that might be construed to have a "carnival air" should be submitted to the Elections Committee for review, and then must within 24 hours to decide whether the legal was级入 Senate rules.
A CANDIDATE disregarding the committee's ruling may be subject to a fine of from $5 to $50 or removed from his seat if elected. Fliynn said.
"I felt we had two valid reasons to use the balloon," Schnacke said. "We wanted to increase voter turnout and circulate information from other campaign spectacles."
Steve McMurray, Avanti campaign manager, said that because there was no provision for approval in the Rules and Regulations in regard to actions taken by the Electron Committee, the committee said that it wanted without being questioned.
The rules and regulations are so vague that the Elections Committee essentially uses them as a reference point.
The Brewery 714 Mass.
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Friday, Oct. 10, 1973
McMurry said, "There seems to be no precedence for overriding or approving the changes."
AN EASY LISTENING FOLK-ROCK EXPERIENCE!
ALTHOUGH Plyn didn't explain why the elections interpretation hadn't been made earlier, he said the committee hadn't overstepped it's power.
"Obviously, some kind of clarification I needed after the election is over to see whether the Elections Committee needs approval from the Senate in many stances, and some questions (described last month) about the provision (discussed last night)."
"We have supervisory power over the elections," Flynn said.
Friday, 9 'til 12
Both Tedde Tasheff, student body
president, and Steve Owens, vice president,
supported Flynn.
Tastfeff said, "The decision of the Elections Committee is final. They had the authority to do it."
Owens said that under Senate rules, the Elections Committee was delegated the power to "decide on complaints (made by voters) and determine necessary steps to rectify the situation."
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Attention Students:
REBATE
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Cash in Last Year's Union Bookstore Receipts beginning Wed., Feb. 9
Period 59----5% thru June,'77
Period 60-5% thru Dec. '77
Receipts cashed on Lower Level of Bookstore at Textbook Dept. counter kansas BOOKSTORE
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10
Thursday, February 10, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Freeze makes flowers, fruit costly
By MARY RINTOUL
Staff Reporter
Valentine's Day will be a little less rosa this year because of increased prices in greenhouse-grown flowers caused by cold temperatures and gas shortages.
Leslie Talmon, part owner of University Floral, 2103. W. 28th Terr. said yesterday that she was having trouble getting several flowers, particularly roses.
"We're having trouble shipping roses from Oregon and carnations from Denver," she said. "Last year roses were $18 a dozen and this year they're $22.50."
Talmon said the cold weather and a current drought in California were causing
DON RANDEL, owner of Owen's Flower Shop, 846 Indiana St., said he had experienced an increase in all greenhouse-grown flowers.
"Because the sellers need the heat to beat the greenhouses, the prices have increased," he said. "Roses have increased about 25 cents a bloom."
Randel said there had been a normal increase in the price of potted plants since last year but that the price of field-grown flowers had increased by 10 to 15 per cent in that time. A Florida freeze in mid-February increased the increased flower prices, be said.
The Florida freeze has already affected the price of fruit in some local grocery stores.
Wayne Pine, assistant manager of Rusty's 909 Iowa St., said some of the fruit
prices were increased within a week after the Florida freeze.
"WEVE EXPERIENCED A fairly good price change in fruit prices but we don't know."
Pine said prices could increase next year because the California drought, which will begin in October, is drying.
Dennis Snowbagger, assistant supervisor for the Northeast Kansas Dillon's Stores, said Dillon's hadn't yet experienced a price rise in fruit.
"We're anticipating a price raise in the next 6 to 8 weeks," he said. "We do most of our buying from the west coast but when that runs out we have to buy from Florida."
Snowbarger said Florida dealers were buying fruit from the Bahamas, a fact that the company was not aware of.
"We don't anticipate price rises in anything else, but next year the canned fruits will be higher because of the freeze in Florida this year," he said.
THE SEVERE cold weather is causing problems all across the nation.
Harold Krogh, professor of business, said the weather could slow the economic recovery that the United States had experienced in the last 18 months.
"There probably won't be an immediate change in the stock market but during the summer there could be a slight down shift and a cool weather and employment," he said.
Krogh said recent reports about employees in the East returning to work were good news. However, he said, many businesses won't become fully operational until this
summer, a delay that would adversely affect the economy.
TWO WORDS heard often later because of the fuel shortage are recession and the economic crisis.
Dick Ruppert, associate professor of economics, said there could be a tendency toward a recession this year because of cold weather's effects on gas and food production.
"My understanding is that not just the fruit crop in Florida has been damaged, but also the trees and plants," Huppert said. "The damage we see until the damped growth can be replaced."
Ruppert said it was easier to correct a recession than a depression.
"There are setbacks during a recession
at it they're easier to correct by applying
more pressure."
ONE WAY TO offset the recession tenden-
he said, to is alleviate the gas
pressure.
"Warmer weather would help alleviate the gas shortage but wouldn't put an end to it," he said. "Another way to alleviate the shortage would be to deregulate gas
The definition of deregulation encompasses many things but briefly deregulation is the removal of regular prices on the sale of interstate gas.
Rupert said he thought gas prices gradually would be deregulated.
"The Kansas Natural Gas Producers might find interstate marketes more attractive and there would be a tendency to sell to other states," he said. "This would
Drop-in athletes'avocation limited
By DAVID JOHNSON
Staff Reporter
As he rounds the bend of the brick-track, Ray Davies slows down to walk. Beads of sweat trickle down his cheeks. He bends at the waist, hands on his hips, straining for
An assistant professor of political science, Davis is one of the pack of joggers running around the track inside Allen Field House. He was a part of an organized class or team.
"It's not a class and I'm not sure it's recreation," he said, still painting and carrying the camera.
Drop-in joggers, as they are called by physical education officials, are part of a large group of recreational enthusiasts who participate in college education class nor involved in varsity athletics.
BUT THEIR avocation is being curtied by the lack of recreational facilities and the hours the facilities can be used at the University of Kansas.
Robinson is closed Monday through Thursday for all recreation except intramurals, scheduled classes and varsity athletics.
The drop-in athlete has his choice of two recreational buildings at KU. He can go to either Robinson Gymnasium or Allen Field House.
Drop-ins can use the gym Friday from 5 to 8 a.m.
and Sunday from 10 to 3:00 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 3:00 p.m.
Robinson's swimming pool is open 12:20 to 1:20 p.m. weekdays to faculty and from 1:20 p.m. weekdays to staff. Open swimming are from 2 to 4 p.m., and 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. on Saturday and from 2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 10 p.m. Sunday. Families can swim from 4 to 6 p.m.
OPEN RECREATION hours for the weight room are from 3 to 10:15 p.m. weekdays. Drop-in on weekends can use the gym during the gym's open recreation hours.
The handball and racketeck courts are available by reservation on weekdays from 7:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. and during regular gym hours on weekends.
The alternative to using Robinson is Allen Field House. Recreational times are from 7 to 10 p.m. Monday to Friday, from 1 to 10 p.m. on Saturday and 3 to 10 p.m. on Sunday.
During open recreation time, eight basketball goals, one volleyball net and the track are available to students, faculty and staff. A KUUID is required for admittance.
JOGGERS MAY run from 6:30 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. Monday through Friday and at the regular recreation times. Soiled during this time, but a jogger can use two outside lanes of the track if the class instructors permit, the coordinator of Robinson and the field house.
Wilkerson said the inside lanes were closed off because they were used the most often.
According to Floyd Temple, who coordinates activities at the field house, a drop-in athlete is one free recreation hours except when varsity athletic events have been scheduled. Drop-in athletes can call 864-3456 to hear a record of scheduled varsity games.
Temple said that even though he supported physical fitness, the large number of people who used the basketball court presented a maintenance problem for his
A THREE-MAN crew cleans the court
three times a week and waxes it once every
Flowers
If you only had the men's and women's basketball team, you wouldn't have as much maintenance," Temple said. "But we don't — it's 'set up' for the students to use it."
Ruppert said that if the Kansas gas supply decreased, many industrial companies probably would switch to alternate fuel supplies.
Send that very special someone a gift of love . . . a specially prepared Valentine's Day bouquet - locally delivered.
two weeks, he said. Cleaning costs more than $36 a cleaning in labor alone and waxing costs $21 for one man to lay two cuts of wax, which takes four to five hours,
cause a reduction in the quantity of available gas in Kansas. On the other hand, deregulating gas prices would encourage the production of gas would increase the total supply.
Owens 9th & Indiana 843-6111 FLOWER SHOP
Despite the problems of keeping the floor in shape, Temple said, he didn't foresee shortening the recreational hours. The temple is also known for better maintenance equipment, he said.
Owens FLOWER
"If we have this situation to live with, which I presume you will, the only thing we can do is get the proper equipment. When I say proper equipment, I'm talking about a $4,000 to $5,000 machine. When you get this kind of use, it's necessary," he said.
He said that reduced fuel gas supplies might cause higher prices and that residential homes probably would switch to alternate fuel supplies also.
master charge
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Use Kansan Classifieds
SUA
MOVIES
7:30 & 9:30 $1
A VERY NATURAL THING (1974)
Dr. Christopher Larkin
UN CHANT D'AMOUR (1952)
Geran Jean Gat
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Fri., Feb. 11
Sat.. Feb. 12
Fri., Feb. 11
Sat., Feb. 12
POPULAR FILMS
ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE
ANYMEH (1973) with
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MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR WITH THE BEATLES (1967)
SUMMARIE (1968)
AROUND THE BEATLES (BBC Concert)
SPECIAL FILM
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
ZERO FOR CONDUCT (1933)
Dir. Jean Jigo with
Direktor Gilbert Pluchon
(French/subtitled)
'LATALANTE' (1934)
Dir. Jean Jigo with
Michael Simon Ditz
(French/subtitled) 7:30 75
12:00 (Midnight) $1
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THIS WEEK'S EVENTS
Accent the ARTS
THURSDAY, FEB. 10
Robert Nunley, Noon, Strong Lobby.
Jill Krebs, 8 p.m., Hoch, $4.00.
FRIDAY, FEB. 11
Lori Malin, Noon, Strong Lobby.
Catherine Cahoon, poet, 4 p.m., Parlor A,
Kansas Union
Martin Moorley, 9-12 p.m., Union Ballroom $1.00
For information call SUA 864-3477.
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Council will discuss sabbaticals
By JOHN MUELLER
Staff Reporter
The Faculty Council is to meet this afternoon to discuss proposed changes in faculty sabbatical policies, but FacEx decided yesterday that the changes were too controversial to be resolved at the council meeting.
FacEx vote to let the council talk about the changes, which center on decentralizing procedures for awarding faculty leaves of absence, but it also voted to defer action on the changes to a FacEx-appointed committee.
The FaceEx committee would include an equal number of members from the University Committee on Sabbaticals (UCS) and the Faculty Senate Committee on FrRPs (FRRP). Additional members would be chosen from outside UCS and FRRP.
THE NEW committee is necessary, according to FacEx, because of the complex issues involved in changing the sabbatical policy. FacEx members said they didn't think the council could agree on the issues after only limited debate.
Rex Martin, FacEx member and council presiding officer, said the sahabtical policy is not appropriate for a parliamentary consider. Let's take it to a committee."
If council members approve formation of the FacEx committee, the committee will act on an FRPR report that recently called present KU kabatbalistic procedures "cumbersome-and, in the view of some faculty at UCS, not as necessary while." FRPR recommended that decision-making power on sabbatical leaves be taken from UCS and given to
METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF HISTORY
On Campus
TODAY: THE SOCIETY OF PHYSICS STUDENTS will present Stephen Shawl, associate professor of physics and astronomy, for a discussion of KU astronomy
Events
TONIGHT: ALCOHOL ABUSE will be the topic of a lecture by FRED MGELLIEME, associate dean of men, at 7 in the Union's Council Room. STUDENT SENATE CANDIDATES will debate at 7:30 in the Union's Jawhawk Hall. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7:30 in Parlors A and B of the Union. DAVID PEARRS of Oxford University will present a paper on "Russell's Unpublished Study of Judgment and Wittgenstein's Picture Theory" at 8 in the Forms Room.
TOMORROW: A TRAINING SESSION for the recruitment and selection of University employees will be conducted at 9:30 a.m. in 104 Carruth O'Leary. Register by calling 864-542-8. A PSYCHOCLOGY COLLEGE will be present to be prepared by JOHN FLAVELLE of Stanford University at 3:30 p.m. in the Union 'B' Room.
IAWS
INTERCOLLEGIATE ASSOCIATION OF WOMEN STUDENTS CONVENTION MARCH 2-6,1977
representatives from various KU schools and departments.
DALLAS, TEXAS
597 (plus transportation and some meals) Act now! The registration deadline's Tuesday, Feb. 15. A meeting for those interested in attending will be held Thursday, Feb. 10 at 6:30 p.m. at Sellars Scholarship Hall. For more information call Barb Jensen - 843-8505.
BUT UCS AND its chairman, Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, have disagreed with FRPR. A memorandum from Calgard, dated Feb. 7, says UCS unanimously consider the proposed "improposal" and unacceptable."
FRREP said sabbatical decisions should be made by four academic groups, which would represent humanities; natural sciences, including mathematics and computer science; social and behavioral sciences; and professional schools and the
Calgaard, however, has said he doesn't see the logic behind the proposed groups. Lumping the professional schools and library together isn't logical, according to Calgaard, who do the schools of social welfare, fine arts and pharmacy have in common with the library? And the School of Engineering could have been put with natural sciences."
T. P. SRIHVANAS, professor of mathematics and FHRP chairman, has defended the proposed group lawsuit against the FHRP in issue in the FHRP report is that "the Faculty Senate Rules and Regulations article on sabbatical leaves has been slowly eroded by the sab-
Because of the conflict between UCS and FRPR, FacEx members agreed yesterday that the new sabbatical committee should have an equal number of UCS and FRPR members. The other members would be neutral, according to FacEx members, but no machinery would be set up to ensure their neutrality.
FACEX MEMBERS also agreed that the present sabbatical policies discouraged professors from applying for sabbaticals. A new system of policies, one member said, "might generate less disappointment for members who are turned down for leaves."
The disappointment, he said, is due to the emphasis UCS places on the motters of sabbatical life.
"The present system is a reflection on you, if you're turned down. The awards should be based on the number of years at the University," he said.
FRPR has endorsed basing awards on the length of an applicant's service to the University, Calgaard and UCS have said the length of service proposal wouldn't work, for reasons not specified in Calgaard's Feb. 7 memorandum.
PRINTING
CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS
POSTERS ★ HANDBILLS
★ POSITION PAPERS ★
HOUSE OF USHER:
838 MASSACHUSETTS • 842-3610
Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358
Jazz
Jazz
PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE
Jazz
926 Mass, above Paul Gray's Music
TONITE Jam Sessions no cover charge Joe Utterback Trio
Great West Coast Jazz
SATURDAY: Tommy Johnson Experiment
surgery now. Modern day Group
Open 8:00 Music starts at 9:00
Call 843-8575, 842-9458 for reservations
Super new Modern Jazz Group
Ford
RENT-A-CAR
LEASING
ADEMIR RAL
2340 Alabama
FALS WORLD'S LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM
PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931
TONIGHT
7:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
DEBATE
Panelists:
JIM BATES
ELDON FIELDS
TEDDE TASHEFF
Leben-Munyan
The Student Body Presidential and Vice-Presidential Candidates
Grey-Green
TO BE
BROADCAST ON KJHK FM 91
McKernan-Rhoads
Paid for by
Student Activities Fees
A hand holding a rectangular object.
12
Thursday, February 10, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Help offered to troubled women
By BETH GREENWALD
Staff Reporter
Women recently widowed or con-
compiling divorce of separated wife
are now required to waive
Women's Transitional Care Services was founded in August 1976 so that women in rural areas could receive care. The service is a 24-hour-a-day, 7-day-a week, on-call counseling service, which operates out of headquarters, 1802 Massachusetts and the KU Inpatient Center, 843-4306
But transitional care is more than a phone service, according to Sandy Elegs, one of six coordinators of the service. In addition to the six coordinators, 17 trained volunteers offer emotional support and physical assistance to women who call.
AFTER A WOMAN has contacted the service, a counselor will arrange to meet the woman wherever she is comfortable. The counselor may then help the woman apply for welfare, get medical assistance or get in touch with the Legal Aid Society.
The counselor also will tell the woman how to acquire job skills and get a job if she is not interested.
More than half of the 50 women who have contacted the service since the phones started operating in November have been battered wives, Eizes said.
In the case of a battered wife, the service first finds out whether the woman is in immediate danger. If so, the police will be called. Eiges said that unfortunately the police don't like to become involved in domestic troubles.
If the woman decides to leave her husband, the next step is to find her a place to stay. Elders say some people in the past and their children for a week at a time.
Because only temporary housing is available, the main goal of transitional services now is to get a shelter house. The service has applied to local church groups
and private foundations for funds for the house, Eigres said.
Eighs said volunteer counsellors came from a "broad base of community women," and many were from other countries.
Eleges said the house would provide a live-in environment of peer support to be provided.
Counselors undergo a six-week training session, meeting twice a week. The 12 workshops, each dealing with a different topic like depression or alcoholism, are led by experts from Lawrence. The sessions also allow its volunteers with academies in Lawrence.
THE SERVICE help put women going through crisis in contact with each other
through support groups. Eiges said. Next week a group of divorced or separated women who are KU students will begin meeting.
Eiges said the women who called are of all ages, income levels and races. The women are generally from 18 to 55 years old, Eiges said, and many are in their 20s.
Transitional care is still in contact with many of the women who first called in November. Eisger said. She said the most important question was the women who ask for help in depression.
"We tell the woman that she has a right to make a decision and that her decisions are valuable," Eigens said. "We help her work out her feelings about her life."
THE IDEA FOR transitional care services began in August 1974, when a survey of Lawrence agencies, including the Douglas County Health Department, Ballard Center and Penn House, was conducted. Eilis said the agencies overwhelmingly responded that such a service was needed.
Eiges said she didn't know what percentage of the women who used the service were employed permanently. However, she said national statistics showed that in cities where shelter houses for women were available, 50 per cent of the women had the shelters left their husbands or lovers.
Easy switch to metrics foreseen
A conversion from the conventional English system of measure to the metric system will be gradual and fairly easy, according to Lelon Cappis, associate dean of
The change will be gradual because of the cost of moving to a new system, he said, but it will be easy because the metric system uses standard units and standard standards to divide the measures.
"Any student in engineering has already taken a course in metric units, and the math department has changed more and more to using metric units," he said.
Robert Moyer, associate professor of mathematics, said the University of Kansas Dept. of Mathematics.
MOYER SAID, however, that classes weren't the only way or the best way to learn the metric system. More effective ways to learn would be by association, such as seeing metric measures on road signs and box tons.
The three measures are the meter, which equals about 39 inches; the gram, which equals about 27 grams.
equals about 15 grains; and the liter, which equals about one liquid quart.
The divisions used on all three basic measures are milli- for 1/1000th, centi- for 1/100th, deci- for 1/10th, deca- for 10, hecto- for 100, and kilo- for 100.
Walter Smith, assistant professor of curriculum and instruction, said it would be easy to learn the metric system because the divisions' names become prefixes to the basic measures, as in kilometer for 1,000 meters.
ALSO, HE SAID, the metric system makes calculations easier because it's a decimal system, with conversion based on 10. Thus, more difficult English system conversions such as 12 inches to one foot and so on to one gallon would be eliminated.
The prefixes are the same and you don't have to memorize different conversions—they're just names.
The metric system is already taught in public schools, Smith said, to get pupils
used to converting the English measures to the metric units.
Capps said some states required that new textbooks use the metric system. California's requirements are the most stringent, he said.
CAPPS SAID large companies such as IBM, John Deere and Minnesota Mining and already converted to the metric system, the company conversion he said, was that other countries used the metric system, so American companies that convert have an easier time using it.
Moyer said the metric system worked better on computers and hand calculators because it was based on decimals. He said it was convenient but more difficult and expensive to use the English system on these machines.
Smith said the metric system is a "really elegant measuring system because of the easy interrelatedness between the units." He explained that conversion to the metric system to be rapid.
Flu vaccinations limited
By NANCYTEETER
Flu vaccines are unavailable for most University of Kansas students, in spite of the government's lift Tuesday of a moratorium on flu vaccinations.
Staff Renorter
Joseph Califano Jr., secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, called off the moratorium so that people over 65 and the chronically ill could get shots to protect them from A-Victoria flu.
The A-Victoria vaccine is available only in combination with the swine flu vaccine. The government will maintain the vaccine containing only serum for swine flu.
The swine flu program was halted in December because of a possible relationship between the vaccine and Gullain-Barre Syndrome, which causes paralysis.
AN OUTBREAK of A-Victoria flu in a Miami nursing home prompted lifting of the government's ban on the combination vaccine.
Don Wilcox, Kansas state epidemiologist,
don yesterday that the state health department was recommending the combination A-Victoria and swine flu shot only for the elderly and chronically ill, but he later be available to the general public.
"We feel that since there was such a large vaccine program in October, November and
December the public has had more than
adequate time to be vaccinated, he said.
Each county can choose whether it will offer the vaccinations, Wilcox said, and so far only Sedgwick and Johnson counties created they might not resume the program.
"The IMPORTANT thing is the A-Victorian vaccine," he said. "Of the elderly and chronically ill, 1,250 per one million die from Gullain-Barre Syndrome."
About 120,000 doses of the vaccine are scattered throughout county health departments in the state, Wilcox said. 120,000 doses are available in Douglas County.
Redistribution of the vaccine is awaiting the arrival of new consent forms, which must be signed by a patient before the next given. The forms are expected next week.
If demand for the vaccine from that group, low, she said, it will then be offered to an adult.
KAY KENT, director of the Douglas County Health Department, said the department would offer the vaccinations to children in the next week after the consent forms arrived.
No flu vaccinations are available at Watkins Hospital and the hospital doesn't keep records of the flu. They will be induction A-Victoria and swine flu vaccine Martin Wollmann, hospital director, said.
Beatle-Mania Returns to K.U.
K.U.
NITHING IS REAL!
The Beatles
Yellow Submarine
COLOR by David
United Artists
The Beatles'
MAGICAL MYSTERY
TOUR
-Plus Special Feature-
"AROUND THE BEATLES"
(BBC concert)
Fri., Feb. 11
Sat., Feb. 12
12:00 - $1
MIDNIGHT
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM-KANSAS UNION
Make Someone else's
Valentine's Day
Hanging Baskets Blooming Plants
Baskets Pottery Clay
Happy
Burpee Flower and Vegetable Seed
Grow Lights Peat Pots Soil
Gardenland
Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat.
8:30 - 5:30
Sun.
10:30-5:30
914 West 23rd 842-1596
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SAILING CLUB
Bahamas San Diego
The K.U. Sailing Club is offering two cruises over spring break. One trip includes sailing from Miami to the Bakamas for $135.00, and the other is from San Diego to Catalina Island for $125.00. Besides six days aboard a chartered yacht, the trip offers the opportunity for scuba diving, snorkeling, sailing experience, and adventure. Prices include round trip transportation and all boat expenses.
Deposits will be accepted starting tonight. Come to our meeting and find out more.
1
Tonight 7:30 P.M.
Parlors A & B
Kansas Union
Sponsored by SUA
Accent the ARTS
SUA presents DAILY RECITALS in the lobby of Strong Hall every
A man resting on a boat.
weekday at noon by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts
Thursday, Feb. 10, at noon Jill Krebs, Flute and Classical Guitar
Friday, Feb. 11, at noon Catherine Cohoon, Clarinet Martin Morley, Plano Program of Debussy,Poulenc,and Schuber
BUY
TWO SANCHOS
GET ONE FREE
with
COUPON
Expiration date: February 28, 1977
Taco Grande
9th and Indiana 1720 W. 23r
Exr
9$
GO a Wheelin' to LITWIN'S Remodeling Sale!
VIKTR 22
Most items are 20% to 50% off
Most items are 20% to 50% off Jean tops 20% to 30% off Jeans from 12.90 to 23.00 Levi style jeans only 15.00 European cut - Five styles Values to 19.00
Lady Wrangler & COS COB Co-ordinating outfits 30% to 50% off Shirts - Button & Pullover Style $^{1}$ with purchase of 1 reg. price item.
LITWIN'S
331 Mass. Free parking in rear
Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358
Thursday, February 10, 1977 12
ALS
ubert
23rd
4358
Sundries in Union fill needs
Two University of Kansas economics professors think President Carter's economic program to reduce the unemployment rate without generating inflation
Leland Pritchard, professor of economics, said recently that a solution to the problem of growing unemployment would be to set up programs that would create jobs for the large influx of women and teen-agers into the job market.
Cutting the rate of unemployment among the involuntary group could be done as long as it wasn't done too fast, be said. If the government tries to push the unemployment rate down too fast then there is a risk of generating inflation, McCaleb said.
THOMAS McCALEB, assistant professor of economics, said steps such as governmental subsidizing of employers who hire teachers more or more job training programs were needed.
McCale said that balancing the federal budget was "possible but not desirable" because of a possible tax increase that might occur. He said a possible solution to balancing the federal budget would be to use an economy by lowering the unemployment rate.
2 profs OK Carter plan for economy
McCaleb said there were two types of unemployed workers: those who looked for jobs but got no offers, the involuntarily unemployed, and those who received offers for jobs and turned them down, the voluntarily unemployed.
Pritchard said there hasn't been a surplus in the federal budget since the late 1920s and to say there will be a balance of the budget by 1800 is "pure nonsense."
"Knocking one to one and a half per cent of the unemployment rate in a year's time will not generate large inflation," he said. Carter also pledged to increase social services and to balance the federal budget by 1800.
Pritchard said he didn't think it was possible to balance the budget.
"I don't think it's possible to balance the no matter who it is or what is promised."
McCabie also said a more permanent cut would have more stimulus than a one-year cut.
MCALEB AND Pritchard agree that the $dax tax reimbursed by Carter will stem from
Kitos said the competition wasn't limited to cancer, but could include such areas as carcinogenic (cancer-causing) substances in the air.
Additions to the merchandise depend on student preference, he said, and the bookstore would order or try to carry anything a number of students wanted.
Mid-America Cancer Center Program, coordinated by Paul Kits, professor of biochemistry has announced the annual awards competition for cancer-related research.
KU students interested in medical or para-medical careers have a chance to receive a $1,200 award to conduct research related to cancer.
PRICES IN THE bookstore aren't competitive with larger stores because the Union can't buy products in large quantities, he said.
For example, the wholesale cost to the bookstore for a small box of Kleenex is one cent more than the price in the grocery store. The same applies to the bookstore's prices were still reasonable.
It's tough to keep some items in stock, like Band-Aids and especially No-Doze at home.
Recipients of the award will be determined by a research proposal submitted to and judged by a panel of eight persons representing varied scientific disciplines.
The disciplines represented include biochemistry, microbiology, radiation biophysics and physiology and cell biology. Kitos said a study was held at Wits University.
$1,200 award for research to be offered
Interestedstudents should, in consultation with a faculty sponsor, submit a research proposal, not more than four pages long, to Lester Mischert, in care of Aline Bilenner, 329 Haworth. The deadline for proposals is March 15.
If you are female, single, between the ages of 17 and 26 and would like a chance at winning a $1,000 scholarship, your chance will come when the Lawrence Jaycees produce the Douglas County Miss KU-Lawrence Beauty Pagel April 1 and 2.
Bilesner said that if anyone had questions, she could be called at 84644201.
An endorsement by the faculty sponsor in whose laboratory the work will be done and an additional independent reference are also required.
When the greeting card section of the Kansas Union Bookstore was moved to the Oread Bookstore last semester, a sundry display took its place.
Scholarships totaling $13,000 are given to winners of the Miss Kansas Pageant.
Now instead of finding Snoopy or Ziggy card, students will find shampoo and a box of shampoo.
The sunny and over-the-counter drug addition to the bookstore opened for business Sept. 6 and is temporarily set up in the bookstore's southwest corner.
The sunny addition has been well worth the small investment the bookstore put into it.
The winner of the pageant will win the scholarship and have a chance at winning the Miss Kansas Beauty Pageant, and, possibly, the Miss America Beauty Pageant.
Pageant entry open
Mike Beahon, assistant bookstore manager, said there always had to be a backup. *bookstore*
"We knew that many students didn't have cars but that they would probably stop in the Union at one time or another," Beahon said.
especially for students who didn't have transportation to a druggare or shopping
Hair care products and Band-Aids are the
materials you use, in addition to personal hygiene products.
THE BIGGEST problem in starting a "mint-drugstore" like this one, he said, was getting a drug company to supply the products.
Surprisingly, there is a kind of "generation gap" in ordering merchandise, because it is hard to determine what products students want and need, Beaohart
winners for the Miss KU-Lawrence pagent will be accepted until March 4 by Craig Fisher, executive director on talent, cent of the judging will be on an interview, and 16 per cent on competition and swimsuit competition.
For-Xiet Drug Co. was willing to try the hea, sea, he said, even though it went to college.
This operation is different from the Daisy Field Bookstore in Hashinger Hall because items can be ordered much more quickly by the Union.
"We had to spend $175 for the fixtures (shelving), but the merchandise is purchased at a wholesale rate and is returnable if not sold," he said.
bookstore. Beahon said any product could be purchased from the company except those listed below.
"At first we had some items like Littl home permanent and hair spray," he said.
"I don't think we sold one can of hair spray in five months."
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students of the original oral or written BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLICT HA13
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.30 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
0.11 0.02 0.03 0.04
ERRORS
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
the UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
POWER
Food items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the DUK business office at 864-534-7000.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
864-4358
Interested in juggling? Join us Thursday at 2
p.m. 1118 IHL, or call 843-8202.
Give away: $10 per week and $200 cash, plus
phone numbers. K.U. Telephone Directions:
Mellow Yellow Page Number.
B10 This Friday, B10 later. It takes 39 KU.
B11 This Thursday, B11 early. What business is "ordered" by the Fed? The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis (FED-BM) - FED-KM-11
ATTENTION LAWENCE AREA SCHERES-THERE will be a meeting at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, March 14 from 5 to 7 p.m., at the Crescent to develop a follow-up program for students attending Lawrence area. All students are expected to attend an idea for this program. If you are unable to attend or need further information, contact Katie Brennan, 703-825-5519, Naismith Hall No. 32, 845-519-519
FOR RENT
1. and 2. room apartments, Furnished, close to
Union, utilities paid, park.kg 943-9759
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
pets. 843-7576. tf
Must substitute by May 31st 2 bedroom unmitted
carpeting, AC B1100.600 W-12 W-10
J-10
For rent. Two, 1-bedroom apartments. March 1-1
1 block from Hotel 843-3398, 841-7667
Large 2-bedroom apartment in North Lawrence,
$140 month plus $15 utility. Small deposit. Also
Roommates wanted to share 3 bedrooms.
Alcohol not stolonking or man/woman.
Call 862-5049.
Available now, large 1 bedroom apartment in modern s-bed near 1623 University Central A-C and Parking 150 per month deposit required. Utilities not included. Absolutely no pets or children. Zip code 2-16
Protecler Ridge—short term leaves available,
Studies, 1. 2 and 3 bed room apartments, some
with study hooks, bed railings, slap carpet-
trap, bed railings curt, pool deck, dog poop-
diamond, palooza - patio - laundry facilities -
free shuttle service to KU. For summer -
furnished and unfurnished from $195. Cali B42-
72
Gatehouse apartments - Call Becky new Summer
contracts on all Gatehouse apartment Call Becky
new Summer
INVENTORY SALE: Extra Stock and Demo Units
Prices Reduced: To Sell Macro excellent one year warranty. Call us at (800) 342-6150.
Unusual pieces of Electronics as well. Now three weeks old. Inventory clearance.
E-Shore. E-Blue. E-Phone. No phone please. Thank you. - 2-11
UNICORNS, Mermaidia, wings in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry, stones to choose from. Stone cutting service. Knife and tool work, satisfaction guaranteed. 841-3833.
Studio Apartment, Clean and Quail. Air conditioned. Steam heat. Available March 1. C-26
1-26
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization so you can serve to orientation. 2. For Exam preparation. 3. New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Tornado
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties:
BELL AUTOLITE ELECTRIC 483-000, 3900 W, 61h.
Electricity 483-000, 3900 W, 61h.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and the Furniture and Appliance Center, 7049 Main Street, T
Guitars for sale—the best guitars in Lawrence are available at LMC, Bob Wedman, dealer. Low overhead fees low prices for Alvarez, accounted for 35%. Come pick them.品 9th. $84-4916. 2-13
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
FIELDS
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Redderen Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod membership (concussion in all students and faculty; active youth group, Place 501, and Haskell). Send resume to MIT office for more information contact. Mit Fredrickson at 703-862-1496, kfredrison@mit.edu, kfredrison at mk.fredrickson@mit.edu, Bible class and Sunday school at 10:15, Lutheran Layman's League meets every eve 2-5pm.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
RADIAI THE CLEARANCE Four pairs of clearance
PACIFIC, 15x15, $94.99; TSA, 15x15, $29.99;
PEACIFIC, 17x17, $39.99; TSA, 17x17, $29.99;
TAPE, 10x10, $49.99; TAPE, 10x10, $49.99;
Used Magnesium component system with 8-track connector. Compatible with Gerard changer for $149.99 in component with Gerard changer for $329.99 in component.
2-145-13 used Dudley radios only $35 for the
Dudley 18-14R for $14 at RAY at 21
July 929 MHz
Bastio, new Alverze 5-string. Play to appreciate:
841-4422
2-10
Cassette tape sale. Pose 60-minute for only 44,
or five minute for $3. Ray Bockrey Shelter
2-11
Stereo Quadragram Music System includes M8-
speaker, Music Center 690, Music Center 436,
Music Center 411, Music Center 412-841-7296,
Music Center 412-841-7296.
Gibson Les Paul Deluxe, Fender Twist Rover Bass
and Tremolo, Mini Mimar Planner Mint-2010
music for men. MK4
Price 23-Channel C.I.'s, half price for $49.90.
Price for only $12.95 at Ray Starley's
store.
1972 VW Fastback, beige, clean, dependable.
1500, 1750, 2002, Olivea.
2-10
Hamilton Beach Butter-Up Puppen Popers only
131 at Ray Stonehack's 929 Mass. 2-11
Advent model 300 Stereo Receiver; designed to offer the kind of sound system you want for a performance computer output. Its audible performance compares outward to that of the most expensive ventilators. We are specialists in the trade.
Cassette recorder: Salty Smy, G.E., Craig and Magnavox on the Nintendo's 980s with a 2-11
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only ones with a specification guarantee of ±2 dB hear conquered top competitors at Ray 14 Achievement.
67 Chevy 2-door Impala. Good condition Call Pat 864-2055 2-11
Yashica MAT 124M ten lens reflex with Braun
strobe. Excellent condition. $100. 8-11
2-11
Fantastic air beds for sale. All new style. Call or write
air bed service in North Wales.
6020 6200
www.northwalesairbeds.co.uk
2-18
Painter CT-P8283 Cassette Record with built-in
Memory Recorder. Step 6, recordment 5, month 41,
862-247-294 after 5 p.m.
**NOTE:** Cassettes are not sold in stores.
Head 300 skis 195 cm Solenium 505 bindings
Scott poles 843-7807, or 841-7535
2-14
BATTERIES: Top quality, fully guaranteed condition. Powered most assist and trucks. Electrify battery Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue, Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue, Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue, Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue, Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue, Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue, Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue, Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue, Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue, Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue, Battery Shop, 54 Mint Avenue. 2-18
1972. Vega, 4-speed, radial tire, $800, $425-700
after 5 mph. 2-14
Cullasax 75 75 Excellent condition All power. Must sell soon. Call 841-6741 2-16
Only 5-ply. $809 - 1972 Vega. 4 cyl. 842-1703. No calls.
3-15
1-15
Planters and pots! This is our last week of best-of-breed plants. $109.95. Home Humus. 204 Vermont. 2-11
Datam 743 8212, Oasis, hatchback, AC, spointer,
Michelton, $2050, 841-6486.
2-11
Garage sale. We've got everything, including a
car, garage tools, and body work.
Landline: 818-375-2455
2-15
Volkswagen Owner's Four new WSB radial tires for $120 including federal tax. size AIRHawk (560-13). Add 40mm of tire depth (560-13). Add bai ray Sunbackyres 560-13. Mass. The appliance store on Mash with the discount tire dept. Come three times per year. same discount. 15-13, 17-13, 18-13, 18-13, 15-14, 18-14, 2-23
For Sale. 2 student season tickets for K-State
and Nebraska games $10 each. 842-899-00
2-10
1963 Corvair, 45,000 o.p. unless Rebuild engine.
good condition and very economical. P-
2-10
Technology SL-1300 Drive Turned, Turbine $24.50
Technology SL-1300 Drive Turned, Turbine $24.50
AT 45m Adm. with AT 14ms and $6.80
AT 45m Adm. with AT 14ms and $6.80
One pair of Bose 901 stereo speakers. Excellent condition. Come by and listen. Please call us at (800) 268-4555.
Supercope famous quality cassette recorder with
motor mk1 unit! Regular $95.99 model cut to
$60.00 plus bonus of 6 hours of play!
Kia Maxe/Kia Sportage/Ryde Stonebacks.
92% Mass Open Thursday nites.
2-16
Free stereo catalog lists incredible discounts on Yamaha, Adventure, Bose JBL, Technica, IBF, Marantz, Marantz, 100 other high end audio and write to Stevenson Books 2 E. 3rd Street, New York, NY 10016 or mail to Cameron Illinois 60451.
1971, Congue AM-PM stereo alt, off good radiat,
studded stoves, warm oven. 843-544-834.
2-17
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
Health & Wellness
6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat
8.8 Sun
Lymph & Mass.
Mon-Sat.
Must sell. 1271 Valkwagen bag. Good condition.
$900.00; Call 841-6531 after 6 p.m. Z-16
68 Mercury Montgomery 4-door, 302-392-afr, air, aircon, windows, roof rails, blower motor, rear doors from campions. Bison included *Air Conditioning* and *Air Conditioning*.
*MAXX, expert condition, new bristol hospital*
*Pride and Prejudice camera 160, Franconia Guild*
*2018*
**MARK D. KNIGHT**
For Sale by owner, holiday Hills and Sunset
For Sale by owner, 3 bedroom bedroom, 1784 sq.
1. 1/4 bath, family room w/ fireplace,
central air, $280.00; for App. contact
623-816-2494
Waitedness needed. Apply at Daqwudh's 644. Mass.
between 2 p.m.-5 p.m. 2-15
HELP WANTED
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy way. Become an Avon representative and make the money you need selling quality products on your own time. Two openings in Lafayette - 2-10
MEN-WOMEN, JOBS ON SHIPS, American,
Forgin, No experience required. Excellent job.
Worldwide travel, Summer job or career.
Master's degree. E.S. Exch. 29-19
Port Angeles, Washington 83522
Oregon 83622
843-9891
Cashier-Hotels, beautiful area restaurant and club caterer over 21 part, time; evenings.
Graduate Assistance, third-quarter time.
Chemistry-ready in 2019. In applied $5M help.
Bachelor's degree, Feb. 18.
Part-time excels in math and science. High scores in XCAT or desirability *Tutoring* courses. *Employment*.
LOST AND FOUND
Fart-time, male or female appropriate. Call for appointment.
2-10:30 am; 3:30 pm; 7:48-7:22 pm
Lost: One pair ladies glasses (in orange/white)
and one pair glasses (in purple/white).
Howard: Call Susie at 864-1573. 2 - 10
Lost-Feb. 2, men's white gold wedding band
and a matching bow tie.
Call 847-301-2111
2-11
Found silver ring in bathroom of Wescow. Call to
claim it. 814-6180.
2-10
Sensitive silver lighter. Braun make; on Jan 28-30
sentimental value. Substantial reward in light
2-14
Lost: 1971 High School ring, gold and ruby stone.
Call: 833-5849 and ask for Janet.
2-14
Brooke Cuffe, black and white long tie,
black dress with black accents, two-inch
tousled sleeves popping off the sleeves.
French linen jacket. 54x30. $2,995.
Forward.
Lost Twedt wait, first week of February. A present with her matrimonial John. At 841-356-136.
Found a box marked "Spectrum." Call either
843-5057 or Don 841-5109
2-14
Found: Watch on the floor of Wesley first floor
call. Hall Killer and Hall describe to 843-
720-6595.
Lost. White dog, 5 months, mixed breed, boxed
not eat, answers to Maldita, 835-5160, 2-15
Found Rocketball Basket between Allen Field House and Bootham. 864-3126
2-11
Found. Hukay, male, black and white. Call 1-
299-8101 after 5:30. 2-11
MISCELLANEOUS
Lost: Blue North Fare daypass in West caterse
loots. 21. & 25.eward 822-346-516, 5-16
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with
Aice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center.
Aice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday,
Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday.
Swan Shop, 620 Mans. Used furniture, dishes,
dining ware, clothing, television. Open daily 12-
30PM-12-37TH.
NOTICE
EUROPE, WORLDWIDE academic discount year
(800), 900-4323 First Ave., Tampa,
3-4
Brighten up your surroundings with a print from J. Hood Bookkater. We have a large collection of beautiful and unique books. Matting is available. Cine and brown- you're always welcome. 462 Museum. Marsha 2-14
The Dance Value* All Been Wellington For Gray
Khan, Alicia DeRosa, Larry Burrows, James
Kennedy, Kansas Union Knights 81.6 pct.席
位
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10.5 Mm. Sat. Till 8 on Thursday
Owens Liquor Store
843-1186
910 N. 2nd
Valentine Day Ideas in jewelry and basketry
available for you at Bengalugs 803 Maida
2-10
New theories and research in Homosexuality will be the topic of Atqv Services meeting. Feb. 15, 7:30 p.m. Regional Road 200 to Storm's Storm to guest speaker. The public is 2:15
HATRA YOGS学院 beginning Pebb. 15th, 16th
and 17th grades. $20 for 8 weeks; call 811-345-2
- 2-16
College will revive: Friday, Saturday and Sunday
Southern Baptist Church, 2-11
2-11
K. U. Sailing Club sign up starts tonight at 7:30 p.m. for spring cruises. Everyone welcome. E-mail info@k.u.sailing.com
PERSONAL
KARATE--Improve yourself physically and mentally this semester. Study This Oriental mantra from national champion themselves now form new championship teams. Attend Lawrence, Kanana (913) 842-8344. 2-11
REFLECTION! 2-17
Volunteers are people making other people happy. Volunteer Cleaning House 843-360. 2-10
**MARIN MUSIC** We make it easier. Folk, blues,
punk, jazz, funk. Guitar, bass, drum, piano.
automatic, autohorn, piano, microphone.
McKinney
Gay Counseling Service: Call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m.
for referrals.
Don't miss an important class because you oversee Jiahua Wake. When you get on you remember the name of the class.
HILLCREST
EUROPE. When you want it, where you want it!
FRANCE. When you want it, where you want it.
ITALY. 17 Europe, N. charter ship, call Huy,
VENICE. N. charter ship, call Huy,
VOICE YOUR OPINION - All Freshmen, opinions, and comments are welcome. Visit www.fresher.suny.edu/college/assembly at 208 Brewster Street, New York, NY 10017 for information at 208 Brewster Street, New York, NY 10017.
I know that they are some affection 18-20 Jewish
teachers who are in meeting with them in
meeting on them. Scott 841-785-920
8-21
Mennon live! Praise Mennon! You could become
a keeper, Keeping听. 2-11
Barden lessons (Illegalgrant) New offered at Rich-
don's Music Call 842-0012, or Paul at 214-836-7911.
Happy Birthday, Toot! Joe. 2-10
Dan Foerman for Student Senate, 2nd District
Numeraker.
2-15
WRITING ASSISTANCE. Get an early start on your first job. Call now! Ensure I'm fine to help you to get the job.
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Foos-Ball
REFLECTION-H has surveyed 1,185 students to get
the results in today's Kauanen. MUNAYA-MUNAYA
has surveyed 423 students.
"Black and White." I need a date. Call 843-6639
and ask for Frank W.
Happy 22nd Bro, M.J. 2-10
Susan Lyman is studying in England this year but she also is still celebrating her 21st birthday. She was born on October 5, B-11, Gritzelda College, University of Lancaster, Brallett, Lancaster. LAHYT, Lancaster. 2-11
DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING RINGS: Up to 50% discount to students, faculty and visitors; et $250, et $450, et $650 by buying direct from leading diamond importer. For color courses call 420-789-6340 or visit www.420diamonds.com #420. Fawn, N.J. 67023 (indicate school or city); 6829-6284 for location of showroom or you can see 6829-6284 for location of showroom - 2-10
A royal coloane -Prince Matchchell spray coloane available at Round Court Drug. 801 635-2400
SAVE THIS AD—and with it, time, money ($26/kept), and effort in supplying you the most current set of equipment or good get-together. Call your Olympia College Representative for complete information and details. 2-10 2-10
SERVICES OFFERED
- Pool
* Snooker
* Ping Pong
Aspiring young artist will design and create mod-
ultiple digital art pieces you. BeReady
priced. bh-103-104 Ask for info.
sister kettle cake
14th and Mass.
10% off dinner with coupon
Bring Coupon in through the 15th
HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service
TRY
TE SELECTION OF BEER
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcress Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
1811 W. 6th
E SELECTION OF BEER
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
Tues.-Fri. 10-6
Sat. 10-4
The Chalk Hawk
Home of
math tutoring--competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118.
Regular sessions or one time test preparation.
Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
Grooming all breeds. Pet supplies. Poope
Puppies Stuid Service. Paradise Gardens 357-
359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 3000, 3001, 3002, 3003, 3004, 3005, 3006, 3007, 3008, 3009, 3010, 3011, 3012, 3013, 3014, 3015, 3016, 3017, 3018, 3019, 3020, 3021, 3022, 3023, 3024, 3025, 3026, 3027, 3028, 3029, 3030, 3031, 3032, 3033, 3034, 3035, 3036, 3037, 3038, 3039, 3040, 3041, 3042, 3043, 3044, 3045, 3046, 3047, 3048, 3049, 3050, 3051, 3052, 3053, 3054, 3055, 3056, 3057, 3058, 3059, 3060, 3061, 3062, 3063, 3064, 3065, 3066, 3067, 3068, 3069, 3070, 3071, 3072, 3073, 3074, 3075, 3076, 3077, 3078, 3079, 3080, 3081, 3082, 3083, 3084, 3085, 3086, 3087, 3088, 3089, 3090, 3091, 3092, 3093, 3094, 3095, 3096, 3097, 3098, 3099, 11000, 11010, 11020, 11030, 11040, 11050, 11060, 11070, 11080, 11090, 11100, 11110, 11120, 11130, 11140, 11150, 11160, 11170, 11180, 11190, 11200, 11210, 11220, 11230, 11240, 11250, 11260, 11270, 11280, 11290, 11300, 11310, 11320, 11330, 11340, 11350, 11360, 11370, 11380, 11390, 11400, 11410, 11420, 11430, 11440, 11450, 11460, 11470, 11480, 11490, 11500, 11510, 11520, 11530, 11540, 11550, 11560, 11570, 11580, 11590, 11600, 11610, 11620, 11630, 11640, 11650, 11660, 11670, 11680, 11690, 11700, 11710, 11720, 11730, 11740, 11750, 11760, 11770, 11780, 11790, 11800, 11810, 11820, 11830, 11840, 11850, 11860, 11870, 11880, 11890, 11900, 11910, 11920, 11930, 11940, 11950, 11960, 11970, 11980, 11990, 20000, 20010, 20020, 20030, 20040, 20050, 20060, 20070, 20080, 20090, 20100, 20110, 20120, 20130, 20140, 20150, 20160, 20170, 20180, 20190, 20200, 20210, 20220, 20230, 20240, 20250, 20260, 20270, 20280, 20290, 20300, 20310, 20320, 20330, 20340, 20350, 20360, 20370, 20380, 20390, 20400, 20410, 20420, 20430, 20440, 20450, 20460, 20470, 20480, 20490, 20500, 20510, 20520, 20530, 20540, 20550, 20560, 20570, 20580, 20590, 20600, 20610, 20620, 20630, 20640, 20650, 20660, 20670, 20680, 20690, 20700, 20710, 20720, 20730, 20740, 20750, 20760, 20770, 20780, 20790, 20800, 20810, 20820, 20830, 20840, 20850, 20860, 20870, 20880, 20890, 20900, 20910, 20920, 20930, 20940, 20950, 20960, 20970, 20980, 20990, 21000, 21010, 21020, 21030, 21040, 21050, 21060, 21070, 21080, 21090, 21100, 21110, 21120, 21130, 21140, 21150, 21160, 21170, 21180, 21190, 21200, 21210, 21220, 21230, 21240, 21250, 21260, 21270, 21280, 21290, 21300, 21310, 21320, 21330, 21340, 21350, 21360, 21370, 21380, 21390, 21400, 21410, 21420, 21430, 21440, 21450, 21460, 21470, 21480, 21490, 21500, 21510, 21520, 21530, 21540, 21550, 21560, 21570, 21580, 21590, 21600, 21610, 21620, 21630, 21640, 21650, 21660, 21670, 21680, 21690, 21700, 21710, 21720, 21730, 21740, 21750, 21760, 21770, 21780, 21790, 21800, 21810, 21820, 21830, 21840, 21850, 21860, 21870, 21880, 21890, 21900, 21910, 21920, 21930, 21940, 21950, 21960, 21970, 21980, 21990, 30000, 30010, 30020, 30030, 30040, 30050, 30060, 30070, 30080, 30090, 30100, 30110, 30120, 30130, 30140, 30150, 30160, 30170, 30180, 30190, 30200, 30210, 30220, 30230, 30240, 30250, 30260, 30270, 30280, 30290, 30300, 30310, 30320, 30330, 30340, 30350, 30360, 30370, 30380, 30390, 30400, 30410, 30420, 30430, 30440, 30450, 30460, 30470, 30480, 30490, 30500, 30510, 30520, 30530, 30540, 30550, 30560, 30570, 30580, 30590, 30600, 30610, 30620, 30630, 30640, 30650, 30660, 30670, 30680, 30690, 30700, 30710, 30720, 30730, 30740, 30750, 30760, 30770, 30780, 30790, 30800, 30810, 30820, 30830, 30840, 30850, 30860, 30870, 30880, 30890, 30900, 30910, 30920, 30930, 30940, 30950, 30960, 30970, 30980, 30990, 20000, 20010, 20020, 20030, 20040, 20050, 20060, 20070, 20080, 20090, 20100, 20110, 20120, 20130, 20140, 20150, 20160, 20170, 20180, 20190, 20200, 20210, 20220, 20230, 20240, 20250, 20260, 20270, 20280, 20290, 20300, 20310, 20320, 20330, 20340, 20350, 20360, 20370, 20380, 20390, 20400, 20410, 20420, 20430, 20440, 20450, 20460, 20470, 20480, 20490, 20500, 20510, 20520, 20530, 20540, 20550, 20560, 20570, 20580, 20590, 20600, 20610, 20620, 20630, 20640, 20650, 20660, 20670, 20680, 20690, 20700, 20710, 20720, 20730, 20740, 20750, 20760, 20770, 20780, 20790, 20800, 20810, 20820, 20830, 20840, 20850, 20860, 20870, 20880, 20890, 20900, 20910, 20920, 20930, 20940, 20950, 20960, 20970, 20980, 20990, 30000, 30010, 30020, 30030, 30040, 30050, 30060, 30070, 30080, 30090, 30100, 30110, 30120, 30130, 30140, 30150, 30160, 30170, 30180, 30190, 30200, 30210, 30220, 30230, 30240, 30250, 30260, 30270, 30280, 30290, 30300, 30310, 30320, 30330, 30340, 30350, 30360, 30370, 30380, 30390, 30400, 30410, 30420, 30430, 30440, 30450, 30460, 30470, 30480, 30490, 30500, 30510, 30520, 30530, 30540, 30550, 30560, 30570, 30580, 30590, 30600, 30610, 30620, 30630, 30640, 30650, 30660, 30670, 30680, 30690, 30700, 30710, 30720, 30730, 30740, 30750, 30760, 30770, 30780, 30790, 30800, 30810, 30820, 30830, 30840, 30850, 30860, 30870, 30880, 30890, 30900, 30910, 30920, 30930, 30940, 30950, 30960, 30970, 30980, 30990, 31000, 31010, 31020, 31030, 31040, 31050, 31060, 31070, 31080, 31090, 31100, 31110, 31120, 31130, 31140, 31150, 31160, 31170, 31180, 31190, 31200, 31210, 31220, 31230, 31240, 31250, 31260, 31270, 31280, 31290, 31300, 31310, 31320, 31330, 31340, 31350, 31360, 31370, 31380, 31390, 31400, 31410, 31420, 31430, 31440, 31450, 31460, 31470, 31480, 31490, 31500, 31510, 31520, 31530, 31540, 31550, 31560, 31570, 31580, 31590, 31600, 31610, 31620, 31630, 31640, 31650, 31660, 31670, 31680, 31690, 31700, 31710, 31720, 31730, 31740, 31750, 31760, 31770, 31780, 31790, 31800, 31810, 31820, 31830, 31840, 31850, 31860, 31870, 31880, 31890, 31900, 31910, 31920, 31930, 31940, 31950, 31960, 31970, 31980, 31990, 32000, 32010, 32020, 32030, 32040, 32050, 32060, 32070, 32080, 32090, 32100, 32110, 32120, 32130, 32140, 32150, 32160, 32170, 32180, 32190, 32200, 32210, 32220, 32230, 32240, 32250, 32260, 32270, 32280, 32290, 32300, 32310, 32320, 32330, 32340, 32350, 32360, 32370, 32380, 32390, 32400, 32410, 32420, 32430, 32440, 32450, 32460, 32470, 32480, 32490, 32500, 32510, 32520, 32530, 32540, 32550, 32560, 32570, 32580, 32590, 32600, 32610, 32620, 32630, 32640, 32650, 32660, 32670, 32680, 32690, 32700, 32710, 32720, 32730, 32740, 32750, 32760, 32770, 32780, 32790, 32800, 32810, 32820, 32830, 32840, 32850, 32860, 32870, 32880, 32890, 32900, 32910, 32920, 32930, 32940, 32950, 32960, 32970, 32980, 32990, 33000, 33010, 33020, 33030, 33040, 33050, 33060, 33070, 33080, 33090, 33100, 33110, 33120, 33130, 33140, 33150, 33160, 33170, 33180, 33190, 33200, 33210, 33220, 33230, 33240, 33250, 33260, 33270, 33280, 33290, 33300, 33310, 33320, 33330, 33340, 33350, 33360, 33370, 33380, 33390, 33400, 33410, 33420, 33430, 33440, 33450, 33460, 33470, 33480, 33490, 33500, 33510, 33520, 33530, 33540, 33550, 33560, 33570, 33580, 33590, 33600, 33610, 33620, 33630, 33640, 33650, 33660, 33670, 33680, 33690, 33700, 33710, 33720, 33730, 33740, 33750, 33760, 33770, 33780, 33790, 33800, 33810, 33820, 33830, 33840, 33850, 33860, 33870, 33880, 33890, 33900, 33910, 33920, 33930, 33940, 33950, 33960, 33970, 33980, 33990, 34000, 34010, 34020, 34030, 34040, 34050, 34060, 34070, 34080, 34090, 34100, 34110, 34120, 34130, 34140, 34150, 34160, 34170, 34180, 34190, 34200, 34210, 34220, 34230, 34240, 34250, 34260, 34270, 34280, 34290, 34300, 34310, 34320, 34330, 34340, 34350, 34360, 34370, 34380, 34390, 34400, 34410, 34420, 34430, 34440, 34450, 34460, 34470, 34480, 34490, 34
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14
Thursday, February 10, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Earthquakes in Kansas a subject of study by Geological Survey
By ROBERT MACKEY
Staff Renorter
Earthquakes and how to predict them form one of the concerns of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), which approves the building sites of all nuclear power plants. The NRC, 1180 Wolf Creek Generating Station No. 1, be built outside Burlington.
Earthquakes in Kansas? According to Frank Wilson, research associate for the Kansas Geological Survey (KGS), the largest one occurred last year and the largest one near Lawrence was in 1961.
The survey began early work on quakes in July 1976, and will start a first year study of earthquake prediction funded by the NRC this June. Wilson said.
WILSON SAID THE HAIN danger to nuclear power plants is to piping that feeds
"The containment vessel is safe," he said, "but the plant has to be designed with huge pipes about four feet in diameter. The plant has to withstand an earthquake as a unit." If an accurate prediction of future earthquakes can be made before building begins, he said, "billions" of dollars could be saved over time by an individual plant by decreasing the cost of changing already built structures.
Most plant sites are in what is called the Central Stable Region, from the Rocky
Mountains east to the Atlantic Ocean. This region, particularly the Midwest, contains large areas rated one to two on a zero-to-three scale of earthquake intensity.
THE SCALE IS based on the Modified Mercalli Scale, a 12-segment scale that describes the Richer Magnitude Scale in terms of damage done by the earthquake. A zero rating means no damage — from I to V on the Mercalli; One means minor damage — V and VI on the Mercalli; Two means moderate damage — VII and III on the Mercalli; and Three means major damage — VIII and up on the Mercalli. East central Kansas is in a two region.
Earthquakes in the Manhattan area—one in 1887 and one in 1906—measured VII to XI on the seismic scale. They ranged from 2 to 3 on the new scale—meaning moderate to heavy damage. Two more in 1929 measured V–in the number one range, meaning minor damage was
The earthquakes, although causing less damage than quakes on the West Coast, spread out over a larger area, Wilson said, because the underlying bedrock was less resistant to the coast. But the location of the faults in Kansas are more important, he said.
"It's the ones we don't know about that worry us." Wilson said.
THIS SUMMER, nine detectors will be
Many methods locate elusive human genes
There is a map, unfinished right now, that can't be found in the map library of Spencer Cummings.
FOR YEARS, GENES were known to be in chromosomes, the bits of material in the nucleus of each cell that determine the activities of each cell and the organism itself. But until recently, the "address," or name, of a specific chromosome was unknown.
A new location technique, somatic cell hybridization, developed in 1961, was applied to gene mapping in 1968. Fusing cells from two different animals allows scientists to plot the neighborhoods in which the genes live. The JAMA article said that more than 1,200 nearby neighborhoods, 120 of them on specific chromosomes, have been found.
The map, showing the location of genes on a human chromosome, is being drawn by geneticists and physicians around the world, an article in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), said recently. The process of mapping genes occurs even with the most powerful microscope, an individual gene can't be seen.
Paul Kitos, University of Kansas professor of biochemistry, said that the cells were aided in their fusing by a new technique. The new cell contains two nuclei, each with the full set of chromosomes from each donor. Sometimes the nuclei come from just one of the donor cell types, resulting in a non-growing cell. If, however, the nuclei are from one of each donor and they fuse, the result is a hybrid that can be grown in the laboratory.
Three other methods—family studies, translocation and co-transfer of genes—help to fill in details of the gene map. The least precise of the three methods, family
THE HYBRID eventually loses some of the excess chromosomes, Kitos said. By noting the functions of the hybrid and recalling which of the chromosomes disappeared, scientists can infer which gene goes on an individual chromosome.
"This (hybridization) is one of the most powerful tools we have. We can work with a population of cells rather than organisms," she said. But this isn't the only method used.
intramural 1st place division winners in Volleyball and Football can pick up their team pictures at services. Rm. 208, Robinson Gym.
placed by Wilson, his staff and helpers in a constantly monitor earthquake activity.
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Wilson detailed his work on earthquake prediction Monday night to about 50 people in Kansas City, Mo., in the Linda Hall School. The University of Missouri at Kansas City.
study, consists of tracing characteristics back through one's family. Translocation happens when the chromosomes cross over between parents or between other. Co-transfer involves surgically removing pieces of chromosomes and planting them on other chromosomes. More than one method is used to locate a gene on chromosome 15 in order that the method might lack accuracy. Kitos said.
He said the NRC required a safety report on the site of any proposed nuclear power plant, containing information on whether an active or capable fault lay within 200 miles of the plant site. An act of damage occurs once within the last 35,000 years or twice within the last 500,000 years. A capable fault is one that ruptures the earth's surface.
For instance, translocation doesn't offer the precision of co-transferring, but is much easier to induce, he said. Another hazard of such an approach is that genes might be mutated, or hidden, by another gene.
JAMA noted that the gene for the ABO blood type was found to be on chromosome nine and the genes for color blindness and hemophilia, although suspected to be there, were located on the X chromosome. A woman with this trait had chromosome would, therefore, have no protection against these two genes if they were on the X chromosome he inherited.
JOBN WEIR, KU professor of physiology and cellular biology, said that gene mapping techniques could help correct genetic abnormalities.
"If you know where defective genes are, you can do a little genetic surgery," he said. Weir added that some scientists thought that some cancer might be related to a human genes. Knowledge of gene locations would lead researchers closer to a cure.
In addition, an estimate of the force of possible future earthquakes is required. Since it is difficult to predict future earthquakes, but that by using an indirect method that considers the amount of time that passes between earthquakes of similar size, predictions could be made.
in the meantime, JAMA noted, the 1,200 gene map locations are located at a rate of two a month and represent a fittithe of the 24 gene map locations of genes on the 24 human chromosomes.
DATA COLLECTED FROM small tremors can be related mathematically to data collected from larger quakes, allowing widely accurate idea of the return period, after tremor.
"But have we seen the largest quake in that region?" he asked the audience.
The region he referred to is the Nemahia Ridge, a subterranean hilly area that stretches from Oklahoma through the Flint Hills of east central Kansas to Nebraska. Along the eastern border of the ridge is a fault, visible on the side of the ridge to be associated with earthquake activity. Burlington is located about 50 miles from the fault.
Movements of the fault are thought to be associated with earthquakes at the northern coast.
Wilson's early studies consisted of mapping the Nemah Ridge, a difficult task because, unlike the San Andreas Fault in California, the Nemah can't be seen. But using such indirect measures as magnetic field data and geologic maps, complete picture can be drawn of the ridge.
ONE SURPRISEFIND, Wilson said, was several large gravitational anomalies in the fault area. One of these encompasses an area that includes Topeka, Lawrence and Karsan City. Another researcher discovered a large mass of dense, highly magnetized magnetite, which extends south through Minnesota and overlaps the northern tip through the Nemah Ridge. Both types of anomalies are associated with earthquakes.
When he found the anomalies, Wilson made profile maps of their location and found that the anomalies peaked in both a north-south and east-west direction in the area. He was interested in these stations. It is questionable whether these anomalies are potentially dangerous.
Wilson said the two anomalies fell into the categories of "black wedges" and "green holes." The black wedge around Lake Superior contains denser material than that surrounding it and the green hole contains material less dense that that surrounding it, causing stresses normally found in the Earth's surface to concentrate around them.
BOTH OF THESE anomalies seem to indicate that the Nemaha Ridge is the source of the earthquake activity around her, Wilson said. The next step is to install monitoring equipment to aid in the prediction of future earthquakes.
Accent the ARTS
SUA and the Commission on the Status of Women present...
"Faces of the American Eve"
a one woman show featuring MAUREEN HAWLEY 8 P.M. Tuesday Feb.15 Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
TOM BUYERS President
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS
MELANIE SMITH
Secretary
CINDY SUGGS Treasurer
SPECTRUM
Paid for by Spectrum
BRAD YOST
Vice-President
MISTER GUY OF LAWRENCE announces:
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Open Thursday MISTER GUY 920 Mass. Nights till 8:30
MISTER
GUY
Despite rejection, black glad she went through rush.
By DEB MILLER
Staff Reporter
At the start of this semester, 468 women followed a tradition of thousands before them—they went through rush to try to join one of the 12 sororities at University of Kansas. Of the 466, 285 were accepted.
Ann (not her real name) is of the women who was not pledged. That is, she was not accepted. Her story wouldn't be unusual, except that she was the only black woman to so through rush this semester.
Ann's experience caused one sorority member, Nancy Tolleson, Lawrence senior, to write an angry letter to the University Dalkan Kansen. The letter was published Jan. 26. Tolleson said that Ann hadn't been pledged because she was black and that members of Tolleson's sorority had made such a claim that can't live with a black," and "We shouldn't place the house in the position of being ridiculed."
But Ann, a freshman, said Wednesday that at first
but hadn't thought of herself as the only black
woman.
Had she been accepted into a house, she would have had the only black woman to live in a KU
Every woman going through rush first visits all 12 hours. Houses invite back those they are interested in. Women can be invited back up to three times without being asked. Women invited back back to seven houses and
Ann, at first was invited back by seven houses and then again by two. Then she was cut.
At first, she said, she didn't feel discriminated against. In fact, the sorority members seemed to look at her as a sort of breakthrough, because she was a black穿 come through rush, she said.
"I COULDN'T handle that attitude," she said. "It made me very nervous."
Am heard, from friends also going through rush,
am sorority sisters said her presenations made them
famous.
"I know the system isn't set up this way, but I wish I had had time to really talk to those people and get to know them, so they wouldn't classify me just as a black," she said.
Caryl Smith, associate dean of women and兵
the Panhellenic Council (the ruling body for
sororites), said there were no clauses in its by-laws
whitewould prevent any sorority from pledging
blackwould prevent any sorority from pledging
THE BOARD OF Regents' Policy on Organizational Membership states that there would be any "discrimination on the basis of sex, race, religious faith or national origin with the institutions under its jurisdiction." The institutions fraternal and campus-related organizations.
A member of one sorority that had asked Ann to
return said she thought Ann had received a fair
credit.
She said that although she had heard many positive comments about Toleflein's letter, if rush were held again tomorrow, the outcome would be the same.
"The way to help the situation is to have workshops with the dean of women's offices, just to put them on hold so we can focus."
SHE SAID rush was strictly a game game. SHE said race on whom to pledge, she said, there may always be a few frightened or uneducated members who will vote against a black.
Cinda Osness, president of Panhellenic, said she
thought there wasn't any discrimination during rush this semester.
"I think the scorpions look for a woman who can be in their homes," she said.
No black women live in KU's live-in sororities and Oness said that could be because there were three dark sororites on campus-Alpha Kapa AlphA, now inactive, Sigma Gamma Rho and Delta Sigma Theta. Each has a national chapter, but none have organized houses here.
Bonn Franklin, president of Delta Sigma Theta,
said her sophomore has had a KU chapter since 1925.
THE BLACK sororities are for the advancement of blacks, Franklin said, and they do community service work. She said whites could join, and had joined other chaplets across the nation.
"It is a tradition in some black families to join our sorority," she said. "Perhaps members enjoy the company of other blacks, or perhaps they just never think of rushing the other sororites.
"When I came to KU," she said, "I knew what I wanted to do. I lived in GSP, and some of my friends asked me if I was going to go through rush. I thought about it, but I already made up my mind.
Ann said she hadn't heard much about KU's black securities.
PANIELLENIC AND the scarlet sororites work together on some projects, such as the annual blood drive.
It is possible for the black scorers to affiliate with Panhellenic. Horne said, because Panhellenic has a higher percentage of scorpions.
However, Pam Horne, resident director for Gertrude Turtleards Pearson Hall and former panselline adviser, said, "There has never been enough interaction between the two to suit me."
But Gwen Young, past president of Delta Sigma Theta, said that possibility had been discussed.
"I met a lot of people, and most of the I talked to were very nice," she said. "I think the I liked to go through next fall, just so I could sit down with them and talk again."
STILL WARMER
Am, who in high school was head troller, a baker, number of Kayettes and pop club, a Student Union leader, and a friend, had 4 per cent of her graduating class, said she was in spite of her rejection, that she went through
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Friday, February 11, 1977
Dance examined for variety, depth
See page six
Candidates express views debate 'issues of the dav'
By SANDY DECHANT Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
If the student body presidential candidates had the power to solve the "issue of the day," as one candidate called the day, "the most whistle, it would be unanimously approved.
But at a Senate-sponsored debate last night among the three teams of presidential and vice presidential candidates, opinions on issues including the ticket subsidy, limits on campaign spending, parking problems in the Senate's size, weren't so clear-cut.
In a 10-minute opening statement, Randy McKernan, presidential candidate for the Democratic Senate was student representation and communication. He said these could be provided only by experienced candidates. Katie Rhodes, Leawood sophomore,
"Unless you have the experience to draw on, it does no good to emphasize the issues," McKernan said, "because you would have no means to implement them.
To improve communication, the Avanti team proposed a weekly column in the University Daily Kansan summarizing Senate activities.
McKernan and Rhoads said that they would improve student representation by requiring Senators to meet with their students. "I'd be happy to tell students who their senators were."
Steve Leben, presidential candidate for the Reflection coalition, said in his opening statement that he hoped to make the Senate more representative of student opinion by conducting frequent opinion polls, holding town hall meetings and involving executive councils of living groups and continuing to distribute the Senate newsletter.
Sherri Grey, Spectrum presidential candidate, emphasized her qualifications and those of her running mate, Don Green, Abilene sophomore, in her opening statement and said she had the most diverse of the three coalitions.
"I will match my qualifications with anyone's." Grey said.
For the next hour and a half the candidates were questioned by a panel committee consisting of Mr. President; Jim Bates, Kansan editor; and Eldon Fields, SenEx chairman and professor of political science. Kathy Tucker, a member of Information Center, was the moderator.
Throughout the questioning, the fate of a $108,000 surplus in Senate funds was batted hard.
Association, where the interest would be used for a Senate-sponsored scholarship
McKernan said he would transfer the money from its State of Kansas account to a federal agency, but it was not clear.
"I'm opposed to the liberal, spend-it philosophes of my opponents," he said. Leben and Grey didn't accept McKernan's idea.
Leben said the money should be used to give the students tangible benefits from extracurricular activities.
He said he would use the money to improve recreational facilities and to reinstate teacher evaluation. Unlike Feedback, used until 1974, the new evaluation would include course requirements and a summary of student critiques of courses and assignments.
Grey said the money should be used to improve recreational facilities, and op-
eration facilities.
See CANDIDATES page 12
Assembly members differ on drop policy
By JOERADCLIFFE
Staff Reporter
Student and faculty members of the College Assembly disagree over a new class withdrawn proposal being voted on by mail and the proposal receiving all thing—the proposal will probably pass.
Robert Friau, professor of physics and astronomy and chairman of the Undergraduate Educational Policies and Procedures Committee (UPPC), which presented the proposal, said, "It will probably pass. It is a very hazardous
"I have no doubt (it will pass)," he said.
"Even if all the students vote against it, enough faculty will return their ballots to pass the proposal."
PHIL KAUFMAN, a student member of the UPPC, was not so cautious.
Tasheff asks faculty for more Union funds
Faculty members make up 75 per cent of the College Assembly.
proposition predicting what the College Assembly will do."
By JOHN MUELLER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Faculty use of the Kansas Union is a fringe benefit that deserves more financial support from faculty members, Tedde student body president, said yesterday.
Tasheff, addressing the University Council, said the next Student Senate might reject giving more student money to the university to contribute contributions weren't similarly increased.
Faculty payments for the Union are now $25,000 a year, provided by administration funds. Student payments make up $50 of each student's annual activity fees.
Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, said, "It's far from what I consider a fringe benefit. It's like the beautiful trees out there on campus—that's
Tasheff said the next Senate would consider increasing the student amount to $1 a student each year, but she was concerned the Senate might not pass the $1 increase if the faculty amount was kept at its current level.
Faculty members of the council immediately responded to Tasheff's statements, saying faculty use of the Union wasn't a fringe benefit at all.
The result of such a rejection, she said, is that the team in the level of services the United States provides.
THE ACTIVITY FEE pay for retiring
union debt and building the satellite
union.
Similarly, Roy Laird, professor of political science, said, "My immediate gut
response is, I don't think the Union is a fringe benefit. It's a place where we and the people are at work.
TASHEFF SAID that she'd not "bcome here to ask you to pay for this thing," but that faculty members eventually would consider increasing their contributions.
LAIRD SAID that increased faculty support might generate interest in reinviting a faculty club, which he said would cut down on faculty-student communications.
If the proposal passes, which won't be known until the March 22 College Assembly meeting, students in liberal arts and sciences next fall will have only seven weeks in which to drop a course and still graduate. Students would have to petition the UPCP.
Tasheff and council members agreed, however, that an increase in faculty funding wasn't necessarily a faculty responsibility. The extra funds, they said, could come from administration money or from direct state support.
Arno Knapper, associate professor of business, said that because the Union occasionally was used for classes, "I feel confident that I have the capability of the state," to help pay for it.
No Big Eight school supports a student not through funds paid directly from faculty.
"The Union is used for PR activities" he said. "May the administration should keep it that way."
"I wanted to inform you of the fact you're not napping very much," she said.
But Bernie 'Williams, Hoyt graduate
student and he though administration
work was too difficult.
"Let's put the bite on Archie," Williams said.
Council members took no formal action on Tashfeef's request.
Kaufman said his main complaint about proposal was that petitioning a commission is unacceptable.
"I don't like the idea of a central board that doesn't know who you are," he said. "The people know nothing about how you've progressed through the course. All they're looking at is a letter or possibly your transcripts."
"I FEEL that the instructor-student relationship will be left out with this
Both Fagges and Kaufman expressed concern about whether faculty members of the UPCH had the right to look at a student's resume. They were certain whether a drop should be approved.
Gerald Feagles, another assembly member, agreed.
Friau, who is serving his last year on the UPPC, said the committee might have to look at some files to see whether a student is taking a drop for personal or academic reasons.
"WE'RE FUNCTIONING as an elective faculty body," he said. "If we need information on student's records, then conference of records by the committee is appropriate."
"Our real hope is that this policy will cause a considerable decrease in the number of drops," he said. "The trouble is that we have to wait later, a lot of his work down, the draw down."
"I would suspect that in most cases there would not be the need."
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Frieda said faculty members were trying to cut down the number of withdrawals.
Friau also said that he didn't think the student-instructor relationship would be jeopardized by the proposal. He think it might not have been the case before they dropped a course and might possibly
See COLLEGE ASSEMBLY page five
Judith
McLouth senior, on flute and guitar, and Robert Nunley,
professor of geography, on guitar.
Strona performance
A series of noontime informal爬行者 began yesterday at Strong Hall with *A* Coucle of Docean Musical Vineettes) with JILK Krebs,
Faculty Council, FRPR disagree over proposed sabbatical changes
By JOHN MUELLER
Staff Reporter
The Faculty Council decided yesterday to send proposed changes in sabbatical policies back to the Faculty Senate Committee on Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities (FRPR), which had recommended the changes.
The FRPR had recommended that sabbatical policies be more decentralized, a reduction in the number of Committee on Sabbaticals (UCS) of power to award leaves of absence. It also criticized UCS for putting too much stress on competition among faculty members and staff.
The FRPR will clarify its recommendations and submit a new report at the next council meeting. It was decided to send the proposal back to the FRPR after council members couldn't agree on what to do, so the decision has been have been called unacceptable by the UCS.
RON CALGARD, vice chancellor for academic affairs and UCS chairman, said he didn't see the logic behind parts of the FRPR prosoal.
Another council debate centered on which county should further consider the PRIME LEVEL.
He urged council members not to "make an ad hoc committee to consider one of the boroughs."
Faex decided Wednesday to set up a new sabbaticals committee which will in-
vestigate the issue.
But T. T. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics and FRPR chairman, opposed the FacEx decision. He said, "If you don't believe that the committee doesn't like the committee, replace it."
HE ALSO criticized the 10 faculty members on UCS, saying, "When you are in that committee, we have to colleagues" UCS has 12 members—the 10 faculty, Calgard and
William Argeringer, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies.
Srinivasan said UCS consistently favored definite research proposals over sabbatical requests in which research wasn't emphasized.
The council sent the report back to FRPR after voti-g to reject the FacEx plan to form a new committee. But council should modify its proposal. how FRPR should modify its proposal.
Saying UCS was too centralized and put too much stress on definite proposals, Srinivasa speculated that “if Gallile had been asked to sumit a proposal on the sun, UCS would have said, ‘fascinating but too tentative.’”
HE ALSO SAID UCS had overemphasized competition in its decision-making. Com-
munity leaders responded by saying they were not
the Faculty Senate Rules and R-gulations which states that the primary criteria for awarding sabbaticals should be the merit of an applicant and the candidate's academic record.
A UCS memorandum, dated Sept. 1, 1976 states that "candidates applying for a leave should prepare their application as an offer and propose for any other competitive award."
Council members disagreed on whether anything, could replace competition as a basis for making awards. Elden Fields, professor of political science, asked, "Where do you draw the line—how do you cut off applications?"
M. Erik Wright, professor of psychology,
draw straws. That's a reasonable
possible.
See SABBATICAL CHANGES page 13
14-year-old held in killing
By CHUCK WILSON
Staff Reporter
Police are holding a 14-year-old male in connection with the stabbing death yesterday morning of Mary Cox, 43, of 2440 have been accused for the crime has been found, police said.
Cos's body was found in her apartment by an unidentified neighbor who then called物业。
Mike Malone, Douglas County attorney, said last night that he would file a formal plea of delinquency today against the youth in connection with the killing.
The KBI lab team was called in by local police to investigate the crime scene, Lawrence police and the Douglas County sheriff's department also asked the University of Kansas security police to help in the investigation.
Malone said that he had suspected burnicide from the outset of the in-vestigation.
During a press conference yesterday afternoon Malone seemed to suggest that he had ruled out suicide because no weapon was found at the scene.
A neighbor, Hiroshi Samizo, Tokyo graduate student, said last night that Cox apparently spent most of her time at home. He said he didn't think she was employed.
This was the second murder within a week in Lawrence. In both cases the victim was dead, and then stabbed, and in both instances young, white males have been charged in connection with
Malone said he didn't think there was any connection between the killing and the killers.
2.
Friday, February 11, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Vance requests boycott
WASHINGTON- Secretary of State Cyrus Vance yesterday appealed to Washington to help prevent the release of a cyberattack that Carter administration impaired a raid but prevented transition to blast.
"the key to peace in lieu of Mr. Ian Smith's hands," Vance said, referring to a white Rhodesian prime minister. Vance said a U.S. boycott of Rhodesian chrome was necessary."
Vance, testifying before the Senate subcommittee on African affairs, said the United States would not take charge of any negotiations toward black rule and has no intention of becoming involved in a conflict in Rhodesia if Britain fails to arrange a peaceful settlement.
Dope found in train debris
CHICAGO—Police said last night that four hand-rolled cigarettes found in the wreckage of the recent Chicago elevated train accident, contained marjuanja and were believed to have belonged to a motorman running one of the two trains involved.
A train piloted by motorman Stephen Martin, 34, bumped into the rear of another train in the Loop last Friday evening during rush hour. Two cars smashed to the street and two more were left hanging from the tracks.
Fiveteen people died and nearly 200 were injured.
aurors begin deliberations
NALINA—Francis Donald Nemechek is a psychopath with latent homosexual tendencies that reflect in his hostility toward women, but he knew what he was going to do.
The opinion of Dr. Michael Burges end a brief prosecution rebuttal to claims that Nemechei was inasmake at the time of the murders and concluded testimony in the trial.
The seven-woman, five-man jury will begin its deliberations today after closing arguments and legal instructions.
Demos re-elect chairmen
WASHINGTON - Senate Democrats, voting by secret ballot for the first time in history, re-elected all committee chairmen yesterday but voiced some opposition.
to nearly every one of them.
At the same time, Republicans stacked the Senate Judiciary Committee with hard-line conservatives and the Democrats added a conservative of their own, Sen. James Allen of Alabama.
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-A gunman last night freed the mortgage company executive he had held hostage for nearly three days and then was taken into custody by police.
Hostage freed after 62 hours
The hostage, Richard O. Hall, was unhurt.
The hostage, Richard O. Hall, was unhurt.
The gunman, Anthony Kritisia, 44, said immediately after he removed the wire that bound a sawed-off shotgun to Hall's neck,
"I've wanted to fire this thing ever since I've had it."
Kirtis then left the building, fired a shot into the sky and returned to the room. Four policemen grabbed him, handcuffed him and hustled him into the back seat of a patrol car.
Hall was removed from the building on a stretcher but was coherent and calm.
Fried Heckman, news director of radio station WIBC, had talked with Kirtis repeatedly by telephone when the 62-hour session in the room when Kirtis fired Hall.
Heckman said Kirkits looked in disbelief as he was grabbed by police. Earlier, Marion County authorities had promised him prosecution on state and local charges.
Heckman said that Indianapolis Police Chief Eugene Gallagher had told Kirtisia, "Tony, you lie. You said you would let that man go before you came down."
An hour before Kirstia freed Hall, he had brought the hostage downstairs from his apartment and shouted at reporters. The police called to the house of release Hall before meeting with reporter's.
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These meetings will be held on campus at the Lutheran Student Center, 15th and 10th, on Wed., Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 17, 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Feb. 18 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Sat., Feb. 19 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 20 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. and TWO FINAL MEETINGS, Tues., Feb. 22, 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
The United States Reading Lab Mid-West Division is offering their famous speed reading course to a limited number of qualified people here in the Lawrence area. The average person who completes this course can read 10 times faster, and with substantially improved comprehension and better concentration.
SPEED READING CLASS TO BE TAUGHT IN LAWRENCE
For complete details about this famous speed reading course be sure to attend one of the free one hour orientation lectures that have been scheduled. These lectures are open to the public, above age 13 (persons under 18 should be accompanied by a parent, if possible.) and the course will be explained in complete detail, including class schedules, instruction procedures and a tuition that is much less than similar courses.
This famous course has taught many thousands of people to read over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and retain what they have read much more effectively. Average graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.
Classes are limited and class places will be filled on first come-first serve basis to attend a fastest meeting possible to insure a class place. Group rates are not charged.
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Foundation honors Chicago editor
By BARRY MASSEY
Staff Renorter
Clayton Kirkpatrick, editor of the Chicago Tribune, told about 200 people at a noon luncheon yesterday that the future of newspapers looked bright.
Kirkpatrick, the 1977 recipient of the William Allen White Foundation's Award for Journalistic Merit, spoke on "Pluses of Journalism."
The day marked the 199th anniversary of the birth of William Allen White, Pulitzer Prize-winning editor of the Emporia Gazette for whom the University of Kansas School of Journalism was named. Kirk Buchanan had provided inspiration to "generation of young Americans" and that he hoped it would continue to do so.
The 62-YEAR-OLD editor said that despite many recent threats to freedom of expression, there still was hope for the future of newspaper.
"The printed word-his (White's) instrument that White employed so skilfully to achieve success—still is the supreme example of his art." Kirkpatrick said. "And this is only one of
Although television and radio may have certain advantages over newspapers, Kirkpatrick said, newspapers fill an informational void.
many positive aspects of newspaper publishing today.
"When the communication is from intellect to intellect and the need for analysis or reference to other information is present," he said, "no other medium now available can replace print." "It has not been able to be not supplanted by broadcast media."
Predicting that newspapers wouldn't brow to the pressures placed on them by radio and television, Kirkpatrick said new paper publishers also gave hope to the future of newspaper's.
"TELEVISION CAN NEVER waken a citizen in his newspaper as long as his newspaper is not published."
Kirkpatrick emphasized the role newspapers play as a supplier of comprehensive news coverage, and said it made newspapers an invaluable tool to many
*Newspapers are going through an industrial revolution that should make them
Editor says press freedom doesn't extend to Hustler
Freedom of the press doesn't apply to Hustler magazine, Clayton Kirkpatrick, editor of the Chicago Tribune, said yesterday.
Kirkpatrick was on campus to accept the 1977 William Allen White Foundation's award.
"I have no stomach for the magazine," he
looks. "I've see one issue, and that was
enough."
Larry Flyp, publisher of Hustler, was convicted Tuesday of pandering obscenity by distributing the magazine. He was sentenced by an Ohio court to serve from seven to 25 years in prison and was fined $11,000.
Kirkpatrick said Flynt had written to him asked for his support in fighting the boycott.
"I won't help him," he said, "because his magazine is nothing more than hard-core peer review."
Kirkpatrick said the First Amendment right to freedom of the press didn't apply to Hustler's "terrible writing and explicit photos."
Kirkpatrick added, "It may not mean that much to your generation, but discipline is the hallmark of a free society. Society has a right to protect itself."
"I would rather save my fire for political repression," he said. He referred to the need for "a responsible free press that must stand behind what it orbits."
Press conferences with Daley, he said, became more nothing than "a continual game—Daley led about a lot of little thunus."
Speaking on another topic, Kirkpatrick said that Richard Daley often lied to reporters during his long reign as mayor of Chicago.
"Daly ete' like the press, but he was an effective mayor," Kirkpatrick said.
He said Chicago would survive without
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Daley, who "couldn't concede that another person would ever be mayor."
The Tribune supported Daley in four of his five successful election bids, Kirkpatrick said, to a great extent because the state has a strong responsibility in handling Chicago's budget.
"Daley gave Chicago relatively moderate tax rates," he said. "He also managed the city's finances without the spending that put New York City in terrible trouble."
The Tribute didn't support Laie last fall in his find election, Kirkpatrick said, and he didn't back it.
Kirkpatrick predicted few changes would occur in Chicago government because of its rapid growth.
At the time of his death less than two months ago, Daley was 74.
"Daley followers will continue his prosecutions, might be a little less tough."
far better able to cope with their competitions and win an enlarging circle of friends.
"The new technology will offer an opportunity for men and women with little experience in computer programming, 1895, when he bought the Gazette, to launch careers as successful as his—if they have the talent, the same energy, the same industry and the same commitment," he
University Daily Kansan
KIRPATRICK NOTED that the use of scientific methods to study the interests and needs of newspaper readers was another reason that newspapers had a promising future.
Gravity as the Therapist
a film on Rolfing followed by discussion and demonstration by Tom Pathe MON.,FEB.14
"A renewed and determined commitment to freedom of expression" is another positive factor Kirkpatrick mentioned for the future. He said a growing feeling among students was "unite and to resist" upon arrangements First Amendment rights.
Economically, the outlook for newspapers continues to be bright. Kirkpatrick said, and projections of advertising revenues and expenditures in 1877 indicate that both should increase.
LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY
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The indignant response of news organizations to a gag raiding in a Nebraska trial last year is one example of this feeling, Kirkpatrick said. Such a feeling is held not only by American journalists, he said, but also by foreign news organizations.
Perhaps the most prominent aspect of the news of newspapers, he said, is the young population. "They're at the mercy of their elders," he added.
Not only are their numbers increasing, he said, but they are reportedly very skilled and extremely committed to their chosen field of journalism.
"Perhaps William Allen White's greatest service to journalism," he said, "rests in the inspiration his career has given to young men and women who has sought to follow
The Award for Journalistic Merit annually goes to a journalist "who exemplifies William Allen White in service to his profession and to his country."
"They offer the brightest hope that the best years for newspapers are still ahead."
Kirpkpatrick, the 28th recipient, first joined the Chicago Tribune as a reporter in 1973.
an honorarium Kirkiputrk received as part of the award was given to the KU student.
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---
4
Friday, February 11, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Regents just pawns
Donn Everett is probably snickering away right, now.
He's snickering—or should be—at Governor Robert Bennett and the people of Kansas, who fell for Everett's political maneuvering that resulted in the appointment of two Kansas State University alumni to the Board of Regents Wednesday.
Everett is a state senator from Manhattan, which is, not coincidentally, the home of K-State. He is the man who proposed a ridiculous bill that would have prevented more than a single graduate of any one Regents school from serving on the board. The bill was killed in a Senate committee Monday.
WHILE THE bill was still alive, Everett candidly admitted that it was a silly one that had no chance to pass. He said he submitted it only to make a point—that fewer KU graduates should be appointed to the Board of Regents.
Sily or not, the bill bore fruit this week when Bennett bowed to political pressure and appointed K-State alumni to the board. They replaced, strangely enough, two KU graduates who had sought reappointment.
Bennett of course has denied that his appointments had anything to do with Everett's bill or criticism of the Regents composition. Just a coincidence, apparently.
The words Bennett spoke as he made the appointments must have sounded like "forthwards." Afterwards,
"I APPOINTED them because they were good men and they come from Western Kansas." the governor said.
Anyone who believes that should stay away from men selling cheap real estate in Florida. The least the governor could have done was admit that he had succumbed to the pressure—at least he could be respected for his honesty, if not his judgement.
Bennett appointed the two because they are graduates of K-State. In his attempt to show that educational history and political games have no influence on appointments to the Army, Bennett was Regents. Bennett has made it obvious that those two factors are the only determinants.
No one had ever seriously considered the
alma mater of a Board of Regents appointe until Everett bullied his way into the headlines with his proposal, which he announced during a legislative slack time over the Christmas break.
WHEN HE presented the proposal, Everett accompanied it with some rhetoric about how the number of KU graduates on the board had caused funding shortages. He shared facts or examples—but it all sounded good to the folks out in Western Kansas.
What Everett didn't mention that, in its 1977 fiscal year budget requests, the Board of Regents—chock full of KU alumni—requested $88 million for the Lawrence campus of KU and $68 million for Considering whether the campus has students than the Manhattan campus, that hardly seems like exorbitant spending for KU.
Everett and K-Staters are also upset that there is so much construction going on at KU. They are probably also mad that KU has 5,000 more students on the Lakeland campus than it did five years ago—after all, that makes the new buildings necessary.
Using Everett's and Bennett's reasoning, the two new Regents now will probably be expected to be prejudiced toward K-State. After all, wasn't that the point of this whole exercise in political power playing? To make sure K-State gets its share of blamed Regents?
IF THAT wasn't the point, if Bennett and Everett weren't planning to even up the sides in some game of political football, then the whole scenario makes even less sense. Bennett and Everett must have a pretty low opinion of the Regents—otherwise, they wouldn't think the schools from which they graduated would make much difference.
Kansans should expect their leaders to choose the most qualified candidates for any appointive jobs. Everett and Bennett have now guaranteed that, at least for the Board of Regents, educational history will be the most important factor.
It was a sad and dangerous precedent that was set in Topeka Wednesday. Perhaps, however, the Regents themselves can rise above the pushing and shoving of our elected leaders.
If you're as bored as I usually am of childhood reminiscences, please forgive me. But there's something I've got to get off my chest.
I tomorrow we celebrate the birthday of one of America's greatest presidents. Tomorrow we pay official tribute to the president in a speech by Emancipation Proclamation, the solution to the Civil War and the Reconstruction. His subsequent assassination made him a martyr for the cause of civil rights, and inspired America. I loves Abraham Lincoln.
Abraham Lincoln's face stirs fear
I hate Abraham Lincoln.
MAYBE ID better clarify that. I don't hate Lincoln the Great President. Who could hate a president who did what he did? Rather, I hate Lincoln the Ugly Face. That face through the years has taught me how to be both amicable and many painful classroom experiences and has brought much delight to my family and friends.
It all began one frosty, blustery February night. 12 or 13 years ago.
I shared a bed with an older brother. He was at that age when old brothers satisfy primitive animal urges by teasing, taunting and tormenting him. He still younger than I, but I was the one most convenient as the object of Older Brother's devious (and deviant) tricks. Because we slept together, he could be a slave to us, and Mother and Father would never know. He got away with murder.
The aforementioned frosty, blustery February night was a night like any other night. I'd said my prayers, bid my parents goodnight and trotted off to bed. My older brother sat in the bedroom desk with his nose buried in a book (or so I thought). I pulled down the covers, as I always did, and started to jump into bed.
THEN I saw it. On my pillow. A grusomesly ugly picture of Abraham Lincoln.
I froze, gasped, shrieked, screamed,
cried, jumped out of bed, beat, kicked
and bit my older brother, who was by
Stewart Brann
Editorial Editor
then quaking with laughter. Then I ran downstairs to take sanctuary in Mother's lap.
She met me halfway down the stairs, curious as to the nature of my screams and tears. I was incoherent amid the mix of blubberlings and wallings, but eventually the story came out: My older sister came up to me for a picture of Abraham Lincoln on my pillow.
Mother was nonplused. She told my still quaking brother to "settle down," hardly my idea of compensatory punishment,
Unfortunately, the story doesn't end there.
There it was. Propped up on the table.
The servant was, of the birthday box.
There I was, confronting the ugliest man in history.
There they were. My older brother AND my mother, in the kitchen, convulsing.
SUCH ARE the roots of my distance- to put it mildly—for Abraham Lincoln. That episode's effects on my late childhood were profound.
Lincoln was an often-photographe man, considering that photography was something relatively new in the 1860s. His mug appears in every history book, dictionary and encyclopedia around. He is a very well-known World Book in fourth grade, I avoided section "L." That immediately eliminated the desire to learn about leopards, lichens, Liechtenstein, lions, lima beams and lingerie. I never learned the proper definitions and root words of woodland, woodland, lingua franca, linotype or litany.
The fear was reinforced in junior high. At assemblies, my homeroom was always the one that sat directly under the desk. I sat in the auditorium. A portrait of George Washington, who doesn't bother me a bit, was on the opposite side of the auditorium. We never sat there.
Three years ago tomorrow, for some unknown reason, they flashed Lincoln's picture on the screen during "Jeopardy."
six years ago tomorrow, my history teacher, a fan of Carl Sandburg, read us passages from Sandburg's biography of Lincoln. That in itself was too bad. But why did he have to spice up the lecture with a slide show?
All my trials. Lord.
A YEAR ago tomorrow, I received an anonymous Lincoln's birthday card adorned with profuse illustrations. Two months before that, I received a Christmas card with a picture of Lincoln pasted over the head of Baby Jesus.
Does no one share my anxiety? Does no one sympathize with what I've gone through? Does no one else consider Lincoln frightfully ugly?
Take a good long look at one of his pictures (there's a dooory on page 410 of the American Heritage pocket book, which is filled with photos of his eyes are the eyes of wickness. Look at his mouth; his lips are the lips of an ogre. Look at his enormous nose, his over sized ears, his bushy eyebrows, his unkempt hair, his wide-legged beard, his high check-hones, his wart.
"Doesn't it cause you to shift uncomfortable in your chair?" Doesn't it make you want to avoid dark air? Compel you to go check on your children?
Why not the best of Billy?
I rest my case.
Billy Carter's hoppin' mad. Someone, it seems, done went off and wrote a book about him. "I was the best dancer here. Here then, are excerpts from a book Billy might have written himself, a book that might be titled 'Billy's Life.' As I thought As Hell would've seen It."
There's probably other reasons, too.
MOST PEOPLE think of me as nothin' but a beer drinker that sits around watchin' pumps all day. That's just because the media goes around makin' news instead of presentin' it. Not a one of em or them, with what is most like, what I'm really like, because most of 'em are spendin' so much damn time in my beer bottle.
Like I get up every mornin' at 4:30—workin' man's hours. By 5:30, I've read four or five
Meet what I do durin' the day is run in the family bidness. There's a lot of peanut jokes in the country that people don't
M. B. FRAZIER
newsheets and all the crap that's been in 'em. There's no way in hell that a newsman will show up in Plains 'til an hour before deadline time, and then you know the man over they look like they've been ridin' a washin' machine all night.
Jay Bemis
Editorial Writer
realize growin' peanuts is hard work.
A MAN isn't a man if he doesn't like sitin' and drinkin' with the boys after workin' 12 hours, though. Beer is the best social drink we got down in Plains, and the best day to drink
Bigotry alive and well in Lawrence
To the editor:
Kansan chastised
Thanks to the letter of Linda Saiger (Krause, Feb. 7), we can all rest easy tonight, secure in the knowledge that sororites at KU harbor no "secondrels," rogues and ruffians prostitutes and pushes and other compositions of that, alas, is not Debra Watson's point. Undoubtedly, there are problems to be had with Ms. Watson's letter. I find especially dubious the idea that teachers downgrade blacks in their classes. I think that Ms. Watson should find data to back that statement. But that is also not the point.
Face it, Ms. Saiger, you may have soothed your pained conscience with your circular argument, yet you do not soothe the me. It must be nice knowing that you and your "sisters" can talk in plain words about the "house" song before you cup with clear hearts now that you have mitigated the blot of bigryth on your philosophy.
The point is that it has been alleged that black women are being systematically excluded from at least one sorcery house on this campus and Ms. Saul, who harden了她, cannot skirt that issue. Yet, that is precisely what she has tried to do. Saiger regales us with platitudes about "lifetimes" and meaningless phrases like "the sorceress members into categories." If, indeed, a sorority is "nothing but a building which houses sorony members," why is it so very important that some of them have "category" label on their face should be excluded on that basis?
Your argument won't wash, Linda. I suggest a course in logic and a very thorough session of soul-searching before you decide that you really believe what you wrote.
The fact remains and always will remain that a black woman was excluded from rush purely on the basis of her color, a sad one, not because she is poor and well in Lawrence and harbored in the sorority system.
To the editor:
Bob Nugent Philadelphia Senior
In the Feb. 4 issue of the Kansan a front page article reported on the marijuana enforcement policies of the KU enforcement agency, a story appeared, it has been picked up by one wire service, several radio stations, and two television news shows. As a result, the police in the residence halls has been described as "rampant," "uncontrollable," and "condoned." As members of the police department have distressed to note that only a very small minority of Resident
taught, they are allowed to be used in the newspaper.
Paul Miller
Lawrence senior
Susie Handelman
Shawnee Mission junior
(Also signed by nine other students)
Airport worthwhile
To the editor:
In response to the article on the editorial page of the Karsan on Jan. 28 discouraging improvement of Lawrence Municipal airport, I feel I must reply in opposition.
While I am not very familiar with the Lawrence area or its people, it is obvious by the large
I hope that I have shed a little light on the importance of your airport so that you may favor it. My advice is that you can now say is that the people of Lawrence have an old gold mine under their nues that really could pay off if they spent a lot of money and dug a little liceer.
Gary Potter 1601 N. 78th St.
Kansas City, Kan
a stopping point for corporations.
Beliefs not static To the editor:
Arise, O people of common sense, there is a boar loose in the Kansan! The boar is Alan
Realizing that the School of Journalism at the University of Kansas is a "teaching laboratory," we do hope that your students will learn to do a better job on future articles. Surely such techniques as staging events overgeneralizations and shabby investigative reporting are not taught at a school as proud as this one. And one can only wonder why, if they are not
Readers Respond
Your story implied that since there are problems with pot in one or two residence halls and that a few R.A.'s "candle" this activity is the case in all of the residence halls. In fact, it was an important decision done pot-smoking in the halls they live in because: 1) the word condense implies a moral judgment which it is not our job to make and 2) we enforce residence hall policies and to be lenient in one area and to be lenient in other areas. What a resident does off hall property is of his own private concern.
Although policy enforcement is part of the R.A. role, residents with the policies of the hall they live in will enable the staff to direct their attention to issues and provide experience for all involved.
Assistants were polled on this subject.
Why knock progress and growth? Is this not essential for a successful business environment? Thirty years ago, more than half of the American population situated in cities of more than 100,000 people. By 1856, more one-third of all new factories were going to smaller cities. In fact, to date the trend of industrial decentralization is moving towards smaller communities that have something in common—a decent airport.
Airports do create more jobs. Who will work at the new industrial facilities drawn to a change in technology? Who will make the important decisions that determine their prosperity? I understand that KU has an excellent business culture, leading out competent graduates!
number of those opposed to the improvement that there is a misunderstanding about the value of a good airport. Aviation is a diverse industry. This is why those who control its destiny have difficulty realizing its importance.
it is on Sunday. That's when I give it away to the boys.
Lawrence airport should not expect or want to compete with Kansas City International or Topka airports. This is what makes Lawrence so attractive—an airport that is close to town and business. It should serve as a link as well as
Hicks, who, in his Feb. 8th letter, said that the ordination of women was an integral part of Catholic doctrine. The present attitude regarding ordination of women could—and probably will—change with the pontifex, the leading aspect of Hicks' life is that the pre-Vatican II era. When I was a pupil in a parochial school, we were taught that the church possessed THE truth.
The Catholic Church would never change; we were right and THEY were WRONG. Then came Vatican II, and there hasn't been the same comfortable, unthinking approach that has characterized the Church is made up of humans, and despite the best efforts of the Holy Spirit, it will reflect human frailties. That belief isn't a static principle is manifest in the tradition of change and progress, as seen in figures from Erasmus to Pope John Paul II. Faith is a call for struggle and is an unfolding process.
1. J. (Toby) Westerman Lawrence graduate student
City needs change
I was upset by Brent Anderson's article "Let's Keep Our City Government" in Wednesday's Kansan, concerning the proposal that will be on the April ballot to change the
You see, this damn state has what they call blue laws. They're so full of crap they're like a blue tick on a blue tick dog.
form of government from the present City-Manager form to the Mayor-Council form of government.
First, Brent made it sound like "Joe College" and "Sally College" indiscriminately signed the petition, not knowing or carying about what they were doing. I am sorry to see them uniformed non-caring citizen and student. Also, signing the petition did not mean those people were for the change of government, and trying to "get the uniformed non-caring citizen and student." It merely meant they felt that the issue deserved to be put to a vote. Just having this issue on the ballot is an education to the students and citizens of Lawrence to discover motives of those who organized the petition were not clear. Did he speak with any of them? I felt they were extremely clean and careful who were distributing the petitions if you were willing to listen. The main motives were well-pay by you: 1) It will responsive to the needs of its citizens, and the citizens in local government and in making decisions that affect the city. Number 1 is achieved by the process of electing Commissioners from districts. Contrary to what good of the city being utmost important, Lawrence is a diverse town; each section's needs and wants are different and must be acknowledged. That is why representation is important in city manager system does not meet that need with Commissioners elected at large. I do not feel their main concern is centered on the over-mall town, anyway and on growth-, indiscriminate growth, regardiness of the needs of the city as a whole.
Regarding the second motive listed above, by having ward elections, citizen participation will be increased on a neighborly basis. Citizens who become involved to elect someone from their district.
Two more important facts regarding Mayor-Council form
And the blue laws said as heil don't stop me from barbecuing on Sundays, either. If I butcher a mug and it ready to eat, nobody has any damn bainnes tellin' me I can't put her on the stove so that nobody can many people in Plains anymore that you can't barbecue. There's too many mouths to feed.
The City Manager, Buford Watson, has an incredible amount of power now. He tells the part-time Commissioners "the facts" that they make their own decisions out of 10 agree with him mainly because they do not have the time to research the facts out. Under the Mayor-Council form of government, many people are in agreement to send democratic the. The Mayor could vote with the Commissioners only if there was a tie; he could vote their decisions, but they could override his veto by a 2/3 majority. Would a Sandrini?? Just like the President and Congress. Here we have a balance of power that is so important to the idea of democracy. Maybe an even more efficient—one man telling the rest what to do and how to do it—however, I would rather see a slower, more democratic way of running the city, for we are a more multi-million dollar business" as Brent Anderson calls it.
of government that Brent did not mention were that the City Commissioners would be able to devote more energy to running the city, and 2) be paid a livable salary so that people could earn more money. I earn a big salary could afford to run for the Commission.
To demonstrate the absurdity of the City Manager form of government, let's apply it to the federal government. The President would be appointed by the senate, not elected, with full power and the Senators elected at large so that certain states had more control over theSenators would have other employment. Sounds undemocratic somehow!
I don't feel I am being overly optimistic or naive when I refuse to acknowledge the city as merely a business. If we take the human element out of City government, and decide to run it yourself, we might blooted way we know, we might have an efficient business machine, but we sure won't have a city that is fit to live in.
Patti Plamann Clerk III
ONE THING I've said before and I'll say again is that Plains is goat straight to hell. Tourists come up here and get tads too many already. In fact, they're so damn thick the place looks like a swarm of flies on the ground.
And that's not mentionin'
what they're in'd Flaina. I'm
payin' so much damn deposit
and I don't know what we've
been stolen for souvenirs.
I wanted to change it. That's why I ran for mayor. I just guess I'm one Carter who wasn't born to be a leader for a change. One thing about that election night, though. Me and Andrew were there. For a while there, we were thinkin' we was back in high school goin' to Americus for a hot dog and a coke.
of a runnin'-the-family-bidness job.
ME AND Jimmy get together every once in a while, but it's nobody's darmin biddess what he does. He hadn't elected. If he hadn't, I'd be out
n ope he can find a way of getin' at the gas companies. They're always preachin' about how we have a gas shortage, but I know better. Those dunn companies will sell you more gas if they were nice. I know I have gas biddiness quite a while now. It's kinda funny they used to hold back on me. Ever since Jimmy started runin' for President I've been getin' all the gas I want.
JUST BECAUSE I haven't been to church in quite a while doesn't mean I'm not religious. I believe in God, but I worship God. When I see people who say I'm not religious are nothin' but a crock of hypocrites. A hypocrite is the worst kind of sinner there as she, he, and they want to make a baisdness deal with a man, I want to trust him. If he turns his back on me, and then goes to church on Sunday, he's still a sin, and he sure as bell won't be able to bindiness with me no more.
I doubt if I'd change my life if I was to do it all over again. Oh, I've had my ups and downs. In fact, I've had nine years of ups of downs; we had to do 50 of 'em with her other exercises in the Marines.
"we been called red neck, peanut farmer, Jimmy's little brother and even worse things. But as far as I'm concerned, I'd just as soon they call me to Georgia from Georgia," and the others can go straight to Plains with all those other slap-ass crazy tourists.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Bob Giles David Dary Mel Adams
Friday, February 11. 1977
ear
5
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rg's biography of
it too sad. but
be cee up the lecture
narrow, for some flashed Lincoln's biring "Jeopardy" and received an apology in illustrations. Two received a Christmas gift of Lincoln pasted Jesus.
v anxiety? Does no what I've gone one else consider v?
University Daily Kansan
look at one of his his page on 410 pages of pocket document皱紧, sickened, look at the lips of an open. the oversized his, unhkempt rd, his high cheek
you to shift un-
chair? Doesn't exist
to void allexes?
to go check on your
the-family-bidness
can find a way of a way
of gas companies.
w preschain' about
a gas shortage,
butter. Those damn
will sell you will sell
you wanted. I know, I've
got a dumbie. I can
diam a hunky funny
he back on me. He
started runnin' for
he been getten' all
ant.
CAUSEI I haven't chin in quite a while in I'm not religious. God, but I worship in damn way. Those n not religious are out a crock of A hypocrite is the of sinner then as concesses need when I拿 trust to trust him. If heck on me, and then march on Sunday, he's sain, and he sure as ee doin' bldness with ee.
I'd change my life if it all over again. Oh, yup and down. In and nine years of ups since we had do 50 other exercises
n called red neck, neler, Jimmy's little and even worse things. e they call me "Billy, le bidnessman from and the others can go Plains with all these bessary tourists.
AN
daily August
during day and Holi-
day, Kan
Bham, Kannan
Bhimayan or $20
acceptions are activity fee.
Editorial Editor
Stewart Brann
Lydia Smith Jerry Seib.
Jim Cobb, Jim Cobb.
Gary Wear
Gary Wear like Campbell
Jim Cobb, Jim Cobb.
Jay Bemis, Jay Bemis.
Jay Bemis, Bedwin Baidwyn,
Ulysek
Ulysek Bowser
Baurower
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Worthish
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Paul Thornton
Bobin Grueber
obin Grueber
weinStrand
ainess Adviser
Mel Adams
College Assembly
From page one
make them decide not to drop the course at all.
"IN THIS SENSE, it may improve overall the student instructor's relationship," he said. "It goes to the department and fills out a form. He usually doesn't talk to the teacher at
Charles Reynolds, professor of chemistry
County loses jobs to city
The money will be distributed under the federal Comprehensive Employment Training Act (CETA) public service job program.
The Douglas County Commission yesterday approved an application for $23,609 in federal money to fund five temporary county jobs.
The county originally applied for $61,350 in CETA money to fund 11 temporary jobs. The city of Lawrence, which had applied for $61,350, leased it from pariion $26,843.
The county commissioners have objected to the funding formula for CETA funds, saying Lawrence wasn't considered a county when the funds were distributed.
The five jobs to be funded by the county's CETA money will be eight-month positions. The commission hasn't decided what type of work the jobs would include.
In other business, the commissioners signed contracts for revenue-sharing funds with Bert Nash Mental Health Center, $11,000; the Douglas County Amateur Baseball Asn., $9,000; and the Lawrence City Baseball Center. The commission had approved last week the amounts of revenue-sharing funds the organizations would receive.
"The teacher can sure have an impact on the petition," he said. "I'm sure it'll have a lot of weight for the teacher to write a note on the petition."
and a UPCP member, also said he thought the student-instructor relationship would be worth it.
Reynolds helped write the proposal. If it poses a challenge he will help decide on petitions as a way to promote his work.
He said that since students wouldn't be allowed to drop after the seventh week simply because of academic reasons there was no need to look at their private files.
"WE WOULDN'T ever look at the academic records," he said. "We'd just look at what the student put on the petition. That won't ever be a problem."
Reynolds said that the proposal would make the policy uniform throughout the departments and that it would be similar to the universities for other schools in the University.
Some College Assembly members have argued that the UPCP would be swamped with thousands of drop petitions after the seventh week. Reynolds and other faculty members who favored the proposal said they were confident that if the new policy was advertised well enough students would make most of their drops by the seventh week.
"I just think that students will start dropping sooner," he said. "If everybody learns how to do it, we can make a better job."
ONE FACULTY member who said he couldn't understand why the policy had to be changed was John Wright, professor of human development. Wright was one of the students whoided with the students and spoke out against the proposed drop policy.
"A restrictive drop policy serves no purpose at all," he said, "except when the professor is doing a bad job and doesn't want to be embarrassed by drops."
Wright said he had found that students
learned well under strict repressive out-
sidings.
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"Professor Friauj has a different view," he said. "He and others want to see every march to the time of the same year, not for the military but not for a university."
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Wright said a student was punished enough by dropping a course because he was not in class.
"Why the hell do you want to punish a student to stay in a class," he said. "If a student doesn't want to be in my class, then I don't want him there."
Wright said he thought the policies were being centralized because of fear.
"When people want to tighten up it's
"I think our side will win. We'll have all the students voting against it and all the faculty members that you never see at the assembly."
because they are afraid," he said. "I've seen it happen at every institution I've been connected with. I don't know what they're afraid of."
Wright said he was optimistic that the proposal would be defeated when the mail was delivered.
He said that there were many faculty members who shared his view but that they didn't make themselves known by coming to the meetings. But their vote will be counted when they mail in their ballots, he said.
"They don't come to the meetings because they reject authority," he said.
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kansas union BOOKSTORE
6
Friday, February 11, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Leisure
DANCE
THE
Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL
Ballet blues
Cynthia Hale, Topea junior, contemplates another stab at
bait with a broken ankle. Despite her cast and crushes, Hale
has continued to attend the ballet class and is able to do many of the exercises.
The trend is toward younger and better ballet performers. The Joffrey II Company is a part of that trend as a bundle of fresh, stimulating and creative young talent.
By SHERI BALDWIN
Entertainment Editor
Joffrey II, the touring and training company of the New York University, has been called the best small classical ballet in the country by many. But its members are more specialized and averaged 18 years of age.
SUCH youthfulness was hard to detect last night as Joffrey charmed a small but enthusiastic crowd in Hochfeld and routinely in spirit, the company performed like adults.
But with adulthood comes maturity, and the company has little time to find that on a road trip. The company is beautiful - clean and crisp with good extension. And the dancers have obviously adapted to making the best of any stage environment. What is lacking is dramatics.
Some, not all, of the dancers were concentrating so carefully on technique that all sense of audience contact seemed lost. Pull the few, perhaps new, dancers into the "play to the beat" stage and be ready would be ready to perform for the most critical of audiences.
JUST AFTER the program was announced from the repertory list, a last minute tradition of the company,
The wait wasn't a long one, however, and the audience was startled. "I had to try a variety of dance," he being boped that those who expected ballet to be merely tutus and girls playing about weren't disappearing.
technical difficulties stranded two posed dancers as they waited for music.
The "Scherzo," was a quick moving dance that matched the melody of the tempo and attitude. Abstract movements such as flat, unpointed footwork and flicks of the head were also used in additional classical movements.
ONE SMOOTH lyrical piece in both music and dance, "Continuo" no pauses. Lots of point work, filmlight blue costumes and, now flowing, a beded ensemble highlighted the舞语's mood.
"The Gift to Be Simple" was one of the most entertaining dances in the program. Based on a book by Robert A. The Shakers, an 18th century communal and ceilidant religious group, the eight-part dance conveyed mores of the Shakers's daily lives, work and beliefs.
ABRUPT clocklike movements in the first part reflected rigidly structured patterns the Shakers lived by.
Lisa Leada, originally from Salina and one of the newest in the company, was exceptional in a solo dance where a young maiden silently rebels against the Shaker teachings.
In the eighth part, the entire company parodies the reason the Shakers were called so. To counter this, they shake their body violently. When the elder is out of sight, however, the shaking stops. The comedy is heightened when the elders demand the demands the shaking resume.
"TZIGANE," or gypsy in Hungarian, was the program's best example of classical dance. A pas de deux, "Tzigane" even provided traditional black-and-white dances, as do velvet waltcost costuming.
ACCORDING to director Sally Brayley Bliss, the young company is often plagued with injuries because the program's issues are as varied. Its problem shared by most companies.
In "Sedalia," saloon girls, their male customers, orchestrated ragtime and a lighthearted burlesque atmosphere combined to create revue-style entertainment. The dancers, tumbling and bumbling in gingham banders and garter straps, had most of the audience laughing at their antics.
To compensate, Bliss said training has become better and the dancers learn how to handle their injuries so they can still land from leaps without a sound. Rugged, cowboy-laced, theancers are also chosen more often for their endurance, she said.
Three-fourths of the New York Joffrey is Joffrey II stock.
No wonder Joffrey has such a wonderful reputation. With a turnover of not much longer than two years and the grueling schedule Joffrey II endures, a simple time to achieve perfection.
Dance dates
Judging from last night's performance, this 11-member season of Joffrey II is already well-deserved promotions.
Dance events tonight include a free Kansas City Civlet Ball concert at 7:30 at Kansas City Kansas Community College, and the laffey II Company at its Hopka Municipal Auditorium.
Other spring events include:
March 3- University Dance Club lecture demonstration to show what differences still remain between classical,
modern and jazz dances.
March 2. 3 and 4-Chiff Keuter Dance Company, Baker University, Baldwin
City, Kan.
March 4 and 3—Pennsylvania Ballet,
Music Hall, Kansas City, Mo.
March 7—Vlenna Philarmonica
MARRIT
Vienna Corona de Ballet, an all-Strauss
program, KTWU public television.
— h 9 — Boston Flamenco Ballet.
program, KTVU public television.
March 9- Bosehann Palmetto Ballerie,
Kansas City, Mo.
March 23- Dance Theater of Harlem
Judge theater of Harlem.
KTWU.
March 28-April 3-Kansas City Civic
ballet, featuring guest artists, Lyric Theater, Kansas City, Mo April 6-Cliff Kuster Dance Company, University of Kansas
**Theater.**
Agril 6–Cliff Kueller Dance Company
University of Kansas.
August 13—Tayla Tharp and dancers, both
with choreographer, a Dance Actor.
Athletes, troupe entering ballet act
In America segment of the Grew
Performances series, KTWU.
Mid-April - Premier of Topeka Ballet
Company, Topeka.
april 27- *Photohousus dance* dekeren & other groups perform in "New Directions in Dance", a dance in America segment of the Great Perf.
April 30- Dance Theater of Kansas from Wichita, Topeka.
"If you put basketball players in shoes and leotards, they're doing the same things we're doing in modern dance while they're on the court," DiAme Darno, assistant professor of dance, said yesterday.
Balletteamens take heart. Not only is ballet becoming more popular--football players are now enrolling—but areas per capita are changing in Topeka and Kansas City ballet.
Damro said many athletes were encouraged to sign up for ballet and modern dance, as were theater and music therapy teachers. He also said of movement in what they do, she said.
The image that dance is feminine seems to be slowly dissolving. Darna said the ratio of men to women in KU classes has improved from 1-15 to 1-7.
1. just think dance is on the move," she said. "There's an increase in interest, new classes and more students than ever before."
increasing number of movements from modern, jazz and even ethnic dance. Classical ballet is still easier recognized by its fixed poses and steps, but now there is neoclassical ballet, ballet combined with untraditional steps. And even modern and
KU has two dance companies. Tau Sigma performs ballet, modern, jazz and mime dance, and is open to any student. The University Dance Company is open by audition only and members receive credit. Tau Sigma offers ballet, modern and jazz dance and has about 10 members. Tau Sigma has about 40 members.
In addition to KU courses, Free University offers beginning and intermediate ballet and Hashinger Hall teaches modern dance.
jazz dance has grown so close that a line of definition is difficult.
Topeka now has a new ballet company and the Kansas City Civic Ballet has gone professional, two moves that may schedule more ballet in the area.
Auditions for the Topena Ballet Company were last Sunday. About 28 dancers will perform at the annual Winter Gala.
temporary, modern, ethnic, jazz and character dances.
Director Tom Steinhoff has directed both Jacksonville's Florida Dance Theater and the touring band in 2015, including tours and lecture demonstrations in addition to spring, fall and winter concerts. A complete performance of Prokofiev's *Orchestral* *derella* is scheduled at Christmas time.
Dance: an assorted mix
Cultural detours in dance available in Lawrence range from the ordinary (tap, ballroom and square dance) to the unusual (dance of the 1950s). The dancing is an assortment. The following is an assortment.
Despite the obvious popularity of the current disco dancewear and the variety of dance styles it offers, many people are treating themselves to a wide spectrum of dance techniques far-removed from the disco doldrums.
BALLROOM—An alternative to contemporary hooding with a more conventional style, ballroom dancing offers a unique experience and intricate challenge over disco dancing.
Kathy Riordan, assistant instructor in
physical education, attributed ballroom's sudden popularity in part to rhythms now provided by musicians such as the Beach Boys and Bette Midler.
Big band or swing style music lends itself to dances such as the ffortro, Big Apple, jitterbug, Charleston, blackbottom, soft shoe, polka and waltz. Rirdman said that she is in her classes prefer the dancing because it is more indicate and takes more thought.
The "swing" element of ballroom dancing can be sampled at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Big band dances of the 20s and 30s will feature the 11:30 Jazz Band beats playing at 9.
MIME AND IMPROVISATION—
Weekend
Highlights
Theater
"OLD TIMES," 8 tonight and tomorrow, William Inge Theatre.
"RAIISIN," the musical version of "A Raisin in the Sun." 8 tonight through Sunday. Ck theater, Kansas City, Mo.
Concerts
The 11:30 JAZZ BAND, 9 to midnight tonight. Kansas Union Ballroom.
THE EASTMAN QUARTET,
piano and strings as part of the
Chamber Music Series, 3:30
University Theater.
Recitals
INFORMAL RECITALS by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts at alno Stroll through Mar. 4. Strong Hall lobby
J. J. CALE, 8 tonight,
Memorial Hall, Kansas City,
Kan
LINDA JOHNSON
SHANKEL, soprano, 8 tonight,
Swarthout Recital Hall.
Nightclubs
The JERRY WOOD GROUP plays from 9 to 12 midnight tonight and tomorrow night at Off the Wall, HU.
The JOE UTERBACK TRIOM
plays from 9 to midnight tonight
at Paul Gray's Jazz Place.
THE TOMMY JOHNSON EX-
ERMENT plays from 9 p.m. to
midnight Saturday at Paul Gray
Kansas City dance-rock band, plays from 9 to midnight tonight at the Opera House.
The JOHN ROLLER BAND,
Films
THE NAIROBI TRIAL, a local jazz band that plays contemporary jazz, plays from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the 17th Spirit.
ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE-Ellen Burstyn won an Oscar for her portrayal as a struggling singer in this comedy drama. Directed by Travis Driver (PGI)
A STAR IS BORN - A Barbela Streisand - Kris Krissofferson clash. A terrible reviews, a terrifying 977/1071 Golden Globe awards. (R)
FREAKY FRIDAY—Walt Disney switches the mentalities and personalities of a teenager and her mother, each becoming
ROCKY—Passionate tale of struggle, suffering and fortune. Syvester Stallion is a true knight in one of the year's best books (BPG)
THE SENTINEL—Horror galore with a star-studded cast. (R)
SHAGGY D.A.—This district attorney really is a dog—Walt Disney style. (G)
Leetures
"GYOKUDO, AN 18TH CENTURY LITERATI PAINTER AND MUSICIAN," by Stephen Addis, of the painter and member of the folk group "Addis and Croft." Addis is lecturing on Asian art history and music while on a break at a museum. This afternoon, Spooner Thayer, Art Museum lecture hall.
MICHAEL JOHNSON, poet.
SUA Contemporary Writer and
Poets Series, 4 p.m. today,
Union's Parter A.
Exhibits
Barbara Hawkins, photography.
SPENCER RESEARCH LIBRARY "Earth, Air, Fire, Water" Main Gallery; "Kansas Peretals: The Land Through its People"; "Kansas Collection; the Book design North Gallery."
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER-Graduate exhibition displays Richard Bird paintings and Anita Kapau ceramics.
7E7—Beginning Saturday,
Nick Vaccaro, boxed assemblages,
and Luella Vaccaro, pot assemblages.
Books
LAWRENCE PUBLIC
AWRENCE
ham, paintings; Wit Orvaled,
wooden works; Bynea Snegas,
powder and silver works; Milford
Dickerson
THE KEYS OF HELL, by
Jack Higgins (Gold Medal,
1962). He's hot names in today's suspense fiction. It takes place in
Albania, where the hero is
trying to be a beautiful girl in
Africa.
**SMOKY VALLEY**, by Donald Hamilton (Gold Medal, $1.50)—western in the yellow book and his Books. The hero is named Parrish, and he's more like a 20th century heroin in 19th century setting. A
HARRY'S GAME, by Gerald Seymour (Crest, $1.95) - A thriller in which the hero is a British intelligence officer, recruited from Berlin to find an IRA man who has assassinated Harry's brother and services Harry's IRA, to infiltrate the IRA's setting: Belfast.
Narrative body movement, either planned or spur of the moment, is offered both through University courses and at the Movement Center Workshop, resident dance and mime company of the Lawrence Arts Center.
Usually, simple games, rhythmic activities and imagination exercises are part of gymnastics.
BELLY—Both exercise and a reducing method, belly dancing is a means to relieve everyday tension, according to the instructor, president of the KU Belly Dancing Club.
Styles of belly dancing range from Hawaiian hula dancing to Tahitan, Greek and Egyptian styles, she says. She also teaches courses of animals important to different cultures, as in a camel walk, or butterfly and swan arms. Belly dancing club members range in age
Belly dancing club members range in age from six to 55 years.
The dance was created as a means to unite people from differing cultures and religions. Languages used in chants with Sufi dancing include English, Islam, Hindu and Japanese. Classes are offered through the Free University.
SUFI—Suft dancing's formal title is the dance of universal peace. Baccalaic folk dance with a religious flavor, Suft dancing has its roots in ancient Rome and is as simple as circling to the left or right.
**FOLK--Most of the folk dances done in the area are ones from the Balkans in Eastern Europe, according to Martha Miauer, Eagle, Ore., senior and a KUK Dance Club member. Scandinavian, Israeli, Austrian and Russian dances are also done.**
**SQUARE - Good owl** fashioned hoedowns are still in the area on a regular basis. Square dancers usually join one of three groups—the Barn Dancers, Merry Mixers or Twirling Teams—and come to dances in additional hoop skirts and string bow ties.
Mater offers a Free University class on just Israeli folk dances since the founding of
Eugene Westerhouse, former president of the Merry Mixers, said that fellowship and good clean fun were main tenets of his club's philosophy. Neither liquor nor instructors are allowed at the clubs dances. Experienced dancers teach the novices.
TAP AND JAZZ- The shoes make tap dancing what it is, along with quick feet, of course. Jazz dancing is a form of tap without the shoes. Movements are primitive, yet stylized, in cha-cha and shuffle steps and the step-ball-charge.
In addition to private lessons, tap and jazz are offered in courses at Hastingsher and Inventry colleges.
Staff drawing by David Muller
Beginners' ballet class a chaotic war on grace
Staff Writer
BvGREGGHEJNA
A half-dozen little girls sat on a carpet in the center of the small studio. They were dressed in leotards they'll grow into as adults and tappers they'll grow out of before too long.
In front of them sat Becky Johnson, assistant director of the University Dance Company and the girl's instructor in this class. Ms. Bray was a faculty member of School of Ballet, 942 Massachusetts St.
Stretch and point. Stretch and point.
As Johnson began the lesson with a series of warm-up exercises, the girls glanced nervously at each other. There were giggles as they tried their best to imitate their teacher and, when that failed, the person next to them.
Holding the attention span of this group ... six to eight year olds was not an easy task.
What had begun as a carefully disciplined exercise quickly degenerated into a chaotic mass of arms and legs on the exercise mat. Other exercises produced much the same result, but it was easier left for right. There were more than a few collisions but fortunately, no one was hurt.
Several times Johnson had to repeat instructions to an aspiring ballerina who had been failing in ballet.
With one eye on the teacher and the other on her reflection in the mirror, each student stretched her awkward, lanky frame, trying to mimic Johnson's every move. The results were no more graceful than the exercises had been.
Graceful music from a record player in the corner and the jerky movements of the young dancers produced a startling, yet humorous contrast.
Back, open, front. Back, open, front.
Back, back, front. Back, open, front.
The girls repeated their movements countless times, usually out of sync with their teacher.
Learning how to twirl on one leg produced interesting results. After one or two twirls, the young ballerinas became dizzier and dizzier with each successive twirl.
As they completed their last twirl, they stumbled back to the group.
Regaining their balance, they slipped into an adjoining room to gather up coats, shoes and sweaters and to wait for their mothers to return to pick them up.
Maybe next week they'll learn that twirl.
Friday, February 11, 1977
7
ng
University Daily Kansan
ey has such a
key. With a.
much longer
and the grueling
y II endures,
to achieve
1 last night's
this 11-member
y II is already
well-deserved
dates
tongle tonight
city Civic Ballet
at Kansas City
uiversity College.
II Company at 8
kauai Municipal
events include:
Dance Club lecture
to show what dif-
tain between classical,
dances.
Cliff Keuter Dance University, Baldwin
encinitasvilla ballet,
in City, Mo.
Philharmonic and
Ballet, all-aSirrans
public television.
Flamenco Ballet.
Theater of Harlem.
-Kansas City Civic
guest artists, Lyric
City, Mo.
masas,
arp and dancers, both
sical dances, a Dance
documentation of the Great
eries, KTWU.
e of Topeka Ballet
a Dance Theater and perform in "New dance," a Dance in the Great Per KYTWL.
eater of Kansas from
wing by David Miller
class grace
had to repeat in ballerina who had here in the room.
and the other
mirror, each student
blanky frame, trying
move. The results
than the exercises
seir last twirl, they group.
a record player in the movements of the end a startling, yet
ck, open, front,
their movements
out of sync with
on one leg produced
one or two twirls,
receame dizzier and
passive twirl.
eer, they slipped into
their coat, shoes
fit for their mothers
up.
y'll learn that twirl.
Top classical group will perform Sunday
One of the country's top classical music groups, the Eastman Quartet, will perform as part of the Chamber Music Series at 3:30 p.m. at the University Theatre at Murphy Hall.
Known for its elegance in execution, technical perfection, stylistic authenticity and interpretive insight, the Eastman Quartet is the only professional touring group in this country performing works for piano, violin, viola and cello. The inclusion of piano in the quartet distinguishes it from other chamber music groups.
The four quartet players, all faculty members of the Eastman School of Music, are successful soloists. Frank Guzzer, a composer and conductor, performs television networks, performed more than
35 of the great concertos with leading orchestras in the United States and Europe and experimented with his own television show on concert music.
Million Taylor, violinist, was concertmaster with the Washington National Symphony Orchestra seven years and has been a constant chamber music and teaching position.
Alan Harris, cellist, is a former principal of the Rochester, N.Y., Civic and Chamber Orchestra and has made several recordings.
Francis Tursi, violist, is frequently a guest artist with the Curtis and Berkshire String Quartets and has made many solo recordings.
Comfort for
Spring 'n' Summer
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HAAS IMPORTS
1029 Mass.
Accent the ARTS
THIS WEEK'S EVENTS
FRIDAY, FEB.11 Lori Malin, Noon, Strong Lobby.
Catherine Cahoon, poet, 4 p.m., Parlor A,
Kansas Union
THURSDAY, FEB. 10 Robert Nunley, Noon, Strong Lobby. Jill Krebs, 8 p.m., Hoch, $4.00.
Martin Moorley, 9-12 p.m., Union Ballroom $1.00
For information call SUA 864-3477.
MASS. STREET DELI
941 MASSACHUSETTS
REUBEN SANDWICH
Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on Cottage Rye.
50c OFF with this coupon Reg. Value $2.00
$2.00
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NO OBLIGATION UNTIL GRADUATION
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OPEN FACED
HOT BEEF SANDWICH
served with thin sliced roast beef,
home-made mashed potatoes—smothered
in dark-brown gravy, relishes included
Coupon Expires
March 20, 1977
$1.75
With this coupon
Reg. price $2.10
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
NO ON-CAMPUS TRAINING
Coupon Expires
March 20, 1977
$1.75
With this coupon
Reg. price $2.10
Commissioned 2nd Lt. Upon Graduation
Programs for Fr., Soph., Jr., and Srs.
Choose Marine Air or Ground
MARINE OFFICER
SERVE AS A
EMERGENCIES
U.S. Marine Corps Officer Selection Team will be on campus
January 14, 15, & 16 from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. in the Kansas
Union Bldg., Main Lobby. If you miss us and desire more
information call our office COLECT at (816) 374-3031 or 374-3614.
Scientists in a laboratory preparing and testing chemical substances.
Now comes Miller time.
Milwaukee
$ \textcircled{1} $
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 11, 1977
Track team's record on the line tomorrow
Snorts Writer
Kansas' undefeated track team will take its record on the road this weekend when it travels to the United States Track and Field Championships in Oklahoma City.
The Jayhawks will face their toughest competition to date tomorrow in the USTF meet, according to coach Bob Timmons. The team's coaches and club chairs and individuals will participate.
Among the track clubs sated to compete is the Pacific Coast Club (PCC), which defeated the Jayhawks, $32 \frac{1}{2}$ to 25, to win last year's meet.
Two former KU standouts, sprinters Mark Lutz and Randy Benson, will be running for the PCC. Two of the individuals competing unattached will be former Kansas stars—long jumper Theo Hamilton and shot putter Stone Stone.
"I THINK it's great that guys like Theo and Steve, who aren't with a club, can compete in this meet," Timmons said. "But
Time outs trip KU; free throw wins for CMSU
Central Missouri State University's Kathryn Huggare made her only free throw count by converting a technical foul into a goal, which the KU women's basketball team last night.
KU was called for the technical, for taking too many time-outs, with five seconds remaining in the overtime. In a five-minute overtime period, each team is allotted one timeout. The Jayhawks called two.
The Jayhawks were trailing by one-point, 69-88, with five-seconds left and were about to play a jump ball between KU's V. C. and Gilliam. The players took the time out and foul were called.
"OH, LORD," KU coach Marian
a matriarch when things like it is a
matriarchy
Washington said she thought her team had a good chance to win the jump and win the playoffs.
"That was my fault and I feel badly about it," she said. "I should have been aware of it."
sammers sent the game into overtime by making the first shot of a one-and-one free throw situation but missed the second shot with 30 seconds left. She missed a 15-foot shot at the buzzer that would have won the game.
THE JENNIES, now with a 164 record,
went to 8-6 center Candy Ranger for their
last six points of the game. Ranger led all
players in runs and points, hitting 10
of 15 shots from the floor.
KU despite playing its best home game of the season, according to Washington, hit 46 points in 29 per cent. June Koleber and Sue Berens II, Jaywhays in scoring with 18 points each.
it's possible they could knock some of our guys out of the scoring."
Timmons and the Jayhawks were going into the meet with two goals: to win the meet and to qualify more people for the NC'AA meet March 11-12.
Kansas has already qualified six individuals and the mile relay team for the
"OUR KIDS who haven't qualified need to because we're getting close to the end," Timmons said. "We just have a triangular and contact triangle, so, which doesn't allow many opportunities."
Two 'Hawks are only two-tenths of a second off the qualifying times in their events. Jay Wagner who has run a 1:10.5 in the 600, needs a 1:10.3 to qualify. Glenn Harter needs to go from 2:10.7 to 2:10.5 to qualify in the 1,000-yard run.
Because the distance medley relay isn't run in the conference meet, this will be the Jayhawks' only chance to qualify in that event.
SUA
MOVIES
POPULAR FILMS
Fri., Feb. 11
Sat., Feb. 12
ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE
ANYMORE (1975)
Dr. Martin Scorsece with
Eilen Burstyn, Kris Kristofferson
Fri., Feb. 11
Sat., Feb. 12
MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR WITH
THE BEATLES (1967)
YELLOW SUBMARINE (1968)
RED BOW TIE THE BEATLES (BBC
GROUP) 12:00 (midnight)
SPECIAL FILM
FILMS OF JEAN VIGO (FRANCE)
ZERO FOR CONDUCT (1933)
ZERO FOR CONDUCT (1933)
Louise Lebrie, Gilbert Pluchon
(French/subtilized)
(LUAZARI 1942)
Dr. Jean Vigo with
Michel Simon, Dita Parre
(French) 7:30, 7:50-7:5c
SPECIAL FILM
1065, FOBI. 13
ZHENKO XLEXANDER DOV-
ZHENKO (U.S.S.R.)
ZVENIGORA (1928)
ARSENAL (1929)
V.I. NOLIY (1921)
Q.U. Pudovkin,
Nikolai Shipkovsky with Jose
Cap兰ca
7:30 7:50
CLASSICAL SERIES
Wed.. Feb. 16
Beatle-Mania Returns
WAR OF THE BUTTONS (1962)
Dave Rewbert
with Les Liquefees
Winner of the Le Trix Prize Jean
Koenig
(French/subtitled) 7:30 75c
to
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
NOTHING IS REAL!
The Beatles
Yellow Submarine
COLOR by Dexter
United Artists
The Beatles'
MAGICAL MYSTERY
TOUR
- Plus Special Feature -
"AROUND THE BEATLES"
(BBC concert)
Fri., Feb. 11
Sat., Feb. 12
12:00 - $1
MIDNIGHT
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM—KANSAS UNION
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A Service Organization of Arnold Air Society
ANGEL FLIGHT RUSH
For further information contact 864-2073 or 841-6324
--the United Jewish Appeal Campus Campaign
Information Table 2, Union
Feb. 14-18, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
or send your contribution to
Kansas Union, Box 4,
Lawrence, Kansas 66045
Kiryat Shemona Ma'alot Beit Shean
Where others would kill innocent children, we will build schools.
Where others would take life,we will sustain it.
Where others would destroy buildings, we will build homes.
We stand firmly with the people of Israel. Let them know it
Give to
stomp out old shoes contest
The Athlete's Foot.
BRING YOUR OLDEST, SCROUNGIEST SHOES IN AND SAVE $2.50 ON THE PURCHASE OF A NEW PAIR.
THE WORST SHOES WILL WIN A $25.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE.
CONTEST ENDS FEBRUARY 19TH.
919 Massachusetts
919 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas Phone 841-2995
BankAmerica and Master Charge Welcome
BankAmericard and
Eastman Quartet Back by popular demand
1940
Tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office; all seats $4.00
University of Kansas Chamber Music Series
SUNDAY,
FEB.13
3:30 p.m.
University
Theatre
Located at 7th & Mass.
CINEMAS
Total Entertainment In One Location
THE LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE The Entertainment Center of Lawrence Presents this Week
The Opera House
*Fri.—"The JOHN ROLLER BAND" from K.C.
live entertainment at its finest
*Sat.—DISCO EXTRAVAGANZA Drink and Dance the night
away
Give-away Specials
$1.00 cover
*Everynight—PITCHERS $1.25, 7:30 'till 9:00
We feature a full line of beers.
76TH SPIRIT
7th Spirit
PROF.
KATZ
ARCADE
雪人
Extending from the Basement to
•The Balcony (overlooking the Opera House)
•Offering Fine Cocktails and Friendly Folks 3:00 a.m.
nightly
•Featureting the NAIROBI TRI Sat., Feb. 12, 10 *fil1*
Contemporary Jazz in the basement
•NO COVER CHARGE for members in the balcony
•Open for Lunch Monday thru Friday starting Monday, Feb. 14
•Both spaces available for catered private parties
PROF.
KATZ
ARCade
Daagwud's
- Exceptional sandwiches & side orders
* Check for the 2 for 1 coupons in this week's Kansan
* Open Daily: 1 a.m. - 2 p.m. Mon.-Sat; 2 p.m. - 10 p.m. Sun.
Professor Katz Arcade
*Open Daily: Sunday 1-10, Mon. thru Fri. 2:30-12, Sat. 11 a.m.
12 p.m.
*Lawrence's largest and most extensive machine arcade
Friday, February 11, 1977
University Daily Kansan
9
wit.
Jayhawks. Wildcats in like situation
---
By COURTNEY THOMPSON Associate Sports Editor
Paul Mokksi, the Jayhawks' 7-0 center said earlier this week he worked the Kansas-Kansas State game would be a good match and to after sitting out for about six weeks.
amment
no
on
JSE
all this should make the game a good one.
All KU-R-Slate games are always good
companies that produce high-quality
games.
There's the usual hoopla and to-do that accompanies the intratec rivalry. And there's the precarious position of both teams in the Big Eight conference standings with no preference for the home-court advantage during post-season tournament play.
THE JAYHAWKS meet the K-State Wildcats tomorrow in a regionally televised game at 1:40 p.m. in Allen Field House. The team is expected to a crowd of more than 16,000 is expected.
Moksi said he now was physically able to play and is expected to make his comeback after having been sidelined for months while he recovered from a broken foot.
The pleasure of getting back into it all may wear off soon, though.
KU coach Ted Owens said, grinning, that he'd "be one unhappy coach" if his team wasn't up the K-State game, despite Wednesday's 87-79 loss to Missouri. The team lost both games with an 8-2 record. That loss dropped KU into a tie with Nebraska for fourth place.
THE WILD CATS, however, come into the game having won against Nebraska at Manhattan. They are now tied with Oklahoma for second in the conference.
vantage (given to the top four teams in the final standings) in post-season play. K-State
This will be the third meeting between the two schools this year. Kansas won the first game, 81-44, in the semifinals of the Big Ten tournament and got even with an 80-65 win in Manhattan.
Both KU and K-State had impressive individual scorers during their last games. Guard John Douglas scored a career-high 34 points for the Jayhawks against Missouri; forward Larry Dassie and guard Mike McGary scored respectively for the Wildcats against NU.
Evans and Dassie were among KU's nemeses in the first meeting between the two schools, Evans. No. 2 scoreer in the conference with a 21.5 average, is always a problem but he becomes more so when Scott is taken to another school. Evans takes off on a double-fiture scrum, spree-
"THE PLAY of Scott Langton was a major factor in our last game," said Owens. "Mike Evans is even better when Langton contributes as he did against us."
Langton scored 18 points in that game.
Langton scored 15 points in thin game.
The Hawks have been taken turns to win and have won many marks. Herb Nobles, Clint Johnson and Douglas have been sharing the honors. Douglas, who averages 18.7 points a game, should give Evans competition.
Evans recently became K-State's second-leading all-time scorer (1,378), having bettered the record of former teammate Chuckie Williams. The twosome was known to most Big Eight basketball followers as the powerful purple popsures.
IN REBOUNDING, Nobles is third in the conference for KU with a 9.6 average, and the Wildcats' Dassie is fifth, averaging 8.1 a game.
The conference schedule this weekend has the top three teams playing away from us.
TOMORROW'S GAME should be all of that. Because whenever KU and K-State play there is rarely an established pattern with the team, it's interesting—in one way or another.
Probable Starting Lineups
F-Herb Nobles, 6-7 senior
K-Koen Kogems, 6-10 junior
G-Clint Johnson, 6-2 junior
G-Davis Gustafsen, 6-3 junior
G-Hasan Houston, 6-2 freshman
"Basketball doesn't go by any established pattern and that's the beauty of it."
Kansas
But Owens says that's what makes the game interesting.
Oklahoma plays Colorado in Boulder.
And the Jawaharks' chances for the Big
Spectacular are good.
Kansas State
F-Curts Redding, 6-5 freshman
F-Larry Dassie, 6-5 senior
C-Darryl Winston, 6-5 senior
G-Scott Langton, 6-11 junior
G-Scott Langton, 6-11 junior
'Hawks need win to even dual swim meet record
The KU men's swim team will try to even its 34 dual meet record in Dallas Saturday when the Jayhawks met nationally-ranked Southern Methodist University.
The Mustangs, who downed KU in Lawrence last year, 83-30, provide good competition for the Jayhawks, and Kansas coach Dick Reason knows it.
KU'S PROGRESS has been slow this season, in the buttajawah's last two meetings the improvement has been encouraging and helping for this improvement to continue.
“SMU is awfully good,” Reamon said. “In pre-season rankings they were rated first, sixteenth and seventh.”
ONE OF THE key factors in the improvement of the KU squad has been the tough competition on the Jayhawks' schedule and SMU should provide the kind of competition that will make KU even stronger, Reamon said.
to do almost anything against us they want
Accent the ARTS
SUA and the Commission on the Status of Women present...
a one woman show featuring
"Faces of the American Eve"
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wheat salad
sandwich board 1.75
salami turkey ham corn beef roast beef
CHEESES cheddar caraway mozzarella swiss
monte cristo 2:25
french dip, french tuxedo
ruben
Vienna Club. 2:25
cucumber & tomato
cucumbet & tomato
BLT. 2:00
french dip 2:00
dough dough dough
arctan 1 29 CUP.SG
The KU men's gymnastics team will have its work cut out for it when the Jayhawks meet Nebraska at 2 p.m. tomorrow in Lincoln.
BREADS
rye wholewheat
onion bun white
HERO
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french toast
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Jayhawk gymnasts face stiff competition
Nebraska, one of the three powers in Big Eight gymnastics, will give Kansas its stiff competition of the dual season so Bock Lockwood said his team was ready.
"We should have a good performance," he said, "I really feel as if we'll score our
8:30
Closed Sunday
best of the year. Our potential is near 190 (of
240 possible), if the judging is right."
THE KU TEAM has good workouts this week, Lockwood said.
The Jayhawks take a 3-1 dual meet record into tomorrow's meet with the Cornshakers.
Lockwood, however, is worried about one of his top performers, John Nunley. Oneum, a still talented specialist who scored a 25 of 10 in the first round, decided Lockwood said he expected him to compete.
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Tickets are still available for LADY JAYHAWKS NIGHT with the KANSAS CITY KINGS
with the
A Basketball Doubleheader
Kansas City Kings & Phoenix Suns
University of Kansas Lady Jayhawks
vs.
February 15, 6 p.m. in Kemper Arena, Kansas City Discount Court Level Tickets: $5.00,$4.00 (18 and under)
in a preliminary game to the
Northwest Missouri State Bearkittens in a preliminary game to the
Tickets available at the women's athletic office Room 6 - Allen Field House and SUA Ticket Office, Student Union
- Bus transportation available for an additional $3.50. Please call 864-4938 for reservations.
And—Don't forget the Lady Jayhawks play Wichita State Saturday in Allen Field House at 5:15 p.m.
Reflection
Steve Leben and Ralph Munyan, candidates for student body president and vice president, and the REFLECTION candidate for Student Senate have surveyed 1,185 KU students on Senate issues, because they are sincere in their desire to open new lines of communication between the Senate and the student. Here is the third of the three part survey, along with Steve and Ralph's positions on these issues.
PRIORITIES
Q—The time and efforts that can be made by the Student Senate, a body of elected members setting priorities for the Senate, what would be your top priority?
33% improving academic advising
32% improving the quality of classroom teaching
32% keeping student fees as low as possible
32% keeping student fees as low as 20 per
24% improving Watson library
26% improving Watson library 24% improving recreational facilities
16% improving recreational techniques
12% improving the campus bus system
12% improving the campus bus system
12% joybinding for passage of student-oriented bills in the Legislature
11% lobbying for passage of student representation
9% improving student representation on University and departmental policy-making committees
We will work to enact the recommendations of the Senate's Committee on the Quality of Classroom Teaching, which have been piling up during the past two years. Let's quit studying this—it's time to act.
If the programs we have proposed for spending the $108,000 surplus of funds from the activity fee are not approved by the full Senate, we will then propose lowering the activity fee until the surplus is used up. Further, we have experience formulated and staying with a budget committee to determine how much Y, K, and H need to be allocated to the Senate for funding, and then kept within that budget. As vice president of the subpoena class, has had to work with the fixed resources of class dues. We'll spend your money carefully.
Steve Leben and Ralph Munyan—they care enough about you to ask your opinion. Vote for them on February 16 and 17.
Leben-Munyan
Paid for by Leben/Munyan
10
Friday, February 11, 1977
University Daily Kansan
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Friday, February 11, 1977
11
---
Women gymnasts now limping but dedicated
By DAN BOWERMAN
Associate Sports Editor
The bandaged KU women's gymnastics team will limp into Ames, Iowa, today and put together a team worthy of competition despite the injuries.
nly.
has
ate
urd
and
es
All-around gymnasts Kumdy and Pegeen Murphy have been competing most of the season with injuries, and two other all-arounders, Angie Wagle and Helena Pfukinsky, were lost for the season with dislocated knees. Balance beam specialist suffered a knee injury earlier in the season but has since recovered.
And Coach Ken Snow had more bad luck when two more gymnasts suffer in the tournament.
RENE NEVILLE, another all-around performer, received a strained ankle, caused by his dismount from the uneven parallel bars. And Sherry Hassler suffered some strained ligaments in her knee from vaulting.
Snow said, though, that both would be competing this weekend at the Big Eight Championships, along with the rest of the walking wounded on the Kansas team. The girls would compete in all four championships and will finish tomorrow, with individual finals beginning at 1:30 p.m.
Snow said the host school, Iowa State, would be the team to beat.
"IT'LL BE a competitive meet." he said.
"I'LL BE a competitive meet," he st
"iowa State, since they're at home, will be favored, but I wouldn't count Nebraska
Both Iowa State and Nebraska have scored in the mid-120s of 160 possible, while KU's top score this season was 117.99. Snowmass has also scored in the other school participating in the meet.
"Unless they (Oklahoma State) have gotten better, we expect to get third," he said. We may be fighting it out with them and all four schools will be pretty close together.
"Hopefully, this will be our best meet of the season."
SNOW IS expecting good things from Mundy, Murphy and Laurie Propt. He said he would not make the individual finals tomorrow. He said Mundy should make finals in bars, bearn and vaulting. Propt should make it on floor exercise and vaulting, and Murphy should
Mundy, Murphy, Neville and Prosp will compete in the all-around in today's meet. Hassler will work the floor and vaulting. Moore will test Joe Thompson will perform on the beam.
Bat Snow silk ii sian suure how hi tiam wil-
But Bat Snow silk ii sian suure how hi tiam wil-
But Bat Snow silk ii sian suure how hi tiam wil-
"It a case of if we practice, we don't compete," he said. "And if we compete we win."
After setting four school records in last week's competition, the women's track team travels to Manhattan tomorrow to compete in the Kansas State Invitational.
Track team to KSU
McPhrison College, Bethel College and Barton County Community College also will compete in individual events but aren't entered in the team competition.
The Jawahara's competition will be K-State and Wichita State, both strong teams, and it will be a challenging one.
Lovale said he was pleased with his team's first performance last weekend, and said they would be proud.
Weekend Sports
SOPHOMORE SPRINTER Sheila Calmese set K2U buildup records in last weekend, running the 68-yard dash in 6.5 seconds and the 300-yard dash in 36.1
Big Eight schedule Other Big Eight conference games this weekend: Melissa at Nebraska Oklahoma at Colorado Iowa State at Oklahoma State
The KU Soccer Club begin its spring season in which they play to Wichita to play the Whitneywinters Sunday.
indoor record in the mile by 12.9 seconds when she ran a 5.22.8, and junior Nancy Bissell also set an indoor mark by running the two mile in 12.17.7.
The Jayhawks have won their last four games against the Wichita team, holding the division title.
But KU coach Bernie Mullin said Tuesday that Wichita had strengthened its mid-field and had defeated some of the best teams in the Kansas City area since last played KU.
Weekend Specials!
Freshman Cena Frame bettered the
Soccer season starts
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ZERO FOR CONDUCT (1933) Dir. Jean Vigo, with Louis Lefebre, Gilbert Pluchon (French/subtilites)
LATALANTE (1934) Dir. Jean Vigo, with Michel Simon, Dita Parlo (French/subtilites) Mon., Feb. 14, 750 tsc
MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR WITH THE BEATLES (1967)
YELLOW SUBMARINE (1968)
AROUND THE BEATLES (BBC Concert)
Fri, Feb. 18 & Sat, Feb. 12 12:00 (midnight) $1
ZVENIGORA (1928) Dir. Alexander Dovzhenko (USSR)
ARSENAL (1929) Dir. Alexander Dovzhenko (USSR)
CHESS FEVER. V.I. Pudvokin, Nikolai Shpikovsky, with Jose Capablanca
(USSR)Tues., Feb. 15, 7:30 75c
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM-KANSAS UNION
ZVENIGORA (1928) Dir. Alexander Dovzhenko (USSR)
Donzhentko (USSR)
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12
Friday, February 11, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Students aid social welfare clients
Staff Renorter
Young people in trouble with the law,
alcoholics and families with problems are
only a small part of the workload at the
UGCG, a university in Kansas.
UCSC exists so that students in the School of Social Welfare can learn from ex-
Jerome Ewald, administrative assistant at UCSC, said recently the center taught students that "clinical social work is more important than helping clients deal with their feelings."
The center, funded by the School of Social Welfare, was established in fall 1973 and is housed in Twente Hall annex, formerly called Wakings Home.
ABOUT 25 students work out of the center as part of the School of Social Welfare's field placement project. The students apply to the Lawrence community to assesses to help the Lawrence community.
Students see clients with a variety of problems. Clients usually are seen outside of the center, either at the client's home or at the agency that referred the client.
Students work two or three days a week and their campers range from six to eight
Ewald said that often the students served simply as people to talk to. Students sometimes take clients to a movie or to a psychologist.
RENTIE BAKER, Wichita graduate student, of students learned to handle a desk.
Once a week Baker meets with a 95-year-old woman who has withdrawn from people. Together they discuss her health and her feelings about herself and her family.
Baker helped a young boy in trouble with the law find a lawyer and then visited him in jail to discuss his feelings. Baker also talked with the lawyer, who was eager for the boy when he returned home.
Cara Newman, Lawrence graduate student, said USC2 offered students more variety than they would find working in a case because at because at USC each case was different
Students sometimes use the UGS's video
tapes play during interviews to tape their
clips.
"That way we can replay and notice what we overlooked during the interview." Baker was impressed.
A CLIENT's problem determines how you can serve your service. It could be as long as you are a client.
few weeks, for example, the client needed help in negotiating the welfare system, he would probably need UCSC's help for only a short time.
The majority of UCSC clients are referred from other Lawrence community agencies, such as the Visiting Nurses Association, juvenile court, nursing homes and the Lawrence School District. The social worker also collaborates with the State Social and Rehabilitative Services office.
"You can't drop clients." Ewald said.
"You can't treat them like a thing."
The Center's students are each placed under a field instructor, who assigns clients and makes suggestions when the students encounter difficulties. Students may request particular kinds of cases, Ewald said.
The center also sponsors monthly workshops on such topics as child abuse, child neglect, and trauma.
The center brings together the needs of the Lawrence community and of students in its programs.
"We get our needs met too," he said. "I grow with the client."
TODAY; KU HISTORY OF ART DEPARTMENT will "growkudo, an eighteenth Century Painter and Musician," by Stephen帕尔斯 at 3:30 p.m. in the lecture room at Kansas State University. DNERGRUDATE ANTHROPOLOGY ASSOCIATION will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 617 Fraser Hall. JOHN FLAVELLE of Stanford University will speak on the "Development of the Anthropology of Prehension" at 3:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: THE KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the United Ministers Bureau of Oread. A BLAACK BANCE CLUB DANCE CLUB will be held at 8.p.m. in, 3140 Wesley Hall.
SUNDAY: AN ORIENTEEING MEET will begin at 2 p.m. on west campus. Participants should meet at the parking lot just north of Pioneer Cemetery. The School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series will present the EASTMAN QUARTET, a professional piano quartet, at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre at Murphy Hall.
Events
On Campus
Stereo equipment, musical instruments, tools, tents, fishing equipment, etc. Obtained at discount prices. Free consumer info before each purchase. Call Lawrence rep. Mark Bazayman at 842-5358 or write CONSUMER BroKERAGE SERVICE P.O. box 24628 K.C. MO. 44131
NAME BRANDS
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“completely refurbishing” it. It also said she opposed use of the money for scholarships because the money should be spent on all those who paid it.
Munyang said the 227 people currently running for 166 Senate positions indicated that his party had won about a third.
From page one
To improve campus parking and solve traffic problems, Grey proposed opening a portion of Jojewhik Blvd. to daytime traffic and providing sidewalks for members paid outstanding traffic fines.
Candidates...
McKernan said he returning to an integrated traffic ticket system, in which the first violation would be a warning; the second would cost $2, and the third $4 and so on, with fines doubling on each additional ticket.
Leben said he preferred to allow the current Parking and Traffic Board, which examines the problems daily, to handle parking problems as it does now.
Notice to All Organizations
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, Level 3.
WISHING TO APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE STUDENT SENATE/STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE:
These requests must be completed and returned to the Senate office NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 28,1976.
All the tree association database suppo
tured by the student database
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
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whether to have a ticket subsidy but Gretz and Lachen said they didn't favor a subsidy
McKernan, supported the ticket subsidy,
saying, "Nothing the Senate does affects
He agreed, however, that because the entire student body would be affected by the subsidy, the question should be put to a student vote.
Mckernan and Grey, who each spend about $1,200 to campaign, said the Senate shouldn't reduce the campaign expenses. The Republican candidate can spend no more than $1,400.
campaigning, said that by reducing the ceiling, more candidates would be forced to campaign door-to-door and personally reach more people.
But Leben, who will spend about $850
During the rest of the debate, the candidates agreed that the president should obtain the Senate's approval before though the Senate should investigate possible discrimination in fraternity and security rush, the decision of whom to pledge should remain with each other.
The candidates also agreed that KU shouldn't join the Associated Students of Kansas (ASK), a lobbying group comprising five other Regents schools because ASK suffered from too many internal problems.
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COLLEGE ASSEMBLY ELECTION
for
Undergraduate Representatives from Nunemaker Center and the Liberal Arts and Sciences
The College Assembly
- Sets requirements for graduate and undergraduate degrees
—Approves or disapproves changes in courses, or new courses offered for credit
—establishes procedures related to the maintenance of academic policies
for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Filing applications available at 206 Strong Hall, Nunemaker Center, Student Senate Office, Graduate Student Office, Kansas Union. Filing deadline: 4:30 p.m., Friday, February 11 in 206 Strong Hall and Nunemaker Center.
god make me
god doesn't
make junk
Election will be conducted February 16 and 17 by the Student Senate.
'I'd like information about opportunities with the Glemmary Missionors and the free 17" x '22" God Made Me poster.
'I'd like a free copy of the
You have something to share with the people of the rural South and Appalachia yourself. Find out how
you can help, as a Catholic Brother, Sister, or Priest. Your request will be treated confidentially.
Glenmary Missioners
Room 18-321 Box 46404
Cincinnati, Ohio 45246
Name
Address
City State
Zip Age
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
In a few months, May 8th, France will celebrate Joan of Arc Day. This is a great day celorating the victory and entrance into Paris! Consider this the imposition distinction: "Since the writing of ht-iory began, Joan of Arc is the only person of either sex, who has been held command of the succession of a nation at the age of seventeen". Louis Cosault.
Now quote extracts from Mark Twain. "Judged by the standards of one century, the noblest characters of an earlier one lose much of their luster; judged by the standards of today, there is probably no illusorious man of four or five centuries ago whose character could meet the test at all points. But the character of Joan of Arc is unique. It can be compared to a giant like Moses, but it is the result. Judged by any of them, judged by all of them, it is still flawless. It is perfect. It still occupies the fittest place possible to human attainment, a lofter one than has been reached by any other mere mortal."
"When we reflect that her century was the brutalist, the wickedest, the rottenest in history since the middle ages, we are lost in wonder at the miracle of a such product from such a soil. The contrast between her and her century is the contrast between her and the common age; she was honest when honesty had become a lost virtue; she was a keeper of promises when the keeping of a promise was expected of no one; she gave her great mind to great thoughts when other great minds wasted themselves upon grace, but when the gift of wisdom and delicate whiteness to loud and coarse might be said to be universal; she was full of pity when a merciless cruelty was the rule; she was steadfast when stability was unknown, and honorable in an age that had forgotten what honor was; she was a rock of confidence when trust was not in all things; she was untually烈 in an age that was false to the core; she maintained her personal dignity unimpaired in an age of fairs and dwellings; she was of a dauntless courage when hope and courage had perished in the hearts of her nation; she was spotlessly pure in mind and body. She was not a man who would well these things in an age when crime was the common business of lords and princes and when the highest
personages in Christendom were able to astonish even that infamous era and make it stand aghast at the spectacle of the atrocious lives laced with unimaginable treacheries, butcheries, and beastialities."
Comment: Gentile Christianity, sincere and true FAITH made Joan of Arc what she was!
"The work wrought by Joan of Arc may fairly be regarded as ranking any in history, when one considers the conditions under which it was undertaken, the obstacles in the way and the means at its disposal. Caesar carried conquest far, but he was not a man of force. He was a trained soldier himself; and Napoleon swept away the disciplined armies of Europe, but he also was a trained soldier, and he began his work with a patriot battalion inflamed and inspired by the miracle working new breath of courage and hope. He made young apprentices to the splendid trade of war, not old and broken men at arms, despairing survivors of an ageolum accumulation of monotonous defeat; but Joan of Arc, a mere child in years, ignorant, unlettered, a poor village girl, did not know how to navigate the chains, helpless and hopeless under an alien domination, its treasury bankrupt, its soldiers disheated and dispersed, all spirit torpid, all courage dead in the hearts of the people through long years of foreign and domestic outage and opression. She was an emperor by reason alone by the country; AND SHE LAID HER ON THIS NATION, THIS CORPSE, AND IT ROSE AND FOLLOWED HER, SHE LIE IT FROM VICTORY TO VICTORY. SHE TURNED BACK THE TIDE OF THE HUNDRED YEARS AND DID WITH THE TITLE OF HE LIVERY OF FRANCE" which she bears to this day.
**COMMENT:** GENIINE CHRISTIANITY, SINCERE AND **TRUST** FAITH, FAULTFULLY WORKED AT AND ENURED **MAIN** SAID: "THE ENURED THREE TIMES IN THE GOSPELS CHRIST SAID: "HE THAT ENDURRET TO THE END SHALL BE SAVED:" AND IN REVELATION 2.10 He said: "BE THOU GOD, THAT DEAD, AND I LOVE GIVE THE CROWN OF LIFE"
P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031
Friday, February 11. 1977
13
educating the force to personally
e, the consent should actions and should ination in decision of with each
I that KU Students of group com- ols because y internal
Box
Sabbatical changes ...
From page one
FIELDS REPEATED his question several times to other council members, saying that "We may have many more applications, all of them with merit, than we have awards available."
Srinivasan said, "You may submit the same proposal different years. You may be turned down one year, and all of a sudden the next year, your proposal has merit."
Barbara Craig, professor of French and Italian and a UCS member, said it was
Roy Laird, professor of political science,
said that competition was inevitable.
Council members eventually accepted the advice of the presiding officer, Rex Martin, professor of philosophy, who said, "We debate this at great length—let a stop
"I think we are flying into the face of our needs if we have egalitarianism, which is the only one."
impossible to leave competition out of sabbatical decisions.
Greeks sponsor benefit
Thirteen fraternity teams, mostly from KU, will compete from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. tomorrow and Sunday at the South Junior High School gymnasium.
The Phi Delta Theta fraternity hopes to raise at least $1,000 from its second annual Easter Seals Foundation Benefit Basketball Tournament this weekend.
The tournament will break at noon tomorrow for the KU-Kansas State game
Last year's event raised $1,000. The benefit will aid crippled children.
University Daily Kansan
Half-times of the benefit games will feature lay-up contests between KU teams.
Besides KU fraternities, Washburn, Nebraska and K-State fraternities will compete in the tournament. The admission price is $1 a person for each day, and tickets can be bought at the door or at the Phi Delta Theta house, 1821 Edgill Road.
KANSAN WANT ADS
that begins at 1:40 p.m. in Allen Field House and resume following the game.
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to race, color, religion, sex or national origin. BING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111F FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
time times time times times
15 words or
each additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
$2.00 $2.25 $2.75 $3.00
.01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
If the UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect inceptors. No allowance 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 via the UDK business office at 844-3583.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Give away $10 per week and $100 each cash
purchase. U. Telephone Directed
Mellow Yellow Messages
Interested in juggling? Join us Thursdays at 2 p.m. l114. Pennsylvania, or call 843-7202-8201
B10 this Friday. B10 later. See page 39, KU
Bank of America. B10 later.
What business is "underdebted" to
the bank? B10 later. B10 later.
KU-Bank of America - KU-MP
FOR RENT
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
no pets; 843-5767 tf
Large 2-bedroom apartment in North Lawrence,
$140 month plus 1½ utilities. Small deposit. Also
Roommates wanted to share 3 bedroom house.
Non-smokig non-monk or woman-
28-449-2443
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished. close to
union, utilities paid. parking: 843-9579.
For rent. Two - 1-bedroom apartment, 1 block
Union, 845-3398-7867, 2-15
ATTENTION LAWRENCE AREA SCHERERS-
There will be a meeting at 8 p.m on Tuesday (June 1) from 5-7 p.m. at the National Increscent to develop a follow-up program for the second in the Land and Share program, based on their ideas for this program. If you are unable to attend or need transportation, visit their website (76), Naismith Hall No. 32, 849-5219, 2-15
Gatehouse apartments - Call Becky now, summer!
contracts on all Gatehouse apartment - Call Becky now,
summer!
Studio Apartment. Clean and airl. Air conditioned. Steam room. Available March 1. Cars - 2-16
Available now, large 1 bedroom apartment in modern 8-sleek at 1021 Ibiza house with balcony and free disposal disposal $150 per/month deposit required. Utilities not included. Absolutely no pets or children. 2-16
Frontier Ridgets—short term lease available. Frontier Ridgets comes with study. H heated indoor pool • shag carpet • dorm room pool • disposal • pallet - laundry facilities • laundry room • storage • furnished and unfurnished from $135 Call 842-760-6291
Maryale roommate to share nice apartment till May
Bentley roommate to share nice apartment route.
Rent $12, plus rooms; $181-190.
Furnished apartment, close to KLU. One bedroom.
$50. Available immediately. $267-600 after $ 5.
Apartment for rent to single male student of quiet disposition. One bedroom furnished. Third floor of old house. Fantastic view no pets. Deposit required. $10 per month. 424-396-2172
2-17
FOR SALE
INVENTORY SALE: Extra Stock and Demo Units
Prices Reduced to $10. So Many excellent one
units available. Prices are unreal. Unusual pieces of Electronics as well. Now three 20th Lay-A-Way Financial Group 20th Lay-A-Way Financial Group. Thank you, 21.
Western Civilization Notes- Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization notes to sense in to
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
lighting. New and updated furnishings.
The Furniture and Appliance Center, 7041 Madison
Road.
UNICORNS, Mermaidia, wings in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones can be from home. Stone cutting service. Nesting cages for work, satisfaction gift. after 841-3883.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialist.
BLUE ELECTRIC, 843-600-3990, W. 6th.
Guitars for sale—The best guitars in Lawrence are available at LMC, Bob Wiedenman, dealer. Low overhead费 low prices for Alvarve Yati Guitars. Contact 309 E. 818-949-6166. Play 2-11 309 E. 818-949-6166.
Owens Liquor Store
843-1186
910 N. 2nd
Redeberen Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod member (community). All students and faculty active youth group. Place: 30th and Baker Avenues. More information contact: Mit Fredrickson at more information contact: Mit Fredrickson at a sat on a am. Bible class and Sunday school at 10:15. Lutheran Lauryan's League meets every week at 7:30.
Used Magnaform component system with 8-track
cardboard and plastic components for $1499.00 in
component with Oakland cardboard for $1499.00
RADIAL THE CLEARANCE Your size at all times.
P125 = 47-50 inches P150 = 52-54 inches P195 = 63-65 inches P250 = 75-78 inches P295 = 89-92 inches
P350 = 103-106 inches P400 = 118-121 inches P450 = 134-137 inches P500 = 152-155 inches
2-16-13 used Dunkn radials only $#$ for the
192-bit 8-way 175kR-14 for $#$ at R-118,
use 192-bit 8-way 175kR-14 for $#$ at R-118,
Cassette tape fine. 50 min-imum for only $4.
or RV 10 minute for $5. Ray Bonehack $21-
$4.
Stereo Quadraphase Musite System, includes MS-
system, an MP system and 2 new Systek
Systems. Good condition.
Save up to $20 on Magnavox Digital Clock AM
Only $35 am at Ray Stone Bank 2-111
Missus
Hamilton-Beach Butter-Popper Popcovers only
13 at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 2-11
P23-Channel B.C.'s, half price for only $9.90.
The cinema for only 2$1, at Ray Stonehouse.
925 Main
Cassette recorder sale! Sony, G.E., Craig and
James are also available at Rock Stoneback's 320 MHz
2-11
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room airconators. The only ones with a specification of 4 cm² or ± 3 dB heat. E8.8h, price from $175. A2-4 E.8h, prices from $175.
Advent model 300 Stereo Receiver: designed to offer the kind of sound associated with audio recording. The audible performances compare directly, in every respect, against a complete chassis. Expensive expressive chassis component. Ray Kravitz's design.
67 Chevy 2-door Impala. Good condition. Call Pat 864-2095
2-11
Yabasha MAT 128T twin lens reflex with Brain
strooke. Excellent condition. $150 - 6400 (+700)
+1800.
Fantastic airbnb for sale. All sizes. Cottle or work
Graft 1-4 (102) 825 697 West 66th St. (68) 218-
301 218-301 2-18
3 Ford Econoline N, AC, automatic, radials, 8
cells. $2900. Phone - (478) 480-680.
Pioneer CT-FR285 Cassette Recorder with built-in Daly System and Memory Recorder. 5-month 2-11月
Skole 360 skils. 195 cm. Solonen 505 bindings.
Scott poles. 843-787, 841-5735. 2-14
conditioned batteries, $19.50 to $19.50 with exchange. Fits most autos and SUVs. Parking lot behind the U-Hail parking lot at 6th and Mimn. Shop on 8-8 on Friday and Saturday, or call first. **2-14**
1972 Vega, 4-speed, radial tires, $800, #82-7050
after 5 p.m. 2-14
Technology SL-1200 Direct Drive Turbable 8212
8214
A 14m adf 86.46 .Personal Sound 8411 .Soundboard
A 14m adf 86.46 .Personal Sound 8411 .Soundboard
Planters and pots! This is our last week of business. We've packed 2,800 plants. Homeware, 904 Wernert. 2-11
Only $899-192.7 mm. Vega. 4 cyl. 842-1703. No calls.
2-15
1-25
Cullass Supreme 75. Excellent condition. Allower. Mobil sell now. Call 841-6710. - 216
Gildocher Optical
DISTING IM PHOTURE
New York
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
One pair of Bose 901 stereo speakers. Excellent condition. Come by listen and call. Please phone 216-574-2838.
Datum 74.8210 B12U0, grabback, AC, spooler,
Mittalum $2005 811-648-668
2-11
Garage sale! We've got everything, including:
- Grey box and box springs,
- Red沿阶 Louvre Bag 1,
- 2-15
Supercaster famous quality cassette recorder with condenser mike! Regular $39.95 model cut to $80.00 plus a bonus of 60 minute casetec control. Regular $129.95. 292 Mast, Open Thursday nites. 2-16
Volkswagen Owners Four new WSB rail fire
alarm systems (1850, 1650) + 240 for $1 per mounting. $300
Mass. The appliance on stone with the display
Woodrow. $750. 17-19, 18-19, 17-18, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19.
(18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19, 18-19)
1971 Congo, AM-PM stere, air, good radials,
studded雪轮,蛮足 834-453-484 before 4:30
1972 Congo, AM-PM stere, air, good radials,
studded雪轮,蛮足 834-453-484 before 4:30
Free stereo catalog lists incredible discounts on Yamaha. Advent, Bower JBL, TECHNICS, IMF, Marantz, Marantz, 100 other lift and audiophile lines. Kona Airplane EA 8. EA Street 2-114, 431, Chicago Illinois 60155.
1) . GTV, excellent condition, new lives, brake lights, window tint, leather seat, camera, 16x5. Frantage Camera, Guitar 6X4
Must sell: 1771 Volkwagen bug, Good condition.
$99.00; Call 841-6531 at 6 p.m.
Pantier Porter. Fine organic shampoos and lotions.
Natural vinegar sprays and boret wrist ballet
shoes. For the whole body. $120.00
68 Mercury Montage 4-Lower, 302-3 ref, auto, auto.
69 Mercury Montego 4-Lower, 302-3 ref, auto,
and from campus. Snows includes $200. Ski
shoes include $150.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
For Sale by owner Holiday Hills and Sunset
School; 11 yrs. old; 3 bedroom suite, 1784 sq.
ft., 1/4 bath, family room w/fireplace, deck,
center aisle, central air, $850.00. For contact
call 2-614-894-7343.
HELP WANTED
New stereo-Panasonic Quadraphone Component
used or used on opened CLS Atmus
or Bath, 843-7606.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
Ear. Ear. 2 Hill 500 speakers for sale, fused excellent power capabilities. Call Rusty. 843-7657.
Waitress needed. Apply at Daagwud's 644. Mass.
between 2 p.m.-5 p.m. 2-15
MEN-WOMEN, JOBS ON SHIPS, American.
Foreign
No experience required. Excellent job.
Required:
Experience travel, Summer job or career.
$3 for information cards.
E-mail: jason@sw.com. E-mail: E.S.Bour.
Port Angeles, Washington 93822.
2-15
www.men-women.jobs.com
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy way. Become an Avon representative and make the money you need selling quality products to your customers. Two openings in Lawrence 482-512-6161 2-16
Graduate, Assistantship, three-quarter time
Chemistry-graduate affair. Apply in 579 Male.
Apply by May 20th.
Part-time, male or female or male. Call 457-258 for
part-time, male or female. Call for more
carefulness. Call for more
contact information.
3-08; 3-10; 3-12; 3-14; 2-11
LOST AND FOUND
Part-time excels in math and science. High school diploma required. Deducting Tuition Call (912) 825-0097
Lost-Feb. 2, men's white gold wedding band with four diamonds between Robinson and Mahan.
Last, Border Collie-black and white long fur for a very cool dog. Last seen on Japanese Kobe clothes. Last seen on Japanese Kobe clothes.
Lost: 1971 High School ring, gold and ruby stone.
Call: 833-5499 and ask for Janet.
2-14
8:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
8-8 Sun.
Found: Watch on the floor of Wessex First floor call Matt Milner and describe to claim 2-11
Lost Tweed hat, first week of February. A present, has sentimental value. John at 841-356-101.
Found a box marked "Spectrum" Call either
harris.833-5075, or Don 841-5109.
2-14
last silver lighter. Brunn maker; on Jan 28-
settlement value. Substantial reward of
2-14
VISIONS
has the eyeglasses
you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 841.7421
牙
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS
MADE WITH IAMS
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
BankAmericard Mastercharge
Mastercharge
Lot by carcasses owner—a two tone brown breast.
Lost for bycarcasses, 1¼ inch thick, 3 inches in diameter.
Positively lost in 40 Wheeze. Of important sentiments.
I please hold for #42-8350. If anyone info. thank!
2-17
Lost! Blue North Face daypack in Wesley cater-
on Bay on 21. Reward 842.368-32. 3-16
Found. Basketball Racket between Allen Field Home and Robinson 641,318 9,11
Lost a set of keys in Strong Hall on 3-1-77.
found, please contact 842-902-827
2-17
Lost: White dog, 5 months, mixed breed, no breeding.
Answer: answers to M434. Hatfield, 8-10-15
Found "Hikky male, black and white Call 1-298-8101 after 5:30. 2-11
Lost: Gold necklace with Alakao in it
in the 1870s. Wecco. Sentimental value. Reuse
Call 864-7812
Footing 'máthelhúr 'núðféir' Between Aenid Field
And Rohanbain & Robsonmá 841-2360
2-11
MISCELLANEOUS
Found KU-ID near Learned Hall Call 864-5022
to identify
2-15
Expensive text book left in Military Science
room. Identify to 108 M.S. Building to
identify.
Found large female Irish Setter with collar, in size of 14th and New Hanbridge. Bk1-847-664.
Found political science notes, orange notebook.
Call Bethe 864-2977. 2-15
NOTICE
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Usher/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass.
Just arrived. Incense from the Republic of China, always paragymnase for the contestant 18 (USA) in the annual Olympic Games.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
clocks, clock televisions. Open daily 12-
843-353.
EUROPE WORLDWIDE academic discourses year
1980 (40) First Ave. Fitch, Tucker, 3
6440 (80) 241-9822
New theories and research in Homosexuality will be the topic of Gary Services meetings. Feb. 15, 7:30 p.m. Regionalist Hall of the Union. Prof. J. Stormt in guest speaker. The poll. Part-2: 15:30
The Dance You've All Been Waiting For. For Gex
and Kaitlyn, you can find them at the Uptown Baby Club,
Kansas City Baby Club, 157 Pecan Street, Kansas City,
KS 64102.
HATRA YOGA学校 beginning Feb. 15th. 15h-3h
Saturday. $17,000 for 8 weeks; $41,145-$44,145;
Oscar, $20 for 8 weeks; call 841-345-145.
Tu-Chi-Flu Child, sponsored by the Community Mercantile Sunday, sponsored by the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce and 115 Children Vermont China will be shown by Fansheen Farm at 7:30 and 9 p.m. Advanced Tickets: Adults $15.95 and children $8.95. Mercantile, 615 Mass. At the door; adults $2.90 and children $1.00. Dinner will be served from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Brighten up your surroundings with a print from a designer's collection of beautiful colors, color lithographs, and steel engravings. Matting is available. Come in and browse—you're welcome! 1405 W. Magnolia St. 3-14
Unique designs in jewelry, available for your valentine at belladonna, 803 Madison, in the Cadash.
College youth revival: Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Fourth South Baptist Church, 10th and 12th Street, New York City.
Gay Services has qualified staff to discuss gay issues. Stop by GSK office, 1046 Madison Ave for information.
Big rewards for any of these "Instant Money"
$15, $85, $24, $22, $22, $41, $41-59, $41-59,
$81-452, $81-452, $2-11
PERSONAL
Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen & Sandwich Shop
KNAFE: Improve yourself physically and mentally.
KNAFE: Improve yourself physically and mentually.
Gou-Ren Yang, Army Air Force, Massachusetts.
MAKIN' MUSIC—We make it easier. Pok, blak, nouns, infinitive, preterit, tense. Bar, ballet, mandolin, saxophone, plano. McKinney.
: ... a ... a ...
Su Casa
745 New Hampshire
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts
& Crafts 841.3599
in THE MARKET PLACE 745 New Hampshire
...
843-7685
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses - Liners
Heaters - Frames
Bedspreads - Fitted Sheets
--ow-cost Travel Arrangements for Individuals & Groups
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Menna live! Praise Menna! You could become an apostle. Keep listening.
2-11
Banjo series (Blugrass) Now offered at Banjo's music Hall Call 842-0012, or Paul at 214-567-3992.
REFLECTIONI 2-17
Dan Pearman for Student Senate, 2nd District
Noumeraker
2-15
EUROPE. When you want it, where you want it.
EUROPE. Europe is the home of IT Europe. No other baserist, call Bayer!
IT Europe. No other baserist, call Bayer!
VOICE YOUR OPINION—All freshmen, sophomores, and junior in Numerator at 10.85 make your views known Run for eleven on the third round of the Strong Bath Center at 28 Strong Bath or Numerator Center. 2-11
Gay Counselling Service: Call 842-7505. 6-12 p.m.
for females
A royal coltage-Prince Matchcheat matchlead gre-
rewatches at Round Corner Doger 801 - 615
842-020
WRITING ASSISTANCE Get an early start on
your homework. I will help you get now before
you need it. I'm too busy to help you
Susan Lynn is studying in England this year, but
he will study at the University of London.
20 Friends will send worm to Susan Lynn,
B-11, Grigatez College, University of Lancaster,
Lancaster, LA14Y7, Lancaby,
2-11
Don't be hounded by minute picture and gallery. Don't be hounded by minute picture and gallery. SPSPIRHUM (Bilberg Gray) and Don Green for "Invisible Woman" are in the museum's collection.
"Black and White." I need a date. Call 843-6639
and ask for Frank W.
DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Rings: Up to 50% discount to students, faculty and staff. $179 up to $329; it $250, it $450, it $650 by buying direct from diamond importer. For color catalog send $1 to 800-272-3744 or contact N.J. 07922 (indicate name of school) or call (t22) 682-3980 for classroom showroom new
Well get you out of bed $3 per month. Jay-
hawke Wake-up: 843-6211 or 843-2813
Wanted: Conserved Freundship to elect responsible candidate. Applicant must be 18 years old and have been an Avanti for 16-17 of March-Schaffen-Hamilton. Please visit www.avanti.org. Resumes to: Office of the Governor.
I can help you with passages and math problems
YOU can help me with my English Call: 856-743-1288
What do you ask? We tried to find out by having them interview the past two weeks. Reading 3 of our survey paper, Steve Leben and Malay Munny Pham, Steve Leben and Malay Munny Pham, candidates for student body president and vice-president, 2-11
Steve Laben and Rahul Murayan have surveyed the city's public housing apartments complex, talked with campus groups, and set up a table at the Union, all in our attempt to communicate with you. Vote RI-2014.
Karenet. Learn the ancient secrets of the marital
stress on the individuals development as a mutual
stressor on their own emotional well-being.
Gliovima cura, che il mundi nuda baut sed, non apre-
messo un colpo e si accettano. Il mundi non è
glioga al colpo. Ancissiamo il mundi e sferratiwi
al collpo. Ancissiamo il mundi e sferratiwi
al collpo. Ancisson
Bewire Mitch: One of these days I will wish
Gailey Fowash tabell shall be mine Dana 2-11
SERVICES OFFERED
M. Iark, I know the cookies were bad, but this is ridiculous! What's the score, "KU?" 2-11
C-MUSH - Happy Shp, SHi Thanks for loving me
TOM SCHNEIDER, HAPPY SHOP, W2W, and MH are glad. I love you. May 2-11
BILLIARDS
• Pin-Ball
• Air Hockey
• Foos-Ball
Aspiring young artist will design and create modern jewelry originally designed for you. Reasonably priced.
Math tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 105, 116, 117, 119, 121, 122, 123, 124, 142, 500, 548, 622, Reasonable rates. Call 842-7841 for preparation. Rate reasons: Call 842-7841
Grooming all breeds, Pet supplies, Poodle
Puppies Std Service. Paradise Grooming. 843-7690
Decorated Valentine Cakes. Only $5.00. Call 843-7263
6236
00000000
Doc Datsun's Drive-in Clinic for most imported cars TOY'S IMPORTS
500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
9th and Iowa
- Pinball
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Typist editor, IBM Pica/cille. Quality work.
Typist editor, Desk introductions. welcome
Call: 842-913-8728
CAUTION: DO NOT MOVE THE BICYCLE.
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
Horned Crow
WANTED
- Foosball
TYPHING-We have many return customers who want us to help them with their business. We appreciate your business, Call Harvey or visit www.yyjob.com.
The Lounge
Will type your paper with TLC. Term papers and
articles with APA format.
4-141-8796 overprints & weekends.
8-141-8796 weekdays.
THEISIS BINDING COPYING. The House of Ubens' Quick Copy Center in headquarters for Ubens copying in Lawrence, Kan., help you at $38 Massachusetts or phone 828-310. Thank you.
Open Daily to a.m. - Midnight except Sunday
TYPING
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
Roommate wanted, 3 bedroom trailer, plenty warm and dry, chaser, shower and dryer available. $1600-$2400.
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mla.
Experienced typist—writing, spellings, printed
483-3503 Mr. Wright
Miss. Koch
Guitar pickers, players, and listeners. Listen to
the radio on Sunday evening from 6:30
8:30 on KANU-95.
Roommate wanted-female to share Towers
room, 100-seat-droon, all utilities paid,
2-21
843-1503-100
Roommate wanted for 2-bedroom apart-
ment for 50 a.m. On bus route Call Pho-
184-9923
842-9923
Female roommate to share two bedroom apartment one block from campus $22 plus ½ utility fee.
- Pool
Need 9 tickets to KU-KSU game. Call 842-7806.
Female romantique wanted to share 3-bedroom
apartment. Non-smoker. 614-623-2144
www.romantica.com
- Bud on Tap
One roommate for three bedroom townhouse.
Furnished for bedroom. Call 841-754-2-15
Wanted: Female roommate for my mite 2-Bed,
600 sq ft home. $385/month plus call 1-842-2877.
Resume to HR@homeshome.com
Rosemile rominate for 2 bedrooms, furnished or unfitted. $750 per month, plus 1% uplift.
Call (800) 633-4111.
MAISMITH HALL
THE MAISMITH HOUSE AMERICAN LANDLAND ARCHAIC 516 BROADWAY
NAI$MITN HALL
You would be passing up the chance of a lifetime if you need a roommate and detect call records. You may be unable to speeches, students, brotherly mate to share Jay Sanger, department, Cal, and ask for or Nancy
2-16
Female roommate wanted. Large apartment. Just
1 bedroom, plus 1/8 bath. $450.
843-892 after $75
5-15
Need 6 tickets to KU-K-State game. Willing to
pay extra Call 842-7575. 2-11
River City Hair Co. wants you! A total professional salon 842-608-7067 Massachusetts
Need ride to Worlds of Fun callbacks, Sat. Feb.
12. Share票. Call Ses 81-7459.
Need 4 tickets to the KU-K State Basketball game
=Please call 841-258-398
2-11
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
- Furniture - Antiques
- Imported Clothing
7308 Mass. 841-7070
WingsTo
EURPE
CharterFlights Youth Fares
KU Union Bldg./900 Mass.
_Hillcrest & The Malls Ctrs.
843-1211
Maupintour travel service
www.maupintour.com
14
Friday, February 11, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Council recommends pre-finals dead week
Students confronted with the agonies of final examinations deserve more time to study for them, the University Council decided yesterday.
The council discussed an Academic Course in the field, and a committee report that outlined ways of controlling what one member called "the crushing burdens that fall on students."
Presumably, APP will consider the report and will recommend it to the full council
Oscar Haugh, professor of curriculum and instruction and APP chairman, said faculty members had abused the final examinations. He also exams during the last week of classes.
Also, Haugh said, faculty members have been changing the times at which final exams are taken.
The subcommittee proposed a "dead week" for the last seven calendar days before final examinations, during which no final examinations could be given.
HAUGA SAIID that a past faculty committee had proposed a dead week, but that the "proposal disappeared into the bowels of Strong." He meant that no administrative action had been taken on the request.
M. Erik Wright, professor of psychology and a member of the University Senate Calendar Committee, said student members of his committee "have a strong sentiment against faculty who give finals during the last week of classes."
But Paul Mostert, professor of mathematics, said a dead week period would be "interfering with our teaching efforts." He also said requirements for all departments to follow.
WILLIAM WEBERKE, associate professor of law, echoed Mostert's opinion.
Roy Laird, professor of political science, said he recognized the need for flexibility in the university calendar. However, he said, "I share the students' anger."
The council didn't formally act on the subcommittee ideas, which Haugh said Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, supported.
In a related development, the council approved changes in the University's academic curriculum for women.
Robert Umholtz, associate professor of mechanical engineering and chairman of
the calendar committee, said the changes were necessary to bring KU's calendar into conformity with the Board of Regents' calendar.
The main change in the calendar for students is an extra holiday. Beginning this fall, no classes will be held Nov. 11, Veterans' Day.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.87,No.89
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
K-State beats KU Saturday
Monday, February 14. 1977
See story page eight
FIRST DATE
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Budding explorers
Novice explorers and map readers like Steve Pierce, Ft. Rucker, Ala., junior, and Jayne Kelson, Leanworth wonorth, got a
chance to practice their skills during an orientering exercise yesterday on west campus. The orienters were divided into two groups, each following a specified route.
Members must foot bill for faculty club's return
By JOHN MUELLER
Staff Reporter
If the University of Kansas resurrects its faculty club, members will have to pay for itself, Chancellor Archie Dykes said yesterday.
Dykes said he definitely supported the club, which he said would be a great asset to him.
However, Dykes said, "The state can't pay for such a club. There are problems with operating it, mainly the increasing food and labor costs."
Faculty members have recently talked about ways to revive a club at KU. For 26 years, a club was situated across from the Kansas Union on Jayhawk Blvd., but it closed in the fall of 1987 because of a large debt.
ELDON FIELDS, professor of political science and SenEx chairman, said last week that a possible site for a new club was in the area of the proposed Continuing Education Center north of the Union. Dykes agreed with that possibility.
but the, the $2.2 million center won't be built until an appropriations bill for the U. Department of Health, Education and Welfare will finance the center, is passed by Congress.
Dykes said a club legally could be built at the center, contrary to a report published last week in the Lawrence Journal-World, which said it would be illegal to have a club at the center because of liquor sale restrictions on state property.
DYKES SAID the construction was possible because the state wouldn't own all the property for the center. He said the KU Entuphony Association was going to buy
Orienteering match attracts diverse runners
Staff Reporter
By JOE RADCLIEEE
Russ Jedlicka stood on the University of Kansas West Campus yesterday afternoon wearing a $12 pair of sweat pants and a moldy, red sweat shirt—worth about 15—counts which had "Greenwich Cross Country" printed across the front.
He was part of a crowd of 30 persons, who ranged from five-year-old boys wearing jeans and sneakers to gray-haired couples as if they were out for a Sunday stroll.
They were all there to participate in the sport of orienteering, a combination of cross country running and hiking, using a map and a compass for navigation.
"THE COURSE is only about two miles."
ORIENTEERING originated with the military, which used it as a training exercise, and it is now spreading through Europe and the United States. The sport is played over a course of checkpoints where the oponent's main opponent is the stopwatch.
The meet yesterday was sponsored by SUA, the University of Kansas department of geography, KU Recreational Services and the Possum Trot Orientering Club of Mission, Kan. Most people who showed up had never participated in the sport before.
Jedicka, Lawrence graduate student said,
"I thought it would be about eight or 10."
Jedlicka, who once was on the KU cross country team, he entered the meet for the NCAA.
Each contestant received a map and a compass. Jeidika said he didn't take a compass because he'd run around West Campus before and knew the area well.
Another contestant, Katherine Keene, who works for the Kansas Geological Survey, took the compass but kept it in her purse once she started.
Keene, 54, was dressed as if she had just come from church, wearing a knap cap pulled down over her ears, her good winter coat and a pair of green double knit rots.
EACH STARTER was sent to the course at one-minute intervals, and Keene was one of the first to go. She checked her map and headed to the first checkpoint.
"I really wasn't expecting this," she said, stepping over a barbed wire fence. "I just wanted to take a nice walk through the woods."
SHE MARCHED across a field to the next
The first checkpoint was down a muddy bank into a heavily wooded valley. Keene soon spotted the red-striped marker and fought her way through some brambles to punch her card. She turned and started back up the hill.
checkpoint with the map in one hand and her purse over her shoulder, saying how people 'her age' should "get out and get their blood circulating."
She said she didn't mind orientering so far, except that her shoes were getting worn.
Keene said she figured people who liked orientering were probably "hikers and
"And those who like nature," she said, looking around at the brown grass and mud, then laughing. "Although we can't see much nature now."
THE FOURTH checkpoint marker was pinned to a fence post. Two 14-year-olds, Greg Marciniowski and Andy Turk, a friend of his and son of Peter Turk, acting assistant professor of journalism, and Ellie Turk, assistant to the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, stepped up to punch their cards.
"I can't this the first checkpoint?" Andy asked. Greg simply shook his head and cried.
They said that although they enjoyed orientering, they'd have enjoyed it more if they hadn't seen them.
What did they think of the course?
Marcintowski answered with a cynical, "Yeah."
"He talked me into this," he said, pointing an accusing finger at Turk.
MEANWHILE, BACK at the finish line, Jedlicka lounged on the grass. He'd already run the course in the winning time of 28:04. He didn't enter the more experienced division, which was run over the same field. Or order, because he said he was new to the order. He won, Berkeley, Calif., graduate student, won the experienced division in 33:54.
Jedlicka admitted that he had an advantage in the meet because he knew the
"When I lived in Templin," he said,
"I used to do my morning running over here every day.
"JUST looked at the checkpoint on the map, and most of the things were familiar to me."
part of the land, so it would be partly privately owned.
But he still had some trouble.
"On the first checkpoint, I went into the valley too soon, and I had to run through the stream to the marker," he said. "It wasn't too deep."
The purpose of a faculty club would be to provide social services, including the sale of equipment by faculty members. It would be funded through donations from Friends Fields said they are a stumbling block
On the second checkpoint, delia said, he was in the area but couldn't pimp the map.
"I was having a lot of trouble finding that thing," he said with a laugh. "Then I finally decided to look at the map."
"There is a real interest in a faculty clu,
provided it can be worked out in a way that
it can be used easily and the cost wouldn't
be so expensive. We'll work with a large number of the faculty." Fields said
AN EARLIER idea to locate the club in Jayhawker Towers, he said, would have cost from $150,000 to $185,000 just to remodel part of the complex.
Faculty members have said that money from the administration should supplement money from daes, which could be so high that only full professors could afford them.
SenEx members said last week that costs of the Towers proposal would have excluded faculty members who made less money in their job. The club's leadershipiness would hurt the club's social interactions.
Dykes said he didn't know how much a faculty club at the center would cost.
HENRY SNYDER, dean of research
administration, has said he thought KU was the only state university that didn't have a club.
Snyder was a member of the faculty club board of directors when the original club, housed in the current University Relations Center, was closed. The building was then into headquarters for the Endowment Association, which owned the club property.
The club had a dining room, lounges, two libraries and a meeting room and served as a social center for the faculty.
A group of faculty members, including Snyder, has worked since 1968 to form a new club. In 1972, Raymond Nichols, then chancellor, told the group that KU would support a club if the faculty could raise enough money to start the project.
The group raised $70,000 in funds and began a membership drive, only to discover that administrators no longer favored the project. The administration refused to give University funds for the project because KU was committed to building a new art museum, so the money was returned to the donors.
Second debate tonight; balloon will still fly
The Student Senate elections campaign moves into its last two days of campaigning with a presidential debate tonight and the inflation of a hot air balloon tomorrow.
The second debate between the three candidates for student body president won't include the vice presidential candidates as last week's did. Members of the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity are sponsoring it at 7 a.m., at the fraternity house, 1918 Stewart St.
If the weather is fair, the balloon will be inflated tomorrow morning in front of Strong Hall by Avanti sophomore class
See related election story page five
candidates. The candidates will inflate it despite a ruling by the Senate Elections Committee last month in the balloon shouldn't be part of the campaign because it would contribute a carnival atmosphere not allowed by Senate rules.
GREG SCHNACKE, sophomore class presidential candidate, said last night that Avanti had decided to go ahead with her campaign. When they felt it would increase voter turnout.
"We think it's a good idea and the Election Committee's wrong," he said.
The class candidates won't use a banner bearing the coalition name as they had intended, but will still campaign personally handing out literature at the balloon site, Bill Hamilton, vice president candidate, said last night.
Kevin Flynn, Senate Elections Committee chairman, warned candidates last week that if they disregarded the committee's rules, he said, he could be removed from their seats if elected.
Each candidate also will answer questions from two panelists, Karlin Campbell, professor of speech and drama, and an assistant professor of speech and drama.
Controversies about the Election Committee's decision and the campaign tactics of candidates may enter into tonight's debate. The committee will spend 10 minutes to question the other candidates.
Lake developers in legal fight
Campbell said yesterday that she might question candidates about the Senate's continuing commitment to minority affairs and to women's athletics.
She said candidates might also be questioned about financial plans the Senate should make in anticipation of a drop in student costs as the rising costs of student services.
Stan Smith, Lambda Chi Alpha member and moderator, will give each candidate five minutes for opening and five minutes for marking the hours and-a-balf debate.
By LIZ LEECH
Contributing Writer
MCMURY SAID his decision also was based on time and academic considerations. He regretted committee work in these areas, but he would still work on them without being charged.
Gary and Linda Pence consider themselves lucky. The Pences, who live in Silver Lake, bought a small plot of land several years ago at Lake Ridge Estates, a recreational land development at Perry Reservoir in Jefferson County, which was owned by Del Coronado, Inc. (DCI).
They consulted their lawyer in 1974 and filed a petition in the Jefferson County District Court against DCI and Edward Silverman, vice president of DCI. The case was negotiated outside of court, and the Pence had been sentenced to prison for punitive damages and lawyer fees. The Pence had made $1,600 in payments for one and a half years.
But the Pences said they were promised things by a salesman that never materialized, so they decided to cancel their contract and get back the payments they had made on their lot.
LAKE RIDGE Estates and another Perry Reservoir development, Lake Shore Estates, now are owned by Development Marketing, Inc. (DMI). Records in the Kansas Secretary of State's office show that Silverman and the contractors of Development Marketing, Inc. the ownership of the two developments has changed four times.
Mrs. Pence described how she and her husband became involved with DCI.
SNACHKE SAID he thought the Elections Committee didn't have that power.
She said she and her husband received advertising in the mail encouraging them to visit Lake Ridge Estates during its promotional campaign. A free breakfast at the site was offered.
"We were driven around the development in a heep, with a two-way radio," she said. "The salesman kept checking with the headquarters to see that the lot we were going to hadn't already been sold."
The Pences went to the development, had their free breakfast and were assigned a salesman
"Because I felt that the Elections Committee was going beyond its jurisdiction, the person who looks into this should be commissioned," he said. "We are all engrassled in," he said.
"HE SAID they were really going fast."
The couple signed a short contract at the development, which Pence said she thought obligated them to.
'But they didn't carry out the promises made by their salesman. They said that we would have water in a year and there wasn't, and there was no guard at the gate.
She said the salesman described the fishing pool, clubhouse with an open bar, guarded entrance to the development, swimming pool and tennis courts that soon would be available at Lake Ridge Estates.
"There is quite a controversy over the recent actions of the Elections Committee, which is a subcommittee of the rights committee," McMurry said.
she and her husband were given another contract to take home to study.
"I remember reading it myself. It really didn't tell you much about dates when things were going to happen," she said.
The PENCES hire a reactor to all their lot, and the PENCER puts a reactor with the reality company’s partner on the PENGEN.
"Now I don't know why we bought it. I guess it's just because it sounded so good."
"Every time we went out there, about tour times I think, to check our sign we found it face down. We started guessing suspicious and asked Ed Silverman at Lake Ridge Estates about it." Pence said.
His opinion was eched by Steve McMurry, who resigned Friday as chairman of the rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee.
Silverman, Pence said, told them that it must have a phantom and not one of his employees that knew him.
Finally, Pence, who is a photographer, set his camera with a 400 millimeter lens on a hill near his lot.
Her husband took a picture of the man's actions
"He hardy had his camera set up and a black car came along and a man look down the sign and put it in
MRS. PENCE said she didn't think she and her
She said her husband followed the man to the lake's edge, where he was about to throw away the sign. Mrs. Pence said she suspected the man was a DCI salesman.
The Pences aren't the only ones dissatisfied with DCI.
husband would ever have gotten their money back had her husband not photographed the act. The act, and his, would never happen.
John and Hannelore Cole, Leavenworth, bought a lot at Lake Shore Estates in 1975, became disatisfied because their salesman's promises weren't fulfilled and sold against DCI in 1976 to cancel their contract.
"They didn't fix what the salesman promised," Mrs. Cole said. "You see all the plans and hear all the salesman's promises and you think, 'Oh boy, that's something nice,' and then you are disappointed because they didn't keep their promises. They're a crooked outfit."
The Coles didn't get back the payments they had paid for their lot but were released from the contract
Since Lake Shore Estates and Lake Lake Ridge Estates were begin about eight years ago, 27 law suits have been filed against them.
The most recent case was filed Jan. 4 by the State or Kansas through Atty. Gen. Curt Schneider and the Board of Jefferson County Commissioners by County Attorney Gary Nafziger against DCI, DMI and two other organizations, Del Coronado Properties and Boyer Crown Homes.
LANCE POOL, assistant attorney general, said that the brief alleges that Lake Shore Estates and Lake Ridge Estates weren't operating their water and sewer properly and that they didn't meet state standards.
It also alleges that the defendants have collected money for the water and sewer districts from the development's patrons but failed and refused to accuse them of wrongdoing. There is a temporary injunction to stop them from selling lots.
See LAKE page 10
A temporary restraining order to prohibit the See LAKE decree 10.
NAME
'Well, then, could I interest you in lake-front real estate?'
2
University Daily Kans
News Digest
From our wire services
Eaypt says Libya meddlina
It says Libya says CAIRO - a senior official accused the Libyan government of Col. Moammar Khadify yesterday of encouraging Communist subversion in Egypt, and teaming with Moscow to launch a propaganda war against Egypt.
The charge was triggered by a statement issued by an organization calling itself the "Egyptian Liberation Front," which claimed responsibility for last month's food price riots.
and price lists.
"The statement, and the fact that it was broadcast by the Libyan radio, is a demonstration of the connection between the subversive activities launched against the Egyptian people and the rulers of Libya," the unnamed official told the semificial newspaper Al Ahram.
semiotical news paper "Moreover, the fact that Libyan and Soviet information media are playing the role of the existence of a Libyan-Communist scheme that has connections with the groups that work in the darkness against the security and stability of Event," he said.
stability or ekgp? Egyptian adults said they had never heard of the Front, which said in its study that it was "responsible for planning and organizing the uprising of Jan. 18, 19." Nearly 80 persons were killed and 600 others injured in the roles that swept half a dozen Egyptian cities.
Egypt's relations with both Libya and Russia have been strained ever since the 1973 Middle East war.
Bell accepts limited busing
SEATTLE...Atty. Gen. Griffin B. Bell said yesterday that he accepted a stand limiting school busing that was taken by the Justice Department in the Ford and Nixon administrations because the Supreme Court has made it the law.
Civil rights advocates are expected to dispute his assertion on the ground that the court is not yet to agree or disagree with the department positions that the scope of remedies for segregated schooling should be no greater than the proved wrongs. Bell told reporters that the Supreme Court has interpreted the law in accordance with the views of the previous administrations, and that he intends to leave the situation as it is.
Fighting potential extolled
SALISBURY, Rhodesia—Defense Minister Reginald E. D. Cowper, who resigned over the weekend, said yesterday Rhodesia has the potential to fight "indefinitely" against black nationalist guerrillas.
In summary, against black *because* Cowper resigned because of a public opposition to his plans for increased military force, the signing of the buzzer war.
call-ups because of the spreading bus war.
He ups the Rhodeian people's commitment to the war effort was "in its infancy" compared to Israel, where nearly all and some women can be called up quickly during military emergencies."
The 45-year-old former college president, who became defense minister Sept. 9, has been under heavy criticism recently for measures he took to increase the recruitment of soldiers to fight in the four-year old bush war.
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LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
Student Senate
Elect
Mark Bolton Mark Hughes Jim Ruano
Corliss Chandler Ken Idlemon Jake
Sharon Anderson Steve McMurry Thompson
John Esau Andy Ramirez Jim Willis
Lisa Friday Dave Ramirez
AVANTI
MOVE FORWARD WITH AVANTI · NOTE FEBRUARY 16 & 17
AVANTI
Mild temperatures cause floods
Rv United Press International
By United Press International
ice jams forced evacuation of people yesterday from along the Big Coal River in West Virginia and caused creeks and streams to flow over their banks in Ohio and Kentucky.
Another day of mild temperatures harried the breakup of thick sheets of ice following one of the harshest cold spells of the 20th century.
Flooding occurred on the Marsh Fork of the Big Coal River in Boone and Raleigh
WASHINGTON (UPI)-President Carter, toting an antique abugue, got an up-to-the-minute briefing yesterday on the nation's worldwide nuclear war capabilities as he flew back to Washington aboard his "Doomsday" jet after a down-home visit.
Carter was briefed by a 15-member battle staff representing all branches of the armed services on the 90-minute flight from Plains to Washington.
Carter learns of nuclear potential during flight on Doomsday'jet
Carter is the first president to fly in one of the aircraft, taking it to Georgia Friday and returning here yesterday.
and he had to resort to the flying command post for protection while he directed the nation's defense.
He also was given a daily-attention report typeform to which he would receive if the State came under attack.
The fragrant-looking gun was a high-polished, walnut nuttle loader, a gift to Carter from Jack Cockford, who makes guns for a hobby. Crockford presented it to the President on behalf of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources.
Carter told reporters he found the briefings interesting.
When he boarded a helicopter at Plains to fly to Warrior Robins Air Force base near Macon, Ga., where the big jet waited, Carter was overheard to mutter that he would "rather tote the gun myself than have it busted."
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RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
Expanding Lawrence Memorial Hospital has a part-time opening for a registered or registry-eligible X-ray technologist. Hours are 3:30-midnight, Saturday and Sunday. Please contact the Personnel Office, 843-368O, ext.391.
Equal Opportunity Employer
A flash flood watch was issued for all of West Virginia until noon today.
The National Weather Service said flood danger on the Ohio River was reduced, but ice coverage at reporting points averaged 60 per cent with an average ice thickness of 20 inches. The ice extended more than 30 inches upstream from several dams on the upper Ohio.
In St. Louis, the U.S. Coast Guard said volunteers from the commercial towing industry had chipped the ice onway in the Mississippi River, breaking up ice jams between Cairo, III, and St. Louis, a segment which has been closed since Jan. 19.
Heavy snow warnings were in effect for the northern and mountain sections of Newfoundland.
Police control Buffalo crowds
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPD)—Off-duty and auxiliary police were called in yesterday to handle traffic jams and scuffles at some Erie County locations as thousands of residents applied for free food stamps authorized after the recent blizzard.
Police were used to control an estimated 6,000 persons, four and five acrees, at the St. Augustine Center in Buffalo's east side. Many applicants lined up during the early morning and waited for hours—only to be sent home by police, who told the crowd that only limited amounts could be processed, officials said.
Officials reported arresting two 17-year-old girls for jumping ahead of the line at Buffalo's Grace Community Center. One officer said the "jumping" problem was so prevalent that some persons who were there at 6 a.m. were still in line hours later.
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104
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PURPOSE - The program provides advanced training in planning, design, construction and operation of the built environment, by considering the interrelated esthetic, technological, financial and managerial aspects of building problems, embedded in a systems approach. The program integrates methods, knowledge and techniques which address problems of building environments than following traditionally fragmented approaches to design of the built environment.
The program is designed to prepare future leaders in the building industry for opportunities of advanced practices which emerge in large architectural and engineering firms, construction firms, real property development and management organizations which concern themselves with building related products, and various local, state and national government agencies concerned with regulation or management of the built environment.
TOPICS OF STUDY
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APPLICATION - For students with first professional degrees in Architecture, Engineering and/or Management Graduate fellowships and research assistantships are available. Applications must be received by February 28, 1977.
The Kansas discuss decided probler
"IF effecti numbe done."
Wali East questio system John results library priority
Please request information from
Prof. Volker Hartkirk, Director / Advanced Building Studies / Carnegie-Mellon
University / Parks & Recreation / Pittsburgh PA 15213
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Survey polls library's problems
Staff Reporter
By KATHY GANNON
The deficiencies of the University of Kansas library system have been widely discussed, but one University professor has to do more than just discuss the problems.
Wallace Johnson, associate professor of East Asian Studies, has devised a questionnaire to find out what the library system needs to better serve the University.
Johnson said last week he hoped the results of the survey would help make library improvement the University's top priority.
yairs
ky
The questionnaire asks students and faculty members to list the courses they have taken or taught that have been administered by the condition of the library system.
Johnson said he became more aware of the library's problems last year when he heard that students told him that the library didn't have copies of some of the books they needed, that there weren't enough copies of others and that some had been misplaced or lost.
In a 1975 report, library officials said the number of volumes added to the library's collections had dropped by a third since 1965. The report also indicated that U.S. publications had increased by 26,000 a year during the same period, showing that "our collection has attained an ever-diminishing proportion of the total of currently published books."
"IF THERE are courses that can't be effectively taught because of an insufficient number of books, something has to be done." Johnson said.
Johnson's survey also asks library users to identify other library problems, including too few open hours, inadequate study space and a dearth of library staff.
SUA FILMS FOREIGN FILM WEEK
Mon.. Feb. 14
FILMS OF JEAN VIGO (FRENCH)
ZERO FOR CONDUCT (1933)
JEAN VIGO (French) Letrae Glibert Pluchon (French/subtilted)
*LATALAANTE* (1934)
Dir. Jean Vigo with
Pierre Dauphin
Parlo (French/subtilted)
7:30 75c
Tues.. Feb. 15
1005., TOB. 15
FILMS OF ALEXANDER DOV-
FISKO (U.S.A.) ZVENIGORA (1928)
ARSENAL (1929)
CHESS FEVER V.I. Pudovkin, N.
Skipovik with Jose Cap兰攀a.
Wed., Feb. 16 CLASSICAL SERIES
Wed., Feb. 16
CLASSICAL SIKES
Dir. Yves Robert with Martin
Lartique. Winner of the Le Tr
Kozzi (numer.) 692
(French/ubrush)
7:30 750
Thurs., Feb. 17 FILM SOCIETY
THE MILKY WAY (1968)
Dir. Luis Bunuel (Fr.-Sp.)
7:30, 9:30 $1
Fri., Feb. 18 Sat., Feb. 19
POPULAR FILMS
FELLIEN SATYRICAN (1970)
Dir. Fredrico Fellini with
Martin Potter, Miram Keller,
(H Italian/subtitled)
3:40 7:00 8:00 9:51
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
Johnson distributed about 3,000 surveys at the end of last month.
SOME FACULTY members are passing the surveys out in their classes and copies are available at the checkout desks of the College of Science libraries and in the Kansas Union lobby.
Johnson said he hoped to present the results of this research to university adversity authorities by the end of March.
"The survey will uncover some new problems we'll want to look into in implemen- tion."
Earl Huyer, chairman of the University senate Library Committee, said Johnson's work on the program will be announced.
Four library surveys have been conducted in recent years: three by the Staff Library Improvement Committee in 1973, 1974 and 1975; and one by the University Senate Library Committee in 1974. These surveys affirmed and reaffirmed the
100
Would you miss this?
JAMES RANZ, dean of libraries, said he was eager to know the results of Johnson's survey because it could pinpoint new trends in library use and for increased support for the libraries.
problems of inadequate hours, shortage of staff and space and too few books.
The wind in your face,
The blur of trees,
The sudden spray of snow
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the crisp, still air...
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mind.
The skier is turning backwards while skiing.
So trust Tampax tampons. Internal protection that can't chafe or show, or feel bulky and awkward. Tampax tampons — because on a day like this you need protection, not distractions.
Johnson said many of the 300 persons who have completed the survey offered to write letters about the inadequacies of the KU library and to ask for suggestions included in the report to the administration.
TAMPAX
10 Regular
Compact
41 Regular
TAMPAX
These meetings will be held on campus at the Lutheran Student Center, 15th and Iowa, on Wed., Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 17, 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Feb. 18 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Sat., Feb. 19 at 10:30 a.m. and again at 1:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. and TWO FINAL MEETINGS, Tues., Feb. 22, 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
MADE ONLY BY TAMPAX INCORPORATED PALMER MASS
SPEED READING CLASS TO BE TAUGHT IN LAWRENCE
The United States Reading Lab Mid-West Division is offering their famous speed reading course to a limited number of qualified people here in the Lawrence area. The average person who completes this course can read 10 times faster, and with substantially improved comprehension and better concentration.
For complete details about this famous speed reading course be sure to attend one of the free one hour orientation lectures that have been scheduled. These lectures are open to the public, above age 13 (persons under 18 should be accompanied by a parent, if possible.) and the course will be explained in complete detail, including class schedules, instruction procedures and a tuition that is much less than similar courses.
This famous course has taught many thousands of people to read over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and retain what they have read much more effectively. Average graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.
The Kansas Board of Recently
approved $80,000 in funds to make un-
derstandable.
*
Classes are limited and class places will be filled on first come-first serve basis to attend and meet meeting possible in ensure class place. Group rates are required upon request.
Huyser said, "This year, the administration, Board of Regents and the legislature have been very receptive to other ways such as the need for immediate space."
Schwinn products are for all seasons DELUXE EXERCISER by Schwinn
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Le Tours 10-Speed bicycle men's & women's Frame - was 169.95 Now 149.95 while 11 last LAWRENCE SCHWINN CYCLE SHOP We're open daily 9-6, Thursday until 8:30 Sunday 1-4 1820 W. 6th 842-6363
Record Record Sale
1. 98 AND UP On Sale NOW!
FEB.14-18
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Plant&Maintenance ENGINEERING CAREER OPPORTUNITIES at OSCAR MAYER
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Yes, we do have challenging engineering opportunities . but don't be surprised. As a leader in the
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- Plant Engineering Management
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We presently have assignments in the following areas:
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- Planning and Craft Supervision
Oscar Mayer
Initially, you'll complete a three month training program placing emphasis on the application of broad knowledge of engineering and management principles. After that, a more extensive, individually designed personal development program will follow. There's so much to look forward to with a career at OSCAR MAVER. Find out the whole story from our campus recruiter who will be interviewing on campus the week of February 14th, 1977, or contact
College Relations Dept.
OSCAR MAYER & CO.
910 Mayer Avenue
Madison, WI 53704
An Equal Opportunity Employer
2
Monday, February 14, 1977
University Dally Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Eaupt says Libya meddlina
CAIRO—A senior official accused the Libyan government of Col. Moammar Khadafy yesterday of encouraging Communist subversion in Egypt and teaming up with Moscow to launch a propaganda war against Egypt.
up with Moscow to launch a propaganda mail campaign. The charge was triggered by a statement issued by an organization calling itself the "Egyptian Liberation Front," which claimed responsibility for last month's food price riots.
"This statement, and the fact that it was broadcast by the Libyan radio, is a clear admission of the connection between the subversive activities launched against the Egyptian people and the rulers of Libya," the unnamed official told the semiofficial newspaper Al Ahram.
"Moreover, the fact that Libyan and Soviet information media are playing the same time proves the existence of a Libyan-Cormanist scheme that has connections with the groups that work in the darkness against the security and stability of Eovol." he said.
sabiny Egyptian officials said they had never heard of the Front, which said in its settlement it was "responsible for planning and organizing the uprising of its man. 18-19." Nearly 80 persons were killed and 600 others injured in the riots that swept half a dozen Egyptian cities.
Egypt's relations with both Libya and Russia have been strained ever since the 1973 Middle East war.
Bell accepts limited busing
SEATTLE--Atty. Gen. Griffin B. Bell said yesterday that he accepted a stand limiting school buildup that was taken by the Justice Department in the Ford and General Motors cases.
Civil rights advocates are expected to dispute his assertion on the ground that the court has yet to agree or disagree with the department positions that the scope of remedies for segregated schooling should be no greater than the proved wrongs. Bell told reporters that the Supreme Court has interpreted the law in accordance with the views of the previous administrations, and that he intends to leave the situation as it is.
Fighting potential extolled
SALISBURY, Rhodesia—Defense Minister Reginald E. D. Cowper, who resigned over the weekend, said yesterday Rhodesia has the potential to fight "infidelity" against black nationalist guerrillas.
Compete because of public opposition to his plans for increased militaryollusion because of the spreading bush war.
call-ups because of the spreading bush war. He said the Rhodesian people's commitment to the war effort was "in its infancy" compared to Israel, where nearly all and some women can be called up quickly during military emergencies."
The 45-year-old former college president, who became defense minister Sept. 9, has been under heavy criticism recently for measures he took to increase the recruitment of soldiers to fight in the four-year old bush war.
EASY GRADES?
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LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
Student Senate
Elect
Mark Bolton Mark Hughes Jim Ruano
Corliss Chandler Ken Idlemon Jake
Sharon Anderson Steve McMurry Thompson
John Esau Andy Ramirez Jim Willis
Lisa Friday Dave Ramiroz
AVANTI
MOVE, FORWARD WITH AMANT NOTE FEBRUARY 16 & 17
PAID FOR BY AMANT
By United Press International
Another day of mild temperatures hurried the breakup of thick sheets of ice following one of the harshest cold spells of the 20th century.
冰 jams forced evacuation of people yesterday from along the Big Coal River in West Virginia and caused creeks and streams flow over their banks in Ohio and Kentucky.
Mild temperatures cause floods
Carter was briefed by a 15-member battle staff representing all branches of the armed services on the 90-minute flight from Plains to Washington.
WASHINGTON (UPI)- President Carter, tooting an antique shotgun, got an up-to-the-minute briefing yesterday on the nation's worldwide nuclear war capabilities as he flew back to Washington aboard his "Doomsday" jet after a down-home visit.
Flooding occurred on the Marsh Park of the Big Coal River in Boone and Raleigh
Carter is the first president to fly in one of her duties, taking to Georgia FF and preparing for a trip to Japan.
Carter learns of nuclear potential during flight on 'Doomsday' iet
He also was given a daily-situation report typical of the type he would receive if the patient required treatment.
and he had to resort to the flying command post for protection while he directed the crew.
The frayed-look gun was a high-polished, walnut muzzle loader, a gift to Carter from Jack Cockford, who makes guns for a hobby. Crockford presented it to the President on behalf of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources.
Carter told reporters he found the briefings interesting.
When he boarded a helicopter at Plains to fly to Warrior Robins Air Force base near Macon, Ga., where the big jet waited, Carter was overheard to mutter that he would "rather tote the gun myself than have it busted."
Inventory Reduction SALE
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RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
Expanding Lawrence Memorial Hospital has a part-time opening for a registered or registry-eligible X-ray technologist. Hours are 3:30-midnight, Saturday and Sunday. Please contact the Personnel Office, 843-3680, ext. 391.
Equal Opportunity Employer
A flash flood watch was issued for all of West Virginia until noon today.
The National Weather Service said flood danger on the Ohio River was reduced, but ice coverage at reporting points averaged 60 per cent with an average ice thickness of 4.5 inches. The ice extended more than 20 meters from several dams on the upper Ohio.
In St. Louis, the U.S. Coast Guard said volunteers from the commercial towing industry had chipped the ice away on the Mississippi River, breaking up ice jams between Cairo, III, and St. Louis, a segment which has been closed since Jan. 19.
Heavy snow warnings were in effect for the northern and mountain areas of New Hampshire, Hampshire.
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI)—Off-duty and auxiliary police were called in yesterday to handle traffic jaws and scuffles at some Erie County locations as thousands of residents applied for free food stamps authorized after the recent blizzard.
Police control Buffalo crowds
Police were used to control an estimated 6,000 pounds of ivory and other wildlife in Buffalo on a sidewalk in Buffalo's east side.
Many applicants lineed up during the early morning and waited for hours—only to be sent home by police, who told the crowd that amounts could be processed, officials said.
Officials reported arresting two 17-year-old girls for jumping ahead of the line at Buffalo's Grace Community Center. One officer said the "jumping" problem was so prevalent that some persons who were at 6 a.m. were still in line hourles
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Advanced Building Studies
Graduate Multidisciplinary Programs
120 E. 89TH ST.
PURPOSE — The program provides advanced training in planning, design, construction and operation of the built environment, by considering the interrelated esthetic, technological, financial and managerial aspects of building problems, embedded in a systems approach. The program integrates techniques which address problems of building simultaneously rather than following traditionally regimented approaches to design of the built environment.
The program is designed to prepare future leaders in the building industry for opportunities of advanced practices which emerge in large architectural and engineering firms, construction firms, real property development and management organizations which concern themselves with building related products, and various local, state and national government agencies concerned with regulation or management of the built environment.
TOPICS OF STUDY
Computer-Aided Design Energy Conscious Design Disaster Mitigation Cost Estimation Project Management
Real Estate Economics and Management Solar Utilization in Building Structural Systems in Design Systems Integration
DEGREES
Master of Architecture in Advanced Building Studies
Master of Science in Civil Engineering (Advanced Building Studies)
Master of Urban and Public Affairs in Advanced Building Studies
Doctor of Philosophy
APPLICATION — For students with first professional degrees in Architecture, Engineering and/or Management Graduate fellowships and research assistantships are available. Applications must be received by February 28, 1977.
Su
The Kansas discuss decided problem
Walla East question system
Please request information from:
Prof. Volker Löwens / Advanced Building Studies / Carnegie-Mellon
University / Schenley Park / Pittsburgh, PA 15213
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Survey polls library's problems
By KATHY GANNON Staff Reporter
By KATHY GANNON
The deficiencies of the University of Kansas library system have been widely discussed, but one University professor has said to do more than just discuss the problems.
Wallace Johnson, associate professor of East Asian Studies, has devised a questionnaire to find out what the library system needs to better serve the University. Johnson said last week he hoped the results of the survey would help make library improvement the University's top priority.
yairsky
Johnson said he became more aware of the library's problems last year when he returned to China thought his students told him that they had copies of some of the books they needed, that there weren't enough copies of others and that some had been misplaced or
In a 1975 report, library officials said the number of volumes added to the library's collections had dropped by a third since 1965. The report also indicated that U.S. publications had increased by 26,000 a year from 1963. The increase in additions constituted an ever-diminishing proportion of the total of currently published books."
The questionnaire asks students and faculty members to list the courses they have taken or taught that have been administered by the condition of the library system.
"IF THEY are courses that can't be effectively taught because of an insufficient number of books, something has to be done." Johnson said.
Johnson's survey also asks library users to identify other library problems, including too few open hours, inadequate study space and a dearth of library staff.
University Daily Kansam
SUA FILMS FOREIGN FILM WEEK
Mon.. Feb. 14
FILMS OF JEAN VIGO (FRENCH)
ZERO FOR CONDUCT (1933)
Gilbert Pluchon (French/subtilted)
*L'ATALANTE* (1934)
Michiel Simone Dita Parlo
(French/subtilted)
7:30 75c.
Tues., Feb. 15
FILMS OF ALEXANDER DOV-
ZHENKO (U.S.S.R.)
NICKELMAN (1780)
ARSENAL (1929)
CHESS FEVER V.I. Pudovkin,
Shipkovix with Jose Cap兰攀a.
WAR OF THE BUTTONS (1962)
Dir. Yves Robert with Martin Lartique. Winner of the Le Trie French(submitted) 7:30 75c
(French/submitted)
Wed., Feb. 16 CLASSICAL SERIES
Thurs., Feb. 17 FILM SOCIETY
THE MILKY WAY (1968)
Dir. Luis Bunuel (Fr.-Sp.)
7:30, 9:30 $1
Fri., Feb. 18 Sat., Feb. 19
POPULAR FILMS
FELLINI SATYRICAN (1970)
Dir. Fredric罗佩尼 Fellini with
Martin Potter, Miram Keller.
(Italian/subtitled)
7:00 7:00 8:30 9:10
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 $1
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
Johnson distributed about 3,000 surveys at the end of last month.
SOME FACULTY members are passing the surveys out in their classes and copies are available at the checkout desks of the building, which offer libraries and in the Kansas Union lobby.
Johnson said he hoped to present the results of his research to the advisory authority appointed by the end of March.
"The survey may uncover some new problems well want to look into immediately."
Earl Heyser, chairman of the University senate Library Committee, said Johnson's report on the proposed law was
Four library surveys have been conducted in recent years: three by the Staff Library Improvement Committee in 1973, 1974 and 1975; and one by the University Senate Library Committee in 1974. These survey affirmed and reaffirmed the
Skiing
JAMES HANZ, dean of libraries, said he was eager to know the results of Johnson's survey because it could pinpoint new areas for improvement in case for increased support for the libraries.
Would you miss this?
problems of inadequate hours, shortage of staff and staff and too few books.
I wea in your face,
The blur of trees,
The sudden spray of snow that hangs suspended in the crisp, still air...
No, this isn't the day to stay home. Not for anything. Not even your period.
So trust Tampax tampons. Internal protection that can't chafe or show, or feel bulky and awkward.
Tampax tampons — because on a day like this you need protection, not distractions.
Johnson said many of the 300 persons who have completed the survey offered to write letters about the inadequacies of the KU system. He also noted that students included in the report to the administration,
I
These meetings will be held on campus at the Lutheran Student Center, 15th and Iowa, on Wed., Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 17, 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Feb. 18 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Sat., Feb. 19 at 10:30 a.m. and again at 1:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. and TWO FINAL MEETINGS, Tues., Feb. 22, 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
The Kansas Board of Recently
approved $380,000 in funds to make un-
derstandable investments.
The internal protection more women trust
TAMPAX
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MUNICIPALIDAD DE ARIZONA
SPEED READING CLASS TO BE TAUGHT IN LAWRENCE
Huyser said, "This year, the administration, Board of Regents and the legislature have been very receptive to changes in such a need for immediate space."
This famous course has taught many thousands of people to read over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and retain what they have read much more effectively. Average graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.
For complete details about this famous speed reading course be sure to attend one of the free one hour orientation lectures that have been scheduled. These lectures are open to the public, above age 16. persons under 18 should be accompanied by a parent, if possible. Students will be trained in complete detail, including class schedules, instruction procedures and a tuition that is much less than similar courses.
The United States Reading Lab Mid-West Division is offering their famous speed reading course to a limited number of qualified people here in the Lawrence area. The average person who completes this course can read 10 times faster, and with substantially improved comprehension and better concentration.
Classes are limited and class places will be filled on first come-first serve basis only. Be sure to attend the first meeting possible to ensure a class place. Group meetings may be held.
Schwinn products are for all seasons DELUXE EXERCISE by Schwinn
100
Built in Speedometer
Timer & Tension Control
Recommended By
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Relieves Arthritis
Reduces Weight
Relieves Arteriopathies
Relieves Leg Cramping
Relieves Mental Fatigue
Strengthens Back Muscles
Helps Your Heart Pump
Blows
ASSEMBLED & SERVICED
SUPERIOR QUALITY
Le Tours 10-Speed bicycle men's & women's Frame - was 169.95 Now 149.95 while 11 last LAWRENCE SCHWINN CYCLE SHOP We're open daily 9-6, Thursday until 8:30 Sunday 1-4 1820 W. 6th 842-6363
Record Record Sale
1. 98 AND UP On Sale NOW!
FEB. 14-18
KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE 8:30-5:00
last record sale of the season!
Patronize Kansan advertisers.
Plant&Maintenance ENGINEERING CAREER OPPORTUNITIES at OSCAR MAYER
PART 1
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4.88
4.89
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21.24
21.25
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22.80
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23.80
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25.80
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25.
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An Equal Opportunity Employer
4
Monday, February 14, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Sabbaticals simmer
Faculty committee maneuvering, by the Faculty Executive Committee, the University Committee on Sabbaticals and the Faculty Senate Committee on Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities has placed an already boiling University issue on the back burner to simmer for awhile longer.
BEHND THE cumbersome and ambiguous titles of these committees, and their equally cumbersome and ambiguous abbreviations and initials (FacEx, UCS and FRRP, respectively) lie the fundamental centralization of power within the University.
But the issue, the question of who determines the approval of faculty sabbaticals, may sing the hides of some KU professors and administers before a final resolution,
FRPR, in a report suggesting decentralization of the sabbatical decision-making process, charged that UCS procedures were "cumbersome—and in the view of some faculty members who receive sabbaticals, not worthwhile.
T. P. Srinivasan, FRPR chairman, alleged that a change in wording, from "a statement setting forth the objectives of the leave" to "a proposal . . ." had created a situation in which competition was the chief criterion for the approval of faculty sabbaticals.
AT FIRST glance, the two words would seem to mean the same thing; Calgaard, chairman of UCS, has said the change was "a minor, not a substantive point." Yet if the point is minor, why was the wording of the passage, contained in Article VIII of the faculty handbook—also under the control of the Office of Academic Affairs—changed?
The answer can be found in an UCS memorandum, dated Sept. 1, 1976, that says
candidates applying for sabbaticals "should prepare this application as carefully as they would a proposal for any other competitive award."
The memo seems to support Srivasantas' contention that sabbatical approval, under UCS guidelines, lacks sufficient influence from departmental or school levels.
That is precisely what FRPR is attempting to do; it is trying to bring major decision-making powers back to the departmental and school levels of power. We know the people who know about the faculty member and his reasons for requesting a sabbatical.
BUT CALGARD does not see it that way.
He says the decentralization plan will create
a decentralized system.
The underlying assumptions behind Calgard's statement are false. He assumes that additional layers of review will get in the way of his committee's smooth-running operation. The additional review barrier is therefore evil. Wrong on both counts.
FRRP's proposal is based on the premise that lower level decisions are more representative and more accurate assessments of sabbatical requests—at least certainly more accurate and representative by one massive centralized committee.
certain technical conditions. And even if the proposed FRPR move is enacted, UCS still will maintain a power of review.
THE RESULTS of Thursday's Faculty Council meeting proved little; FRPR's plan was sent back to FRPR because the council did not want it. The school will prepare the plan will go on, now is anybody's guess.
One nops the sensibility of the FRPR plan doesn't get lost in the committee shuffle.
On Friday, Feb. 4, 1977, a story headlined "Dose smoking often condoned in KU residence balls" appeared on the front page of the Kansas. The Great Grass Story had been born.
It was, for the most part, a rather innocuous feature story. It said little more than that enforcement of University regulations against marijuana came to light. Some students in residence halls smoked grass, (hardly a revelation). It contained some holes in that it didn't say enough about penalties that might face RAs who less-than-requisite and under-qualified amounts of smoking involved. It may well not have deserved front page play.
This "rather innocuous" feature did, however, quote one RA as saying 80 per cent of Hashinger. I also tried marijuana and another as saying about 50 per cent of the students in his hall smoked pot. There was also a student quoted as saying some lra RAs enforce regulations on the students' pot but put lows under their doors.
THREE LITTLE quotes. No Kansan survey; no Kansan charge; no Kansan poll. Just three little quotes.
On Friday and Saturday,
nothing happened.
The marijuana feature drew no
response to it on any paper in
that day's paper.
But on Sunday—wham!
Pot story criticism misdirected
But on Sunday-wham.
Some unknown employee of Utech Chemical in Kansas City must have found the Kansan in that day's exchange papers. Hm, he must have said, looks like a good little kid. And he picked the three quotes and stuck them together with a little
Dole sets a bad example
Letters
I find it somewhat amusing that Senator Dole would say that the Republican party needs to put forth positive alternatives to the problems of taxes, government spending and energy shortages. Perhaps now be realizes that there is more to do than just comply with some jokes, intolerant criticism and slick advertising.
positive and constructive proposals.
New Senator Dole wants to attract youth and minorities into the Republican party, which during the 1972 campaign made perfectly clear that the party wanted nothing to do with these groups. People in this country have the doors to become Republicans as long as the party has people like Senator Dole in it.
The debate between Vice-President Mondale and Senator Dole brought this out for all to see on a nationwide basis. It appears that when you run against Senator Dole, you don't know who is the winner, you have to do to let Senator Dole do all of the talking.
For the past six years, Senator Dole, along with Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew, has represented a conservative many people off to the Republican party. Some of the speeches made by Senator Dole after his appointment as national chairman refereed at a debate, those who dared to disagree with Richard Nixon, while offering little if nothing in terms of
If the Republican party in Kansas wants to acquire a more positive image, it would do well for the leaders of the party to
consider someone else as the Republican candidate for U.S. Senator in 1980.
To the editor:
Yes vote for whistle To the editor:
After reading the letters to the editor the past three weeks concerning "The Whistle," I offered my opinion on the issue.
Bill Kirby
Bellingham, Wash.
Graduate student
The whistle is the piece of equipment which keeps the University functioning smoothly, it students are faculty are late in class and late in arriving for their next class. The whistle reminded professors that class was over and that students need to work on their next class to work or to wait needed to be.
I've been a student at KU for the past three and one-half years and I'll vote "yes" on Feb. 16 and 17 for the return of the whistle so the University again function smoothly.
THE THIRD ITEM in the state wire budget received by subscribers was "DOPE LAWRENCE - 40 per person" of state-owned University of Kansas smoke marijuana, according to the
padding and sent them to little papers all over Kansas and beyond.
Bill French Olathe senior
front page of one of the most important papers in the state is even more of a thrill.
SO, FOR THE next couple of hours, we all felt pretty pleased with ourselves. We were confused and amazed that anyone was doing this difficult time recognizing the UFI version as a descendant
Editor's Note
Tim Bates
student newspaper . . .
Hmmm, the various editors have said, looks like an interesting item.
worrying about cracking-down RAs and raiding attorneys general.
No one was more surprised to see that story on the front page of Monday's Topeka Capital Times than the staff of the Kansan.
of our story. But we were all pleased with ourselves nonetheless.
To be perfectly honest, it was sort of thrilling. It's a big bogo toprie for a college newspaper to have anything it publishes picked up by a wire service. And to have it published on the
AND GUESS WHO all these concerned people began blaming? Yes, you guessed it—the Kansan.
Administrators, senators, RAS and students weren't upset because there was pot smoking in the residence halls. All of them either knew about the situation or didn't want to know. They were mad because printing the story meant that some people wouldn't pretend to know couldn't pretend anymore and that some people who they didn't want to know would now know.
And we certainly weren't innocent in that matter. We certainly did run the story. But we certainly didn't create the situation we reported or make in the quotes.
Ah yes, killing the messenger
I WOULD BE nice if the Kansan story would have been some fantastic reporting job against utrageous odds. It
would be nice if the Karsan could beat its collective chest in pride because of the fruits of its dizziness.
FOR A WEEK now, Kansan staffers have been enduring grass jokes from friends and dodging grass attacks from others. So much so that the Kansan has printed, the Great Grass Story probably deserved both. Quite a bit of joking and criticism is justified. It is justified, that is, as long as the criticism is based on the story of the story is self- on its writing, editing and news play.
It would be nice, but unfortunately we can't really do that because of a story based on a few guest-stimulated RAs, a story that was common knowledge or any present or former residence hall resident. I loved the heat and
We really rocked the boat and we weren't even trying.
It is a slightly different matter when the criticism is based on quoting someone or telling the truth.
Recommendation: Remove all clocks from campus as the ticking is distracting and not conducive to classroom activity!!!
Erasmus Smurd
Prof. of quietude
SILENE IS GOLDEN!
Conservatives need less purity
WASHINGTON — Several hundred adherents to the conservative faith held their fourth annual revival meeting at the Hyatt Regency last week. They left town full of the news, and a large crowd sawawit trail nawel. I wish them all the luck in the world.
This was the Conservative
Political Action Conference, sponsored by Young Americans for Freedom and the American Conservative Union. Participants ranged in age from those barely old enough to vote to those just about old enough to quit, but they shared a common bond—a total dedication to the conservative point of view.
These are the evangelical members of the holy faith, full-time missionaries in the conservative cause. Their purpose is to elect conservatives to the House and Senate in 1787, and to reclaim the White House in 1980. Theirs is a noble crusade.
RONALD REAGAN spoke to the closing banquet Saturday
night. it was the eve of his 66th birthday, but you wouldn't have guessed it. The former California governor was sun-
seemed to command less support at this conference than they have commanded in the past. Most of the participants
Candidates express intentions
Note: Elections for student body president and vice president are tomorrow and Wednesday. The Kanas has offered space for the three coalitions in them in their own words, their campaign platforms.
James J. Kilpatrick
(1) 177 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Reflection: Steve Leben,
Ralph Munyan
We have a two-part program for improving
instrument and increasing student involvement in it.
WE HAVE SEVERAL new ideas for the future. Polling of students will continue on a regular basis. Time will be made available at Senate meetings for any student to address the group. We will have a special meeting of executive bodies of all living groups about once a month. Just holding open meetings in living groups, we have found, usually fails because one shows up. This way we'll still get a broad audience. In particular, organizations made in these meetings will be printed in the Senate Record, which goes to all senators.
Several new ideas have been implemented this year by the Communications Committee. We surveyed the student body on academic advising and on whether the KU-MU football game should be moved to Kansas City. We also surveyed the Student Body in our publication, and hosted on campus and in living groups.
Part one is communication—the area that has always been our top priority. I am chairperson of the Senate Communications Committee and my colleague, Ralph Munyan, serves on that committee.
WE WILL SEE that you benefit from the $108,000 surplus the Senate has accumulated. You pay a $6.00 activity fee each semester, and you benefit any prospect benefits from it. We'll see that you get them.
Part two of our program is giving each of you tangible benefits from the Sentae and from your fees. If we do that, and you realize that the Senate can protect you, then we think you'll want to get involved.
We would use part of the money to improve recreational services and facilities, which are essential for our children.
aren't used for this, then the only way we could get the money to make these improvements would be by raising your fees. We'll spend the money you've already paid before even considering a fee in advance.
We would use the rest of the surplus to re-institute a published Feedback book, which would include student evaluations of each course and the teaching experience. We would go universities, and it can be successful here, too.
WE HAVE TRIED our best to communicate with you during this campaign. We surveyed 1,185 students on a variety of ideas we have for improving services to you. We visited 27 living groups, held open meetings in 5 apartment complexes, and set up a table in the Union.
Along with the Reflection Senate candidates, we want to reflect your views.
My qualifications include: president, All Scholarship Hall Council (ASHC); student senator; member, Student Senate Student Housing Board; member, Student Satellite Union
Spectrum: Sberri Grey,
Don Green and I deserve your vote. We sincerely believe this, primarily for three reasons. Don and I have had more experience with a wider variety of KU organizations than either of us.
Don Green
DON'T QUALIFICATIONS enhance and expand upon my own, student senator; member, Students Rights, Responsibilities and Privileges Committee; and member, Elections Subcommittee.
We deserve your vote because the Spectrum coalition was formed with broad representation in mind. Consequently, 29 coalition members are from fraternities and sororites, 25 Spectrum candidates live in residence halls, 10 candidates are from scholarship halls and 10 live off-campus.
SPECTRUM'S ISSUE orientations are practical and can be realized:
Our opposition cannot, and does not, boast of this same diversity. The Reflection coalition, for example, is running only 13 residence hall candidates, while running only 9 residence hall candidates out of 79.
We do not approve of giving all of that money to the KU Endowment Association for management and provision of $6,000 worth of scholarships per year. We also do not approve of benefits in other ways. We also do not approve of spending $30,000 for expanding the Feedback program when the creator of Feedback notes that the program has been updated in the past five years, something which might not be workable anyway?
1. Student government and student government: updating the Student Senate structure and reorganizing committees; 2. student government and students: improving library services, revamping Feedback, providing a student center, and graduate student concerns; 3. student government and administration, faculty and staff: involving students in budget allocations and salary levels; 4. student government and community: more student involvement e.g., via social media; 5. student government and the legislature and Board of Regents: implementing public information centers.
The major purpose of student government is to provide student services, via allocations of student activity fees. Last year, the Senate allocated $465,000 for an additional $188,000 will be at our disposal.
SPECTRUM WOULD like to see capital equipment expenditures (e.g. basketballets, etc.) for intramural and recreational services increased with some of these funds. We would also like to discuss advocating monetary incentives to faculty for advising us.
We believe we deserve your vote. Look at the facts. We're proud of ours.
Avanti; Randy McKernan,
Katie Rhoads
I have been a member of the Senate for two years and for those two years have worked hard as a member of the Senate's Finance and Auditing Committee. For the past year I have served as the
Avanti means moving forward. Moving in the sense that as our first goal we need to address ourselves to the major problem that exists in the minds of many students.
co chairman of this integral Senate committee. For most purposes, financing of student organizations is the key to the activities of the Senate. And the $350,000 worth of programs funded ties into the Senate in one vital area—finance and auditing. Katie can also bring a strong sense of response to the finance in this area after having served as an enforcement officer and working member of Finance and Auditing.
KATIE AND I are able to bring an abundance of diverse leadership abilities and tested examples of those important attributes. Our combined experience as student leaders at KU ranges from Katie's presidency of GSP-Corbin Hall; her research on the role of the AURH President's Council and its various committees; her service on the Higher Education Week Steering Committee; and her membership on the Chancellor's Task Force on Enrollment, to my experience with some major areas of University government, including the Senate, the Board of Trustees and membership on the University Council.
I want to provide you with the responsibility that you deserve. The president of the student body is not only an elected official, but is employed by the student body.
It should be mandatory that student senators make effective attempts to seek out student views. We have also proposed a weekly column in the Kansan that would publicize the issues under discussion in the Senate before the Senate decides on them.
In
ONE OF THE MOST controversial issues is the use of the excess money that the Senate will have acquired at the end of this fiscal year. We are not opposed to spending money on worthwhile programs, but we are opposed to the liberal spend it philosophy; we should be able to spend it because our program that will either be discontinued when the money runs out, or one that will require raising additional revenues via the activity fee in the future. Until permanent programs can be started, we would like to see a majority of this excess transferred to the Endowment Association to provide such assistance that must be acquired. One of the first places money should be spent would be in recreational services.
tanned, virile, as handsome as he. Rang him all the old bells: The American people really are scared by his talk, thought; the poll shows a resurgence of conservative attitudes; all that is necessary for victory is to weld this latent weakness into an effective political force.
Former Senator James L. Buckley of New York hit the same note. So did Rush Limbaugh, the publisher of National Review. This is the way it is with revivals. Everybody gets born again, but Mr. Limbaugh will go forth rejoicing, trumping in the sheaves.
BUT HOW? That is the question many of my passionate brothers are unwilling to face realistically. Mr. Rusher, for example, insisted that the Republican party is done for; it has known sin; it cannot be redeemed. Salvation, in his view, lies in a new unblemished Conservative party. Mr. Rusher's evidence shows that the GOP holds barely one-third of the seats in the House and Senate; the party is down to 12 governors; it controls both houses in only 5 state legislatures. As a reaction the Republican party is no more than an aging Edsel.
Althou Student dominate coalitions trum—27 on their
Jesse H Marrs, M for soph presiden
Although whistle s classes, Paul said
"It's n grasp," but an a doing so
SOME with the academi
of funds,
distribu
newslett
thought
addition
The facts may be undeniable, but they do not necessarily lead to a sound political conclusion. Mr. Rusher's schismatic views
"Weed too
muck didn't
just one
They
with the
because
people
would like to stick with the Republican party, provided its candidates stand for true Republican principles.
HAVI people,
AND THIS is where orthodoxy runs aground. The conservative activists have not quite got it through their heads that elections are not ideas; elections are people. It is not attitudes that vote; it is human beings, warm bodies, men and women. Faith alone is not enough. The consensus of voters, in the pact, must motivate a majority of the voters in any given constituency to put ballots in a box.
**THIS IS THE conservatives' dilemma.** They will not compromise with sin. If they had managed to nominate a governor this year, by this time they would be snapping at his heels. You wonder, sometimes, if the conservatives really want to win—want deep to win, truly want to organize an government and govern don't know.
I do know this: Whether they work within the Republican party, or seek to establish their own party, the conservatives have an inference for dissent, a willingness to reach out, an acceptance of political realities. Until they appeal to a broad range of failible internal and exterior darkness, and speaking simply as one true believer, I am getting awfully tired of the cold.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 15, 2018. Students June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. 60441 Subscriptions by mail to student@ku.edu or $3 a year outside the university through the student activity fee.
Editor Jim Bates
Business Manager Janice Clements
Monday, February 14, 1977
5
uny do dled on RAs,amon at or indent. t and
ansan during and from another inted, bably bit of fitted. its long on the ry iting and
erent is one or
9
Independents find campaign rough
Staff Reporter
By MARSHA WOOLERY
d less once than in the participants
with the provided its for true
Although this year's campaign for Student Senate positions has been dominated by the names of the three big coalitions-Avanti, Reflection and Spectrum—27 students have opted to campaign on their own.
nere or-
er, and The.
have not
heir heads
of ideas;
It is not
is human
men and
women,
it is not
ideas, if
in the at
majority
any given
in a
Jesse Paul, Ingalas freshman, and Perry Marrs, Montaurea freshman, are running for sophomore class president and vice president as the Whistle-Start team.
Although they would like to see the whistle started again to signal the end of classes, that is not their major concern, Paul said.
SOME OF their campaign goals coincide with their opponents, such as better academic advising, more efficient handling of funds, more student participation and the distribution of a sophomore monthly newsletter, Paul said. But he said he still thought their small coalition had some additional views, too.
“It’s more a name that the students could grasp,” he said. “It’s not an abstract name, but an aggressive term reflecting a start in doing something in the right direction.”
veritas'
not com-
they had
them
to be
bear,
be sap-
wonder,
verservatives
deeply
organize to
I don’t
know. I don’t
---
neither they republican bishl their conservative develop a development, a dissent, an outh, an realities. to a broad man beings, an exterior man beings, I am the cold. I am the cold.
They have encountered several problems with their independent campaign, basically due to the fact that they were
"We decided to branch off because there is too much dependency," he said. "We just didn't think it was very broadminded with just one voice (in a coalition)."
campaigning or have access to the money needed for heavy advertising, Paul said. And because of problems with printing, they were unable to post posters until this week.
The odds also have not stopped Jim Lasley, Shawnee Mission sophomore, and Ed Biggs, Prairie Village freshman, from leading the Knicks in a game against Snapper. No 29 is the All-Star team.
"Basically, we started because we disliked the bigness and the formality the big coalitions had to go through to get things done." Lasley said.
chairman of the Elections Committee and
want to be able show no bias if asked
"We just started thinking about what coalitions stood for and how insignificant the individual senators are," Lasley said. Lasley said both are concerned about KU's traffic problems and would like to increase parking and 13-minute lounge zone areas.
Running as an independent won't hurt her chances for election, she said, because only one other person is running, and Bock was elected last year as an independent.
HAVING THE resources of only two people, they can't compete in personal
All six of the candidates for the 23 graduation seats are running independently.
Serate candidate from the Numerakum No. 1 district, said people had told him it was a terrorist attack.
unintentionally.
Clair Keizer, Lawrence freshman and Nunemaker No. 5 midday, said, "I don't like what the coalition has done. Maybe it's the political way of doing things but they're not out to represent the students. If a coalition gets major power the candidates are responsible to the coalition and not the people they represent.
"Basically, I'm new to this election business so I didn't realize the power of the coalitions," he said. "It's been a challenge for me and the people to figure it out it's difficult to get elected on your own."
Rob Lintz, Wilamette, Ill. sophomore and
David Hess, Lawrence sophomore and Liberal Arts Senate candidate, said, "I didn't disagree with any party, but I just transferred from a junior college and I felt I could have some representation for these students and not be tied to party ideas."
But running independently gives most candidates less of a chance at having their ideas heard.
DAN PEARMAN, Kansas City, Kan.
freshman, and Numeraker No. 2 candidate,
said he is running independently so a
coach will ask him to join it next year.
Benita Bock, Junction City senior, campaigning for one of two pharmacy Senate seats, said she was running independently because she was a former
"my coalition is my district as far as I'm concerned," he said.
Gravity as the Therapist
a film on Rolfing followed by discussion and demonstration by Tom Pathe MON.,FEB. 14
LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY
$1.00 at door 841-3145
TONIGHT
School of Business Presents
ROLAND BERGER
Internationally recognized consultant on trade with China
"China: Current Opportunities for Trade and Cultural Exchange"
University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 14, 7:30 p.m.
Forum Room, Union.
Open to the public free of charge
Japan
Night
Sunday, Feb. 20
5:00 p.m. Banquet 6:00 p.m. Cultural Show Kansas Union Cafeteria Woodruff Auditorium Tickets: $4.50 at S.U.A. office JAPANESE ASSOCIATION Sponsored by K.U. International Club
Court hearing set
A Feb. 23 formal hearing has been scheduled in Douglas County Court for a 14-year old youth whom police are holding in custody. The case is stabbing death Thursday, of Mary E. Cox, Macy's.
The youth is being held in the juvenile detention facility at the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, 14th Street, 1609 North Washington, D.C. to Mike Malone, Douglas County attorney.
The youth was arrested Thursday evening about six hours after a woman found Cow's cellphone.
Malone said that there were no signs of force entry and that the woman was found
Pollors sense said the youth lived with his sister in the same apartmert complex as his sister.
Malone he had asked that the County Attorney's office be permitted to work with him on his case.
Under Kansas law, juveniles 'names can't be released unless a judge has given special permission.
Malone said it wasn't likely the youth would be tried as an adult.
Funeral services for Cox were yesterday at the Rumney Funeral Home Chapel, 601 Indiana St. Graveside services will be at 4 p.m. today in Roxanna, Ill.
Taco Tico Introduces
Sancho Dinners
Buy one Sancho Dinner, and with this coupon receive another dinner of your choice FREE.
Sancho Dinner ... $ 1 ^ {45}
Burrito Dinner... $ 145
Enchilada Dinner... $ 1^{25}
Tamale Dinner... $1^{25}
Coupon good thru Sun., Feb. 20, 1977
One coupon per customer
23rd St
Holiday Inn
IOWA
TACO
TICO
Ancient Greece is renowned for its "democratic" government. Yet the only persons allowed to vote were citizens of Athens: no women, no slaves, no common men. At the University of Kansas we deviate from that philosophy. Here, everyone has a vote.
In the upcoming elections, every registered student will have the opportunity to vote for the senators of his choice, according to representation base. Every student will be able to vote for the president and vice president of the Student Body: two paid positions that serve campus concerns and represent the University to state and national organizations. Class officers for next year's sophomore, junior and senior classes will also be determined, by student vote, in this election.
The issues to be confronted by your senators and officers are often highly applicable to everyday campus life. Activity Fee distribution, quality of teaching, and athletic ticket subsidies are but a few of the concerns. Every student can have an active voice in the outcome of these issues, and more. Exercise the heritage of Athens, and vote.
DEMOCRACY WAS BORN IN ANCIENT GREECE*
*and is being continued at the University of Kansas.
STUDENT ELECTIONS
FEB. 16-17
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
VOTE
PLATO IS GREATO
OEDIPUS serves!
VOTE ICARUS and soar to new heights.
HERCULES
LET Xantippe Speak for You!
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
6
Monday, February 14, 1977
University Daily Kansan
'Dames at Sea' sets sail Thursday
By JULIE WILLIAMS Staff Reporter
New York comes to Lawrence this week but in the form of the "dessert theater" production of "Dames at Sea," a nostalgic spoof of the musicals of the Thirteens.
The show will be presented by SUA in cooperation with the University residence halls at 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday, and at 2:30 and 7 p.m. on Sunday in the Big Eight Room of the Kauai Theater. Chris Kauli, Sauer's associate, and the show manager will entertain York theater theater
Chris Kahlier, SUA adviser, said the show is taking them to the greatest creative theater to it to the students.
"We're trying to offer a theater where the audience will be sitting at tables instead of just rows, and the cast will serve desserts during intermission."
DESSERT IS appropriate, she said,
because it fits in with the light and funny
atmosphere of the 1930s spoof.
The song and dance format, directed and choreographed by KU graduate students, chronicles the life of a small-town actress who sets off for New York to become a star.
"It's a spoil of the way things were in the Thirties, we're not really poking fun but just
nostalgically remembering the 'era,'*
Kahler said.
During the show's intermission, the audience may feast on apple pie and ice cream, a cherry turnover or a banana split, and so forth. There are songs of the period that "Darned" sperm,
THE ORIGINAL show premiered off Broadway in 1968 and was presented only in theaters in 1972.
"This is why we chose the Big Eight Room; the show never went before more than 125 people and we're trying to retain the intimacy of the original show," she said.
Everyone in the seven-member cast, including the directors, is affiliated with the University Theatre, Kahler said, but this production allows the performers to branch
"The University Theatre provides excellent facilities but unfortunately is able to present only about four performances a year," she said.
"DAMES' IS one way to show students that there are other places and other ways musicals can be presented and I hope we can see this idea in other places in lawrence."
Arts & Leisure
Eastman Quartet displays talent
ny SHERI BALDWIN
Editor
"Thank you for waiting."
"And thank you for coming."
Such was the initial exchange between Eastman Quartet violinist Milton Taylor and an outspoken member of a large University Theatre audience yesterday. Before the concert was over, the exchange was the same, but much broader than one-
Delayed for one half hour by flight difficulty, the Eastman Quartet began playing after a pause to tune instruments, and with little or no warmup.
Such poise belongs only to the most seasoned of artists. The quartet, the only group to have won a Grammy Award.
United States, quickly displayed its ability to use talent against disadvantages.
Pianist Frank Glazer was able to use the brightness of a Murphy Hall piano to the quartet's advantage just seconds after touching it. And projection problems, normal when in a chamber music group is placed in a larger heater, were never noticeable.
Gentlemanly in appearance, the quartet's members came far from performing in a stody, businesslike manner. They played a program of Mozart, Faure and Brahms quartets displaying dramatics and improvisation in a style that seemed innmutable.
Their musical interpretation thrived on
The show, produced as part of the SUA
Accent of the Arts program, is directed by
Amy Abrams, Brooklyn, N.Y., graduate
from Cornell University, Hedge, Brooklyn,
N.Y., graduate student.
contrast. Dramatic crescendos were squeezed into dramatic pauses. And even piano passages combined with driving cello notes for a balanced sound.
"if anything, our music has gotten a little more serious," Taylor said. "Audences are up."
General admission is $3, $2 for KU residence hall students and tickets are $4.
Originally a string trio, the quartet was formed in 1965 because each member had wanted to play a concert of all three Brahms quartets. All are full-time teachers in performance, Glazer, Taylor and viola players Francis Tursi at the Eastman School of Music, Rochester, N.Y.: cellist Alan Harris at the Cleveland Institute of Music, Cleveland, Ohio. Concerts are either spot dates or short tours.
CINDY SUGGS
Treasurer
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS
KANSAS BRS ENSEMBLE, Faculty
Recrival Series, 8 tonight, Swoirh RAoulfec
Rachel Series
TOM BYERS
BRAD YOST
Vice-President
SPECTRUM
Paid for by Spectrum
President
Secretary
MELANIE SMITH
B.
CLOUF MALI N, SUPERN AND CATHY
LORO
INFORMAL RECITALS by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts at noon every weekday through March. 4. Strong Hall lobby.
919 Massachusetts
BRING YOUR OLDEST, SCROUNGIEST SHOES IN AND SAVE
$2.5O ON THE PURCHASE OF A NEW PAIR.
THE WORST SHOES WILL WIN A $25.OO GIFT CERTIFICATE.
CONTEST ENDS FEBRUARY 19TH.
stomp out old shoes contest
BankAmericard and
919 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas Phone 841-2995
'Faces of Eve this Tuesday
JOB BOUILTY, TUITE, AND ANTIOLOGY
SOCIAL WORK, CAPACITY RETAIL SMOOTH
Master Charge Welcome
"Faces of the American Eve," a onewoman show that incorporates poetry, drama and song, will play at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union's Jayhawk Room.
In "Faces," Maureen Hawley displays attitudes about the American woman as she looks into her life.
"DAMES AT SEA" a spoof of '30s Hollywood extravaganzas offered in the form of a dessert theater, 8 p.m. Thursday through Sunday, Union's Big Eight Room.
"FACES OF THE AMERICAN EVE," a one woman show of poetry, drama and song performed by Maureen Hawley, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Kansas Union's Jawkway Room.
TAJ MAJAL and COLE TUCKY ON
Kingsman, Wednesday. Upon Tower,
Kansas City.
SANTANA - 8 p.m. Tuesday, Memorial Hall, Kansas City, Kan.
This Week's Highlights
Concerts
ELIZABETH M. WATKINS COM-
MUNITY MUSEUM—An American
Sampler. A Look at Life in the 1800s'; 80
photos, from the library of Congres-
sion.
Become a navigator with the United States Air Force. Air Force navigators are among the finest in the world. They train in the ultra-modern T-43轰炸机, the US Marine Corps' and Sacramento, California
pay tuition, textbooks, lab fees,
and $100 tax-fair dollars a month.
The Air Force ROTC
commission, an excellent starting
commission, an excellent starting
salary, challenging work (with
some of the finest equipment
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sibilities, graduate education
and much more.
DOWN HOME , a Lawrence country and western band, 9 to midnight night. Off the
Find out about the programs today and chart a secure future for you. At Air Force commission, your checkpoints, are excellent salary, promotions, responsibility, and Air Force opportunities.
KANSAS UNION—The Colette Bangert
Exhibition opens today in the Union
Gallery. A Marson Galleries Art Sale is
Thursday and Friday, Union lobby.
Theater
Recitals
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.
by paying tuition, text-
books, lab fees, and $100 tax
free dollars each month while
you're in college. Plus, Air
Exhibits
艺术设计
第一章 设计基础
第一节 设计概念
设计是一种创造性的活动,它要求艺术家有独特的思维能力和创造力。设计需要考虑如何将想法转化为现实的产品或服务。
第二节 设计要素
设计通常包括以下几类要素:
1. **视觉元素**:设计中的主要元素,包括文字、图形、色彩、线条等。
2. **功能元素**:设计中要满足的功能,如交通设施、家居用品、广告牌等。
3. **情感元素**:设计中要传递的情感,如情感表达、审美感受等。
4. **文化元素**:设计中要融入的文化背景,如传统文化、现代文化等。
第三节 设计方法
设计方法是指在设计过程中采用的各种方法和技术。例如:
1. **原型设计**:通过制作一个原始的模型来验证设计的可行性。
2. **草图设计**:绘制出初步的设计草图,然后将其转化为三维模型。
3. **电子设计**:使用计算机辅助设计工具(如CAD、AutoCAD)进行设计。
4. **交互设计**:通过用户界面(UI)和交互系统(UX)实现用户与产品的连接。
第四节 设计流程
设计流程是指从设计概念到最终产品或服务的完整过程。它包括以下几个阶段:
1. **需求分析**:了解用户的需求和期望,确定设计方向。
2. **概念设计**:提出设计概念,设计方案。
3. **原型设计**:制作一个原型,展示设计效果。
4. **测试**:测试设计是否符合预期。
5. **优化**:根据测试结果调整设计。
6. **生产**:制造最终产品。
7. **运营**:管理和维护设计产品。
8. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
第五节 设计技巧
设计技巧是指在设计过程中采用的一些有效的方法和策略。例如:
1. **注意细节**:注意设计中的细节,避免出现错误。
2. **优化设计**:采用更好的设计和技巧,提高设计效率。
3. **简化设计**:简化复杂的设计,使之更容易理解和使用。
4. **多样化设计**:采用多种设计方法,增加设计的多样性。
5. **创新设计**:采用新颖的创意方法,提升设计作品的艺术价值。
---
第二章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括绘画、雕塑、书法、建筑、摄影、动画、游戏等多个领域。
二、艺术设计的核心要素
艺术设计的核心要素是艺术创作的过程,它包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴等方式获得灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感受到艺术的美感。
三、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精致的质感。
4. **个性性**:设计作品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **环保性**:设计产品应符合环保的要求。
四、艺术设计的流程
艺术设计的流程包括:
1. **需求分析**:了解用户的需求和期望,制定设计方案。
2. **概念设计**:提出设计概念,设计方案。
3. **原型设计**:制作一个原型,展示设计效果。
4. **测试**:测试设计是否符合预期。
5. **优化**:采用更好的设计和技巧,提高设计效率。
6. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感受到艺术的美感。
7. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
五、艺术设计的创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一、美术设计案例
1. **《白鹭》**:一名画家创作的白色鹭主题绘画作品。作品描绘了一只优雅的鹭鸟,采用明快的色调,展现了鹭鸟的生动形象和自然之美。
2. **《山水画》**:一幅山水画,描绘了山水风景和人物,运用了丰富的笔法和色彩手法,表现了中国传统山水画的意境和哲学思想。
3. **《建筑设计》**:一幅建筑设计图,展示了建筑的结构和形式,采用简洁的线条和几何形状,体现现代建筑的简约美。
4. **《环境设计》**:一幅环境设计图,展示了城市环境的生态平衡和可持续发展,强调人与自然的和谐关系。
二、摄影设计案例
1. **《人物摄影》**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的性格特点。
2. **《动物摄影》**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情充满活力,展现了动物的奇趣之处。
3. **《环境摄影》**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。环境景象真实、生动,展现了城市生活的多样性。
三、绘画设计案例
1. **《水彩画》**:一幅水彩画,描绘了一个宁静的湖泊和湖边的景色,采用柔和的色调和细腻的笔法,展现了湖泊的静谧和水的流动。
2. **《素描画》**:一副素描画,描绘了一个生动的动物形象,采用简单的线条和色彩,展现了动物的可爱和力量。
3. **《雕塑画》**:一幅雕塑画,雕刻了一座高大的石雕,雕刻的图案生动、形象,具有强烈的立体感和艺术感染力。
四、设计案例
1. **《网页设计》**:一个用于设计网页的应用程序,包含多个功能模块,如登录、注册、购物、导航等,通过用户操作完成各种任务。
2. **《app设计》**:一个用于开发移动应用的应用程序,包含多种功能模块,如消息通知、游戏、新闻资讯等,通过用户操作完成各种任务。
3. **《品牌设计》**:一个用于设计品牌形象的应用程序,包含多个功能模块,如促销、优惠券、服务介绍等,通过用户操作完成各种任务。
第三章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴等方式获得灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感受到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三、艺术设计的创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **《人物摄影》**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **《动物摄影》**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **《环境摄影》**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **《人像摄影》**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **《动物摄影》**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **《环境摄影》**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **《平面设计》**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的线条和色彩搭配,营造出清新、现代的城市氛围。
2. **《网站设计》**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用整齐的排版和简洁的字体,提高网站的易用性和美观度。
3. **《海报设计》**:一个海报设计案例,展示了一场展览的海报。海报中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第四章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴等方式获得灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感受到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第五章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴等方式获得灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第六章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴等方式获得灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第七章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴等方式获得灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第八章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴等方式获得灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第九章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴等方式获得灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第十章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴等方式获得灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第十一章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴等方式获得灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第十二章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴的方式提供灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第十三章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴的方式提供灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第十四章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴的方式提供灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践创新**:通过实际实践,不断完善和改进设计。
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
3. **环境摄影**:一组环境摄影作品,拍摄了三处不同的环境场景,包括一处自然景观、二处人工景观和一处城市景观。
二摄影设计案例
1. **人像摄影**:一组人像摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三只不同的动物,包括一只猫、一只鹿和一只鸟。动物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同动物的魅力。
三设计案例
1. **平面设计**:一个平面设计案例,展示了一个城市的建筑布局和装饰设计。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
2. **网站设计**:一个网站设计案例,展示了一个网站的设计布局和页面布局。案例中采用简洁的排版和强烈的视觉冲击力,吸引观众的 attention。
第十五章 艺术设计
第一节 艺术设计概论
一、艺术设计的定义
艺术设计是指利用艺术材料和工艺 techniques 来创造出具有艺术价值的作品或艺术品。艺术设计包括:
1. **灵感**:从哪里获得灵感,构思作品的主题和内容。
2. **灵感源泉**:通过观察、研究、借鉴的方式提供灵感。
3. **创作意图**:明确设计意图,了解设计的目标和目的。
4. **创作过程**:设计创作的过程,包括设计准备、设计创作、成果展示等。
5. **成品展示**:将设计成果展示给观众,让他们感到艺术的美感。
6. **反馈**:收集用户反馈,进行改进。
二、艺术设计的原则
艺术设计的原则包括:
1. **以人为本**:尊重用户的需要和体验。
2. **实用性**:设计产品或作品应满足日常需求。
3. **美观性**:设计作品应具有高雅、精美的质感。
4. **个性化**:设计产品应具有独特的风格和个性。
5. **创新性**:采用新的材料和工艺 techniques,提高设计效率。
6. **经济性**:设计产品应具有合理的成本和经济效益。
三艺术设计创新
艺术设计的创新包括:
1. **概念创新**:探索新的设计概念,提出新的设计理念。
2. **技术创新**:采用新的技术和软件,提高设计效率。
3. **材料创新**:采用新的材料,如陶瓷、石膏等,增强材料的性能。
4. **环境创新**:采用新的环境设计,如节能、环保等。
5. **实践活动**
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第三节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第三节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第三节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第三节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第三节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1. **人物摄影**:一组人物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
2. **动物摄影**:一组动物摄影作品,拍摄了三个不同年龄段的人物,分别拍摄了女性、中年人和男性。人物形象生动、表情富有感情,展现了不同人物的个性。
3. **实践活动**
第二节 艺术设计案例
一美术设计案例
1.
Two, three, and four-year Air Force ROTC scholarships are available to help you get there
Nightclubs
警察
Books
TOM RUSSELL, fiction writer, SUA Contemporary Fiction Series, 45.
Chronicle of a Nation, Union's Pair. A
"A SNEAK PREVIEW OF THE SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART," with Charles Eldridge, museum director, 7:30 a.m. Thursday, Union's Room Forum.
Leetures
CARGO, a rock band. 9 to midnight Wednesday, the Opera House.
Put yourself on the map.
Force ROTC is a great way to serve your country.
aeronautical engineering majors are offered a computer science, mathematics and physical science major. The Air Force is looking for young airmen of the Air Force such as those. If you are majoring in one of these areas, you may also be required to complete two-year or the four-year Air RTC program. And to help them prepare for their future three, four and five-year scholarships, you must apply.
Find out today about one of the finest scholarships in the nation. It's a great opportunity.
MADONNA OF THE SEVEN HILLS, by Jean Plaidy (Crest, $1.75)—A story of the Reimacism, the herene being the famous Lucrezia Borgia, daughter of Pope Alexander VI. Intrigue, passion, and all kinds of derring do.
SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS: If you are a physical science, math or engineering major designated slots are available in the following categories:
Mechanical and civil engineering majors aerospace and aeronautical engineering majors
We need certain college majors to become Air Force lieutenants.
PILOT, NAVIGATOR & SCIENCE/ENGINEERING.
Apply THIS WEEK. See Capt. Macke, Military Science Building, Room 108, or call 864- 4676.
BEST, WORST AND MOST UNUSUAL,
edited by Bruce Felton and Mark Fowler
who helped create the book to care
accept all the value judgments. How do
they know that the All Saints Church in
Siediac, Czechoslovakia, is the worst
church, that Chicago is the best
city?
Air Force ROTC
YOU'VE READ THE BOOK... YOU'VE SEEN THE TV SHOW.. NOW HEAR THE ALBUM.
.
Quincy Jones'...Roots
Music from and inspired by the David L. Wolper production of "Roots." Conceived by a man with a history just as famous. No one but Quincy Jones could give you the sound of "Roots"'!
MUSIC FROM AND INSPIRED BY THE
DAVID J. WOLPER PRODUCTION OF ROOTS
QUINCY JONES
ROOTS
The Son of an American Family
MUSIC FROM AND INSPIRED BY THE
DAVID L. WOLPER PRODUCTION OF ROOTS
QUINGY JONES
ROOTS
The Saga of an American Family
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Monday, February 14, 1977
SUA es, 4
THE with 7:30
ingert
Union
ale is
COM- american 80 yr. of
DUAL bowler if you how do such in worst best
Foreign films scheduled
By BILL UYEKI
Entertainment Editor
There's an abundance of foreign films in SUA's film schedule for this semester—nearly 40 per cent of the schedule's films. Steve Schmidt, SUA film board member.
Foreign films are scattered throughout the semester, but this week is special. The entire schedule for this week will consist of eight films from France, Russia, Spain and
The week will end on a rather bizarre note with Federico Fellini's "Satyric, in the midst of a war," an ancient Rome to what he regards as a somewhat equally decadent modern play.
FOR THOSE WHO enjoyed Fellin's "Amarcord" last year, but didn't see enough voracious prostitutes, hideous and vicious animals, Satyricion should satisfy their appetites.
Two films by French film director Jean Vigo, who died of tuberculosis at 29, will be shown tonight. "Zero for Conduct," his most famous film—he only made four—is a surrealist look at life in a boys' boarding school and the rigors of adult authority.
"Zero is acclaimed by famous film directors all over the world." Schmidt said.
Vigo's last film, "L'Atalante," a romance
of a young couple, also will be shown.
TOMORROW THREE silent films will be shown, two of them by Russian director Alexander Dovzhkeno. Among the few Russian films he has directed, Dovzhkeno is regarded as the most artistic.
"He's the 'third party' of Russian directors," Schmidt said. "The other directors, Eisenstein and Pudovkin, were more politically inclined."
"The films deal with the wheat-growing areas of the Soviet Union. We should be able to watch."
The third movie tomorrow will be "Cheese
ever," a short, humorous piece on chees on chops
and the way they melt.
OTHER FILMS this week are "The War of the Buttons," directed by Vesey Robert, and "The Milky Way," directed by Lais Bunnel. Bunnel is a Spanish film director, who made his first movie in 1928 with Salvador Dali. "On Chien Andalov."
Schmidt said the special week was scheduled because he thought foreign films needed to be on the screen.
"There's quite an enthusiasm in the University community for foreign films," he said. "The foreign language instructors especially enjoy seeing the foreign films."
I'll just use plain text for the background.
Pre-Nursing Club
Community Health
will have a speaker on:
Feb.15, 7:30 p.m.
International Room, Kansas Union
Funded by Student Senate
By Gay Services of Kansas LAWRENCE
DISCO DANCE
University Daily Kansan
K.U. Union — Feb. 19, 8 p.m.
$1.75
No Alcoholic Beverages
Brought In
Beer Sold with I.D.
SOUND SUGGESTIONS FROM KJHK MONDAY FRIDAY
MONDAY
DAY IN THE LIFE NEWS - 10:25 AM,
4:25 PM, 9:25 PM
SUA REPORT - 2:30 PM
THE PEOPLE'S PRESERVE - 8:30 PM
Tuesday
FOR THE 13 : 30 P.M. - 10 : 25 A.M.
4:25 PM, 9:12 PM ONLY
STUDENT SEGARATE REPORT - 2:30 PM
CROSS CULTURAL HABITAT - 1:30 PM
wEDNeSDAY
DAY 10 THE LIFE NEWS - 10:25 AM,
4:25 PM, 9:25 PM
DAY IN THE LIFE NEWS 10:25 AM
--prediction - 10:25 AM, 4:25 PM
q. 9:25 PM
SUA REPORT - 2:30 PM
SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS - 8:30 PM
11:30 AM
THURSDAY
Beel To Beel
STUDENT SENATE REPORT - 2:30 PM
LAXA EDITIONAL REVIEW - 2:10PM
RADIO TIME MACHINE - 8:30 PM
INSIGHT EVERY OTHER WEEK
8:00 PM
sATURDaY
stage scrapbook - every other week @ 8:30 pm /
MAN and molecules - 9:30 AM
REEL TO REEL - 11:30 AM
NIGHTBIRD BAND COMPANY 8:30 PM
SUNDAY
PARTIALLY FUNDED THROUGH STUDENT SENATE
KJHKFM91
WISHING WELL - 9:00 AM
GOOSE EXPRESSIONS - 11:00 AM
UNIQUE PERSPECTIVES ON THE
CLASSICS - NOON
AMERICAN PAST - 2:00 PM
DOWN HOME - 3:00 PM
FLAIRBACK - 4:00 PM !
♪ ♫
ON
WISHING TO APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE STUDENT SENATE/STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE:
Notice to All Organizations
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, Level 3.
These requests must be completed and returned to the Senate office NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 28, 1977.
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
BUY TWO JEWELER STEAK-A-BOB PLATTERS...
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Limit 2 Dinners per coupon
Offer good through Fri., Feb. 18
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SPECTRUM CANDIDATES
ARCHITECTURE Bill Quatman Jane Calacci
SOCIAL WELFARE Jerre Bowen
JOURNALISM
Becky Herman Tim Akard Pat Thornton
LAW
Greg Buehne
Dave Larkin
LAW
BUSINESS
Kent Allingham
Laura Fuller
Mike Galloway
Cindy Whitton
ENGINEERING
Sandy Appl
John Shell
Jay Shore
Scott Weise
FINE ARTS
Mary Beth Craig
Phill Kauman
Bruce Douglas
Cyndi Wheeler
Dietre Colgan
Lynne Garell
Steve Geist
EDUCATION
LA&S
Cliff Mosley Sherry McKee Susan Turner Diana Berquist Kevin Letcher
Bill Ekey
Joel Naille
Bob Huffman
Claudia Shusterman
Chris Caldwell
Scott Niclan
Madhup Joshi
Terry Thum
Sarah Hein
Debbie Watson
Kris McKinney
Anne Burke
T.J. Wilder
NUNEMAKER 1
Kevin Sundbye
Beth Reiger
Debbie Copenhauer
Paul Russell
Debbie Sedorcek
T.C. Cloon
Mark Suderman
Scott McKinley
Russ Tlusick
Carolee Miller
NUNEMAKER 2
NUNEMAKER 3
Mike Bengston
Brian Kaufman
Jim Bloom
Mark Winkleman
Melanie Martin
NUNEMAKER 5
NUNEMAKER 4
Kim Wetzel
Valerie Howard
Randy Rock
Tammy Powell
Tim Stites
Patty Cray
Mark Buchanan
Brian Settle
Carolyn Jenkins
Carlos Chavez
Bernard Johnston
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Pres.-Jim Corbett
Vice-Pres.-Davey
Colburn
Sec.-Patsy Cassidy
Treas.-Janet Dyer
JUNIOR CLASS
SPECTRUM
GREY & GREEN
FOR PRESIDENT FOR VICE-PRESIDENT
Pres.—Tom Byers
Vice-Pres.—Brad Yost
Sec.—Mel Smith
Treas.—Cindy Suggs
PAID FOR BY GREY GREEN SPECTRUM
8
Monday. February 14, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Wildcats defeat KU technically
By GARY VICE
Sports Editor
Heck, the Big Eight basketball championship doesn't mean much anyway. After all, each a postseason tournament to represent it presents the conference in the NCAA playoff.
Right? Well, sour grapes are at least palatable to stauk CHU supporters who can't stomach the thought of their Jayhawks losing. But you agree with the verdict. Minnesota Kansas State University Saturday afternoon in Allen Field House, 86-83.
K-State is going about the Big Eight basketball战 the right way. KU is not.
The Wildcats, although not endowed with superior height or superstars, are winning. And they're winning on the road again for the top contenders for the conference title.
OR, AGAINST teams once considered top contenders, as the Jayhawks are now fifth in the Big Eight with a 6-5 record having lost
their last two games to K-State and Missouri. The Tigers, who lost to Nebraska in Lincoln on the weekend, 60,45 are tied for first with K-State with 8-3 records. The Cornhuskers and Oklahoma are tied for third at 7-4.
Sports
The demise of the failling 'Hawks this time has become known as the god, . . . er . . . the mental error of one of the nation's most intelligent players.
With 33 seconds left in the game and the score失锁ed at 83-8, junior co-captain Ken Koenigs for a time out when he hit the ball in bounds against a Wildcat press.
ALTOUGH NORMALLY a smart thing to do when in that situation, it wasn't this time as KU already had its four allotted hours and the hawks were charged with a technical foul.
K-State's Curtis Redding then pocketed the free throw for his 34th point, and the Wildcats had the ball and the game under control.
Chances are, however, that Koenigs' error would never have mattered if the 'Hawks hadn't blown three consecutive layups with less than three minutes to play and 79/74 lead. Had the under-the-basket feeds been more accurate or not bobbled, the Jayhaws might have been able to put the Wildcats away.
"IF WE HADN'T dropped those three dead open layups," Owens said, "it wouldn't have been a close contest. We were just a little bit nervous."
Owens, sensing questions about Koenig's fateful time out call, said, "I've been here 17
years and there's never been a kid I've had more admiration for than Ken Koenigs.
"If there's anyone to blame, it's me for not having a time out left."
He then explained a situation where he had called what he termed an unnecessary time out for a substitution when Redding was shooting from the foul line.
"IF YOU'RE going to print anything about Ken Koenig, "Owens added, "then print he had a ball of a bulgame. If you're going to print that there's a goat, then print
Keenigs, who had tied the game at 83-43 by sinking two free throws, scored 18 points in the game equaling his season high, shooting 7-of-11 from the field and 4-of-4 from the line. He also pulled down 15 rebounds to equal the best rebounding performance of any KU basketball player this season.
Clint Johnson led the hot shooting Hawks, who hit 59 per cent from the field, with a career-high 21 points. John Douglas scored 19, and Herb Nobles 14.
JOHNSON, WHOSE 15-foot jump shot at 8:16 gave KU its largest lead on the game at 68-98, said. "I watched the films from our KU-KState) games before, and when they're in a zone they leave a couple spots open. So I just moved to them and hit. I knew they wouldn't be expecting me to shoot much."
KU's leading offensive threat, Douglas, fouled out of the game on a charging violation with 51 seconds remaining. Douglas was attempting to move around Scott Langton when Langton tumbled to the floor.
DOUGLAS DIDN'T think he charged and Owens also voiced his doubts on the call.
"When it comes down to the wire it comes down to marginal calls too," Owens said. "Did Douglas charge or did Llangon have position? Do you know?"
In the end, it could be noted that the 'Hawks had dropped the rubber game of the season with the Wildcats and that center Paul Mantle had played a period from a manacle wicket was extended.
The Wildcats, who committed only four turnovers in Saturday's game, defeated KU, 80-63, in Manhattan, 81-75 at the pre-season tour in Kansas City. Mo.
★★★
BANKS (D)
| | FT | Ft | R | Pf | Pt |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Johnson | 9-13 | 9-14 | 4 | 4 | 21 |
| Nobles | 7-13 | 7-14 | 4 | 4 | 18 |
| Houston | 7-11 | 4-14 | 15 | 3 | 18 |
| Houton | 7-11 | 4-12 | 14 | 3 | 18 |
| Iowa | 10-15 | 7-17 | 5 | 19 | 19 |
| VanMoore | 2-4 | 0-0 | 4 | 4 | 4 |
| Gilbert | 3-4 | 0-0 | 4 | 4 | 4 |
| McKinnon | 34-44 | 15-19 | 32 | 22 | 18 |
| | F15 | F24 | R1 | R2 | P15 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Beckington | 10.5 | 19.7 | T | PF | Pts |
| Danestone | 10.5 | 16.4 | T | 3 | 32 |
| Lanzaion | 8.8 | 14.1 | T | 1 | 15 |
| Lemaion | 8.8 | 3.4 | T | 1 | 13 |
| Leavon | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Lingwu | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| TOTALS | 34.78 | 19.85 | 30 | 17 | 86 |
| KRANNAN SCALE | | | 43 | 43 | 86 |
| KRANNAN SCALE | | | 43 | 43 | 86 |
K-State's Curtis Redding raised early victory salute following technical foul charged against Kansas
KANSAS
STATE
KANSAS
STATE
Unlucky gymnasts third in Big 8
By DAN BOWERMAN
KANSAS STATE
Attendance: 16,138
Associate Sports Editor not being prior to Ken Snow
Fate is not being nice to Ken Snow
First, most of his women's gymnasms have
experienced injury in the Big Eight Championships in
Ampas, Iowa, Friday tapped it off.
just past the Kansas border, a radiator hose burst in the team's car. In the ensuing struggle to get the car to a service station, he got two. He got two and one half hours traveling time.
Because of the lost time, Kansas arrived at the meet 15 minutes before it was to start. Meet officials allowed KU an extra 15 minutes warm-up, but snow said, it was hardly busy.
meet of the year, but four they managed to take third in the four-team meet. Iowa State University won it with 123.05; University of Nebraska was second at 116.2; KU was third at 108.9, and Oklahoma State University was fourth at 104.85.
THE JAYHAWKS didn't have their best
"We had very little warm-up," Snow said yesterday. "We really didn't have too bad a meadow, though. If we wouldn't have had to walk all the way down to clooseto Nebraska, which we did not expect."
Four Jayhawk gymnasts advanced to Saturday's individual finals, including all-around performer Karen Mundy, who made finals on all four events.
MUNDY WAS 32nd in the all-around competition with 30.50 of 40 possible. She won the silver medal.
of 10 possible points preliminary score and a
7.85 final score. Mundy was third on the uneven parallel bars with a 7.8 in
the preliminaries and 8.05 in the finals.
She was seventh in floor exercise and vaulting. On the floor, Laurie Props took second place with 8.3 in preliminaries and third place with 8.35 in preliminaries and finals.
made finals for Kansas. Murphy placed
seventh on the beam. And Thompson was
seventh on the beam.
Iowa State's all-around gymnast Margie Huddlson set the pace for the rest of the gymnasts. She won first in the vaulting. Another Iowa State competitor won the unevens.
Pegeen Murphy and Sue Thompson also
KU's next competition will be here against Wichita State Friday at Robinson
Wiley ties world mark; KU wins USTFF
By ROB RAINS
Snorts Writer
Rv RORRAINS
OLKAHOMA CITY—The Kansas Jayhaws used two record-tying performances by Cliff Wiley to come from behind and wilt the United States Track
Wiley tied the world record in the 300- yard dash, blazing to a 29.8 seconds clocking on the board-banked wooden track. He tied the school record in the 60
and Field Federation (USTFF) Indoor Championships here Saturday night.
SUNY
[Football]
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Wiley hits tape equaling world record in 300
with a time of 6.0, finishing second.
IT WAS the running of Garrison and his Oklahoma teammates that paced them to an early lead. "Hawks" beat the Oklahoma team on the night and recorded a 45-38% decision.
Anthony Coleman, who was expected to challenge for the title in the 60-yard high hurdles, hit the third hurdle and didn't finish the race. The two-mile relay team suffered through a dropped baton and a stumbling finish, but didn't
Earlier in the day, in preliminary competition, the mile relay team had failed to qualify for the finals when Gary Hirschfield was injured and to stop after suffering a pulled muscle.
In the 60, Wiley and first-place finisher John Garrison of Oklahoma were credited with the same time but Garrison was awarded the win.
Oklahoma built an early 17-1 lead over KU after four events, and coach Bob Timmons had reason to wonder what was happening to his squad.
IF THAT wasn't enough bad luck, things weren't going well for the 'Hawks during the early going of the night session either.
Also failing to advance to the finals were Keith Guinn in the high jump and Jesse Hunt in the long jump.
Jay Wagner started to turn things in Kansas' direction as he picked up its first title of the night, winning the 600 with a time of 1:10.4, one-tenth of a second off the qualifying time for the NCAA championship.
THEN IT WAS Rick Ensz and Glenn Harter's turn. They finished second and fourth in the 1,000 to give KU six points and move them closer to the Sooners.
It looked as if Oklahoma was in a commanding stance. But then Wiley cut off the blonde.
Tad Scales took second in the pole vault—four more points. He cleared 18-6 on his last attempt, qualifying him for the NCAA meet.
The high jump results came in this time, and again the news was good for Timmons, Steve Raimond and there were seven more points for the Jayhawks.
"We were scoring points but they kept on scoring more points." Timmons said.
THE MOMENTUM was starting to
SHIFT. Tommy McCall took second in the
880-yard run, running a 1:52.3 for another four points. He also missed qualifying for the NCAA meet by one-benth of a second.
"WEHAD thought that Missouri would have a chance to beat OU." Timmons said, "but we didn't think OSU was that strong."
"You could see from the start that he was going to run a very good race." Timmons said. "The 300 is his event. He ran a beautiful race."
"I didn't start sweating until I realized we were out of events," Timmons said. "When you have a chance to win on your own, that's not too bad. But when you have to pull for somebody else, well..."
Wiley, a junior, had plenty of help in pulling the Jayhawks out of OU's grasp, but his performance still rated the best of the evening.
Pull for somebody else they did—Missouri and Oklahoma State. If Oklahoma had won the mile relay, they would have beaten the 'Hawks by one-half point. They took third. Missouri won and Oklahoma State took second.
Oklahoma was still hanging strong, and the Jayhawks were coming at them hard and fast. If OU could hold on just a little longer, the Jayhawks chance for their second USTFY Indoor title might be over. KUT's first title came in 1975.
San Vanton took second for OU in the two-mile run, and appeared to have stalled the 'Hawks charge. Then came Wiley's world record, coupled with the fourth-place finish of Kevin Newell in the same event, and KU had eight points.
BUT THE Sooners weren't through, and the worst part—for Timmons anyway—was that the Jayhawks couldn't do anything about it. They didn't have any entries in the last two events, the mile run and the mile relay.
Assistant coach Stan Narewski also
raised Wiley's effort.
The Jayhawks have one more meet before the Big Eight Inout, against Oklahoma State and Wichita State Thursday night in Allen Field House.
"He's as good as he thinks he is, maybe even better," Narewski said.
KU women triumph despite poor showing
Reardon put together his best meet of in the indoor season. The freshman cleared 6-11 in the high jump and took fourth place in the long jump with a leap of 24-24%. He also reached the finals in the triple jump , but didn't place.
Sports Writer
By RICK BRYANT
Pathetic. Lethargic. Either of those words describes the KU women's basketball team's victory over Wichita State University this weekend.
Saturday night's game was poorly played and against many other teams KU might have lost. The Jayhawks were just plain fast in the 61-60 win over the Wheatstocks.
KU had to win against WSU to stay in the running for a berth in the Association of intercollegiate Athletics for Women post-season tournament. The Jaywhaws must now be Kansas State later this month in Allen Field House and in a playoff on a neutral court to be the Kansas representative in the AIAW tournament.
KU forward June Koleber made four free throws during the last two minutes of the game to clinch the win. She sank a pair with 1:51 left for KU give a knee point lead and 14 points. She scored a 58 lead before WSU's Peggy Clark made the scoring with a goal field.
"NO DOUBT this was a big win for us tonight," KU coach Marian Washington said, "I'm glad we had a bad game and won rather than play and lose. It was just plain stupid."
Women second in track meet
Off night was right. KU, 10-14, clung to leads ranging from one to three points during the last two minutes of the game, not being able to put WSU away.
The KU women's track team set three school records and took second place in the Kansas State Indoor Track Invitational Saturday.
The final team scores were: K-State 84,
KU 30, and Wichita State 25.
KU coach Tom Lonvale said after the meet the team looked better than last week.
Kubahua's time was good for a first place finish, while Bassa and Mordy both finished.
"Over all, the times were improved." "Over all," there were several nominal seats, but no election. "We were not yet."
Record times were turned in by Charmaine Kuhman in the 600-yard dash (1.38.3), by Bunny Crawford in the 600-yard dash (1.38.4) and by Marry Morley in the two mile with a 12.01.8.
Also taking a first place was Sheila
who ran the 80-yard dash in 7.0
seconds.
G'
THE 'HAWKS game-long lead was interrupted for only a few seconds when Clark put the Wheatshocks ahead, 28-27, with it and beat the first half. Kansas led at the half 33-32.
Coach that his score
Nebraska it wasn'
powerful
Nebraska of the se-
cond place
It was has su
changes
passed last ye-
MIKI with 48 was a c in solid parallel the sco
place fi one of t nastics perform
KU had the ball with 32 seconds left in the game and took three shots while holding a one-point lead, 61-60, instead of running out the clock.
"I told the girls during that time-out with 32 seconds left to hold onto the ball, but they forgot," Washington said. "I'm thankful we didn't get beat on a last-second shot."
WSU's Bebt Epp forced a up shot with two seconds remaining that fell short as the
Forward Sue Berens led the KU scoring with 19 points followed by Coleber and Adrian Mitchell with 15 and 14 points respectively.
Marguerite Kell and Epp were the top scores with 18 and 16 points respectively.
SMU sinks Jayhawks
Senior co-captain Mike Alley broke the 10-minute barrier for the first time this year in the 1,000-yard freestyle with a winning time of 9:55.69.
Southern Methodist University's swim team provides stiff competition for just about anyone in the nation and KU swimmers. The team was named 81 to 32 decision to the Mustangs.
The Jayhawks won only two events in Saturday's dual meet against SMU, which was ranked eight in the nation in pre-season polls.
KU'S OTHER first came in the 200-yard butterfly by sophomore David Estes turned in a season's best time of 1:55.03 to win the event.
Dick Ream, Kansas head coach, was especially pleased with two swimmers who didn't win their events. Cocaptain Ben Wagner finished with two second places and freshman Doug Smith won a second and a third.
Wagner's seconds came in the 200 individual medley and the 200 breaststroke. Smith took second in the 500 freestyle and third in the 1,000 freestyle behind Alley.
"We're getting more consistent," Reason said. "But SMU is just awesome. They think they have a shot at secreting in USC. They'll definitely be in the top ten."
University Dally Kansan
Monday, February 14, 1977
9
Gymnasts' top performance loses
Coach Bob Lockwood predicted last week that his men's gymnastics team would score 190 points Saturday against Nebraska. The Jayhawks did just that, but it wasn't good enough to overcome the powerful Cornshuskers.
Nebraska, despite KU's best performance
at the knees, easily handled the Hawks in
the second round.
BELL
It was only the second time that Kansas has surpassed the 190 mark since rule changes making scoring more difficult were passed two years ago. The other time was last year against Oklahoma when KU scored 197.65.
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events in J, which in pre-
The Jayhawks mustered only three third place finishes against the "Hunkers, who are one of the three powers in Big Eight gymnasium UU had several outstanding performances.
take the 10- s year in ning time
200-yard
d Estes
1:55.03 to
ach, was emers who obtain Ben and places second and
MIKE HYNES paced the Kansas crew with 48.60 of 60 placed in the all-around. It was a career high for Hynes, and he turned in solid performances on the pennel horse, parallel bars and horizontal bar to achieve the score.
The 48.60 was good for third place. Larry Gerard of Nebraska, an international competitor for the United States, won the all-around with $53.35, and Mark Williams of NU was second with $51.25. KU's Jody Summers was fourth in the all-around with 45.75, his best output at that event since midway through last season.
je 200 in-
stash.style and style and
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BESIDES HIS third place finishing in the all-around, Hynes also took third in the all-around, but he did not win KU's other third place was won by John Nunley, who scored 9.0 on the still rings.
was still room to improve because KU hit only 17 of 28 routines flawlessly.
"That 190 is a pretty good score, and it was kind of our goal," he said. "But it's not like a limit because we just hit 61 per cent of our sets."
Lockwood said he was pleased with the team's performance, but added that there
performance was a little off from last weekend's 9.25 on the rings, but he added that Nunley was ill Saturday and had to wear practices last week because of the illness.
Lockwood said Hynes and Summers had good meets and that freshman Bob Teel, who is still recovering from a broken leg, also performed well. He said that Nunley's
The Jayhawks will be at home this weekend when they host Fort Hays State College and Northern Colorado in a meet Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium.
If President Jimmy Carter's proposed tax rebate is paid by Congress, almost everyone who filed a federal income tax return will receive an extra $50.
First tax rebates have been figured on a percentage basis of the amount of money a person owes.
Carter's proposed tax rebate described
Arkansas sweeps past KU netters, 9-0
Kirkland Gates thought the KU men's tennis team would be prepared for its meet with the University of Arkansas Saturday afternoon in Fayetteville, Ark.
After all, the head coach had seen his team beat Tulsa, 8-1, and narrowly defeated by Southern Illinois, 5-4, in their first two matches.
So it came as quite a shock to Gates when the Jawshacks the Jawshacks shutout by the Razorbills.
"I think that it came as a surprise to everyone," Gates said after the defeat. "I thought that the match would be much more even, with Arkansas possibly favored because of the home court advantage. I never expected a 9-0 sweep."
EVEN THE BEST could not win for KU Saturday, Bill Clarke, who was 24-6 last season, lost to Buddy Bowman, 7-5, 64, in the final game of the season. Bowman in straight sets last year.
Mark Hasking, in the No. 2 position, took his match to three sets before bowing to Brian Sakey, 4-6, 7-6, 6-2. Hosking's record slipped to 2-1.
KU's Jeff Thomas and Joe Ruyser ran into tough competition, both losing in straight sets. Thomas, at No. 3, was defeated, 6-1, 8-2 by Ronnie Hightower, and Ruyser, No. 4, lost to Joe Bailey by the identical score.
NO. 5 SINGLES player, Mats Eurenius of Stockholm, lost to Mark Vogge, 64, 3-6, 6-0, and No. 6 Chett Collier lost to Robert Cox. 6,2-7. 7-6.
In doubles, the No. 1 team of Clarke and Hosking lost to Sakety and Vogle, 6-2, 6-4, while the No. 2 team of Thomas and Greg Buller was defeated, 6-2, 7-6, by Highower and Bailey. It took three sets before the No. 3 team of Thomas and Gavin won by Bowman and Cox, 6-2, 4-6, 6-3.
"WE WERE NOT outclassed. There were several matches that could've gone either way," he said. "We didn't perform as badly as the score indicates.
Gates wasn't as disappointed at the end of the match.
"We learned a lesson Saturday. We have prepared. I think it's good we 1870 this time."
Gates and his souud will spend this week
thinking about that lesson, preparing for their next match, which will be against Wichita State Friday night at the Alvamar Racquet Club.
Big Eight standings
Conf. All Game
Conf. W L. All Games
Kansas St. 9 1 W 7
Missouri 8 3 16 7
Nebraska 7 4 15 10
Oklahoma 7 4 15 8
KANS A 4 5 18
Colorado 4 8 9 14
Okahama St. 3 8 9 14
Iowa St. 2 9 6 17
SATURDAY'S RESULTS
SATURDAY'S RESULTS
Oklahoma State 81, Iowa State 79; Kansas
State 66, Kansas 83; Colorado 79, Oklahoma
65; Nebraska 60; Missouri 58.
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
Wednesday: Kansas at Iowa State;
Oklahoma State at Kansas State; Colorado
at Missouri; Nebraska at Oklahoma;
Missouri at Oklahoma; Iowa State
at Oklahoma; Oklahoma State at
Colorado; Nebraska at Kansas
Carter's proposal is similar to an exemption.
It doesn't give a percentage of the taxes a person owes to the government, but a rebate is offered.
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
NO ON-CAMPUS TRAINING
SERVE AS A
NO OBLIGATION UNTIL GRADUATION
MARINE OFFICER
EAGLE
For college students who work either part-time or full-time, this should be good news. Even if a student receives all his federal tax back, and ends up paying more than he would have received the $2 rebate, Larry Chance, of Professional Tax Service Inc., said.
AE
Choose Marine Air or Ground
If you have any questions, please inquire at the Dean of Women's Office.
Lambda Sigma Society
Commissioned 2nd Lt. Upon Graduation
Applications due Feb. 25
If a student's parents claim him as a dependent on their income tax return and a student declares himself as a dependent on his own return, they both will receive a rebate of $50, he said. In the past, only the parents would have received the rebate.
U. S. Marine Corps Officer Selection Team will be on campus February 14, 15, 15 & 16 from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. in the Kansas Union Bldg., Main Lobby. If you miss us and desire more information call our office COLLECT at (816) 3703-1 or 374-3616.
A sophomore coed honorary society at the University of Kansas is now accepting a Bachelor's degree in Social Science, from the Dean of Women's Office, 228 Strong, or that of Dam of Men's Office, 228 Strong.
If a student's parents don't claim him as his parent, the student alone will receive $50 rebate.
Programs for Fr., Soph., Jr., and Srs.
The aim of Carter's proposal, according to W. Michael Blumenthal, secretary of the Treasury, is to reach as many people as possible in the hope of stimulating the economy.
Congress, however, could amend Carter's proposal that the obstate wouldn't be paid to a banker.
That is, if a student is claimed as a dependent on both his own statement an his own claim, he cannot be claimed.
either to the student or to his parents—but not to both.
People who receive welfare or social security payments also will receive the rebate, even if they don't file a tax return, Chance said.
Carter's proposal is now before the House Budget Committee. If it passes in its current form, the rebates will be paid to the taxpayers for 60 days after Congress completes action.
Jack Maxwell, Gardner's attorney, filed the request before Associate District Judge Mike Elwil, who took the request under advisement.
Hearing asked in murder case
Gardner, 22, and his brother, James Gardner, 19, and his sister, with week at the University of Maryville.
A petition for a competency hearing was filed in Douglas County Court Friday to determine whether Joseph Gardner Jr. is able to stand trial.
Maxey died of a stab wound in the chest, according to Mike Malone, Douglas County Sheriff.
The two brothers are being held in Douglas County Jail without bail.
BUY
TWO TACOS GET ONE FREE
with
Exp.
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Expiration date: February 28, 1977
Taco Grande
9th & Indiana * 1720 W. 23rd
Steve Leben for student body president
Reflection
Business
Business
Ginny Erdwien
Brian S. Jones
Brit McPherson
Scott Stanley
Education
Bev Brown
Corie Brown
Bill Cannon
Pam Gotsche
Connie Hale
Steve Hamous
Beth Anne MacCurdy
Louis Osborn
Janet Ferree
Jill Grubaugh
Eric Morgenstern
Nathan Bulfman
Richard W. Durham
Douglas J. Edmonds
Gary Foote
Alan D. Soelter
Engineering
Journalism
Doug Ferguson
Sann Glaze
Claire McCurdy
Kristen Olander
Kathy Russell
Sybil Summers
Fine Arts
Special Students Wade Corey Klosterman
Reeves W. Wiedeman Curt Woody
Architecture
Sophomore Class
Pres.-Matt Haverty
V-Pres.-Chip Anthony
Secy.-Dawn Daniel
Treas.-Barbara Goolsbee
K
Leben-Munyan
- WE REFLECT YOUR VIEWS *
- RESPONSIBLE USE OF STUDENT FEEES * ** The Senate has allowed more than $100,000 of your fees to accumulate in a surplus, benefiting no one. Steve and Roby sapph is should either, be the active surgeon for the patient's illness, or the active spa should be lowered until the surplus is gone.
- FEEDBACK * ⚬ Steve and Robp will see that a Feedback book is published, giving student comments and ratings of each course and instructor at KU. Your best advice on courses and instructions comes from other students — we'll see what you get it.
- **RECREATIONAL FACILITIES** *
- COMMUNICATION * This is the area Steve and Ralph know best from experience. They will make sure you are involved in your work.
Leben-Munyan
LA&S
Ralph Munyan for student body vice president
Paula Bush
Vicki Coulter
Trinka Crossley
Craig Dawson
Thomas E. Graves
Bruce Huffman
Grant Larkin
Betsy McCarley
Bob Meyer
Jim Mueltberger
Judy Navickas
Tim O'Connor
Mike Pendergast
Kevin White
Paid for by Leben/Munyan
Pharmacy Teri Pollard
Social Welfare
Lisa Bennett
Jeanne Kovac
Nunemaker Dist. 1
Bruce Leinmiller
Nunemaker Dist. 2
Dave Bromley
Gordon Geldhof
Chris Redlingshafer
Jan Smith
Russ Tuscik
Nunemaker Dist. 3
Mark Bernhardt
Johnny Hill
David Jett
John Masterson
Laura Trausch
Nunemaker Dist. 4
Jeff Eriksen
Ann Holderman
Anne Judge
Mary Ellen Pogson
Sam Sheldon
Nunemaker Dist. 5
Cheryl Engelman
Amy Gregg
Mike Harper
Luanne O'Dell
Reggie Robinson
Ed Stucky
Junior Class
Pres.- Craig Blessing
V-Pres.- Scott Morgan
Secy.- Pam Olander
Treas.- Sheri Sigman
10
Monday, February 14, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Lake ...
From page one
defendants from selling any more lot was
involved. The judge will be issued
pardon of court. Pool said.
W. L. Biles, sole stockholder and president of DMI, and former president of DCI, said the injunction was unnecessary because DMI already couldn't sell lots because it hadn't completed its registration with the Kansas Securities System.
re also said that in 1974 his engineer had asked the Jefferson County Commissioners to inspect the projects but that they hadn't done anything. He said he was a lawyer for DCI, a board member of DMI. He said DMI would try to negotiate with the state and county but wouldn't comment on how he wanted to settle it because he didn't know what the state and county wanted to do.
Negotiations began last Friday during a closed meeting among Natziger, Pool and representatives from the firm. Estate Estates home owners, Mercantile Mortgage Company (a company that has loaned DMI and DCI money and holds mortgages on Lake Shore Estates) and estate estates from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
POOL SAID yesterday that as a result of the meeting, "it seemed pretty favorable that we could work things out between the parties."
Last week Pool said he wanted to work out an agreement so that Mercantile Mortgage Company would finance the development. If Mercantile Agent's problem will be resolved, of court, he said.
"If we can't work this out with Mercantile, then there will be ill law suits,"
Lance Burr, Lawrence lawyer and former assistant attorney general, said he had been contacted recently by Lake 11 dissatisfied with the law. Lake State Estates or lake Ridenge Estates.
"Now we are just reviewing the people who are responsible for the activities that
Hole-In-The-Wall
Delicatessen
& Sandwich Shop
846 Illinois 843-7685
HALF AS MUCH
have taken place up there that have harmed the couples” Burr said. “These couples aren't necessarily concerned about the corporations. They are concerned about the people in them who cause these things to take place.”
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods • Vintage Clothing
• Furniture • Antiques
• Imported Clothing
730B Mass. 841-7070
Pool said the attorney general's office had received more than 100 written complaints from lot owners at Lake Shore Estates and at Lake Ridge Estates. Most of the complaints, Pool said, stemmed from promises by purchasers that didn't 'be fulfilled'.
MANY OF these promises allegedly were made oral by salesmen to purchasers. A document called the HUD report includes information about the development that all purchasers should receive and sign if they buy a lot.
HUD requires developments selling more than 50 lots (Lake Shore Estates and Lake Ridge Estate) such have more than 50 to present purchase offers. The HUD report doesn't guarantee that the information in it is accurate or whether the developer is reliable, nor does it determine whether the land is worth its price or keep track of what salesmen sell it.
Developers also are supposed to report such details as the nature of the sales contract, payment terms, whether there are any mortgages or liens on the property and whether those claims will have any effect on the buy price. If these claims will have to pay and tells the promised completion dates for recreational and other facilities.
P
FINE SELECTION OF WET SHIRTS,
BOOTS, WATES, JEANS
RAASCH
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842 8413
209 W. Bn.
Bankeramerica
Mastercharge
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FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS,
BOOTS, HATS, JEANS.
RAASCH
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Center R. 80 Thursday
842-8413
BankAmericard
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NAISMITH HALL
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a purchaser doesn't get a copy of the HUD report, he can demand his money back and revoke the contract at any time. If the purchaser is given the report fewer than 72 hours before he signs it, he has an additional 72 hours to revoke it and ask for a refund.
Su Casa
IN THE MARKET PLACE
745 New Hampshire
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts
& Crafts 841-3222
Affiliated to
THE ATTORNEY general's office made a list of the complaints about misrepresentation in regard to DMI. Some of the most common were: inadequate utilities; failure to construct a lake, stores, doctors' offices, streets, a boat dock and marina, a
clubhouse area, golf course; that land values would greatly increase in a short time; that the lot shown to the purchaser wasn't the lot he ultimately contracted for; that there wasn't a guard on duty as promised; that the salesman said that the
land was on special for that day only or was a bargain.
VISIONS
has the eyeglasses
you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 841-7421
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th & Mass.
843-9891 6:30:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
8:30-Run.
DMI, formed in February 1978, obtained its HUD property report in October 1978, but because DMI hasn't been authorized to sell. See EXSTATES page 12.
See ESTATES page 12
We can give them that peace of mind.
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The Lounge
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
● Bud on Tap
● Pool
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa
843-9812
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
TRY HILLCREST BILLIARDS
● Pool
● Snooker
● 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
Home of The Chalk Hawk
We must let the new immigrants know that they do not stand alone.
STUDENT COORDINATING COMMITTEE FOR THE ISRAEL EMERGENCY FUND
Home of
keep the promise
Steak & LOBSTER
$4.95
A fancy restaurant dinner,
without the fancy price.
Jan. 20 to Feb. 14
920 West 23rd
Lawrence, Kansas
Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily
Mr. Steak
© AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
Steak
LOBSTER
No, we can't give them what they deserve in their course. We can provide for their basic human needs—housing education, food, transportation. We must help them as they build new lives, as they move and care for us.
We can give them peace of mind.
衣架
CME
Mr. Steak
© AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
But the 70,000 immigrants to lakeland this year will find a land where their children live and land where they can live as Jews. Many, like the Soviet Jews, have suffered, have sacrificed, have waited for a new life, come seeking a new life.
The 70,000 immigrants to
Israel this year will find a
county full striving for
their own mobility.
Lives live surrounded by hostile
neighbors — enemies capable
of massacres at Led
Givati.
I am a musician. I play the guitar and play the piano. I love music.
We can't give them peace.
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Information Table 2, Union Feb. 14-18. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. or send your contribution to Kansas University Box 4 Lawrence, Kansas 66045
THE HAWK
MICHELOB.
THE HAWK IS PROUD TO INTRODUCE—
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TODAY, Monday, February 14
We will be serving MICHELOB ONLY all day today "on tap"
and in the world-famous bottle!
EAGLE
SPECIAL PRICES
PITCHER $1.50 (Reg. $2.00)
SCHOONER 75¢ (Reg. 95¢)
BOTTLE 45¢ (Reg 60¢)
Prices good all day Monday, Feb. 14
Treat your Valentine to an "Unexpected Pleasure"
THE JAYHAWK CAFE
1340 Ohio
A Campus Tradition for Over 55 Years
TC Cloon: Student Senate
Nunemaker No. 2
A 28-year-old veteran, who can cope with student problems.
Former legislative haison and elected secretary of the University
of Kansas Campus Veterans, "TC" understands student needs
and is responsive to requests. If you need help BEFORE and/or
AFTER the election give him a call at the Campus Veterans Office,
864-4476 or at home 841-7393. Cloon for Student Senate,
Nunemaker #2.
Take Action.
ELECT
TC CLOON
X
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Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on Cottage Rye.
REUBEN SANDWICH
MASS. STREET DELI in
GI MASCARA HICHTE
50c OFF with this coupon Reg. Value $2.00
$2.00
Coupon Expires March 20, 1977
Bull & Boar
11 W. 9th
OPEN FACED
HOT BEEF SANDWICH
served with thin sliced roast beef,
home-made mashed potatoes—smothered
in dark-brown gravy, relishes included
Coupon Expires
March 20, 1977
$1.75
With this coupon
Reg. price $2.10
Co
99
Big B **R**
To the
tens. **M**
To the
men. **T**
Twenty.
choose.
tenth.
Humana
multa
huma
mo-
MO-
you
ye-
Dear
sorrow.
Do
do-beth.
Lyme
lymne.
Monday, February 14, 1977
11
Computers aid research work
Librarians and researchers can use three computer terminals—in Watson Library, the science library in Malot Hall and the Space Technology Center—to search subject files or data bases, and to receive a comprehensive list of resource matrial. To do this, researchers must telephone computers owned by
A data base is a computer tape of a printed index to resource material in an academic area. Indexed materials include books, magazines, dissertations, government reports, newspaper articles and research papers.
Students and faculty work on research papers or projects can now use computer systems for bibliographic searching in addition to card catalogs and the Reader's Guide to Periodical Literature.
at a university. LOCKHEED AND SDC have more than 75 data bases in subject areas such as education, sociology, psychology, engineering and the life sciences.
KU computer operators type the research topic on a computer terminal, and this message is transmitted to the Lockehead or SDC computers. The computers search the memory bank of the requested data base and print out all available bibliographic material indexed to the topic.
Lockheed Information Systems and Systems Development Corporation (SDC).
The print-outs are mailed to the KU operators within about five days.
TO APPLY FOR the computer service, an ap-
KANSAN WANT ADS
The cost of a bibliographic search varies according to long distance telephone charges, the amount of time needed to connect with the company's computer and printing fees. In addition, the Denver Bibliographic Network with trains KU computer operators and maintains the equipment, charges a 15 per cent service fee.
pification formulate be completed and an appointment made with the KULRIBIAN who knows about the data provided by the client.
MY VALENTINE
DIT Laugh live love and be happy today and
happy Valentine's Day, Love KMB.
everybody Thank you Tomorrow
Dear Carolyn: Today, Tomorrow, Always Love
Dear Carolyn. Today, Tomorrow, Always. Love David.
Davie, I may be silly wog but I still love you ever so much. Gee.
Slow and steadly our love does grow. I sure do love you my escortor.
To the most wonderful people in the world, my parents, Happy Valentine's Day, Love, Donna.
To J.A.M. Happy Valentine Day, Darlin' I love
me. I'm your Mom. You're my Mom and you're
SWAK. MARVIN.
We love you Wizard State and Sue. Happy Valentine's Day. Virgin Vaulters (and future students)
To the Cows of NN. You give us heart palms.
Please be our Valentines, Loves, B and B.
Big Bills - years behind, years ahead. Night after
big baby get better in bed. Love you too much.
Baby you too much.
To the gorgeous redhead who loves beakers, kittens, and McDonald's, I love you always.
Don't be SHIEPHIN Chunk, be my valentine
brief Bridge Builder, and Arkham Machine.
Tenth floor Elliswurst. The biggest bunch of clocks ever to lay an egg. Fred Crope.
Happy Valentine's Day and B.O. right to our
Malaa. Root-Sniff: Dr. D.O., D.S.D.; and the first
Dear Former LXA~Tha~ Crement sure is glad you have your eye on her "Cutie"
PATIENCE is a virtue; but who said I was virtuous? Happy Valentine's Day, and thanks.
Dear Munchen, For you my piano always plays
you leave me now. Love, Stormer.
Dabaluig and Spike, Bee my Valentine and you both eat kites. Love, Pinkie.
Lynn, four years ago I knew I loved you; now I know why I do.
**WEAREL** I love you for the things you do and for the way you love me too. But mostly I love you.
Dumbly, Dumbly bunches—hunny, red friend,
Wildly, Wildly 15th Banbury-victory, vivid-
ly Love, LYE
ERC. I love you. Meet me tonight for doughnuts
—The Quer Duck
ERC. I love you more than Duck does. Meet MEK tonight for doughnuts. The Phantom.
Bokonon Potion. Porter: To all connoisseurs of
pink persimmonia wishing you a Happy Valentine.
HVD to the MMM at 23rd and Mass. Cold rooms, warm hearts, KAG.
Dear Dad, Happy Valentine's Day. I lie here dich,
Love from your $2,500 girlfriend.
Dearest Vanny Happy 2nd Valentine's Day together. Looking forward to our own Silver Jubilee.
A softertofu smough for a Doubart Alto Rhapsody from a Bryonic Bass II.
Gazeboze, Happy B.D.I Happy V.D.I. We've had
happiness. Love from Lover from you rehearsed
Hatton (7%), Joy (2%).
Nanna nicely--Roll loves you=will you be his bowrentine?
Say "Happy Valentine's Day" to the real thing
with her, with his the happiest at
5:49pm @ 5 P.M.
To Bunny, my sweet Babboo; Happy Valentine's Day, Love, Radish all the way.
Dear Elders and Elves. Have a famy-good Valentine's Day. Dee-a-Dahl! Your Liz
King (Bearded Wonder) on our 1st V-Day, it's still there. I love Crabba. Crabbba
Lavi, you a real sweetie and we love ya for it.
From your pal. Buns.
Roses are red. Violets are blue. Pepi and Wop
Trees, Tales, Lies and Sue
Robert- I hope you are as happy now as I was when you were here.
Little Meathall, it is a Mist Fortune that we can't see each other more often. As I go back to my college, I'm glad I can clear saltine so I can see you. Your uncle is a real sport and I have yet to send cupid a message of my love. My personality and I'm still calling for it. At the Dawn's boy you must (but Jew know that) much like I do.
Roses are red. Violets are blue, Naney Drew, I still love you. Andy Hardy.
Barbecue on Bastille Day? Your friend, your mistress, and your lady, always and forever.
Kokolo sam, kyon wa Barainem Dee dakara,
ni ali ni jama "Daiukui-i" Budan.
*
Jennie-Wrenle, you're my queenie, All my love
always D.B.
Millsy and Lou, I Love You. M.C. at 1227
Salt--Bell of luck in your biggest endearver ever.
Hope you break your string, gice.
St. Thomas, sixty airlines won't be enough. Happy Valentine's Day, (not for a hairplift)
Me!—The secret out, I love you. Happy Valentine's day. · Your little gem. . .
This is for you JAZ and TMC Happy Valentine's Day. From the crazy kid.
Butch, if a hard man is good to find, youre the love Love and kisses from your seating席地而坐.
Terissa Allen. I love you very much. Happy Valentine's Day. J.C.
C. Jean be mine on Feb. 14. Bruce who? Love S.
James
MICHELLE V. I'LL love you always (even seri-
ally just sometimes). Love. 2-14
Final—glad you changed your mind about waiting
to be my Valentine. Love you lots—Wag
Dear Crankie—Be mine forever. Love, your little
"Gay," I wish a beautiful day for a truly beautiful woman. I need to talk to you. I think I love you.
Ashley Cupid sure knows that to shoot love's matching ball is to Happy Valentine's day.
To John Bawren Timberlake, you just happened along in my life. Thanks, Love, LaDonna
He, Meyton. Happy V.D. Day. Did you remember my muth? Love and kisses forever. Florida.
Cocktail—flying home to clear your head—Be mine. Love, bookmppu.
our hearts stay together forever. Love, Sugarbear.
Doug. Another airline. Our tree to climb, rivers to swim,
trees to play with, trees to hug. Love.
Molly. The sun is shining on our hearts. Love.
Linds--Thanks for a GREAT Valentine's week-end.
There and back again; Teddy to Duck
Hidley weats run together. Like Gary Gimnorowe said, "Let's do it." Wrecks.
valentines-h but I've got YOU Love, Schu.
Hire We outa run together, like Gary Gill-
l
Red, Roses are red, violets are blue. Others have valentines—but you get YOU Love, Schu.
Lucky. You still want a housemate? Watch out.
Happy. V.D. Candy.
JHB—Happy Valentine's Day, I Love you. PMB.
That's right, it's me, Bucky. But one day out of the year, even I can admit that all my friends and expereince heartily IU, Rick, Margle, Karen, Denen, Kathryn, Kathy B., Barry, Jiamr, Blam
Maurice J. love you, please be my Valentine.
Rose P. You too Bill. Your little Munchkinn.
I'll do whatever you want.
Bob. You're world and I love it. Thanks for a year of humour, bulbs, etc.
P K M * There's a sumptuity bout your love that
takes you to heart. * Happy Valentine's Day, Love, your Loyal Fam.
*
JUD. It’s been a fantastic year. We have many more. Love, your Lady.
Dear Shark. Argile Angle Morble Wheadow? o'muwarum. God bless you abundantly Matida
TRIXIS DELIGHTLY delights kinky thunny. Delving for a craftsman's Valentine treat, meal 84-4600.
Person A. You are my sunrise and my sunset
happy now! Your tacos cook.
To my favorite female. As Gary Glimore said, "Let's do it." From your favorite male
Dr Jack, Sunrise, DVH Honey Bunny, Thanks for a super two years; tee-thee Love, Chip
Paddy Bear. Since you read this section is a good place to show your child your own.
Cookie Monster--we know what you've got on your mind--will you be our Valentine?
J. T. Carolman and Val. Happy Valentine's Day. Count in for California. Marilar.
Angel. You Make my heart sing, all with the love you bring. Your Silly Boy.
Tammy Old times, new times Patt to present,
now and forever, I love you. Cathy.
on a windy coast. I drank a toast to you and me and the Sea, Britt.
Ma jesie funne Charlie, I'd rather chase you than balloons any day. Love, Jack
Margaret. Roses red, Violets blue. Love's not
dead. I love you. Love, Kisses, and hugs.
Not me.
If you love you have everything. Happy valentine's Day Rise. Love always Raz.
Wooloths, Haystacks in western Kansas remember those starry nights.
Happy Valentine's Day, Wendy. Hearty Love you in the Tennies. Love always, Little Girl.
Dear Rise, Happy Valentine's Day. Twice in one year, I hope that the box of candies don't settle on you.
Raggedy Anne—Let's love daffalfa, the stars, and each other forever--Fuzzy Puppy
Happy Birthday and H.V.D Smutley Love,
Sherrylu.
McREE. Roses are red, Viola are blue, Happy
Katévan's Day. I am you, Melly
Happy. Mappy Lee. Congratulations on job. Here's to
Alain, Fourtette. October, October. B-cell-hall.
*
To Catherine Horatio: Your water runs deep.
Happy Valentine's day. JR.
No Matter how far apart, we'll always be together. Happy Valentine's Day, Scott Love, Lori
Flower? Be my Valentine? I love flowers. Can I love you? B
Happy Valentine's day to my favorite early riser or late sleeper, with love from Keith.
To Diane, my favorite artist, Happy Valentine's Day,
I love you, Bruce.
Apartment for rent to single male student of quiet disposition. One bedroom furnished. Third floor of old home. Fantastic location, gets great airfare. Required $100 per month. 842-256-245 p.m. 2-17
Oi Wiring. Oi Mohedy. FI ro away with your
SMO, thank you for all those drives, Winston on the front seat is a treat, Love, Korean.
Available now, large 1 bedroom apartment in modern 50's style with pool and outdoor patio. Inside wall carpeting, garbage disposal $150 per/month deposit required. Utilities not included. Absolutely pet or pets in children. 2-16
Steven, NO one else could ever 'move me to tears.' Love, Karen.
Bilver City Hair Co. wants you! A total professional haircut for $175-$200. Massachusetts *Mariach* Can be reached 7 days a week.
When your heart is pierced by Cupid's dart, date
Vivian. Visit JR. Tru. Joy and Diana. To John
Valentine, Viv. Tr. Joy and Diana. To John
Amie, Happy Valentine's Day. I love you, I wish it without you. Also, greetings to Robert
The ladies of Pt Bla Ph坦* How do you make that tacre when all you want to say to him?
Frontier Ridge-abert term leaves available.
Frontier Ridge-abert term leaves available.
with study. Heated indoor pool + shag carpet +
door pool + dispail + laundry facilities +
furnished and unfurnished @ $135. Call 842-769-7200
furnished and unfurnished @ $135. Call 842-769-7200
Diana-Have a happy V.D. Love and kisses,
Marshall Man
Gatehouse apartments - Call Becky new. Summer.
contracts on all Gatehouse apartment - Call Becky
new. summer. contracts on all Gatehouse apartment - Call Becky
Barritt, I love you Bushel and Peck Bushel and peek Peck hug around neck. Grin.
Pretzel—All my love forever to Frank, Jerry, and the Gang. Steven Michael
Luan, Remember that you'll always be my Valentine.
You see loom. Love, TNT.
Ross is red. Volunteers ample, all my friends
are blue. I wear a blue shirt as a Magpie. Kinsie the
girl in black.
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dalyan Kanan are offered online or in person, or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FILLH LALM
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
.01 .02 .03 .04 .05
CLASSIFIED RATES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Monday Friday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling 843-5158 the UDB business office at 843-5158
Furnished apartment, close to KU. One bedroom,
$90. Available immediately, 842-657-02 after 5 p.m.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Male roommate to share nice apartment till May.
Male roommate to share nice bus route, bus
ride $12, plus utilities. $14, plus roommates.
Interested in lugging? Join us Thursday at 2
p.m. 11:14, Lincoln, or call 843-802-252
Give away: $10 per week and $100 cash, plus
$25 travel to K.U. Telephone Directive,
Mellow Yellow Mellow
ATTENTION LAWRENCE AREA SEARCHERS-
There will be a meeting at 8 p.m. on Tuesday,
4/27 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Crescent) to develop a follow-up program for the
student in the service area, and
to attend to student ideas, soft tips for this
program. If you are unable to attend or need
to attend, please contact Todd Sullivan,
709, Maitham Hall No. 328, 849-5319
2-15
FOR RENT
Large 2-bedroom apartment in North Lawrence,
1480 plus month ^1 utilities. North dweller.
Also Roommates wanted to share 3 bedroom house;
neighbor is non-smoker or man and woman.
842-504-1
2-15
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to
Toronto, million squares, marking 862-9370.
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
no pets. 843-5767. tt
For rent. Two, 1-bedroom apartments. 1 block
from Union, 834-3398, 7867-1258
2-15
Studio Apartment Clean and await Air. Air conditioned, Steam heat Available March 1 Chelsea 2-16
Nice furnished room and apartment 1 block from campo. No pets. #43-896. study environment. 2-16
FOR SALE
Jayhawk Towers, now housing a 5-bedroom penthouse before March 31, and saw on our Early Bird Monday that the town had been built.
Excelent collection of new and old furniture and
furniture accessories. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704] Mass.
Riverside, CA 94615.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization guide. 2 for Class preparation. 3 for Exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at **TW Clerk Stores**.
UNICORNs, Mermains, wings in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to choose from. Stone cutting service. Rehabilitation work, art satisfaction gift.贤士 841-3834.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties:
BELL AUTOR,
ELECTRIC, 835-9029, 9090 W, 6h.
Rededeer Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod membership (conservancy) All students and faculties have active youth group. Place 50th and Hakekel 12th. Email info@rededeerchurch.org for more information: Mild Pickford at lesa@rededeerchurch.org or Jesse at a.m. Bible class and Sunday school at 10 a.m. Southern, Layman campus at the second floor. 2-24
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only ones with a specification guarantee of m² at Ray Audio, 1-34 E. 8th, Prices from $175.
Fantastic airbnb for sale for 135. Call or write
Geoff 1-816-931-1022, 2516 West 69th St., Shawna
Ridge, WA 98076
1972. Vega, 4-axed, radial tire, $800, 842-7050
after 5 p.m.
BATTERIES. Top quality fully guaranteed rec-
reation. Fits most automobiles and trucks. Elec-
trite-Battery Shop. Same day service. Elec-
trite-Battery Shop at 6th and 10th, Shop open
8:45 on Friday and Saturday, or call 214-2-
214
Volkswagen Owner! Four new NWB radial tires (215/40R18) for $69.00, 165/50R18 for $139.00, 150/50R18 for $129.00, and 245/40R18 for $169.00. Add $2 per tire for mounting, $60.00. Mass The appliance on Mass with the dia. of wheel is a 15% reduction in Woolworths. 13 BRT-10 16 BRT-10
T2 Ford Econoline VW, AC automatic, radial, 8 panel. $2900. Phone 1-478-4500.
Technics SL-1300 Direct Drive Turbular 821-620
Technics SL-1300 Direct Drive Turbular 821-620
AT44 640 and 648.58 Perkinel 841-6206
AT44 640 and 648.58 Perkinel 841-6206
Superpose famous quality cassette recorder with condenser mute! Regular $9.95 model cut to $6.00 plus a bonus of 3 free 60 minute cassettes to Kardan on Amazon Ray Stones 2-16
68 Mercury Montgomery 4-door, 302-D. sait, auto.
69 Mercury Montgomery 4-door, 302-D. sait, auto.
and from campus. Scores included. $2000.
One pair of Bose 901 stereo speakers. Excellent.
Cobyn by date and hear. Please call.
2-246
2-246
Only $899 - 1972 Vega. 4 cyl. 842-1703. No calls.
2-15
1-25
Cullas Supreme 75. Excellent condition. All power. Must sell soon. Call 641-8710. 2-16
Solid 500 skins, 195 cm. Solomon 505 bindings.
Neat pieces, 843-7877, or 841-7535. 2-14
Garage sale. We've got everything, including a
garage rack, baggage and box springs.
Landline Lane 841-736-2555
2-15
1971 Cougay, AM-FM stereo, air, good radial,
studded snow, volkswagen, 843-654-8443 before 6/44
2010 Cougay, AM-FM stereo, air, good radial,
11 GTX excellent condition, new tires brakes
12 Dell Ultra HD 5000, ProCam, Prunus camera
13 Panasonic Frames 195mm, Francion Camera
Must sell: 1771 Vokavagam swab. Good condition.
Call: 909. Call 841-6311 after 6 p.m. 2-16
For sale by owner Holiday Hills and Sunset
School, 1½ years old; 3 bedroom suite, 1784 sq.
¾/4 bedroom, family room w/ fireplace, bedroom
air, central air, $800. For appointment
2-12-894.
Porter Parlor. Five organic dresses and leathers.
Natural wool, silk and booteh brittle turtles.
12 E. 8th street, 11th floor. (800) 365-7492.
New stereo-Panasonic Quadraphone Component
of Bath. 843-7600 or used with spared Call:
137-2589.
Gibson GB4 guitar w/case. Excellent condition/
humidity protection. Easy fingerboard, hum-
banding, speed control. Warranty included.
Ear, Eart 2 Lill 500 speakers for sale; fired excellent power capabilities. Call Rusty, 843-873-6191
Pioneer receiver XS-427 continuous power output 18/w 18 w excellent condition, call 845-539 - 216
Four rings with genuine cornell dones. 98.5%)
and five rings with bands from Iran. 2-18
already priced. 841-790-3260.
69 Mustang Mach 1, 331. Auto. Trans. PS, black.
Red Interior. After p. 6ent. Kpm. 864-2305. 2-18
One pair of E.S.P. 3-way 40 W.P.C. speakers 800:
Bilf 641-8576 2-18
HELP WANTED
1972 Honda 550 Super Sport 5,000 miles, fairing,
rear suspension with bar, and back, with 434-
keep it tight.
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy way. Become an Avon代表ative and make the money you need selling quality products on 842-838-7216. Two openings in Lawrence 842-838-7216.
more brand stereo equipment, musical instrument obtain, fishing equipment, etc. Can provide consumer information is given before each purchase. 842-561-3900 or write Customer Brokerage Service. www.cbservice.com
1976 Datsan B320, 26,000 Miles, good condition.
Call Balwin D5349, 3494 after 6.
2-18
Camera-4 month old Nikonkron FT-2 with
Camera-4 month old Nikonkron FT-2
841-388, keep trying 2-18
841-388, keep trying 2-18
Waitress needed. Apply at Daagwud's. 644 Mass.
between 2 p.m.-5 p.m. 2-15
MEN-WOMEN, JOBS ON SHIPS, American, Foreign, No experience. Required. Excellent, job. Worldwide travel, international travel or career. Send resume to the SEAFAQ office. E-mail: B. Ack-25 Port Angles,香港 93682
Graduate, Assistancehip, three-quarter time. Chemistry-academic affairs. Apply in 570 Mag.
Weekly position available for instructors in Omi-
tation Biology and Archaeology for Summer Workshops
June 6-August 5, half-time $100/week Contact:
June 6-August 5, half-time $100/week. Email:
864-417-38. An equal opportunity employer.
864-417-38.
LOST AND FOUND
Weekly positions available for assistant instructor in summer workshops for young people. Museum of Art Summer Workshops for young people. Museum of Art 8:00 am, week 54. Contact Bath Guthenthall 613-892-8777 or bathguthenthall@museumofart.org. 413. An equal opportunity employer 2-16
Lost silver liner. Braun make; on Jan. 28-
014-6026. Value: Subtional reward off
014-6026.
Lost: 1971 High School ring, gold and ruby stone.
Call: 843-5849 and ask for Janet.
2-14
Least Border Collie=black and white, long fur. Least Border Collie=white and black, short fur. Least Border Collie=on lighthouse on Ishland Bay Least Border Collie=on lighthouse on Ishland Bay Least Border Collie=on lighthouse on Ishland Bay
Lost Tweet has first week of February. A present, has sentimental value. John at 841-356-2166.
Found a box marked "Specimen." Call either
hairy. 843-5075, or Don 841-5109.
2-14
Lost: White dog, 2 months, mixed breed, no collar, or tags, answers to "harmful." Matsudai. 843-1080. 2-15
Lost: Blue North Face dipcap in Woolite cocerate on Jan 25. Reward included: 842-367-9. 2-16
Lost by carcass owner—a two tone brown bracelet, approx. 1¼ inch thick, 3 inches in diameter, 4½ inch wide, 40 Wrecks and a mental joke. Fire call 823-359 if you have any info. Thanks!
Lost a set of keys in Strong Hall on 2-1-77.
found, please contact 849-6902.
2-17
IF
Lost: Gold necklace with Alaska on it in the
Miami-MT-6728. Sentimental value: Reward
144-MT-6728
Found KU-ID near Learned Hall. Call 864-5822
to identify.
Found large female Irish trist with collar, in area of 140 and New Hampshire. Cap 841-3674.
Found political science notes, orange notebook.
For Hall Ref 845-5977
2-15
Found. Tan and white dog with blue collar.
Friendly. Call Pat at 843-2796.
2-16
Found young white female cat in Falfair's lot
5217 blue-white; one green eye Cat 2-16
6433 or 641-8800
Found wavy well behaved grown female cat with a normal coat. He is calm and eligible to go to good home or to found a new home.
MISCELLANEOUS
Lost-Math 124 notes in Strong Hall, green spiral notebook. Book #98-4925. 2-18
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Usher/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday-9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass.
Just arrived. Incease from the Republic of China,
to become a sponsor for the concessions 18
Bilair Street, 414-7300.
NOTICE
Tofu-Chili Chamber, sponsored by the Community Mercantile. Sunday, February 9th at the Community Chamber, will be shown by Fashion Farm at 7:30 and 9 p.m. Advertisement will follow. Sale on a new row at the Community Mercantile, 615 Mass. At the door: adults $2.00 and children $1.00; Dinner will be served at 2:00 p.m.
Swap Shop, 620 Muss. Mass. used furniture, dishes, patens, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-5.
EUROPE/WORLDWIDE academic years 2014-2018
round (86) A229 A129 Flint Ave. Tucker J4
4345 N. 27th St. St. Louis, MO 63103
Brighten up your surroundings with a print from J. Hood Bookeller. We have a large collection of titles, and some are in envelopes. Engravings. Matting is available. Come in and browse—they're always welcome. 1465 Mason Street 2-14
HATHA YOGA classes beginning Feb. 15th.
10am-12pm at 940 W. 37th St.
$200 for 8 weeks, call 811-345-126
2-16
New theories and research in Homosexuality will be the topic at Gay Services meeting, Feb. 15, 7:30 p.m.; Regional Room of the Union on Thursday; Storms in guest speaker. The public is invited. 2-15
Everyone can help someone as a Volunteer
Volunteer Clearing House, 864-389-2
2-18
volunteers . . . an untagged resource. Volunteer
Clearing House. 864-380) 2-14
PERSONAL
Gay Services has qualified speakers to discuss gay-related concerns. Stop by GSK office, 215-634-6200 or gsk@gsk.com.
2-15
Guerry Consulting Service: Call 842.7505, 6-12 p.m.
for queries.
tf
Needed: GAY COUPLES who have been living with HIV and have a history of inappropriate in an interesting study investigating non-standard study focus will be on the positive and strength of the offered hold assessment. The relationship off the offer holds assessment is given to COMPLETE, which is guaranteed, and couples will be paid $16 for each person with HIV. Walter; 911-6520. With cooperation of Gay Sex Education Program.
MAKIN' MUSIC - We make it easier. Blues, folk,
songs, gospel, jazz and pop are all available.
band, mandolin, autoharp, piano. McKinney
piano.
REFLECTIONI 2-17
EUROPE. When you want it, where you want it
EUROPE. You can buy a 17-inch TV or
19-inch IE Noorian share宅台, edi Riyadh.
EUR.
Bardon Jensson (Bliregant) is now offered at Rich-
bardio's Music. Call 842-0011, or Paul at Rich-
bardio's Music.
Dan Pearman for Student Senate, 2nd District
Numeraker.
2-15
WRITING ASSISTANCE Get an early start on homework. Help your child call now before he needs to help you to go back. Please be careful.
"Black and White." I need a date. Call 843-6629
and ask for Frank W.
Don't be burden by mindfulness and patience.
SPECTRUM - "Blire! Grey and white"
SPRITCHTIME - "Blire! Grey and white"
PRESIDENT - "X-15"
DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Rings: Up to 50% discount to students receive $15 off each ring; up to $250 off each et cetera; it $250, it $650 by buying direct from leading diamond importer. For color catalogs go to Fannin Wood, N.J. 07923 (indicate name of school) or call (212) 682-3300 for location info. **2-15**
We'll get you out of bed! $3 per month. Jay-
kaw Wake-Up, 843-6212 or 843-2813. -273
Wanted: Freshman freshman to serve responsibility
as Assistant on January 16, 17th. Schism-Hampton
Awarded on February 25th.
I can help you with payslips and math problems
and YOU can help me with my English
2-18
2-18
Steve Leben and Rahm Munyany have surveyed 1,812 KU students, visiting at their apartment compound on campus and at their group groups, to table at the Union ... all in our attempt to communicate with them. **2-17**
Karate. Leaves the ancient secrets of the martial art to our children and gives them an advantage on the individuals development as a master.
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2-15
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Happy 21st birthday Marykins. (The Fox) Love.
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5-14
Communication means *steve Loben and Rajan Palpati* three-time WCC chair, held open meetings in a department computerases, visited 27 living groups, addressed several issues, and generally tried to communicate with you. Vote generally tried to communicate with you.
We'll keep you informed of election returns and
entertained with sound alternatives on the
website www.ni.gov/nsw/election-2016.
9-15
You missed your first opportunity to win $10.
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Vote Avanti
student body coach and vice-president—2-16
*licenses McKernan & Rhoads*
Present identification ID card and be admitted FREE.
Telephone: 617-253-8900
Toronto, Canada 9:00 a.m. on Friday, p.m. Sunday,
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
19 Move Forward with Avant! Vote February 16 & 2-16
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8030. Furnished rooms for $134,975. 75 per room, plus a
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12
Monday, February 14, 1977
University Daily Kansan
On Campus
THE HOTEL
Events
TODAY: THE SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY GRADUATE STUDENTS will meet at 2:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union's Cork Room Two. The NATIVE AMERICAN ALLIANCE will meet at 4 p.m. in the Union's Regionalist Room. MARTIN KARPLUS, Harvard University chemist, will lecture on "Dynamics of Protein" at 4 p.m. in 124 Malot Hall. LEWIS FULCHER, of Bowling Green State University, will present Proton Production and Heavy Ion Collisions" at 4:30 p.m. in 332 Malott.
TONIGHT: ROLAND BERGER, consultant to British trading firms, will speak on "China: Current Opportunities for Trade and Cultural change" at 7:30 in the Union House and an introductory talk in Spanish at 7:30 in the Union's Governors Room. After the film, there will be an introductory talk in Spanish by Jess Portillo, a native of El Salvador. There will be a PLAY READING session in German at 8 at the home of Ige Zimmermann, 600 West 12th Street, New York, NY. The SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
TOMORROW: There will be a FIRE SAFETY TRAINING PROGRAM from 9 to 11 a.m. the Union's Forum Room. Charles Kregel will give a presentation on the uniqueness of the LAW LIBRARY at 2:30 p.m. in Room B-28 of Watson Library. The COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 p.m. in woodfruit Auditorium.
--professor of International Law at Tel Aviv University and former member of Israel Permanent Mission to the United Nations,
Dr. Yoram Dinstein
Speaks on —
ISRAEL in the U.N.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. February 16th, 1977
Kansas Room in the Union Refreshments served.
Sponsored by S.U.A., Hillel International Law Society
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
lots, no reports have been presented to the purchasers.
Estates . . .
From page 10
Both DCT and DMT's reports include one page of HUD's instructions. One copy goes on the Dashboard.
The words, "Purchaser should read this document before signing anything," appear in three fourths-inch red letters on the front page. Below is a box for the purchaser's signature. In the buyer's signs the report, he acknowledges that he received a copy of the report.
The report also says it's illegal for anyone to imply that HUD has approved the development and it's illegal for any one to make an assertion that differs from property report.
Both BCT's and DMT's reports include the following: "Warning: The developer is not legally obligated for some of the proposals he has included in this property report."
THE REPORT lists the facilities at Lake Ridge Estates or Lake Shore Estates that are complete or lists how near they are to completion.
Agge said that there's no way to be certain a salesman won't住 to a customer and that it's impossible for the corporation to monitor every word a salesman speaks.
"If the salesman said we're going to have five club houses and the HUD report says one, they should read it in the HUD report," Aree said.
He said the HUD report is given to purchasers by their salesman, who ask the purchasers if they understand it. If they sign the report, they have 72 hours to rescind the contract if they change their minds.
Biles said he developed a consumer protection plan in 1974 as a result of complaints against DCL. Purchasers are given a list of the issues they understand the purchasing process.
Agee said that the questionnaire would be
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written evidence that the purchaser understood what he was signing, and could be useful in court cases when purchasers alleged misrepresentation.
If there is a blanket mortgage on land such as DM's it's possible that if the developer defaulted in its payments to a mortgage company, Mercantile Mortgage Co., the lot owner could lose his lot if he doesn't have title to it.
6th & Maine
Pool said most of the complaints he had heard indicated that the salesmen used incorrect product codes.
chasers didn't have time to think about their purchase and were confused.
"ONE COMPLAINT said that the salesman followed a couple home and waited outside their house for them to decide whether they wanted to buy," he said.
Another thing that has confused lot owners is that they sometimes aren't sure what corporation currently owns Lake Shore Estates and Lake Ridge Estates. The ownership of the development has changed four times.
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NUNEMAKER 1
Cathy Bailey
Nancy Dressler
Ed Duckers
Sheila Everhart
Susan Rieger
Brad Sterrett
NUNEMAKER 2
Ladonna Hale
Pam Kern
Ed Mick
Allen Reynolds
Anne O'Shaughnessy
LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
NUNEMAKER 3
Lance Armer
Ruth Benion
Jeff Knox
Kathy Pobley
Diane Scheuchl
Sharon Anderson
Mark Balton
Corliss Chandler
John Esau
Lisa Friday
Mark Hughes
Ken Idleman
Steve McMurry
Andy Ramires
Dave Ramires
Jim Ruane
Jake Thompson
Jim Willis
NONEMAKER 4
Allen Gilstrap
Leslie Anne Graves
Julie Long
Sarah Toevs
Tom Werth
NUNEMAKER 3
Mary Huffman
Tim McCarthy
Julie Riggs
Brad Snyder
Marcia Talty
Ladd Welch
NUNEMAKER 5'
NUNEMAKER 4
ARCHITECTURE
Joe Bandy
Ray Kramer
BUSINESS
Rick Chambers
Dave Dyers
Todd Hunter
Kenneth Leathers
EDUCATION
Jan Davidson
Janet Haverty
Linda Louden
Barbara Brussell
David Fuchs
Ed Hite
Jim Jandt
Rhonda May
Jim McCarten
Weezie Purzer
Scott Stallard
ENGINEERING
FINE ARTS
Don Consolver
Jordan Hanna
Sally McDonald
Anne Moeker
Cyndee Michale
Nancy Park
Scott Ward
JOURNALISM
Marsha Bjorkan
Jack Marvin
Dan Terrill
SENIOR CLASS
Mike Nelson Fred Gans Patty Curry Lisa Cave
JUNIOR CLASS
Rod Beeler Craig Gilland Kathy Taylor Sharon Pavel
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Greg Schnacke
Bill Hamilton
Lisa Larsen
Molli Hasenbank
about their
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that the home and them to buy," he
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s changed
The image shows three individuals in a room with wooden walls and a patterned floor. The person on the left is wearing a dark sweater and has a mustache. They are holding a basket containing what appears to be snacks or desserts, and smiling as they engage in a conversation with the other two people. The person in the middle is also wearing a dark sweater and has long hair. They are smiling and looking at the person on the right. The person on the right is wearing a dark shirt and has short hair. They are smiling and looking at the person on the left. The background includes additional people and chairs, suggesting that this event is taking place in a public space.
Choosina sides
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Candidates for Student Body President Randy McKernan (center), Sherri Grey and Steve Leben (far right) drew numbers from a patient before last's final debate.
between the three candidates. The drawing decided the debate seating arrangement and the order in which questions would be asked.
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.87,No.90
Tuesday, February 15, 1977
City government change debated
Lawrence voters will decide in April 5's city election whether to change the city government from the present commission-manager form to a mayor-council form.
Advocates for both sides said yesterday that their system was more representative of the people.
CITY MANAGER Buford Watson said that because the commissioners were elected at large and not by wards, they represented the whole city. This, he said, discourages political favors.
Political favors are healthy, according to Mark Kaplan, a leader of the mayor-council movement. He said the "I'll scratch your back, you scratch mine" system was good because city programs and development are only distributed among the city's wards.
Watson said the present form of government wouldn't be greatly changed if commissioners were elected from each ward. He said the manager form was flexible because he could decide how many commissioners to elect and where they could be elected from.
THE PRESENT system in Lawrence consists of five commissioners, one of whom is officially called a mayor, and another is a professional trained administrator.
The manager is hired by the city and can be fired by three commission votes. He has no contract.
Watson said this was the key to good city management. One fault of the mayor-council form, he said, was that the mayor, who would be the chief administrator, couldn't be removed from office until his term expired.
THE MANAGER gathers and organizes facts to implement policy and gives those facts and his recommendations to the company. The manager responds with an accent or reject these recommendations.
Watson said that the city was like a business and that it needed someone trained in city affairs. He said a good city manager was well informed on the problems facing the city and the solutions to those problems.
Klaplan said there were business affairs to the city, but the city wasn't a business.
Kaplan said he would like to see the manager position eliminated because a manager could conduct business behind the desk, but not with both the public and the commissioners.
Kate Duffey, another advocate of the mayor-council form, agreed with Kaplan, saying that the commissioners didn't understand what to do when the manager presented it to them.
OK on space addition likely, legislators say
Kaplan said the main problem with the present system was that the commissioners were primarily from one class of students and the "little guy" tended to be ignored.
Both Kapian and Duffy said they wanted a mayor-council form with a full-time mayor and councilmen. Full-time mayor, they said, could better serve the city.
THE PROPOSAL in April doesn't say that the mayor and councilmen will be full time, but Kaplan said that that could be written in after the proposal was passed.
Under the mayor-council form, the mayor would be elected at large and would have the power of veto over the county council. Under the county council would be elected from at least four wards.
Kaplan said the present system was the same as electing representatives from congressional districts, as is done in the United States today.
Wayne Ogress, chairman of the department of health, physical education and recreation (HPER), led the Robinson tour. He said some HPER classes were filled the first afternoon of enrollment because of space shortages.
Keeping taxes down and spending less is characteristic of a commission-manager form of government, according to an article by Robert Lineberry and Edmund Fowler from the American Political Science Review.
HE ADDED that the property tax was lower now than the rate in 1970. He said the city had grown substantially but taxes were still held down.
HE SAID that when citizens went to会议 meetings to argue a point on an issue, they generally found that the commission had already gone too far in im-
planning, accompanied the legislators on their tour.
Watson said the present city government was always in the public eye and the community is well-informed.
plementing the policy for the person to do anything about chaining it.
Von Ende said Board of Regents guidelines specified Robinson should have 250,000 square feet of floor space. It now has only 74,000 square feet, he said, and even with the addition, the total would be only about 150,000 square feet.
Von Ende told the legislators the animal quarters were barely passing federal regulations for research animal care, and the officers were appalled "almost to the point of desolation."
Watson said that Lawrence had grown prosperous under the manager-compromis-
dations.
The article also said that that form increased the power of the middle class.
Howard Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy, met the tour group in Malott and explained that the Malott addition would provide more space for the science library, classrooms and animal research quarters.
Kaplan seemed to agree with this, saying that the growth and development in Lawrence was directed toward certain towns town while others were being neglected.
Hess said his major concern with the proposed Robinson addition was that the governor recommended $6.7 million for him, but KU revised its request to $7.25 million.
Hess, looking into a packed weight lifting bag. "If my YMCA looked like this, I would go."
Candidate debate matches records
Lucas said $6.7 million would be the minimum for the new construction. The higher estimate included increases in construction costs because of inflation, he said.
If attendance at last night's Student Senate presidential debate is an indicator, KU students are apathetic about the elections tomorrow and Thursday.
By MARSHA WOOLERY
Staff Renorter
Fewer than 75 persons attended the two-hour debate between the three coalition members, a senior body president, and most of the spouses of the candidates or campaign workers. Most of the other spectators were members of the philanthropy fraternity, which sponsored the debate.
Warren said, "They've made a pretty good case for the need for more room today. The only thing that would stop approval of the buildings would be state finances as a whole—we've got to look at everything. But I doubt that will stop it."
Staff Renorter
By STEVE FRAZIER
Chancellor Archie Dykes; Richard Von
Olsen; Michael S. McCarthy; and
other; Max Laxas director of facilities
Steve Leben, Reflection presidential candidate, typified the tone of the debate when he asked the audience in his opening comments to "look beyond the elicited
Completing preparations for tomorrow's and Thursday's Student Senate elections, the Senate Elections Committee yesterday announced polling places and Senate questions that will accompany the election ballots.
Approval of additions to Malott Hall and Robinson Gymnasium by the Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee appears likely, two members of the committee said yesterday after an hour-and-a-half tour of the two buildings.
From 8.a.m. to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday, polling places will be open in the Kansas Union lobby, Wesco cafeteria, the west entrance to the fourth floor of Wesco, the Joybah Blvd. Information Booth and Learning Field, Warfield, Fraser, Learned and Green balls.
Polls placed for elections
★★
From 5 to 7 p.m. tomorrow, polls will be open in Lewis, Naismith, Oliver and GSP-Corbin residence halls; Battentfield Scholarship Hall; and the lobbies of Jayawhey Towers, Gatehouse, Meadowbrook and Frontier Ridge apartment complexes.
Hess is chairman of the KU subcommittee of the Senate Ways and Means Committee.
State senators Paul Hess, R-Wichita, and Joe Warren, D-Maple City, agreed with University of Kansas administrators that Robinson and Malott were obviously crowded. Hess, Warren and Joe Barday, an assistant to State Sen. Norm. Gear, R-Westwood, were on campus to review KU's fiscal 1978 budget.
Polls will be open tomorrow only in Martha and Malcolm halls. They will be in Murphy on Monday.
"I just didn't realize that Robinson had such terrible overcrowding problems." Hess said. "I think that both additions are very likely to be approved."
Polls will be open from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday at Hashinger, Elsworth and J.R.P. residence halls; Douthart Scholarship Hall; Phil Delta Thema, Sigma Phi Epion and Beta Theta Pi fraternities; and Delta Delta
The questionnaire is composed of the following questions:
Hearings on the KU budget begin at the Statehouse tomorrow. Gov. Robert Bennett has recommended $5.5 million in first-year construction costs for the $6.7 million Robinson addition and $11.5 million Malott addition.
Have you ever attempted to apply for a scholarship or grant or loan from the University or any other lending institution? If so, have you ever had any problems in qualifying for or applying for any scholarship or grant? In addition, University office or lending institution.
From 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. tomorrow, polls will be open in Delta Upsilon and Phi Kappa Theta fraternities and Pi Beta Phi, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Chi Omega sororites.
Do you want the whistle that signals the ending of classes to be retained?
Would you like to see Jayhawk Blvd. closed to all traffic (except emergency vehicles, buses, medical and handicapped permit holders and other special vehicles) from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. on school days?
Do you think that Watson Library should have a refreshment area?
Do you think that a refreshment area be included in plans for the program?
From there to the end of the debate,
Leben; Sheri Grey, Spectrum candidate;
and Randy McKernan, emphasizing their
competence in emphasizing their
position as a student body president and the qualifications of each candidate for vice president.
Should the University offer a one
hour credit course, the University
resource package is required.
Reflection coalition members moaned before Leben said that the committee's poll was too early to warrant that it hadn't been necessary to waste time polling more students. He said the poll he conducted for his campaign was different because it was a way to advertise the event.
They used part of their five minute cross-examination pattern to question the other patient.
"Is it safe to construe that your interest in polling students has increased tenfold since you began campaigning for president?" she asked.
McKernan asked Lieber whether he was qualified to direct the Senate after serving only one term as a senator. He asked Grey whether she was sufficiently versed in University policy, not having served on any standing committees.
Grey asked Leben of KU students during his chairmanship of the Senate Communications Committee and why that poll had included only 119 students while one conducted for his campaign included 1,200.
we're giving you tonight and look at our past records in the Senate."
The audience was quietly attentive, breaking into mild applause only a few times when a candidate presented himself favorably. They approached laughter only at skips of the tongue, such as when they directed a question to "Miss Leben."
Leben and McKernan faced the audience when directing questions or criticisms to their opponents but Grey, at the far left and table, looked directly at her opponents.
The candidates rarely answered a question without criticizing an opponent's position, but the criticism was never hostile or startling.
Grey criticized McKernan's plan for the money, saying, "I am not an economist, but I certainly don't see how we can let our donors and endowment Association and devolve itself."
Should it be mandatory?
Leben was questioned by the other candidates on his justification for planning to allocate part of the money to a Feedback program, when student response in the past had been poor and when the Senate wouldn't have the support funds for it in the future.
He criticized her coalfaction for not specifying the amounts they planned to spend on improving particular areas of recreational facilities.
McKernan was criticized by the other candidates for his advocacy of a faculty user's fee before he would consider enrolling them to pay a $140,000 recreational maintenance fee.
The issue of a $108,000 surplus in Senate funds was referred to throughout the debate.
"Sheri, how many basketball do you want to buy?" he asked.
His opponents also disagreed with McKernan on his projection of the ad-
The concern over an anticipated drop in enrolment is a political move by the administration to get students involved in recruiting. Lebae said. He cited figures that
See DEBATE page eight
Two thousand pipes give George real pizzazz
By RICK THAEMERT
Staff Renorter
The fragrance of spice and tobacco saturates the small pipe shop at 727 Massachusetts St. A mélange of pipes cling to the walls like a throne of silent sentinels.
A young Latin American student surveys the walls with wide eyes, then seeks out a man who's leaning over the counter. The man has slicked-back silver hair and sports a cowboy string tie around his green-check shirt. A wad of chewing tobacco bulges from
The man is George Wilson of George'sPipe Shop, and he has been selling pipes in the area.
"You might say I and a little advantage," Wilson, who resembles a heavy Milton Berle. said, "My dad owned a photography unit and when he died, I took over the building."
Wilson, 65, paces in back of the counter nervously. He says he started the business in 1949, when he got out of the service. He already had a collection of 125 nines.
Although he started the business with only
$2,000, he now has about $10,000 invested,
and the company is raising its capital.
"Hell, I've smoked at least 2,000 pipes in my life," Wilson says, switching his "chaw" to the other side of his cheek. "It's a pretty wild business."
Wilson attributes his expertise in pipes to the fact that he has seen many faces and places. His endeavors range from gas attendant in Kansas to soldier in India.
"I invacitate here and there," Wilson says,
straightening the shelves. "I can go into practically any town in Kansas and somebody says, 'Hi, George.' I don't know how many thousands I've ran through here."
Wilson says 50 to 75 per cent of his business is related to the University. He's bad professors who have been customers of him and his students, and dropped in to see him when they're in town.
Because many of his customers grow accustomed to their pipes, Wilson also does
"A guy in Salina can get attach to his pipe and break it. Hell, what he's going to do?"
Although it's cheaper to get a pipe fixed than buy a new one, many pipe dealers consider repairs too much trouble, Wilson says.
"There’s only one shortage in the business," he said. "If a pipe cannot be repaired, Wilson can."
if a pipe can't be repaired, Wilson can replace it with one of his 2,000 pipes.
The Latin American asks to see a large carved pipe Wilson has puffed on.
Wilson says his average pipe costs between five and seven dollars, but he has the same $125 for one-dollar pipe is a armful of black pipe that bears the sign, "$1. What can you expect." The $300 pipe stands nearly three feet tall and costs about $65 for car warrings. Wilson says it came from France.
He also has pipes from India, Algeria,
Italy, and Germany. He cooks a large pot of
a German wine with a steel lid, wine pipes, a three-foot pipe with a coconut bowl, a pipe in the shape of a candle.
Wilson says most pipes are made from Briar wood, although clay, gourds, corncobs and other woods often are used. Meerschaum, a coral-like, fossilized material found only in a small section of the ocean, is the most expensive pipe material.
"I'm the former specialist on water pipes because I was in India," Wilson blonded.
Wilson sells several thousand pipes a
Wood and meerschaum pipes change color as they age and therefore, are裂
open.
Wilson says one of his best sellers is the cornbac pipe many of which he regrettably never made.
sells several thousand pipes a
See PIPES page nine
SCIENCE NO MORE BOGUS
Staff photo by MARIANNE MAURI
George Wilson shows off some of his many pipes
?
Tuesday. February 15, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Drought threatens power
SAN FRANCISCO - Northern California, from two years of drought, face the possibility of power blackouts this summer because of reduced hydroelectric power, prompting a state energy officials' call for a "shotgun wedding" of major utilities.
The critically low level of reservoirs—as low as one quarter of capacity—and less snow than normal in the Sierraver that less water will be available to residents.
The "shotgun wedding" would involve pooling the resources of competing companies.
Panama talks begin today
PANAMA CITY, Panama—United States and Panamanian negotiators met separately to plan strategy yesterday on the eve of their negotiations to decide future control over the 51-mile-long Panama Canal linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
The talks, expected to last about 10 days, will be the 17th in the current series. Negotiations for a new treaty have been underway since a series of anti-U.S. Riots.
Both sides have professed their optimism over the new round of talks today, the first since President Carter took office.
Soviets conduct space tests
MOSCOW—Two Soviet cosmonauts completed their first week in space
vesteday with a series of technical and biological experiments.
The Tass news agency said the cosmonauts, Viktor Gorbatko and Yuri Glazkov,
"feel fine."
The two cosomatsians blasted off from the Central Asian site aboard Soyuz 24 Feb. 7 and linked up with the Salyut 5 space station the following day.
7 and link up with the Satuyt 5 space station the following day.
"The main part of the program of the latest two working days was technical,
technological, medical and biological research and experiments." Tass said. The comsnationals carried out crystal studies, medical checks at rest and while conducting the experiments.
Flunt bail set at $$$55,000
CINCINNATI-The First Ohio District Court of Appeals yesterday set bail for convicted Hutchester man Adam Worley, $50,000 and attorneys for his case who have jumped from jail with $10,000.
Flint has been in jail since last Tuesday afternoon when he was convicted of engaging in organized crime and pandering obscenity in publishing Hutter, a lawmaker.
Carter welcomes Portillo, vows stronger relations
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter vowed to strengthen United States relations with Mexico yesterday as he welcomed Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo, the first foreign head of state to visit the White House since Carter assumed the office.
"Our problems are mutual. Our future must be shared," Carter said during the interview.
"I will go even further than is required through diplomatic courtesy . . . to tie our countries together in an unprecedented and continual demonstration of common purpose, common hope, common confidence and common friendship." Carter said.
Loper Portillo, who promised "good faith and good will," told the chief executive that "I'm certain we can solve our problems and consolidate our friendship."
The welcoming ceremony was marked by the elimination of a few frills that normally accompany the arrival of a foreign head of state.
The Army herald trumpeters, who traditionally play "Hail to the Chief" on the President's arrival and "Ruffles and Fourishes" when the visiting dignitary appears, were eliminated, along with the tunes. Also abolished was the traditional march by the red-coated Marine Band and a display of state and territorial flags.
The ceremony, however, included a 21-gun salute, the playing of the national anthems of the United States and Mexico, a review of troops and welcoming speeches. Carter thanked Lopez Portillo for "an ardent effort to foster public concern" by offering to export additional oil and natural gas to help the United States during the recent energy crisis.
Boy detained in slaying of 3
LARNED (AP) – A 15-year-old boy was detained yesterday by juvenile authorities in connection with the weekend slayings in a young brother, who were shot to death.
The youngster, Michael Wurm, was charged with juvenile delinquency following a detention hearing Sunday before Judge Philip Aldrich of the Pawnee County District Court. A continuation of that hearing was scheduled today.
The youth was taken into custody after the bodies of Joe Wurm, 36, his wife, Diane, 35, and their son, Jim, 9, were discovered in the home-marshouse shortly after midnight Saturday.
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--professor of International Law at Tel Aviv University and former member of Israel Permanent Mission to the United Nations,
Dr. Yoram Dinstein
Speaks on —
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Secretary of State Cyrus Vance headed for the Middle East yesterday in quest of a lasting settlement between Israel and its Arab neighbors.
ISRAEL in the U.N.
In advance of his late-eventive departure on the week-long mission, United States officials described it as "the first step of a long-term effort to ensure that the on part of the Carter administration.
Vance's schedule called for him to arrive in Israel today, then carry his diplomatic efforts to Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Syria.
NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. (UPI)—A twocourt-martialled Army veteran who admired Adolf Hitler, had sweatstains tattooed on his arm, was killed five persons including a policeman
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. February 16th, 1977
The officials said Vance intended to have a "fairly intense, detailed discussion" with the leaders of the countries on a series of issues. They gave this rundown:
State Department officials traveling with Vance described the trip as "a means of coming to grips with the issues. This will be a useful experience." In the process of getting the negotiations started, "I
Vance's trip to seek a lasting settlement
Kansas Room in the Union Refreshments served
- Palestinian representation. The Israelis will they will refuse to negotiate in any forum where the Palestinians are a member of the Palestinians must be insisted the Palestinians must be included.
State police described the murders as an "execution-style slaying." Their only cleo to get involved was a girl named Kaitlyn.
"Killing four people over $30 doesn't make a whole lot of sense," said Sgt. Don Aldrich, spokesman for Indiana State Police.
Hitler admirer kills five, himself
POLICE said the muscle-bound gunman, Predwain Cody, 32, shot himself in the head when he entered the building.
- The form of a Geneva conference. There could be a preliminary conference, or there could be a series of working groups to settle details before the main conference takes them up. Again, there will be no American initiatives, the officials said.
yesterday, then shot himself to death in a rage over a two-week job suspension.
American officials said the solution may lie in changing the charter of the state to recognize the right of Israel to exist as a state. But they said Vance was going with no predetermined set of ideas on this question, which he described as "the best option" he felt.
Sponsored by S.U.A., Hillel International Law Society
The climate of peace. The officials said Vance will ask all leaders in the area to exercise maximum restraint in what they see necessary to interfere with the negotiating process.
Their mother was wounded, but escaped by pretending to be dead after shocks ripped through her.
HOLLANDSBURG, Ind. (AP)—Four brothers aged 14 to 22 were by shotgun blasts to the head in "execution" style yesterday after being ordered to lie face down on the floor of their family's mobile home.
The mobile home was in an isolated, woody hill in the hills of western Indiana.
- **Arms sales**. The officials said Vance will be discussing arms salts with all the Middle Eastern countries, seeking ways to cut down on them. Vince and President Carter both have said cutting back on the quantity of arms salts, especially to troublesome areas such as the Middle East, will be a major goal of the new administration.
Vance says he believes that a series of factors—including a more moderate tone from the Arab bloc and the move up of Israeli elections to May, instead of the fall—means chances for an overall settlement are better than they have been for years.
Vance's trip will be followed by a series of visits to Washington by Middle Eastern leaders, including, according to the U.S. officials, Israeli opposition leaders who will face the ruling Labor party in the May elections.
4 brothers shot, killed
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workers and a New Rochelle policeman when he reported back to work at the Neptune Worldwide Moving Co. from a two-week suspension.
His body was found behind a makeshift barricade in a company vice president's office on the top floor of the two-story building. The president quietly left this quiet, New York city bedroom suburb.
SPEED READING CLASS TO BE TAUGHT IN LAWRENCE
The United States Reading Lab Mid-West Division is offering their famous speed reading course to a limited number of qualified people here, the Lawrence area. The average person who takes this course needs to read at least 250 words stamatically improved comprehension and better concentration.
VOLUNTEER Clearing House 114B UNION
Police, fearful that Cowan still had hostages, did not move in for more than three hours after the gunman killed himself. He was able to secure a safe set in by the jungle, they found his body.
This famous course has taught many thousands of people to read over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and retain what they have read much more effectively. Average graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.
For complete details about this famous speed reading course be sure to attend one of the free one hour orientation lectures that have been scheduled. These lectures are open to the public, above age 18, persons under 18 should be accompanied by a parent, if possible, and classes are offered in complete detail including class schedules, instruction procedures and a tuition that is much less than similar courses.
These meetings will be held on campus at the Lutheran Student Center, 15th and Iowa, on Wed., Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 17, 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Feb. 18 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Sat., Feb. 19 at 10:30 p.m. and again at 1:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. and TWO FINAL MEETINGS, Tuesday, Feb. 22, 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Classes are limited and class places will be filled on first come-first serve basis only. Be sure to attend the earliest meeting possible to insure a class place. Group meetings should be scheduled at least 4 hours prior to the class.
Cowen had told co-worker he planned to "get the man who suspended him because Cowen was rude to a customer, but that dispatcher Norming Bain, escaped injury.
Police said Cowan shot the first patrolman on the scene, Alen McLead, 32, as the officer stepped from his car at 7:50 a.m. at the courthouse and two co-workers inside the building.
Cowan, who arrived at work wearing an Army field shirt and a German military helmet, also wounded five other persons, including three policemen.
Police Commissioner William Hegarty said that at one point during the 10-hour ordal, Cowan "made direct physical threats to people with him, placing weapons next to their heads and—in one case—in their mouth."
Cown, described by some co-workers as "a class A guy," but a man who "was not fond of blacks and Jews" ignored the pleas for father and two brothers to give up himself.
His only direct contact with authorities came at 12:30 p.m. when he 'telephoned the police' to report an incident.
demanded food- potato salad and coca-
and apologized to Mayor Vincent Rippa for
the insensitive remarks.
Cowan was a bodybuilding enthusiist whose picture appears in the current issue of the reader-photo section of the magazine Muscle Training Illustrated.
Friends said he was also a devoted admor of Adolf Hitler. Neighborhood teenagers said he often showed them his gun and his collection of Nazi muggerabilla.
Jim Murray, a friend, said Cowan "had swastikas and symbols tattooed all over his arms." But he described Cowan as "mostly quiet. He would have a few drinks and he'd start talking about Germany. He read books about Germany all the time."
Hegarty said police searched Cowan's room at his parents' home. He said they found "evidence indicating some allegiance but the commissioner declined to elaborate.
While Cowan had told neighborhood youngsters he was a Vietnam veteran, a Pentagon spokesman in Washington said he attended the time in the Far East but rather in Germany.
He was court-martialed twice, the spokesman said, once for being absent without leave and one for leaving the scene of a motor accident in Germany.
He received a six-month sentence at hain labor for the second offense and a $55 per month fine. But he was discharged from the Army before completing the prison term,
The Pentagon spokesman said Cowan, who was awarded a "sharpshooter" rating with the M14 rifle, received an other than honorable discharge. The Privacy Act, however, precludes military officials from disclosing the exact nature of the discharge.
TC Cloon: Student Senate Nunemaker No. 2
A 28-year-old veteran, who can cope with student problems. Former legislative liaison and elected secretary of the University of Kansas Campus Veterans, "TC" understands student needs and is responsive to requests. If you need help BEFORE and/or give him a call at the Campus Veterans Office, 844-4748 or at home 841-7399. Cloon for Student Senate, Nunemaker #2.
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Downtown Lawrence
Tuesday, February 15. 1977
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Med students fight proposed bill
Staff Renorter
By BARRY MASSEY
KANSAS CITY, KAN—Concerned about impending action in the Kansas Legislature that could raise tuition to $13,500, University of Kansas medical students met yesterday to formulate battle plans against the proposed legislation.
The meeting of about 100 first-year medical students came about because of the increasing number of cases.
proposing an increased tuition had already been passed by the legislature, Marjorie Bordy, first-year student representative to the Student Assembly (MSA), said yesterday.
SHE SAID the assembly thought that a meeting of all concerned first-year medical students would help to dispel rumors and inaccuracies about the response legislation.
First-year students are the only medical
Bonds on city agenda
A resolution for the issuance of about $10 million in industrial revenue bonds to a firm that plans to open a branch in Lawrence will be held on Wednesday, Lawrence City Commission meeting.
The bonds, if approved, would be used to build a Quaker Oats Company plant, which would manufacture pet foods. The plant, which would employ about 180 persons, is to be completed in a year. The proposed site for the plant is north of the industrial park.
If the commission approves the bond issue, a resolution of intent probably will be voted on the following week City Manager Buford Watson said.
The firm will be responsible for payment of the bonds, and the city will forgo the company's property taxes for 10 years while the firm becomes established.
In other action, the commission is to consider giving the city manager authority to manage public works.
Delay sought in murder case
Attorneys for two brothers charged in the murder last week of a Lawrence woman have filed petitions in Douglas County Court to seek full or partial hearings delayed until early March.
Charged in the death of Margaret Maxey,
are Joseph Gordon Jr., and James C.
James Rumsey, attorney for James Gardner, petitioned yesterday to have Gardner's hearing delayed until 9:30 a.m. March 2. Jack Maxwell, Joseph Gardner's attorney, filed for a continuance until 1:30 a.m. March 2.
Preliminary hearings for the two originally were scheduled for Friday.
The brothers were charged last week by the Douglas County Attorney in connection with the stabbing Jeath and mutilation of Maxey.
Both have been held without ball in the Douglas County jail.
and for a housing needs survey, Watson said he was in the process of creating a con- tents case study.
The commission also will consider setting March 8 as the bid date for improvements in the Burcham Park area. The park is part of riverfront development in the city.
Bavles dies
Services for Ernest Bayles, professor emeritus of education, are pending at Rumsey Funeral Home. Mr. BAYLEYS, 79, who lived in 1911 Oxford Rd., died Sunday in Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
He was born Oct. 31, 1897, at Onaga. He received undergraduate and graduate degrees in education from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Ph.D. from Ohio State University in 1922.
Mr. Bayles taught science in Kansas and Iowa high schools before teaching at Central Missouri State Teachers College in Warrenburg. He joined the KU faculty in 1928. He was an assistant professor emeritus in 1968.
students to meet regularly because up-
perclassmen are attending clinical
care.
He served as president of the National Society for College Teachers of Education, the Philosophy of Education Society and the KU chapter of the American Association of Professors. He was a member of the executive board of the John Dewey Society.
NOW, MEDICAL students from Kansas pay about $1,500 in tuition. The state pays for the remainder of the estimated costs of a student's education. This year, the cost of a student's education is figured at about $15,500 to $18,000.
The bill that concerns the students was recently proposed by Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood. It would require medical students to pay up to about $13,500 for tuition or agree to work in an area where there is a doctor shortage.
He is survived by his wife, Lucie, of the home; four sons, Hugh, Fredonia, Spencer, Houston, Tex.; Lewis, Atlanta, Ga.; and Manhattan, Ohio; Andrea, Bedford, Manhattan; a sister, Mrs. Lillian Tiffin-Ottawa; 13 grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
The $13,500 proposed in Hayden's bill is 87.5 percent of the estimated amount the hospital would receive. It would be ranked in order of their need for medical care, and students who agreed to serve in one of the highest priority areas would be waived the $7.5 percent of the total cost.
Under a preliminary draft of Hayden's bill, smaller amounts would be waived for students who promised to serve in areas of lower priority.
THE WAIVER wouldn't cover the costs of room and board, books and other incidental
For each year the student is given a tuition waiver, he is required to serve one伏期.
The waiver percentage decreases in four steps to the lowest level of 25 per cent.
If passed by the legislature, Hayden's bill would take effect July 1, 1978.
Mr. Bayles' body was donated to the department of anatomy at the KU Medical Center. The family requests that memorials go to the Ernest E. Bayles Memorial Fund of the Kansas University Endowment Association.
DEBBIE HAYNES, another first-year representative to the MSA, said that 11
She said legislators were concerned that many medical students were leaving Kansas and that they thought a tuition waiver would help solve this problem.
hearing of a Senate Ways and Means subcommittees in which questions were raised
"They're really upset about it," Haynes said, and "they feel we don't have a moral偿
SOME STUDENTS were concerned that if tuition was increased to $13,500, many potentially good medical students would go elsewhere, possibly hurting the Med Center.
Jana Rasmussen, a representative of NSA, asked students to work to defeat the Islamic State.
"We encourage you to go out and talk to legislators and other people you know and trust."
University Daily Kansan
Students were reminded by Debbie Smith Wright, MSA president, that they weren't representing the opinion of the Med Center, and that the concerns individual medical students.
SHE SAId that the meeting had provided a good beginning, but that students needed to present options to the legislature on how to address problems of health care needs in Kansas.
Committees were organized during the meeting to provide direction of a write-in campaign against the bill, to set up small groups of students to visit Topeka and to discuss the legislation with government officials in order to find medical students concerning the status of the legislation and to establish a lobbying-type program.
Student tells police of kidnaping, rape
The woman told police that the man came up behind her while she was walking in front of her boyfriend's house at 1138 Ohio St., put her hand on her head and told her to hand over her money.
A 19-year-old University of Kansas student reported to Lawrence police Saturday night that a man kidnapped her in a dumpster and took her to an apartment and raped her.
When she said she didn't have any money, the man reportedly forced her into his car and made her wear adhesive bandages and sunglasses over her eyes. He then drove her to what he told her was his apartment, according to the police report.
The woman described her attacker as a
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Reflection
Steve Leben
for student body president
Business
Ginny Erdwien
Brian S. Jones
Brit McPherson
Scott Stanley
Education
Bev Brown
Corie Brown
Bill Cannon
Pam Gotsche
Connie Hale
Steve Hamous
Beth Anne MacCurdy
Beth Osborn
Nathan Bultman
Richard W. Durham
Douglas J. Edmonds
Gary Foote
Alan D. Soelter
Engineering
Journalism
Janet Ferree
Jill Grubaugh
Eric Morgenstern
Doug Ferguson
Sann Glaza
Claire McCurdy
Kristen Olander
Kathy Russell
Sybil Summers
Fine Arts
Special Students Wade Corey Klosterman
Architecture
Reeves W. Wiedeman
Curt Woody
Architecture
Pres.—Matt Haverty
V.P.-Pres.Chip Anthony
Secy.—Dawn Daniel
Treas.—Barbara Goolsbee
Sophomore Class
MARCEAL BROWN
Leben-Munyan
- WE REFLECT YOUR VIEWS *
- *RESPONSIBLE USE OF STUDENT FEES ** * The Senate has allowed more than $100,000 of your fees to accumulate in a surplus, benefitting no one. Steve and Ralph say it should either be used for education benefits, or the activity fee should be lowered until the supply is full.
- *FEEDBACK* ★ ★ Steve and Robp will see that a Feedback book is published, giving student comments and ratings of each course and instructor at KU. Your best advice on enquiries and instructors comes from other students—we'll see what you get it.
- RECREATIONAL FACILITIES * ** Steve and Ralph will spend some of the弥补 fund to improve URS recreational facilities. more lighting for tennis courts and resodding outdoor playing fields are examples of improvements that will be made.
*COMMUNICATION* ❤️ This is the area Steve and Rick know best - from experience. They will make you are involved in your training.
Leben - Munyan
LA&S
Ralph Munyan for student body vice president
Paula Bush
Vicki Coulter
Trinka Crossley
Craig Dawson
Thomas E. Graves
Bruce Huffman
Grant Larkin
Betsy McCarley
Bob Meyer
Jim Muehlberger
Judy Navickas
Tim O'Connor
Mike Pendergast
Kevin White
Pharmacy Teri Pollard
Social Welfare
Lisa Bennett Jeanne Kovac
Nunemaker Dist. 1
Bruce Leinmiller
Dave Bromley
Gordon Geldhof
Chris Redlinghafer
Jan Smith
Russ Tluscik
Nunemaker Dist. 2
Paid for by Leben/Munyan
Nunemaker Dist. 3
Mark Bernhardt
Johnny Hill
David Jett
John Masterson
Laura Trausch
Nunemaker Dist. 4
Jeff Eriksen
Ann Holderman
Anne Judge
Mary Ellen Pogson
Sam Sheldon
Nunemaker Dist. 5
Cheryl Engelmann
Amy Gregg
Mike Harper
Luanne O'Dell
Reggie Robinson
Ed Stucky
Junior Class
Pres.-Craig Blessing
V-Pres.-Scott Morgan
Secy.-Pam Olander
Treas.-Sheri Sigman
4
Tuesday, February 15, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Poll subjects detailed
Perhaps it's a commentary on our times that this semester's burning campus issue centers on the whistle that signals—or had signaled—the end of classes.
The whistle, of course, was silenced at the start of the semester as an experiment to determine whether the University of Kansas could function without the alarm clock that had controlled the movement of classes for 64 years. Administrators said the whistle would be shut off for a few weeks, when students and faculty could voice their opinions about the new-found peace and quiet.
The time has come to voice opinions—formally. The Student Senate will canvass student views on the whistle issue in an opinion poll to be conducted during the regular Student Senate elections Wednesday and Thursday.
THE QUESTION—which will read simply, "Do you want the whistle that signals the ending of classes to be retained?"—is one of seven that will be on the ballot. Two of the questions are informational ones designed to tailor Senate approval to how many received financial aid at KU. The others deal with student issues, circa 1977.
It now seems inevitable that those answering the questionnaire will favor reinstating the whistle. Students and instructors alike miss the prompting of the old fog horn. This is an important factor to determine the time has proven distasteful to teachers and irksome to students.
ITS TOO BAD. Things were much more pleasant without the hourly honking from a shrill whistle, and the campus seems less like a factory without the thing.
But people want it back. So be it. University officials have indicated that they will wait to hear the results of the Senate poll before deciding whether to strike up the whistle again. A vote in favor of reinstating the whistle will help restore a bit of the status que that so many on campus obviously miss.
Some thoughts on the other three issues:
- The Student Senate will ask students whether they would like to see Jayhawk Blvd. closed to all traffic except emergency and service vehicles from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. on school days. Such a move would establish a pedestrian mall of sorts in the central portion of campus during the day.
A JAYHAWK Blvd. without cars would be nice, but it would also be a waste of desperately needed parking spaces and a
thorn in the side of anyone who has business in the central campus.
The boulevard has been restricted to unauthorized traffic for years, and that is about as far as one can realistically go in reducing the flow of traffic.
Presumably, the only vehicles that get on Jayhawk Blvd. now are the ones with permits indicating that they have business on campus. If there are vehicles getting on the road that don't have to be there, let them drive or choose a different selective in issuing campus drives passes. But to think that Jayhawk Blvd. could be shut off to all traffic is a pipe dream.
*Students will be asked whether they favor the establishment of a refreshment area somewhere inside a Boston Library. Students might rightightharpoon a very practical on on closer examination.
Some will argue that refreshments could be restricted to the area in which they are sold. However, because the library is so hard-pressed to pay the employees it needs now, it's hard to imagine that there could be supervision of a refreshment area. And library materials are too costly to be trusted to the honor system.
THERE HAS NEVER been a concession service inside Watson, and for good reason. Library materials are too easily ruined by food and drink.
- The Senate Academic Affairs Committee has proposed a one-credit-hour course on the educational resources available to students. This course would teach students how to use Wattson Library pools of information located around campus.
THIS IS A marvelous idea, one students should highly favor. The thought of starting a research project has long struck fear in the hearts of new KU students, largely because finding and sifting through resource materials seemed like such an awesome task.
Any time spent帮学生learn the research ropes would be well spent. And learning one's way around Watson Library is surely one of the most educational experiences on campus. There's no reason not to award academic credit for it.
The Senate will also ask students whether they think such a class should be mandatory. That would be taking a good idea one step too far. There's no reason to shove the idea down the board or put a technical engineering student who would find it much less valuable than a history student.
WASHINGTON—In a celebrated case in Colorado a few weeks ago, Claudine Longet got the ball lower. It is a reasonable surmise that on the same day in Colorado, in some other court, a defendant got 30 days for stealing firearms during serious crimes. Same punishment.
WHAT WE ARE talking about is the disturbing disparity in the punishments imposed by our criminal courts. Few aspects of our criminal justice system are under attack among judges or provoked stronger criticism from the public. Now a three-year study has been completed that may do much to correct the situation. For the first time, some rational guidelines have been developed and analyzed in organizing task of fixing sentences on guilty defendants.
Try another example. In U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, a defendant accused of bank robbery is being held years in prison. In a Federal District Court somewhere else, a different defendant also is convicted of bank robbery. His case, by the average, is 10 years. Some prisons. Different punishments.
Sentencing guidelines supported
The study emerged last month from the Criminal Justice Research Center in Albany, N.Y., under a grant from the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration. The program developed from an analysis of actual experience in the municipal courts of Denver and the state courts of Vermont. Criminal courts in Newark and Des Moines also contributed their observations. Based on the findings, guidelines are in prospect for Chicago, Phoenix, Philadelphia and Seattle.
IF THE guidelines catch on—and there is every reason to believe they will—the system has become more insecure in criminal justice since the development of probation and parole systems many years ago. The guidelines will not produce absolute uniformity. Instead, they are achieved in a desirable. Too many human variations enter in. But the guidelines will provide a useful tool for the authorities to arrest one individualized and equal.
To develop the guidelines, the Research Center staff began by listing the relevant factors that judges considered in imposing sentences. To their amusement, they included more than 205 considerations. What was the offense at Law? What was the "real offense"? These
AFTER A study of more than 400 cases in Denver and in Vermont, patterns began to emerge. Some factors constantly recurred. Others had no significant influence. In time, the number of body伤者 increased 205 items to a dozen factors of major importance. By quan-
James J. Kilpatrick
(714) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
are often different. Was a weapon used? Was the victim harmed? What of the defendant's age, education, emigration, record, family background? Was the defendant on narcotics?
The sustem does not diminish a judge's discretion. If a judge
be developed that provides all the information a judge needs in the vast majority of his sentencing decisions.
concludes that a defendant should get a sentence of 10 years instead of the five suggested by the guidelines, the judge is free to impose it—but he would be required to write a memorandum, the judge said, and a major variation from the norm. The very act of drafting the memorandum, it is thought, would compel a judge to look closely at his own motions. Is he being lenient out of unwarranted sympathy? Is he being because of mere prejudice?
UNDER THIS PLAN, judges will be equipped with the knowledge of what other people are doing. The appropriate judge will have empirical data
on what has gone before.
Defendants and their lawyers will know generally what to expect, given the nature of the crime and the record of the accused. If nothing else, the guidelines should reduce the angry criticism that arises in court, and simply situated defendants, found guilty of apparently identical crimes, get widely disparate punishments.
Equal justice under law, as every court observer knows, is an unattainable ideal. We will never get there. But it remains to prove that these guidelines constitute a big step in the right direction.
WESTPHAL
USS PANAMA TALKS
Office job a coffee clash
Iris doesn't make coffee anymore.
She never did. She doesn't even drink the stuff.
Yet her refusal to make coffee for her bosses recently cost her her job.
Iris Rivera, a 35-year-old former employee of the State Appellate Defender's office in Chicago, was one of several secretaries in the office who was ordered to fix coffee for her
Mayor-council government defended
To the editor:
I thought that Brent Anderson's article was extremely good on why we should keep our present form of government. I also expected that many would respond as Ms. Plasman did, in defense of the change to Mayor-Council form of government.
This is a particularly unique election year nationwide. People are voting for change. What we must determine is when does a change in government favor the people? The answer is when their needs are addressed by the government. I have always been a firm believer that changing forms of things disguises their contents. In the case of city government, change in the form at the top doesn't necessarily mean a change in the favor of people's interests. For example what will the fight for wards do to this city? I fear that those in the area of most need in our town, north and east Lawrence, may lose out in redistricting designations because of business interests in that section. Citizen like six of these currently filed for commission stand a chance to be effective in a technical professional job like councilperson? Its no secret that people on the KU campus are interested in the requirements for councilperson more readily address their qualification than those of the average citizen. The mayor is the leader of this group of eight and there is no doubt in my mind that for the first decade we would see councilpeople from other cities and states in these jobs.
Our present form of government, as shaky as it has appeared, still lets the people speak out any time about governmental issues, wouldn't trade that for backdoor deals in smoke-fired
dangerous when people's interests are at stake. It appears also as though our chances as citizens to directly address the commission will decrease. We must ask ourselves, how would the important issues like the Haskell Loop, the Garage, municipal employment and municipal housing be handled without all the public presentations on behalf of citizen concerns citywide? District representation dilutes city-wide effectiveness.
nns is a letter of commendation in regard to your article on Feb. 9. Tony Ice has been a dedicated worker for the University for more than four years. His dedication to Lawrence and baseball for Lawrence high school is another reason he joined the university more than a decade. The University and the parents of Lawrence are indebted to him for his diligent and unheardful efforts.
He is a man of excellent character and a man deserving respect. He really appreciates youth and enjoys working with and around young people. I'm glad that someone besides those
Now the so-called experts decide we need a new water plant. Do the people get to vote
water bill or because the trash wasn't picked up on time. Then he says the motives of those who organized the petition drive are less clear than those of "Joe and Sally College."
Maybe I should clear things up for him. The people who organized the petition drive hope to get a government more responsive to the people's needs. For instance, when the City Commission decided to destroy a neighborhood just to put in another business district or benefit the general public, it was these people who worked hard to stop it.
Tony Ice lauded To the editor:
In short, geographical representation hands away our rights as citizens to the power structure on a silver platter. Southwest Lawrence will never have to listen to north and east Lawrence problems directly. We'll need councilpersons to do and to take care of. All problems would be solved in a "scratch my back," I'll scratch yours' attitude. These trade-offs become
However, there are some other aspects to be remembered about the Greek organizations. They can and do discriminate unfairly at times on many issues.
Readers Respond
rooms made by representatives who don't know what I want to say.
the mayor-Council form emphasizes differences to the point that resentment and bitterness increases toward those areas that are “better” for the people, the campaigns for equity. This, too, destroys citywide efficiency and understanding of issues. Given the present situation in Lawrence where the business sector is much more organized than it was a year ago, interests that the people, I don't see where an overriding of a vote or veto means anything. It's just a matter of time before their persistence wins out. They have the time to wait, people have the time to wait, and the time to wait. If representation democrycis is what we want, then we've got it.
Carlos Watson Kansas City, Kan., senior
Carlos Watson
connected with this went to charity.
Petitioners praised To the editor:
I'm responding to the article by Brent Anderson in the Feb. 9 Kansan. First, he assumes people will vote for a mayor-council form of government because the forgo to pay their
Some sociologists state that Greek organizations can be just an extension of the home away from home. Some post adolescents allegedly can't cope with the "free" academic social ties of the Greek system, regimentation of the Greek system. This system can also provide all the family relationships, the house "mother," the big "brother" and the little "sister." All this is largely accompanied with the use of anniversary and other of the sentimental "family" trappings.
He also complains that people from different wards will spend all their time worrying about their own wards instead of the city as a whole. Let's look at how much they are spending amounts to five commissioners who come from the same general area so they worry about one area and pretty well ignore the rest of the city. I am surprised people are interested in revenge, as Joe and Sally are.
boss. When she refused, she was canned.
And as for Joe College, maybe a more responsive city government would be more interested in trash collecting than in needless growth, causing urban sprawl. And as for the local waterworks responsible city water works would give a fair warning before giving her the surprise of empty waterpipes.
on it? No. But they were generous enough to let us decide how to pay for it. Big deal.
Let's face it, the mayor-council form of government means more democracy and less regulation no matter how you look at it.
Steve Otto Lawrence sophomore
in the athletic department has shown some appreciation for him. That is to say thank the Kansan staff and Joe Radcliffe for a job that was more than a good deed.
Generally the Greek organizations are functional on college and university campuses. They provide living arrangements for students; they provide an enforced studious environment and a social life.
Greek life grilled To the editor:
Kansas City, Kan., senior
Pt smuck Omega -Hypcron-
Biogeeta -Fraternities-Sorior-
ties-sick boom hah!?
how they liked their coffee. Ask Joe DiMaggio. or Danny Thomas. (Forget Mrs. Olson.) IF RIVENA's case was to be delayed by the basis alone, it would be decided quickly, and in her favor.
That's the rub
They also "require" their members, at times, to participate in many of the college's activities and help to generate support for them. These are good things these organizations do. I remember one act in participation organizations at Kansas State College at Pittsburgh cleaned up the entire length of U.S. Highway 69 from Pittsburg to Kansas City. All fund raising
Karl Hassard
But there is another, more fundamental element in the Rivera case. She is paid by her boss, and if she fails the function. If coffee-making is part of that function, and if Rivera knew that before she accepted the job, then she was fired —she broke the contract.
The Greek system also helps to promote the middle class image and system, sometimes to the extreme. And these students must pay their expenses, dues, party fees and whatnot. Largely it takes a secure middle class family to support a student in his or her Greek desires. Some students would say the Greek society would say the American politician's
Fraternities and sororites are good for some things and bad for others. So, the new student should wary pick and choose his academic life style, keen cool and Sis up to you.
Jeffrey L. Latz 121 W. 14th E
In the aftermath of this nation's bicentennial year, I was quite surprised to read in the Feb. 11 Kansan that this year's recipient of the William Allen White Foundation's Award for Journalistic Merit said in a letter from freedom of the press didn't apply to all publications. Mr. Kirkpatrick also was quoted as saying, "Society has a right to protect itself."
But the timing and the issuance of the order requiring secretaries to make coffee leads
Free press a must To the editor:
The founding fathers (and mothers) must be spinning in their graves. It is exactly this kind of selective censorship
they tough so hard to destroy.
They, unlike the editor of the Chicago Tribune, realized that when freedom of expression is stifed, we as a, whole, suffer. Where would we be in the realm of protection? Society would "protect" itself against the theory of evolution? How could we possibly continue to grow and develop as a nation if all anomalies were suppressed? Society would be quite stagnant without the "protected" ourselves against new ideas and creativities.
Hustler, the publication in question, is offensive to many and makes others uncomfortable. But if self-serving selective censorship starts here, where will it go next? Playboy, Time, and Reader's Digest (yes, even the venerable Reader's Digest) could be next step. If you give rights to certain groups, how long can it be before the cancer spreads?
To paraphrase an old saying, Mr. Kirkpatrick seems to believe, "If I agree with what you say, how you live, or what you will defend with my life your right to do. If not, tough."
Steve Lathan
Shawnee junior
Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and bolded. All words in letters are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Also required are KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; they must provide their position; others must provide their address.
Letters Policy
Fifty Chicago secretaries, under the banner of Women Employed, rallied to her defense. Rivera has filed a case with the Fair Employment Practices Commission.
THE EVENT received widespread, although brief, media attention. Rivers's boss lamaely explained that because the secretaries were usually the first to arrive at the office, they had to take over all of course, the attorneys had more important things to do.
Crucial to the story is the fact that only days before, coffee-
K
AND HOW MANY would like to forget the whole brown, soggy mountain-grown mess? Two issues arise from the Rivera incident. One can be surprised by the intelligent people (one hopes) ascribe to the notion that it is the woman's job, and hers alone, to make coffee, whether at home or on the job. Although no studies probably have been made on the subject, one can make coffee just as well as women. Perhaps better—after all, the attorneys Rivera worked for presumably knew
Key was a quest Greer
Rivera's story would be laughable if there weren't so many secretaries like her. Who can guess how many secretaries on campus, in downtown Lawrence, across the state of Missouri, or written agreement that they tend to the machine, the grounds, the cream and-or sugar?
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making dikes were relegated in a specific directive which said coffee-making was secretarial work.
Bill Sniffen
Editorial Writer
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to precisely the opposite conclusion—Rivera's bosses changed the ground rules. They, not she, broke the contract. Consequently, unless another employee of Rivera was present, her bosses violated any agreement upon which her employment was based.
Rivera appears to fit none of the afermentioned categories. She is simply someone who wants to do her job, yet someone who won't roll over and play dead. And that's to her
SECRETARIES HAVE been much maligned as dizzy broads, clock-watching office firls, supercilious old hags, or silly girls (Elinabeth Ray has probably expanded the stereotype.)
She deserves to be rehired; her bosses should make their own coffee.
Where does that leave the rest of the still coffee-making, sludge draining secretaries? Just ask the boss: One lump or two? And where would you like it?
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom-864-4810
Business Office-801-4258
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through July. See online for details. Subscription through JULY excursion Saturday, Sunday and Holiday Monday through Saturday. $40 per month. 60444 Subscriptions by mail are a $2 member or $18 junior member. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $3 member. A year outside the county.
Editor
Jim Bates
Business Manager
Janice Clements
Managing Editor
Gret Hack
Editing Manager
Business Manager
Business Manager
d
Tuesday, February 15. 1977
5
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lawyers
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THE SUN
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1: One lump
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By JOHN MUELLER
Kevs criticizes federal pay raise
Staff Reporter
Rep. Martha Keys, D-Kan., yesterday basted a proposed pay increase for federal officials in Washington.
Keys, who represents the 2nd District,
was at the University of Kansas to answer
questions from about 100 law students at
Green Hall.
Keys spoke on topics ranging from the doctor shortage in western Kansas to the problems of stimulating the national economy, but most of her remarks were condemnations of pay raises for Congressmen, the federal office busiders and top executive civil servants.
"LET'S NOT kid ourselves," keys said. We don't have it to live as though it's the last day of school.
Congressional salaries will rise from $44,600 to $73,500 - effective Feb. 20 - under a plan approved last week by the House Post Office and Civil Service subcommittee. No committee or House action that would block the plan is expected.
Keys said that she was "horrified" at the subcommittee action.
"I just think the pay raises are untenable." she said.
one criticized the subcommittee for the way it had considered the pay raise, saying it had harassed witnesses who opposed the increase.
"WE IN CONGRESS are in the top 3 per cent of income now," Keys said. "I don't think you can say that monetary gain is the motivation for public service."
Keys said that Congress was setting a bad example for a nation conscious of inflation
Grad scholarship offered
Seniors planning graduate work at the university of Kansas are eligible for a $200 scholarship.
Jan Scott, co-chairman of the scholarship selection committee, said yesterday that the scholarship would be awarded on the basis of academic achievement and participation in extracurricular activities.
She said applicants must plan to attend KU for graduate study and that financial aid will be available.
Money for the scholarship was left over
before previous senior class debts were paid,
e.g.
"A record number of seniors paid class dues this year, so we were able to pay off all debts of past senior classes, allocate money for scholarships, and will have money for a scholarship," the said.
Scott estimated that about 800 to 900 students paid senior class dues this year compared with past years when only about 500 students paid.
Scott said this year's scholarship would set a precedent and could continue as a model.
She said, however, that if future seniors don't pay dues money might not be
available for the scholarship. Class officers might have to campaign to get students to attend.
Steve Segebrecht, co-chairman of the selection committee, said the committee, made up of administrators, faculty and students, would review all applications.
Segebrecht said he wasn't an actual committee member, but as the acting committee secretary he would be in contact with the applicants.
This way, he said, committee members *don't* meet the applicants until their permanent position.
The top five applicants selected then will be interviewed with the selection committee.
"This scholarship was designed for those who have excelled academically while participating in extracurricular activities," he said.
by accepting the extra money, but that the increase was even more indefeable for the federal judiciary, who have absolute job security.
Applications will be available Feb. 23 in the student affairs office, 227 Strong Hall. The deadline will be Mar. 30 and applications must be in by then, Seebrecht said.
Keys and her husband, Rep. Andrew Jacobs, Jr., D-Ind., have said they would return their pay increases to the federal government. But when Keys was asked by a law student whether she would accept a cut in the federal minimum wage, and said, "I'm not willing to go far that way."
Keys tied her comments on the pay raises to observations on the national economy. She said that Carter eventually might keep his campaign pledge to balance, the budget, but that it wow 'n't be possible without reductions in the unemployment rate.
The winner will be announced May 2 and a recognition plaque will be awarded to the winner.
She said that predictions of a 1.5 per cent drop this year in the current unemployment rate of 7.9 per cent were "a little bit optimistic."
"I think it's necessary to have some economic stimulation." Keys said.
UNEMPLOYMENT ideally should be at 4.5 per cent,Keys said.Economists generally consider that figure to be "full" and therefore an effective force is operating at maximum capacity.
She praised Carter's proposed $3.14 million simulation package, now considered "competitive."
"I think there will be some tattering of the legislation, but it will probably pass pretty quickly," he said.
CKY Hunted Adults
ROCKY
RO
Keys disregarded with Carter's plan to give rebates to most taxpayers. I think the plan would be better.
Wan O'Driscoll G
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Keys also spoke on the doctor shortage in western Kansas. The American Medical Association (AMA) is mostly to blame for the shortage, she said.
The AMA's monopolistic control of medical school enrollment has dampened efforts to bring more doctors to western Kansas and other rural areas, she said.
going to provide that much economic stimulus," she said.
Kristoferison
"A STAR IS BORN"
Eve. 715, 745, 945,
Sat. Sun. 1:18
Hillcrost
PREDICTING THAT Congress would cooperate in writing Carter's plans into law, Keys said Carter "has already shown his good faith in reorganizing the board" on the board.
Varsity
THEATER ... Logan Square 91-37-2042
Keys suggested that the AMA to lift its medical school enrollment limitations and that more scholarship aid be given to medical school interns, with a stipulation that they practice in small Kansas towns for two or three years after they graduate.
Keys also praised Carter's government reorganization plans. The President should have as much power as possible to consolidate government agencies, she said.
"This would give our tax system simplicity and equity." Keys said. "It would bring a return of confidence in the system. It also provides solutions for everyone making under $24,000."
RATHER THAN adopt the rebate plan, she said. Congress should concentrate on the rest of Carter's program, especially his security recipients and industrial investors.
the sentinel
Eve. 7:35, 9:25
Sat. Sun. 1:50 R
But Keys said she favored Carter's plan to change the $750 federal income-tax plan, which is now under review.
Hillcrest E
THE CATALOGUES ARE HERE!
Enrollment for the FREE UNIVERSITY will be this WED.-THURS.-FRI.
University Daily Kansan
Pick up your list of class descriptions today in the SUA office
FreeUniversity
By LYNN KIRKMAN
Local talent try out for television movie
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence Holiday Inn is a long way from Hollywood and Vine, and its Jayhawk Room does not have a soda fountain. But it does have a pool. The same when Caro Jones was in town.
Jones, *i*, free-lance casting director, was in Lawrece last week endek to wup a two-week search for home-grown talent for an ABCTV movie, "Mary White." The film will be based on the classic essay written by William Allen White, Pulitzer Prize-winning author. He was memorial to his daughter who died in a raiding accident in 1923 at the age of 16.
"Have you had any acting experience?" she asked. "Do you see yourself as a leading character or would you prefer to be an extra? Do you ride horseback?"
"I DECIDED to make the switch," she said. "I left New York for California and I made it."
Jones was an actress and singer before she entered the business end of the entertainment industry.
"Some of them are curious, some just want to hang around, and some of them want to be friends."
Jones worked for the Theatre Guild, NBC or Paramount before becoming an independent producer.
She said she would make recommendations about casting, but Robert Raditz, producer, would have the final say. Raditz'ds role is "Where the Lies Bloom" and "Sounder."
JONES ESTIMATED that she interviewed about 1,000 people on her visit, which included stops in Wichita, Emporia, Missouri City, City Mo., before she arrived in Lawrence.
"MR. RADNITZ prefers to work with unknowns," she said. William Allen White and his wife Sallie will be played by established Hollow wood names though."
Actors for the other roles will be decided in about three weeks, she said.
PRODUCTION OF "MARY WHITE" is expected to begin about May and the film will be directed by Barbara Bressler.
Jul Taylor, whose most recent work was the feature "Tail Gunner Joe," will direct the film.
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6
Tuesday, February 15, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Kansas didn't win, but it was a good game
Students were there at 9 a.m. (four and a half hours early) to get a good seat. A quick evaluation at 1:15 p.m. revealed only two students, and they were in the nosh reserved section.
You knew this was the Kansas-Kansas State game by the crowd size (16,138), its enthusiasm and friendly ambiosity and the feeling of specialness about the whole thing. It seems unnecessary to remind all brands of fans were present. It was and there were—KU students, many wearing some sort of clothing affirming allegiance to the Jayhawks, older men in business suits and ties (for a few), younger girls, double-blank shirt-waists with matching shoes, and kids starting the day's collection of plastic cups.
The teams went through the usual warm-up-to-do, fans roared, pompon girls cheered, muscled cavorted; and it does seem as if the excelsis could get their Wildcat a bottom part.
THE K-STATE contingent was there too, sprinkled liberally around the uppermost floor of the gymnasium, sports usually taken by little boys best exploring or by philosophical fans who basically loathe crowds. NBC sports was on TV every day, and the tennis, it was going to be a good game.
The national anthem was played, and that was the last time the crowd was silent for two hours. Player introductions were a formality because had you not known who was whom, you couldn't hear the announcer tell you.
THERE WERE no dyd animals (as in red and blue birds) present, which was
Each team gathered its last minute thoughts; the press poised its collective pens and alleged objectivity; NBC aired a final commercial. An enterprising KU group outlined a sign that read "Gong the Pussies," and which had red, white and blue balloons attached to it. Evidently the idea was to float this message in the flood of online views using images that nearly remove both student and sign. Soil sports.
There was the tip-off and the Jayhawks did good rights right off—eight points to zip in our favor within the first two minutes. K-State got into the act soon enough, but KU kept everything together and twice built up a 10-point lead early on.
TIME OUTS are always stretched a little when a game is televised, so the fans got a good chance to see the pompon girls perform. It seems they too had gone all out for this traditional encounter; their routines were at least partly new and were well done. And the yell leaders built still higher and shakier pyramids.
Everything went well in the first half. K-managed to hold onto the lead, albeit a narrowing one, both teams were shooting well, and the Jayhawks' flashy style was doing its thing. But K-State's Curds Reddings also was doing his thing, but it wasn't as good. The team made two field goals in the last 50 seconds to tie the score at 43 at the half.
The Wildcat rafter-dwellers were screeching, and the KU faithful were silent. With .03 to play the exodus began. That was it.
And at halftime there was the usual; the
The atmosphere outside KU coach Ted Owen's dressing room was numb. It had been a good game, but it was hard to lose to the rivalry is so intense—but friendly.
it seems somewhat superfluous to report
Fifth Quarter
Courtney Thompson
Associate Sports Editor
THERE WAS another effort at sign display ('Beat the fertilizer out of Silo Tech'), which also was summarily removed. Then it was back to business.
contested blue broom vs. red broom event, refreshment munching for those whose stomachs weren't too knotted to do so, and probably some clandestine friendly girlfriend (Gil) and Katele friends. And the unusual -balconies and frisbees floating through.
Wings went all right for the most part during the second half, too. KU stayed ahead almost all the time, including a nine-point advantage (68-59). Clint Johnson and Ken Koenis of KU and K-Larry Dassie and Riddling of K-Late each had scoring spores.
KU had a 77-70 lead with 4:33 to play, and the fans, whose lungs and feet were being taxed severely from shouting and stomping, were glad they came.
THERE WAS a questionable foul call by the referrer, with which players and both head coaches took issue. The crowd laughed and would develop. But this isn't the kind of atmosphere present at some games—the intensity at competition is there, but the pressure is not.
Then the Jayhawks had being four troubles, the score got uncomfortably close (one point), and the lead began to waver as they moved. The ball was dropped on a palet paper spontaneously descended.
There were back-to-back plays in which neither team could inbound the ball within 30 seconds of the ball. KU's turn to inbound the ball with 33 left, Koenigs couldn't find a receiver, so he called time out. A technical foul was assessed because KU had no turn out left
that Owens was obviously glum when he came out of the training room. Players came out of there sooner than usual, too, and headed for the locker room. Heads were down, some conseling was being done, and one could hide inside the door a sound whack as they passed
K-STATE MADE the awarded free throw, to go one point ahead, then made two more free throws to win by three points. 86-83. That was their largest lead of the game.
there. but, unfortunately, sympathetic feelings don't make facts disappear.
ONE PLAYER tried, without success,
to get a drink from a malfunctioning water
cup.
It seemed natural to experience a gut reaction of sympathy for Koenigs—and most did. Almost anyone who has participated in any sport has been in the position of making a mistake that lost the game.
Being in that lonely situation can be appreciated only by those who have been
And now an official has admitted making an incorrect ruling in the whole sequence of plays during that chaotic 33 seconds that determined the outcome of the game.
A TV CREW busied themselves outside Owen's conference room. Owen faced reporters who also were subdued. It seemed to be a good time to shut up.
He was quick to defend Koenigs' mistake.
"In my 17 years of coaching, I've had no greater respect for any player than Ken. So don't label him the goat of this game. Say that he had a super effort—because he did.
If you must call someone the goat, it should
tucked under the windshield wipers urging
"removal of Owens as coach if you are a
coach"
A few other questions were asked, but with little enthusiasm, and the reporters drifted out quietly, notuttering their thanks to the staff. The crew still patterned, now with bright lights.
THE KU LOCKER room was now a quiet, lonely place. Many players had speeded up the post-game locker room to do. There wasn't much to reminisce about, and at any one time only two or three players were around.
No one was blaming anybody for the last 35 seconds—the grumbling was about the seven-point lead (77-70 at 4:33) that went kaput.
Usually by this time (about 30 minutes after the game) the field house is deserted and still, except for miscellaneous peckings of typewriters in the press area. Clean-up
people are beginning the collection of assorted remnants of fans' refreshments.
BUT SATURDAY at this time, several groups lingered. Maybe they were KU-KState friends getting together, or maybe they were all KU fans grumbling, tuming or collecting their stuff. And collectors were still seeking one last addition to their tail, swaying plastic array.
The 182nd meeting between the two schools was frustrating to most, heartbreaking to some, intensely irritating to others. But it was a good game.
Fans returning to their cars found leaflets
Regardless of the final score, there is something about a KUK-slate game that makes it worthless.
Soccer club wins opener
started, but we played well considering it was our first game."
KU's Soccer Club got through the opening game jitters and came on to defeat the Wichita Wheathawks, 3-1, Sunday in Wichita
Hammed Alt-Ameur scored the Jayhawks' first goal on an own-goal, which is a shot that is turned into the goal by the defender.
Wichita came back to the game at 1-1, but just before half, Paul Addison gave KU another goal. German Paz scored KU's last goal right after halftime.
Mullin said that Kess Veraa played an outstanding game for KU at his backlift position. He also said that the rest of the squad turned in good performances.
The soccer club will play a home match at 11 a.m. Saturday against Kansas United, which is a squid made up of former KU players. The team will be playing Kansas United advanced to the quarterfinals of the National Amateur Cup competition last year before dropping out. That game will be played on the fields at 2:30 and then meet KState in Manhattan on Sunday.
"We won going away even though we didn't score any more," coach Bernie Mullen said yesterday. "We made a lot of mistakes, and it took us a long time to get
DISCO DANCE
By Gay Services of Kansas LAWRENCE
K. U. Union — Feb. 19, 8 p.m.
Beer Sold with I.D.
No Alcoholic Beverages Brought In
$1.75
The Commission on the Status of Women and Accent the Arts present:
"Faces of the American Eve"
BALLET
A one- woman show featuring Maureen Hawley Tonight
8 p.m.
Jayhawk Room
Union
Admission Free
ELECTION RETURNS
PRESIDENT
LEEDHAM
A. LONG
N. KAHN
12
4 4 9 2
4 4 9 1
4 4 9 2
4 4 9 2
4 4 9 1
4 4 9 2
Your vote is important. Starting tomorrow the Student Body will be electing a new president and vice president. Three highly qualified groups of candidates are vying for these positions. And students will be voting for their Senators. (Last year one senate race ended in a tie and was decided by the flip of a coin.) Class officers for next year's sophomore, junior and senior classes will also be determined in this election.
Issues of the upcoming term will affect every student in some way, through Activity Fee distribution, quality of teaching, or any variety of concerns. You are no exception. You, too, will be affected. That is why your vote counts.
STUDENT ELECTIONS FEB.16-17
BALLOT
BOX
(
EVERY VOTE COUNTS
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
Tuesday, February 15, 1977
University Daily Kansan
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---
Official blew K-State call
Even amateur detectives know enough to solve a mystery you've got to begin by.
So I return you to Allen Field House last Saturday afternoon where 16,138 witnesses observed a basketball game between Bakersfield and K State. K State was declared the winner, 88-63.
The first noteworthy piece of evidence came with 35 seconds to play when KU center Ken Koenigs both ends of a one-and-one from the free throw line to tie the score, 83-43, after being fouled by K-State's Curtis Redding.
The Wildcats then used a time out to set up their inbounds play, Kansas coach Ted Owens used this opportunity to substitute guard Milt Gibson on defense for forward Donnie Von Moore to pressure K-State with a full-court press.
MIKE EVANS wasn't able to get the ball to an open man within the required five seconds and the ball was turned over to the Jayhawks. The timekeeper, however, allowed two seconds to click off the clock when a desperation pass by Evans was put into play in time. The clock then incorreally indicated 33 seconds remaining.
It became Ken Koenings' turn to inbound the ball against the Wildcats' pressure defense and he, unable to find an open man after three seconds, signaled for a time out. That was the mistake that proved to be fatal, but it needn't have been.
rule book, a false double foul occurs when fouls are committed by both teams, the second of which occurs before the clock is over. A rulebook says "After the last free throw following a false double foul, the ball shall be thrown to jump at center between any two opponents."
Koenigs' error was that KU had already used its four allotted time outs that half. Cameron's carry immediately, correctly, signaled to be charged against Kansas, Redding, who hit 12-of-12 from the line, netted the free throw putting the Wildcats in the lead by 67.
So the final 35 seconds of the game could be replayed with the score reset to read 84-8 in favor of the Wildcats. But, since this is college basketball and not pro ball, it is unlikely the 16,138 will return to their places to witness the game's just conclusion.
BEFORE GOING further, let's reassemble the time span of all this activity. Although the clock indicated two seconds had elapsed, the ball was officially dead from the moment Redding fouled Koenigs as it was never successfully inbounded by either team. Therefore, no time was to have elapsed throughout the incidents.
Following Redding's free throw, Overby awarded K-State the ball as part of normal procedures following a technical foul. This injury should have been there, and there should have been a bump ball.
According to Bernie Saggau, Big Eight
when we had only one time out left that the next one would be the last one. If there was something said in the last time out I don't remember."
Explain Keenings' time out call, Owens said, "It's like when you're on ice and you start to skid. What aren't you supposed to do?" "Well, don't forget about the time what do you do anyway?"
"So we condition our men, who throw the ball in, to count to three and if they can't find an open man—get a time out. So Ken was conditioned to do what he did."
What really happened was a false double foul had been committed. According to the
Owens then said he planned to "make several points clear with the com-
The KU women's basketball team has the distinction of playing the first women's basketball game ever in Kansas City, Mo. His team was against Northwest Missouri State University.
Women play in Kemper tonight
"This game will enhance our program tremendously in exposure and recruiting." Washington said. "We can show the fans in the K.C. area the quality of our program and help recruit players in that area to attend KU."
Women's coach Marian Washington said she was looking forward to the game tonight because it would give Kansas City fans a chance to see her team in action.
NEXT YEAR KU will be in charge of arranging the game at Kemper, Washington said, because officials there were injured and basketball teams in the area more exposed.
Washington said that Kemper Arena officials offered NWMS the first chance to
play and requested that its opponent come from the Big Eight Conference. KU was the first team to win a national title.
Janet Cooksey, who is averaging 14.8 points per game and needs only 58 points more to take over the NWMS single season scoring record. Trish VanOos雀斯 is second in scoring and leads in rebounding with 13.5 points and 11.3 rebounds.
"I'm confident that we will make a good show of ourselves against NWMS," she said. "We should match up with them well, and we would outdoor shooters, which we must stop."
Center Adrian Mitchell remains the top scorer for KU with a 14.1 per game average. Forwards June Koleber and Sue Berens scored 13, 13 and 10 points per game respectively.
The Barkertiers are 15-8 on the season and hold a 2-4 edge over the Jayhawks this winter.
Tamara Flarup, women's sports information director, said tickets were still available for the 6 p.m. contest. The ticket price includes both the KU-NWMS game and the Kansas City Kings-Phoenix Suns professional basketball game.
NWMS is led in scoring by 5-10 forward
Fifth Quarter
Sports Editor
Gary Vice
Conference supervisor of basketball officials, he and Overby have discussed the game and have determined that Overby goofed.
Sagaua also said that in normal false double foul situations, two shots instead of one would have been awarded the second team (K-State) shooting free throws. Otherwise, it could be advantageous to a team without the ball to seek a false double foul, lose one point, and have an opportunity to win the iumba ball.
"WITH MY interpretation of the rule books," Saggaan said this morning in a telephone interview, "there should have been one free throw and then a jump ball."
"The reason Kansas State should have shot only one free throw," Sagau said, "was because it wasn't to KU's advantage to commit the second foul as they had the ball."
The ignoble honor of that second foul belongs to Koenig, who said, "I am as sorry as I can be that it happened. I should have waited the time out; it was my responsibility."
OWENS SAID the team was told they had no time outs remaining and Saggua said Overby contends he told Koenigs when he banded him the ball.
Koenigs said, "I knew earlier in the game
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missioner's officials' so a similar wrong call won't happen again.
According to Saggaun, KU's opportunity to have the mistake rectified is over.
the only recourse they had was right at the game to ask for an audience with the referee at the table, "Saggaau said. 'They missed it and it's gone by.'"
13:00-8:59 7:59-8:39
San Francisco (14)
California (19)
Utica (14)
Auburn (16)
Washington and Vegan
Water Forrest (17)
Wake Forest (18)
Marquette (19)
Arkansas (20)
Missouri (21)
Alabama (22)
Tennessee (23)
N. Carolina (24)
Texas (25)
Detroit (26)
Providence (27)
Arthona (28)
VMI (29)
St. Louis (30)
All of which afforded Koenigs only a hollow chuckle when he said, "I guess the really messed up about as much as I did."
AP's Top Twenty
**The Association of Teachers**
The Top Twenty businesses awarded Press college based paper with first place votes in parenthesis. Paper is published by The Association of Teachers.
By The Associated Press
Accent the ARTS
STRONG CONCERTS Daily recitals in the Lobby of Strong Hall 12:00 noon
TUESDAY, FEB. 15, 12:00 NOON
Robin Maas, soprano
Keith Lynch, piano
and
University of Kansas Horn Ensemble
Works by Hassler, Lo Presti, Mayer
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 16, 12:00 NOON
Marilyn Michael, mezzo-soprano Fred Ioner, piano Recitals performed by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts
All events are free.
For information call SUA - 864-3477
A Pas de Deux of the Spirit
as de Deux
f the Spirit
For two years, Galina and Valery Panov did not dance. They were like birds whose wings were made of feathers, artists whose talents belong to the world, were not allowed to dance because they asked to dance.
But today they are alive again in their art, for they are free-free to dance and to live as they
Harassed, abused and tormented, they languished.
The same spirit that helps Soviet Jews to flee oppression must help them to live in free dom in Israel.
WE ARE ONE
But what of those still to come? What will they find? Will there be homes and educational facilities on our larger language training for them?
choose. Their struggle symbolizes the struggle of all those Jews who still languish in the Soviet Union under oppression.
Information Table 2, Union
Give To The United Jewish Appeal Campus Campaign
Feb. 14-18, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
or send your contribution to
Kansas Union Box 4 Lawrence, Kansas 66045
FRESHMEN &
COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRANSFER STUDENTS
The 28th Annual Counselor-Student Conference
will be held on Wednesday, February 16 in the Kansas Union
Each year the Office of Admissions and Records sponsors a Conference which brings to the campus high school principals and counselors and community college personnel for a program of academic and student affairs presentations. Students who are freshmen or with their former students who are freshmen or community college transfers.
Students attending the afternoon meetings will be excused from attendance in any classes between 2:00 and 3:00 p.m. on the 16th. The following high schools and community colleges will be attending the Conference and have indicated an interest in visiting with their former students in the Kansas Union.
The Office of Admissions and Records invites interested students to take part in this year's Conference. It will be an excellent opportunity to discuss your preparation for K.U., how well you have met the academic challenge of the academic programs, and your concerns for the future here. Your participation also helps the University build a stronger relationship with your former school, and provides information about making your K.U. experience a more meaningful one for you.
KANSAS HIGH SCHOOLS
Abbiele
Ashland
Atchison
Atwood
Augusta
Baldwin
Beloit
Bayway Miege
Blue Valley, Stanley
Bonner Springs
Burlingame
High, Wichita
Chanute
Chaparrel, Anthony
Carronen
Clay Center
Colby
Goldwater
Conway Springs
Decatur Community, Oberlin
Desoto
Dodge City
El Dorado
Elkhart
Emporia
Erie Thayer-St. Paul
Eudora
Euroka
Eureka Field, Langdon
Field Kindley, Coffeyville
Gardner
Glasso
Goddard
Goodland
Great Bend
Greensburg
Lamaron, K.C., Ks.
Haighawa
Highland Park, Topeka
K-City
Hutchinson
immaculata, Leavenworth
Independence
Iola
Jayhawk Linn, Mound City
Jewell
Junction City
Kapau/N.M., Carmel, Wichita
Kimberly
Lanning
Larned
Lawrence
Leavenworth
Liberal
Lincoln
Louisburg
Lucas
Luray
Lyndon
Lyons
Mission Pearson
Marion
Meade
Miltonvale
Mission Valley, Eskridge
Mulvane
Nookeshaw
Newton
Oakley
Oathew
Osage City
Osawatomie
Odartwa
Paola
Plymouth-Leucompton
Pittsburgh
Plainville
Powhatan
Protection
Rilley
Russell
St. Francis, St. Francis
St. John's, Beloit
St. Joseph, Shawnee
St. Mary's, Mary's
St. Averi, Manhattan
Sabetha
Sacred Heart, Tampa
Salina Central
Salina South
Schagliere, Ks.
Warranton, Topeka
Siliver Lake
Shawnee Mission East
Shawnee Mission North
Shawnee Mission Northwest
Shawnee Mission South
Shawnee Mission West
Tonganoxie
Topeka High
Topeka West
Troy
Troyl
Wakeau Heights, Blue Rapids
Wabaunaeuse, Ks.
Wamego
Washington, Rural, Topeka
Washington, K.C., Ks.
Wafenha
Wellington
Wavilleville
Wichita East
Wichita Height
Wichita North
Wichita South
Wichita Southeast
Wichita West
Wyandotte
MISSOURI HIGH SCHOOLS
Central, K.C., Mo.
Fort Osage, Independence, Mo.
Oak Park, K.C., Mo.
COMMUNITY COLLEGES
Park Hill, K.C., Mo.
Paseo, K.C., Mo.
Raytown South, Raytown, Mo.
Van Horn, Independence, Mo.
Barton County
Cloud County
Charlieville
Colby
Cowley County
Fold City
Gold School
Garden City
Haskell
Hutchinson
Independence
Johnson County
Kansas City Kansas
Neoho county
Prairie
Seward
This is your opportunity to feedback information about experiences at KU to your former high school and community college.
2-3 p.m. Wednesday,
Feb. 16, Kansas Union
in case you have any questions concerning the conference, please contact the Office of Admissions and Records, 128 Strong Hall, phone 844-3911.
8
Tuesday, February 15, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Debate . . .
From page one
enrollment might decline to between 21,860 and 22,400 by 1983 and to between 19,300 and 20,000 by 1987. This isn't a significant amount to hurt student services; he said. Grey advice for them would drop because there would be fewer persons paying activity fees, but she promised to spend money for currently-enrolled students.
Mkernan stood by his conviction that predicted enrollment drops is a major concern.
"I think it's a essential that we plan for the future," he said.
After five minutes of individual opening remarks, the two panelists, Karyn CampYN
bell, professor of speech and drama, asked the candidates nine questions.
After five minutes of individual opening remarks, the two panelists, Karyll Campbell, professor of speech and drama, and Diane L. Shapiro, associate professor and drama, asked the candidates nine questions. The questions covered areas from the candidates' commitments to minority affairs to their financial support of women in sports as women's athletics and the Kansas.
All three candidates agreed they would continue the Senate commitment to a minority affairs resource center while not encroaching on the affairs of other minority organizations the Senate finances. They agreed that more minorities needed to be
On Campus
recruited into these organizations, but Leben said the Senate shouldn't be responsible for recruiting minorities to the University.
MIDWEST AMERICA
McKernan said, "It seems too many times that people place the emphasis all on money. We need to keep up communications with organizations and help them find their
TODAY: MARTIN KARPLUS, Harvard University chemist, will lecture on "Theoretical Studies of Chemical Reactions" at 1:30 p.m. in 124 Mallott Hall, CHARLES KREGEL, readers' service documents librarian at the School of Law library, will speak on the uniqueness of the law library at 2:30 p.m. in Room B-28 Watson Library. THE COLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 p.m. in the Kansas Union's Woodruff Auditorium.
TONIGHT: THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 6:30 in Danforth Chapel. THE DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICS will sponsor a colloquium on "Language Boundaries and Intelligibility" at 7:30 in 207 Blake Hall. The PRE-NURSING CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Kansas Union's International Room. The SUA PLAY, "Faces of the American Eve," featuring Maureen Hawley, will be presented at 8 in the Union's Forum Room.
TOMORROW: STUDENT SENATE ELECTION voting runs from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the campus information booth. A PRINCIPAL AND COUNSELOR FRESHMAN DAY, sponsored by the Office of Admissions and Records, will be held on Monday, August 16th from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. with "Nigra sum sed Formia": A Medieval Presence in the Modern University"; at 4 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. PHI CHI THETA and ACCOUNTING CLUB will sponsor an accountation panel at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Council Room. HILLEL SOCIETY will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Kansas Room. The department of English will sponsor an EASTMAN KODAK FORUM at 8 p.m. in the Union's Rock Room. THE UNDERGRADUATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will present papers by students Paul Draper and Max Fristler at 8 p.m. at 1027 Mississippi, Aprt. 9.
The candidates were asked by the panelists why the forensics program was cut from Senate funding and about the policy for similar academic recipients.
Applications for the SUA OFFICER AND BOARD SELECTIONS are due March in the SUA office. An informal information meeting for anyone interested will be held at 13:15 p.m., February 21, Parlor A at the Union. Applications are available in the SUA office.
Announcements
Applications for Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, the senior honorary society, are available at the KU Alumni Association office in the Union. Deadline
Events
All agreed that the forensics program was cut because it was a service to only a small number of students and was an academic program in which classroom credit could be obtained. The administration also had to ensure that the teachers they said, which kept the program going.
Friday's Kansas incorrectly stated that both of last week's murders involved male, middle-aged female victims and young, male suspects. The suspect in
What keeps the Kansan and women's athletics from the same fate are their widespread services to students, the candidates said.
SUA MOVIES
Foreign Director's
Film Week-Feb. 14-19
SPECIAL FILM
The battle begins, but you soon realize you have grossly overestimated your abilities. You take a pasting and limp home with your shattered crew.
Your orders are printed in glowing letters on a shining computer terminal and you are ordered to destroy a number of enemy warships.
SPECIAL FILM
ZERO FOR CONDUCT (1923)
With Louis Leefebre, Gibralbion Pluchon
(French/subtiltes)
LATALANTE (1934)
With Michel Simon, Dita Parlo
(French/subtiltes)
1074 x 1200 m. 75c
Games build computer confidence
this was a computer game. They range from simple to sophisticated and their purpose isn't entertainment but training and familiarizing new users with the large Honeywell 6600 at the University of Kansas Computation Center.
"THESE PROGRAMS are not meant to be games." Dave Lordand, assistant director of programming services, said last week that the company offers an expensive fun on departmental accounts."
SPECIAL FILM
Correction
Staff Reporter
Films of Alexander Dovzhenko
Alexander Dovzhenko
ARSENAL (1929)
ABSENAL IVER (1929)
ABSENAL IVER, P. Iudkovin
Nikolai Nishkovsky, Jose
Capablanca
Nordlund said the computer handled about 12,000 student hours of computer time a year. Student enrolled in one class must be considered one hour of computer time.
CLASSICAL FILM
Students must get an account number
THE WAR OF THE BUTTONS
(1840)
One set of programs is useful for figuring out interest rates on savings accounts, loans and depreciation on property a person owns. This is appropriately called Executive Wear-Teen.
If you're feeling uninspired, but have to write a short story for an assignment, the prompt is to use plain text.
Dir. Yves Robert, with Martin
Lartique. Winner of the Le Trix
Prize. Joan Vigo (1962)
(French/subtitles)
30, 75
*EARTH SCIENTISTS invent tiny mechanical devices which understand us all to well and are not radioactive and can be burned of peasants with torches, one story goes.
FILM SOCIETY
By LEROY JOHNSTON
FELLIEN SATYRICION (1970)
Dir. Federico Fellini, with Martin
Bernardo Miram Keler (Italian/
subtitles),
Fri., Feb. 18 & Sat., Feb. 19
Among the programs available are three-dimensional tact-tac-tie, maze problems, lunar lander and the game of life, in which a human is denoted as a star in space.
Another game, called King, was designed as a simulation game for business students. In this game, the player receives a certain amount of money from a small tropical island. He's the king, and he
THE MILKY WAY (1968)
Dir. Luis Bunuel (Fr.-Sp.)
Thurs., Feb. 17, 7:30; 9:30 $1
POPULAR FILMS
through the department their class is in to be eligible to use the system, he said.
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
Nordland said the programs were meant to confidence-builders that help students (and staff) cope with change.
Japan
Night
has to decide how to budget money in order to save the country and its economy.
Sunday, Feb. 20
:00 p.m. Banquet 6:00 p.m. Cultural Show Kansas Union Cafeteria Woodruff Auditorium Tickets: $4.50 at S.U.A. office JAPANESE ASSOCIATION Sponsored by K.U. International Club
"Over one-third of the population has died since you were elected. The people (remaining) hate your guts. You have been unassassinated."
A typical result:
AFTER THE GAME, the computer will tell how much time it took to play and the cost.
Nordlund said that if someone was willing to go through the red tape involved, he could get on the computer and pay for his time in cash. At the high rates, however, computer use likely will remain restricted to University accounts.
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Mini tornadoes spin on campus
By LEROY JOHNSTON
Staff Reporter
Tornado season is still a few months away, but research into these mysterious, unusual events is ongoing.
The University of Kansas has been involved in tornado research since 1973 under the direction of Vincent Muirhead, professor of aerospace engineering.
Working through a NASA grant, Murhead and two aerospace students, Trevor Sorensen, Mauldin, S.C., graduate students from the University of sophomore, have created miniature torndocks by spinning cage up to 1,200 r.p.m. A suction device draws up air inside the vortex to simulate tornado action more realistically. The team's bovairant in air, make the airflow visible.
IN 1975, Muirhead helped write a book about tornadoes and building damage, which presented evidence that, contrary to previous belief, the southwest corner of a building wasn't the safest place to be during a storm. Instead, the northwest and central areas were shown to offer the best protection.
Joe Eagleman, professor of geography, and Nicholas Willems, professor of civil engineering, worked with Muirhead doing tornado research. They used destruction
model testing and pressure mapping processes. Models of houses and other structures made of balsa wood were subjected to winds up to 300 miles an hour in a wind tunnel. What remained was carefully studied.
THREE HUNDRED m.p.h. winds are considered the upper limit for a tornado compared with a 100 m.p.h. limit in a hurricane. Besides high winds, a tornado's suction effect can cause damage by exploding buildings.
Kansas is in the heart of tornado country. The Rocky Mountains to the west, the Gulf of Mexico to the south and arid deserts to the southwest channel cold polar air from the north into warm moist air coming from the gulf. The meeting of these two air streams is strong frontal activity, triggering intense thunderstorms and rapid air lifting.
A MAP in Murhur's office clearly shows that all reported U.S. tornadoes move from southwest to northeast. It also informs residents of sage sightings west of the Rocky Mountains.
A breakdown of tornado sightings by decade shows that the number of tornadoes has remained constant over the years, but that the amount of death and destruction has increased because of increased population density and urban expansion.
The most notorious tornado in Kansas history hit Toppea June 8, 1966, destroying more than 8,000 homes and killing 17 people. The massive funnel cloud created a 12-mile path of destruction that started at Gage Blvd. and ended at the Capitol building. In the process, the Washburn University campus was nearly wiped out.
MURHEAD'S RESEARCH has shed some light on tornado phenomena. His findings have confirmed that the core of tornadoes moves upward, and experiments with simultaneous vortices have shown that a stronger vortex will often absorb a weaker
It is hoped that basic research such as this will finally lead to methods to dissipate, control or predict tornado activity. One possibility is that we were dealing a bomb into a torrone core.
If a tornado should appear, what are your chances?
SAID PIRNAZAR, resident director of McCollum Hall, said that if a tornado were sighted, a notice would be broadcast over the intercoms in every room advising people to leave their windows shut. sail door or glass up on the wall hall. If a person could not get to the basement, he should lie down on the floor in the hall, he said.
Woman's band strong on vocals
Bv JULIE RORINSON
Staff Reporter
All-woman bands are a rarity in Lawrence, but the Lawrence Women's Music Collective hopes that's not the reason for its growing popularity.
The band staried last summer when four women decided it would be fun to “jam a little every Wednesday night.” The group played on the floor, playing at benefits and small local clubs
The nine women play violins, pianos, guitars - electric and bass - flutes, mandolins, saxophones, drums and conga's that their strong point is their vocals, according to Lynn Bretz, Lawrence graduate student and a member of the collective.
THE GROUP! plays a variety of music, including folk, rock, blues, country and gospel.
Some of the group's material is original, but much of it is from popular artists.
Susan Davis, 1205 Mississippi St. said,
"We do some Joni Mitchell, James Taylor,
Phoebe Snow, even Bach, although we
haven't done that in awhile."
Kathy Buehler, 1138 New York St., has been in rock groups since 1971 and the group plays some of her material. Other songs were written specifically for the band, such as Fischer's "Lavender Jane On If Wheels" a song about women truckers
BUEHLER, WHO was in male bands
and his band has both advantages and drawbacks.
"It's delightful not to have to deal with the workings of working with all-male bands," she said.
Bretz added, "We don't force each other to wear hot pants."
Buehler and Bretz agree that one drawback of the band is that people contend
Bretz said, "We're out to play well, and be a good, solid band, not to create an image."
Group members say they've glad the band has a following of both men and women and think Lawrence is a good environment to start in.
"There are lots of groups here, and we have lots of friends who support us," Bretz said. "The people at Off the Wall Hall have been very helpful."
The group has had to rely on musician friends for amplifiers and microphones. Members own all their instruments but they also want to invest in a public address system yet.
MarienLY, Lawrence graduate student, said, "We had a benefit concert last Thursday to startraising money for our p.a. system. That will be our first expense, since we have already paid for the concert and said they always practice in the home of Deb Holmes, Lawrence graduate student.
THE GROUP usually practices seven hours a week, a difficult habit because most of them have jobs or are students and two others do not. Dr. Karlinn and Sarah Lepelt, live in Topeka.
But the endear has been worth it, the group agrees.
"It's refreshing because it's usually hard to find people you are compatible with musically," Julie Deisler, Houston freshman, said.
Most importantly, according to Bretz, that all the members have grown musically and are comfortable performing.
Davis said. "We've learned new things about our audience, how to improve our communication," he said.
THE WOMEN staged a rap session this week to determine their goals.
"We all have different musical needs and different personal goals, so it's hard to figure out where we go from here," Davis said.
But Bueller said some immediate goals were to be financially independent, to improve musically, to make more money and to start traveling more.
Feb. 18 and 19 the group will perform at Fookhill, Etc., 4/6. E 31 St. in Kansas
They hope to have a concert in Lawrence late in March. Their last concert, at Off the Wall Hall Feb. 3, turned into a "rock out" people dancing all night, the group said.
THE GROUP ISN'T really suited for the club market, according to Buehler. She said the group would prefer doing small conerts.
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS
TOM BYERS
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CINDY SUGGS
Treasurer
MELANIE SMITH
Secretary
BRAD YOST
Vice-President
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Muirhead said it was impossible to predict what effect a tornado would have on a residence hall because there were too many variables involved. He said the flat roofs on the halls were a disadvantage because they often easier than steeply peaked roofs.
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University Daily Kansan
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For as each passing day becomes a little warmer, the atmosphere is carefully setting up for a climactic showdown.
PILOT, NAVIGATOR & SCIENCE/ENGINEERING.
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If a tornado should approach, it's still good advice to move at right angles to the path. A person in a car might be able to walk up a hill without hitting someone known to pick up and relocate cars. Torndares are predictable to an extent and a close watch on the weather is still good advice.
If Wilson doesn't have a pipe, he can make one to specifications, although the pipe must be of a certain type.
year, he says, most of which are machine-made and of standard shapes and sizes. He says he can make more profit on machine-made pipes than machine-made pipes because no two are alike.
Pipes ...
"We're just trying to enjoy old age," he says.
Wilson walks over to an old television housing several goldfish in its clear picture window.
from page one
"If you dream of something, I can probably come up with it." he says.
He says he has tried to reach a balance in sales between low- and high-cost items.
sales between now. and nigh-cost terms.
"That what's killed most of the shops," he says. "You've got to move a lot of merchandise if it's a low-dollar deal."
Although the pipe business' success is dependent on the tobacco industry, Wilson
"I don't claim to make a lot of money, but I probably have had more fun than anybody in the business." Wilson says, laughing heartily. He adds that the pipe shop, run by him and his wife, Lorraine, is "one of the few ma and pa operations around."
says he isn't in business just to make a buck.
KU bands have openings
"There's no successful man who doesn't have some place to play." Wilson says. "I have a reputation of being the oldest hippe in the most relaxed businessman in Lawrence."
Students who enjoy playing in bands but
may not play at the university's opportunity to
play three universities of music.
Those interested should call Thomas Stidham, assistant professor of ensembles.
The varsity band has openings for the
same instruments, as well as openings for clarinet, tuba and double reeds.
The concert band meets at 2:30 p.m.
Monday, Wednesday and Friday. It has concerts on and off campus and a tour March 2 and 3.
It meets at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday and
Thursday, and has concerts on off-campus.
The concert band has openings for string bass, double bass, harp and percussion musicians. The number of openings depends on the quality of the applicants, according to Robert Foster, director of band ensembles.
Those interested should call David Boadhouse, associate professor of performance studies.
A jazz ensemble is forming with openings in all instruments. The class will meet at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Those attending must be at the bandroom either day this week.
The classes for the three bands will be closing this week, according to Foster, All Music and CBS.
Wilson says he also enjoys the company of the wooden Indian standing guard outside the shop. It's equipped with an intercom system. Wilson to play music or to talk pass-by-
"Sometimes teachers from KU bring those little kids up here and they have them all hanging on ropes," Wilson recalls, barely spitting it out between chuckles. "I started talking to a little kid on the end, and then he came home when that Indian started to talk."
On slow days when Wilson can't find anyone to talk to, Chindy, his singing dog,
"Hell, on command she'll do as good or better than those singing dogs on Johnny Carson." Wilson says, taking a long draw on his hands and looking at home in the corner of his mouth.
--last record sale of the season!
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UNIVERSITY THEATRE—MURPHY HALL
Feb. 18, 19, 24, 25 at 8:00 p.m. Feb. 20 at 2:30 p.m.
Ticket Reservations: 864-3982
KU students admitted without charge upon receipt of
current Certificate of Registration.
This program is partially tuned by the Student Activity ree.
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Record Record Sale
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10
Tuesday, February 15, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Geology team back from Antarctic
BY ROBERT MACKE' Staff Reporter
A four-member team returned to the University of Kansas last Friday sporting suntats. They had spent the last two-and-half hours on a field sponsored mineral resources survey.
The team, led by Edward Zeller, professor of geology, faced tides of the harsh winter conditions in the United States on its return. They responded by noting the existence of a new tectonicoria Land region of Antarctica, where their work centered -40 degrees Farenheit. Even though it's winter here, it's summer there-ideal conditions for conducting the survey, funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) with the help of the U.S.
THE NSF SURVEY, the first of several to be conducted by Zeller annually, sprang from a multinational treaty signed after the end of the Cold War (IGY) exploration disclosed the possibility of rich mineral deposits locked beneath the frozen Antarctic landscape. The treaty provides for peaceful exploration and careful management of these particularly granium, found in Antarctica.
The Antarctic treaty initially was signed by 12 nations, and five or six others have joined, Franz Tessensohn, West German geologist and team member, said. Tessensohn and the two other team members were part of an informal gathering of about a dozen friends and associates of Zeller at his home recently.
Tesseraehn said he was sent along as part of the team because West Germany was a world leader.
"IT WAS A good chance to go there and what it looked like." he said.
Tessennohn and Zeller's other guests viewed dozens of slides and several small reels of Super-8 movie film that represented the first month of the survey.
The remaining film is being processed and shipped to KU along with more than 400 additional films.
The rocks were gathered from the Royal Society Mountain Range in Victoria Land. The team covered an area about 124 miles long by 50 miles wide. The mountains averaged 17,000 feet. For the field work, the team took a few days at a time, sleeping in tents.
Zeller said aerial detection techniques yielded successful results. Nearly 100 feet above sheer 3,000-foot cliffs scattered among the ridges, the radiation detector worked well from a C-130 Hercules cargo plane and Navi helicopters.
SOME OF THE HELIopter piloting was done by Kent Criss, Burlington senior. A helicopter pilot is a specialist in aeronautics.
troductory class from Zeller and spoke with him often outside of class. When Zeller discovered that Crisler had flown to Vietnam, he was asked to join the team.
The fourth team member, Gisela Dreschhoff, research associate in geology, said she was the geophysician on the team, and had another reason for going to Antarctica.
Antarctica plays a key role in a proposal she, Zeller and another geologist wrote. The proposal was to seal nuclear waste in glass containers and place them on the polar ice. The heat generated within the containers would melt the ice, which would seal itself as the containers slowly sank. The resulting capsules of ice-covered water would provide a source of heat for the environment. The discovery of large pools of liquid water where the ice and rock met forced the scientists' attention to the ice-free mountains as a burial site.
"WE CERTAINLY visited some of the areas we were interested in. Earlier said,
The major interest of the survey team—mapping large, potentially commercial, uranium deposits—went well, Zeller said. Some uranium minerals were found, but the deposit's size is unknown. Evidence for the presence of uranium included the discovery of petrified trees and rock formations—mainly the volcanic rocks—that are almost identical to the types of materials found in the commercial uranium mines of Africa and India.
Although desalate for the most part, the frigid continent of Antarctica supports some life. The waters beneath the ice support krill, a shrimplike creature that is being investigated with an eye on possible harvest. The team's diet consisted, in part, of sea urchins and krill forming the main food source for whales, penguins and some seals that inhabit the coastal regions. Zeller seems to have a knack for finding mummified seals.
WHEN HE WAS in Antarctica 15 years ago with the IGY, Zeller found a group of five seals, estimated to be 500 years old. One of them was sent to the KU Museum of Natural History in Dyche Hall for study. The other three were seals in inland parts of the continent. He said some scientists thought the seals, mostly males, somehow became disoriented and ventured inland looking for food. Because there isn't any food source there the seals eventually die. The scientists think the seals might suffer from a similar affliction. In addition, the seal beach themselves, which nearly always causes their death, according to Zeller.
BESIDES THE penguins, skuas, that are large, voracious predatory birds, abound near the coast. Skuas feed on penguin chicks, but Dreschhoff said they occasionally followed the team looking for a handout. They succeeded once, she said, when she left the team's food sitting out, unaware of their presence.
"WE GOT A good deal more accomplishment than we expected," he said. "We were proud of the work."
Crisler and Dreschhoeff said that they were awed by the vast area and strange beauty of Antarctica. Distance seemed to lose meaning when there were no familiar objects to judge against. Crisler said he and Tessmann decided to walk to what they knew was beyond hill one day after he and shalf-heft they were picked up by the helicopter, seemingly having covered little ground. Crisler said that after alighting from the transport plane, he was aided by the feeling that he had walked where no one else had been.
Zeller said the team, increased by two, would return next year to extend the study area and to supplement data on the area already studied.
ONE PIECE of equipment that wasn't provided was the radiation detector, a 112 cubic inch crystal contained in an insulated glass enclosure. Flashes when struck by gamma radiation.
The only plant life in Antarctica, Zeller said, is a small algae-like plant. Then there's the "forest." Navy helicopter plants planted a single, four-foot plastic tree, asistant on showing all visitors to McMurdo Station, a small research and naval base.
The container generally was carried aboard the helicopter, which flew at an altitude of about 100 feet. If an unusually high reading, an anomaly, was detected the helicopter was landed and a ground survey was made. This not only saved time—helicopter flight costs were measured in thousands of dollars, Zeller said but it also reduced the risk of accidental field studies. Zeller carried the cylindrical container—about two feet long and six inches in diameter—on a backpack with the recording device suspended from his chest.
McMurdo formed the focal point for several international researchers. Zeller said scientific teams from New Zealand, the newest land mass, Russia, Germany, Sweden, Italy, Japan, Pakistan and Australia, made up 150 of the residents of the base. Support personnel, 750 in all, make up the rest of the population. They are from Australia, New Zealand, a contractor who provides the tents, red parkas and food used by the scientists.
Zeller said the team returned Thursday but they were too tired from the trip on the uncomfortable transport plane to do anything but sleep Thursday night. Already the requests for showings of the slides have come in and Zeller said that as soon as all of the slides were collected and sorted, he would show them to the public.
GEOLOGICAL POINTS of interest in the exposed rocks are unmistakably etched, from the light-colored marbles to the basalt layers. Even the least learned of the guests could distinguish these features as Zeller pointed them out in the slides he showed.
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LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
Student Senate
Elect
Mark Bolton Mark Hughes Jim Ruane
Corliss Chandler Ken Idlemon Jake
Sharon Anderson Steve McMurry Thompson
John Esau Andy Ramirez Jim Willis
Lisa Friday Dave Ramirez
AVANTI
MOVE FORWARD WITH AVANTI · VOTE FEBRUARY 16 & 17
PAID FOR BY AVANTI
ZELLER the work progressed faster than SAID he had expected because the temperatures were mild, around 10 degrees most of the time. One night, the temperature dropped to zero, and the coldest day was 13 below at the South Pole.
The wind was relatively calm while the team was there, Zeller said. The wind averaged between 35 and 60 miles an hour and sometimes was stronger. The rocks from the ice bear evidence of wind—some fiercely sculpted, some polished mirror-smooth.
Although the cold was fairly comfortable, Zeller said, it produced some bizarre effects. During sleep periods, the sun never really sets in the Antarctic summer—condensation from the breath of the sleepers caused ice crystals to form on the ceiling, and eventually, from their own weight, the crystals drop—directly on the sleeper.
LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
Student Senate
Elect
Mark Bolton Mark Hughes Jim Ruane
Corliss Chandler Ken Idlemon Jake
Sharon Anderson Steve McMurry Thompson
John Esau Andy Ramirez Jim Willis
Lisa Friday Dave Ramirez
RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
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Expanding Lawrence Memorial Hospital has a part-time opening for a registered or registry-eligible X-ray technologist. Hours are 3:30-midnight, Saturday and Sunday. Please contact the Personnel Office, 843-368O, ext.391.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Scholarship hall deadline extended 2 more weeks
Anyone who misses today's deadline for turning in scholarship hall applications will be notified.
The deadline has been extended to March 1, Bob Rosellez, assistant dean of men and women, said.
To choose from the many applicants, eight teams of two students and a staff
The deadline was extended, Rozzell said, so the dean of men's and women's offices can have a larger pool of applicants to choose from.
So far, about 700 have applied for the approximately 160 positions open next year.
Rozelle said that the deadline also was extended to March 1 last year, and that this date possibly will become the permanent application deadline.
"Some people see the word 'scholarship' and they prematurely disquely themself."
One of the most important qualities that a scholarship hall member should have, Rozelle is and is the financial life with other women to live with. Because it was considered but not a prerequisite, he said.
member read the applications, then rate the applicants according to test scores, grade point average and other factors. For those whose acceptance will be notified April 1.
Anyone wishing to pick up an application can stop by or call the dean of men's or the dean of women's offices. They also can call a toll free number, 1-800-532-6772, and an application will be sent to them, Rozelle phone.
Inventory Reduction SALE Save up to 50%
- Rings • Bracelets • Necklaces • Buckles • Watchbands
Entire Stock Not Included
Quality Craftsmanship from the Indians of the Southwest
Pat Read Indian Trader
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Accent the ARTS
12:00—The University of Kansas Horn Ensemble
Works by Hassler, Lo Proisti, Mayer
Robin Maas, soprano; Keith Lynch, piano.
Strona Hall Labby
TODAY'S EVENTS
7.30—Opening of the Colette Baugert Exhibition
United Gallery
8:00—"Faces of the American Eve"
A one-woman show featuring Maureen Hawley
Joshua Room, Union Bldg.
8:00—Lori Malin, soprano; Cathy Cokoon, clarinet
Student Recital Series
Swarthout Auditorium, Murphy Hall
All events free
For information call SUA offices - 864-3477
Advanced Building Studies Graduate Multidisciplinary Programs
407-415-425-435
DesignRecycleCenter/District RSavvakar
PURPOSE=The program provides advanced training in planning, design, construction and operation of the built environment, by considering the interrelated esthetic, technological, financial and managerial aspects of building problems, embedded in a systems approach. The program integrates methods, knowledge and techniques which address problems of building environments, having traditionally fragmented approaches to design of the built environment.
The program is designed to prepare future leaders in the building industry for opportunities of advanced practices which emerge in large architectural and engineering firms, construction firms, real property development and management organizations which concern themselves with building related products, and various local, state and national government agencies concerned with regulation or management of the built environment.
TOPICS OF STUDY
Computer-Aided Design
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Disaster Mitigation
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Real Estate Economics and Management Solar Utilization in Building Structural Systems in Design Systems Integration
DEGREES
Master of Architecture in Advanced Building Studies
Master of Science in Civil Engineering (Advanced Building Studies)
Master of Urban and Public Affairs in Advanced Building Studies
Doctor of Philosophy
APPLICATION — For students with first professional degrees in Architecture, Engineering and/or Management Graduates fellowships and research assistant positions.
Please request information from:
Prof. Volker Harker, Director; Advanced Building Studies / Carnegie-Mellon
University; Pittsburgh, PA 15213
College of Fine Arts Carnegie Institute of Technology School of Urban and Public Affairs
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Carnegie-Mellon University
11
neks
then rate
st scores,
r factors.
be notified
tities that a haid have, to live social need is he, he said, 'honorship'ify them-
Tuesday, February 15, 1977
ly
airs
ty
Rural gain made at Med Center
KANAS CITY, Kan.—More applicants from nonmetropolitan areas in Kansas have been accepted this year to the KU Medical Center because of an increased number of patients needured rural applicants, Dwight Mufford, died admissions at the Med Center, said Sunday.
In the class of medical students that begins this July, 58 per cent of the apprehended Kansas were accepted and 57 per cent of nonmetropolitan areas in eastern Kansas
By BARRY MASSEY Staff Reporter
MULFORD SAID the effects of that increase on the shortage of physicians in rural areas.
FROM 1960 to 1968, 146 students from western Kansas graduated from the Med Center, Mulford said, and only 15 returned to western Kansas to practice.
Although some persons think a correlation exists between a physician's hometown and where he ends up practicing, and the correlation hasn't been validated.
University Daily Kansan
Muffard said, "but that's not necessarily the case. He'll go where he has the best option."
This year, 71 students from western Kansas were interviewed at the Med Center and 60 students from western Kansas were interviewed from nonmetropolitan areas of eastern Kansas, 73 were accepted.
Almost half of the 146 students set up practice outside of Kansas, he said.
A total of 195 students from metropolitan areas of eastern Kanaas-Johnson, Sedgwick, Shawneu and Wyandotte counties—applied. Four students withdrew early, leaving 191 students who were interviewed. From that number, 93 students, or 49 per cent, were accepted to medical school.
FOR THE SCHOOL of Medicine in 1977, 870 students applied for admission. There were 401 Kansas applicants; 469 students from other states applied.
"Some people think that if a person comes from a rural area then he'll go back,"
applicants, letters of acceptance to the medical school were sent to 225 students. Kansas residents totaled 209 of these, and nonresidents totaled 16.
However, it is projected that the class size will shrink to 200 students by the time classes begin this July because of withdrawals by some of the accepted students.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Last year, 42 per cent of the applicants from western Kansas were accepted.
IN HOPES OF continuing this year's trend of a higher percentage of rural acceptances, Mulford said, the Med Center has increased interest in rural students in medical school.
After the completion of interviews with
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the Daily Daily Kannan are offered to students without regard to their ability to attend a school. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 11FIRST HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
were accepted, according to a medical school admissions profile.
one two three four five
time times time times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional $1.00 $1.25 $1.50 $1.75
run Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These can be placed in person or being called the URB business office at 641-8358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Give away $10 per week and $100 cash, plus
$250 in K.U. Telephone Directivity
Mellow Yellow Mollon Pack
FREE UNIVERSITY Course descriptions are available in the SUA office. Enroll Wed. 2/16.
FOR RENT
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished. close to
union, utilities paid, parking. 833-9579.
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
no pets, 843-757-601
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ATTENTION LAWRENCE AREA SCHERERS--There will be a meeting at 8 p.m. on Tuesday (6) from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Claremont (Crescent) to develop a follow-up program for the search in the Lawrence area. All searchers are required to attend the program. If you are unable to attend or need further information, call 212-745-3900, 76), Nathan Hall No. 82, 845-5139, 2-15
For rent: Two. 1-bedroom apartments. 1 block
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Gatehouse apartments - Call Beck 911 new summer.
Cabin apartments - Call Beck 911 new summer.
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Furnished apartment, close to KU. One bedroom,
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Apartment for rent to single male student of
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Nice furnished room and apartment 1 book from campus. No pets. RI-ID number study environment.
River City Hair Co. wants you! A total professional Irish hairstyle. #402-608 *Of Musselburgh*
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Salem! Make sure to review the material; come sense to use them—1) as study guide, 2) for examination, 3) For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Toft *Citizen Stats*.
UNICORNS, Mermaids, wings in flight and other imaginings in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to choose from. Stone cutting service. Reservation. 841-3883. satisfaction gift. avail. 841-3883.
Jiahawkher Tower, now living in 2-bedroom
bachelor's dorm at the University of Maryland,
before March 31, and living on our early Bird
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Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties:
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Female grad student to share furnished house near campus. Many extras. 841-635-821
2-21
FOR SALE
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
furniture supplies. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704% Mason,
Riverdale, NY 11576. (312) 892-2400.
Redeemer Lutheran Church, Missouri society invited to worship with us. We have an active youth group, Place: 30th and Haskell, St. Louis at 10:45 a.m.; more information contact: MH Fredrickson at 212-795-8561 or place: 9 a.m. Bible class and Sunday school at 10 a.m. Bible class and second second Sunday evening of the month. 2-24
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only one with a specification guarantee of ± 2 dB. Hear it at Walt Disney in Haywood, Ada. E. 8th. Prices from $175.
Advent model 300 Stere Receiver; designed to the kind of sound associated with the professional kind of performance compared directly, in every respect of the sound. It includes expensive separator channels components. Buy a new Advent model 300 Stere Receiver.
Fantastic airbnb for sale. All sizes Call or write
Airbnb, 216 West 69th St. Sh1-88,
Mission, Kuwait 60288
Cultsass Multipack 78. Excellent condition. All power. Must sell soon. Call 841-6741-6-216
Only $899—1972 Vega, 4 cyl. 842-1703. No calls
2-5 p.m.
2-15
Tobiach SL-1300 Direct Drive Turntable 8210
Aria SL-4300 Direct Drive Turntable 8210
ATax A445 add 46.96 Personal 841-6030
ATax A445 add 46.96 Personal 841-6030
Garage sale! Weve got everything, including a
doubtless set of mattresses and box springs, $35
or less. Call us at (212) 678-4000.
one pair of Bose 901 stereo speakers. Excellent condition. Com by and listen. Please call 841-378-2580.
Volkswagen Owners! Four new NEW radial tires (195/65R15) for the 2009-14 VW Passat (60-15). Add $20 per lift for mounting, $300 Mass The application on Max with the data from the Sensor. Maximum load: Woolworths (60-15) HB5H-85, 16-14 HB5H-85, discounted by $70.
Supercure famous quality cassette recorder with condenser mute! Regular $9.95 model cut to $4.00 and $7.95 for 60 minute cascade to Kanaan readers only! Ray Strikes 2-1992 Mass Open Thursday nites!
M8 Mercury Mortgage 4-door, 2022-3, fa-safe, auto.
M9 Mercury Mortgage 5-door, 2022-3, fa-safe, auto and from campus. Snowie showed. $265,000.
M1 Mercury Mortgage 4-door, 2022-3, fa-safe, auto and from campus. Snowie showed. $265,000.
191. Coaugen, AM-FM stereo, air, good radials,
snowed dyes, snowy: 843-513-4400 for 4-80
and 8-72-6500.
11. GTX - excellent condition, new tires, brakes.
12. Canon - excellent condition, new lenses.
13. Nikon - cameras 156, Framcater Cutter 96,
102, Pro 87 and Pro 94.
Porter Pillar. Fine organic sponges and lattes.
Natural vegetable sponge and beat little brittle
for topping or decoration.
New stereo-Panasonic Quadraphonic Component System never been used or opened. Call AiR.
Ear, Earl 2 Hill 600 speakers for sale; fused, excellent power capabilities. Call Rusty, 843-780-6951.
Pioneer receiver SX-272 continuum power output 18/w 18 w excellent condition, call 642-5310 - 216
Gibson SG guitar w/case / condition/
Sound Mahogany body cherry fingerboard, himi-
terial finish
Four rings with genuine ceramic坦坦s. 88,75%
Four rings with bands (from Italy). 2,18%
A priced: 841-709-700
7. G1MC v 1, T Window Van, carpet call 1-866-345-2020
8. MIDCv 1, T Window Van, carpet call 1-866-345-2020
9. Midc Mapleau MWL, Auto Air Conditioner, BP Mark
89 Mustang Mach I 351, Auto Trans, PS, Black.
Red Interior. After 40 min. Kent 686-2353. 2-18
1976 Datum BH10. 26,000 Miles, good condition.
Call Back Bailin 53948 in 1984-6.
2-18
orant stereo equipment, musical instrument or audio equipment that must be obtained at discount prices—just ask. Free consumer information is given upon request such as 842-5380 or write Consumer Brokerage Service, 842-5380 or write Consumer Brokerage Service.
One pair of E.S.P. 3-way 40 W.P.C. speakers $80.
B11 - 645-761. 2-18
1955 Honda 500 Super Sport 5,000 miles, fatiging,
keeps brake with back, and tack. With 4-Mile
428, 2-18
1972 VW faxhack. Beige, clean, dependable. 2-18.
1500, $182, 1612, Olaihe.
camera-4 month old Nikonklar PT-2 with
camera-3 month old Nikonklar FT-2 flashes,
601-813, keep warm, 2-18
601-813, keep warm, 2-18
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 18th, 841-2656
Must sell camera, Manama/Sokor 1000 DTL with
up rings hardly used, like new Catkick
DSLR with up rings
Sony TTS-3000 turntable with SME 3000 II tone
and MESA 3000 II perform not $2,980 2-222
Call 841-8353 7655
HELP WANTED
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy way. Become an Avon representative and make the money you need selling quality products on your own. Two openings in Lawrence 842-812-6821.
Waitress needed. Apply at Daqwud's. 644 Mass.
between 2 p.m.-5 p.m. 2-15
MEN-WOMEN, JOBS ON SHIPS, American,
Foreign. No experience required. Excellent
payment. Job offered or career as
$5 for information. SKAPAFF $4, E&Q. Box 2049,
Port Angeles, WASHINGTON 98382 2-15
10-5 Mon.-Sat. Till 8 on Thursday
Graduate Assistance, third-quarter time
Chemistry-aidness affairs Apply in $50 Malwai
e-mail: assistance@cis.malwai.edu
Student computer programmer available immediately. Office of Information Systems is seeking a 7% salary for a position in the development of comprehensive administration environment Opportunity to join a growing information technology environment Opportunity to join a growing information technology environment. VP, IMS, CICS, MARK IV, and iv. IT, ISP, SYS, APL, AML, APIL, 398-148 with
Weekly position available for instructors in Orchid
Botany, Botany and Arthropod Workshop Studies
Botany, and Arthropod Workshop Studies
June 6-August 12, half-time $100/week. Contact:
Margaret Hale, 844-7137. An equal opportunity employer.
844-7137. An equal opportunity employer.
Part-time science in math and science. High score in MCAT or BAT desirable. Tertiary training required.
Weekly positions available for assistant instructors in our early childhood methodology for work in the working school for students of Natural History. June 6-August 5, 18 hours/week. Mail resume to: Helen Cunningham, Director of Public Education, 6023, Dyke Hall, Wheaton, IL. Dr. of Public Education, 6023, Dyke Hall, Wheaton, IL.
LOST AND FOUND
DIRECTOR OF ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES wanted to coordinate program courses and their course tutoring. Nine-month appointment with the Environmental Science department on rank, experience, and qualifications Ph.D., teaching experience, and ongoing research in environmental science, and current faculty status at KU Research experience, and current faculty status at KU Research experience. KU 646-2936. Snow, KU 646-2936. Application deadline: March 15, 2018. Equal Opportunity Applyment 2-17 Mar. Employer
Loot Tweed hat, first week of February. A pre-
ent, has sentimental value. John at 841-256-316.
*
Last Border Collie-black and white long fur
Landrood terrier with long fur. It is taller
towards people on Jawachyn land on Jawachyn
terrier.
Lost or misplaced incarnate two tone brown hair
with long hair. Call 516-279-8304 if you have
money missing. Please call 642-356-1004 if you have
money missing. Please call 642-356-1004 if you have
Lost: White dog, 5 months, mixed breed, no collar, tags, answers to questions at: M433- 8109 2-15
Lost a set of keys in Strong Hall on 2-1-77. If found, please contact 842-4002. 2-1-77
Lost: Blue North Face face cover in Wesco cater
on Ban 25. Reward offered: 842-346-3, 2-16
HARTERS/YOUTH FARES/APEX AIR FARE
SCHOOL SCHOOL DISTRICT DENTAL & PUGEHASE/TUDENT USE
Expertise text book left in Military Science Building. Come to room 108 M.S. Building, to visit us.
Lost: Gold necklace with Alaska on it in the
Sentiment. Sentimental value.
Call 864-6737 Re-2
Found young white female cat in Fallay's cell
with a brown one blue eye Call 216-4103 or 811-4000.
Found KU-ID near Learned Hall. Call 864-5022
to identify.
Found political science notes, orange notebook.
Call Bebi 864-3977.
2-15
Lost- Math 124 notes in Strong Hall, green spiral
notebook. Phone 842-9252. 2-18
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
Found very well behaved grown female cat with a beautiful pink nose. Climbs little to go good home or to patain the garden.
Found large female Irish Ister wearer, in area of 13th and New Hampiscip. Buit 841-365.
Found: Tan and white dog with blue collar.
Friend: Call Pat at 843-2796
2-16
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
843-9B91 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
0.0 sec
sister kettle cake
15% Off at All-inclusive with Coupon
Bring Coupon in through the 28th
10% off dinner with coupon
A. B. C. D.
CH.
EU
RT
SU
Kansas
14th and Mass.
Lost a neat wedding hand made of yellow and
white gold. Reward is offered: Call 843-291-
5061.
MISCELLANEOUS
Found—Walker in men's restroom 3rd floor. Mom,
locked up. Wrong claim. Claim at caretress
lockout. Justified.
Lost-ble clair cloth covered, threedirve Maude note 64. Probably in 235 Murray Calgary Gall 2-17
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAT is available with Alice at the House of Uwhar/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday-afternoon, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Max.
Just arrived. Incease from the Republic of China,
where he was imprisoned for the connoisseur 12 Elevation
814 Street, B41-3001.
NOTICE
EUROPE.WORLDWIDE academicdiscount years total SA A 428 First Ave. Tucker, QA 601 Kauffman St. Brooklyn, NY
Wash Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, diaries,
pail locks, clothes, television. Open daily 12
pm-5 pm.
New theories and research in Homosexuality will be the topic at Gay Services meetings, Feb. 15, 7:30 p.m. Regional Room of the Union Prof. Jill Storma is host guest. The palace is open.
SUA Maupintour travel service
Tofu-Chi Dinner, sponsored by the Community Merleville, Sunday, February 20th at the Community Merleville Cafe. The China will be shown by Fanchen Farm at 7:30 and 9 p.m. Advanced Tickets Adults $125 and Children $100. Merleville, 615 Mass. At the door; adults $2.00 and children $1.00. Dinner will be served from 6:30 to 8:30.
HATTA YOGA classes beginning Feb. 15th, bw#
4-8h, $20; 9 hrs, 6ull, 841-343-2
2-4k, $20 for 8 weeks, call 841-343-2
Gay Services has qualified discussors to discuss gay-related concerns. Stop by GSKO office, 184 North Park Road, Brooklyn, NY 11205.
Needed: GAY COUPLES who have been living with lesbian women in a non-traditional or unconventional life styles. The qualities of gay relationships in order to clarify their identity and the qualities of gay relationships in order to clarify their identity are non-visible. COMPLETE CONFIDENTIALITY is required. Call Dauley Dailey 864-4720 or Michele Wenner. 841-6820. With cooperation of Gay Sister Wenner, we can help you identify and help everyone can help someone as a Volunteer.
PERSONAL
Give a dance about your fellow man. Volunteer. Cleaning Cleaver House, 14B I8 Companion. 2-15
Everyone can help someone as a Volunteer. Volunteer Clearing House, 664-380-218
2-18
MAKIN' MUSIC--Make it easier. Folk, blues, jazz, funk, soul. Record with a guitar or banjo, mandolin, autoharp, piano. McKinney.
Gay Counselling Service: Call 842-7506, 6-12 p.m.
for referrals.
EUROPE. When you want it, you want it want it. EUROPE. You need it. IT Europe. No charter haste, call HBO. IT Europe. No charter haste, call HBO.
REFLECTION 2-17
Don't be bearded by mounds pictures and poster.
DON'T BEAR THE DARKNESS of SPECTRUM—BIBLIO GREETS and Dan Green for the CBS show.
Dan Pearman for Student Senate, 2nd District
Nunemaker. 2-15
WRITING ASSISTANCE Get an early start on your job.
Hands-on help too busy to help in the morning.
Nathan Hunter- 811-259-3467
DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING
& staff (full or part-time). Example: at $75.0
% et $250.1 for $965 by buying direct from leading
diamond importer. For color catalog send $1
wood. N.J. 97232 (indicate name of school) or
N.J. 86229 (for location of showroom not sure).
"Black and White." I need a date. Call 843-6539 and ask for Frank W.
2-16
NAISMITH HALL
Well we'll get you out of bed $3 per month. Jay-
hawk wake Up! b45-6321 or b45-2833.
The Lounge
"A different kind of bar
featuring seclusion and quiet.
Bud on Tap
- Pinball
- Pool
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
- Foosball
9th and Iowa
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
Wanted: Concerned feedmaster to check responsibility for feed from the HHF facility. Avanti an April 16-17 "Concerned-Hamilton" visit.
I can help you with payee and math problems
I can help you with my English and my English
2-18 2-18
Steve Laheb and Ralph Munyane have surveyed 60 students living in groups and 5 group apartments, complexed up in a building and set up a table at the Union ... all in our FLECTION—we reflect your views. 2-17
Karate. Learn the amount of scrutiny of the martial arts on the individual development as a martial artist and how it affects their growth.
Communication means Steve Leben and his wife, Tricia. We meet at the college students, hold open meetings in 5 apartment complexes, send emails and engage several people, set up a table for them, generally tried to communicate with you. You're usually able to do that.
We'll keep you informed of election returns and correlated with sound alternatives on 9-4-18
2-8-18
For the sound alternative in election coverage
and returns, listen to JKHK FM 91:
2-15
Vote Await! elect McKernan & Rhonda
& vice-president and vice-president
vote February 16 & 17 - 2-16
Combine politics with pleasure—Keep up with election returns on KJIK FM 91
2-15
Prepared student ID card and be admitted FREE—
Press ENTER. Tickets are $10 per person.
Toronto, Kitchener, Ontario 9:00 am - 5:00 pm,
Saturday, June 23th.
Move Forward with Avanti Vote February 16 &
2-16
You missed their first opportunity to win $10.
0 bonus prize. Amir Mellow Yellow Pigeon.
5 bonus prize. Amir Mellow White Pigeon.
Chip-You made me so very happy. Bob-
Happy 2nd. May there be more movies. Love Greg.
Joseph
Accruing or computer science student wanted
to obtain a BS degree or for good proof Call Ma-
ser 3-21
841-719-6711
SERVICES OFFERED
Math tutoring—competent, experienced tutors help you through courses 600, 602, 102, 105, 111, 122, 138, 142, 142, 500, 548, 567. Regular sessions or one time of preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-768-781.
Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for great typing at 634-214, 735-829, 909-event.
**wcoworking Time Up** Up Special-$16.00 Bench
Time Up $35.00 Main Duty $19.00 WV Repair, 8th and 10th Roads B41-2432
WV Repair, 9th and 10th Roads B41-2432
TYPING
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mike, miss. Letter writing. Resume creation, spelling correction, 843-5654, Mr. Wright.
I do darned good typing. Pegasus, 484-4476. tf
Typing editor, IBM. Priceline. Image quality.
Reasonable rates. Thesis, dissertations welcome.
Call Joan, 841-9127. tf
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
FIELDS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Will you type your paper with TLC. Term papers and
essays are $15 each. 6-18, 24-30, 6-18,
841-718 evenings & weekends.
TYPING - We have many return customers who want to customize their business. We appreciate your business, Call Harvey at 800-746-2390.
WANTED
Need 9 tickets to KU-KSU game. Call 842-7766.
9.15
Guitar players, players and listeners, listen to
the music of Sunday evening from 6:30 to
8:00 on KAU 107.
Female inmates wanted for 2-bedroom ager-
taiement for 3 to 5 months. On hot run Call: 212-482-9073
SR-16 Calculator SR-11 Alright, too. 84%-
evenings.
2-16
One roommate for three bedroom townhouse.
Formitted except for bedroom: Call 814-731-2-15
Wanted KU-R State baseball tickets in student
uniform. As many as possible. No official affi-
sion. No text or graphics. Mail to:
212-679-4030.
New apartment for one person beginning June 1. List of apartments:
864-398 (campus), or 864-3642, (hospital),
864-4098 (campus), or 864-3642, (hospital).
Male roommate for 2 bedroom duplex. Furnished or unfurnished. $85.50 per month, plus 1% upcharge.
Female to share nicely furnished 2 bedroom
apartment and dryer. 842-0012 evening
plumbing service.
River City Hall Hat. We want you! *A total professional Reden沙店* 826-703-507 *Massachusetts
Wanted Female roommate for my nice 2-bedroom, furnished apartment. Avail $180/month. Call (516) 347-2941.
You would be passing up the chance of a life-changing experience at our home, 842-876-9766. New accepting female or one acceptable, brotherly maze to share! Brendan Tower apartment, Call, ask for Brendan
Roommate for house, 15 minute walk to
campus; $83 month. Call 841-387-21-2
*
A female roommate needs to share a two-bed-
room apartment with a new information call 841-8294 line 2138.
Male to share large spacious houses $5 plus
miles. Kroiter or vegetarian preferred. 842-3358
TOWING
Wanted co-pilot, Companion. Experienced pilot wants co-pilot support for fun flying aerials and mountain climbs. Send resume to member. Have four place plane available for more details. For more detail write Lawrence 0547 321-212
Drive-in Clinic for most imported cars
TONY'S IMPORTS DATASUN
500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
HORIZONS HONDA
Sales, Parts, Service
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-4 Sat. 10-4
WingsTo EUROPE
CharterFlights Youth Fares
Low-cost Travel
Low cost Travel Arrangements for Individuals & Groups
UU Union Bldg./900 Mass.
Hillcrest & the Malls Ctrs.
843-1211
Maupintour travel service
Home of
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Pool
- Snooker
- Ping Pong
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Foo-Ball
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week. No One Under 18 Admitted
12
University Dally Kansai
---
FALLEY'S
2525 Iowa
Next Door to Gibson's
Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days
Prices good Tuesday thru Sunday
Feb.15-Feb.20
RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
U.S.D.A. Choice Blade Cut
Chuck Roast 53c
U. S.D.A. Choice Arm Swiss Steak 85c lb.
Wilson Corn King Bacon
U.S.D.A. Choice Center Cut Roast... lb. 63¢
U.S.D.A.Choice
7 Bone Chuck Roast... lb. 59¢
U.S.D.A.Choice
Boneless Chuck Roast... lb. 89¢
U.S.D.A. Choice Chuck Steak... lb. 69¢
Extra Lean Ground Beef... 2 lbs. or more ... lb. 99¢
Van De Kamp Halibut... 20 oz. $2^99
Van De Kamp Fish Fillets... 12 oz. $1^29
99 c
12
oz.
Winchester Fully Cooked Ham 17 to 20 pound avg. lb. 99¢
Oscar Mayer All Meat Wieners or all beef lb. $1 19
Seitz All Meat Bologna 8 oz. pkg. 59¢
Armour Star Grill Dogs lb. 79¢
Swift Premium Brown & Serve Sausage All Varieties 8 oz. 79¢
Ohse "Big T" Whole Boneless Hams lb. $1 69
Ohse Polish Sausage lb. 99¢
Michelob Beer
6 pack
12 oz.
Bottles or Cans
$ 1.59
Falley's Potato Chips
9 oz.
Bag
49c
9 oz. 49c Bag
Hi-Dry Towels Jumbo Roll 39c
Wilderness Cherry Pie Filling...21 oz. 69°c
Peter Pan Peanut Butter...18 oz. 89°c
Creamette Extra Wide Egg Noodles 10 oz.
Bag 39°c
Creamette Mac & Cheese Dinners 7 oz.
Box 4 for $1
Kraft Velveeta...2 lb. Box $1'79
Frozen French Fries...5 lb. Bag 89°c
Kraft Soft Parkay Margarine...16 oz. 59°c
Meadow Gold Half & Half...Pint 39°c
Win INSTANTLY or COLLECT to Win!
INSTANT
NO MACHINE NECESSARY
CASINO CASH
To enter, collect 10 Sweepstakes Jokers. See Collector folder for details
SWEEPSTAKES
ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE JANUARY 26, 1977"
$5000
SAVE
$ 5000
Los Angeles Mall for 2
Priced $1,000 each
9 NCA Color Tack '19 TV
14.00 Channel CB Radio
25.1 ELE Digital Watchers
200 News CALENDARISTS
CASTING CASH is only one of many promotions available
GAME
VALUE
NO. OF
PRICES**
OBS ONE
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OBS 12
STORE ITVUE
OBS 26
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$1000
50
100
100
18,500
100
18,500
17,292
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100
100
100
15,500
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12,699
100
100
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1,250
100
1,250
1,199
100
100
100
1,250
100
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1,377
100
15
KING
*These cards are an offer only once and never after other offers are paid. If the card is not paid within 10 business days of the Offer, then no Offer will be accepted. All Offer Expiration dates may expire. Cards expire when used by the holder of the Offer and cannot be redeemed for cash. Cards can be made payable to a recipient who has purchased the Offer. The cost of each card must equal the cost of one offering in any of the given sports games offered with the Offer. No other offers can be made for cash without the Offer or any cash offering of any kind. Cards will be invalid until the Offer is paid.
WIN
UP TO
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Double Luck Cut Green Beans 6 16 oz. Cans $1 Argo Sweet Peas 5 17 oz. Cans $1 Crisp, Solid Head Lettuce 3 for $1
Double Luck
Cut Green
Beans
6 16 oz. Cans $1
Argo
Sweet Peas
5 17 oz. Cans $1
Crisp, Solid Head
Lettuce
3 for $1
Keebler Vanilla Wafers...16 oz. 59¢ Red Ripe Salad Tomatoes...Pkg. of 10 $100
Our Own Brand Ice Cream...1/2 Gal. 89¢ California Buttery Rich Avacados...Each 19¢
Pringle's Twin Pack...9 oz. 69¢ Tender Snappy Carrots...1 lb. pkg. 3 for $1
Reames Frozen Egg Noodles...12 oz. 55¢ California Sunkist Navel Oranges...15 for $1
Wholesun Frozen
Orange Juice
6 6 oz. Cans $1
Totino's
Frozen
Pizza
13 oz. 4 Varieties 69¢
Diet Rite
Nehi Flavors - R.C.
or
Seven-Up
64 oz. No Return Bottle 79¢
FALLEY'S
Crisp, Solid Head Lettuce 3 for $1
Red Ripe Salad Tomatoes...Pkg. of 10 $1¹⁰⁰
California Buttery Rich Avacados...Each 19³
Tender Snappy Carrots...1 lb. pkg. 3 for $1
California Sunkist Navel Oranges...15 for $1
Totino's
Frozen
Pizza
13 oz.
4 Varieties 69c
Over Falloy's Low $397 Discount Prices with Those
13 oz. 4 69c Varieties
Diet Rite Nehi Flavors - R.C.
or
Seven-Up
64 oz.
No Return
Bottle 79c
6 oz. $1 Cans
Valuable Coupons
FALLEY'S
Hunt's
BEEF SHOP
Wholesun Frozen Orange Juice 6 oz. Cans $1 Totino's Frozen Pizza 13 oz. 4 Varieties 69c
Wholesun Frozen Orange Juice 6 oz. Cans $1
FALLEY'S
Regular
95c
HUNT'S KETCHUP
32 oz. 69¢
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 20
COUPON
Wholesun Frozen Orange Juice
6 oz. Cans $1
Totino's Frozen Pizza
13 oz.
4 Varieties 69¢
Diet Rite Nehi Flavors - R.C. or Seven-Up
64 oz. No Return Bottle 79¢
FALLEY'S
Sunshine HYDROX COOKIES
Vanilla or Chocolate
19 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon 69¢
Good thru Feb. 20
FALLEY'S
Regular
Keebler PITTER PATTER COOKIES
16 oz. 79¢
FALLEY'S
wesson
FALLEY'S
409 CLEANER
BUY CLEANER
BUY ONE
GET ONE FREE
22.07
COUPON
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 20
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular 59c
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
Regular
59c
FALLEY'S
RAISIN BREAD
16 oz. 29¢
loaf
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 20
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular 91c
FALLEY'S Regular 73c
Betty Crocker
SNACKIN' CAKE
Assorted Flavors 59¢
Limit 2 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 20 COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.15
FALLEY'S Regular $1.15
BISQUICK
40 oz. 89¢
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 20
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular $1.49
FALLEY'S Regular 99c
Sunshine
HYDROX COOKIES
Vanilla or Chocolate
19 oz. 69¢
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 20
COUPON
FALLEY'S Regular 95c
Keebler
PITTER PATTER COOKIES
16 oz. 79¢
COUPON
COUPON
[
1 f
Delays leave law building's fall opening in doubt
1980
Still waiting
in the delivery of building materials threaten to keep the new School of Law moving from opening next fall. The building, between 15th Street and Irving Road, will have to be rebuilt.
By JOHN MUELLER
Staff Reporter
The new School of Law building probably won't be open for classes until January 17, probably in the spring.
The $ 5 million building, east of Jayawater Towers between 13th Street and Irving Hill Road, officially is scheduled to be completed by day 23 and to be opened for classes this fall.
But minutes from a Feb. 4 School of Law faculty-student conflict the contradictory.
According to the minutes, Martin Dickinson, dean of the School of Law, "indicated that, because of the continuing need for training in concrete pre-cast concrete blocks, and other difficulties, it is now virtually certain that we will be unable to move into the new building."
THE CONCRETE blocks were replacements for 17 other blocks provided
by the building's general contractor, Casson Construction Co., Topeka. Casson was asked last fall to replace the original blocks, which form the outer skin of the building, after state and KU investigators decided the panels were of inferior quality.
Dickinson局 refused to confirm or deny that the minutes were accurate. He said, "We had an internal discussion. The minutes were written by a person other than
Francis Heller, professor of law who attended the meeting, said last night the murderer was charged.
When Dickinson was read a copy of the minutes, he said he "wouldn't want to say" that he didn't.
HELLER SAID, "The dean informed us the chances were virtually nothing—that they were very remote—for moving in this fall."
John Cassion, a member of the contracting
John Cassion, said he wouldn't comment on
By state law, each day after May 23 that the building isn't finished will cost the Caesars.
whether the building would be finished on time.
Max Lucas, University director of facilities planning, said the company had been denied a request for extending the May 23 deadline. The request was made at a Feb. 3 meeting. Casson, he said, has "been given ample time to build the building."
"IT WILL TAKE a maximum effort to form a team, as it has said, "but there has been no extension."
"The company must legally be done by May 25. The panels are not justification for us."
"You'll have to talk to Dean Dickinson about that."
But Dickinson said, "There is only one spokesman at the University who can comment on the building, and that is Max Lucas."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Dykes was unavailable for comment. His administrative assistant, Jim Scaly, said that "Lucas is the one who knows about this."
COLD
DICKINSON ALSO said he wouldn't comment on portions of the minutes that said "he reported that Chancellor Dykes is lending every possible support to efforts to induce the contractor to take the steps in order to complete the building on time.
Construction of the building, which replaces Green Hall been in March 1975.
Construction of the building, which replaces Green Hall, began in March 1975. A major advantage of the new building is that its 65,000 square feet of floor space will accommodate more than 100 students, 104 more students than were enrolled last semester.
KANSAN
Vol.87,No.91
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Blacksmithing story pages 6.7
18 caught using fake bus passes
By CHUCK WILSON Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Eighteen students caught in the last 10 days using forged bus passes will be referred to the office of student affairs for possible disciplinary action.
Donald Alderson, acting vice chancellor for student affairs, said last night that he heard about the forgeryes yesterday after she and planned to talk to the KU Police today.
"Before we question any of the people involved, we plan to study every aspect of their lives."
THE NAMES OF the students can't be released, because of the Buckley Amendment.
The KU Police have assigned two detectives and one officer to help in the investigation.
"Who knows how many more are still out-
side?" he said. "Some are even selling
takes."
Hill said some people caught had hand-engaged their own passes and others had used them.
Five persons were caught last week with forged passes, nine were caught Monday and four were caught yesterday by 1 p.m., Hill said.
The crackdown came after one bus driver discovered a fake pass last week and other drivers saw it more, according to Steve McMurray, Student Senate Transportation Committee chairman. The Senate Transportation Committee, the wheels, the campus transportation system.
PEOPLE MAKING the bus passes could be prosecuted for forgery, Hill said, and
users of the passes could be prosecuted for theft of services.
Duane Ogle, owner of Lawrence Bus Co., which owns the KU buses, had no comment on whether the company would prosecute people caught using fake passes.
PEOPLE FORGING passes use many methods from drawing an a piece of coloring paper to printing a printed method, he said, but no matter what the method, a fast bus pass was easy
Official bus passes are printed by the KU Printer Service.
One student who was caught said she bought her pass for $2,50. police said. Official bus passes cost $18 for students and $20 for nonstudents each semester.
Another student caught said the person who sold her a pass said it was so well-done that she had to get it.
Dave Neely, a driver for the Lawrence Bus Co., said all the fake passes found had been used.
The yellow background isn't the right shade and the letters are not as clear. Some of them were copied by hand, one had been photographed and another pass contained letters that had been sten-
Nearly said the forging of bus passes
hadn't been nearly as widespread as in past
When someone using a fake pass is caught, Neely said, the driver takes down the person's name and address. And, if the person who the driver turns him over to the KI Police,
"If we have to examine everyone's bus pass to stop this we will," he said.
NOXUS
WEST
JDT2704
The 55-foot-high balloon was inflated from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. yesterday until 15 to 18 mile-an-hour winds hampered the balloon. Across the pink-and-red sphere a banner read, "Be involved. Vote Feb. 16 and 17."
Committee postpones disciplinary decision
As the committee met last night, all three presidential and vice-presidential teams
Senate regulations give the committee the power to ban "political gimmicks" in campaigns that might add a "carnival atmosphere" to an election.
The Student Senate Elections Committee posted action last night against Senate candidates who inflated a hot air balloon yesterday morning so the Committee could deal with the more immediate concerns of the election today and tomorrow.
Action was delayed despite five protesting telephone calls and one formal protest by the Reflection coalition's sophomore candidates against the balloon, which the Avanti sophomore class candidates inflated in front of Strong Hall.
Testimonies conflict in marijuana hearing
The Reflection team said it didn't object to the use of the balloon but disapproved of the Avanti candidates disregard of an official ruling last Wednesday banning the balloon.
All the candidates said they intended to
"1KNOW of one patient who smoked two marjuana joints and got a psychotic companion."
Ungerleides said after the hearing that the testimony he heard in opposition to Glenn Ferguson is unreliable.
decriminalization as a sign of their elders
abandoning concern for their welfare.
By STEVE FRAZIER
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-A-Psychiatrist and law enforcement officials spared yesterday in a House committee hearing on a bill that seeks the possession of small amounts of marijuana.
YOUTH
See MARLJUANA nage 10
continue their campaign efforts through today and tomorrow.
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee heard two hours of conflicting testimonies, emotional appeals and moral arguments about a modified marijuana decriminalization bill by State Rep. Mike Glover, D.Dr Lawrence.
J. Thomas Ungerleider, a University of California at Los Angeles psychiatrist who served on the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse, listed research results that led the commission to conclude that marijuana should be decriminalized. Ungerleider said there was no acceptable evidence that marijuana was a health hazard or was addictive.
William Albott, director of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI), said he would favor an amended law of Glover's punishment, a law the punishment doesn't fit the crime.
FRED HOWARD, former KBI director who is now TokePA police chief, represented the Kansas Association of Chiefs of Police in a lawsuit filed by the known member of the association of marijuana decriminalization. Glover's bill would increase marijuana use, he said, and increase the danger of car wrecks caused by driving under the influence of marijuana.
All the candidates began planning their campaigns in mid-November, but didn't actively campaign until school started this semester. In the last month, Grey said, she has distributed about 6,000 fliers, 2,500 posters and 48 T-shirts.
Two presidential candidates, Dana Mckernan, Salina junior, and Steve Leben, El Dorado junior, said they planned to station themselves and coalition workers near polling places to speak to students who hadn't decided whom they would vote for.
The third candidate, Sherri Grey,
Manhattan senior, said that in addition to
stationing people around campus, she would
continue to speak at living groups and hand
out campaign literature until the polls
closed.
HAROLD VOTH, a psychiatrist on the staff of the Meninger Foundation in Topeka, blasted the reduction of penalties for marijuana possession, saying marijuana contributed to "the general decline in the moral fiber in America."
"I am concerned with what has happened
because," Voth said. "This concern should
be addressed." The doctor will
answer.
Bill Hamilton, Salma freshman, steadied a hot air balloon in the wind yesterday morning in front of Strong Hall. The balloon and coilon sophomore class candidates.
McKernan said he had distributed about 100 posters and 1,000 handbills in the same pool.
Lebens said he had distributed 500 posters,
3,200 brochures, 6,500 filers, 3,000 doorknob
sheets.
After last night's meeting, Kevin Flynn, Elections Committee chairman, reiterated his pledge to get more than 5,000 students to vote for president and vice president. The election in a Senate election in the late 15 years was last year, when 3,167 students voted.
Greg Schrake, Avanti sophomore class presidential candidate, said he defied the Election Committee's ruling banning the help the committee meets its $5,000 voter goal.
Schnacke said that because the committee had made its ruling after the campaign, he felt unfair. He questioned whether the Elections Committee had the power to prorify a decision it made against class office candidates, centring to the Senate Rules Committee.
Flynn said last week that if candidates disregarded an Election Committee ruling, they could be fined from $5 to $50 or removed from office if elected.
If the Elections Committee decides to take action against the Avanti sophomore class candidates, the case would be heard by the University Judiciary, which would decide them to fine the candidates or remove them from office.
Flynn said election results should be available about a.i. Friday from the KU Information Center, 864-3566. Election returns will also be carried over JKH-FM.
Lobby pushes student issues without KU aid
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ
Contributing Writer
Money is one of the main reasons KU hasn't joined the Associated Students of Kansas (ASK). If KU joined ASK, each student's activity fee would be raised 25 cents a semester. With a record full-time equivalency enrollment of 21,011 this fall, KU would contribute almost $10,000 a year to ASK.
For 25 cents a semester, students at participating Kansas colleges and universities support a group that lobbies for student interests in the state legislature. The group represents about half of the college population and all of the largest schools in Kansas, with one exception—the University of Kansas.
ASK was formed as a Topka-based lobbying group more than three years ago. Since then it has endorsed select legislative issues such as landlord-tenant bills, faculty salary increases and a student loan program. ASK representatives also have tested before the university on issues such as the decriminalization of marijuana.
"I DON'T think they're $10,000 worth of effective" Tadesh Tassie. student body president. said this week
KU was offered a chance to join when the group first formed. But KU's Student Senate opposed membership by a vote of 42-8. Senators questioned the use of the financial fund to滋 fund finance-full-time professional lebbits.
BY OCTOBER 1973, Kansas State University,
Emory University, Emporia Kansas State
College, Kansas State College
Kansas State College (all Board of Regents schools) and Washburn University had joined. They remain
Doug Oblander, ASK executive director, said ASK had approached KU each year until this year.
But there are no plans this year to bring the ASK issue before the Student Senate, which would have to vote to raise the student activity fee paid at enrollment. A Student Senate subcommittee on legislative laiison decided this year to suggest the formation of KU-based volunteer groups that would deal with the legislature, rather than suggest ASK membership.
MARK ALLEN, Ames, Iowa, junior and subcommittee chairman, said he took a random survey of 11 legislators and found that most legislators thought ASK was not as effective as they thought it could have
KU groups would cost a fraction of what it would cost to join ASK, Allen said, and still would let legislators know what students desired and would let students know about the legislature.
However, ASK supports KU membership because of the strength-in-numbers theory.
"We're talking about 50,000 votes," Oblander said, referring to the approximate ASK membership. The students are a pretty viable voting force. That's probably the strength of ASK is—the potential student votes.
"We don't claim that people will vote the ASK
position. But we represent a group of people with common interests." Oblander said.
"It's a free ride for KU," he said. But he said KU still was welcome to join.
"SOME PEOPLE think that perhaps you think
*you're too good for ASK, but they'd feel that way about
that."
Some student members may resent KU for not joining, he said, because KU receives the same benefits as member schools when an endorsed bill passes.
Dwight Endering, ASK campus director at Wichita State, said, "We would like you (KU) to be involved. We feel as if you could have a great deal of influence on KU's development and be great number of KU grads in the state legislature.
- 75 per cent said they had been contacted by ASK;
22 per cent didn't; 3 per cent had no opinion.
Ed Rolfs, former KU student body president, was a Student Senator when ASK was established. He said KU decided not to join because the Senate thought that activity funds shouldn't be used for political lobbying and favored a more voluntary program, especially because KU is so close to Toopka.
-Only 17 per cent thought that ASK had positively affected their vote on legislation; 22 per cent
In the summer of 1974, the Student Senate surveyed the state legislature about ASK. They received responses from 106 of 165 legislators, 64 per cent of the legislature. They found that:
- Only 6 per cent thought student activity fees should be paid
- 90 per cent disagreed; four per cent had no opinion
State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Topeka and former ASK executive director, said it was hard to judge a lobbying group's effectiveness, especially through a questionnaire.
"They (lobbyists) provide a service." Hein said, "All you can really do is say whether or not they are putting good input into the system. Lobbyists just make you aware of a bill."
Hein said the most important function of lobbyists is to provide information for the legislators to help them make.
Each year a legislative assembly, composed of student representatives from the members' schools (1 representative for each thousand students enrolled in the school), has a director to research and lobby for certain issues.
In 1974, these issues were endorsed by ASK and acted on in the legislature:
— A 10 per cent faculty salary increase for KU and UCLA, and a 20 per cent faculty salary increase for the other Regents schools. Approximate salaries.
—A campaign finance act to establish a candidate's contribution and expenditure ceilings. Approved.
—The Minimum Housing Act to devise minimum rental housing standards. Defeated in the Senate.
See ASK page 11
2
Wednesday, February 16, 1977
University Dally Kansar
News Digest
From our wire services
Vance assures U.S. support
JERUSALEM—Secretary of State Cyrus Vance assured Israel yesterday of an enduring American commitment to that nation's security and survival as he began a six-nation Middle East tour to survey prospects for new Arab-Israel peace talks. Welcome Vance at Ben Gurion International Airport, where Vigny will be given a high time the political momentum should be renewed. Israel wasn't in favor of stagnation, he said. "On the contrary we are for movement toward peace."
movement toward peace.
The stop in Israel is the first of a week-long tour that will take Vance to Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Syria. This is his first visit to those countries since taking office.
Open minds urged by Dole
HUTCHINSON-Kansas Republican Sen. Robert Dole, urged Kansas farmers to keep an open mind about the Federal Grain Inspection Act and said several amendments were planned to eliminate unpopular aspects of the measure
"We want to be positive about the act because it think in many areas it can help the Kansas producer," Dole told an audience of 80 persons during a special Agriculture Committee hearing here yesterday.
"It's a result of scandals at the ports and the farmers were really hurt because foreign buyers began to doubt our credibility." Dole said.
WASHINGTON (AP)—Only metropolitan school delegation which reaches into the white suburbs can save urban black children from continued racial separation in schools, the U.S. Civil Rights Commission said yesterday.
School desegregation must reach into suburbs, commission says
"We have concluded that metropolitan school dissemination is a must if today's children are to be given equal education and opportunities," mission chairman, told a news conference.
"School segregation is most acute in our cities where the majority of black and Hispanic American children and attend public schools," the commission said.
"In the wake of two migrations—the movement of black people from the rural South to big cities throughout the country and back, the racial composition of suburbs—the racial composition of these school systems has changed dramatically from predominantly white to predominantly black."
In Chicago and Detroit, for example, the
--public school enrollment in 1974 was more than 70 per cent black and other minorities, the report said. Minority enrollment was more than 60 per cent in New York and Philadelphia and more than 50 per cent in Los Angeles.
Rock Chalk Revue Feb.25th-26th
Tickets available at SUA office $3.00-$3.25
Good Seats Still Available for Friday-But Hurry!
--public school enrollment in 1974 was more than 70 per cent black and other minorities, the report said. Minority enrollment was more than 60 per cent in New York and Philadelphia and more than 50 per cent in Los Angeles.
Record Record Sale
Record Record Sale
1.98 AND UP
On Sale NOW!
FEB. 14-18
KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
8:30-5:00
last record sale of the season!
That means, the commission said, that effective school integration cannot be accomplished within the boundaries of most big cities.
School officials must reach into the white suburbs, and they should do so voluntarily without waiting for court orders, Flemming said.
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Thursday, Feb. 17, 1977 7:30 p.m. Room 3, Bailey Hall
SPEAKER
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---
Looking towards
Looking towards
SPRING BREAK?
THE SUNSET GIRL
It's time to suit yourself. Get out of those winter clothes and get ready for the sun! Jay Shoppe's got an early start on bathing suit fashions, so you can get an early start on your fan!
Bekey wears the Olympic stripe 2-piece with a bandeau top. It's made of nylon and spandex, so it stretches with you and dries in the oven. It has green and white, sizes 5-13. By Bobbie Brooks, $19.
Kim's black one piece has a sunny yellow graphic design on the front. The mailer suit has a low-cut back and the new huger seat that actually fits your form! It's made of nylon and spandex and comes in sizes 5-13. By High Tide, $25.
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Wednesday, February 16, 1977
2
HOTEL AIRPORT
On Campus
**TODAY:** STUDENT ELECTION VOTING will be from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the campus information booth, PRINCIPAL AND COUNSELOR FRESHMAN DAY be all day in the Kansas Union. IPA CD meeting of the CITY CLERKS be all day in the University of Kansas. Harvard University chemist, will lecture on "Theoretical Studies of Chemical Reactions" at 1:30 p.m in 124 Malot Hall. CHARLES KREGEL, reader's service documents librarian at the School of Law Library, will speak on the uniqueness of law library at 1:30 p.m. in Room B2- Wutson Library, MEDIEVAL SOCIETY will speak on the uniqueness of law library at 1:30 p.m. in Room B2- Wutson Library, MEDIEVAL SOCIETY Presence in the Modern University* at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
Events
TONIGHT: There will be an ANGEL FLIGHT meeting at 6:30 p.m. in Room 107 of the military science building for formal pledging and yearbook pictures. SPEED READING LECTURES at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. will be in the Lutheran Student Center, 15th and Iowa Streets. THE DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICS is sponsoring a colloquium entitled "Language Boundaries and Intelligibility," by Dr. Stephen M. Currie, who will teach at NURSING CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's International Room. HILLEL SOCIETY will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Kansas Room. EASTMAN KODAK FORUM will be at 8 p.m. in the Union's Jayhawk Room.
TOMORROW: MICHAEL CRAWFORD will speak at the museum luncheon at noon in 602 Dyche Hall. There will be a CONCERT at noon in the Strong rotunda. HAROLD OREL, professor of english, will speak on Thomas Hardy at noon at the United Ministries Center. GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in 2005 Wesco. The College of Medicine building will present a program entitled "Fishes of Kanas," by Frank Cross, professor of systematics and ecology, at 7:30 p.m. at the South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Mass. ST. FLYISH WORKSHOP will be from 7:30 to 10 p.m. at the Museum of Natural History. MINORITY AFFAIRS film series will feature a program for PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS AND PARENTS will be at 7:30 p.m. undergraduate art history department and SUA will sponsor a sneak preview of SPENCER ART MUSEUM at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room.
Commission okays bonds for new Quaker Oats plant
The Lawrence City Commission last night approved the use of $12.5 million in industrial revenue bonds to build a new manufacturing plant in Lawrence.
The city and the new plant, Quaker Oats Co., under the bond system would enter into a partnership enabling the company to deliver low rates of financing for its new plant.
Before the bond issue was passed, a company spokesman said that the company's manufacturing process would allow it to employ no-tact student workers.
BESIDES approving the issuance of bonds to the company, the commission authorized the city to write a resolution granting the company's request to close a road leading to the site so it could build a more accessible road. The resolution would be amended to allow the companies now using the road, TRW Co. and Plastics, objected to the Parker
University Daily Kausan
The plant will employ about 180 people and will produce net foods.
The plant will be built at the corner of Iowa St. and Packer Road in the Santa Fe Industrial subdivision in northwest Lawrence. It is expected to be completed in January 1978, according to Richard H. Glanzer, director of the pet foods division of Glenview.
THE COMPANY made public its intentions yesterday morning at a breakfast in the Kansas Union which several city and including Gov. Robert Bennett, attended.
Bennett made a brief statement at the gathering.
He said, "We don't want wall-to-wall industry in Kansas. We're primarily an agricultural state and our mission is to provide food and fibre to the nation."
IN OTHER action last night, the commission received a request from the Lawrence Apartment Association to have it listed by a private company instead of, if not, by the public.
The commission voted to have the association wait 60 days to see whether the proposal was approved.
NORML National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws Feature:MIKE GLOVER speaking on the progress of marijuana reform bill. 7:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Room—Union WED., FEB. 16 TONIGHT!
Brown Bag Special
2 Fish Sandwiches
1 Lg. Fry
Only $1.23
Srandus
Good through Feb.20
Sandy's
SUA
MOVIES
FOREIGN FILM WEEK
Wed., Feb. 16
CLASSICAL SERIES
Thurs., Feb. 17 FILM SOCIETY
WAR OF THE BUTTONS (1962)
Dir. Vesel Robert with Martin
Dorian De La Leir Trixe
Prize Jean Vigo-1962
(French/subtitled)
7:30 75c
THE MILKY WAY (1968)
Dir, Luis Bunuel (Fr.-Sp.)
7:30. 9:30 $1
FELLIEN SATYRICON (1970)
Dir. Federico Fellini with
Marian Potter, Hiram Keller.
(Italian/subtitled)
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 SL
Fri., Feb. 18 Sat., Feb. 19 POPULAR FILMS
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
DISCO DANCE
By Gay Services of Kansas LAWRENCE
K. U. Union - Feb. 19,8 p.m.
$1.75 No Alcoholic Beverages Brought In Beer Sold with I.D.
TODAY'S EVENTS
Accent the ARTS
12:00 Marilyn Michael, mezzo-soprano Fred Toner,piano Duets in the Lobby of Strong Hall
Faculty Recital Series - Swarthout
8:00 John Boulton, flute Antonio Perez, voice
Women's Swimming Championship
BIG 8
THURSDAY-SATURDAY, FEB. 17-19
10 a.m. preliminary heats $ .75
7 p.m. finals $^{1}1^{23}$ adults $^{1}1^{00}$ 12 and under
Robinson Natatorium, K.U. campus BIG 8 COMPETITORS
KANSAS two time defending champs Oklahoma, Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa State Oklahoma State
Reflection
Steve Leben for student body president
Business
Ginny Erdwien
Brian S. Jones
Brit McPheron
Scott Stanley
Education
Bev Brown
Corie Brown
Bill Cannon
Pam Gotsche
Connie Hale
Steve Hamous
Beth Anne MacCurdy
Beth Osborn
Journalism
Janet Ferree
Jill Grubaugh
Eric Morgenstern
Engineering
Nathan Bultman
Richard W. Durham
Douglas J. Edmonds
Gary Foote
Alan D. Soelter
Engineering
Doug Ferguson
Sann Glaza
Claire McCurdy
Kristen Olander
Kathy Russell
Sybil Summers
Fine Arts
Special Students Wade Corey Klosterman
Architecture
Reeves W. Wiedeman
Curt Woody
Pres.—Matt Haverty
V.Pres.—Chip Anthony
Secy.—Dawn Daniel
Treas.—Barbara Goolsbee
PARKER AND PERRY
Sophomore Class
Leben-Munyan
- WE REFLECT YOUR VIEWS *
- FEEDBACK** **\* Steve and Ralph will see that a Feedback book is provided, student comments and ratings of each course and instructor at KU. Your best advice on courses and instructors comes from other students—we'll see what you get it.
- RESPONSIBLE USE OF STUDENT FEES * ** The Senate has allowed more than $100,000 of your fees to accumulate in a supps, benefiting no one. Sieve and Roby sap it should either be set aside for future use, or disposed of, the activity fee should be lowered until the supply is gone.
- **RECREATIONAL FACILITIES** * * Steve and Ralph will spend the supply of funds to improve UNSK recreational facilities. More lighting for tennis courts and resodding outdoor playing fields are examples of improvements that will be made.
- COMMUNICATION * This is the one Steve and Rick know best from experience. They will make sure you are involved in your journey.
Leben - Munyan
LA&S
Ralph Munyan for student body vice president
LA&S
Paula Bush
Vicki Coulter
Trinka Crossley
Craig Dawson
Thomas E. Graves
Bruce Huffman
Grant Larkin
Betsy McCarley
Bob Meyer
Jim Muehlberger
Judy Navickas
Tim O'Connor
Mike Pendergast
Kevin White
Paid for by Leben/Munyan
Lisa Bennett Jeanne Kovac
Pharmacy Teri Pollard
Social Welfare
Nunemaker Dist. 2
Nunemaker Dist. 1 Bruce Leinmiller
Dave Bromley
Gordon Geldhof
Chris Redlingshafer
Jan Smith
Tom Zackary
Nunemaker Dist. 3
Nunemaker Dist. 3
Mark Bernhardt
Johnny Hill
David Jett
John Masterson
Laura Trausch
Nunemaker Dist. 4
Jeff Eriksen
Ann Holderman
Anne Judge
Mary Ellen Pogson
Sam Sheldon
Nunemaker Dist. 5
Cheryl Engelmann
Amy Gregg
Mike Harper
Luanne O'Dell
Reggie Robinson
Ed Stucky
Junior Class
Pres.—Craig Blessing
V-Pres.—Scott Morgan
Secy.—Pam Olander
Treas.—Sheri Sigman
4
Wednesday, February 16, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Tasheff remembered
Tomorrow is Tedde Tasheff's last day as student, boy president.
Tashseh has been one of the University's less visible student body presidents. She didn't create that many headlines; either positive or negative. Sometimes it almost seemed as if the Student Senate had just faded away.
It has been a rather quiet 12 months.
THIS IS not to say that Tasheff didn't do anything. Most of the things Tasheff did during her administration were the behind-the-scenes that the average student doesn't know or care about.
Tasheff did a very good job of working with all the administrative committees and subcommittees a student body president must deal with. She fulfilled her campaign promise to use and extend student representation in school administration and faculty committees. She also kept her promise to improve the education of these student representatives.
But, again, these are all behind-the-scenes accomplishments. They are not seen by or cared about by most students. Most students didn't see anything Senate did and, therefore, assume Senate was wrong. This assumption wasn't correct, but it still probably aggravated the Senate's eternal communications and apathy problems.
MANY OF Tasheff's attempts to take actions that might really affect the average student failed. She tried to revive the KUAC ticket subsidy twice—once by a direct vote and once through a referral, the first was submitted of a referral of quorum, the second was voted down by the Senate.
An attempt to create a Senate reclamation
service failed when the Whomper died this December and an attempt to increase hours at Watson Library also failed. An attempt to put the University Events committee under Senate control after a series of incidents involving permits for campus musicians and other groups was vetoed by Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
Some of the Tasheff administration's public actions succeeded, of course. The Senate did pass a resolution opposing a proposed moving of the annual KU-University of Missouri football game to Kansas City's Arrowhead Stadium and later conducted a student poll on the same issue. And Tasheff did succeed in getting a proposed fee waiver for graduate teaching assistants and assistant instructors endorsed by five other Kansas colleges and placed before the Board of Regents.
THE REGENTS are expected to act on the proposal soon.
Another visible Tasheff action was a qualified success. This was her attempt to spread more responsibility throughout the Senate's committee structure and keep less responsibility and power tied up in the central Senate office.
Although many committees and senators did take an active role, in many cases Tasheff herself was still the only person who knew exactly what was going on and why. But, then, this may well be the natural state of the office.
THE "QUIET" Tasheff year, like any year, was filled with failures and successes. And it is probably still too early to say for sure which predominated. All anyone can say for sure is that some things did happen and it is too late to change anything now.
Bye, Tedde.
By now, everyone who even knows what a television is has been exposed to the phenomenon known as "Roots," Alex Haley's dramatic account (in book, television and LP album form) of his ancestors and their struggle for freedom, after being brought to the Americas from their native Africa.
Black history month celebrated
Haley's novel is deservedly being hailed as a tau-de-force in literature, and its impact has focused the attention of people of all races, especially blacks, on their own backgrounds and ancestral heritage.
And like "Roots" the celebration of Black History Month during February attempts to bring to the fore an area of history too long ignored.
ON CAMPUS LAST week, several programs were presented in honor of this month's special emphasis. The department of African studies produced a slide presentation of black poetry, prose and music entitled "Black Values and Public Policy," and presented a lecture on African Past, debunking the pictures of African incarcerates and presenting a more accurate account of Africa today.
In a more contemporary vein, the emergence of black art was highlighted by a performance by the Black Exodus dance troupe from Kansas City, Mn. Other events last week on campus included a disco dance and a free "soul
food" dinner served to all students last Sunday. These events, taken as a whole, are supposed to represent what is uncommon, known as the "black experience."
design or order. And black history is being made every day.
ONE OF THE main problems of
an ongoing process, without specific
explanation.
Paul Jefferson
Editorial Writer
Black history is made when a people play the most significant part in electing leaders.
But black history is more than foods, music, or fashion.
Black history is Watergate security guard Frank Wills uncovering what became the biggest governmental scandal in all of history.
front of a Montgomery bus and refusing to move to the back.
Black history is the Voting Rights Act or 1965, the influence of which is being studied.
It is lawyer Thurgood Marshall, arguing before the Supreme Court in 1854, when it ruled that separate local courts facilities were unconstitutional.
It is Jackie Robinson stepping up to the plate for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, breaking the "color line."
as the formation of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1900 by the University's leading black and white educators.
It is the establishment of the
Titian booker by Booker T.
Washington in 1838.
It is the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, and the 14th and 15th amendments to the Constitution, which banned slavery after the end of the war and granted all black full citizenship.
IT IS CRISPUS Attucks, who was the first man to die in the Revolution for the eventual independence of the United States. So here the "shot heard round the world."
Other people and lives have purposely been left off this list. But the above accomplishments are the primary ones of which blacks in America can justly be proud. I have omitted mention of the innumerable injustices inflicted upon
blacks in the past, as they are already tales told too many times.
Certainly, no one alive today can be directly responsible for the iniquities of the past. To impose the past on the present is unfair, but yet it is necessary to honor them with past for the cultural and collective posteriority of a people.
BLACK HISTORY is, in itself, a history of the United States. It is the history of a people, who, disadvantaged and diorented in a new country, have struggled to gain their freedom from slavery and live equally among others.
Realistically, there isn't (or there shouldn't be) anything special about being black or white or anything else. The fact of recognizing a person solely on color, nationality or sex is almost as bad as recognizing them for the reason they are same. They are accompanied with all the rights, faults, ideas and ideas as the next man or woman.
Black History月 is a time when people across the United States should take some time to reflect on and enjoy their culture. The most important progress made by the largest single minority group in the country. We should all strive to eliminate the stereotypical and separatist attitudes still with us, for now these attitudes have been made when it has no color at all.
Hustler deserves press freedom
To the editor:
This letter is in response to the statement made in the Feb. 11 issue of the Kansan by the recipient of the William Allen White Foundation's Award for Journalistic Merit, and editor of the report, which reported that freedom of the press, our Constitution's
EMMA, WHAT IS THAT BOY DOING IN THE CELLAR?
OH, HE SAID HE WAS ABLE TO ROUND UP A LITTLE (GIGGLE) PLUTONIUM AND NOW HE THINKS HE CAN FINISH HIS ATOM BOMB.
EMMA, WHAT IS THAT BOY DOING IN THE CELLAR?
OH, HE SAID HE WAS ABLE TO ROUND UP A LITTLE (GUGGLE) PLUTONIUM AND NOW HE THINKS HE CAN FINISH HIS ATOM BOMB.
ISN'T THAT CU—
© 1977 NYT Special Fear
ISN'T THAT CU--
Wescoe no taste treat
Wescoe Terrace Feb.16, 1977
Joseph and Audrey Addison 14 Cherry Tree Ave. Lymm, Cheshire
Dear Mum and Dad.
Sorry I haven't written for so long. It's lunchtime here now and I'm sitting in the cafeteria of a building where I have some classes. It's called Wescoe Terrace and it is a large L
shaped room that to me is a good example of many things found in modern day America, a sophisticated aesthetic appeal, comfort or style.
Since it seems such a good example of pure unadulterated Americana, forgive me if I was a little on its merits and faults.
One wall is painted in
Bicentennial red and blue while
part of a mock glare glares
bright orange, green and yellow
colors. Many of the naro- molded-polish seats around the edge of the room are joined to prevent easy access
the garbage cans are so large here.
Besides the regular food there's also a delicatessen in
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 15, 2013 by the U.S. Department of Education June and July are accepted Saturday, Sunday and Holiday 6:00am to 8:00pm. Subscriptions by mail may be a $2 offer or $12 if received by mail. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are free. Mail to: U.S. Dept. of Education 60444. Subscribers to
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Editor
Vincent Byrd
Associate Campus Editor Lydna Smith
Assistant Campus Editor Barbara Boree
Copy Chirs Jim Cubb
Sports Editor Bernell Juhkne Jim Gryce
Associate Sports Editors Gary Vite
Photo Editor Courtney Theorem
Photographer George Miller
Makeup Editor Jay Koehler Mariane Maurne
Make-up Editor Suspain Appleton, Juncob
Mary Myers Amanda O'Neill
Wire Editors Jay Bemin
Entertainment Editor Larry Bonarow
Sheet Silver, B薪明
Campus Editor
Alison Gwinn
Paul Addison
Editorial Writer
Business Manager Janice Clements
Advertising Manager Tim O'Shea
Advertising Manager Jake Tanner
Classified Manager Randy Highey
Assistant Classified Manager Paul Thornley
Dana McLean
National Advertising Manager Robin Gruber
National Advertising Manager John Baldacci
Managing Editor
Greg Hark
and are fixed on the floor so that the rigid rectangular design of the table is preserved. Most of the tables have a smooth matagoyah with sharp pointed edges, each with a small in-possessible ash tray in the middle.
AS IN MOST fast food institutions, individual and disposable seem to be key words in the , Terrace, and away, seemingly without regard to cost or the environment. For instance, when you get in the queue (they call it a "line" over here) to buy food, you pick up a cardboard tray, then a paper plate to put your food on or sandwich on, then pull down a paper cup to fill with a soft drink. After paying for the food you pick up plastic utensils, an 'individualized' carton of white powder to brighten the coffee, and an 'individualized' sack of ketchup which always seems to pour all over when ripped open. AFTER 20 minutes—actually it's usually later because it often takes 10 minutes merely to find a seat—it's time to throw
Many of the people sitting around me are from residence balls, which serve a "brown-bag" luncheon that seems to be the same everyday—a bologna or cheese sandwich, a small pack of tortilla chips and a bruised apple.
here which I usually avoid because the queue is so long and it's often impossible to get in the door, without setting crushed.
THERE'S AN election going on at the moment on campus to pick a student body president and vice president. Three teams of candidates are running and blazoned all over one of the walls in here. Their campaigns seem to be miniature versions of the national election campaigns with badges, tee-shirts, posters and even a few issues thrown in for good measure.
First Amendment, does not apply to Hustler magazine. Where in the Constitution is it written that we can arbitrarily make exceptions to amendments of the Constitution? It is not!
Kirkpatrick justified his belief that the First Amendment right to freedom of the press didn't apply to Hustler because of its "terrible writing and explicit photos." I am sure there are those who think that the Chicago Tribune itself is guilty of printing "terrible photos." It all depends on one's definition of "terrible writing and explicit photos."
Any believer in civil liberties does not have to agree with what a man says or prints but should defend his right to say or print it. There are no exceptions to general principles unless he is guilty of illegal acts in expressing those ideas.
I see it's almost time for my next class. They used to have a screaming whistle to condition us to get there on time, but we were away with it now so people are forced to look at a watch or clock.
Must rush,
Your loving son,
Paul
Kirkpatrick goes on to say that "I would rather save my fire for political repression." This is clearly a case of political repression. The courts have said that the American people freedoms that most Americans treasure, freedom of press. This is not to say that I am advocating pornography, but how one can one man be singled out when there are hundreds of publications which are equally as explicit as Hustler? Hustler has never made them more visible; there weren't many people who bought it voluntarily, for no one is forced to buy it. The excuse that Hustler and other pornographic publications are responsible for decaying the morals of the American people is that they are about the thousands of volumes that he ordered banned and burned in Nazi Germany, Shades of Fascism.
The most astounding aspect of Kirkpatrick's remarks is that in the same speech he talked about "a renewed and determined commitment to freedom from extremism, feeling among professional journalism organizations was to 'unite and resist' infringements upon First Amendment rights, but in the fourth death ways that these rights do not apply to Huster magazine.
"good" men, but to put them in jail for "terrible writing and explicit photos" is a greater threat than American freedom than they are.
Anyone who agrees with my point of view is not condoning or advocating pornography but is simply an advocate of civil liberties and is outraged by any attempts to revoke or limit our Press freedom. I pray freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution.
Shawnee Mission sophomore
I close with the great words of Daniel Patrick Moynihan; "When a person goes to a country and finds their newspapers filled with nothing they want, are good men in jail." Publishers of magazines like Hustler may or may not be
Matt Dennis
His fire's all wet To the editor.
Freedom of the press doesn't apply to Hustler magazine, says the man who received the 1977 William Allen White Foundation award for journalistic merit. He was tastelessness, and goes on, "I would rather save my fire for political repression." In other words—I may disagree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it. Would it be unkind to suggest
Would it be unkind to suggest
when Christ chose men as his apostles.
The role given to women does not lessen their worth and might in serving God. Women are the center of the family. God gave them the inheritance, the children, and the task to raise them through His teachings. If women relinquish their role in God's plan, the whole family structure will be weakened. This will make it only more important for the priests, male or female, to build up the Kingdom of God.
Joany Van Mol
Joany Van Mol Kansas City, Kan., junior
To the editor:
Sex bill lauded
The passage of Elwaine Pomeroy's bill which would legalize sexual acts between consenting adults is paramount
Readers Respond
his saved fire might not be all that warm after the courts get through soaking his matches?
Meanwhile, Vern Miller's men (does anyone in Lawrence remember him?) invade the campus of a sister institution and confiscate a film—again. A university professor, University suffered a similar indignity from the local authorities.
are legal questions and moral questions raised by outside intervention into a university's activities are not without some interest to a few of your readers.
Through all this, the Karsan staff jokes about a lack of news and publishes the second article this year (that I remember) on the sale of drugstore items in the Union bookstore.
Steve Miller
Waverly graduate student
Church can't err To the editor:
1. J. Westernman, in his letter of Feb. 11, displayed his ignorance concerning his own religion. It is an unfortunate fact that many children raised under him never grasp the basic teachings of the Church. When a reference is made to the infallibility of the Catholic Church, it is meant that the Church, by the special assistance of the Holy Ghost, can infiltrate the faith of believers a doctrine of faith or morals. The Church teaches infiltrate through the Pope alone, as the teacher of all Christians, or through the Pope and the bishops. This doctrine is based on the beginning of the Christian Faith. Vatican II did not change this fact.
It is also a fact that Pope Paul was not speaking ex cathedra was not speaking ex cathedral that women should not be ordained as Catholic priests. I was disappointed with Mr. Hicks's response to the issue in his letter of Feb. 8.
In his directive, the Pope has simply restated the criteria established by God for Catholics to follow. God created man and nature, but also gave these roles, or callings, are as relevant today as they were
to the ideals of sexual privacy, human dignity, and equality in Kansas.
The Pomeroy bill is especially pertinent to gay women and men because our statutes criminalize our lifestyles and our ways of expressing love. Although these laws are rarely enforced, many books they may be used for selective enforcement and may easily provide a basis for discrimination against gay men and lesbians in areas such as employment, housing, child custody and education. Eighteen states have made the archaic sex laws; Kansas would be wise to follow this trend.
The simple fact is that the state has no place in our bedrooms (be they gay or non-gay), and we consider sodomy an unconstitutional right of privacy. Concerned KU students can make sexual privacy a reality in Kansas by urging their state senators and representatives to pass the governor's proposed legislation.
newspaper. You printed the quotes.
The companion bill that specifically prohibits homosexual marriage strikes as practical compromise. However, we support the overall Formery effort in the hope that eventually the legislation prohibiting same-sex marriage will be made of increased sensitivity to the dignity of gay people.
Todd VanLaningham
Margaret Arnold
Margaret Arbour faculty adviser, Women's Coalition
Todd van.aningnam director, Gay Services of Kansas
You do not have to waste your time explaining that you didn't make up the quotes or create pot smoking in the residence. I believe your readers this fact without being told.
Reply unnecessary
To the editor:
The feeling came over me while reading your story that you wept as you wrote it. Richard Nixon's "Checkers" speech has become a classic quote, and the word "Quotes"故事 in, I'm sure, soon to follow under the heading of "heart melters."
People are held responsible for what they say and newspapers are held responsible for what they print. The students totally responsible for their estimates of pot smokers in the halls and anyone who disagrees with them should speak with the RAs who made the estimates. They make the estimates (erroneous or not) does not resign all responsibility from the
Tre
Ad reality Tau K becau Villag
The fact that the Karans relayed an opinion of an RA is nothing to complain about as far as I am concerned. You have the criticism is just based on the written place, and editing of a story. Where have you considered the content of a story? Are we not able to criticize the content of the story appearing in a newspaper? Are truth and quoting make up the content of a story?
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He Kans "mer the e band
Has anyone bought the film rights to "Three Little Quotes" yet?
Robert Longmire
Loved enthusiasm
One define prove With found design
Political blackmail To the editor:
Tedesha Tellese's proposal that we have the size of the faculty member's contribution toward student union funds increased strikes me as nothing short of political blackmail. I don't doubt this appeal was made to improve the status of the student in the academic community, a community that overall, has a limited view of the council member's activities.
Houletly, I've heard it said that anyone today deserves exactly what they can get and it's just that simple, but for a second, let's look at the record. What has the Student Senate actually accomplished this year? Why is this matter being left unresolved as a new election in the planning stage?
While I don't see anything wrong with making a proposal of this type, I wonder whether Tedde will actually stick her hand out for more funds if the faculty gives in.
Instead of resorting to backbiting tactics at the end of her term, I believe it would have been better to keep the crowned to size up the fiscal year from the start with a realistic (although possibly disappointing) outlook and petition to make it soon as possible afterwards.
The real moral to be gained here, however, is that the amount of service the Senate performs is essential to the academic community and that that type of service really does have an impact on that community. The council members have been an effective form of government is another story.
Quentin Peterson
Leavenworth freshman
Wednesday. February 16, 1977
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By JULIE ROBINSON Staff Reporter
person
n freshman
TKE member's work results in frat library
A dream for three years has become reality with the opening of a library in the Taukape Epition fraternity house largely the work of Skip Cooper, Prairie Village senior.
This promise greets into a project to build a library for the fraternity because members have long been interested in it.
When Gerier was elected TKE school chairman in December 1975, he promised to do something about organizing all the fraternity's papers.
THE PROJECT took the form of a photography business Carier formed to provide education.
Cerier said he had thought a library would aid the type of study environment" he saidwould be required for internity's 12-hour class schedules and 2.4 grade point average initiation requirements.
Initially, he enlisted the aid of
participants and kept a picture of the
entire party, and then the grid.
"But on Jan. 24, 1976, I had a photograph take some party pics, and he showed me the mechanics of shooting pictures," Cerier said. "He left the party picture, then bucked with the camera and requests for pictures, so I ended up taking some pictures."
Cerier stopped using professionals and began taking pictures himself. He called his enterprise Jayhawk Photo Company. It proved successful.
HE WENT TO organizations and told them about his plans for the fraternity library, and 20 organizations gave him training to bring him regular business at their functions.
Roche took pictures of the entire Roch
Clark Revue and sold $2,000 prints at $1.25
on EBay.
He took pictures of the University of Kansas marching band and sold sets called "memory mates," compriming pictures of skirts and pictures of individual band members.
Once he had financial backing and definite plans, Cerier's dream was approved by the fraternity's board of trustees. With the help of the TKE parents' club, he found an architect, contractors and designers.
CERIER ESTIMATES the value of the library at $4,000. There are 14 eight-foot shelves housing reference material ranging from encyclopedias to architecture books, and a test file containing about 500 tests. The fraternity has bought subscription to many magazines and plans to use its scholarship fund to buy more books.
The library which now has room for seven people to study, in use 24 hours a day (the library is open 7am-5pm).
The bright orange and yellow room has study boots and soon will have two lounge chairs.
THE LIBRARY is named the Larry Miller Scholarship Library in honor of a 1972 pledge who was initiated posthumously.
Cerier hopes the success of the project will inspire others.
"You can do it, too, if you have the energy in your organization," he said. "I look at it this way. We are all here to get an answer." But we don't get one dealing with all these people."
The project benefited Cerier, an accounting major, personally. His Jayhawk Photo Company has received contracts to photograph tools to picture of the marching hands.
His photographs are also being donated to the University Archives, at the request of the U.S. Government.
Prof plans visit to Iranian jail
Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare in Tehran, Iran, to do research on visit 18 Iranian citizens arrested last year for and-government activities.
Forer's intention was announced Monday by Don Brownstein, associate professor of philosophy and director of the American Committee for Iranian Human Rights.
Brownstein said the committee had sent a letter to President Jimmy Carter to ask for an expression of support for the rights of the prisoners.
Forer is scheduled to return to Lawrence by March 1.
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Ken Idlemon Jake
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6
Wednesday, February 16, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Old
'Smithy'
Staff photos by MARIANNE MAURIN
1726
Just right
Wilmer Selzer, a blacksmith for 50 years, knows exactly when the metal is ready to be removed from the fire. Below, the cobwebs have claimed tools of Selzer's father.
By RICK THAEMERT Staff Reporter
When Wilfred Selzer was 12 years old, his father taught him blacksmithing. Now 72, Selzer is the last blacksmith in a century-old family tradition, and one of the last practice masters in the United States.
Selzer, who lives eight miles south of Eudora, pulled open the door of the house where the tradition began. Built more than 100 years ago by his grandfather, the house is leasing and dilapidated. Where furniture once stood, only blacksmith and carpenter's tools remain.
"My dad was born right there in that corner," Selzer said, pointing to a corner of his blacksmith room filled with dirty plowshares and rusty nuts and bolts. Iron and steel items—from horse bits, tools and machines—filled almost every inch of bare wall space.
THE FAINT SCENT of gunpowder and steel filled the room, and the presence of iron
forks and machines—milled into every inch of mine space.
THE FAMILY SCENT of gunpowder and steel filled the room, and the presence of iron
chung to everything.
"I like iron," Selzer said. "You can't make a board longer, but you sure can weld two pieces of metal together and make them as strong as one."
Tinned iron woven iron pipes together and smiled proudly. Wips of soft, silver hair placed under a dark green farm implement cap and Seler's overslora were covered with steel.
"I told the missus when I married her that I fooled around a lot with grease and got dirt," Selzer said.
He walked over to two gunny sacks filled with "smithing" coal and grabbed two band-folks.
"THAT COAL, ain't no good. It's dirty," he said, throwing one handful to the ground. The good coal in his other hand formed large, shiny nuggets, in contrast to the dull,
"You have to have the right coal to weld two pieces of iron together," Selzer said. "I know, because I've used them all."
Seelzer said good coal was usually Pennsylvania or Virginia soft coal, and was difficult to find. He last tried to buy some in St. Paul, Miln.
"When I ask for 'smitiming' coal in a store, the young ones will ask me what I'm talking about," he said. "If my dad did of found out he couldn't buy blacksmithing coal, he'd
Seizer said he was also disturbed by the high costs of coal. It used to sell for 75 cents for 100 pounds, but it now costs $6 for the same quantity, he said.
to through a ton of coal in a year, he said
See BLACKSMITH page seven
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SPEED READING CLASS TO BE TAUGHT IN LAWRENCE
The United States Reading Lab Mid-West Division is offering their famous speed reading course to a limited number of qualified people here in the Lawrence area. The average person who completes this course can read 10 times faster, and with substantially improved comprehension and better concentration.
For complete details about this famous speed reading course be sure to attend one of the free one hour orientation lectures that have been scheduled. These lectures are open to the public, above persons under 18 should be accompanied by a parent, if possible, and training is provided in complete detail, including class schedules, instruction procedures and a tuition that is much less than similar courses.
This famous course has taught many thousands of people to read over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and retain what they have read much more effectively. Average graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.
These meetings will be held on campus at the Lutheran Student Center, 15th and Iowa, on Wed., Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m. , Thurs., Feb. 17, 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m. , Fri., Feb. 18 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m. , Sat., Feb. 19 at 10:30 p.m. and two FINAL MEETINGS, Tues., Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. and TWO FINAL MEETINGS, Tues., Feb. 22, 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Classes are limited and class places will be filled on first come first serve basis only. Be sure to attend the meeting possible to insure a class place. Group meetings may be requested.
Seats to be decided for College Assembly
A total of 108 student seats in the College and the university decided during elections today and tomorrow.
fourths of the assembly is made up of faculty members, and the rest consists of staff.
The assembly, the governing body of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, meets about once a month to handle such matters. The college is subject to specific regulations and course changes. Three-
Students may vote only for candidates from their class.
Students may write in their own choices as assembly positions, but the College offers a large number of opportunities.
Accent the ARTS
Strong Concerts are daily recitals in the Lobby of Strong Hall at noon
Wed., Feb. 16 - noon Marilyn Michael, mezzo-soprano Fred Toner, piano
Thurs., Feb. 17 - noon Varied works by an all-string ensemble
Fri., Feb. 18 - noon
Joe Utterback, jazz piano
Recitals performed by students and faculty of School of Fine Arts Events free
2 FREE Draws with any pizza ordered at the Wheel between 5 & 7
Featuring today's special—Green Pepper
HEAVY EDDYS Pizza
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Kiryat Shemona Ma'alot Beit Shean
Where others would kill innocent children, we will build schools.
Where others would destroy buildings, we will build homes.
Where others would take life, we will sustain it.
We stand firmly with the people of Israel. Let them know I
Let them know it.
Give to the United Jewish Appeal Campus Campaign Information Table 2, Union Feb.14-18, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. or send your contribution to Kansas Union, Box 4, Lawrence, Kansas 66045
Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
Wednesday, February 16, 1977
7
ly made up of consists of graduates candidates own choices be College practice.
east
free
delivery
-3100
A
Staff photo by MARTANNE MAURIN
"I can tell by the look of the fire what it's doing."
Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Programs NO ADMISSION
Thursday, Feb. 17 FILMS
Room 3 Bailey
Mexican Americans...Historical Profile
Mexican Americans...The invisible minority
The most hated man in New Mexico
Friday, Feb. 18 SPEAKER
Forum Room Union 7:30 p.m. Ramon Roubideaux, A.I.M. Attorney will talk on "Educational Dilemma of Native Americans in the Professions. For more information
Blacksmith
From page six
Although he once did all kinds of blacksmith and carpentry work, Selzer said he now limits himself to sharpening plowshares and repairing tractors.
For more information 864-4353
Selzer said his father and he once did as many as 50 plowshares a day, at 35 cents each. Now, he doesn't do that many, but he buys 15 cents an hour for 15 minutes, and earns $1.50 for each effort.
SELZER CRUMPLED a yellow copy of the Lawrence Daily Journal-Landmark and it lit up the room, having placed it under some coal in a large, round, canopied stove. As the coal began smoldering, Selzer quickly began turning a fire air to the fire from underneath.
He pointed to several pieces of coal chimney together. "That's what the fireman could be said."
As the fire blazed, the smoke cleared,
but the smokey good coal left little smoke after
the ashes.
Selzer wiped his forehead, and stripped away his greasy jacket.
Thick smoke filled the room. Sunlight filtering through holes and cracks in the roof and walls became hundreds of bright beams that illuminated a faint. A thin layer of sootell on every wain.
"I can tell by the look of the fire what it's doing," he said.
HE STOKED THE burning coal without fear.
Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansas. 864-4358
--touched it to my face, it would burn me." Selzer took a round piece of steel and bounced it on a large anvil. The steel pealed loudly.
"When it's about a hundred outside in the sun, it gets mighty hot here. 'Delerer said, 'We're here.'"
"THAT AINT tooled steel," I can tell by it, the aid, burying the steel under the laumier's feet.
Sezler said when he tempered steel, he first heated it, then touched the hot metal to water. As each color of the rainbow appears in succession, he simply chooses the color that corresponds to the temper he wants, then douzes the metal in water to cool it.
Selzer check the stove and removed the piece of steel. It was bright red.
my front pocket, and it get so hot if I touched it to my face, it would burn me."
"I always work steel when it cherry red—no hotter, no colder," he said, grabbing a six-pound hammer and placing the bolt on a 58-year-old Sears and Roebuck avail.
THE ROOM filled with echoes after each blow to the metal. Sparks flew as Selzer pounded the edge of the metal to a sharp point.
Selzer threw the metal aside impatiently and grabbed a plowshaper, immerging it in
Several minutes later, he pulled out the glowing plowshare and walked to a 100-year-old trip hammer. When he switched it on, an iron driver slammed down on a platform in rapid succession. Selzer steamed his plate, setting the machine, letting the hammer mold a sharp edge for him. He shook with each percussion of the machine.
"You have to do this by feel," he said. "If
Bull & Boar
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Advanced Building Studies Graduate Multidisciplinary Programs
134 N. 67th St.
Database Research Control Organisation Registered
The program is designed to prepare future leaders in the building industry for opportunities of advanced practices which emerge in large architectural and engineering firms, construction firms, real property development and management organizations which concern themselves with building related products, and various local, state and national government agencies concerned with regulation or management of the built environment.
PURPOSE - The program provides advanced training in planning, design, construction and operation of the built environment, by considering the interrelated esthetic, technological, financial and managerial aspects of building problems, embedded in a systems approach. The program integrates methods, knowledge and techniques which address problems of building traditionally fragmented approaches to design of the built environment.
Computer-Aided Design Energy Conscious Design Disaster Mitigation Cost Management Project Management
Real Estate Economics and Management Solar Utilization in Building Structural Systems in Design Systems Integration
TOPICS OF STUDY
DEGREES
Master of Architecture in Advanced Building Studies
Master of Science in Civil Engineering (Advanced Building Studies)
Master of Urban and Public Affairs in Advanced Building Studies
Doctor of Philosophy
APPLICATION — For students with first professional degrees in Architecture, Engineering and/or Management Graduate fellowships and research assistant positions.
Please request information from
Prot. Völker Harktor, Director / Advanced Building Studies / Carnegie-Mellon
University Park, Pittsburgh, PA 15233
College of Fine Arts Carnegie Institute of Technology School of Urban and Public Affairs
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you get the metal in there wrong, the machine will take it and throw it across the table.
SELZER LAID the plowshare down to cool, then picked up a broken pipe. He said he could焊 the pieces and they'd be as strong as before.
"When I take those out of the forge, they're gonna throw sparkles all over. Then I'll stick them together and they'll stay. Nothing beat forging if it's done right."
Not all blacksmiths do it right, however. "I don't know one young person who knows how to do this," Selzer said. "Even my own nephew don't know about some of this stuff."
SELZER SAID he could remember times when students had taken blacksmithing
classes came to him and were surprised at their lack of knowledge. One even tried to start a fire with clinkers, or coal residue, he said.
SELZER PUSHED open a creaky door
SELZER PUSHED open have been the living room of the old house.
More large tools basked in the sunlight coming through caved-in segments of the roof. An energy wheel for smoothing metal, a laft for casting metal and a saw oak floor. A wall with moldings, filings, sawdust and clothes covered the floor. The walls were lined with metal stenicts, old wagon parts, yellowed ledger books and almost every kind of mechanical device.
See SELZER page 10
FRESHMEN &
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
TRANSFER STUDENTS
(Plus any interested upperclassmen)
The 28th Annual
Counselor-Student
Conference
will be held on
Wednesday, February 16
in the Kansas Union
Each year the Office of Admissions and Records sponsors a Conference which brings to the campus high school principals and counselors and community college personnel for a program of academic and student affairs presentations. The conference also includes students with their former students who are freshmen or community college transfers.
The Office of Admissions and Records invites interested students to take part in this year's Conference. It will be an excellent opportunity to discuss your preparation for K.U., how well you have met the academic challenge of the academic programs, and your concerns for the future here. Your participation also helps build a stronger relationship with your former school, meaningful value information about making your K.U. experience a more meaningful one for you.
Students attending the afternoon meetings will be excused from attendance in any classes between 2:00 and 3:00 p.m. on the 16th. The following high schools and community colleges will be attending the Conference and have indicated an interest in visiting with their former students in the Kansas Union.
KANSAS HIGH SCHOOLS
Abilene
Asthand
Ashland
Atkinson
Atwood
Augusta
Baldwin
Beloit
Bishop Miege
Bee Valley, Stanley
Bonner Springs
Burlingame
Burrington
Chanute
Chaparrel Anthony
Carrollon
Clay Center
Colby
Goldwater
Conway Springs
Decatur Community, Oberlin
Derry
Desoto
Dodge City
El Dorado
Elkhart
Emporia
Ethical Tayer-St. Paul
Eudora
Eureka
Field, Field, Langdon
Field Kindle, Coffeyville
Gardner
Gearless
Glasco
Goddard
Goodland
Great Bend
Greensburg
Harmon, K.C., Ks.
Highland Park, Topeka
City
Hutchinson
immaculata, Leavenworth
Independence
Iola
Jayhawk-Linn, Mound City
Jewell
Junction City
Kaplan/Mt. Carmel, Wichita
Kimpson
Lansing
Larned
Lawrence
Leavenworth
Liberty
Lincoln
Louisburg
Lucas
Luray
Lyndon
Lyons
McPherson
Marion
Meade
Milwaukee
Wooloola
Mission Valley, Eskridge
Muvane
Nodasha
Newton
Oakley
Okahne
Osage City
Oswatotomie
Observation
Okawa
Paola
Perry-Lecompton
Pittsburgh
Plainville
Powhatan
Protection
Riley
Russell
St. Francis, St. John's, Beloit
St. Joseph, Shawnee
St. Mary's, Marys
St. Xavier, Manhattan
Sabeth
St. Heart Heart, Salina
Salina Central
Salina South
Schlegel, Kays, Ks.
Samantha, Topka
Silver Lake
Shawnee Mission North
Shawnee Mission Northwest
Shawnee Mission South
Shawnee Mission West
Foxcrest
Tonganoxie
Topekha West
Troy
Ulysses
Wabansee, Alma
Wamego
Warmor, Topeka
Washington, K.C., Ks.
Wathena
Wellington
Wellsville
Wichita East
Wichita Heights
Wichita North
Wichita South
Wichita Southeast
Wichita West
Wandofthe
MISSOURI HIGH SCHOOLS
Central, K.C., Mo.
Fort Osage, Independence, Mo.
Oak Park, K.C., Mo.
Park Hill, K.C., Mo.
Paseo, K.C., Mo.
Raytown South, Raytown, Mo.
Van Horn, Independence, Mo.
COMMUNITY COLLEGES
Barton County
Cloud County
Colby
Cowley County
Dodge City
Garden City
Garden City
Haskell
Hutchinson
Independence
Kansas
Kansas City Kansas
Neoho County
Park
Seward
A list of room locations will be available at information booth #1 in the north lobby of the Union from 1:30:30 p.m. on the 16th.
this is your opportunity to feedback information about experiences at KU to your former high school and community college.
2-3 p.m. Wednesday,
Feb. 16, Kansas Union
in case you have any questions concerning the conference, please contact the Office of Admissions and Records, 124 Strong Hall, phone 864-3911.
8
Wednesday, February 16, 1977
University Dally Kansan
KU seeks out of second division
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Associate Sports Editor
If a good team with a good record inspires other teams to winning performance, the team will be more competitive.
The Jayhaws meet Iowa State, the team with the worst overall record (6-18) in the Big Eight conference, at 7:35 tonight in Omaha. The team would seem to be patently unimpressive.
And KU needs inspiration, or something.
And the players still have the less than enjoyable memories of the Kansas State loss filed too far back in their minds.
But KU coach ted Towens says the team is coming to this point, to con- template its troubles.
"SOMETIMES YOU just have to do what's required. We can't afford to让kid our wounds now because we have to go back out and win these three last games."
The object of concern now is the home
court advantage for post season tournament play. Worries about the Big Eight contest are not to be missed.
Owens said that the Jayhawks can't win only two of their last three games and still win a game in each round of the post-season tournament, Feb. 26. All three must be wins, he says—against Iowa State tonight, Nebraska here this weekend and Colorado next Wednesday in Boulder.
If KU can win all three games, the Jayhawks will finish with a 9-5 conference record. The loss to K-State on Saturday dropped KU to fifth (6), behind Oklahoma and Nebraska, both with 74 records. The State share the conference lend at 8-5.
Kansas seems relatively well assured of at least the fifth-place spot -the problem is that only the first four teams get the home court advantage.
It looks now as if the Jayhawks will play either Nebraska or Oklahoma in the first round of the playoffs. The 'Hawks are now up to determine the location of that game.
So being at the top of the second division doesn't get it.
BUT KANSAS still has two remaining games on the road (at Iowa State and Colorado), and the Jayhawks' success on the road has been inconsistent. Nebraska plays all of its remaining games on the road but the Sooners have only one road game against Dallas. But the game favor Oklahoma which means Nebraska is KU's likely opponent—either here or there.
Although 7-0 center Paul Mokesi said he was physically able to play and wanted to be in the game against K-Site, he didn't play. Instead, he made a nature of Mokesi's potential for play tonight.
"He has the flu now,but will probably
make the trip. But we can't afford to experiment at this point though. If he can demonstrate in practice that he can be effective, he may play."
KU may need that height however, to deal with the rebounding of the Cyclones' freshman center, Dean Uthoff. He leads the conference in rebounds and averages 10.4 a game, and also is the leading Iowa State scorer. Uthoff is unusual in that the has more total rebounds to his credit than total points he leads his team $^{1}$ both categories.
★★★
Probable Starting Lineups
Harris Nobbles, 6.7 senior
Ryan Foster, 6.5 junior
C Kim Horns, 6.10 junior
K Cam Kenny, 6.10 junior
G Haasen Houson, 6.42 state
W State
S Steve Borgstenau, 6.31 sophomore
A Andrew Ullman, 6.29 sophomore
U University of Akron, 6.24 junior
L Leonard Alex, 6.44 junior
World record is no stopping point for Wiley
Bv ROB RAINS
Sports Writer
A few people may have been surprised by Cliff Wiley's performance at the United States Track and Field Federation (USTF- F) Indoor Championships last weekend.
If they were, they don't know Cliff Wiley.
If they were, they don't know Cliff Wiley. Wiley, Baltimore, Md., junior, tied the world record in the 300-yard dash and the second in the 80-120 pace to the Jayhawks as the team hit.
Wiley's time in the 300-29.8 seconds-
tied the record for a 176-yard track. The
record for the more common 220 track is
sleighter faster-29.3
"It (the record) is nice to have," Wiley said Monday, "but it hasn't been one of my goals. I like running that well, but it's not something I can stop with."
ONE THING the race did for Wiley was build up his confidence. And that, according to head coach Bob Timmons, has been one of his problems.
THE JACKSON STREET FIGHTERS
"Cliff wants to be a world-class spinner." Timmons said. "He needs to have all kinds of confidence in his own ability before that is soining to happen."
Wiley says that he needs to be more confident, saying that he has been too inconsistent in his races this season. He wants to change that soon.
Wiley has one advantage in trying to build his confidence this year that he didn't have. He has a solid reputation.
"I'm looking forward to a good Big Eight tour," he said, "but I I'm looking more toward national."
HIDEN't participate in meets during KU's outdoor season last year because of a snowstorm.
Speedster Cliff Wiley
limits on the amount of financial aid he could receive.
The problem arose because Wiley was on a full athletic scholarship and also received financial aid through a federal program that assists students from underprivileged families.
Wiley took the case to court and won. The NCAA, however, has appealed the federal district court decision to the 10 U.S. court of Appeals. No trial date has been set.
"The whole thing disturbed me more
academically than anything else," Wiley said. "It was hard to come in and sit down to study when you didn't know if you would be in school the next week or not.
"ITS BAD when the NCAA can't see what I see," Wiley continued. "Here I was, a sophomore in college and basic logic told me that I couldn't have had no connection to my athletic ability."
But the NCAA officials thought otherwise and Wiley missed the outdoor season.
"I don't have a bitter taste in my mouth because of the whole affair," Wiley said. "It's one of those situations in life that you just have to deal with."
Foremost in Wiley's mind is the Big Eight meet Feb. 25-26 and the NCAA Indoor Championships March 11-12. He has qualified for the nationals in the 60 and as a member of the mile relay team. The 300 is not run in the nationals.
Wiley said his favorite events were the 100 and 200 meters. It is in them that he hopes to succeed as a world-class athlete.
"I don't run that great early in the season," Wiley said. "I prefer to run out-
"I look at this as the pivotal year," Willey said. "I'm planning on going to Europe this summer and running over there. I want to see what I can do."
ROCKY HITS RIGHT ON THE BUTTON!
WITH 10 ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS! Eve, a+t 30.9; 45.
Morgan, a+t 68.4; 78.2.
Varsity
2041-17 ... September 19, 2016
Ends Tuesday
Barbra Streisand &
Kris Kristofferson
Ends Tuesday
... a guardian at the
gates of Hell
Ends Tuesday Walt Disney's
"A STAR IS BORN"
>SILVER STREAK>
the sentinel
Eve. 7:35, 9:20, 5:5. 2:05
Eve, at 7:15 & 9:45
Sat, Sun, Mat 1:45
Eve. With Gene Wilder
9:40
Sat.
1:55
Hillcrest
"FREAKY FRIDAY"
Hillcrest
Hillcrest
KANAS CITY (AP)—Pitcher Dennis Leonard and shortstop Fred Patek are thought to be the only Kansas City Royals who may play out their options this year and become free agents, a source close to the team indicated yesterday.
Eve. 7:30, 9:30
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30
Granada
Nº14/15 - Segundo Floor
Six Royals unsigned
SUA
The Royals, western division champions of the American League, hurriedly announced the signings of 30 of their 36er sluggers. The final round of rumors of signings began circulating.
The holdouts are designated hitter Hal McRae, who hit .332 last year, starting pitcher Larry Gura, outfielder Tom Pouquette, first baseman-outfielder Pete LaCock and Leonard and Patek.
Leonard, who won 17 games last year with an earned-run average of 3.51, is the only Royal regular represented by Jerry Kupcik and the history of taking tough negotiating stances.
BOSA and the Art History undergraduates present:
SUA and the
"A Sneak Preview of the Spencer Museum of Art—" DR. CHARLES ELDREDGE, director Thursday, Feb. 17
7:30 p.m.
FORUM ROOM, UNION
BUNUEL DOESN'T GIVE A DAMNI
"MARVELOUS!
Dozens of saisons, rapage, mum, picasaons,
inquintions, heretics, bishops, whores and
humble people are either represented or
evoked, comic, masterly cool, fascination.
New York Times
UNIC PICTURES a division of UNIVERNAL MEDIA CORPORATION
LUIS BUNUEL'S
THE MILKY WAY
Woodruff Auditorium
7:30 and 9:30 $1.00
THURSDAY, FEB. 17
ELECT
McKERNAN & RHOADS
STUDENT BODY PRESENT
AVANTI
MOVE FOREWARD WITH AVANTI VOTE FEBRUARY 16-17
Paid for by Avanti
CANDIDATES MOVING FORWARD WITH AVANTI
NUNEMAKER 1
NUNEMAKER 2
Cathy Bailey
Nancy Dressier
Ed Duckers
Sheila Everhart
Susan Rioger
Brad Sterrett
Ladonna Hale
Pam Kern
Ed Mick
Allen Reynolds
Anne O'Shaughnessy
NUNEMAKER 3
LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES
Lance Armer
Ruth Benian
Jeff Knox
Kathy Pobley
Diane Schuechi
Sharon Anderson
Mark Bolton
Corliss Chandler
John Esau
Lisa Friday
Mark Hughes
Ken Idleman
Steve McMurry
Andy Ramires
Dave Ramires
Jim Ruane
Jake Thompson
Jim Willis
Allen Gilstrap
Leslie Anne Graves
Julie Long
Sarah Toevs
Tom Werth
NUNEMAKER 4
Mary Huffman
Tim MCCarthy
Julie Rlggs
Brad Snyder
Marcia Talty
Ladd Welch
NUNEMAKER 5
ARCHITECTURE
ARCHITECTURE
Joe Bandy Ray Kramer
BUSINESS
Rick Chambers
Dave Dyers
Todd Hunter
Kenneth Leathers
EDUCATION
Jan Davidson
Janet Haverty
Linda Louden
ENGINEERING
B
Barbara Brussell
David Fuchs
Ed Hite
Jim Jandt
Rhonda May
Jim McCarten
Weezie Purzer
Scott Stallard
FINE ARTS
Their and all the t Univer in mir Ted O
Rum head of years.
Don Consolver Jordan Hanna Sally McDonald Anne Meeker Cyndee Michele Nancy Park Scott Ward
W
The season
S
KAN
baske
Kemp
win
Unive
Dioc men' the pa said for resig the s
The he w curr Hills
re
JOURNALISM
JOSEPHALIS
Marsha Bjerkan
Jack Marvin
Dan Terrill
Re
impr
was
time
med
sch
was
"I said job I feel a richi clea reas
decid
done
mai
at K
the
SENIOR CLASS
Mike Nelson Fred Gans Patty Curry Lisa Cave
JUNIOR CLASS
Rod Beeler Craig Gilland Kathy Taylor Sharon Pavel
SOPHOMORE CLASS
Greg Schnacke
Bill Hamilton
Lisa Larsen
Molli Hasenbank
Wednesday, February 16, 1977
9
ater Hal
starting
r Tom
r Pete
ear with the only ry Kap- f taking
University Daily Kansan
Basketball coaching staff under the 'Gong'
By COURTNEY THOMPSON and GARY VICE Sports Writers
There are apparently groups of students and alumni that think a change is needed in the basketball coaching staff at the University of Kansas. The change they have in mind is the replacement of head coach Ted Owens and his staff.
Rumblings of dissatisfaction with the KU head coach have been present for several years. The university's first head coach
Several (estimates vary from 15 to 25) students wore T-shirts to the game with the words "Gong Owens" on the front. The students moved to an unveil of Owens in favor of "new blood."
expressions of disapprovat last Saturday during and after the Kansas-Kansas State
Also, sometime during the K-State game,
also an autonymous group of students and alumni
from the university.
Women cagers win
AFTER TAKING over the KU helm in 1962, Reamon turned out 218 Big-Eight swimmers, 107 conference gold medals and 15 All-Americans. Reamon himself was voted District Five Coach-of-the-Year in 1970.
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-The KU women's basketball team made its first visit to Kemper Avenue a successful one with a 71-61 victory. Missouri University here last night.
Under Reamon KU kupas won eight straight Big Eight conference championships between 1968 and 1975. Last year Hawks dropped to third in the conference.
"I thoroughly enjoyed my work at KU," said Reamon. "There is no other coaching job I could have wanted or enjoyed more. I feel as if the time I spent at Kansas has been richly rewarding, and I want to make it more." My I'm leaving strictly for personal reasons."
Reamon also is investigating several other private offers.
Dick Reamon, head coach of the Kansas men's swim team, resigned yesterday from the post he has held for 15 years. Reamon said in an announcement that he resigned for personal reasons and that the resignation would be effective at the end of the season.
Reamon, a KU graduate, had a very impressive career at Kansas. He was a first-year student three times in the butterfly and individual medley. At the time, Reamon held every school record in those events, and he also was named an honorable mentor All-State.
The 37-year-old coach from Topeka said he would enter private business. Reamon currently is owner and manager of Holiday Hills Swim Club in Lawrence.
The win by the Jayhawks, now 11-14 on the season, was the first over the Bakerskirk in
Kansas athletic director Clyde Walker said the search for Reasonan's successor
Swim coach resigns post
"Naturally I'm disappointed Dick has decided to resign," said Walker. "He has done an excellent job in building and maintaining a superior swimming program at KU. All of us wish him the best of luck in the future."
Reason started the 1976-77 season with an 87-31 lifetime record in dual meets as KU coach. The Jahayhws' dual record so far this season is 3-5.
Two meets remain on the KU schedule this year. The last dual of the season will be Saturday against Oklahoma State in Robinson Natorium. The Big Eight Conference Championship meet is slated for March 3- in Lincoln, Neb.
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10 games dating back to the 1972-73 season. KU had it easy going in the first half but struggled in the second half to remain on top of the basketball match ever played in the arena.
parking lots of allen Field House. The flyers advocating Owens' removal cite a "noticeable decline in basketball excellence at the University of Kansas."
In the first half, the 'Hawks shot 47 per cent from the field as they led by 10 points at half time but led at one time by 14 points, 18.5 points in another. The second half was a different story.
THE LITERATURE further states that a poor record outside the Big Eight conference, poor recruiting reputation among premier high school players, decreased recruitment and opportunities points all are reasons for "a completely pew basketball coach staff."
"It's so nice to win the first one, that I don't care if we ever win again," KUU said. "I'll be happy."
"They were a good team but we played our game and went out after them tonight,"
KU cooled off from the field and hit only 29 per cent as NWSI1 was lifted to within four feet of the ground.
Adrian Mitchell led KU in scoring and rebounding with figures of 18 points and 14 rebounds. Koleber and Sanders followed in scoring with 12 and 11 points respectively.
Free throws kept the 'Hawks in front as they scored seven of their last 11 points from the foul line with guard Cheryl Burnett scoring three times from the line while guard V. C. S. Sanders scored twice and forward June Koleber added one.
The game was a preliminary contest before the Kansas City Kings-King-Phoenix Suns in the NBA. The teams were tied 7-7.
Within the past five years, KU has won 50 per cent of its non-fence games, 59 per cent of its conference games and 59 per cent of its total games played. But against them in most games, KU was Kentucky, Indiana, the Jayhawks have a 1-2 record during that five year period.
There hasn't been a steady yearly decline in "basketball excellence" in the last five years according to won-lost figures. (1967-72) KLU won 70 per cent of its games.
"My job is to assist our players in every way possible and to have the best possible team."
BUT WHY are no prestige schools scheduled to play here? It's been reported that teams avoid scheduling games in favor of being more efficient quality high school talent in the area.
Owens said he was disappointed that fans chose to express their disappointment over game losses in the form of T-shirts and leaflets.
Owens has been head coach at KU for 13 years. Sam Miranda, assistant coach, has been at KU for 13 years, and Duncan Red, an assistant coach, is in his fourth year here.
"I think Dr. Forrest 'Phog' Allen made a comment several years ago which seems appropriate at this time. Owens said, "The dog has been the best barking dog, he would never get his mail delivered."
And teams set their schedules so they can play before potential toni recruits.
BACKGAMMON Tonight, 7 p.m. Kansas Union
The distributors of the flyers didn't identify themselves but they urged supporters of their opinion to write Clyde McClellan. The athleticists, to lend support to oust Owens.
1
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WHEN ASKED whether he had received complaints from such supporters, Walker said, "I would have no comment to make on that, sorry."
BUY
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Expiration date: February 28, 1977
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JayHawk "Pecker" Hats Still
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Concerning complaints aimed directly at Owens, Walker said, "I don't intend to comment on anything related to that subject."
WEARE!
Finally, when questioned about Owens' future as KU's head basketball coach, he said, "I've never considered committing to a team. I wouldn't dignify that with a comment."
Bottle
THE STABLES
1401 WEST SEVENTH NOON-MIDNIGHT "Home Of The KU Student And Budweiser"
A check of the printing services in Lawrence gave no indication of the sponsor of the leaflets. None of the shops knew the printing request by KU alumni or students.
THE WEARERS of "Gong Owens" T-shirts, in contrast to the identified "concerned students and alumni," don't hesitate to explain their position.
A spokesman for the KU Alumni Association said the association knew nothing of the distribution of the flyers and wouldn't approve it.
John Bush, Lawrence junior, who was the first to wear a "Gong Owens" T-shirt, said, "I really miss being a power in basketball. If Kansas is going to be a winner; let's do it." I am tired of being a second division team in a second-grade conference."
Explaining the origin of the T-shirts, Bush said, "I got one a long time ago for myself after seeing some Gong (Al) Onofrio (Missouri football coach) once. It was just a joke. Other people saw it and thought it was funny and wanted one."
said that they would like to see Gale Caitlett, new head coach at the University of Chicago, return to KU. Caitlett was formerly an assistant coach at KU.
All of the T-shirt objectors questioned
Jeff Nelson, Salina senior, said, "The recruiting and talent are good, but we are dissatisfied with what Owens has done with this potential he has not being fully utilized."
Bush said he didn't know who was behind the publishing of the leaflets.
Japan
Night
Sunday, Feb. 20
5:00 p.m. Banquet 6:00 p.m. Cultural Show Kansas Union Cafeteria Woodruff Auditorium Tickets: $4.50 at S.U.A. office JAPANESE ASSOCIATION Sponsored by K.U. International Club
---
COOT
"An irreverent farce by an ungrateful subject. Lamont Cranston was right?"
T
UNIVERSITY THEATRE—MURPHY HALL Feb.18,19,24,25 at 8:00 p.m.Feb.20 at 2:30 p.m. Ticket Reservations: 864-3982 KU students admitted without charge upon receipt of current Certificate of Registration. This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fee.
record breaking Music
3'99
•Our regular
4'7" albums
ALBUMS
KRIS KRISTOFFERSON
SURREAL THING
John Austin Pancheck
11 Months And 29 Days
Barbra Streisand
Kris Kristofferson
A Star Wars
TOWER OF POWER
Ant Neil John Shippin Us Now
RUSTY WIER
BLACK HAT SALDON
Burton Cummings
4'99
Records
5'99
Tapes
WILLIE NELSON
THE TROUBLEMAKER
4'99
•Our regular
6'67" tapes
TAPES
ON COLUMBIA
RECORDS AND TAPES.
GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER 2525 Iowa Street, Lawrence, Kansas Prices good now through Sunday, Feb. 20, 1977
10
Wednesday, February 16, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Selzer ...
From page seven
part. It resembled an antique museum for mechanics...
"MY GRANDAD was a wagon maker," Selzer said, picking up a wagon wheel hub. "When automobiles in came in, wagons went plumb out."
"I used to tell grandma, 'I don't wanna make no damn wagons. I wanna be a mechanic,' he said. "But, it didn't hurt me anyway. You can never learn too much."
Selzer foraged about the plies of machine parts in the room. Buggy spokes, horse yokes, carpenters' aprons and buggy wrenches passed through his calloused
Coming from a family of craftsmen,
Seize said he could build almost anything.
And, if he didn't know how, he simply read
a book and tried it, he said.
"THERE ANN'T nothing I won't try."
Saler said.
Despite Selzer's bubbly appearance, which he attributes to hard "smitting" work, he's a little slower than he used to be, he said.
"To used to, quick as I got something in my stomach I was ready to work again," Seizer said, leaning near a window thick with billowy cobwebs. "Dad used to get kindies to play with you. You now know what feel like going all the time. Now know what be meant."
Seizer said that some relatives had tried persuade him to visit other relatives in Govenment offices.
SELZER SAID he would probably quit "smiling" in a few years and concentrate on farming his 160 acres, cattle and rice. He was also to have a wife's wishes and take a vacation, he said.
"They're well off over there in Germany, them Seizers. They have a factory with 700 employees," he said. "But I don't think I understand it. I do not have any faith in airplanes."
Ceremony to honor high school seniors
Outstanding high school seniors from Marion and McPherson counties will be honored at 7 on tight by the University of Mississippi. The event will be held at McPheron's Limited Methodist Church.
At the ceremony, Chancellor Archie Dykes will present a special plaque to one of the seniors, the 10,000th student honored by the KU Honors Program.
The program, begun six years ago, encourages Kansas communities to promote education and recognize outstanding students.
Eighty students will attend the program from Centre, Canton-Galva, Goessel, Hillibarou, Inman, Lindsborg, Marion, Peabody-Burns high schools and Peabody-Burns high schools.
ridiculous he had heard on the subject. He said the opponents argued mostly moral reasons.
Marijuana bill . . .
"But this is Kansas," Ungerleider said. "This is America 100 years ago. It's sort of fun to come to Kansas and go back in time 100 years."
From page one
Glover's bill, if it becomes law, would reduce penalties for possession of two ounces or less of marijuana to a maximum fine of $100. Those arrested for marijuana wouldn't be jailed and, after two years, wouldn't have a record of their arrest.
NOW, SIMPLE possession is punishable by a $2,500 bill and one year in prison. A second conviction is a felony that could result in a $5,000 bill and up to 10 years in prison.
Besides Abbott and Ungerleider, other proponents of Glover's till yesterday were the Rev. Richard Taylor, director of the Kansas United Dry Forces; Pat Hatcher, vice president of the Kansas City where marijuana was criminalized in 1973; Jim Concannon, a Washburn University professor of law; Lance Burr, a Lawrence attorney and a former state assistant attorney general, and Doug Williams, a former director of the Associated Students of Kansas.
OPPONENTS testingify were Ed Ritchie,
police department department
parolis squad police department
A United Dry Forces statement said the prohibitionist group didn't favor marijuana use, but wanted reduced penalties to decrease suffering.
for the Wichita Police Department, Howard and Voth.
Horton agreed with Albott that strict marijuana laws resulted in lax enforcement. Since Oregon reduced marijuana penalty possessions, Horton said, possession arrests have increased 65 per cent.
However, Horton said that the new laws had freed court dockets for more serious crimes and that "the jails are full of people who belong there."
A federal study indicated that actual marijuana use hadn't increased in Oregon since possession was decriminalized, Horton said.
Ritchie, shaking with emotion as he spoke, said, "I've got parent after parent with kids who're all stoned-out, sleeping in a car. We're all going to have given them up trying to control them."
Ritchie said that even though he hadn't "sent a kid to jail for a joint since Christ was a coralor", he thought Kansas needed marijuana laws as a deterrent.
Albott said he would favor Glover's bill if it were amended to decrease the maximum amount from two ounces to one and three ounces, in gifts of gifts of marijuana wouldn't be punishable.
BUY
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Expiration date: February 28, 1977
Taco Grande
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Expirat
THE
KANSAS UNION
PROUDLY ANNOUNCES
master charge
THE INTERBANK
Your
BANKAMERICARD
welcome here
master charge
THE INTERBANK
THE KANSAS UNION
PROUDLY ANNOUNCES
master charge
THE INTERBANK
Your
BANKAMERICARD
welcome here
HAVE COME TO CAMPUS!
OREAD BOOKSHOP
kansas union BOOKSTORE
In response to the many requests we have received from the students, faculty and staff, the Kansas Union Bookstore, the United Book Shop, in addition to the Prairie Room, can now accept your Master Charge and BankAmericard. The credit cards that are accepted everywhere are now accepted at the Kansas Union.
THE KANSAS UNION
COME INTO THE NEW KANSAS UNION
IT'S BETTER THAN EVER!
OREAD
BOOK
SHOP
OREAD BOOKSHOP
kansas union BOOKSTORE
In response to the many requests we have, received from the students, faculty and staff, the Kansas Union bookstore, the Oread Book Shop, in addition to the Pacific Union, can accept your Master Charge and BankAmerican. The credit cards that are accepted everywhere are now accepted at the Kansas Union, too!
THE KANSAS UNION
COME INTO THE NEW KANSAS UNION
IT'S BETTER THAN EVER!
in response to the many requests we have received from the stockholders in the Kansas Bankers, the Oned Bed Shop, in partnership with now accept your Matter Charge and Bankreceived. The credit card now accepted at the Kansas Union.
U
stomp out old shoes contest
BRING YOUR OLDEST, SCROUNGIEST SHOES IN AND SAVE $2.50 ON THE PURCHASE OF A NEW PAIR.
THE WORST SHOES WILL WIN A $25.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE.
CONTEST ENDS FEBRUARY 19TH.
919 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas Phone 841-2995 BankAmericard and Master Charge Welcome
The Athlete's Foot.
POSITION OPENINGS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS RESIDENCE HALLS 1977-1978
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS
Must be Junior, Senior or Graduate Student for 77-78 academic year
ASSISTANT HALL DIRECTORS
---
Must be Graduate Student or Fifth-year status for 77-78 academic year
Application deadline March 11, 1977
All applicants should evidence above average academic achievement, prior residential group living experience and availability for the entire 1977-1978 academic year (August-May).
Applications and job descriptions available now in Dean of Women's Office (220 Strong Hall) or in Dean of Men's Office (228 Strong Hall).
The University of Kansas
is an equal opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer.
BENNY'S BIRTHDAY ASH
BENNY'S BIRTHDAY ASH
at the Harbor
Wednesday, February 16th
Featuring MISS HARBOR LIGHTS
Pitchers $1.00 6-8 p.m.
8-12 p.m.
Come Celebrate with Benny
]
A
A.
-T Act t and r mitte
In A Comm prove
---
---
Wednesday, February 16, 1977
11
est
CATE.
---
ASK lobby pushes issues
From page one
—The Residential Landlord and Tenant Act to define landlords' and tenants' duties and rights. Died in House Judiciary Committee.
---
In 1975:
A bill establishing a Student Advisory Committee to the Board of Regents, Approves.
A different Landlord-Tenant Act that
addresses rights and duties of landlords and
landowners.
"A bill that abolished residence and age requirements for candidates in city elections."
A-10 per cent faculty pay raise for Regents schools, Approved.
In 1976:
— A 10 per cent faculty pay raise.
Legislature approved 7 per cent.
—A bill to allow voters to register by mail. Approved.
- Guaranteed Student Loan Act to entail the state as a student loan agency.
. .
Issues endorsed in this legislative session:
- The Guan united Student Loan Bill.
- A Self-Help Amendment to the Lam
ASK also originated the plan for insuring student loans through a Minnesota foundation to make loans more available to students, supported the concept of the marijuana ban, and promoted equal representation of Kansas citizens on the Board of Regents.
—An endorsement of open hearings before a tuition increase.
stdord-Tenant Act that would allow a tenant to have mine repaired made on the landlord's behalf.
Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said he thought ASK's three key lobbyists
"To say that something would have happened without them or that they are the reason a bill passed would be a distortion," he said.
had helped put the Landlord-tenant acts
the campaign disclosure act through
the legislature.
But he said he thought the three ASK babytube could influence legislators with their views on tech policy.
"Taylor (Rev. Richard Taylor Jr., Dr. Forces lobbyist) has only one lobbyist (himself). You don't need an army up here."
Charter Flights Youth Fares
WingsTo EUROPE
KU Union Bldg./900 Mass.
Hillcrest & The Matls Ctrs.
843-1211
Maupintour travel service
Selling something? Call us
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to the student's ability or background. BRENG ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
three times three times four times
times times times times times
15 words or
fewer
Each additional
$1.00 $2.35 $2.50 $7.30
$3.00
**basic additional**
**word** .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDX business office at (800) 539-7244.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Give away: $10 per week and $200 cash, plus
U telephone, U telephone Direct line,
Mellow Yellow Pagen. U
Japan.
FOR RENT
FREE UNIVERSITY Course descriptions are
available in the SUA office. Enrollwl. Wed
2-18
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to
union, utilizes parking. 843-979-70
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, pn
pot, 845-5707. tf
Available now, large 1 bedroom apartment in modern building. Central Amenity walk to wall with carpeted patio and $150 per/month deposit required. Utilities not included. Above-ground bldg. 441-443, Children 2-16
Gatchell apartments - Call Beeky now. Summer
contacts on all Gatchell apartments. Call 843-765-
1201.
Furnished apartment, close to MI. One bedroom.
$5. Available immediately. KM-867-609 1 p.m.
Biver City Hair Co. wants you! A totalprofessional hair dresser in NYC can be reached 7 days a week. 2-18 2-18
Male roommate to share nice apartment till May
Male roommate to share nice apartment till May
Rent $15 per month, plus 844.8 bus route,
Rent $15 per month, plus 844.8 bus route.
Frontier Ridgetop-短 term leases available. Offer includes $100 per month with study. Hated indoor pool +贮 carpet pool; pool - disposal + laundry facilities, furnished and unfurnished to $135. Cah 642. Furnished and unfurnished to $135. Cah 642.
Apartment for rent to single male student of quiet disposition. One bedroom furnished. Third floor of old house. Fantasy room, no price. Dealer required. $100 per month. 94-216-835 p.m. 2-17
Nice furnished room and apartment 1 block from campus. No pets. 843-7960, study environment. 2-16
Jabarhawk Tower, now leasing Beautiful 5-Door Suite with two bedrooms, was opened for business in March 31, and save on fees. Early March 20th offers free tours of the building.
Female grade student to furnish furnished house near campus. Many extras. 841-6353. 2-21
3-bedroom, 1 bath townhouse for mallace. Fireplace. Call 841-6697, or 841-7333.
2-22
Sublease 3-bedroom unfurnished house immediately
due. Rent $5,290/month. Family $200 plus dorm
space. 814-234-322. $22
TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN
awrence, Kan. 842-0444
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
Drive-In Clinic for most imported cars
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make
your own "New Analysis" from book—1) As study guide, 2) For Class preparation, 3) For Exam preparation. "New Analysis"
of Western Civilization" available now at Towson
UNICORNS, Mermalds, wings in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry. Many stone items from. From Stone cutting service. Re-creation work, satisfaction training. 841.-3883. guild. tt
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists.
BELL AUDIO ELECTRIC, 849-900-3989, w. ch. (715) 642-3981.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
the furniture and Appliance Center, 7041; Maison
Saint-André.
Redeemer Lutheran Church, Missouri Syndicate, invites you to a weeklong community invited to worship with us. We are an active youth group. Place: 501S and Haskell; Call: (215) 374-6968; more information contact: Mit Fredrickson at 9 a.m. or Christie at 9 a.m. Bible class and Sunday school at 10 a.m., Bible School meets every 24 second Sunday evening of the year.
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room accommodations. The only one with a specification guarantee of $\frac{\pi}{2}$ dB. Hear it at 113-756-8044, Aardvark E. 8th. Price from $175.
Advent model 200 Stereo Receiver: designed to offer the kind of sound associated with far more complex audio systems, it performs compares directly, in every respect, to other expensive分离 components. Ray and his team expatriate extensive分离组件。Ray
Fantastic air bed for sale All size. Call or write
to 610-529-8700 West 60th St, Shawnee Mt,
Mission, Kaiser 60085
Cultivar Supreme 75 Excellent condition. All power. Nuts sell so cheap. Call 641-8710. 2-16
Technics SL-1200 Direct Drive Turbullery $219
+ 49.95 for S-Video or DVSA + 81-6820
A14 and A44 + $69.95 For S-Video + 81-6820
A14 and A44 + $69.95 For S-Video + 81-6820
Volkswagen Owner! Four new WSW radial tires (165/60R14) and four new 215/60R14 (60-15). Add $25 per tire for mounting. $300 per tire for ground support. Mass The appliance store on Mars with the data of our exoplanet. Woofwow! The Mars Mars Mars Mars. Discounts: 12-18, 24-32, 38-46, 60-72, 96-114, 164-184, 232-260.
Superstore famous quality cassette recorder with condenser mike! Regular $9.95 model cut to $8.00 plus a bonus of 4 free minutes. Sunset State, Ray City, New York. 929 Mass. Open Thursday nights. 2-16
171. Couague AM-FM stereo, air, good radials,
studded knives, very clean. 843-644-4000 before 4:00.
$68 Mercury Montgomery 4-door, 302-3.5, alr, auto
mountain bike from North Carolina and in from campus. Snow included $90, $80,
$70, $60, $50, $40, $30, $20, $10, $0.
71. GTX, excellent condition, new lenses, brakes.
80. Fuji X-Pro3, excellent condition, new cameras 150, Francisco Guitar 60.
81. Fuji X-Pro3, excellent condition, new cameras 150, Francisco Guitar 60.
Must sell. 1971 Volkwagen bug. Good condition.
8900.00 €, 8431.-621 after 6 p.m.
2-16
For Sale by owner, Holiday Hills and Sunset School, 1½ years old, 3 bedroom suite, 1784 ft. 1/4 bath, family room w/fireplace, deck, central air, $800. For Applicants 2-16
Patiar Peller. Fine organic sweetness and lotions.
Natural vegetation, sponge and bear bait制品
2-18
2-18
New stereo-Panasonic Quadraphonic Component
组件 have been used or opened. Cabled
with Bath, B434. 2-17
Ear, Ear 2 Hill 500 speakers for sale; fueled; expensive. Power call capability. Burbank 434-717
Four rings with誓典铜 stone. 98.5%
pure and inscribed bands from India.
A prieed copy. R-16
2-18
Gibson SG guitar w/case. Environmental condition.
Stainless steel headband. Speedback speedkick 843-6581 after 2.
1-28
Pioneer receiver XS-427 continuous power output 18W/18 w excellent condition, call 842-539-129
Eightmacker Optics
Must sell. Camera, Mamiya/Sekor 1000 DPF with
up to 18 rings hardy, used like
435-6469 2-17
71 GMC i, $ T Window Van, carpet, call 1-816-5346-5764; e-mail or write box W11. 511f. Flint -
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
32 Main Street
901-456-7890
TABLE AIRLINE
TABLE BOMBING
TABLE CAMPING
TABLE HYDRATION
TABLE MILITARY
TABLE OPERATIONS
TABLE PARKING
TABLE RAILWAY
TABLE SUPPLIES
TABLE TREASURES
69 Mustung Mach I, 311. Auto, Trans, PS, black.
Red Interior after p. 80. kent P. McBensink-245.
One pair of E.S.P. 3-way 40 W.P.C. speakers $80.
铃立 641-5756.
1973 VW faint hutch, Beige, clean, dependable, radia-
lite 1500, 1752, 1812, Oilate. 2-18
Owens Liquor Store
843-1186
906, 892-3412 CHICAGO
19th class bar, buy $400.00 fatties, fatting
pork bar with rack, and more. 904, 892-
3418
21st class bar, buy $450.00 fatties, fatting
pork bar with rack, and more. 904, 892-
3418
1976 Datum B210. 26,000 Miles, good condition.
Call Badwin B5149. 54849 after 6.
2-18
Sony TSS-3000 turntable with SME 8000 II tone
microphone for perform up to 5000 Hz
Cable Num 841-1833-22
2.22
Attention new KUMC Medical Students; for sale:
Wesene binocular microscope; 10×40, 100x oil
objectives, 2 years old excellent condition;
KUMC 2014-014 or write J. Oster Borto, 810,
KUMC 2014-222
Name brand stereo equipment, musical instruments, tools, tent fishing equipment, and more. All free consumer information is available by each purchaser 845-620-3000 or write companyBrokerage Service, www.brokerage.com. Mail 64138. MA 64138.
Camera--4 month old Nikonformat FT-2 with
microSD card, 814-388, keep typing
The Advent Company is the leader in the Hi-Fi industry in research and product development. The company has standardized its training. A) The company is gaining popularity as one of the cleanest units at any price. And B) The company is offering engineering and value unassured at any price range. Your authorized Advisor is led by B) 3-1.
Kennedouw 900 watt stereo receiver, less than a year
Coffey and Co. 650 watt coffee kettle
Call Mike, 642,2848
Table 1-18
HELP WANTED
Bicycle="23"..MKM "18" Reynolds K34 DB Tubing
Reynolds K34 equipped QT tubing must sell.
must sell. Call 622-750-2222
Tri-Phase Speakers - A Real Home Disc System
that delivers high data high freq.
drivers. Built in pileuz for easy
protection. Dig out those Boogie Shoes and check
that specially designed units at Ray Aunts<
416-892-2700.
910 N. 2nd
PUT YOURSELF THROUGH COLLEGE the easy way. Become an Avon representative and make the money you need selling quality products on your own time. Two openings in Lavender, 2-16
Graduate Assistance, three-quarter time
June 14-16. Apply in 570 MOH for
cumulative 4-6000 by Feb. 18.
Part-time excels in math and science. High
school graduate. Desirable. Tutoring.
Call (913) 825-0977.
Weekly position available for instructors in Orient-
ation and Archivist or Summer Workshops.
Rotary and Archivist for June 6-8 August, half-time. 10:30am Contest
Date: July 5-9
Bron. Put your vision through college the easy way.
Become an Avon Representative, and make the money you need, selling quality products on your own time. For full details, call 482-4168 or 38-38-5977.
Weekly positions available for assistant instructor in computer science and face action training. Computer workshops are required. Members of Natural Sciences 9 June to August 6th, two hours weekly. Bachelors or higher degree required. Bath, Hull, Milton, Salisbury. An equal opportunity employer.
LOST AND FOUND
DIRECTOR OF ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES wanted to coordinate program course and the three teaching objectives. Nine-month appointment with continue education experience, experience and qualifications. Ph.D., teaching experience, and ongoing research in the field of environmental science experience, and current faculty status at KU researcher position. KU, 864-3036; 644-5096; KU, 864-3036. Application deadline: March 15, 2017. Equity Opportunity Affirmation: 217-
Lost Tweet has had first week of February. A present, has sentimental value. John at 841-356-1367.
Lost by careless owner—a two tone brown bracelet, approx. 1 inch thick, 3 inches in diameter. Please contact us for an estimate of material value. Please call 842-3305 if you have any info. Thanks!
2-17
Lost: Blue Face near facepaint in Wesley cateron on Jan. 25. Reward offered: 615-347-261. -1-
RAASCH
SADGE & BRIDLE SMOP
Open 30'00" x 6'00" x 6'00"
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen 9 Southville
846 Illinois
Found young white female cat in Fall's hole for
a blue, white, blue, one green eye. Call 2-16
431 or 841-7689
Found: Tam and白狗 with blue boll雀.
Friendly: Call Pati at 843-2796
2-16
Found very well behaved grown female cat with
short hair. Could eat a large meal,
clinic mist, to go to good home or to pound
cats.
Lost-Math 124 notes in Strong Hall, green spiral
book. Notebook 842-9292.
2-18
Found... Wallet in men's restroom third floor, Mon-
tage. Phone 21-775-4083. Clint Aaronson,
lost security lock.
Lots a man's wedding hand made of yellow and pink, with white and gold portion. Reward is offered to Call 842-350-1267.
Lost: Gold necklace with Alaskan on it in the
bank. Call 817-2938. Sentimental value: Rep.
Call 864-7532.
Lost a set of keys in Strong Hall on 2-1-77. 2-17
found, contact ABC 842-4002. 2-17
Lost- Blue cloth covered, three-ring Meade note-
probably in 253 Murray Calligraphy G2
2-17
Lost-First — I-Y Zone, men's blue suede coat
— only $250,000 or less at Miu Miu $22
— heavily cowboy coat $22
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uher/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday, Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m.
Just arrived. Incease from the Republic of China, as its minister for the consolación 18 Lei Street. 641-506
NOTICE
843-7685
Swap Shop 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
dinners, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-5pm.
843-337-71
EUROPE/WORLDWIDE academic discountoar day SATA A 4228 First Ave. Tucker, G-4
1000 West 76th Street
Needed: GAY COUPLES who have been living with lesbian or gay partners and who indicate in an interesting study investigate non-binary relationships will be on the positive and strength of the study focus will be on the positive and strength of the often held assumption that gay relationship co-parenting is guaranteed, and couples will be paid $10 for each partner. With cooperation from Gay Society Weiner, 841-6820. With cooperation of Gay Ser
Tofu-Chi Dinner, sponsored by the Community Mercreille, Dinner, February 20th at the Community Building,午11 and Vermont Hall at 7:30 and 9:00. Advanced Tickets: Adults $175 and children $145. Mercreille, 615 Mass. At the Door: adults $2.00 and children $1.00. Dinner will be served from
HATTA YOCA学会 beginning Feb. 15th, 5b
10c, 12c, 14c, 16c, 18c, 20c
$200; for 8 weeks, call 811-341-3
3-16
Everyone can help someone as a Volunteer. Volunteer Clearing, 664-389, 2-18
***
Volunteers are for making a day cloud bright
Volunteer Clearing House 114 B. Union 2-16
PERSONAL
MAKIN MUSIC—We make it easier. Folk, blues, jazz, pop, rock. Learn piano, flute, guitar, banjo, mandolin, autoharp, piano. McKeaney (Rock) and (Jazz) band programs.
Gay Counselling Service: Call 842-7505, 6-12 p.m.
tf
in THE MARKET PLACE 745 New Hampshire
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts
B. Eraile, 841, 3523
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
& Crafts 841-3522
Su Casa
- WRITING BOOK, COPPER BACK, AND LIGHT GREY.
COMPLETE SELECTION OF DEER
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods • Vintage Clothing
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
- Furniture - Antiques
7308 Mass. 841-7070
We'll get you out of bed! $3 per month. Jay-
hawer Wake Up: 843-6211 or 843-2833.
"Black and White." I need a call. Call 943-6628
and ask for Frank W.
I can help you with physics and math problems and YOU can help me with my English. Call 1-800-352-2941.
EUROPE. When you want it, where you want it. You don't have to go to Europe or other countries. No charter house, call Rhyll Airport.
Steve Leben and Ralph Murray have surveyed the computer facilities of their apartment complexes, talked with campus groups, and set up a table at the Union . . . all in our attempt to communicate with vole. Vole is a fox.
Communication means Steve Leben and Ralph Munyan. They have surveyed all LIRU pieces, visited 27 living group, addressed several groups of people and generally tried to communicate with you. You are probably ready.
Present student ID card and be admitted FREEBEE
Toronto, Kershaw 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Sunday.
Friday, Toronto, Kershaw 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Sunday.
Move Forward with Avanti! Vote February 16 & 2-16
Vote Aware ... elect McKernan & Rhoads
August 21 ... elect vice-president
President February 16 & 18
Today is the day. Vote and show people your concern about what's happening in Nunetaker. 8-17
Accompanying or computer science students wanted
to work with computer science faculty. Good job for good work. Call Mark, or Eddie at (212) 456-7890.
- Pool
* Snooker
* Ping Po
You missed your first opportunity to win $100 bonus prize. Enter Mellow Yellow Pages
to enter. You must be a registered Starbucks employee.
Vote Liberal. Vote Free. Vote Independent. Vote
William Willen, Check. Student Susan
market 5 2-17
WHISTLE-MART. We're not a big business, but
and Pepa Starr for Subombrae class President
of the World's Top 10 Artists.
Lynn, it's really me this time. For 3 years you have been my breath, my smile, my sum. For these I say thanks. Now I add the love. CFT. 2-16
Wally-22. hubt Put your feet up and your calculator away—a lot of times. Isuky 2-16
To the men of Alpha Tau Omega, "We'll help you find 'concerns' of the sky!" We love 2.75
Moon.
If you want responsible officers for next year, at least have REFLECTION-Havenry, Anthony. Daniel Good.
SERVICES OFFERED
Owl
has the eyeglasses you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 814-7421
Volkswagen Tune Up Special-$15.60 Bundle
Volkswagen Tune Up Special-$15.60 Bundle
VW Repair, 9th and Entry Road 841-2323
VW Repair, 9th and Entry Road 841-2323
February “Tune up special” We clean up and wash the machines, adjust hydraulic and crank head. And install any part or accessories bought at all time. Drive a 3-speed, drive a 16-speed, drive a 140-speed, take 3-speed for all machines. Drive a 180-speed for all machines of bicycles. Lawrence Schwimm Cycle 1920 W. 6th W. 6-4th M.-Son. Thurs. **2-28**
**11-5:** 11:30am - 11:50am
VISIONS
Experienced typist - term paper, papers, Usuis, mails.
Desk phone, fax. Email: spellerr.office@ucl.edu
843-554-6344. Mrs. Wright
DEADBOLTS INSTALLED
MORRIS
Lock & Key
710 Mass. • 843-2182
SUA Maupintour travel service
New Ways to See the Old World
WANTED
THEISIS BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us send you a $3 Massachusetts or phone $82 Thank you.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
Will type your paper with TLC. Term papers and
articles will be submitted to 811-4391, dayy 811-
4170 weeksend & evening hours.
CLEER
SU
Kansas Union
Typhil/editor, IBM Pica/clie, Quality work.
Typhil editor, IBM Pica/clie, distractions welcome.
842-912-877
**
Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for
804-354-3143; day 842-998, evening and
weekends.
TYPNING- We have many return customers who
want to meet you. We will be apprised of your business, Call Harvey, or
apply for your business.
Guitar pickers, players, and listeners, listen to
the band's live performance from 6:28 to
8:30 on KAU1-81.5.
Female roommate wanted for 2-bedroom apart-
ment in Fulton County a month. On bus route II.
483-8075 483-8071 2-21
CHARARTERS/YOUTH FARES/APEX AIR FARES
RENTAL & PURCHASE/STUDENT TOURS
SR-16 Calculator. SR-11 Alright, too. 842-1531
evenings.
Female to share nearly furnished 2 bedroom
partition. Warder and dryer. 842-9012 evening.
room.
River City Hat Club. you want it? A total professional Redken salon. 812-508-7075 Massachusetts
Nic's apartment for one person beginning June 1.
453-288 (campus), or 843-2643, (home), 2-23
849-6899 (campus), or 843-2643, (home), 2-23
You would be passing up the chance of a life with someone as important to you as Mrs. 483-8471. New accepting one female one respectable, brotherly mate to share Jay Kemp's apartment. Call, ask or inform Nancy. B2-16
Wanted. Female roommate for my nix-2 bed,
room, furnishings and appliances.
Call 841-287-1511. Call 841-287-1511.
2-17
Male to share large special houseware $50 plus
utilities. Kosher or vegetarian preferred. 842-355-
8186.
Wanted co-plot, Companion, Experienced pilot wants co-plot companion for fun flying in flying suits. You are invited to join the team member. Have four place place available for fourons. For more detail write Lawrence. 2-21
A female roommate need to share a two-bed-
room apartment with a male roommate who
more information call 841-6029 anytime. 2-555-
307-2222.
Tracy Searles and Teresa Cuekes need a female roommate at, jayhawk Towers 405 B now.
843.9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
0.5 fpm
wanted for house, 15 minute walk to campus, 88 month. Call 841-3897. 2-21
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
Wanted one extra timeout. No reasonable offer
beyond the trade one 6-10 minute.
8-32 and ask for 2-16.
2-16
Summer roommate needed. Own room, 4 bed.
Roommate provides 4 *utilities*. Comfortable.
Convenient. Beds have windows.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
10th & Mass
Female student to share large house with 2 grades
and 1 teacher. More info: 841-5033, 2-18
& 4 plus 1 tuition. More info: 841-5033, 2-18
Wanted: Work with musical talent. If you play a brass, woodwind, or percussion instrument, only allow one week of time. Sign up at 31228 Army Reserve Bank gets together once a month over the mid-west as well as local. If you can spare one week at $361 per hour, doing something you enjoy part-time, call us at 31228 Army Reserve Bank and even if you vide you with an instrument and uniform. Ask for Sgt. Branny James U. Army Reserve, 31228.
MAISMITH HALL
The Lounge
featuring seclusion and quiet."
- Pool
"A different kind of bar
seclusion and quiet."
Bud on Tap
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
- Foosball
9th and Iowa
843-9812 Open Early 10am, Midnight 11am
12
Wednesday, February 16, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Student Senate Elections
Feb.16-17
Bring only your Student I.D. [with Registration Sticker] and a pen or pencil.
Polling Places
Kansas Union Lobby
Wescoe Hall (4th Floor, West Exit)
Wescoe Cafeteria
Information Booth (in front of Bailey Hall)
Summerfield Hall (2nd Floor)
Frazier Hall
Learned Hall (2nd Floor)
Green Hall
Wednesday & Thursday, 8:00-4:30
Wednesday Only
8:00-4:30
Marvin Hall
Malott Hall
5:00-7:00
Lewis Hall
Oliver Hall
G.S.P. Hall
Corbin Hall
Jayhawk Towers Apartments
Malls Old English Apartments
Frontier Ridge Apartments
Battenfeld Hall
Naismith Hall
Gatehouse Apartments
7:30-9:30
Chi Omega
Pi Phi
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Phi Kappa Theta
Thursday Only
8:00-4:30 Blake Hall Murphy Hall
5:00-7:00
Delta Delta Delta
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Douthart Hall
McCollum Hall
Ellsworth Hall
J.R.P. Hall
Phi Delt
Alpha Gamma Delta
Beta
Sigma Kappa
President-Vice President
Leben-Munyan
Grey-Green
McKernan-Rhoads
Architecture 2 seats
Joseph Bandy
Jane Calacci
Ray Kramer
Dan Webster
Bill Quattman
Reeves W. Wiedeman
Curt Woody
Kent Allingham
Rick Chambers
Dave Dyer
Ginny Erdwin
Luena Fuller
Mike Galloway
Todd Hunter
Brain S. Jones
Kenneth Leathers
Bril McPherson
Scott Stanley
Cindy Whitten
Business 4 seats
Education 8 seats
Diane Bergquist
Bev Brown
Corie Brown
Bill Cannon
Jess Cornellus
Jan Davidson
Pam Gottsche
Connie Hale
Steve Hamous
James Haverty
Kevin Letcher
Linda Loudon
Beeth Anne MacCurdy
Sherry McKee
Clifford Mosley
Louis Oborn
Susan K. Turner
Engineering 8 seats
Sandy Appl
Barbara Brussell
Nathan Bultman
Richard W. Durham
Douglas J. Edmonds
Gay F. Poole
David Fuchs
Ed Hite
Jim Jandt
Tom Marshall
Rhonda Maya
Jim McCarten
Lawrence Miller
Weezie Puzzer
Bill Scott
John R. Shell
Jay Shore
Alan D. Soelter
Scott Stallard
H. Wilson Tyson, Jr.
Scott Wiese
Fine Arts 7 seats
Deitre L. Colgan
Don Consoliver
Mary Beth Craig
Bruce Douglas
Doug Perguson
Lynne Garrell
Steve Geist
Sann Glaze
Jordan Hanna
Phil Kaufman
Claire McCurdy
Sally McDonald
Anne Meeker
Cyndee Michele
Kieren Olander
Nancy M. Park
Kathy Russell
Sybil Summers
Seacat J. Ward
Cyndie Wheeler
LA & S 15 seats
Sharon Anderson
Mark Bolton
Anne Burke
Paula Bush
Chris Caldwell
Corliss Chandler
Coulter
Trinka Crossley
Craig Dawson
Bill Ekey
John Essau
Lisa Friday
Thomas E. Graves
Sarah E. Hein
Daniel E. Hess
Bob Huffman
Brice Huffman
Mark B. Hughes
Ken Idleman
Ken Idleman
Jr. Jordan, Jr.
Madhup Joshi
Grant Larkin
Joel R. Maliie
Judy McCaryllie
Kris McKinney
Steve McMurray
Bob Meyer
Jim Muehlerberger
Jody Newickas
Scott Neilan
Tim O'Connor
Mike Pendergast
Judy Ramirez
Dave Ramirez
Jim Ruane
Claudia Stüderman
Ake Thompson
Terry Thum
Debra Watson
Kevin White
T.J. Widdey
Jim Willis
Journalism 3 seats
Journalism 3 seats
Tim Akard
Marsha Bjerkan
Janet Force
Jill Grubbleau
Bocky Herman
Jack Marvin
Elle Morgensern
Den Terrill
Pat Thornton
Law School 2 seats
Greg Buehne
Dave Larkin
Nunemaker 1 6 seats
Nunemaker 1 5 seats
Cathy Bailey
Debbie Copenhaver
Nancy Dressler
Ed Duckers
Sebahn Everhart
Bruce Leinmiller
Rob Lintz
Susan Rieger
Paul Russell
Debbie Sedoreck
Ragdill Svencrk
Kevin Sundbye
Beth Regler
Nunemaker 2 5 seats
Ed Bigus
Dave Bromley
T. C. Cloon
Gordon Geldhof
L.D. Dona Hale
Pam Kern
Jim Lasley
Scott McKinley
Ed Mick
Carolee Miller
Anne O'Shaugnessy
Dan Pearman
Chris Redlingshafer
Alken Reynolds
Jan Smith
Mark Sudermann
Russ Tiuscik
Thomas Zackary
Nunemaker 3 5 seats
Lance Armer
Mike Bengtson
Fultch Benien
Mark Bernhardt
Jim Bloom
William Cheek
Johnny Hill
David Jett
Brian Kaufman
Jeff Knox
Metanie Martin
John Masterson
Kathy Pebley
Diane Scheuchl
Laura Irausch
Mark Winkleman
Nunemaker 4 5 seats
Craig Blessing
Jeff Eriksen
John Galtersay
Leslie Anne Graves
Ann Holderman
Valerie Howard
Anne Judge
Julie Long
Scott Morgan
Matt Mullarky
Mary Ellen Pogson
Tanny Powell
Randy Rock
Sam Sheldon
Tim Siltes
Sarah Toews
Tom Worth
Kim Wetzel
Nunemaker 5 6 seats
Mark Buchanan
Carlos Chavez
Patty Crazy
Cheryl Engelmann
Amy Gregg
Mike Harper
Mary Hoffman
Carolyn Jenkins
Bernard Johnston
Clair Ketter
Tim McCarthy
Uanne O'Dell
Julie Riggs
Reggie Robinson
Brian Settle
Brad Snyder
Ed Stucky
Marcia Tavily
Ladd Welch
Social Welfare 3 seats
Pharmacy 2 seats
Pharmacy 2 seats
Benita Bock
Teri Pollard
Social Welfare 3 seats
Lisa Bennett
Jerre Bowen
Jeanne Kovac
Graduate School 23 seats
Otix L. Darby
Charlotte Kimbrough
Steve Sheld
Bernard E. Willard
Samuel Zweifel
Special 2 seats
Bonnie deNoyelles Wade Corey Klosterman
Sophomore Class Officers
President:
Jim Corbett
Matt Haverley
Jess "A.J." Paul
Greg Schancke
Secretary:
Patty Cassidy
Dawn Daniel
Lisa Larsen
Vice President:
Chip Anthony
David Colburn
Bill Hamilton
Perrie Marris
Treasurer:
Javier Dyer
Barbara Goolsbee
Moll Hasenbank
Junior Class Officers
President: Vice President:
Rod Beeler Craig Gilliland
Brandon Mossman Scott Morgan
Tom Byers Brad Yost
Secretary: Treasurer:
Bernard Pavel
Pam Olander Sheri Fayler Sheri Sigman
Pamelia McLennan Cindy Sugs
Senior Class Officers
President--Mike Nelson Vice President--Predent Gans Secretary--Lisa Cave Treasure--Pattie Curry
AUTHORIZED EDITOR
Thoughtful decision
Brooks Augustine, Potwin freshman, carefully looks over his ballot for the student senate elections. Voting ends today.
KU asks legislators to restore budget cuts
Staff Reporter
By STEVE FRAZIER
TOPEKA-University of Kansas administers asked the House and Senate ways and means committees yesterday for restoration of cuts made by Gov. Robert Bennett in the fiscal 1978 KU budget as approved by the Kansas Board of Regents.
The Regents recommended $103.9 million for the Lawrence campus and $83.2 million for the Med Center, but Bennett cut those amounts to $99.2 million and $83.2 million respectively.
A statement by Glee Smith, Regents chairman, and presentation of the KU budget opened three days of Regents institutions budget hearings. The hearings resulted in a legislative toward approval of fiscal 1978 and supplemental fiscal 1977 budgets.
Chancellor Archie Dykes; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor for the Lawrence campus; Robert Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the KU Medical Center; and Cramer Reed, vice chancellor for the University. There are many sections of the Regents requests were the minimum requests necessary to maintain adequate programs.
Dykes briefly mentioned a 7 per cent faculty salary increase, $5.5 million in first-year construction costs for additions to the school and another an 8 per cent increase in other operating expenditures, which all were approved by the governor. To save time, Dykes said KU concentrated its presentation on items that are or substantially reduced by Bennett.
Shankel asked the ways and means committees to approve $73,000 to renovate the staircases for new stage curtains for Hoch Auditorium and Spooner Hall exterior walls, $83,000 for repair work on old Green Hall and $40,000 for renovation of Marvin Hall. All of these items were
Reed said a $25,000 cut in requests for new positions at the Wichita branch of the Med Center would seriously impair expansion of programs there. The Regents recommended 7 Wichita restoration of the cuts, Reed said, the Wichita branch and pediatrics departments at the Wichita branch might collapse.
Dykes spoke in favor of a $100,000 study of a possible solid waste-fired power plant. Bennett had recommended $100,000 to study the feasibility of a power source, be restricted to any single power source.
Bennett has recommended that KU be allowed to spend only $380,492 of $1,800 from a higher extra fee money resulting from a higher tuition charge in 1976. KU renewed its request to spend all the money, which includes $380,000 in university library improvements approved by the Board.
State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, and State Sen. Wint Winder, R-Ottawa, asked Dykes and Kugel about their efforts to kansas. Both Hayden and Winter were before the 1977 Kansas Legislature that would require medical students to pay up to a year in tuition unless they promised to invest in rural areas of Kansas after graduation.
Dyke's said statistics from 1973 indicated
graduates stayed in Kansas. Dyke's grad
was 54%.
Kugel explained programs designed to keep Med Center graduates in Kansas, such as a placement office, efforts to match rural communities with graduating doctors and residency programs in cities other than Kansas City, Kan., and Wichita.
Winter said, "If those programs don't work, I think Rep. Hayden has an idea of what to do," referring to Hayden's tution bill. Kuel has said he heaps such a bill.
Dykes asked for $216,443 to establish new baccalaureate programs in respiratory therapy, nurse anesthesia and emergency medical services administration. All three
Dykes asked the ways and means committees to lower the governor's recommended shrinkage requirements for both faculty and staff members. Specified shrinkage rates require that the total amount of faculty and staff salaries be a certain percentage lower at the end of a fiscal year than at the beginning, because of deaths, deaths or the holding open of positions.
Dykes said the shrinkage rate for classified employees on the main campus is 10%.
See BUDGET page 5
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.87,No.92
Thursday, February 17.1977
Unexpectedly large voter turnout causes ballot shortage, poll delay
By SANDY DECHANT
Staff Reporter
An unexpectedly large voter turnout yesterday in the first day of Student Senate elections caused a shortage of ballots at five polls. The number of ballots opened the opening of all 10 polls an hour.
Flynn said yesterday's turnout wouldn't be counted until tonight.
THE CAMPUS POLLS closed at 4:30 p.m., and the evening polls were scheduled to open at 5 p.m. However, a delay in the closing of the daytime polls and a shortage of personnel to move boxes of ballots to the nighttime polls delayed the opening of the nighttime polls until about 6 p.m., Flynn said.
A half hour after the polls opened last night at Lewis, Oliver, GSC-Porbin and Naimish residence halls and at Battfenn Scholarship Hall, the polls ran out of sophomore, junior and senior class balls, Flynn, Elections Committee chairman.
Some of those polls also ran out of ballots for Nunemaker College and the schools of architecture.
Flynn said that no problem occurred with the five polls that were open from 7:30 to 9:30 last night because five sets of ballots had been reserved for those polls.
Because of the shortage of ballots and the delay, polls in Oliver, Naismith, Lewis, and GSP-Corbin halls will be open from 5 to 7 tonight.
INITIALLY, when the ballots ran out, voters were told to sign sheets allowing them to complete their voting today. Flynn said, but when the problem began occurring at all the polling places, he decided to reopen the poll tonight.
Flynn, who had used last year's voting totals to determine how many ballots to print, said he printed 600 ballots each for the state and classroom class office elections, and all were used.
Only about 50 ballots remained in each of the following categories: Nunemaker College, in which 2,700 ballots had been printed; the School of Business, 400 ballots; the School or Engineering, 800 ballots; and the Law School. 200 ballots.
FLYNN HAD predicted rotor turnout this year to increase to 5,000 students. To encourage voting he had increased the number of polls from 10 last year to a total of 20 yesterday. Ten of those 20 polling stations were replaced by polls at 53 other places.
Flynn said that even though he had expected increased student voting, he hadn't foreseen such an increase that some ballots would be depleted the first day.
Votter turnover at apartment complexes—which totaled 27 at five places; was too small for many.
TO REPLENISH the supply of ballots for today's voting, members of the Elections Committee late last night ran off about 1,500 additional ballots for the category depending on the heaviness of voting yesterday. For example, only 50 additional Law School ballots were made; but 300 additional ballots were printed for the school's board of honour. Both class and 100 for the junior class.
The KU Printing Service, which had printed the original ballots, had said it couldn't prepare additional ballots overnight.
The disadvantage of the Senate copying
the ballots, Flynn said, is that the names on the ballots can't be rotated, as originally planned, to avoid discrimination stemming from the order of candidates' names on the ballots.
TO AVOID problems today, Flynn said, he plans to have plenty of balloons available and to close daytime campus polls about 20 minutes early—perhaps about 4:10—so that evening polls can open on time. The late morning from 7:30 to 9:30, won't be open tonight.
Flynn said he had few problems with the evening of morning polls yesterday, even though there was a delay resulted when a buildings and grounds truck he had reserved was borrowed for use by Chancellor Archie Lynch by police to deliver to the ballot boxes by car.
Students' reasons for voting vary
THE ONLY other problem yesterday was that the name of a student running for a Nunemaker奖 was mistakenly placed on the ballot for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The name had to be crossed out printed on correct balls by hand, he said.
Bv MARSHA WOOLERY
Staff Reporter
A sense of responsibility, personal obligations and a desire to see the whistle resumed—not the candidates or issues—seemed to draw voters to the polls yesterday, according to an informal Kansan poll.
Only 29 of the 75 students questioned near polls around campus said they had voted or planned to vote. Seven students said they weren't sure whether they were going to vote and 39 said they were sure they wouldn't.
Those voting said their main reason for voting was to answer the questionnaire—particularly a question about reinstating the whistle. A second reason many gave was that they were not working on a campaign, and a few said they thought it was their duty to vote.
"I REALLY FEEL it's a responsibility," Kathleen Roult, Leawood freshman, said. "Especially when people have gone to all the colleges, we do it, the least you can do is acknowledge it."
The Elections Committee will begin to tabulate ballots about 9 tonight, Flynn said, and results of the presidential and vice-presidential candidates should be ready by about 1 a.m. tomorrow.
'When they go to the point of putting advertising on your apartment door, that's a bit too much,' Ceryl Shakboua, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, 'and I just says to where how often you see their name determines how the people vote.'
Some students said they thought the candidates had gone to externe to get their
One unidentified student said, "I vote it will be out of protest because I really think it's important."
OTHER STUDENTS said they hadn't had the opportunity to learn enough about the job.
Mark Johnson, Wichita Falls junior, said,
"I would vote if I had the opportunity to meet them personally. They should come to where the people are."
Terry Massa, New York graduate student, said, "They should have made sure that students were University, such as stopping people on the street and introducing themselves. The articles and posters helped, but words are just unless you hear them personally."
Most of the 39 novotons said they didn't care who was in office.
“WHEN I HAVE voted in the past, they have always turned out to be the same,” Deric Schindell, Lawrence junior, said. “Each Senate bolts down to the same stew.”
Gail Carpenter, Great Bend freshman,
said, "I just feel that they all stand for
the same thing. The changes they want to make
are the changes everyone has always wanted
to make. They haven't gotten anywhere so it seems useless."
Some students were frustrated that there weren't any issues distinguishing the cases.
"The apathy is justified because there's nothing to be concerned about," Dave Eagle, Prairie Village sophomore, said. "No issues. no vote."
The committee reportedly wasn't going to abolish the votes until then because it was not convinced that a voter would vote.
MERIT RAMZY, Topke junior, said her decision not to vote "stems from all the things I heard about Student Senate. It made me feel very hurt and angry and bicker and never get anything done."
CBs still a good buddy despite thefts, vandalism
Staff Renorter
Bv JIM MURRAY
Was your brand new, 40-channel CB ripped off only three weeks after you had it on the shelf? Is it worth the half and half of the dashboard along with it? Does your antenna keep getting caught in low-hanging trees? Does the sound of "104," a Brooklyn accent make you cringe?
If so, you are suffering from CB backlash. In the last few years the CB craze has grown to such proportions that the Federal communication department (FCC) which regulates use of the airwaves was forced to expand the citizen's band from 23 to 40 channels Jan. 1, 1977.
sut Radio Shack, 711 W. 32rd S.t., reported unimally low sales of channel-encoders.
BUT ALONG with the increased popularity of CBs has come increased theft and vandalism and higher insurance rates for CB owners. Despite these drawbacks, local electronics stores report that sales of both 23- and 40-channel models are normal.
Team Electronics, 2319 Louisiana St., and River City Communications, 23rd and Ixra streets, both reported that CB sales were "very good" for both models even though 23-channel CBs are being sold at "clearance prices." at River City.
Colesbank one of the main complaints about the design of CIs- that of internet users.
"The 404 have not sold too well, because of the depressed prices on the 238," Scott Colebank, manager of Radio Shack, "the 'Virev at close-out level' prices."
He said he expected the 40-channel sets to arrive once the store had sold all of its 23-channel sets.
Results of the other Senate races will be tabulated by about dawn tomorrow, he said. Returns will be carried all night over at the KU Information Center, 844-3560.
"The 23-channels were built to specifications, the FCC approves and verifies," he said. "When they expanded to 40 channels, they didn't just add 17 channels, they also changed the specifications to lower the interference.
emissions-had been corrected in the new 40-channel models.
Because they aren't part of the dash of a car, but are bolted onto the floor, ceiling or dash, CBS have become a favorite target of thieves. The tall, distinctive antenna serves both as a beacon to potential felons and as a convenient target for vandals.
"BUT ONCE the specifications are get, all receivers are made the same. We don't do anything extra, but nobody else does either."
The Lawrence area, however, seems to have hit a lull in CB thefts.
LT. VERNON Harrell said 25 to 30 percent of the stolen CBA had been recovered. He said that vandalism of antennas wasn't common but that they were frequently stolen.
Because of the high CB theft rate, many car insurers have raised the rates of drivers who own CBS. Some companies refuse to insure CBS with a "quick release" mounting, which makes the CB easy to remove from the car.
In 1976, 143 CBS were reported stolen in Lawrence. More than 100 of these were reported to be stolen in the months of 1976 and only 12 sets were reported stolen in the last four months of the year.
John McKinsey of American Family insurance, 1000 Iowa St., said his company required a month for every $100 of assessed value and assessed three months of 1976, American Family
paid $230,000 in claims on stolen CB
and did not include return to burglarized cars.
MPA Insurance, 1003 E. 23rd St., doesn't have a surcharge for CDs according to VA law.
"We ARE NOT surcharging now, but it's in the works," Wess Hunn of Allstate Insurance, 839 Iowa St., said. He did not put a restriction on mountains.
"It is attached to the vehicle, it is part of the car, comes under the comprehensive coverage. "
Downing said MFA had no mounting restrictions at this time
John Hartman of Prudential Insurance,
1927th Massachusetts Sd., said that his
company's rate for CBS was based on the
following: "CBS's latest study was
examining 'mute release' moun-tains
Several students who said they were apathetic toward the elections said they would support a candidate who promised support for foreign students or gay liberation.
Amy Riddee of State Farm Insurance, 927
Massachusetts Arcade, said that an added fee was charged if a CB was "permanently in the claim rate on CBS was" 'pretty high.'
But one student simply said, "Nothing could really make me care."
Commercial CB usage is in danger of being virtually wiped out in the near future, however. The February issue of Science Digest contains an article which predicts that we will see a sunspot activity over the next few years would severely affect transmission.
"A lot of them have the CBA stolen,
replace them and have them stolen again,"
said the investigator.
It also said that the possibility of "bounce" transmissions—transmissions which bounce off upper atmospheric layers and are received far beyond the normal CB range—might be greatly increased by the sunspot activity.
Tuesday officially was the last day to apply for financial aid for next year, but students are encouraged to turn in late. The university will hold an office of director of financial aid, said yesterday.
After 4,000 applications have been received so far, he said, and about 1,000 of those were turned in Tuesday. The total may exceed the number of applications made for aid for this school year, which was a school record.
4,000 apply for KU aid
Weinberg said that late applications would be put on file but that financial aid to those applicants would depend on whether money was still available.
Students also must fill out financial statements. The Basic Educational Statistics
deadline before fall enrolment, but the Parents' Confidential Statement and the American College Testing form should be said out as soon as possible, Weinberg said.
He said the early deadline this year was partly because the office wanted to award financial aid as soon as possible to incoming freshmen to encourage them to come to KU. Another reason was to inform returning students of their financial aid that they could arrange for additional aid if necessary, Weinberg said.
Processing of financial aid applications will begin immediately in the hope that students can be notified by May 1 whether they will receive money.
hp gain
CB MOBILE ANTENNA
hp gain
CB MOBILE ANTENNA
hp gain
CB MOBILE ANTENNA
hp gain
CB MOBILE ANTENNA
Which one?
Staff photo by MARIANNE MAURIN
The popularity of CB radio has continued to rise with the invention of several new styles. Michael Stueningen, Kansas City, Ma., ltres to decide which one would help him the most.
2
Thursday, February 17, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Carter rebate plan altered
WASHINGTON—The House Ways and Means Committee voted yesterday to deny President Carter's proposed $50 rebate to those making more than $30,000 and voted to give a smaller rebate to those making more than $25,000 a year.
and voted to give a smaller share to close financing. The committee voted 17 to 9 in favor of a proposal by Rep. William Cotter, D-Conn., to "phase out" the rebate gradually as family income rose from $25,000 to $30,000.
This would mean, for example, that someone making $27,500 would receive a rebate of $25 for each family member. In some cases, checks for as little as $1 or perhaps a few cents would be mailed to those making not quite $30,000.
Rabin won't talk with PLO
JERUSALEM-Israel is willing to join Middle East peace talks, but not with the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said yesterday after meeting with Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance.
yesterday after meeting with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Vance told Israeli leaders on the first step of a Middle East fact-finding tour that the United States wanted peace talks by the second half of 1977, but would refuse to deal with the PLO as long as it didn't recognize Israel's right to exist.
"The answer is simply no." Rabain said of prospects that Israel would participate in talks involving Yasir Arafat's PLO.
Nun tried for manslaughter
ROCHESTER, N.Y. - A Roman Catholic nun went on trial for manslaughter
westerday, charged with suffocating her newborn son.
yesterday, charged with suffocating her newborn son:
Sister Maude Murphy, 36, a member of the Sisters of St. Joseph Order, had previously pleaded not guilty to the charges and waived her right to a jury trial.
She is free on $5,000 bail.
Heavenly Salvation陪我了 nun gave
Monroe County assistant district attorney Joseph Valentino said the nun gave birth to a boy in her room at the Burdy Our Lady of Lourdes parish convict last April 27, "after nine months of hiding her pregnancy, dolging questions and lying about going to the doctor."
Shortly after having the child, Valentino said, the man "unstr" a pair of pants down this baby's threat as far as she could" and then "wrapped the baby in a blue nighttown and discarded him in an orange waste-paper basket."
U.S.S.R. returns criticism
LONDON—The Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia are accusing the United States, Britain and the West in general of a long series of human rights violations ranging from torture in North Ireland and political repression of American permitting widespread unemployment that amounts to deprivation of basic civil rights.
This counter-offensive is designed to take some of the sting out of mounting Western protests against the treatment of dissidents in the Soviet bloc. For the moment the Communist "human rights" campaign is being conducted mainly in newspaper articles and speeches.
Japan
Night
Sunday, Feb. 20
5:00 p.m. Banquet 6:00 p.m. Cultural Show Kansas Union Cafeteria Woodruff Auditorium Tickets: $4.50 at S.U.A. office JAPANESE ASSOCIATION Sponsored by K.U. International Club
SPEED READING CLASS TO BE TAUGHT IN LAWRENCE
The United States Reading Lab Mid-West Division is offering their famous speed reading course to a limited number of qualified people here in the Lawrence area. The average person who completes this course can read 10 times faster, and with substantially improved comprehension and better concentration.
This famous course has taught many thousands of people to read over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and retain what they have read much more effectively. Average graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.
For complete details about this famous speed reading course be sure to attend one of the free one hour orientation lectures that have been scheduled. These lectures are open to the public, above age 13 (persons under 18 should be accompanied by a parent, if possible.) and the course will be explained in complete detail, including class schedules, instruction procedures and a tuition that is much less than similar courses.
These meetings will be held on campus at the Lutheran Student Center, 15th and Iowa, on Wed., Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 17, 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Feb. 18 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Sat., Feb. 19 at 10:30 a.m. and again at 1:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. and **TWO FINAL MEETINGS**, Tues., Feb. 22, 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Classes are limited and class places will be filled on first come-first serve basis only. Be sure to attend the earliest meeting possible to insure a class place. Group meetings may take up to 3 hours.
WASHINGTON (AP)—A pay raise for members of Congress, federal judges and high federal officials seemed certain yesterday to go into effect without a House vote after a move to put members on record individually failed.
Federal pay raises likely unless House votes soon
The attempt to bring the issue to the House floor for a vote would have required unanimous consent. It was blocked by Rep. Charles H. Wilson, D-Calif.
Members objecting to the pay raise, or to the no-vote method of enacting it, or both, vowed to continue their efforts to force a roll call. Some said they would try to block weekend adjournment of the House, scheduled for today.
But they acknowledged the odds against them were long. House Republican Leader John Rhodes, who sponsored the attempt to force a vote, said, "I am at a loss to know what else any body can do to get this to a vote."
Unless the House vote a disapproving resolution by midnight Saturday, the pay raise—for representatives and senators a $12,900 to $75,000 increase—goes into effect automatically. The Senate, by a 54-42 vote Feb. 2, has already in effect reused to block the raise. The Senate is in recess until Monday.
Some of the raises include: vice president, chief justice, House speaker, $5,500 to $7,500; associate justices of the Supreme Court; associate judges to $3,000 to $6,000; majority and minority leaders in Congress, $22,000 to $55,000; appeals court judges, $44,000 to
In addition to the raises for senators and representatives, the pending proposal would increase the compensation of high school graduates and teachers in top-level career government employees.
$87,500; district judges, $42,000 to $45,000.
In urging a House vote the pay raise,
the state has made a special respect for the intelligence of the American people that to believe that they will not see through this charade. . . We must face up to our responsibility and have a recorded voice.
$57,500: district judges. $42,000 to $54,500.
He later said he wouldn't necessarily oppose raises for judges and officials, but didn't think members of Congress should wait until the federal budget was balanced.
Rep. Wilson, a member of a subcommittee that voted down a resolution of disapproval, said of the efforts to force a judge to think there is some demagogue there."
Wilson said the matter was being handled under proper procedures and that "one of the purposes of the 1967 resolution is to prevent Congress from having to vote on its own pay raises."
Rep. Robert J. Lagomasrio, R-Calif,
said he went back to his district during the
recess that ended yesterday and "there was
a lot of activity," he said in talks about,
the proposed pay increase.
"Some defended the need, but not one wanted it to go through without a vote."
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill said he favored the pay raise and would vote for it on a roll call, but doubted that it would pass if such a vote were held.
The pay raise came before Congress under the provisions of a 1967 act specifying that a special commission every four years review the compensation of members of Congress, federal judges and high officials and recommend needed adjustments.
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Campus Beauty Shoppe firmly believes that any woman who cares about herself can be beautiful. This means treating yourself well. And being treated well.
Like the very special personal attention you get every time you visit a fine hair styling salon. Campus Beauty Shoppe specializes in The Redken Experience, a combination of science, professional treatments, service and an entire collection of hair and skin products to use at home.
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"FELLINI
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Rome.
Before Christ.
After Fellini.
FRIDAY, FEB. 18 & SATURDAY, FEB. 19 7:30, 9:30 p.m.$1 3:30 p.m.Matinee Each Dav
THE MILKY WAY (1968) Dir. Luis Bunuel (Fr.-Sp.) $1
Thursday, Feb. 17, 7:30, 9:30
BIRTH OF A NATION (1915) Dir. D.W. Griffith.
Available for the first time in many years. The complete, original version with sound track.
Sunday, Feb. 20, 3:00. Free.
BIRDS IN PERU Dr. Romain Gary, with Jean Soberg,
MauriceRonel. French/subtitled. Rated X.
MURDER AT THE VAMINIES. Dirt. Mitchell Leison.
With Kitty Carlisle, Duke Ellington & his Orchestra.
Monday, Feb. 21, 7:30 p.m. 75°
Woodruff Auditorium—Tickets available at SUA Office
at be on e and acts
3
☆☆☆
Thursday, February 17, 1977
version with
erg,
Marylin Moore
Silent player
Photo by NANCY NORRIS
Lula Trowbridge. University Theatre seamstress, puts a few
finishing stitches in a dummy that will occupy a coffin in the KU production of the satire, "Loot."
Rules of society attacked in play
"Loot," a black comedy attacking some of society's sacred laws, will open the University Theatre's spring season at 8 tomorrow night.
Additional performances will be at b.p. 8 p.m.
Feb. 19, 24 and 25 and at 2:30 p.m.
Feb. 19, 24 and 25 and 2 at 3:30 p.m. Feb. 20.
McLeary joins Joe Orton, begins with a M McLeary's job. Doesn't it matter? McLeary's living room. The comedy becomes entangled when M McLeary's son and an accomplice rob a bank and stush the bank. M McLeary's coffin, in place of her body.
The antics continue when the deceased wife's nurse discovers the money and has to pay.
According to director William Keeler, assistant professor of the theather, the target of the play isn't only society's emphasis on money, but also the importance of quickly acquiring wealth without disturbing the moral world or attracting attention.
Nancy Walker, Prairie Village graduate student, is assistant director.
(McLeavy), Pittsburg graduate student; Alan Schwertferger (McLeawy's son Hall), Kinsey堡, Cliff Rakerd (Ha's accomplice), North Olmsted, Ohio; barbara Mounsey (nursse Fay), Granville, Ohio; roger Roger Nolan (Scotland Yard inspector), Lenexa senior; and Keith Bloomington, Min., senior. (Meadows), Bloomington, Min., senior.
Cast members: Barry Bengston
All seats are reserved. Public ticket
patients must register at the ticket
admission desk with a current URU.
Glassblowing, ceramics spark workshop
Fascinated onlookers watched an all-day glassblowing and ceramic raku firing demonstration yesterday in front of the Kansas Union.
Trash fire set at Acacia house
A fire bomb ignited a fire in the trash "dumpster" of the Acacia fraternity house, 1100 Indiana St., shortly after midnight as university members said early this morning.
"I was sitting in the dining room when I heard a big boom and then saw a flash of light outside," Rick Hartman, Birmingham, Mich., senior, said.
"We first tried putting out the fire with some letoff water, and then all three of the house fire extinguishers to try to put it out. Finally we called the fire department."
Hartman said that other members of the fraternity had seen a car pull up to the house immediately before the explosion, and he says that police that police who arrived on the scene indicated there wasn't sufficient evidence to press any charges.
The demonstration was part of the Art and Design Academic Workshop, which is held in conjunction with the annual Principal Counselor-Freshman Conference run
The glassblowing demonstration was conducted by Vernon Brejeta, assistant
Brecha carefully removed small balls of molten glass from a brick, propane gas furnace and carried them on the end of a ladder to the pipe about two feet away from the furnace.
He constantly twirled the pipe to keep gravity from pulling the glass out of shape and repeatedly placed the blown glass in the water. It would seem that the glass wouldn't cool too quickly and explode.
Graduate students in ceramics demonstrated ceramic raku firing techniques, using a kiln built by William Bracker, the professor of design, for the glaze firing.
The demonstration klin used yesterday and others used at the University of Kansas
Raku is a procedure for firing pottery that achieves a special smoked effect. Special color or glaze may be added to the pottery. The technique was developed by Japanese potters in the late 16th century for making tea ceremony wares.
Students applied oxides and carbonates directly to the stoneware or mixed them with a basic white crackle glaze to achieve a white shiny finish. They fired the pieces in a small portable kiln.
were designed by Bracer specifically for the raku firing process.
The final step in the process, reduction or smoking in sawdust or leaves, created the ash.
Bracker said sawdust was used for yesterday's demonstration because it was to windy to use leaves, and sawdust is less messy.
Then the ceramics were placed in a trash can filled with sawdust. The high temperature of the pieces ignited the sawdust and the ceramic shattered, leaving pieces of the clay body that weren't glazed.
For the reduction process, the glaze fired pieces had to reach a low fire temperature of about 1,800 degrees and have a fire-red, glassy appearance. Bracker said.
The workshop and demonstrations were held for art and design teachers from high schools and community colleges in Kansas and surrounding states. Bracker said, to students, the focus about KU's art and design programs and to display material being developed.
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UNIVERSITY THEATRE—MORPHY HALL Feb. 18, 19, 24, 25 at 8:00 p.m. Feb. 20 at 2:30 p.m. Ticket Reservations: 864-3982 KU students admitted without charge upon receipt of current Certificate of Registration. This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fee.
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University Dally Kansan
Prof studies bees' flight
The flight of the bumblebee—and other winged insects—is being studied for possible use in the aerospace industry by Chuan-Tau Lan, associate professor of aerospace engineering.
"We're studying things that fly very differently, trying to discover general principles in flying. Lan said yesterday. We are still working on it, but we are also studying dragonflies, locusts, etc."
According to one aerodynamic theory, the bumblebee shouldn't be able to fly. Through funding from a one-year, $4,200 grant from the University of Chapman-Weill School, Lan is studying how they fly.
Lan said the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) had expressed interest in the study and he hoped such would be funded by NASA in the future.
Because of limited funds, Lam said, he and a graduate assistant are conducting only theoretical research, using computers in the laboratory. He noted that using high-speed photography in the study.
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4
Thursday, February 17, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Gas plight serious
President Ford's request a few years ago that Americans "bite the bullet" to fight inflation produced a lot of smokeried, fodder in comic comics and, generally, very few results.
Now Americans face another problem: a natural gas shortage. Again, they are asked to
but they'd better take things a bit more seriously now than they did when Ford was warning about inflation. This time, the country faces an immediate problem that will require some kind of solution; the country puts to action the only long-term solution; deactivation of natural gas prices.
Deregulation means lifting the price ceiling off interstate natural gas—that is, gas produced in one state and sold in another. That, in turn, means that prices will jump.
TO CONSUMERS AND some Congressmen, it all seems very unfair. They theorize that the price now paid is fair and that the only reason there isn't enough gas is that companies have been too busy counting their gold to bring new supplies out of the ground.
But it's not that simple. The fact is that Congress has, through price regulation, squelchecled government to develop infrastructural gas networks that would take the gas to places that need it most.
It is a tangled web that Congress has woven around our natural gas supply. The problem began years ago when Congress theorized that natural gas shipped from state to state was merchandise in interstate commerce. Therefore, Congress felt compelled to regulate it. It put a price ceiling into effect.
THAT WAS JUST fine, because the price ceiling was reasonable. And, besides, natural gas was just cheap stuff that people used for vard lights and things like that.
Then, in the 1960s, coal and oil prices rose and people began substituting natural gas. The demand for natural gas began rising,
but the price of interstate natural gas remained low.
No right-minded congressman was going to support removal of the price lid. The folks at home wouldn't like that. So demand for natural gas around the country grew while it became increasingly less attractive for companies to sell its natural gas for interstate pipelines.
Instead, producers concentrated in intrastate sales, over which the federal government had no control. The gas companies made a fair profit, and everybody
UNTIL THIS WINTER. It got awfully cold in places like Ohio and Pennsylvania and New York—places that aren't brimful of natural gas. Their supplies ran out, and interstate lines had never been developed. The result was a shortage.
People in gas-rich states like Kansas have trouble comprehending the whole situation. They often do not understand it.
But it isn't an equal world in which we live, and those shivering in Ohio need Kansas gas. And they would have gotten it if Congress hadn't squeezed the flow shut.
Now Congress needs to backtrack and undo the damage before even more Americans freeze next year. There's no reason for panic, but there is a need for controlled, positive action to deregulate prices.
OF COURSE, ANY price deregulation would be a form of whistling in the dark if it wasn't accompanied by a stringent conservation program in both the public and private sectors. Natural gas is a strictly finite resource, just as coal and oil are. Regardless of its price, it will disappear just as quickly as our oil is unless some common step measures are taken to extend our supplies.
Toss the prelection pap about legislative ethics out the window folks, for the 1976 Congressional campaign stockings nearly bursting with green goodies last fall.
The Federal Election Commission reports that candidates for Congress received nearly double the amount they got in campaign finance, $25 million mainly from organized corporate groups.
Candidates still get big money
Leading the list of corporate cronies were the American Medical Association political committees, which gave a total $1.8 million. Following were the United States Medical Association and AFL-CIO political committees, which provided about $1 million.
AND SO ON, down the luxury line they go, with corporate and business trade association accounts, which totals $7.1 million into the salad.
Chief among the House recipients was Rep. John Rhodes of Arizona. House recipient $250,000 from business, professional and agricultural groups. Former Sen. Vance Harkite of Indiana led in the case $245,000 from organized labor alone.
It appears—pompous edicts about government ethics aside—that special interest groups are still courted by our noble-sounding legislative leaders—noble funders—who uncleart fund grab bags tussle loose again in a couple years.
BUT WHO CAN fault the candidates? Campaigns, especially losing ones, as was the case with Harkins's cost, for a public campaign funds to help out, our leaders are still compelled to seek funds elsewhere, gifts hidden under election materials, gifts whose predominant color is green, green, green.
The preponderance of the words "political committees" make obvious the ways by which the various contributing
...ALL CONTRIBUTIONS made by political committees established or financed or maintained by any corporation, organization, person . . shall be considered to have been made by a single
groups got around the Federal Election Campaign Act Amendments of 1978:
between political committees of funds raised through joint fund-raising efforts. . . "
A. **thing** in these FEC Amendments makes any sense. OF COURSE, the ambiguous word dilates and equally eager donors to ease through the loopholes in the law, ac-
Bill Sniffen
Editorial Writer
PENGUIN
whose ends are the strings attached?
countants and lawyers at the ready.
"... (A) Nothing in this sentence shall limit transfers
"Why bother with a national health insurance plan? Let private (read: expensive and selective) companies handle the job. Sure, milk prices are low. Why don't we boost price supports or something? Local manufacturers can buy milk and-a-half during your lunch breaks certainly seem justified to me..."
SHEER FANTASY, of course. Some sor of national health plan is inevitable, despite AMA protests. Legislators foolish enough to follow the Nixian example to attempt to artificially boost employment be boiled and then hauled off the Congressional floor. Organized labor isn't likely to get all it
wants, despite beloved lunch breaks.
But there could be less obvious effects caused by the big contributions. That's where the vote goes, and those are responsible to only those major groups that got them elected in the first place, we can expect the same sort of special effects with our efforts barring went out of style.
We'll give our electees a break for now. Their voting records will indicate later how well they know which side their bread is buttered on. But I have my doubts.
After all, money around campaign time sure beats the back of a lump of coal in the heat—even if it a labor union coal.
ETHICS
CONGRESS
© 1977 NYT
Tanman signals spring
But that weather isn't coming to the University of Kansas; it only concerns the rest of our countrymen.
rumors about of his going to Texas for the winter.) He may have been around recently with a shirt and coat on since this has been an unusually cold winter. But it's that first no-shirt ap-
KU, in breaking this national tradition, has a more distinctive forecaster than the one in Pennsylvania. And that earlier didn't display his forecasting methods on Feb. 2, either.
THE FORECASTER of whom we're speaking is, of course, the Tannan. Local legend has it that if the Tannan makes a noshirt appearance sometime during the first two weeks of winter, we will be good weather will be forthcoming in a few, short weeks.
and noticed that the weather hadn't changed much. It was a little on the windy side, but the sun was still there and the temperature was in the mid-50s. Since I had to go to Flint Hall for
Last week I was assigned the task of watching for Tannam's February appearance. Now, that doesn't mean the Tannam hasn't been around lately (although there had been
Jay Bemis Editorial Writer
pearance that keeps us all bubbling with enthusiasm.
MOST OF last week we had some nice, clear weather with lots of sunshine. I began wait for the newsroom windows in Flint Hall. That's about the best spot to watch for the "Tan," by the newsroom window. A stunning spot is on the benchite just east of Wescoe Hall.
But as each weekday went by, there was no Tan. About all I saw were the disgusted glances from women who took me for some palpert pervert who had nothing better to do than gank at them from open newsroom windows.
LAST SATURDAY I awoke
other reasons, anyway, I went a little earlier in hopes of breaking my first Tanman story.
The time was 11 a.m. I had an 11:30 appointment in Flint and planned to go to Allen Field House right after that for the KU-KState disappointment. In other words, my search for the Tan had about 30 minutes to find something more desperate. As the minutes ticked on, I was about to close the window.
SOMEWHERE outside, a car was honking.
And then, lo and behold, there he was. John Snyder, alias the Tannam. He was walking along Jayhawk Blvd., three days
He was dressed (with no shirt, of course) in his usual summer attire: ragged blue cut-offs, slapped gray socks and beat brown shoes with tarnished buckles. He was waving at the driver of the car that had bonked.
before the end of February's first two weeks.
One could see by the big smile on Tan's bronze face that the signs of excellent spring and summer seasons were soon to be setting in. He continued his work, and soon he passed the Wescock benches where one sees him so often in warmer weather.
I CONCLUDED that the Tan had been gone so long that he was foregoing a stop at the benches to take a full-scale tour of the campus. Or maybe he knew of the KU-K-State encounter and to go allen Field House for a little people-watching, which happily ended with a pretend last meal. I yelled at Tan in hopes of getting a quick interview, but it was too late.
Arsena
Sadi
We
WISTPHILL
NRA
THIS ISSUE:
"This is a cheap shot!"
TONY KIRITSIS
FRED COWAN
man of the year
Bull
Dig
In this Issue of Bullet
He had started jogging,
hoping perhaps that the Chi
Omega fountain had been
turned on for the season.
To the editor:
WSU alumnus concerned
as an alumnus of Wichita State University, I have been watching with concern the recent developments regarding obscurity at WSU. During my time at the university, the importance of awareness, as tolerance, freedom of expression and ideation were firmly ingrained in my mind.
The following is an open letter to Clark Ahlberg, president of Wichita State University (in response to a raid on the film, "The Devil in Miss Jones," Feb. 10 on the WSU campus):
The university should, above all other societal institutions, hold these values to be sacred. And in fact it is the national virtue to uphold these basic constructs upon which our country was founded.
To allow without so much as an argument the violation of a duty, you must desecreation of your duty as protector of the academic atmosphere as well as your authority as a citizen of the United States.
I can well understand that you, just as I, find these films distasteful, but that is not the issue. Neither you nor I nor the society have the right to impose our moral values on the minority.
In the tradition of our founding fathers there is a time when principle reigns above social acceptance, boards of regents or commissioned that, if required of taking the fatalistic approach implied by denouncing the seized film as illegal, you would recognize the clear imposition of the majority's sensitivities to the minority's constitutional rights. The films we watch are not weakenig people's minds. It is clearly set out in the Constitution that government is not intended to be a religious institution or anyone's moral guardian. I am overwhelmed with disbelief to see that in the land of the free, people of the arrest for showing pictures to a volunteer audience.
letters
I sincerely hope that in the spirit of civil disobedience you will reassemble your position on this issue and that I will no longer be an associate with Wichita State University.
Richard Jantz
2330 N. Oliver
Wichita
winstiing aiong
To the editor:
Is anyone aware of the chaotic effects of the whistle's absence on campus? Why, no more are casualties regularly reported in the demilitarized zone where all self classes continue without the mid-lecture invasion of our dear, beloved factory reject and its sweet strains. But perhaps worst of all, my instructors feel free to finish a sentence, comment on our event or even wait until 20 minutes and 30 seconds past the hour.
Oh, for those days of old when I was lovingly awaked every day after school on Saturday morning. Oh, for the times when my startle response was so vigorously exercised in the quiet of Watson's west garden.
Could it be that even spring is lost without the whistle, and will not know when to return to our lovely, quiet campus? It can not be! Unite . . . call a half to such absurdities! And remember, Feb. 16 and 17 are "Be Kind to Your Startle Response Days."
Bekki Mumaw Holton sophomor
Sign rule miffs fan To the editor:
I enjoyed reading Courtney Thompson's article on the recent KU-State basketball rivalry. Something within her article, however, sparked me into a fury. She remarks that beside our enthusiasm, KU students were nice and kind, but I wonder if the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation's business department cannot act in a similar fashion.
Let me explain my dissatisfaction. First of all as a loyal and devoted KU basketball fan, one who has backed our team at Kemper Arena and in Columbia, I was a bit puzzled when I found out that the seats that I have sat in for four years as a student had been sold. Who got those tickets? Generally speaking, the KU student or alumnus who supports our team for one game a year, or worse yet, K-Sate delegates. What about seats that became pure profit on Saturday.
What really rubs me the wrong way, however, is the business departments "sign" admit. Admittedly I am no
acust, but the sign which I spent hours on and took to the Kemper Arena, was ripped up by two spirited security agents. This would not bother me so much except that every Sunday at the center of campus and college basketball, I also see wall-to-wall signs.
One might ask as I did, "why no signs at 'colorful' Allen?" Well, in talking with someone at the business office I got three excellent reasons: 1. Have you ever had to take 20 or 30 signs down after a game? They are why are both NBC and TVS allowed to tape up their signs? 2. Inlure to spectators.
Somehow I felt that if the mortality rate rate on the nation due to signs was a respectable percentage, I feel that schools Tennessee and Notre Dame would follow similar policies.
The real reason I feel that our University upholds such a rule — and certainly destroy the moundate and drab atmosphere of the pit. GO, KU round-bailers. My sign is "Keep waiting at Kemper March 3 and 4."
Gene Spratford Prairie Village senior
Need new system To the editor:
grent Anderson's editorial and the recent stream of letters supporting the manager-commissioner form of government are confusing me. Especially alarming is that these people have actually said the present system is truly the
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representative voice of the people and why change a good thing? I don't see how anyone represents present system is representative.
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A policy of business expansion is the main thrust of the present system in control of city hall. When election time comes around, the businessmen in town have the money to campaign, and they must part get elected. Money is spent to improve business opportunities and growth.
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Business has its place in the growth of any city, but the mayor-council government gives both segments as well as others a chance to work and benefit the whole city.
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A more representative system is needed. I'm tired of business controlling the future of our city. Less money needs to be spent on improving the terrible air, or to turn Lawrence into a fast-growing, industrialized center of business. M
After all, government is supposed to be by the people, for the people--all the people. Lee Timm
The proposed mayor-council form would elect members from divided wards. Each section of the city would elect its own representatives and together they would decide the affairs of the city. It's called democracy.
Kansas City, Kan., sophomore
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University Daily Kansan
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FacEx delays policy
FacEx members yesterday delayed action on proposed changes in faculty promotion and tenure, saying they needed to study current promotion and tenure policies.
The changes were proposed in a report from the Faculty Senate Committee on Formation and Responsibilities (FRRP), FRRP, and Responsibilities (沙化 support of spring and fall tenure reviews, by eliminating the present March review and eliminating all promotion and tenure reviews in November.
The consolidation would start in the fall of 1978. FRRP said that "to implement the proposed change next fall could cause undue hardship to a few departments."
A TENURE review for faculty members is mandatory at the end of their sixth year at the University of Kansas. For faculty members whose review comes at the end of the second year,
FRPR recommended that "if a candidate does not come out successfully for tenure in this initial (fall) review, the University Committee on Promotions and Tenure (UCPT) will leave his-her case open until late spring."
But FRPR said the last spring action should no longer be a separate tenure award, and instead the back with UCPT. The check-back would be used only for tenure applicants who had accumulated "the strength of any ad-hoc documentation" between fall and spring.
FACEX, however, questioned the necessity of the spring check-back with UCPT and asked what it would be scheduled in late spring.
Nancy Denney, associate professor of psychology and FacEx member, said the possible check-back back be "spelled out in more detail" before SenEx acted on it.
Denney and other FaeEx members said they wondered whether the check-back might actually "turn up a faculty member who won a Nobel prize between fall and spring," or would simply waste UCPT's time.
FacEx members also said they needed a week to study current promotion and tenure (2017).
Eldon Fields, professor of political science, will be dead most of our faculty after forty years.
FacEx members couldn't decide what they should do with the FRP report after
they acted on it. Fields said he thought
would agree to WEBC go to EBRI.
to over 90% of our work to PARR.
PRIPR's report
each University School and
department.
T. P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics and FRPR chairman, said in the report, 'More people seem to be against the proposed change than we expected—even if they still be in a minority—and they are not strongly on the matter than we expected.'
More than 90 per cent of the departments and schools surveyed responded, the report said. The report listed faculty objections to the POR proposal, including the following:
The present system spreads the work out for the departments and schools. If we have to put it all together in one package in the fall, the work load could be enormous. The job done by a bit of pressure to get the job done before the decision may suffer.
"IF PAST experience is any guide, for many faculty members the four to five months between November and March are valuable in terms of strengthening their students and have made the difference between an adverse and a favorable decision.
City officials received little indication of what the public is thinking about the Clinton Lake water treatment plant last night, when city officials extended a public meeting about the plant.
Four city commissioners and several city officials attended the meeting at the Lawrence Public Library. City Manager Buford Watson said, "It looks as if we are talking to ourselves." But for the benefit of the citizens present, the meeting proceeded.
The main point of the meeting was to tell Lawrence voters the advantages of using general obligation bonds instead of revenue bonds to finance the treatment plant. Voters will decide the bond issue in the March 8 primary.
Use of general obligation bonds, Watson said, would save the city $5 million in interest because they would take 20 years to repay, while revenue bonds would take 30 years to repay. The construction one year, resulting in higher construction costs due to inflation.
Watson said the city needed the water treatment plant if a water shortage arose on one side of the water system, the new storage facility, that the city still received water, he said.
Few attend water plant meeting
The city already has spent about $160,000 installing intakes in the Clinton Reservoir. The water treatment plant is needed to purify water from the reservoir for
Budget . . .
From page one
Bennett's recommended Med Center shrinkage, if it remains unchanged, would mean only 39 new nursing positions by the end of fiscal 1978. Dykes said. The Regents approved 84 new nursing positions, but Bennett recommended 57, which would be further lowered to 39 to meet shrinkage requirements.
recommended by Bennett, to 2 per cent. A 2 per cent shrinkage for unclassified employees was approved by Bennett and the Regents.
Regents chairman Smith, in his opening remarks, thanked the legislature for its support in the last few years. He asked for continued support, especially for the $7 per seat vote required, new Macdonald Center programs, extension courses and capital improvements.
Thursday, February 17, 1977
Since November, Chang said, the
The breast cancer detection center, which X-rays women for breast cancer, experienced a wave of appointment cancellations last August, and at one point, only half the women scheduled for breast X rays showed up.
X-ray tests back to normal after warning
After a sharp decline in patient attendance last fall, the number of cases treated at the KU Medical Center's breast cancer detection center has returned to normal, Joseph Chang, a Med Center radiologist, said yesterday.
The Med Center has continued to X-ray to check for breast cancer since then, despite tentative NCI guidelines that limit the use of mammography for breast cancer detection.
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
The cancellations followed a warning in August by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) that radiation from breast X rays can increase the risk of breast cancer in some women.
He said that since the time of the NCI's first warnings about the possible effects of mammographies, the American Cancer Society has used of X rays for breast cancer detection.
cerned every day with mammography. We just do our own thinking."
"We have never followed their (NCI) guidelines," Chang said, "and we con-
The NIH had said X rays should be banned for women 35 to 50 years of age unless they showed symptoms of breast cancer or were receiving cancer-related killer, among women.
The breast cancer detection center, which opened at the Med Center in September 1973, was one of the first such projects in the United States. Chang said that since its opening, more than 10,000 mammographies have been given.
The NCI based some of its studies on data gathered from Japanese women who had been exposed to radiation from atomic bomb explosions in World War II, Chang said, which was many times greater than dosages used in mammographies.
"There are no real facts indicating that mammographies can lead to breast cancer," Chang said. "All this is experimentation and there isn't one case in which mammography has caused breast cancer."
detection center has had a full schedule and business there is now "bomming." He said the plan was to use the new
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Watson said the water from Clinton was expected to be much cleaner than the water in New York, where he grew up.
After the treatment plant is completed in about two years, the city will receive most of its water from there. But the Kansas water will still be used when necessary.
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6
Thursday, February 17, 1977
University Dally Kansan
17 sign letter of intent to play football at KU
Snorts Editor
The future of Kansas football was being shaped yesterday as 15 high school and two junior college standouts signed national letters of intent to play for the Jayhawks.
More players are expected to be signed today and further signing announcements will be made during the day, according to Don Baker. KU sports information
The football office wouldn't announce the names of those players who signed Big Eight letters of intent last week because of the closeness to the national signing date. Bud Moore, head football coach at KU, was out of town yesterday and came on the new recruits
LAST WEDNESDAY was the first day that prospective players could sign letters of intent with Big Eight conference schools. But many teams ultimately released until today, although about half of the names were learned last week.
KU's recruiting emphasis was apparently placed on signing quarterbacks and linemen, although two of the top prospects for KU have not been signed officially. The Hawks signed 11 lineman and two quarterbacks.
A letter of intent requires that the recruit play football only for the school with which he signed. The commitment is binding for one year of eligibility.
THE JAYHAWKS, seeking to replace graduating quarterbacks Nolan Cromwell and Scott McMichael, signed junior scout Jeff Hines and high school standout JF Hines.
butenne, 5-11 and 198 pounds, is from Mt.
San Antonio, Calif. He rushed for more
than 900 yards last season and passed for
more than 900 yards.
Hines, 63 and 190 from Arapaho, Colo,
was named all-state by the Denver Post.
He passed for more than 900 yards during
his junior year, but was handcuffed in
2008. He played in the top 600 year,
however he still managed to top 600 yards
n both passing and rushing.
"HINES WAS one of the most highly respected players in the Midwest, and in the nation," Baker said.
Another quarterback KU hoped to sign was Steve Smith of Emporia. Smith, 8-1 and 185, led his team to the Class 4-A state championship last season. The team has been heavily recruited by both KU and Kansas State but was reportedly leaning to the Jayhawks.
"I assume he will sign with us," Makekara
said. "We're awaiting his signature."
There were several other blue-chip
players Baker he was confident would sign with KU sometime today.
"THERE'S NO reason to think they
sign, but I don't have complete
verification."
Kansas has been after 6-4, 260-pound lineman John Odell of Wellington, Kan., and 6-1, 195-pound defensive back Dick Buska of Kapuau M. Carmel in Wichita. Odell has been courted by a number of schools, including Oklahoma.
"It appears we're being successful in our recruiting objective in signing linemen and quarterbacks." Baker said. "We're setting them—or have got them."
the yawkyns also picked up two wide receivers and one running back. Although KU will be losing Laverne Smith, the Jayhawks leading all-time ground gainer, they have great depth at that position and didn’t pursue many ball carriers.
RUNNING BACKS returning for next year include: Bill Campfield, Norris Banks, Max Edger, John Algee, Mike Higginbotham, Irvin, Tracy Levy and Jake Levy.
Mike Lombardo of Rockhurst High School in Kansas City, Mo., is the only running back signed so far. Lombardo, 64, has a, has a 4.6 mark on the 40-derad dash.
At wide receiver, the Jayhawks will have Rob Fulton, 6-3 and 195, from Coffeville Junior College, who played high school football at Shawnee Mission East. He caught 58 passes last year for eight touchdowns and 940 yards.
The Hawks also got wide receiver David
Hawkins. The Summit High School in
Kansas City, Kansan
The long list of linemen, which apparently could be tailored for both offense and defense—including linebacker—begins with Ed Bruce, 6-2 and 235, Lee's Summit. Mo. Bruce was named to the second team all-metro squad this year.
John Calvich, 8-1 and 195, from St. Plus High School in Kansas City, Mo., will join his brother Jerry on the KU squad. Other sirees are:
John Huston, 6-3 and 215, Horlick High School in Racine, Wisc.; August Kyle, 6-5 and 215, Northwest High School in St. Louis, Mo.; David Lawrence, 6-4 and 215, Parsons, Kan.; Bob Lowery, 6-2 and 220, Wichita Heights High School; Jay McAdam, 6-4 and 230, Riverside High School; John Huston, 6-3 and 215, Tom Hill, 6-3 and 215, Winnipeg High School in Kansas City, Mo.; Greg Smith, 6-3 and 285, Mendall Catholic High School in Chicago; Larry Wills, 6-4 and 240, Highland Junior College; and Scellars Young, 6-3 and 215, Central High School in St. Louis.
Reamon's resignation startles, shocks team
Initial reaction to Tuesday's resignation by coach迪克 Reamon from KU swimmers was shock and disbelief. The 37-year-old coach, who led Kansas to eight straight Big Eight championships, gave no forewarning of the announcement.
"It was quite a start to me," said Mike Hines, standing on the KU squad friend of Rachel. "I feel a bit close friend of Rachel."
"His decision hurt me at first but after he explained it to me I realized that is what he really wants. It's sad for me because in my life, I never cared about him. I know I came here because of him."
Freshmen Doug Smith and Kurt Anselm rejected similarly although they haven't been able to explain.
"AT FIRST I didn't know what to think," said Smith. But I'm confident a good coach will come in next year and there will be no complications."
Ansemi agreed that Reamon was a personal loss to him. "I've only known him for a year, so I know the seniors, juniors and sophomores must be really upset. He's done a lot for this year's freshmen and especially for me."
Opinions differ on Reason's choice of timing in making the announcement before the Jayhawks' season is complete. KU has only two meets remaining this season. Reason will stay with the squad for those meets.
"I was shocked," said soplompiece Jay Ar斯器p, "Especially since the Big Eight meet is coming up in a couple of weeks."
ON THE other band, Smith thought the timing of Reason's announcement was the day he met Ed.
'Now a new coach can come in next year and teach with a young group instead of the old one.'
Reamon stresses it was a personal decision and that there were no misunderstandings between him and the athletic department.
Reason feels a great deal of loyalty to
and knows many swimmers came to KUU.
"I didn't want to turn them out in the cold and that's the reason for my timing. This has certainly caused more grief than satisfaction."
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Thursday, February 17, 1977
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4358
Overtime victory led by Douglas
By GARY VICE
Sports Editor
John Douglas had carried the Jayhawks throughout the game scoring an amazing 46 points, but it took a last-second follow shot to win the game. State 91-89 in overtime last night in Miami.
The victory at the buzzer was KU's third such triumph of the season. It was also the 'Hawks third overtime of the year, raising their record to 7.5 in the Niel Eight
Barnhouse had come off the bounce auxi-
four "Hawks had fouled out to hit the game
winner from the baseline after grabbing the
rebound from Douglas" errant shot.
Douglas tied Wilt Chamberlin for
forth most played performance in
KU, 12-4 with 64 points.
The 'Hawks outscored the Cyclones 9-7 in the overtime period after Iowa State's Steve Burgess sent the game into the extra quarter. The Hawks scored twice seconds remaining to even the score, B2-82.
Burgason, who scored 16 points, gave the Cyclones the early lead in the overtime, 82-83, hitting 1-of-7 from the line after being fouled by Clint Johnson.
Johnson's foul was followed quickly by Paul Mokeski's fifth and the 'Hawks were left with a four-guard attack as forward Nick Ken Knonigs were already on the bench.
After Burgasson put the Cyclones up by one, Uthoff made two trips to the foul line (once following Van Moore's fourth foul) setting 2-0 to 4-1 to put I.S.Abed 85-82.
The "Hawks were working patiently on offense and worked the ball inside to Von Moore who was foiled by Andrew Parker in a 9-4 victory within three. 8445, sinking two from the
Iowa State was unable to score on its next possession and Johnson, who was fouled by Paul Landsberger, the game with 2:44 remaining, hitting 1-0-2 free throws. Uthoff grabbed Jones is missed second attempt, Iowa State scored 1-0-2. The team, traveled to turn the ball over to KU.
Leonard Allen, who scored 18 points, Douglas and —out of the game— with 1:18 on the clock. Douglas, who had trouble all game from the line netting only 8 of 14, missed on the one-and-one penalty and Johnson out of the game going for the rebound.
Burgason then went to the line making two free throws to put the Cyclones ahead.
Evans had control of the ball and was fouled by Douglas with 56 seconds remaining and he put I.State on top by four. Evans had control of the ball and was Iowa State's last hurrah, however.
seconds later and the Cyclones grabbed the rebound.
hit for back-to-back buckets tying the game and then set up Barnhouse's winning follow-up.
Iowa State's record fell to 6-18 overall and to 3-8 in the conference. It was the Cyclone's first loss since 2005.
The 'Hawks are now with Nebraska,
lost 72-62 to Oklahoma in Norman last
are scheduled to meet Feb. 26. KU's other game this season is against Colorado in Boulder, the Corkmishers from tailwheel to Sillwater, Oklaho, to face the Cowbys.
| | RANKS |
| :--- | :--- |
| PG | FIS |
| | R | PF | PTS |
| Johnson | 5.14 | 1.3 | 3 | 11 |
| Nobles | 4.9 | 1.2 | 3 | 9 |
| Keenanga | 6.8 | 1.4 | 3 | 9 |
| Kenanga | 3.10 | 1.4 | 2 | 9 |
| Douglas | 19.30 | 8.14 | 0 | 0 |
| Jenkins | 0.1 | 0.4 | 0 | 2 |
| Gilson | 0.1 | 0.4 | 0 | 0 |
| Vickordee | 0.3 | 0.4 | 11 | 1 |
| Vickordee | 0.3 | 0.4 | 11 | 1 |
| Mokaleki | 0.4 | 0.0 | 0 | 4 |
| Mokaleki | 0.4 | 0.0 | 0 | 4 |
| Martin | 27.78 | 17.28 | 4 | 27 |
| Martin | 27.78 | 17.28 | 4 | 27 |
★★
University Daily Kansan
| | DOWAREA |
| :--- | :--- |
| Parker | 3.19 | 3 | 1 | 10 |
| Bayer | 2.54 | 3 | 1 | 47 |
| Ugoff | 10.00 | 7.18 | 17 | 7 |
| Uhmann | 10.00 | 7.18 | 17 | 7 |
| Tibb | 6.31 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 |
| Tilbo | 6.31 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 |
| Freeman | 0-4 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 |
| Fraser | 0-4 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 |
| Burgeau | 6.4 | 8.10 | 3 | 9 |
| Burgeau | 6.4 | 8.10 | 3 | 9 |
| Karawan | 26.41 | 30.97 | 49 | 43 |
| Karawan | 26.41 | 30.97 | 49 | 43 |
| | DOWAREA |
| :--- | :--- |
| RAYMAN | 3.19 | 49 | 43 | 18 |
| RAYMAN | 3.19 | 49 | 43 | 18 |
night, for fourth place in the conference.
The Cornhuskies play KU Saturday night in Allen Field House in a battle for a first-round spot. The home-court advantage in the play-offs.
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
The two will probably also square off
play-offs, as the fourth and fifth place team
play-offs, as the fourth and fifth place team
Conf. Overseal
W 9 10
Missouri 9 3 10
Kansas State 9 3 17
Oklahoma 8 7 8
KANSAS 8 5 17
New York 7 5 13
Oklahoma State 3 9 9
Colorado 3 9 9
Iowa State 2 10 10
KANSAS
13
John Douglas
All Big Eight schools except Kansas State and Colorado will be competing in the meet.
There is at least one distance of every stroke and one individual medley event scheduled for each day. The meet is held three-days because 24 events are involved.
"KU doesn't have an obvious weak spot at the point," said Kempf. "We go at ballet."
Conch Gary Kempel had thought he it
between Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska.
Kempi said he thought KU's chances for a third Biz Eight championship were good.
Jayhawk track teams compete here tonight
He said this meet was important for many KU swimming because they needed to post times that would qualify them for the AIAW regional meet. Feb. 24-28.
The Kansas track team will compete at home for the first time in more than a month tonight when they face Oklahoma. The team is in a triangular meet in Allen Field House.
The men's squad is undefeated this year and had their best performance of the season last weekend when they won the United States Track and Field Federation (USTFF) Indoor Championships in Oklahoma City.
Swimmers try for No.3
"We're exceptional in quality and numbers. In fact, some of last year's winning times wouldn't have a chance of placing this year."
Both Oklahoma State and Wichita State did well at the USTF meet, so head coach Bob Timmons isn't taking tonight's meet lightly.
Field events begin at 6 p.m. and running events start at 7 p.m.
"We'd like to get more people qualified for the nationals and we need to make a determination about who's going to be on our team for the conference meet." Timm
The Big Eight rules allow teams to have only 24 entries in the conference meet next
Preliminaries begin at 10 a.m. each day and finals are at 7 a.m. all three days.
Seven individuals and the mile relay team have already qualified for the nationals.
weekend in Lincoln, Neb. KU's tentative
hater has 32 people on it, he said.
Tom Liomale, KU women's track coach,
has made a hypothetical scorecard
predicting the results of tonight's dual meet
at Northwestern University. And he
doesn't like it, it irritates him.
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After comparing the two teams, Llionvale said the Jiehawks could come up short by 10 points.
"We ran against them last week at Manhattan in a triangular, finished second to K-State and best Wichita by five points, 30-25." Liwonna said.
The dual meet is at 6 tonight in Allen Field House.
But the first-year coach isn't worried.
"Also, we've broken seven school records in the last two weeks."
Lionale said KU would have to make up points in the field and middle distance
The KU women's swim team is trying to win their third Big Eight championship in a row. The three-day competition, today through Saturday, starts at 10 a.m. today in Robinson Natorium with the first round of preliminary time trials.
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THURSDAY, FEB. 17
Friday, Feb. 18 SPEAKER
Woodruff Auditorium 7:30 and 9:30 $1.00
Americans in the Professions.
Forum Room Union 7:30 p.m.
Cultural Enrichment Programs NO ADMISSION
Ramon Roubideaux, A.I.M. Attorney,
will talk on
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FALS WORLDS LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTOMOTIVE LEARNING SYSTEM
Thursday, Feb. 17 FILMS
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8
Thursday, February 17, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Twists, turns and sore muscles all part of Hynes' normal activity
By DAN BOWERMAN
Associate Sports Editor
At 2:45 pm, each weekday, Mike Hynes
strolls into Robinson Gymnasium and plops
his 5-12. 12 lb. body on the Kansas gym-
niscus team's 40x40 cm floor exercise
For the next 15 minutes, Hymes twists his torso into a variety of shapes trying to reach the ceiling.
Then he gets down to serious business.
Usually he starts out on the floor exercise mat. He twists and turns and generally does things that would make a person crinege.
inut for Heshes, it's all in a day's normal activity. And, besides that, he's not through
AFTER HE gets through on the floor, Hynge might get to the horizontal bar. There he would swing around, release the bar, and then lift it off so that would make a person's heart stop.
But Hynes does it just about every day. And, again, he's not through yet.
He'll work out in at least one more event before he calls it a day. Perhaps today it's long horse vaulting. He'll run down the mute, bounce off a sprint and get up to the fence and a little and generally do things that most people would dream of. IT'S A MILLY time for Mike Hynes. And,
IT'S A DAILY thing for Mike Hrynes. And besides all that, he's still not through.
He next goes through some conditioning exercises. He'll do pushups, pulsations, two different types of situps and tops on parallel bars. By this time he's ready to go home
"If you leave workout," N Hayes says, "and your muscles aren't tight if they're not sore—you probably didn't work hard enough."
The following day, Hynes, a junior from Olathe, would work the other three events in gymnastics—pommel horse, still rings and parallel bars. But the process is basically the same and the result—sore muscles—is identical.
NOW, IN the midst of the season, Hymes and the rest of the KU gymnastics team are
"With a meet every weekend, I try to emphasize the events that I did not do well in the week before," Hynes said yesterday. "I was very busy with many sets (routines) I做了 daily. A lot."
Hynes will repeat routines and specific moves on each event till he gets it right, he
"If you don't do well in practice, your confidence won't be good, and you'll probably mess up in the meets." Hynes said.
"Side horse is really tough for me. If I missed my mount three out of five times, then I'd it again until I hit it. But if it wasn't then I have to go on to a different move."
HYNES WORKED hard on the pommel horse last week. He repeated moves that he had done on Saturday against Nebraska, but he did score a 6.8 of 10 possible. That's the highest score on that event in six years of gymnastics.
That 6.35, along with solid performances on the still rings, horizontal bar and parallel bars, helped Hynes score a career-high 48.6 points in the all-around event at the Cornhuskers. That 48.6 is just 11.4 points from a perfect 60.
But Hynes wants to do better, and he has a right set on the sevenyear-old KU proponent.
"I'M LOOKING at that record really close," he said, "I try to improve every meet. I know that's not possible, but I'm looking at that record."
Lockwood said Hynes' 48,6 against Nebraska was the best score in the all-around for a KU gymnast since Les Kerr scored 51.55 years ago.
Since then, however, several rules making it possible to play in gym have been implemented.
"I think a couple of things have helped Mike this year," he said. "First, he seems to be able to work and compete under pain better.
"Second, he's worked not only for himself this year, but for the whole team. He's been a leader, and it's good when your all-around does that."
BUT HYNES gives all the credit for his performances to Lockwood.
'coach Lockwood is with me and the other all-arounders 95 per cent of the team.' The coach practises practice, because without him I usually have a poor practice or no practice at all. He puts a lot of drive in me. More times than not, I need a push to keep me goad, and he puts a lot of drive in me.
So Hynes will continue working out in practice and competing in meets this season. And if he doesn't break the record this year, he has another season left.
But John Brouillette够 ready to see his score slip to No. 2 in KU history, because Mike Hynes doesn't give up easily Beside, he's used to having sore muscles.
Tigers, Wildcats win, remain tied for first place; Sooners now third
By the Associated Press
Missouri and Kansas State both won their games last night to stay in a tie for first place in the Big Eight conference race. Oklahoma beat Nebraska and is now in third place, followed by Kansas and Nebraska in a tie for fourth.
Missouri stayed in the first-place tie by beating Colorado, 101-74, at Columbia.
Scott Sims' 16 first-half points led the Tigers to a 20-8 advantage and a 44-31 halftime lead. Missouri then hit 68 per cent of shots, and scored 25 of those minutes, and added 23 of 24 free throws.
SIMS FINISHED with a career-high 30 points, Kim Anderson added 25 points and 18 points.
Dassie, a 6-5 senior, had 18 points. They combined to hit 18 of 25 shots from the field.
Kansas State, the other half of the two-way tie for first, won over Oklahoma State,
Guard Mike Evans and forward Larry
Roberson each scored just under 21 points.
Evans, a 64-41 junior, scored 21 points.
K-State got the first basket of the second half to take a 43-32 lead, but the Cowboys battled back and took the lead, 57-55, with 9:12 left to play.
The Cowboys are tied with Colorado for sixth in the Big Eight with a 3-8 record.
BUT LEADING 61-59, Oklahoma State then went soreless for only five minutes as the Wildcats scored 12 straight points to take a 71-61 advantage with 3:47 remaining. Forward Olus Holder led Oklahoma State with 22 points and 22 rebounds.
Forward John McCullough led the Oklahoma Sooners with 26 points in their win against Nebraska, 72-62. It was the tenth straight home victory for the Sooners
Oklahoma led 34-24 at the half, but Nebraska came to within two points on three occasions in the early part of the second half.
ROCKY HITS RIGHT ON THE BUTTON!
Oklahoma now has a Big Eight record of 8-4 and Nebraska is tied with Kauai at 7-5. Conference play this weekend will break up the four-strait Missouri slumber in K-State and KU and Nebraska.
"A STAR IS BORN"
Ends Tuesday
a guardian at the
gates of Hell
Ends Tuesday
Barbara Streisand &
Kris Kristofferson
BUT THE Sooners' 6-9 center, Al Beal, kept his team in front with crucial points and seven blocked shots.
Varsity
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WITH 10 ACDEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS!
Ewu. Ewu. Bardot. Warfield.
Bardot. Warfield. 3:20
Bardot. Warfield. 3:20
Missouri will be host to K-State Saturday at 7 p.m. in the Arena for play in Nebraska, also on Saturday.
Eve, at 7:15 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun, Mat. 1:45
Ends Tuesday Walt Disney's
the sentinel
"FREAKY FRIDAY"
R
due 7:15, 9:20, 5-5, 2:05
SILVER STREAK>
2pm With Gene Wilder
7:30, 8:30
5am
6am
9am
11am
Hillcrest
Hillcrest 3
Eve. 7:30, 9:30
Saf. Sun. Mat. 2:30
Granada
Just under two weeks are left in the basketball season, and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation ticket office is preparing for for the possibility that the Jayhawks will be hosts in the first round of the post-season tournament.
Nancy Welsh, ticket manager, said the ticket office was taking ticket orders and reserving tickets in case Kansas qualified as a host team for the first round of the NBA draft. Fifty-four, the Jujuhawes have to finish among the top four teams in the Big Eight Conference.
The tickets won't go on sale until the race for the top four spots is decided next week, Welsh said. If Kansas qualifies, about 13,500 tickets will be available at the ticket office for the Feb. 26 game at Allen Field House, she said.
Tourney tickets planned
Student tickets will cost $2.50. Reserved seats for the general public will be $4.
If the Jayhawks beat their first-round opponents, they will go to the semifinals. Two games will pit the four winning teams against one another at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo., March 3. The final game will be March 4.
If KU plays in the finals, Doug Messmer, assistant athletic director, said, about 1,200 tickets will be supplied to KU for each night. The tickets will be available at the
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Strong Concerts are daily recitals in the Lobby of Strong Hall at noon
ticket office in Allen Field House March 1, two days before the first semifinal game. Messer said he didn't know tickets to the semifinals would cost, but said they would be close to ticket prices for the preseason tournament.
Free Pizza Offer
This is the first year the Big Eight Conference is determining its representative at the NCAA playoffs by a post-season tournament. The conference champion will still be the team that has the best record at the end of the regular season.
Wed., Feb. 16 - noon Marilyn Michael, mezzo-soprano Fred Toner, piano
Kansas Union—Parlor Room
All interested persons invited to attend
Monday, Feb. 21, 3:15 p.m.
SUA Officer and Board Selection Informational Meeting
Thurs., Feb. 17 - noon Varied works by an all-string ensemble
Recitals performed by students and faculty of School of Fine Arts Events free
Fri., Feb. 18 - noon
Joe Utterback, jazz piano
Out they go at drastic reductions!
TRANSFER SALE (Thursday, Friday, Saturday)
We combed all our stores from corner to corner, rack to rack, and transferred all exciting winter fashions to our DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE store at enormous savings . . .
SAVE
- Coats
- Jackets
- Dresses
1/2
- Sportswear
2/3
- Jeans
- Pants
- Sweaters
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All Sales Final Entire Stock Not Included
the VILLAGE SET 922 Mass.
Open
Thurs.
'til
8:30
extra extra
CULTURAL ENRICHMENT PROGRAM
FILMS
MINORITY AFFAIRS
"MEXICAN AMERICANS: A HISTORIC PROFILE"
"MEXICAN AMERICANS: THE INVISIBLE MINORITY"
"The MOST HATED MAN IN NEW MEXICO"
Thursday, Feb. 17, 1977 7:30 p.m. Room 3, Bailey Hall
SPEAKER
RAMON ROUBIDEAUX, A.I.M. ATTORNEY "Educational Dilemma of Native Americans in the Professions" Friday, Feb. 18, 1977 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union, Forum Room All events are FREE For more information, call 864-4353
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F
Rock Chalk Revue Feb.25th-26th
Opera organiza to ease t the Univ
Opera 50 KU foreign the prob land.
The greevening: W.19th
Many volved i to inter nation al munica
Ben H Friendsi was to America students
Tickets available at SUA office $3.00-$3.25
Opera subgroc The gro and on
Broot in the come fror Japo
Ami foreign what w But meet p and A
Raja said C student and st
C to
Good Seats Still Available for
Friday-But Hurry!
Hav you j replace before to rea
This many and to speed
A listed tory the s
Thursday, February 17, 1977
9
Con-
ceive at
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I still
at the
Friends help foreigners to adjust
Operation Friendship, a campus organization formed four years ago, works to ease the loneliness of foreign students at the University of Kansas.
Operation Friendship is a group of about 50 KU students—both American and foreign—who meet once a week to discuss problems of being strangers in a strange land.
The group meets from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday evenings at the Baptist Student Center, 1629
Ben Browne, coordinator of Operation Friendship, said the purpose of the group was to help foreign students adjust to American culture. American students with different cultures.
Many of the 25 American students involved in the program have majors related to international relations—language, international politics, or intercultural communications.
Broome said most of the foreign students in the group this semester had recently come from Iran, Arab countries, Venezuela or Japan.
Operation Friendship is divided into subgroups of eight or nine members each. The groups have two leaders, one American and one foreign.
Amir Zekrogo, one group leader, said
what was going on in Japan to find out
what was going on in Japan.
But the main reason for attending is to meet people and make friends, both foreign and domestic.
Rajan Chaudry, another group leader,
said Operation Friendship gave foreign
students a reason to get out of their rooms
and start making friends.
Chaudry said foreign students had to learn to meet people, and Operation Friendship gave them a good opportunity to do so.
Many of the foreign students in the group are in the Applied English Center, Broome said, and Operation Friendship gives them confidence to meet their English and develop self-confidence.
"It's an atmosphere where they feel it’s OK to make mistakes," he said.
Holly Davis, another group leader, said the Monday night activities encouraged members to talk. This week, students were asked to list six reasons of equality, equality, exponential, national security and wealth—and ranked them. The group then presented their award rankings showed cultural differences.
Another activity has been to make murals and collages depicting each student's community.
This weekend Operation Friendship will sponsor a retreat at Lake Perry. The group has also made trips to Kansas City, Mo., to visit the museum galleries and the Country Club Play.
Operation Friendship has a weekly 30-minute talk show on KJHK, 91.7 FM, in which foreign students are interviewed and play music from their countries.
Broome also teaches a one credit course entitled Cross Cultural Interaction (LA&E) at New York University.
When Operation Friendship began, Broome said, the group tried to find host homes for the students in intensive English. They found them through an organization, funded by the Student Senate,
and shifted its emphases to a student-friend program in which a foreign student was introduced.
it mostly attracted foreign males and American women.
Non-time travellers through Strong Hall lobby will walk to the tune of classical music during informal recitals performed as a part of Accent the Arts.
This system failed, Broome said, because
In 1975, the group took on its current format.
The concertas, which began last week,
feature guitar duets, piano, woodwind, horn
Each weekday until March 4, students and faculty can hear the musical float from the balcony.
Interested students and faculty submitted applications to participate in the american academic plan would please.
Strong Hall becomes a 'classical' building
Howard Collinson, SUA Fine Arts chairman, said that the idea was a nice way to move music to an unexpected place on campus.
He said that he and four professors from
the School of Fine Arts
organize the senior year
"In a university where so many students and faculty have spent most of their lives learning a talent, they should get as many students as possible to enrich the other students." Collins said.
The concert planning was a cooperative effort between SUA and the School of Fine Arts.
Melissa Nabors, concert coordinator, said the concert format was entirely informal.
"The recitals will be held each day at noon, so I hope people will bring their brown bags and come and soak up some culture," she said.
Nabors said, however, that she was looking for volunteers to help set up before the concerts and to help push the piano onto the balcony when necessary.
The programs average 30 minutes, though a few will be shorter, Collinson said.
will be performed today and tomorrow.
A concert on electronic music also is
scheduled.
"Many of the office doors in Strong were open and everyone seemed to enjoy the warmth." This kind of a preview and I hope it can be continued throughout the year."
Courses offer help to the slow reader
By KERRY KELLY Staff Reporter
Have there been too many nights when you just didn't feel like studying and replaced your book with another. And let me tell you, it would end up 232 pages to read for a history exam the next day?
This situation is a common problem for many students at the University of Kansas, and to overcome it, some have turned to speed reading.
Increased reading speed is an important goal of the speed reading program but it
"It's not correct to think of it as only a reading speed course," Mary Michner, instructor of the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute in Lawrence, said recently. "It also improves study skills and a student's ability to concentrate."
Most people's reading speed is increased
A married woman who wants her name listed individually in the telephone directory will have to pay 35 cents a month for the service.
Wives charged for phone listing
It isn't feasible to list all married women's names in the phone book, according to William Collison, an employee of the Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.
"Where do you draw the line?" he asked.
"If we listed women individually, we'd have to list brothers, sisters and men and women who live together also."
Listing women's names also would cost extra time and money, he said.
"We wouldn't save any money even if it meant that people wouldn't call information."
Susan Fisher, Topea lawyer, also said that it was costlier to list women individually but said the extra expense was "touch" for the phone company.
The telephone company charges a customer for every local directory assistance call he makes a month, after the first five calls, but Collins said less than two per cent of the company's customers need or more directory assistance calls a month.
"Any equalizer costs money," she said. Fisher said that a married couple she knew decided to keep their surnames and that their phone number was then listed in the woman's name, so that it cost her money each month a month to have his name listed separately.
at least three times, she said. However, to
get there, she had to take the course,
the student has to stair in practice.
Gary Jones, Overland Park senior, said he needed it. He started at 225 words a minute. He started at 225 words a minute.
MIKE PIERCE, Topeka sophomore, said he tripped his speed.
"While I can't say I enjoyed the program,
it was a good because of what I learned."
"My comprehension was good but my speed was bad," he said. Now Jones' comfortable reading speed is 700 to 1,000 words a minute.
Customers can avoid the extra charge by listing their names as "Jane Doe," *J*2, or *J*3.
Two speed reading courses are offered through the University. One is the Effective Reading course, offered through the residence halls by the dean of men's and dean of women's offices. It costs $25 for students and $30 for students who live off campus.
Rainer Matuszewski, instructor for the Effective Reading program, said most of his students could read at least 1,000 words a minute after they took the course.
Collinson said that even though a few women had complained about the extra charges, he thought that the company had made it easier to be able to list all married women individually.
HE SAID he first tried to overcome bad reading habits such as reading a single word at a time or pronouncing words while reading.
Don Richardson, associate dean of the School of Education, said that the course isn't advertised but that the number of students enrolled for it always exceeded the space available.
The second program offered through the School of Education is open to all students.
The Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute is specially designed for speed reading. It meets once a week for seven weeks and costs $275. After finishing the program, students can return to regain or increase their speed.
A local manufacturer recently contributed half of the largest grant ever received by SCoRMEBE, a KU organization for minority engineering students.
SCoRMEBE gets grant
The company, the Food Machinery Corporation (FMC), awarded a $50,000 grant at a luncheon last Tuesday. The funds form the first installment of a grant to be awarded during the next five years, William Jordan, SCOTMEB adviser, said yesterday.
SCORMEBE, organized in 1969, gives minority students financial aid and helps them pay for college.
3 officials arrested
KAMPALA, Uganda (UPI)—The Anglican archbishop of Uganda, Burundi and Rwanda, and two government officials have been arrested in connection with an alleged plot to overthrow President Idi Amin, Uganda radio announced Wednesday.
University Daily Kansan
Archbishop Janani Luwam, Internal Affairs Minister Obtof Othmida and Water Resources Minister Lt. Col. Erinayo Orryma were arrested only hours after a rally that Luwam attended where he was shot in the head, kill them" at the accused conspirators.
The radio said all three had been arrested 'perilous investigation into their role in the attack'
"They will be deal with according to the law," the radio said. "The arrests should not cause alarm because their cases will be properly investigated."
that FMC was matching $50,000 given by an anonymous donor.
The donor provided the grant with the stipulation that SCORMEBE find a group to match the funds awarded. Hogan said that the FMC fund was for one year only, but that other companies had shown interest in continuing the support.
Use Kansan Classifieds
More than $250,000 has been raised by SCGMeBE since its founding, but never so much at one time. Hoyan said. The money is going towards operating expenses for the group's programs.
The presentation was made by F. Harvey Herbert, resident manager of FMC's Industrial and Chemical division, in Lawrence, FMC manufactures fluid control equipment, material handling equipment, material handling equipment and food and agricultural machinery.
Robert Malot, son of former Chancellor Deane Malot and a 1948 KU graduate, is a professor of psychology at the University.
Hogan said administration of the grant would be done through the University of North Carolina.
While on campus, FMC representatives interviewed students from KU's minority engineering program for possible summer employment.
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Lambda Sigma Society
Applications due Feb. 25
A sophomore cohonorancy honorary at the University of Kansas is now accepting applications for a position in an employment form at the Dean of Women, Office, 220 Strong, or the Dean of Men's Office, 228 Sullivan.
If you have any questions, please inquire at the Dean of Women's Office.
BIG 8 Women's Swimming Championship
THURSDAY-SATURDAY, FEB. 17-19
AE
10 a.m. preliminary heats $.75
7 p.m. finals '125 adults
'100 12 and under
Robinson Natatorium, K.U. campus BIG 8 COMPETITORS
KANSAS two time defending champs Oklahoma, Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa State, Oklahoma State
Accent the ARTS
TODAY'S EVENTS
10:00 Marson Galleries art sale Lobby, Union
Lobby, Strong Hall
12:00 String Ensemble Lobby, Hyde Ha
7:30 "A Sneak Preview of the Spencer Museum of Art," lecture by Dr. Charles Eldredge, director Forum Room, Union. Sponsored by Art History undergraduates.
8:00 "Dames at Sea"; dessert theater
Big Eight Room, Union
$3.00 ($2.00 for residence hall residents)
INFORMATION AT SUA: 864-3477
INFORMATION AT SUA: 864-3477
Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358
DISCO DANCE
By Gay Services of Kansas LAWRENCE
Beer Sold with I.D.
K.U. Union - Feb. 19, 8 p.m.
$1.75
No Alcoholic Beverages
Brought In
Beer Sold with I.D.
jazz Jazz Jazz only at PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE
926 Mass. upstairs
SATURDAY: Mike White - Dixieland Clarinetist
TONITE: Free Jam Session with the River City Jazz Band
with the Gaslight Gang
FRIDAY: Joe Utterback Trio exciting Modern Jazz
Open at 8:00. Music starts at 9:00. Call 842-9458 or 843-8575 for reservations.
POSITION OPENINGS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS RESIDENCE HALLS
1977-1978
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS
Must be Junior, Senior or Graduate Student for 77-78 academic year
ASSISTANT HALL DIRECTORS
Must be Graduate Student or Fifth-year status for 77-78 academic year
All applicants should evidence above average academic achievement, prior residential group living experience, and availability for the entire 1977-1978 academic year (August-May).
Applications and job descriptions available now in Dean of Women's Office (220 Strong Hall) or In Dean of Men's Office (228 Strong Hall).
Application deadline March 11, 1977
The University of Kansas
is an equal opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer.
10
Thursday, February 17, 1977
University Daily Kansas
Student Senate Elections
Feb.16-17
Bring only your Student I.D. [with Registration Sticker] and a pen or pencil.
Polling Places
Wednesday & Thursday, 8:00-4:30
Kansas Union Lobby
Wescoe Hall (4th Floor, West Exit)
Wescoe Cafeteria
Information Booth (in front of Bailey Hall)
Summerfield Hall (2nd Floor)
Frazier Hall
Learned Hall (2nd Floor)
Green Hall
Wednesday Only
8:00-4:30
Marvin Hall Malott Hall
5:00-7:00
Lewis Hall
Oliver Hall
G.S.P. Hall
Corbin Hall
Jayhawk Towers Apartments
Malls Old English Apartments
Frontier Ridge Apartments
Battenfeld Hall
Naismith Hall
Gatehouse Apartments
7:30-9:30
Chi Omega
Pi Phi
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Pi Kappa Thefa
Thursday Only
8:00-4:30 Blake Hall Murphy Hall
5:00-7:00
Delta Delta Delta
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Douthart Hall
McCollum Hall
Ellsworth Hall
J.R.P. Hall
Phi Delt
Alpha Gamma Delta
Beta
Sigma Kappa
President-Vice President
Architecture 2 seats
President-Vice President
Leben-Munyan
Grey-Green
McKernan-Rhoads
Joseph Bandy
Jane Calacci
Ray Kramer
Dan Webster
Bill Quotman
Reeves W. Wiedeman
Curt Woody
Business 4 seats
Kent Allingham
Rick Chambers
Dave Dyer
David Bivion
Laura Fuller
Mike Galloway
Todd Hunter
Brain S. Jones
Jeffers
Brit McPherson
Scott Stanley
Cindy Hinton
Education 8 seats
Diane Bergquist
Bev Brown
Corie Brown
Bill Cannon
Jess Cornellus
Jan Davidson
Pam Gotsche
Connie Hale
Steve Hamous
Jan Heaverty
Kevin Letcher
Linda Loudon
Beth Anne MacCurdy
Sherry McKee
Clifford Miley
Louis Oxborn
Susan M. Turner
Engineering 8 seats
Sandy Appl
Barbara Brussell
Nathan Bulman
Richard W. Durham
Douglas J. Edmonds
Gary Foote
David Ruchs
Ed Hite
Jim Jandt
Tom Marshall
Rhonda May
Jim McCarten
Lawrence Miller
Weezie Purzer
Bill Scott
John R. Shell
Jay Shore
Alan D. Scootler
Scott Stallard
H. Wilson Tyson, Jr.
Scott Wiese
Fine Arts 7 seats
Deitre L. Colgan
Don Consolver
Mary Beth Craig
Bruce Douglas
Doug Ferguson
Lynne Garell
Steve Geist
Sann Glaza
Jordan Hanna
Phill Kaufman
Claire McCordy
Sally McDonald
Anne Meeker
Crewin Michaele
Kristen Olander
Nancy M. Park
Kathy Russell
Sybil Summers
Scott J. Ward
Cydni Wheeler
LA & S 15 seats
Sharon Anderson
Mark Bolton
Anne Burke
Paula Bush
Chris Caldwell
Corliss Chandler
Craig Coulter
Trinka Crossley
Craig Dawson
Bill Ekey
John Esau
Lisa Friday
Thomas E. Graves
Sarah E. Hein
David G. Hess
Bob Huffman
Bruce Huffman
Mark B. Hughes
Ken Idleman
Madhup Joshi
Grant Larkin
Joel R. Mallee
Jerry McCarley
Kris McKinney
Steve McMurry
Bob Meyer
Muhlberger
Judy Navickas
Scott Neilan
Tim O'Connor
Matty Pondergast
Andy Ramirez
Dave Ramirez
Jim Ruane
Jake Stuhrerman
Jake Thompson
Terry Thum
Debra Watson
Kevin White
J. J. Willer
Jim Willis
Journalism 3 seats
Tim Akard
Marsha Bjerkan
Janet Ferree
Jill Grubaugh
Becky Herman
Jack Marvin
Eric Morgerstern
Dan Terrill
Pat Thornton
Law School 2 seats Greg Buehne Dave Larkin
Nunemaker 1 6 seats
Cathy Bailey
Debbie Copenhaver
Nancy Dressler
Ed Bucks
Sheila Everhart
Bruce Leemiller
Rob Lintz
Susan Ringer
Paul Russell
Debbie Sedorcek
Brad Sterratt
Kevin Sandhive
Beth Reefer
Nunemaker 2 5 seats
Ed 6'8gb
Dave Bromley
T: C. Cloon
Gordon Geldhof
LaDonna Hale
Pam Kern
Jim Laley
Mc Scottinney
Ed Mick
Carolee Miller
Anne O'Shaunnessy
Dan Peermann
Chris Redlingshater
Allen Reynolds
Jan Smith
Mark Sudermann
Russ Tlusclik
Thomas Zackery
Nunemaker 3 5 seats
Lance Armer
Wike Bangston
Ruth Bielen
Mark Bernhardt
Jim Bloom
William Cheek
Johnny Hill
David Jett
Brian Kaufman
Jeff Knoft
Melanie Martin
John Masterson
Kathy Pebley
Diane Scheucht
Laure Irewich
Mark Winklem
Nunemaker 4 5 seats
Cristie Bleasing
Jeff Eriksen
Allen Gilstrap
Leslie Anne Graves
Ashin Hardman
Valerie Howard
Anne Judge
Julie Long
Scott Morgan
Matt Mullarky
Mary Ellen Pogson
Tammy Powell
Parney Rock
Sam Sheldon
Tim Stites
Sarah Toews
Tom Worth
Kim Wetzel
Nunemaker 5 6 seats
Mark Buchanan
Carlos Chavez
Penny Crow
Cheryl Engelmann
Amy Gregg
Mike Harper
Mary Huffman
Carolyn Jenkins
Bernard Johnston
Clair Keiser
Tim McCarthy
Luanne O'Dell
Julie Riggs
Reggie Robinson
Brian Settee
Brad Snyder
Ed Shucky
Marcia Tally
Jadk Weich
---
Or
Eve
TOD:
perform
lobby,
of anth
lunchee
HARIOI
discuss
Forum
Minist
Minister
Nunem
with st
careers
Pharmacy 2 seats
TON
for fori
at 6:30
Pharmacy 2 seats
Benita Bock
Teri Pollard
Social Welfare 3 seats
Lisa Bennett
Jerro Bowen
Jeanne Kovac
Graduate School 23 seats
Otix L. Darby
Charlotte Kimbrough
Steve Shedd
Beaard B. E. Willard
Samuel Zweifel
'FISH
by the
Ja
7:30 in
1141
AFFA
will p
Mexic
GAV
rap g
gternat
Muset
adult*
to 10
GRIF
"Arch
Union
Special 2 seats
Bonnie deNoyelles Wade Corey Klosterman
Sophomore Class Officers
TOM
for st
option
pay
REGI
held
@ 3:30
MING
ENR
Rame
Educ
Room
soror
Kans
President: Vice President:
Jim Corbett Chip Anthony
Matt Haverley David Colburn
Jess "A.J." Paul Bill Hamilton
Greg Schancke Perrie Marrens
Secretary: Treasurer:
Patti Caskidy Janet Dyer
Dawn Daniel Barbara Goolsbe
Lisa Larsen Molli Hasenbank
Junior Class Officers
President:
Rod Beeler
Crockett Morgan
Tom Byers
Secretary:
Pam Olander
Sheryl Tayler
Melanie Smith
Vice President:
Craig Gillandian
Scott Morgan
Brad Yost
Treasurer:
Sharon Pavel
Shirley Sigmann
Cindy Suggs
Senior Class Officers
President—Mike Nelson Vice President—Fred Gans
Secretary—Lisa Cave Treasurer—Pattie Curry
---
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 17, 1977
11
On Campus
Events
KANSAN WANT ADS
TODAY: THE STRING PLayers will perform at a noon concert in the Strong Hall of Anthropology, will speak at a museum luncheon at noon in 602 Dyce Hall.
HAROLD OREL, professor of English, will discuss "Thomas Hardy" at a Faculty Forum luncheon at noon in the United Ministries Center. Representatives from the KU MEDICAL CENTER will be at Nunemaker Center from 1 to 4 p.m. to talk with students interested in physical therapy careers.
TONIGHT; ANGEL FLIGHT will meet
at 6:30 in 107 Military. Science bulldog
at 6:30 in 107 Military. Science bulldog
"FISHES OF KANSAS" will be discussed by Frank Cross, Dyche Museum curator, at the Jahawk Audubon Society meeting at 7:30 in the South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Massachusetts St. The MINORITY AFFAIRS Cultural Enrichment Program will present three free film concerning Mexican-Americanes at 7:30 in 3 Bayall Hall.
GAY SERVICES OF KANSAS will have a rap group for men at 7:30 in the International Room of the Kansas Union. The Museum of Natural History will sponsor an adult workshop on "Fly Fishing" from 7:30 to 10. For 20 years, the Museum of Natural History PEDLEY will lecture about "Archaeic Discoveries at Cyrene" at 8 in the Union's Council Room.
TOMORROW: Tomorrow is the last day for students to elect the credit no credit option, to enroll or enrollment and pay a $10 late fee. The KANAS SCHOOL REGIONAL WRITING CONTENT will be held on campus; awards will be given at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Big 8 Room The MINORITY AFFAIRS CULTURAL ENRICHMENT program will present Ramon Boudieaux speaking on "The Educational Dilemma" in the Forum Room of the Union, SIGMA GAMMA RHO socrory will have a dance at 9 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union.
KANSAN Classifieds reach the campus community - call 864-4358
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to race, national origin or ability. BRUNG ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FILLT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times times
time times time times time
15 words or
less $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75
Each additional
word 0.01 0.02 0.04 0.05
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run:
Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 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
round items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These additions can be placed in person or on the phone at the IOR business office at 864-3588.
864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Give away: $10 per week and $200 cash, plus
K.U. KU: Telephone Directory
Yellow Mellow Page
FREE UNIVERSITY Descript descriptions are available in the SAU course. Enroll West.
2-18 2-18
Cantareer House, the Episcopal House at KU is open for study, meditation, prayer, and reverence. Services: Holy Communion 9:00 a.m. and Thurs. 5:30 p.m. At Wednesday 9:00 a.m. and Thurs. 5:30 p.m. At Wednesday.
Delta Delta Delta security is offering two $250 scholarship open to all full-time undergraduate women students at the available from the Delta Delta Delta house, 1603 Oxford Road. Threeallet copy of the applicant's transcript must be submitted to the student should be returned to the TRI Delta Service Project Chair by March 5. The criteria for admission include a demonstrated commitm
ENTERTAINMENT
"Ferry Funrise" Coffee House, 1116 Louisiana
supper restaurant beginning at 9 p.m. every
monday 2-18, 5-18
FOR RENT
1 and 2 room apartments, Furnished, close to Union, utilities paid, parking. 843-0579.
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid, paid,
nets. 843-7567. tt
Frontier Rides—short term lease available.
Rides can be booked with study. Hated indoor pool • charpter carousel • pool deck • pool pool • disposal • pallet • laundry facilities • furnished • furnished and unfurnished from $135. Call 822-649-5701 or visit www.frontierrides.com
Male roommate to share rice apartment till May
St. Capetown; to share bathroom bus route 1;
St. Lucia; 841-1800; 841-1801
Gatchee Apartments - Call Becky tsum. summer
contracts on all Gatchee apartments. Call 843-765-
2190 or email gatcheeapartments.com.
Furnished apartment, close to
Kitchen, one bedroom,
$0.00 available immediately, 842-6670 by 9 p.m.
Apartment for rent to single male student of quiet disposition. One bedroom furnished Third floor of old house. Fantastic living room with post required. $100 per month. N42-2166 after 2-47
River City Hall Co. wants you! A total professional team of 12 staff members can be reached 7 days a week. **2-18**
Jahawkwar Towers, now bearing lighthouse 3-D-bedrooms, will open on March 31, and save on our Earth Blue Bedroom. A new $20 million tower will be installed by June 1.
Female grad student to share furnished house
near pampanga. Many extrahs. 841-6253.
2-21
3-bedroom, 5-bath house for sublease. Fire-
place. Call 841-5697, or 841-7333.
2-22
Sublease 3-bedroom unfurnished house immemorial; 2800 plus $2444; 3600 plus $2444; 414-8244-5244
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization notes to sense to be more informed. Guide 2. For aviation. 3. For Exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Toptail.com
UNICORNS, Mermials, wings in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to choose from. Stone cutting services pair service. Professional work, satisfaction guarantee.
FOR SALE
Redesemen Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod membership (conservative). All students need a bachelor's degree. Youth group, Place: 3010 and Haddock, (Carlo Leo) School, Contact: M. Pilfricken at 845-356-0295, or Mrs. Leo at 845-356-0295, or Mrs. Leo and Sunday school at 10:15. Luterian Leyman's League meets at 10:30.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
tools; Newly built and installed appliances,
the Appliance and Center, 90% Mum!
www.123456789.com
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialist.
Parts: PAC48-3000, 5000 W, 60 hz, BEL AU10-
PAC48-3000, 5000 W, 60 hz
DEADBOLTS
INSTALLED
MORRIS
Lock & Key
710 Mass. • 843-2182
Advent model 200 Stere Receiver; designed to handle a kind of voice over equipment. Its audible performance compares directly to that of the most expensive separate channel, which is offered in the trade.
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only one with a specification guarantee of ± 2 dB hear. At Ray Ash, 13 E. 8th, Prices from $175.
Fantastic air bed for all All State Call or write
mail. Fantastic air bed for all All State Call or write
mail. Music Kitten 62090
Music Kitten 62090
2-18
Volkswagen Owners' Four new NWB triple diesel engines from Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, $150. Add $250 for fire insurance, for mounting $1,000 to the cabin. Add $1,500 to the Mass. The appliance store on Mass, with the discounted Wolfsworths, three others, will sell you a discounted Volkswagen.
1971. Cougier, AM-FM - stereo, air, good radians,
studded snowy, music - all 834-534 before 4100.
834-534 after 4100.
Potion Farlor Fine organic shampoos and lotion
Natural vinegar sponges and bear bait
1-8/18
3-18
New stereo-Panasonic Quadraphonac Component of a device been used or applied to the body. Battery 843-7902 2-17
Ear. Ear 2. HIIL 500 speakers for aux. fueled, powered power capacities Call Rusty. 8:37-2:17
Gibson SG guitar w/.case, Excellent condition (exactly conditioned)
songbook included. 843-6581. After 5. 2-18
or 843-6581. After 5. 2-18
71 GMC i, T Window Van, carpet, aile 1-816-
3574-1064 weeks or write up Box 13.113 Flint - 2.07
Four rings with genuine corium stone stones. 98.3%
alternatively printed bands from India. Re-
12-18
Must sell. Camera, Maniya/Sorok 1000 DTF with ease case up rings hardy used, like new 2-17
Call one of E.P.B. 3-way 40 W.P.C. speakers $80.
One phone: 611-6076
1973 WN fastback, Beige, clean, dependable,赖
tape. 1800*1522, 1012, Olaine. 2-18
68 Mungu Mach I, B31. Auto Trans, PS, black.
Post interior. After I87. Kent B48-2350. 2-18
Name brand stereo equipment musical instrument accessories discount at discount prices—just ask Free consumer information is available. Mark Baynatan at 445-208 or write Consumer Brokerage Service Number.
1976 Datam B210, 26,000 Miles, good condition.
Call Baldwin W3489/4989 after 6.
2-18
Camera-4-month old. Nikonkormat FT-2 with
Camera-4-month old. Nikonkormat FT-2 dash,
and Nikonkormat FT-2 tread.
841-308-6933, trying.
2-18
Sony TTS-2000 turntable with $ME 2000 II tone
equipment not performed $ME 2000 II tone
$50; Cali 842-1633; C292
The Advent Company is the leader in the HI-Fl industry in research and product development. The Advent Company offers 201 A. The Advent receiver is gaining popularity as one of the cleanest units at any price. And the Advent receiver has engineering and value unimpaired at any price range. Your authorized Advisor is B-3-1.
Tri-Phase Speakers - A Real Home Disc System
Speakers with dual high freq drivers. Built in fuse panel protection. Dig out those Boogie Shoes and check designated units designed out at Ray A3. Auditorium I 13 E.8 H.
Bicycle- 231*). MCM. Reynolds 321 DB. Turbing
Campagneto 459*). MCM. Reynolds 604 Good. -
222*. MCM. Reynolds 842/878*.
SKI-Shouldering 155 cm, with look G.T. hind-
shells, 84-104 Dumbo. Like many mats, they
make 2-23
Jeep 1971 C-2.5 Good condition. Must sell. 864-234, 883-641 or 1024 lndry Lindsley 8-24
Free stereo; catalog lists incredible discounts on Yamaha, Advance, Bose, Crown, CW15, Faber, Rabab, Maburo, 100 other hifi and audiophile lines. Write to Chicagoland 23rd Street. 2-18 Chicago, Illinois 60615
1965. Baldwin Electric Guitar. Good condition-
$150. 843-1085. 2-25
HELP WANTED
Student computer programmer available immediately. University of Kansas (Lawrence Campus) ODIS Computer Science Programmer, Student computer programmer to participate in the development of comprehensive administration system. Opportunity to join a growing information system team. MSCS, MICS, MARK IV, and a teleprocessing kLE network. Excellent career opportunity in computer science or 6 or 8 months COBOL programming course and or 6 months COBOL programming course at KU. Send resume to: Michael D. Thompson, University of Kansas Room 232 Customer Service Fax Blue Book Feb 31, 1977. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY and with disabilities encouraged to apply.
2-21
Graduate, Assistancehip, three-quarter time.
Charge, Assistancehip, Apply in $50 MONTH
charge. Call 4-600-8911
DIRECTOR OF ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES wanted to coordinate program courses and their delivery to students in the university's department of education. Nine-month appointment with continued funding expereiences, including training, qualifications, Ph.D., teaching experience, and ongoing experience, and current faculty status at KU received approval. Application deadline: March 15, 1977.Equal opportunity/Affirmative Action.2-17
Owens Liquor Store
843-1186
910 W. 2nd
910 N. 2nd
Graduate assistance is available for science and engineering students, leaders in materials engineering and materials engineering. The newly formed Materials Research Center at Iowa offers an excellent opportunity to work with faculty for further information, write Professor Sun-Takai as a mentor, or serve as the director of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. $2524. 2-17
Aven. Put yourself through the easy way.
Become an Avon Representative, and make the
money you need. sell quality products on your
website. For full details, call 613-852-8988
6073
Men or women. We need 5 people immediately.
Must have own transportation and willing to
leave early for the interview.
For personal interview call Rob Lawson, 842-310-
Lawson Kirk. Can will. To lead fill in section 4-14
Lost by careless owner—a two tone brown bracelet,
approx. 4½ inch, thick 3 inches in diameter.
Portland, Ore., 40 Worcester of Import sentimental value. I paid $412.85. info. thank you.! 2-17
LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS needed to work in the arts department. Mail resume to MARC.COM, Representation-in-journal, March 13th. Send resumes to MARC.COM.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost a set of keys in Strong Hall on 2-1-77.
found, please contact 842-4092.
2-17
Lost: Gold necklace with Alaska on it in the
box. Call NA-8373. Sentimental value: H. Ree-
Call NA-8373.
Lost- Math 124 notes in Strong Hall, green spiral notebook. Phone 842-9252. 2-18
Lost- Blue cloth covered, three-ring Meade笔记 probably in 2015 Murray Calligraphy C-2-17
Lest-Tr-11--Y-Zeon "men's blue suede cout"
Lest-Tr-12--Y-Zeon "beautiful at Mur Max"
only heavy coat $2-28
also available $2-28
Found - Wallet in men's restroom 3rd floor, Mon-
berly - Wallet in women's restroom, claim 1st,
security found - S-17
S-17
Lost large friendly dog, dog Black male with
short hair. Visible mouth and tongue.
Sunday in front of Strung. Call 824-5326
or visit www.strung.com
Found-Ladies wrist watch writ in front of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorcery. Call 841-715-6800, 2-21
Found--Men's Bulova Watch in the parking lot at Alumni Plaza. Call Suit 843-8251. - 2-21
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Ubex/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m.
Just arrived. Incease from the Republic of China,
618th street, 841-300. For the committee in 1958,
618th street, 841-300.
NOTICE
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used for furniture, diaries, clothes, televisions, daily open日午 12:37-18:37
EUROPE WORLDWIDE academic yeardure season
round SATA A 428 First Ave. Tucker A 365
Santa Ana A 710 Northwest Ave.
Tofu-Chi Dinner, sponsored by the Community Mercantile, Sunday, February 24th. Join us for a Community China will be shown by Fanchen Furniture 7:30 and 9 p.m. Advanced Tickets: Adults $175 and Children $150. Community China 615 Mass. At the door: adults $2.00 and children $1.00. Dinner will be served on 2-17
Needed: GAY COUPLES who have been living with HIV and who are experiencing inappropriate in an interesting study investigating non-positive studies of the study forms will be on the positive and strengthened often held belief that HIV is not a serious disease. The confidentiality is guaranteed, and couples will be treated with respect. 641-879 or Muster Wintner, 641-8620. With cooperation of Gary Sawyer, 641-8620.
KU Sailing Club beginner class, spring cruise
at Thursday, 1:35 p.m. (see A-2-7)
A-2-17
Everyone can help someone as a Volunteer. Volunteer Clearing House, 864-389-218
2-18
Want to feel good about yourself. Dayton-17
Volunteer Clearing House, 114 B Union. 2-17
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10-5 Mon. Sat. Till 12 on Thursday
10-5 Mon.-Saf. Till 8 on Thursday
Imported Auto Parts
HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts
Penguin
Foreign Auto Parts
Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m.
304 Locust
--featuring seclusion and qu
PERSONAL
**MAKIN' MUSIC**-We make it eater. Folk, blues,
gospel, jazz. You can even play piano.
bandinole, mandolin, saxophone,琴. McKimmy
Songwriter. You will be thrilled.
We'll get you out of bed $3 per month. Jay-
hawk Wake-up: 843-5212 or 843-2833.
Gay Counselling Service: Call 842-7205, 6-12 p.m.
for queries
tf
REFLECTION! 2-17
EUROPE. When you want it, where you want it. You want it, where you want it.
17 EUROPE. No charter insure, call DBD.
19 EUROPE. No charter insure, call DBD.
I can help you with payoffs and math problems
and YOU can help me with my English. Call 843-627-9111
Home of
**Karate:** Learn the ancient secrets of the martial arts and learn how to master strong strikes on the individuals development as a martial artist.
You missed your first opportunity to win 100.
Please join us on Yellow Note: **Content today at Aqua Forum** - **2-18**
Present student ID card and be admitted FREE-
from the campus. Takes 10 minutes at 9:30 a.m. on
Sunday. Please join us for a free lunch at
the Campus Cafe.
Steve Leben and Rahm Munyan have surveyed students at the University of Utah, apartment complexes, talked with campus groups, and set up a table at the Union ... all in our teamwork, committed with you. Vote **REJECT** FOUNDATION.
Accompanying or computer science student wanted to provide computer assistance for good work. Call Mark, or email me at info@csi.edu.
Communication means Steve Leben and his team meet there. Students are told that students, held open in宿舍 5 apartment compartments, witted 27 living rooms, addressed several students, and talked with them. Generally tried to communicate with you. Vote on who will win the prize.
SERVICES OFFERED
RIDES RIDERS
WHISHTHE-START. We're not a big coachelist, but we have an air of sophistication and marcy moves for Sophomore classes. President
- Pool
- Snooker
The Chalk Hawk
Vote Liberal. Vote Free. Vote Independent. Vote for me, William Chawk. Check Senate Results. **
*SAVE THIS CARD*
Today is the day. Vote and show people your concern about the Nuclear Treaty and National Nuclear Trusts 8-19
To the mom of Alpha Tan Omega, "We'll help you find your 'center of the sky'." We love you to do this!
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
Ping Pong
Rider Wanted - Spring break, destination: Tempe
Arizona Headquarters that call Way Cafe 3-23
- d-23
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
19th & Mass.
Volkswagen Tune Up Special~$16.50. Bosch joints for the 80-90's. 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Open 7 days a week. No open on Sundays. Admitted
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BROADWAY, NEW YORK, 12001
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TYPING
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845-893-7837
Nice apartment for one person beginning June 1, 2023.
844-908 (campus) or 842-5463 (home)
J-22
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Email: info@usb.org
Tracy Scraies and Teresa Castes need a female coach. Towers 405, Towers 2-18, number is 811-416.
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2-23
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Wanted. People with musical talent. If you play a brass instrument or percussion solo, come extra early. The 31st Army Reserve Band gets together once a month on the mid-west as well as locally. If you can square up weekend (10 nps) hours, you get a chance to enjoy part-time, call us at 843-813-6270 or visit us online via you with an instrument and uniform. Ask for Michael H. Kaiser, US. Army Reserve, 21-45 Iowa St., Lawrence, KS.
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1. Roammate (male) for a large house with lawns
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3. Roammate (male) for a 841-4396
4. Roammate (male) for a 744-5091
Roommate wanted. Male. Female. quiet location, friggee, own room, close to campus. call Gry. Phone: (703) 456-2345.
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9th and Iowa
Open Daily 10 a.m.-midnight Except Sundays
9th and Iowa
12
Thursday, February 17, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Vending machines 'steal' money
By DAYNA HEIDRICK
Staff Reporter
Burglarizing vending machines used to be a law enforcement problem on the University of Kansas campus. But the tables have turned, and the machines now seek revenge, robbing unsuspecting burglars, and robbing them frustrated, hungry and poor.
Do machines really steal your money? Or is it a figment of overwhelmed, overpriced imagination? Imagination
Darrell Hutton, KU vending machine repairman, has worked with vending machines for more than 18 years. He said yesterday that some machines could be operated that customer manu-
WHAT CAN A victim of a vending machine robber do? If he wants the bandit arrested, he can call 864-3519 to notify the KU billing office. If he warns a refund, he can fill out how failure slip stating what value he has, how much money he lost, and in which machine.
Many machine bandits continue to rob customers because victims don't report a problem, Hutton said. Only 32 calls to report machine malfunctions were logged at the KU vending office in January, although 613 were turned in during last same month.
KU vending machine customers are unique in their silence about hassles with the machines, Hutton learned recently that vending a seminar for vending machine personnel.
"MOST PLACES wish their customers would quit calling to report problems, but we wish ours would call to let us know something's wrong," he said.
The vending office is eager to have problems reported and to repair the machines because malfunctioning machines can lead to vandalism. Frustrated customers often vent their fears about the damage. Repairs are costly: The 130 machines on the KU camps are worth nearly $500,000.
Hutton said it also was helpful if people who called to report problems could describe exactly what happened with the machine: Did it make a funny noise, just keep the money or deliver the wrong product?
PEOPLE WHO do call to report problems often aren't specific about what actually went wrong with a machine, making a mistake. You might have many problems aren't apparent, he said.
One of the sneakiest thieves among KU vending machines is the innocent-looking milk machine, equipped with a mobile price changer that is extremely sensitive to humidity and dust. It's this new-fangled gadget that is the culprit, Hutton said.
"It only steals money once in awail," he explained, "but it's hard to discover, because it'll work five or six times, take someone's money and then work again."
Hutton said the multicharge device used on milk machines was an improvement because the machine could accept varying amounts of milk and feed it to a machine for different prices, and prices of products could be changed without having to buy a new machine.
NEW EQUIPMENT will feature mobile price changes. Hutton said new equipment should work 85 per cent of the time, cumulative 85 per cent for the older equipment.
"Eliminating the people who use the machines would eliminate 99 per cent of the problems," Hutton said. "For foreign objects, we need to be prepared to deal with a major cause of machine malfunctions."
"Highbailers," people who shoot money into machines at high speeds, also foul up the system.
And problems with electrical outlets are another headache for maintenance men.
"SOME GUY will call me up and tell me there milk all over the floor, because the ice cream machine has been unphugged," Hutton said.
Refunds to customers who lose money in vending machines aren't challenged, Mr. Darden said.
Wescoe Hall customers receive an immediate refund from the cashier. At most other sites, like Strong, Carruth O'Leary and Marvin hills, Allen Field House, Plainfield and adjacent schoolsharing halls, refund slips generally are available to be filled out by customers and picked up twice weekly by the vending office.
Yugoslav man sentenced for attacking system
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (UPI)—A teacher was sentenced to eight years in prison for attacking Yugoslavia's nonaligned policy and Communist system, the newspaper Politika Ekxpres said Monday.
Kovacevac was accused of the "most brutal attacks against socialist self-management, equality and brotherhood and unity," the newspaper said.
The district court in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia-Herzegovina, sentenced Mirko Kovacevic, 38, for his "counterfeit" assault on his "mother." He was also charged with for creating "hostile propaganda."
Judge Rizah Hadzic, in announcing the sentence, and Kovacevic insulted Yugoslav leaders with the aim of forcibly topping the national regime of President Jehovah Tito.
TOMBALS
We can't give them peace.
We can give them peace of mind.
We must let the new immigrants know that they do not stand alone.
We can give them that peace of mind.
keep the promise
The 70,000 immigrants to Israel this year will find at country while striving for a more stable life live surrounded by hostile neighbors — enemies caps at Lod at Munich
But the 70,000 immigrants to Israel this year will find a land where their children are born and a land where they can live as Jews. Many, like the Soviet Jews, have suffered, have sacrificed, have waited for a new come-seeking a new life.
No, we can't give them their courage. We can provide for their basic human needs—housing, education. We must help them as they build new lives — as they grow.
STUDENT COORDINATING COMMITTEE FOR THE ISRAEL EMERGENCY FUND
Customers have to return to the site in a few days to pick up their refunds. At two locations, Summerfield Hall and the Military Science Annex, refund slips are collected, but customers must pick up their refunds at the Kansas Union business office.
SEVERAL THINGS can happen to keep customers from receiving prompt refunds. Failure slips aren't always available when a customer loses money. Sometimes refund slips are misplaced and not collected by the vending office. And some dorm personnel reported that the slips were picked up and returned only once a week, not twice.
Information Table 2, Union Feb. 14-J8, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
or send your contribution to
Kansas Union Box 4
Lawrence, Kansas 66045
A SECRETARY at the Credit Bureau office in Carruth O'Leary, which handles refunds for the building, said she had about 125 refund envelopes that hadn't been picked up, each containing 20 to 25 cents. She also said people were made to contact persons who had refunds.
People who don't work or live in the buildings where machines are standing often aren't familiar with the refund request process or don't take time to fill out their refund requests. They do fill out the slips, they often don't turn to the building to collect their refunds.
least one semester and then the money went back into sales.
The only really effective way of refunding money is to have an attendant at a site check the machines and make refunds, like at Wescoe, Ferguson said. But KU has too many machines and the cost of using attendants is prohibitive, he said.
Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, said refunds were kept for at
A $150,000 lawsuit has been filed against the Beta Tau Chapter of Kappa Sigma fraternity at Baker University by a man injured in a fire that destroyed the Kappa Sigma house and killed five men Aug. 28, 1976.
MAILING REFUNDS to customers also would be too expensive, Ferguson said. Kansas State University uses the campus mail to pick up and return refund requests.
Total refunds for the first six months of the fiscal year, July 1 through December 31, 1976 were $1,800, or about one per cent of total vending sales, which were $18,074. Ferguson said the normal percentage of refunds from one half to one per cent of total sales.
Ferguson said there was no way to know precisely how much money was lost in the machines and how much should be refunded.
Ferguson said he figured that fraudulent books were counterbalanced by people who didn't.
Baker frat, Baldwin named in fire suits
Jolly said he thought the lag between the time refund requests were made and the time refunds were received helped to cut down on the number of false claims.
Monday, the fraternity asked that the city of Baldwin and its fire chief, Archer Carlson, be included as defendants in the suit.
William T. Murphy, a former Baker student from Cameron, Mo., who suffered two broken heels when he jumped from a building on the campus fire, filed the suit against the fraternity.
The fraternity notified the city of Baldwin Monday that it had filed a third-party civil action against the city and Carlson, alleging that the city was liable in the fire because Carlson had inspected the house and ceremony. The court said, Badwin city attorney, said yesterday.
City Council to represent the city and Carlson.
He said he would file a motion on behalf of the city and Carlson asking that both parties be involved.
Carlson, however, said he had checked only the house's fire extinguishers—not the ones in front.
"I think the city is immune from the cut," Oyler said. "There is no city or oor-net." The city government has to check buildings it don't like the government can be held responsible for negligent acts of its employees." Oyler said the responsibility to inspect buildings
But the state fire marshal, Floyd Dibern, didn't agree.
He said that the Baldwin fire department may not have had the personnel or knowledge to inspect and enforce the fire marshal's office to set up the state fire marshal's office to get help.
Dibbern said yesterday that any municipal fire department, whether regular or voluntary, had the authority to enforce Kansas fire laws.
Oyler has been appointed by the Baldwin
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KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.87,No.93
Friday, February 18, 1977
Leben is victor in close election; student voter turnout sets record
By SANDY DECHANT
Staff Reporters
and MARSHA WOOLERY Staff Reporter
Two weeks ago, Steve Leben, El Dorado junior, made two predictions. One that his sister-in-law's baby, due in early March, would be born on election day, and the other was that he would win the student body presidential election by 400 votes.
Last night, Steve became an uncle, and although his prediction of winning the presidency by 400 votes wasn't totally fulfilled, he did win it by 176 votes.
"It wasn't quite what we expected," said about 7 this morning, "but we'll take it."
In the highest turnover ever in a Student Senate election with a total of 4,298 votes, Leben and his running mate, Ralph Moore, lost to Mo., sophomore, received 1,436 votes.
ANOTHER TEAM, Sherri Grey,
Manhattan senior, and Don Green, Akleen
sophomore, received 1,280 votes; and the
team of Randy McKernan, Salina junior,
and Katie Rhoads, Leawood sophomore,
received 1,149 votes.
In the eight-hour wait between the start of vote tabulation and the finish, Leben said he might have to go further.
He said that as he listened to election returns over JKHK-FM, his coalition, Reflection, didn't appear to be winning very many Senate seats.
Elections for Senate seats mirrored the tight Presidential contest. Spectrum coalition won 28 seats, Reflection won 28 seats, both won 21 seats, and others won six seats.
"I CALLED my brother at 6:30 a.m. and
Early tallying shows students back whistle
KU students overwhelmingly want the whistle to resume blowing to signal the end of classes, according to early tabulations of the program. The KU student districted yesterday and Wednesday.
At 5 a.m. today, only the results from the Wescoe fourth-floor poll, which reflected the opinions of about 13 per cent of the total voters, showed that those voters, 47 were voting the whistle back.
ABOUT 60 per cent of the Wescoe voters said they would like to see Jayhawk Blvd. closed to all but special and emergency vehicles from 8 a.m., to 5 p.m.
Nearly half, or 114—of the 262 voters who had tried to apply for a scholarship, grant or loan from the University of Kansas said they had had problems qualifying for such
A total of 383 of the students favored a refreshment area in Waxen Library, while 428 opposed it; 107 opposed a refreshment area in West Campus Library, while 161 opposed it.
Leben, who spent the least money of the three presidential candidates on the campaign—about $850 compared with McKernan's $1,200 and Grey's 1,250--reiterated what he had said throughout his campaign. In cases, not money, would win the election.
The addition of a one-hour-credit course on KU resources and how to use them appealed to 410 of the voters, but 498 of them said it shouldn't be mandatory.
KEVIN FLYNN, Elections Committee chairman, said results of the questionnaire
would be used by the new Senate to issue charges to committees for the coming year. Because the questionnaires are time-consuming to tally, he predicted that all of their results wouldn't be known until next week.
told him I lost," Leben said. "And just now called my parents and told them that I was shocked out of my gourd—that we had won."
He said that the questionnaire would be used as evidence to the administration about student opinions but otherwise would have no direct effects. He added, "I wasn't scientific polling but merely designed to present general student opinion."
Leben said that not only were all his campers posters and other paraphermalia
Senate seat results page 11
SOME POLL workers suspected that the number of questionnaires would outnumber the number of registered voters, Flynn said, and students had strong enough opinions about the whistle and other questionnaires. They also had extra questionnaires and stuff ballot boxes.
The resource class, the Watson refreshment area and the loan and scholarship problems will be concerns of the Senate Academic Affairs Committee, Flynn said. The Transportation Committee will handle the Jawbak Blvd. traffic question.
Because the questionnaires weren't numbered by the ballots, they couldn't
printed in black and white, but that each of the approximately 12,000 campaign promotions stated his opinions on issues.
"We are the only people who had issues,
no just bright campaign posters or T-shirts."
"WE SHOWED we were sincere about communication." Leben said.
Leben was the candidate with the least amount of experience as a senator. He said he had been in two Senate races and lost both of them—one by eight votes and the other by five votes. Lieben by four votes left and he stepped in, serving only half a year as a senator.
AS LEBEEN was talking, Tedde Tasheff, now the former student body president, and Steve Owens, former student body vice president, entered the room and congratulated him.
"I firmly believe that it's not how long you're there, but what you did." he said.
Tasheff said. "It's all yours now."
Owens, looking at Munyan, said, "You'll have to go over them and get my desk cleared," he added.
TASHEEFF AND Owens, who helped tabulate the presidential and vice presidential votes, said the race was close throughout the night and that it wasn't until
Grey and McKernan tried to explain their loss.
early morning that Leben picked up enough votes "here and there" to win.
"I just want to say that Steve Leben ran an admirable campaign in terms of fairness and integrity," said candidate. Surrounded by loyal campignaters at the front desk of Miller Scholarship Hall at 7 this morning, she had just called to congratulate Leben and offer her scholarship.
"It was worth it," she said of her campaign for student body president. "The
Nether she nor her running mate, Green,
could say why they lost.
"You think of a lot of things you could have done," she said, "but you only have x amount of dollars to do x amount of things and you just can't cover all aspects."
Both she and Randy McKernan, defeated avanti candidates, said the votes were close.
Sitting on the bottom stairs inside the Sigma Nu fraternity house, McKernan cradled a cup of coffee as the sun rose this morning.
"I thought this was the biggest flasque I've ever seen," he said. "It wouldn't have been bed—it wouldn't have been half as bad—to have lost at 12 last night."
Looking at the remnants of his coalition, which had begun partying at 10 p.m., McKernan said, "I met a lot of people and part was worthwhile, but the rest was."
Mkernan said several things had caused him to lose the election.
"Part of it was the increased voter turnout, part of it was running out of ballots at some of the polls, and part of it . . . well, I just don't know." he said.
See LEBEN page five
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Presidential call
Newly elected Student Body President Steve Leben phoned his parents about 7 this morning shortly after learning he had been elected. Leben also called Sherri Grey and said she was very pleased with the outcome.
Architect says law school to be done on time
Construction problems aren't responsible for the delay in opening the new School of Law building, Louis Krueger, state architect, said yesterday.
Kruger contradicted Martin Dickinson, dean of the School of Law, who told A. Feb. 4
BURGERS
A few ditchdash supporters from the Avanti Coalition were still waiting at 4 this morning for the final vote tells in yesterday's
All for naught
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
School of Law faculty-student meeting that the building wouldn't be open for classes until January 1978. It officially had been scheduled to open this fall.
Student Senate elections. The Avanti coalition gathered at the Sigma Nu fraternity.
ACCORDING TO 10 minutes of the meeting, Dickinson "indicated that, because of the continuing failure of the subcontractor to deliver the pre-cast concrete blocks, and other difficulties, it is now virtually certain that we will begin building the new building until January of 1978."
But Kruger said, "The concrete blocks aren't going to delay the building. We'll be here."
"DEAN DICKINSON obviously has a misconception about the building. I don't know where he's getting information — maybe he has a communication problem."
Dickinson was contacted by telephone last night. Asked to confirm or deny the accuracy of the Feb. 4 minutes, he said, "I have no comment."
Asked to respond to Krueger, Dickinson said, "I have nothing more to say on the
Francis Heller, professor of law, attended the meeting. He said that the minutes were correct.
Heller said, "The Dean informed us the chances were virally nothing—that they had not been," he added.
Kruger said Casson Co. had been denied a request for extending its May 23 deadline, but the architects have have the building completed. The request was made in Topeka at a F. 3 meeting of representatives from Casson, the architects of Regents and the state architect's office.
OTHER FACULTY members who attended the meeting, who asked not to be identified, also confirmed the accuracy of the minutes.
Kruger, who attended the meeting, said, "We explained to the company in very precise words there wouldn't be a delay. We explained it completely and told them (Casson) that a delay would be very serious."
By state law, each day after May 23 that the building isn't finished will cost the Casualty Co. $10 million.
SPOKEMEN FOR Casson have declined comment on whether the building will be finished on time. They also have refused to release details and they measured the company to meet its deadline.
The Feb. 4 minutes, however, say Dickinson 'reported that Chancellor (Archie) Dykes is lending every possible support to efforts to induce the contractor to take the steps necessary in order to complete the building on time."
Kruger said Casson had taken the steps to which Dickinson alluded.
"They've put men out there," he said. "They've made every effort. They've been making every effort."
Kruger said that even if Cannon didn't meet its deadlines "the building would be destroyed."
That's plenty of time for them to move from Green, "he said. 'I don't understand.'"
CONSTRUCTION ON the building, which replaces Green Hall, began in March 1975. It will cost $40 million.
Law's 140,000+volume library and have room for 30,000 more volumes.
Igal Rodenko, pacifist and civil rights activist, was a draft resister when Vietnam fell.
Rodenkow, who visited the University of Kansas Wednesday and yesterday, served 20 months in federal prison for refusing to fight in World War II. Rodenkow, a Jew born in America, had to rationalize his decision not to fight against Hitler.
"My brain said fight but fight my conscience couldn't aim a gun," he said. "I couldn't believe that the enemy of my friend is my enemy."
During Rodeokin's two-day visit, sponsored by the United Ministries Center, 128 Oread Abbey he met with religion, culture and peace groups, preached his favorite subject—noviolence.
The building also will include a courtroom that doubles as a classroom, individual study stations, student lockers, eight-station rooms and space for the Legal Society.
Rodenko, 60, resembles a freakish Merlin the Magician. His purple jeans, green socks and six-inch gray beard make him seem like an easy-going statement—there are options to normality.
Options to normality explained by pacifist
Draft resiliers don't need to defend their position,oodenkoo, sitting in the front.
A major advantage of the new building is that its 95,000 square feet of floor space will accommodate an enrollment of 560 students, 104 more students than last semester's enrollment. Green Hall was designed to house 100 students.
Rodenkent his said jailhings helped to prove that he means what he says.
"Probably 50 per cent of the people in America have relatives who came to the United States to avoid military service," he said. "They drafts disserted 'a shared experience.'"
"But it's too bad we have to prove our authenticity by suffering," he said.
He also said draft resisters couldn't be called cowords. "I'm still a fighter; it'is just that the traditional ways of battling are counterproductive," he said.
The American civil rights movement helped make Americans aware that racism is still a major problem.
warned that government legislation could do only so much to solve that problem.
Roodenko n's press release bills him as a man who has been arrested more than 10 times. In 1874, he was jailed for his part in the revolt that overturned social inequality (CORE) race ride in the South.
"They (government) can't give equality," he said. "If they could give it, they can take it back. That's not equality, government. Government can only make it easier."
Roodenko said that legislation often could lead to a nation of citizens instead of citizens and that more creative ways were needed to help the disadvantaged. Legislation can make a difference but it's not the only answer, he said.
If the draft was reinstated, he said, "the military won't know what hit them. People will just ignore it and the government will find it won't pay to go after them."
Roodenko called President Jimmy Carter's pardon of draft resisters an upper-middle-class gesture. America didn't learn that he was wrong, but he said, and some people learned nothing.
A vegetarian for the last "last 22 years and two weeks," Roedken talked as he drank a beer and ate a cheese sandwich at his restaurant. Crumbs of cheese stuck in his beard.
He objected to capital punishment, which he said made sense only in society. Society is better off without some people, he said, but that doesn't mean he decides who should live and who shouldn't.
"Capital punishment is a confession by
knowing you don't know to do with
socialistic behavior."
Rodenko is a former chairman of the War Resisters League and is now on the editorial board of WIN magazine, an underground weekly. His current speaking tour will take him all over the United States in the next four months.
There is potential for violence and non-violence, and the violence tend to make certain traits be random.
And, he said, "speaking tours and effective as anything else in doing that."
2
Friday, February 18, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Tax rebates, cuts approved
INVESTMENT—The tax portions of President Cater's economic plan, including a $50 rebate for most Americans and a permanent tax cut for 45 million households, were approved yesterday by the House Ways and Means Committee. The bill now goes to the full house, then to the Senate Finance Committee. The $50-per-person relocation tax, due tomorrow to make it more compatible in the future, is the permanent tax cut, averaging $90 per person would be accomplished by changing the standard deductions.
Natural gas inquiry beaun
fields.
Andrus said the investigation would probably lead to orders to some companies to drill more wells and speed up production. However, he said it was too soon to know where such orders would be appropriate.
WASHINGTON - Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus announced yesterday a broad inquiry into offshore natural gas production. The announcement came after investigators said they had found production decreases and idle reserves in five fields.
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Tickets: $4.50 at S.U.A. office
JAPANESE ASSOCIATION
Sponsored by K.U. International Club
[Illustration of a shield with an American flag waving from a pole, featuring stars and stripes.]
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Saturday, February 19th ONLY!
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LAWRENCE, KANASS
--to the 1977 United Jewish Appeal Campus Campaign
WE ARE ONE GIVE
... with every Jewish man, woman and child who needs our help in this world, whether they live next door or half the world away.
... with the troubled, the oppressed, the deprived, of all ages: in the cities of America, the development towns of Israel, the remnant communities of Europe, the ghettos of Asia and North Africa.
Their need is our obligation, their cries our challenge, their longing our opportunity, their prayers our mandate.
We are one with them. Let them know it ... with your gift.
Information Table 2, Union
Feb. 14-18, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
or send your contribution to Kansas Union Box 4 Lawrence, Kansas 66045
---
--kansas union BOOKSTORE
ANY QUESTIONS?
Hewlett-Packard Calculator Representative, David Wand, will be at the Kansas Union Bookstore on Wednesday, Feb.23, 9:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. to answer any questions and demonstrate the capabilities of Hewlett-Packard Calculators.
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Black Greeks part of KU
By DEB MILLER
Staff Renorter
About 100 blacks at the University of Kansas are involved in a system many students know little about—black sororities and fraternites.
Three black KU sororites-Sigma Gamma Rho, Delta Sigma Theta and Alpha Kappa Alpha—and three black fraternities-Alpha Phi Alpha, Omega Psi Phi and Kappa Alpha Psi—stress brotherhood, sisterhood and community service.
All but one of the sororites and fraternities meet in the Kansas Union because they don't have houses, and one sorority, The Alpha, has a charter but is inactive.
The newest black fraternity on campus, omega Psi Pi, has 18 members. Omega Psi Pi is a Greek organization.
The newest black sorority on campus is Sigma Gamma Rho. Michelle Frasure, president, said Wednesday that the sorority's members, will receive its charter Saturday.
FRASURE'S SORORITY, like the others, is involved in community service programs. Last semester sorority members raised $235 for an occupational therapy center in the community and fraternity members act as big sisters and brothers for children in the community
Bonita Franklin, president of Deltasigma Theta, which has 22 members, said that in some black families it was a tradition to join the group's sorority to do community service work.
Friday, February 18, 1977
Requirements for joining a black sorority or fraternity vary but a student must have between a 2.0 and 2.5 grade point average and must be a full-time student.
Prospective members are pledges for females to 12 weeks before they are initiated.
THE BLACK fraternities have "smokers," or parties in the fall and spring to get acquainted. Then in the spring rush is held.
Frasure said Sigma Gamma Rho was selective because it wanted people dedicated to doing community service work.
Qualities that Alpha Phi Alpha looks for are better mental health, healthy bodies, Body Health.
"We try to look into the inner person," he said.
Alpha Phi Alpha, which has 25 members and is the only black fraternity with a house, had had its KU house since 1955, Presley said.
FUNDS for the house came from KU's chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha and other organizations.
The other black fraternities also have considered getting houses, but representatives of both said money problems had held them back.
Larry Brown, one of Kappa Alpha Psi's 25 members, said the desire for a house would be stronger if more KU students lived in dorms.
"In that case, people would be glad to live in a place, but here there's a lot of money available," ignoring.
The fact that most black fraternities and sororites don't have houses isn't the only thing which makes them different from their white counterparts. None of them are members of the Interfraternity Council (IFC) either.
According to IFC rules, each man who goes through rush has to pay $25, and Presley said his fraternity wasn't ready to make its men pay that amount.
PRESLEY SAID Alpha Phi Alpha had considered joining IFC last year. However, differences in rush and pledge programs caused conflicts.
Presley also said Alpha Phi Alpha members had received crank phone calls when the fraternity considered joining IFC. The fraternity hasn't given up the idea, he said, because joining IFC would give it more recognition on campus.
Many of the black fraternity and sorority members said they would like to see more interaction with the white sororites and fraternities on campus.
Frasure said one白权孝 donation 10 to Sigma Gamma Rho's fund-raising committee.
MORE INVOLVEMENT would mean
more communication, more com-
munication, Freesay said.
Robert Turkey, assistant dean of men and adviser to IFC, said the only interaction between black and white fraternities was on the intramural basketball court.
"I'm sure they have a lot to offer because they go beyond the predominantly white fraternities in the amount of community work they do," he said, "and they must have very strong bonds to stay close without houses."
Brown said one project he would like to see would be an all-Greek picnic.
"It might be a way to bring everybody together so we could get to know about each other."
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Accent the ARTS
SUA and the art history undergraduates present. . .
"What is a Curator?"
a talk with
Ross E. Taggart,
Senior Curator of the Nelson Gallery—
Atkins Museum
Monday, February 21
3:30 p.m.
Regionalist Room. Union
Regionalist Room, Union
Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Program
FRIDAY, FEB. 18, 7:30 p.m.
Forum Room, K.U. Union
Speaker Ramon Roubideaux
AIN Attorney
TOPIC: "Educational Dilemma of Native Americans in the professions"
NO ADMISSION
For more information call 864-4353
Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan 864-4358
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4
Friday, February 18, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Whistle draws voters
A total of 4,209 students voted in this
student Senate elections—a record
number.
This record turnout, however, does not indicate a sudden surge of student interest in Student Senate politics or in student government in general. It indicates, rather, a considerable student interest in the Student Senate questionnaire, particularly in the question regarding whether to keep the whistle.
MORE STUDENTS vote on the questionnaire than voted for all three major presidential candidates. Students even cared about whether they would vote ballots and attempt to stuff the ballot box.
Higher voter interest in the questionnaire than in the election itself should come as no surprise. The Senate election gave students nothing but the chance to choose from among three coalitions that seemed basically the same. There may well have been some fundamental differences between the candidates, but very few students could
discern them beneath the mountains of posters and slogans and balloons.
The questionnaire, however, gave students themselves a chance to express their opinions.
This election's questionnaire should it only a beginning. There should be more questionaires in future elections—maybe even a referendum or two.
PEOPLE DON'T care about Senate politics, but they do care about many of the issues before the Senate. They do care about their activity fee goes and what is included in that. They go through all the layers of prejudice against and mistrust of Student Politics; they care.
Questionnaires and referendums will increase the average student's say and, presumably, his interest. Maybe someday this interest will blossom to the point that 4,209 - a whopping 19 per cent of the eligible voters - won't be hailed as a large turnout and will be, instead, acknowledged as the pathetic number it is.
Dawn's early light
Steve Leben is KU's new student body president. And it sure took everyone long enough to find out.
Student body presidential candidates, friends, reporters and all sorts of other interested parties were kept awake and sitting on the edges of their seats last night and this morning as the election returns were slowly and laboriously tabulated.
The winner was finally announced shortly before 7 this morning.
ADMITTEDLY, counting ballots is hard work, and the people doing the counting have to be careful and accurate. But last night's
counting could have been done much more quickly and efficiently.
Five people worked last night counting the ballots; one reading and four writing them down. A few more people would have come in very handy, as would some sort of team system to double-check without tying up the whole vote counting delegation.
The people who counted the ballots deserve thanks and credit for staying awake all night and deserve some criticism for not planning the whole thing a little better.
It's awfully hard to have a victory party at 7 a.m.
Involvement - it's a word we all too frequently hear spoken by University administrators, professors, politicians and speech-makers as they try to imbue in us those merits that one day could bring a rewarding and fulfilling job.
Involvement primarily connotes a relationship with someone or something, but also means much more. It means caring and understanding; it means giving and receiving; it means empathy, compassion, commitment and patience.
This week's student elections are merely an indication of the current student uninvolvement that borders on insurrection. Students have universities throughout the country.
Apathy kills opportunity
IT'S UNFORTEST that political and social awareness play second fiddle to social and athletic pursuits in the present college generation. It's also unfortunate that University courses, which ostensibly set up to stimulate the
mind, haven't incited active participation in, devotion to, and understanding of contemporary local, American and world problems.
Living in Kansas, almost 1,000 miles from the nearest ocean, it's too easy to be overwhelmed by people aware individuals to close our minds to the world outside. The University's
Paul Addison
Editorial Writer
resources, in terms of individuals, services and materials, contain perhaps the greatest resource that any of us will ever have at our finerines.
For instance, the University's 1,200 student population is the largest in the student population, with invaluable expertise.
knowledge of almost 90 countries,
knowledge frequently dermany
and France, but not so much in
Greece.
THE UNIVERSITY's professors are specialists who are ready to discuss almost any subject from aardvarks to zoology. The library system, too, contains a wealth of pertinent information about everything and everybody.
The late 1960s and early 1970s brimmed with participation, consciousness-raising and other intangible elements associated with those heady days, but the fashionable time of the mid-1970s seems unsurpassed in prospection and self-improvement.
KU ISN't allogether a hotbed (cold-bell) of anpity, as the numerous purrurous sounds
campus and city testify. Organizations exist to cater to the most obscure interests and to help people with personal issues. These organizations promote active discussion of political and philosophical subjects. When it comes down to it, however, all such organizations primarily involve students. Some organizations stand at a standard percentage of the student body.
Why? Analysts contend that lack of involvement shows a rejection of the values of the previous student generation and the need for an economic pressure to find employment.
It's also possibly a result of affluent materialist backgrounds and a feeling that if the problems don't affect one personally, they're irrelevant. Thus, while the opportunity is here and now for involvement in the University, in Kansas and indeed, in the world, few people seem willing to grasp it.
Unfortunately, c'est la vie.
Hustler bares freedom problem
One of the running battles in this country's history is the sporadic confrontation between the government and its fourth cousin, the media, which has a voice as one零件 of freedom of expression.
The cousin received a glancing, but certainly not debilitating, blow last week when Larry Frynt, the publisher of the now-celebrated Huster magazine, was jailed for selling obscenity and engaging in organized crime.
Clayton Kirkpatrick, editor of the Chicago Tribune and recent
THE SECOND charge have never been fully explained, but it is clear that selling obscenity jailing everyone who was in the practice of selling obscenity would seem to rob the United States of all its potential profitability.
winner of the William Allen White Award for Journalistic merit, said last week that he was opposed by the distribution nagazia because he said that he had bought a copy and was
PETER C. BROWN
"disgusted" by its degrading pictures of women.
Paul Jefferson Editorial Writer
That is exactly the point.
Although everyone is entitled to his own opinion, however misguided it may be, it is still unfair for him to try and impose his standards on a token public, he awards vary in each community.
I SEE NO REASON WHY WE CAN'T AGREE OR ARMS CONTROL. I'M CERTAINLY WILLING TO MEET YOU HALF WAY!
PARDON ME.
"Doing it" it seems to be all the government can do lately, especially in the case of the two Americans who are not so permanently in one case.
number of ways for a different meaning each time.
MEANWHILE, arguments continue about the right or wrong aspects of both capitalism and democracy, which may be more closely related than people realize. The only consistency the government has shown regarding capitalist laissez-faire topics is inconsistency.
FOR HUMAN RIGHTS,
FATHEAD!!
**星星**
BY ACHIEVING AN OVERALL BALANCE OF MUTUAL RESTRAINT, WE MAKE THE WORLD A SAFER PLACE WHICH TO RAISE OUR CHILDREN.
"speaking again of the free enterprise system, notice must be taken of another launched T-34 combat aircraft, can only survive in America.
THIS WAXING and waning or interest in pornography sporadically illuminates; only to muddle down again as insulation of morals is tried only if fail, only to be tried again.
IN GOOD OLD BOY.
© 1977 NYT Special Features
This argument goes on and will continue, as public mores vacillate between puritanism and biblical facing six to 25 years in stir and a loss of $10,000, took his conviction with a conviction matched only once before in the face of such adversity. "Let's
THESE T-SHIRTS don't come smelling like pizza or strawberries or grass (the latter are also forms of lingering on the market. Of course, the article of which I'm speaking is from one of my friends, which was on sale recently in which gratefully far from here.
This is strictly a matter for those of us singles who have every intention of staying that way. This is for those who are proud to be always a bridesmaid/groomman and never the bride/bridegroom. We will also need to be for that body of Americans who will never know the joys of matrimony, legitimate children and a nice SBR 2 bolt bath splitiw; w/2c gar. in plant. nbrbd.
How many times has your mother, batting her hopeful eyes, asked you when you were crying? How many times do someone? The next time she does, slug her in the mouth. She'll get the idea. If she weeps wants another grandchild, tell her about the two you squared a
In the past we've passively borne the brunt of married persons' sadden and scorn about being bachelors." We've been made to feel guilty for choosing single despair overwedded bliss—but we have defected the ranks to enter the priesthood, the
Singles should throw off chains
Those of you who are married, who have designs to be married, or who hope and pray to be married some day can read reading right here. This is none of your business.
UNLESS WE do something now, brothers and sisters, the injustices will continue. It is hard, in our own little ways, to strangle them how? you ask. It just so happens that I've compiled a small list of things we can do to earn the respect we do so rightfully. Then, he them, memorize them and above all, put them to use.
example of robbing Peter and paying Peter.
sisterhood and-may God forgive them-parenthood.
Stewart Brann
Editorial Editor
ONE LAST TIME, if you’re married and still reading this, eyes off!!!!!!! Go polish your wedding crystal.
block chairman for the March of Dimes). The next time that happens, pull the wife off to a corner and confide that you wish you had a spouse who thought so highly of you. As you leave the party, thank the chairperson for her conversation, compliment him on his razor-swift wit, then hit him where he lives.
Good . . . now that we're alone; we can talk. You're well aware by now that we singles are truly an oppressed people. You're not in a position to express that oppression from fronts; family, married friends, insurance companies, the IRS, et al.
The T-shirt comes emblazoned with the sardonic smile of the recently executed double murderer, with a heart shape over the left chest that's superimposed on a target.
WHEN WAS the last time you attended a party at which you were the only single in the bum. The others looked upon it and laughed. I bet the guys spent the entire evening exchanging cute anecdotes about "the wife" (she burned the dinner, she couldn't eat) and dressed them with dented the fender, she's so dumb that she was fired as
How much cash have you forked out for gifts for those people? Isn't it time they reciprocate? Send out engraved announcements enclosed in a folded envelope to tastefully shredded edges) that read: "Mr. and Mrs. (parents' names) request the honour of your presence at the confirmation of their marriage to a life of singlehood." You probably won't get anyone to show up for the occasion, but you might at least reap a few matched towel macrame planters, Crockpot and some cornerware.
couple of years ago in Tijuana. That'll shut her up.
NOW IS THE time to stand up and show the world you’re proud of the way of life you’ve learned. You can lead perfectly happy and fulfilled lives without a constant partner at our side. We must make them acknowledge that we, too, are normal, healthy beings, an ability of loving and feeding and caring as they are.
will continue to be a market for magazines such as Hustler. No one is forced to buy the magazines, and yet they are forced off the seemingly welcome shelves of businesses, which are essentially set up to sell books in the system in America to emphasize the satisfaction of the consumer.
DURING COFFEE breaks at work, do your cohorts pull out the latest pictures of their 'little ones' so that everyone can take some pictures of your houseplants and pass them around. Remark how well-behaved you little ones are, and how cheaply they can be taken. And now that doesn't work, tell them you read recently in a medical journal that eight of 10 babies born in this nuclear age aren't likely to live past age four; the adults will be mutants. They'll certainly pause for thought.
The fact is that freedom of expression is guaranteed to everyone, and no reasonable restrictions on any medium can be imposed. The eventual loss of our foremost constitutional privileges.
HOW MANY wedding announcements have you received from friends past and present?
In light of some other current events going on, this selective system of punishment seems to paraphrase an adage to be an
It would seem that no reasonable government (employment) curtail one private enterprise, no matter how vulgar it is, and look with favor on another beware of the "be the ultimate obscurity."
And if they still don't believe you, hit 'em where they live.
The next time the government feels it should intrude on the moral sensibilities of the public, it will be extremely difficult to say "Let's not DO it."
Direct election just adds new ring to old'coon tail
I've told the story before of Robert Whitehead, and would tell it again. He was a countryman who served for many years in the Virginia House of Delegates. He had a pet phrase and hull that is defeated time after time, only to bob up again.
Bob would stand in the well of the House, shaking the offending bill in one hand and pointing to the heavens with the elbow. "Coon," he would cry, "with all round around his tail."
SITTING IN A Senate committee room the other day, I was reminded of old Bob Whitehead. This was a hearing on Senator Birch Bayh's request for an amendment to provide for the direct election of Presidents. It was the same old 'coon.
The morning's first witness was Hubert Humphrey. He sat at the witness table, grey and gaunt, summoning up reserves of energy from his own unquenchable spirit.
"Mr. Chairman," be began,
"I have worked for more than 23 years for the abolition of the Electoral College in favor of direct popular election of the President."
Sitting at the press table, I thought to myself: And I've been working for more than 23 years against it. On an issue like this, Mr. Trump never change; they stay the same. Direct election was proposed at the Constitutional Convention of 1787; it has been urged quadrennially ever since; but whenever this amendment is put to test, its prudence thankfully has come to the Constitution's rescue.
BAYH PROPOSES, as he has proposed before, to abolish the director's single root and the director. The people directly for a presidential-vice presidential ticket. If no ticket received at least 40 percent of the vote, a runoff would be between the two top tickets.
Last week's hearing produced all the old arguments: The present system, written as a compromise into the Constitution of 1787, is politically dangerous. A few maverick
L
electors could thwart the will of the people. The system is undemocratic, in that it accords power to a small group of small states than in large states. If a presidential election ever were thrown into the House, where each state casts a vote, the people might rebel. And so on.
James J. Kilpatrick (b) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
EVENTUALLY, Bayh's subcommittee will get around to
a courteous session for
opponents, and they will make
their familiar arguments also.
They will ask the president
rests on two foundations—separation of powers, and
the principle of federalism. In one stroke, the delicate structure of power would be fatally undermined.
To be consistent, a scheme of direct popular election would demand a uniform ballot in all districts. The need for qualification of presidential
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tickets, uniform rules for challenges and recounts. For all practical purposes, the states would have to yield control of their franchise to a Federal Elections Commission.
Opponents will argue, when they have their inning, that such radical, drastic surgery is unwise and unnecessary. With a much simpler, so-called "district plan," which awards electoral votes according to the number of districts as well as in whole states, the inequities of "winner take all" could be relieved.
Bayh has heard all this before. All of us have heard all this before. This time the Indiana senator has 41 cosponsors to help get the necessary two-thirds of the Senate to accept his resolution. The old system works; it preserves the checks and balances; it needs only modest repair to keep on working. What is the same about the 'coon'; and it is no more appealing this year than it was in 1973.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 12, 2014. Published Monday, June 5 and Jody except Saturday, Sunday and Holly-July 6, 2014. Subscriptions by mail are a $10 annual or $18 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $10 annual or $18 for a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $10 annual or $18 for a year outside the county.
Editor
Jim Hates
Jim Bates
Managing Editor
Greg Hack
Editorial Editor
Stewart Brannan
Campus Editor Alison Gwinn
Associate Campus Editor Lynda Smith
Assistant Campus Editors Jerye Seib,
Barbara Salmieri Jim Cobb,
Copy Chiefs Jim Cobb,
Bernett Junkke Tim Gee,
Sports Editor Gary Viee
Associate Sports Editors Gary Viee
Doug Bewaman, Courtney
Photo Editor George Milleren
Photographer Mike Leiter
Jay Koehler, Marianne Maurin
Make-up Editors Sam Applachy, Jim Cobb,
Siam Applachy Sam Applachy,
Mary Myers, Larry Bemis,
Wire Editors Larry Bonura, Charlene
Entertainment Editors 张舒金,
Business Manager Janice Clements
Advertising Manager
Mon J. Mon 8:00 a.m.
Classified Advertising Manager
Randy Higbee
Classified Advertising Manager
Randy Higbee
Promotional Manager
Danny O'Connor
National Advertising Manager
Robin Gruber
General Manager
Friday, February 18, 1971
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From page one
Leben ...
KEVIN FLYNN, Elections Committee chairman who had hoped to attract at least 12 percent in the election said last night that he but is disappointed that he hadn't reached his goal.
"But in a way, I'm glad we didn't reach 5,000," he said. "Otherwise, we're here till tomorrow noon, before we knew who won anything."
Flynn said the closeness of the race, the addition of 19 polling places and a question about the resumption of the whistle on the gunfire, had increased the more than 4,000 votes to the poll.
FLYNN SAID he didn't expect anyone to lock a recount because of the caution issued by the judge.
Flynn said results of the presidential and vice presidential race were delayed because last night's polls closed two hours late, and extra care was taken to count the votes.
Originally, only nine polls had been scheduled to be open last night, he said, but five additional polls were kept open because they came in out of some ballots Wednesday night.
That delay meant that sorting the ballots into schools and class offices was postponed from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., and that actual voting of votes didn't begin until 11:30 p.m.
a second ballot shortage at the polls yesterday did not occur because the Elections Committee had run short of ballots, but was caused by a distribution problem.
Also, problems transporting ballot boxes from the 10 daytime campus polls and transporting five additional boxes to the 14 evening polls had caused them to open more than an hour before, he said, and to be fair to the voters, they were kept open the additional two hours.
Once tabulation started, Flynn said, extra care was taken in counting ballots for the candidate. He said he would not
In that tabulation, which took nearly seven and a half hours, one person read votes to a group of four. After 52 ballots had been read, the four compared their separate identities and whether they were identical, and if they were the votes were retaliated. Flom said.
because the committee expected an unusually close race.
University Daily Kansan
Only the four persons, who had been chosen because they were considered nonpartisan in the election, were allowed to vote. He, he said, to lessen the chance of error.
Four complaints were filled with the Elections Committee yesterday, Flynn said, three alleging misconduct in campaigning and one calling for a re-vote because a name had been printed on the wrong ballot.
Two of McMurry's complaints alleged that members of the Spectrum coalition had violated the Senate Rules and Regulations by wearing campaign T shirts within 50 feet of a poll, and that members of the Elections Committee, who, according to Senate rules, must be bipartisan, were campaign T shirts, inwardly supported certain candidates.
The fourth complaint, submitted by Harvey C. Jordan J., asked for a re-e vote in the second Nunemaker district because, according to Jordan, his name was printed on the ballot. The committee mistake was noticed Wednesday morning, the committee didn't reprint the ballots.
The three complaints alleging misconduct
are filed by Steve McMurry, Avanti
Court.
He also asked that action be taken "against any and all persons or coalitions" who tore down, marked up or destroyed Avanti campaign posters.
Flynn said the committee had tried to correct the mistake by crossing Jordan's old line with College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and writing it on the Newer Nuemaker ballot.
一
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Fri.- DISCO EXTRAVAGANZA, Pitchers $1.25, 7:30:9:30, $1.00 cover.
LVE LIVE ENTERTAINMENT featuring "LEE MCBEE BLUES BAND"
Dance & Boogie music, $1.50 cover. Pitchers $1.25, 7:30:9:30.
Mon. & Tues.- Closed
Wed.- Oz with Beth Scallet, KJHK Live broadcast, $2.00 cover.
Every night- PITCHERS $1.25, 7:30:9:30.
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Featureting Tommy Johnson, Sat., Feb. 19, 16'11" Extending from the basement to the balcony (overlooking Downtown)
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BIOLOGY GRADUATES WANTED NOW FOR NEW PEACE CORPS PROJECTS
Exceptional sandwiches & side orders
Check for the 2 for 1 coupons in the Kansan
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Use your scientific knowledge to help improve the health of people in a country of Africa, Asia, Latin America, or the S. Pacific or leach science. Learn more about your field and help others too. Peace Corps Volunteers get free traw;health/dent; care 12 days pd. vac.; small can; medical stipend; stipend and j. yrs.; medical stipend. SIGN UP ON BACK. RECRUTERS ON CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT MARCH 2 AND LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES PLACEMENT MARCH 1.
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Notice to All Organizations WISHING TO APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE STUDENT SENATE/STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE:
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, Level 3. These requests must be completed and returned to the Senate office NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 28, 1977.
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- Metal Arts Class
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SPEED READING CLASS TO BE TAUGHT IN LAWRENCE
The United States Reading Lab Mid-West Division is offering their famous speed reading course to a limited number of qualified people here in the Lawrence area. The average person who completes this course can read 10 times faster, and with substantially improved comprehension and better concentration.
This famous course has taught many thousands of people to read over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and retain what they have read much more effectively. Average graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.
For complete details about this famous speed reading course be sure to attend one of the free one hour orientation lectures that have been scheduled. These lectures are open to the public, above age 13 (persons under 18 should be accompanied by a parent), if required and trained in complete detail, including class schedules, instruction procedures and a tuition that is much less than similar courses.
These meetings will be held on campus at the Lutheran Student Center, 15th and linda, on Wed., Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 17, 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Feb. 18 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Saf., Feb. 19 at 10:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. and TWO FINAL MEETINGS, Tuesday, Feb. 22, 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
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The program is designed to prepare future leaders in the building industry for opportunities of advanced practices which emerge in large architectural and engineering firms, construction firms, real property development and management organizations which concern themselves with building related products, and various local, state and national government agencies concerned with regulation or management of the built environment.
TOPICS OF STUDY
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Carnegie-Mellon University
6
Fridav. February 18, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Sculpture and ceramics appealing; computer art cold
BY LEROY JOHNSTON
Two new art shows opened in Lawrence this week. The first features sculpture and ceramic works by Nick Vaccaro, professor of art, and his wife, Loula, at the 767 Fifth Avenue gallery. The second is a series of paintings by COLETte Union Gallery, 729 Illinois St. at the Kansas University Gallery.
The 757 show marks the first time the Vaccarios, who are listed in the 1976 Who's In American Art, have exhibited their works. The pieces have never been exhibited before.
Vaccaro, 46, builds shallow, glass-faced boxes and builds them with objects ranging
from the ordinary to the bizarre. The effect of these small environments is powerful and creates a strong emotional response in the viewer through the juxtaposition of nostalgic, personal or just plain weird items.
THE VAST ARRAY of objects Vaccaro
At the Gallery
uses leads one to wander where anyone could find 50 yellow light bulbs, a miniature cotton bale, 10 brass hat usbats, 35 tailor trousers, a pair of jeans and a Joules grip puzzle and a box full of
chrome model motorcycle parts. The answer, according to Vaccare, is found in 2008.
Toys are especially prevalent in his works, and anyone more than 15 years old will find a part of his life in one of Vaccaro's boxes. There lies one clue to the success of objects that will be created in the great range of objects there will be one that relate directly to the viewer's life.
VACCARO MANIPULATES objects the way a good painter handles paint, and the result is an effect greater than the sum of its parts. Each box creates a unique feeling, impossible to verbalize, in a single moment. It's a tribute to the skill of the artist that the
That Vaccaro loves small items is immediately apparent, and the assumption that he must be a sort of "pack rat," as his wife describes him, is not far off.
result is not a more assemblage of unique objects than interesting in itself, but rather in how they interact.
"I've been collecting about 20 years," she said in the second. "There are about 44,000 items here."
*Only one of my boxes is macabre in any way, however. I'm much more interested in the other ones.*
THE JOY OF life is also strong in Mrs. accaro's ceramics. Her tall pots, toils and bustles are always bright.
sensuous feeling. Feathers, beads, animal beads, bound clumps of material and strange offshoots expand unpredictably from the tops of the vase-like pots.
In contrast to the wealth of emotion and richness of personal commitment in the pots and boxes at 7E7, the paintings at the Union seem rather cold.
In her pseudo-landscapes, Bangert is trying to create paintings that celebrate the line as an art form in itself. That is not enough. The kind of mechanistic doodling that has been so widely alienated the viewer. In short, there's nothing human about these paintings.
AS A FURTHER affront, Bangert has introduced computer drafting into her work and makes the claim that artists using computers will produce a new of what computer drafting is, which in what computer drawing is essentially, isn't the answer to Bangert's problems.
Computer drawing means computer programming, which in turn means preconceiving the drawing in its totality. The result of such planning is to remove the spontaneity, humanity and especially the fine art of gambling, from the painting. In using a computer, Bangert has removed the final reason for the viewer to get involved.
Arts & Leisure
By GREGG HEJNA
Reviewer
"Dames at Sea" is a funny, enjoyable, campy musical providing a laugh-filled, excellent evening of theater.
This particular treatment of a
spoof on '30s musicals is well executed by almost everyone involved. Lamberty Hedge and Anne Ahram combine to do a number of music videos. They work within a setting small enough so that the participants don't get lost on stage,
but large enough that it doesn't
cramp the dance numbers.
TOMMY HOLLAND
Stall photo by MIKE CAMPBELL
Hands off
Ruby, played by Kachle Khan, Lawrence graduate student, expresses her discontent for Dlek, played by Kevin Kiendek, Mission junior in SUA's dessert theatre, "Dames to Sea." The show parted as part of SUA's cultural arts festival, Accent the Arts.
The two directors know their craft well and execute it to the best of their abilities. The team is more than satisfactory.
THE PLOT IS a tried and true relief from days gone by. A girl comes to Broadway to become a star and falls in love with Mr. Right along the way. It's been done countless times and one just knows that it's going to happen again.
Chris Kahler, Lawrence graduate student, plays Ruby, the starry-eyed dancer who has
On Stage
come to the Broadway jungle and meets her dream man Dick, a sailor who writes songs, plays guitar, Kirk Vinek, Mission junior.
The two work well together, their voices blending nicely as they tap dance their way into each other's hearts. All the while they are reciting dialogue with a wide-eyed naive and tongues planted firmly in their cheeks.
SEAN MURPHY, Topeka junior, is Kona Kent, the leading lady in the Broadway production. She is excellent as a singer and actress in Mona. His piano-top rendition of "That Mist Man of Mine" is the highlight of the first act. The duet with Bill Isham on "The Song" two Telegraphs. Two telegraphs the audience laughing long after the song was over.
Although Isham, a Winneka, Ill., junior, and Deal Waxman, Overland Park freshman, spend most of his time in the stage but that they are on is pure delight. Isham as the stuffy ship's captain and Waxman's portrait of the director almost steal the show.
RUBY'S NEW FOUND friend, JOAN, is played by Kate Rogers, Winfield freshman. She is a gun-chomping, hard-dedged veteran of the chorus line and her performance walks the tightrope between adequate and superior. Her dancing ability is
her best feature but she seems unsure of herself on stage.
Joan, Ruby's best friend, is in love with Lucky, who naturally happens to be Dick's best friend.
Kenny Herman, Coffeville freshman, is Lucky, and also the show's weak link. His singing ability is minimal, as is evident during his duet with Joan on "Choo Choo Honeymoon," and his acting isn't much better.
THE DEADLY LIST
HE EMPLOYS a "now you hear it, now you don't!" Southern accent which is annoying and disruptive to the flow of the show. Fortunately, cannada can dance all so is not lost.
The feeling of intimacy provided by the Big Eight Room is conducive to the show. Tables scattered around the room, chairs stacked up, make their way getting on and off the stage, and to the feeling.
The dessert served during the intermission brought with it a short, but excellent program—"What a life!" superb version of "I'm Just Wild About Harry," by students who doubled as waiters and waitresses. The intermission joyous as the rest of the play.
McLeavy, with Fay the nurse and his son, Harold, gazes sadly into the coffin of his former wife in the University theatre presentation, 'Loot.'
Comedv 'Loot'a pleasant farce
Bv JULI E LENAHAN
Billed as "an irreverent fierce," the play leaps at every opportunity to attack or demean just about every social institution once held as sacred. It is this irreverence, however, which makes the play a thumbs-up success.
Joe Orton's "Loot," the first of the spring semester of offerings of the University Theatre Series, is hysterical.
"Loot," a contemporary black comedy, is unquestionably the farce it promises to be. It is an absurd religion, death, the importance of money, integrity, law and loyalty "Loot" undoubtedly views each viewer. It is also a hard-working traditional value that makes
attempt, a glass eye escape,
a Scotland Yard investigation,
a bribery, and the eventual arrest
of the innocent or sane-
character.
Roger Nolan, Lenexa senior, bears the brunt of the humor in his stories. He is an inspector. Nolan's illogical deductions and irrelevant clues add Sherlock Holmes 'brand of humor' to the detective work.
cynicism, denurness, innocence and cunning, the tall, thin Mounsey is largely responsible for the turn of events in May, laying multiple characterizations of these traits deserve recognition.
THE PLAY INVOLVE s a series of events, including the murder of Mrs. McLeay, a bank robbery, a smuggling
The character Harold is developed into a noncommital, basically rotten son who sells his father for immunity from the flu. A nurse named Dennis, Harold's accomplish, is presented as an over-sexed but nervous mortuary employee who tunnels through the walls of the mortuary with Harold to rob the bank next door. McLeavy is the assistant manager mourning the loss of his beloved wife. Meadows is a stereotype
of the obedient rookie policeman, receptive to all orders. This manage of a police work is the play work effect as a farce.
Weekend
Highlights
William Keeler, assistant professor of speech and drama and of theatre, has done a commendable job of directing his plays, which serve the viewer as a true force. Despite all the Laurel-and-Hardy-slapstick and Sherlock Holmes ingenuity, the play consistently maintains a smooth line of humor as he concludes necessary to the volleyes dialogue among characters.
SIX CARICATURED individuals are primarily responsible for the play's success. Orton exaggerates certain mannerisms in each to lend diversity to his satire.
Theater
the humor work so well through the dialogue.
"DAMES AT SEA"/d dessert theater, 8 tonight and Saturday, 2:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sunday, Union's Big Eight Room.
LAWRENCE CHAMBER
Bachelor's in Music
conducted by Daniel Pisatone,
associate professor of music
history, 3:00 p.m. Sunday.
Sunday at the MET.
"THE PIDED PIPER" and "THE ADVENTURES OF NINA ROSS' PRITE", 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Lawrence Arts Center.
"LOOT," 8 tonight and 2:30
p.m. Sunday, University
Theatre.
The cast includes McLeavy;
his son Harold; Harold's friend
and accomplice, Dennis; the
Scotland Yard inspector; and
policeman Meadows, Barbara
Mounsey, a Granville, Oha,
senior; gives the most notable
nursery nurse Fay. Changing hats of
Concerts
HERBIE HANCOCK, 8 tonlight, Uptown Theater, Kansas City, Mo.
THE JE OUITERBACK
TRIO, 9 to midnight tonight;
Paul Gray's Jazz Place.
Tomorrow night MIKE WHITE
Nightclubs
CHET NICHOLS, folksinger,
BOB BOBE, AND THE ORE
western band, 9 to midnight
tonight. Off the Wall Hall.
Tomorrow night Nichols and
a rock band, 9 to midnight.
INFORMAL RECITALS by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts at noon Thursday, March 4. Strong Hall lobby.
THE LEE MCBEE BLUES
BAND, a local band, 9 to
midnight Saturday, the Opera
house of TOMMY JOHNSON
50 EXPERIENCE! 10 p.m. to
1 a.m. Saturday, the Seventh
Spirit.
CHAMBER MUSIC
Chamber Music
Angeletti, piano; Don Schalc,
clarinet; and Karel Blas,
clarinet
formance; KAREN KASISTY
MUSIC
plays with the Gaslight Gang, 9 to midnight.
1930S-40S DANCE, 9 tonight,
Union Ballroom.
Recitals
RECITAL SERIES; 8 tonight;
Battetlen Auditorium;
University of Kansas Medical
Center, Kansas City, Kan.
SATYRICON — Decadence depicted in a scant two hours by Federico Fellini.
Films
MIKE SMETZER, poet, SUA Contemporary Writers and Poets Series. 4 p.m. today, Union's Parlor A.
Lectures
ROCKY - Solid acting by cast of Sylvester Stallion, Talla Burry, Burt Young and Burgess Meredith plotted with a knockout punch (83).
BIRTH OF A NATION—Story of the Civil War, directed by D. W. Griffith. This is the original screenplay for a 1930s expensive film made by 1935.
THE SENTINEL—Lukewarm horror story that was given polished production, a star-studded cast. (R)
FREAKY FRIDAY—Based on a kid's book, this is the best Disney film in a long time.
A STAR IS BORN—
Thousands of narcissistic closeups weren't enough to win
the championship and an Oscar nomination. (R)
SPOONER - THAYER MUSEUM OF ART—The Saline Casey Thayer Collection, Main Gallery.
ELIZABETH M. WATKINS
Elizabeth Watkins, 80,
American Sampler; A Look at
Life in the 1800s', 80 prints
and photos from the Library of
Gertrude Kahn.
KANSAS UNION—Marson Galleries art sale, today, Union lobby.
NELSON GALLERY-
Painting, calligraphy and
decorated ceramics by Kwan
Shu Wong. Chicago graduate
student, through Sunday, Sales
of pottery products in the
Nelson, Kansas City, Mo.
Exhibits
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER-Graduate displays, Richard Bird paintings and Anita Kaapun ceramics.
By CHUCK SACK
Reviewer
Reviewer
"Silver Streak" suffers from an image problem. Set aboard a ship in the 1980s, it is being advertised as an adventure comedy, which it definitely isn't. It isn't quite a comedy, but it's more fun. It's better on the right track.
Really, it should be a comic suspense movie, and had it been properly made, it would be, among other things, "the Rock" of The Lady Vanishes; then to the screwball classic "Twentieth Century." Part of the problem is due to a crucial miscasting, and the screenplay fails in the film. Yet, "Silver Streak" has a saving performance.
George Caldwell (Gene Wilder) is a publisher who boards the Silver Streak from Los Angeles to Boston for the express purpose of being bored for two and a half days. A romantic affair with Hilly Burns (Jill Clayburgh) greets her affection but then he witnesses a murdered man falling off the train, Caldwell's quiet journey is shattered.
WILDER IS A resourceful,
talented actor who under other
accurstance plays the straight romantic
lead. Here though, he must play
a normal man caught up in a fantastic series of events that often being thrown off the brain,reatfully and finally threatens his life.
In the first place, the conception of Caldwell as a sensitive, bewildered innocent is
The changes in Wilder's
The Cinema
ARTHUR HILLER'S direction is most responsible for failing to prepare us for the challenge, because our performance seem inconsistent. Normally, Hiller is at least a polished craftman who gets even performances from his peers. When Hiller gets a grip on the material.
Not surprisingly, it is when Caldwell gets frustrated that Wilder is at his best. When he finds himself without forgers or seizing a gun from a backwoods sherrif, Wilder maintains his manic comic energy. Yet as he resumes his more sophisticated attitude for "night" scenes, the shift underscores his characterization.
just too blond to support his later heroic life. Add to this the uneven comic bent of the actor, whose gift to experience difficulty.
R tl
character always occur in stress situations, usually with comic overtones, where Hiller's direction is weakest. Hiller is best with the ridiculous low-key sex repatriate that opens the film; the more intimate the character, the better. But he can no feel for larger locales, or for the heavy actions Wilder must accomplish.
TO mone weat corre Hall sche Boar toda'
By the time the engine heads into Chicago, we are dreading Hiller's depiction of the inevitable crash. The spectacular crash, featuring eight cars plowing through the railroad terminal, looks like a giant fireball. In fact, it was filmed full-scale in two airplane hangars, and cost $500,000.
LONG BEFORE the climax we wonder why the director of "Love Story," "Plaza Suite," and "Man of La Mancha" was trusted with an action film in the first place. Colleen Foote emphasizes suspense, which Hiller is incapable of creating.
So what could possibly be worth seeing in a suspense film that lacks suspense? Amazingly enough, the whole enterprise is joined to life when Richard Prevor comes onscreen.
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boar
Pryor plays a thief named Grover Muldoon, who gets involved with Caldwell's efforts
to rescue Hilly and avoid the police. Pryor is an absolute delight as he skepthically follows the path of the mystery unravel the mysteries onboard.
JUST WATCHING his facial expressions as he reacts to unforeseen complications is funny enough, but Pryor's mobile features are his greatest asset. Add to this his ability to make the most harebranded plot possible of his own imagination, as in the scene when he smears Wilder with shoe polish to sneak him past the FBI in blackface, and you have a fine comic actor.
But Richard Pryor's genius is in the way he transforms tasteless situations and the rapid cadence of foul language into caucus insights. In one scene he disguises himself as a porter to disarm the villain, and uses a wither to comment with a torrent of comments that are as outrageous and hilarious as they are revealing.
Undoubtedly, it is Richard Pryor who has given "Silver Streak" its identity crisis. The advertising executives probably decided that it was better to stress the comedy that takes place in a suspense that wasn't there. You go with the best you have to offer, and in "Silver Streak," the best means Richard Pryor.
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Regents to consider three funding items
TOPEKA-Requests for extra utility money needed because of unusually cold weather, authorization to spend $55,000 to correct construction deficiencies in Wescoe Hall and extension course fee increases are scheduled to be considered by the Kansas Board of Regents in their monthly meeting today.
The meeting will be the first for Regents Frank Lowman, Hays, and Marshal Reeve, Garden City, who were appointed to the board last week by Gov. Robert Bennett.
The extra utility money requested by all Regents institutions, if approved, would be in the form of a supplemental fiscal 1977 budget request. The University of Kansas is asking for an additional $112,83 to be added to $290,894, requested for higher utility
costs already in the KU supplemental fiscal 1977 budget request.
The $35,000 to correct construction flaws in Wessec Hall comprises $25,000 to improve ventilation in its two large lecture halls, $5,000 to replace oversized handrails and $5,000 to provide proper drainage for concrete planter boxes.
The Regents institutions want extension course fees to be increased from $18 to $18 for each undergraduate credit hour and $22 to $27 for each graduate credit hour.
KU also is scheduled to ask the Regents to accept preliminary drawings of a planned radiation therapy facility at the KU Medical Center and a $119,474 bid for a nurse-call system in the new Med Center clinical facility.
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SUA POPULAR MOVIES
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FRIDAY, FEB. 18 & SATURDAY, FEB. 19 7:00, 9:30 p.m. $1 3:30 p.m.Matinee Each Day
THE MILKY WAY (1968) Dir. Luis Bunuel (Fr.-Sp.) $1
Thursday, Feb. 17, 7:30, 9:30
Available for the first time in many years. The complete, original version with sound track. Sunday, Feb. 20, 3:00. Free.
BIRTH OF A NATION (1915) Dir. D.W. Griffith.
BIRDS IN PERU Dir. Romain Gary, with Joan Soborg,
Maurice Ronet. French/subtitled. Rated X.
PLUS
MURDER AT THE VANIETIES. Dr. Mitchell Lelson.
With Kiffy Carlie, Duke Elington & his Orchestra.
Monday, Feb. 21, 7:30 p.m. 75°
Woodruff Auditorium—Tickets available at SUA Office
--reg. $39.50
Sale Price
$2295
SUA Officer and Board Selection Informational Meeting
Monday, Feb. 21, 3:15 p.m.
All interested persons invited to attend
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发
Friday, February 18, 1977
University Daily Kansan
KU
needs win to get advantage
BY DAN BOWERMAN
Associate Shorts Editor
Associate Siorts Editor
John Douglas may have a tough time
tallowing his act in Wednesday night's Iowa
sunday.
But Douglas and the rest of the Kansas Jayhawks must come up with an encore at 7:35 p.m. Saturday when they play Nebraska in Allen Field House. Otherwise, KW will have to play Combined Sixth Place in the Big Eight Post-Season Tournament.
Douglas was almost a one-man team against the Cyclones as he scored a KU career-high -46 points—and had nine rebounds. He almost single-handedly kept the 'Hawks in the game, which KU won in overtime at the buzzer, 91-89.
"I WAS just getting the open shots," Douglas said yesterday, "and I was putting 'em up because I felt I could hit 'em. I wasn't going for 40 or nothing. I didn't even think I had 40. But I knew I had the hot band."
Douglas and his hot hand made 19 of 30 field goals and eight of 14 free throws to Wit Chamberlain's 1968 point total against Nebraska, for the third-highest scoring mark in KU history. Chamberlain holds the single-game scoring record with 52 points and Bud Stallworth's 50-point game against Missouri in 1972 is second.
"I knew I was shooting good," Douglas said. "但 I didn't know it was that good."
he "shooting good," Douglass said, but I didn't know it was that good. BUT DOUGLAS will have to work hard to make more than $40 million for his hacksers' style of play. When Kansas lost to Nebraska in Lincoln, 60-57, Jan. 28. Douglas managed just 14 points.
"I just got caught up in their game because they were ahead, and they slowed it down," he said. "We need to get ahead and make them play our game."
KU coach Ted Owens echoed that sentiment.
"We hope to get them in a movement game," Owens said. "We want to speed the temp of the game considerably. If we leave it to them, it'll be a 50-point game.
"They could come in and stall right off—that would not surprise me at all."
OWENS SAID KU would try to foil the
KU swimmers take early lead in Big 8 meet
The KU women's swim team has a good start toward winning its third straight Big Eight championship. The Jayhawks, with 247.5 points, are the best in the league, shews connection in the meet.
The three-day meet is in Robinson
Natalotum tarnateum '97 at time trials at
the Utah State Fair on May 21. Natalotum n. (2)
The Jayhawks have taken first place and have qualified for the AAU National Championships in the 200-yard medley relay with a time of 1:55.4. Swimming on the qualifying relay team were: Julie Tully, Justin Bridges, the Blanket and cobcant Tracy Hagerson.
KU ALSO finished first in the 800 freefly relay. Team co-captain Cathy Call, Cam Gallehugh, J. K. Walters and Debbie Bunker sweater the race in 8:03.5.
Coach Gary Kempf said he thought the 80 freeflex stley team would qualify for the nationals because it turned in an excellent preliminary trial time.
KU also set Big Eight records in three events and two swimmers had times betwee-
In the 500 freestyle, Debbie Bunker took second place and set a Big Eight record with a time of 15.5:6. Call was third at 5:20, also surpassing the mark conference mark.
Walter was second in the 50 breaststroke
tattoo. Anderson was third in the 100
batteryfly. I yelled.
Call swam a 21:8 to the for second in the individual medley with Nebraska's 20-year-old.
Laurie Prospet was third in the one-meter diving competition with 357.05 points.
Other team scores were: Nebraska, 1923;
Missouri, 11; Oklahoma State, 101; Iowa
State, 87.
cormunkers' slow style of play by using the fast break whenever possible and by ap- plaining.
McPfee, a 6-8 sophomore center, hurt KU
injured first meeting with 28 points and
rebounded.
However, Nebraska's Carl McPike makes Owens worry about how the Hawks apply to Nebraska.
"We can use one of two choices," Owens said. "We can support on McPipe, or we can try to extend the pressure to stop the ball from getting in to him."
THE JAYHAWKS also will have to watch for Brian Banks, 6-1 guard, and Bob Siegel.
6-7 forward, the 'Hunkers' other scoring threats. Against KU, Banks and Siegad had 13 and 11 points respectively, and Siegad had six rebounds. The remaining eight points for Nebraus in that game were divided between Terry Novak and Allen Holder.
Kansas, now tied with Nebraska for fourth place in the conference with 7-5 record, faces yet another must-win situation, according to Owens.
The Jayhawks are fighting for a spot in the first division so they can play the first round of the post-season tournament in Allen Field House.
in other conference games, Kansas State (9-3) will be at Missouri (9-3) in a regionally televised contest. Iowa State (2-10) will be at Alabama State (3-4) will be at Colorado (3-9).
Probable Starters
KANSAE
F-Herb Nobles, 6.7 senior
C-CIH Johnson, 6.2 junior
G-John Browne, 5.8 junior
G-John Doughead, 6.4 junior
G-Hasan Hason, 6.2 preman
F-Bogel Siegel, 67 senior
F-Terry Nearak, 64 junior
G-Ritan Hanks, 65 sophomore
G-Ritan Hanks, 65 sophomore
G-Allen Holder, 62 senior
KU football signings reach 23
Quarterback Steve Smith headed a list of seven recruits who signed national letters of intent yesterday to play football at the University of Kansas.
That brings to 23 the total number of high school seniors and junior college transfers who have signed with the Jayhawks since Wednesday, the first day national letters could be signed. More prospects are expected to sign in the coming days, according to the KU football office, because the Jayhawks have 30 scholarships available.
Smith's official signing was merely a formality as the 64 and 185-pound athlete, who led Emporia High School with a 120 victory over Washington in signed a Big Eight letter of intent to play for Kansas Feb. 8. Kansas head coach Bud Moore hadn't made the earlier signing official before, however, saying the national team signed dating ties were too close together.
TWO OTHER quarterbacks, Harry Sydney and Frank Wattelet, were also signed yesterday bringing the total number of quarterbacks recruited thus far to five. Sydney, 6-1 and 185 pounds, is from Alabama, and Jimmy Johnson, 185, is from Abilene. They join recruits Brian Bethke and Jeff Hines at quarterback.
The other four sixes yesterday were linemen, bringing that total to 15. They were Craig DVries, 6-4 and 250, Kinnelon, N.J.; Mike Laughman, 6-3 and 240, Warrick; Peter Murray, 6-3 and 250, Coffeyville Community Junior College; and Rob Whitten, 6-3 and 230, Junction City.
"So far we feel we've had a good year," Moore said, "but there are still some very good prospects in the job market and a big difference in the final evaluation of our recruiting success."
MOORE HAD just returned from a trip
south try to recruit 6.7, 270-pounder
wrong way to bring Airmingham, Ala.
youth signed with Austin.
The Jayhawks are also still seeking John Odell, 56 and 280, of Wellington, but the blue-chip prospect won't be signing anywhere until after he has visited the University of Arkansas this weekend. Odell, who runs the 40-yard dash in 4.8, is reportedly considering KU as well as Texas Tech, Arkansas and Oklahoma.
Defensive back Dick Boushka, 6-1 and 195, of Kaunap. Carmel in Wichita, will be making his official visit to KU this weekend. Boushka, who is sought by many schools, also is considering signing with Notre Dame and Duke universities.
Moore is expected to go on several recruiting trips in the coming days, including an event at the University of Iowa.
extra extra
MINORITY SPEAKER AFFAIRS
CULTURAL ENRICHMENT PROGRAM
MINISTRY AFFAIRS SPEAKER PROGRAM RAMON ROUBIDEAUX, A.I.M. ATTORNEY "Educational Dilemma or Native Americans in the Professions" Friday, Feb. 18, 1977
7:30 p.m. Kansas Union, Forum Room
No Admission Charge. For information, call 864-4353.
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Action Peace Corps, Vista
Representatives will be on campus at the following placement offices:
"I have not sent these prophets, they rye ran; I have not spoken to them, yet they prophesied. But if they stood in my counsel, and had caused My people to hear My words, then I did not send My people; and from the evil of their doing," Jeremiah 32:12, 21.
"Ot making many books there is no end — Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter (of life and death). Fear God and keep His Commandments; for this is the whole duty of man. For His shall bring every work into judgement, WITH EVERY SECRET THING, whether it be good or whether it be evil." Epistles 12:12-14.
L.A.&S. Tues., March 1
Educ. Wed., March 2
Bus. Wed., March 2
Engr. Thurs., March 3
"And God is angry with the wicked every day — The wickled is shall be turned into hell, and all the NATIONS that would be punished shall be punished."
During the past thirty years or more we have not been very successful and made a good job of "breaking God's and Christ's bands as sunders, and casting away their cords from us? is not the rise of crime, rape, robs, pillage and burning out of our society." He said in his article about "holding in derision and vexing with all adversity" those who reject His Laws and Commandments?
"Now therefore fear The Lord and serve him in sincerity and truth — And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose ye this day when you will serve — but as for me and my house, we will serve The Lord." Joshua 24:14, 15.
imagine a vain thing, their kings and rulers," and that their rage is against God Himself, and His Anointed," and for the purpose of getting rid of His Laws and Commandments. "Let us break our bands asasun, and cast away their cords from us." In this Psalm God also reveals to us the fruit and harvest of an sancillary will bring the contempt of the Almighty: "He shall insult them in diction. He shall speak up against them in his wrath, and xex them in His sore displeasure."
10:00 MARSON GALLERIES Art Sale, Lobby. Union
4:00 MIKE SMETZER, poot, Parlor A, Union
Every plant in the Greenhouse $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price Starts Fri., 2/18 Ends Sat., 2/26
The
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12:00 JOE UTTERBACK, jazz pianist Lobby, Strong Hail
1/2 Price
8:00 "DAMES AT SEA," dessert theatre Big Eight Room, Union, $3.00 ($2.00 for residence hall residents)
8:00 "LOOT," Theatre production,
University Theater, Murphy
$3.25, 2.50, 1.75 (students free)
"BE NOT DECEIVED; GOD IS NOT MOCKED; FOR WHATSOEVER A MAN SOWTH, THAT SHALL HE ALSO REAP. FOR HE THAT SOWTH TO HIS FLESH SHALL OF THE FLESH ASH CORRUPTION; BUT HE THAT SOWTH TO THE SPRINT SHALL OF THE SPRINT REAP LIFE TO THE SPRINT SHALL OF THE SPRINT REAP LIFE TO over 800 times it has presented God's question to man in the Second Pauli: "Why Do The Heathen Rage?" together with his Statement as to who are the heathen: "People who
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
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Information at SUA - 864-3477
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"AND THOU SHALT REMEMBER ALL THE WAY THE LORD HOD GYTH HAD LED THEE FORTY YEARS."
— Deuteronomy 8.2: For your consideration: the same Lord God has led our nation these 150 odd years. 1777-1930.
Generally speaking, it was in the 1930s our nation and her government began to turn away from and follow her laws. His Law, and His Commandments. However, we kept on writing on our money "in God We Trust." and still do, in spite of the fact that we have 'cast away the Law of the Lord of Hosts' in many respects: concerning idolatry, profaneness, Sabbath desecration, dishonoring of father and mother, murder, adultery, stealing, false witness, and covetousness — 'covetousness is idolatry.' Chris said to us: 'I will go out of my life and not be taken away when we not taken away his lordship of the sacred day and turned it over to the kings of the world, the flesh, and the贼`I also do, so we not almost boast that we have nearly done away with the death penalty commanded by The Almighty, and are saving the lives of murderers, rapists, whoremongers, homosexuals, and others whom God commanded His people to put to death and send their spirits back to Him who gave them? We will not take time to speak of our heavy and growing crop of crime, Ilhires, ivories, covetousness.
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Friday, February 18. 1977
9
Track teams win easily
By ROB RAINS
Sports Writer
The Kansas jumpers were the leading performers as the Jayhawk track team run into the record books last night. KU overpowered Oklahoma State and Wichita State to win a triangular meet in Allen Field House.
The Jayhawks, behind the record-breaking performances of Steve Rainbolt, Jay Reardon, Tad Scales and Mike Wilk, won their fifth meet of the season, scoring 112 points to 34 for WSU and 26 for OSU.
The KU women, getting some outstanding marks of their own, established an early lead and defeated Wichita State 70-42 in a game that un concurrently with the men's triangular.
IT APPAREED that man's assistant coach Gary Pepin had given his charges a dose or two of jumping beans as record record fell before the enthusiastic crowd.
First it was Scales, who finally cleared 17 feet in the pole vault, going to 17¼ in his second attempt to give him a personal mark of 17 new individual marks the 'Hawks set.
"That thing's been eluding me since high school," Scales said. "It finally dawned on me that the Big Eight meet was next weekend and I had to set roping."
The high jump provided the most excitement for the crowd as Rainbolt and Reardon both cleared 7-1 to qualify for the finals. The Rainbolt later kept 7-2 to win the sprint.
RAINBOLT'S JUMP tied the KU indoor record and RAINBOLT's outdoor record. RAINBOLT jump was a lifetime best.
Reardon also recorded a personal best in the long jump but placed only second in the event. Wilk, with 15 inches farther than his previous record, went 24-10 to win. Reardon unseated 24-5.
"This was probably the best meet we've had in this field house," coach Bob Timmons said following the meet. "But these marks scare me just a little. We've got to come back and do it next week in the conference meet."
GEORGE MASON also qualified for the NCAA meet in the three-mile run, turning in a time of 3:39.5, a KU record and a Field House mark.
Other Field House records came from Jay Wagner, who ran a 1:10 in the 600; Dave Linderbush, who ran a 2:30 in the 450; Bill Lunderbush of the Chicago Track Club, formerly of KU, with a 2:10 in the 1,000. KU won all but two events, the mile and two-mile run, and it finished second in both
The Jawhays swept the shot put, taking all four places. They finished one and two in the 60-yard high hurdles, the 880 and had two runners tie for first in the 60-yard low jump.
TIMMONS HOPED that last night's meet would enable him to pick his squad for next weekend's Big Eight meet without much trouble. With all of the outstanding performances, however, it may be a little harder than he had planned.
Final swim meet for KU's coach
The swim meet between Kansas and Oklahoma State tomorrow will be an especially important one for the Jayhawks and their fans. The meet, at 2:30 p.m. in Robinson Natorium, will be the last for KU under the direction of head coach Dick Reason, who announced his resignation Tuesday.
Kansas takes a 3-5 dual meet record into tomorrow's contest. The Jawahvers have shown consistency in their past three meets, and will be in the certain areas of the team's performance.
"Three areas that are keen disappointments are the 50-yard freestyle, the 100-yard freestyle and the 200-yard backstroke." Reasonan said. "I think it's more of a mental thing than physical. But what's happening on our face and we just can't do this."
The women's squad performed better than coach Tom Lionvale had expected in pickup win over WSU. He had a few more points could lose by about seven or eight points.
"The atmosphere was infectious tonight." Lionvale said. "Emotion and momentum are such a big part of track and field, and from there we were on and on from there. We cooked all night."
ANAHOBIE
Steve Rainbolt is congratulated after high jumping 7-2
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Rock Chalk Revue Feb.25th-26th
Tickets available at SUA office $3.00-$3.25
Good Seats Still Available for Friday-But Hurry!
NFL, players close to settlement
NEW YORK (AP) — After more than three years of often-bitter negotiations, the National Football League and its players almost reached labor peace yesterday.
Sargent Karch, executive director of the NFL Management Council, said Ed Garvey, executive director of the players association, jointly announced 'an agreement in principle that a collective agreement between the clubs includes provision for a modified draft.'
THE SETTLEM followed two weeks of intensive talks, first in Washington at player association headquarters and then in New York at the offices of the Management
It was learned that the draft plan calls for a system that includes built-in negotiation time limits, similar to the draft now in use in the National Basketball Association.
That formula grants clubs one-year negotiating rights to drafted players. It allows players who don't sign within that time and don't play professional basketball in another league to return to the list of players for the next year's NBA draft.
THE PLAYERS association has scheduled a meeting of its executive committee for next Thursday. On the committee are President Dick Anderson of the Miami Dolphins, NFC vice president Jared Goff of the AFC and President Gene Uphaw of the Oakland Raiders. Player representatives are scheduled to meet Friday.
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The Management Council was trying to arrange a meeting of its executive committee.
Even with early ratification, the college
draft is unlikely to be held before April.
Commissioner Pete Rozele welcomed the agreement, ending a conflict that began when the last collective bargaining agreement expired Jan. 31, 1974.
NOW NURSES WHO HAVE BSRN, MSRN DEGREES ARE WANTED FOR NEW PEACE CORPS AND VISTA PROJECTS
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I
UNIVERSITY THEATRE—MURPHY HALL Feb.18,19,24,25 at 8:00 p.m. Feb.20 at 2:30 p.m. Ticket Reservations: 864-3982 KU students admitted without charge upon receipt of current Certificate of Registration. This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fee.
---
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Friday, February 18, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Osness to be on Olympic group
BY COURTNEY THOMPSON
Associate Sports Editor
As president-elect of the National Association for Sport and Physical Education of America, more Overseas soon become a member of the Commission on Olympic sports.
Oness, chairman of the department of Health, Physical Education Recretation at the University of Kansas, will become an official participant in the Olympic commission when he assumes the NASPE presidency Mar. 28.
Former President Gerald Ford started the commission and President Jimmy Carter is continuing it. The group consists of seven or eight persons not integrally involved in sports, Osness said. Most are legislators.
"The COMMISSION was created to bring some sense to the whole thing (Olympics)," Oursaid says. Its members are drawn from sports to make objective judgments."
ABC television news commentator Howard K. Smith is the chairman of the President's commission, whose purpose is to give athletics credibility. Results of this group's this group will be used by the President to make revisions in Olympic policies.
Possible subsiding of athletics preparing for Olympic competition similar to that of European countries should be considered, Oness said. He suggested that if this were the case, athletes' performances might improve substantially.
IT ALSO appears, he said, that a "super committee" would be recommended to establish policies for policing amateur sports in this country.
The group would be superior in authority to the NCAA, AAU, USTFF and other branch groups that support amateur athletic competition, Ossess explained.
"There is a fierce competition now between these suborganizations that needs to be eliminated if an athlete is to have a good opportunity to prepare for the Olympics."
Now an athlete can compete in a meet only if it is sanctioned by the amateur
Women's coach named to head All-Star team
Marian Washington, director of women's intercollegiate athletics at KU, has been selected to coach the East team in the first Kansas high school girls East-West All-Star basketball game. Washington also is KU women's basketball coach.
The game, sponsored by the Topena
school, is scheduled for March 18
at Waltham High in Topeka.
Judy Akera, women's basketball coach at
State University, will coach the
West team.
The teams will be selected by the Capital-Journal's sports staff, in the same manner as their All-State teams are chosen, Stan Gorczynski and the Capital-Journal staff member, said yesterday.
WILSON SAID the paper decided to sponsor the girls' game this year because past sponsorship of Kansas high school boys' All-Star football and basketball games had been successful. Proceeds from fund for Toeka's zoo to a development fund for Toeka's zoo.
The game won't be sanctioned by the Amateur High Activity Association, but the High School Athletic Association will.
"Nobody's eligibility will be affected, but we just won't have the stamp of approval on your resumes."
The two coaches were selected, Wilson said, because the Capital-Journal thought it would increase interest in the game. He said the coach had already been well respected around the state.
athletic association in which he holds membership.
"THIS COMPETITION between subgroups puts many athletes in an awkward position with the illogical sanctioning requirements," Oseness said. "And it stems from petty power struggles among the groups."
Oeness that substantial research was needed to straighten out the present situation and to promote amateur athletic competition on a "sane level."
one NASPE will recommend that research efforts be directed toward learning the correct way to train a potential Olympic athlete. Gauss explained:
“It’s one thing to say that a miler like Jim Ryan trains by running 150 miles a week. But do we automatically apply that rule to others who want to be a miler too? Obviously not.”
Oness said he also would recommend investigation into the advisability of international competition for potential Olympic athletes. He said that prohibiting such competition altogether wasn't the answer to all of this travel has proved embarrassing.
THE NASPE, through Omah, intends to encourage an increased research base concerning training methods, physiological effects of drug use and the effects of drug use on athletes.
NASPE is a national group of about 20,000 to 30,000 members. It is a division of a larger organization—the American Alliance of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, which has a membership of about 45,000.
NASPE isn't in the "business of competition." Owners said, but is a in-development project.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 18, 1977
11
Election results
est
These are the official returns for Student Senate seats. Votes for Graduate School senators, College Assembly members and class officers will be counted today. The winners are in darker type. Ties will be broken by a coin flip.
ARCHITECTURE
Jane Clemence (Team Management) 21
Benjamin Fitzpatrick (Team Management) 35
Reeve W. Wiedeman (Reflection) 21
Joseph Bandy (Awards) 24
Honore Aiello (Awards) 34
Curt Woolley (Reflection) 21
Todd Hunter (Avanid) 84
Jack Burris (Avanid) 79
Rick Chamberlin (Avanid) 86
Dee Cockburn (de) 76
Scotland He(Redhead)-de 76
Harrison He(Redhead)-de 75
Britt McPheron (Reflection) 75
Britt McPheron (Reflection) 75
Kenneth Leahner (Avanid) 80
Kenneth Leahner (Spectrum) 80
Cindy Wilson (Spectrum) 82
EDUCATION
Beth Amee MacCurry (Reflection)
Ben Cohen (Avalanche)
Steve Hawkins (Reflection)
Steve Hawkins (Reflection)
Kevin Lecker (Spectrum)
Caleb Clark (Spectrum)
Caleb Clark (Spectrum)
Mary M. Towner (Spinner-dia)
Marcia McKinney (Reflection)
Janet Haverty (Avanti)
Jamie Loudon (Avanti)
Linda Loadon (Avanti)
David Newman (Newman)
Sherry McKeen (Spectrum)
Bill Cannon (Reflection)
Tom Cornell (Cornet)
Bruce Douglas (Spectrum) 96
Mary Berry (Spectrum) 87
Julia Becker (Reflection) 85
Dong Ferguson (Reflection) 82
Mary McDonald (Avanti) 79
Sally McDonald (Avanti) 78
Phill Kaufman (Spectrum) 75
Phil Kaufman (Spectrum) 75
Deliver E. Cole (G spectrum) 74
Scott J. Ward (Avanti) 73
Scott J. Ward (Avanti) 73
Kathy Russell (Reflection) 61
Kathy Russell (Reflection) 61
Sana Glana (Reflection) 54
Sana Glana (Reflection) 54
Jordan Hanna (Avanti) 46
Jordan Hanna (Avanti) 46
Tom Marshall (Indep.)
David Fuchs (Avanti)
David Fishs (Avanti)
Lawrence Minter (Indep.)
Lawrence Minter (Avanti)
Bill Sherman (Avanti)
Bill Sherman (Avanti)
Gary Parrish (Avanti)
Gary Parrish (Avanti)
Gavin Halland (Avanti)
Jay Shales (Spectrum)
Jay Shales (Spectrum)
Ed Hir (Avanti)
Jim McCarten (Avanti)
Jim McCarten (Avanti)
Richard Durbank (Reflection)
Richard Durbank (Reflection)
Nathan Builton (Reflection)
Nathan Builton (Reflection)
sck (Indep.) TOWNSHIP PERM
Teri Pollard (Reflection) ... 29
Kerlin Binder (Index) ... 31
Dave Larkin (Spectrum) 95
Gree Bashke (Noiseband) 88
Janet Ferves (Reflection)
Dan Ferves (Reflection)
Dan Ferves (Reflection)
Bucky Hermann (Reflection)
Bucky Hermann (Spectrum)
Tin Aavir (Spectrum)
Tin Aavir (Spectrum)
Tin Aavir (Aerial)
Jenna Kuvac (Reflection) 34
Lia Bennett (Reflection) 22
KANSAN WANT ADS
Susan Ringer (Avail)
127
Nancy Drewler (Avail)
137
Nancy Drewler (Avail)
139
Brial Sherwin (Avail)
139
Brial Sherwin (Avail)
139
Paul Rabin (Spectrom)
140
Paul Rabin (Spectrom)
140
Caleb Bailey (Avail)
102
Caleb Bailey (Avail)
102
Rolf Lindau (Indep)
66
Rolf Lindau (Indep)
T. C. Glass (Spectrum) 900
T. E. Sullivan (Spectrum) 860
Ladonna Mae (Avanti) 900
Seat McKinney (Spectrum) 870
Nickley Mae (Avanti) 79
Jim Lales (Alternative) 83
Pam Kearn (Avanti) 82
Mark Silberman (Spectrum) 87
Mark Silberman (Spectrum) 69
Carter Shields (Reflection) 64
Carter Shields (Reflection) 64
David Pearman (Immediate) 60
John Payne (Immediate) 54
Allen Reynolds (Avanti) 51
Ed Mick (Avanti) 43
Allen Reynolds (Avanti) 40
Johny Hill (Reflection)
Bradley Banks (Spectrum)
Diane Searle (Avenel)
Malati Marie (Spectrum)
Ryan Fleming (Spectrum)
Mark Bernard (Reflection)
David Jett (Reflection)
Laura Avalone (Reflection)
Laura Traphis (Spectrum)
Mike Bengood (Spectrum)
Wilhelm Wiegand (Independence)
Mark Winkelman (Spectrum)
Tin Size狮 (Spectrums) ... 148
Kim Wetland (Spectrums) ... 137
Kim Wetland (Spectrums) ... 137
Randy Rock (Spectrums) ... 138
Randy Rock (Spectrums) ... 138
Leslie Aine Graves (Avant) ... 126
Leslie Aine Graves (Avant) ... 126
Tom Wilson (Reflection) ... 94
Tom Wilson (Reflection) ... 94
Steve Morgan (Indep) ... 94
Steve Morgan (Indep) ... 94
Jeff Erfler (Reflection) ... 70
Jeff Erfler (Reflection) ... 70
Craig Bleeding (Index) ... 64
Craig Bleeding (Index) ... 64
Mike Harper (Reflection) 138
Michael C. Davis (Assessment) 157
Amy Gregg (Reflection) 137
Eric Dahl (Reflection) 140
Reggie Robson (Reflection) 150
Patty Craig (Spectrum) 96
Ed Sucky (Reflection) 96
Brad Sack (Spectrum) 81
Brad Sack (Adaptive) 81
Brad Sack (Adaptive) 79
Mary Huffman (Assessment) 77
Mary Huffman (Spectrum) 77
Louanne O'Dail (Reflection) 77
Lauren O'Dail (Spectrum) 77
Clark Kindle (Independence) 75
Claudine Wakel (Spectrum) 75
Ladd Wakel (Adaptive) 74
Grace Warren (Spectrum) 64
Bomile de Noyelles (Indep.) ... B
OREY RISTERMAN (RESTAURATION).
TIBERNAL ARTS.
Pamela Bush (Reflection)
Cheryl Koehler (Reflection)
Vikki Catlett (Reflection)
Betsy McCarley (Reflection)
Tim O'Connor (Reflection)
Mike O'Connor (Reflection)
Mike Pendregat (Reflection)
Marianna DeWitt (Reflection)
Joshua Hisham (Spectrum)
Judy Kidd (Spectrum)
Jodie Matlin (Spectrum)
Jodie Matlin (Spectrum)
Bill Ekin (Avali)
Bill Ekin (Spectrum)
Collain Chandler (Avail)
Collain Chandler (Avail)
Claudia Shuarterman (Spectrum)
Claudia Shuarterman (Spectrum)
Craig Dawson (Spectrum)
Craig Dawson (Spectrum)
T. J. Wilber (Spectrum)
Bob Meyer (Reflection)
Bob Meyer (Reflection)
Scott Nedian (Spectrum)
Scott Nedian (Spectrum)
Mark Bolton (Avail)
Brice Bufferman (Avail)
Brice Bufferman (Avail)
David Heast (Indepent)
Jim Willis (Avali)
John Easte (Avali)
John Easte (Avali)
Andy Randle (Avali)
Andy Randle (Avali)
Ken Ideman (Avali)
Ken Ideman (Avali)
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CLASSIFIED RATES
Acrecommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their academic or financial status. BIRL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLLT HALL
one two three four five
time times times times times
15 words or
fewer ... $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word ... 01 02 03 04 05
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UK business office at 864-4358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 664-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Give away $10 per week and $200 cash, plus
phone numbers to U. Telephone Directory
Belle Yellow Pagen. U.S. Postal Service
FREE UNIVERSITY Course descriptions are available in the SUA offer. Webell Wesl, ed. 2018.
Canterbury House, the Episcopal house at KU is open for study, meditation, prayer, and pro-
fessional worship. KU serves Louisiana; Services: Holy Communion Tues. 9 a.m.
12:30, 12:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. at Wednesday 12:30, 12:30 p.m.
Subjects were for research study on male athlete
come to 401 Baird hospital after 10:30 a.m. for
blood tests.
The Pilot Club of Lawrence announces their 19th
annual meeting on Thursday, May 26, 2022. 26, 27. National Guard Armory, 2nd and 1nd.
Lawrence, KS. Show bowls team at 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
One admiration $1.50--good all three days. Food
must be pre-ordered.
ENTERTAINMENT
- "Ferry Furnace" Coffee House 1118 Louisiana
Friday and Saturday at 9 a.m.
2-18
FOR RENT
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to
theatre buildings and nursing facility. 843,9709
Apartment and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
no pets, 843-7567
Frontier Rides—short term leaves available.
Facilities include indoor pool + shag carpet +
with study. Hotented indoor pool + shag carpet +
room pool + disposal + laundry facilities +
furnished room and furnished from $135. Call 842-768-3900 or un
Gatehouse Apartments - Call Becky now: Summer
2014; 2013; 2012. Contracts on all Gatehouse apartment 681-881-
798, 681-881-815, 681-881-821.
Jahawkher Township, now leading beautiful 3-bedroom homes, will have an opening before March 31, and leave on our Early Bird Savings Plan. For more information, visit jahawkhertownship.com.
Female grad student to share furnished house near campus. Many extras. 811-643-211
2-21
Subluate 3-bedroom unfurnished house immediately to Aug. 15. Available at: 214-874-6011, 841-874-6011, 841-874-6011
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
A
RAASCH
SADDLE 6 BRIDLE SNOP
8 30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
.
sericard Masterchi
Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen & Sandwich Shop
1. two, 1 bedroom apartments, 1 block from KU:
843-238 or 841-8767
2. 24-24
BELGIAN CENTRE FOR SPORTS ENTERTAINMENT
Must shelter nile, 2 bedroom influffurbed apartments, 4 blocks from campus $150 per month **2/24**
a-bedroom apartment partially furnished. 1 block to campus. Heat 842-8744. 2-24
846 Illinois 843-7685
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense in addition to Western Civilization; 2. For Exam preparation, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Topeka Books.
3-bedroom, 1) hath townhouse for sublease. Fireplace:
811-569-7617, or 843-7233.
has the eyeglasses
you want!
806 Massachusetts
Phone 814-7421
Redeemer Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod membership (conservative). All students and faculty active youth group. Place: 300s and Haskell. Email: rededemer@lutheranchurch.org more information contact: Mit Fredrickson at 843-5826, or Mrs. Judson Smoyer. School at 101s-Lymberham League's Launceston meet evenings.
UNICORNS, Mermials, wings of flight and other imaginings in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to choose from. Stone cutting service. Repair service. Professional work, satisfaction guaranteed.
Advent model 300 Stereo Receiver: designed to offer the kind of stereo equipment used in higher-end performance compared directly with its audible performance compared directly to that of the most expensive portable chassis compass. The Advent model 300 Stereo Receiver is sold in the trades.
VISIONS
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
MEL. AUG. ELECTRIC,
ELEC. 845-9000, 8900 w. eih.
9th edn.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
furniture accessories. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704% Mass.
Furniture, 212 East 59th Street, 212-834-6100.
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only one with a specification rating of ± 2 dB. Ah-Beh a soundproofing foam for Ray. Ada 103, E. 8th. Price from $175.
Potion Parlier. Fine organic shampoo and lotions.
Natural vegetable sponges and bear bite hardens.
Use for hair removal.
Four rings with genius coraline stones. 98.5%
white. Inlaid from Iraq. Birth price: 841-700.
2-18
71 GMC! 3; T Window Van, carpet, call 1-846-516-5743 or write box at 111.511 FIint #2
Volkswagen Owners! Four new WSW radial tires (195/60R14) for the 2013 model year ($1,450). Add $25 for life mounting. For $1,600. Mass The appliance is stored in a box with the disc mounted on the rear bumper with the discount code WOOLWEEK-13. BIRTH DATE: 12/19. BIRTH TIME: 12/19. BIRTH MONTH: 12/19. BIRTH YEAR: 1950.
Gibson 50 guitar w/ eave / Excellent condition/
sound. Mathews Audio 43-8698, after 5-18
2-18
One pair of E.S.P. 3-way 40 W.P.C. speakers $80.
Call 814-6576.
Fantastic air bed for sale All sizes Call or write
Grant 1634 800 658 Gtr 89th St 68th St 2-18
69 Mustang Mach I 1.31. Auto Trans, PS, black.
Red interior; at 4 p.m. Kent 864-2305.
1972 VW fachback, Beige, clean, dependable, tail-
pad, 1500, 1821, Olistea. 2-18
1976 Dassan 12210, 26,000 Miles, good condition.
Call Baldwin 25449-3484 after 6.
2-18
HORIZONS HONDA
1975 Honda 500 Super Sport 5,000 miles, fatfating, bark will run, and more, #48-18.
Keep (7) 21-8.
Camera-4 month old Nikokernel PT-2 with
microphone 237 flash, and more
841-388 keep trying.
Attention new KUMC Medical Students: For sale:
Wessee biochemical microscope; 10×, 40×, 100× oil
objectives; 2 years old, excellent condition;
KUMC-834, write or j. Write, Box 510,
KUMC-834.
2-22
Sony TTS-T900 turntable with SME 3000 II tone
heads it will not perform $550 turntable with
222.4 mm.
Kennedy W10 sturst server receiver, less than a year
Merkel 9600 ml oak coffee maker
Cali Mike 424-2528
2-18
Bicycle=312; MKM: 879. Reynolds 321 DTB Tubing
Campanulae=536; MKM: 879. Reynolds 321 DTB Tubing
Campsalae=536; MKM: 879. Reynolds 321 DTB Tubing
Campsalae=536; MKM: 879. Reynolds 321 DTB Tubing
6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
8-8 Sun.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
1011 w. o.m.
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
HEAD TO HEALTH
.901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
Jewel 1971 C-3.5. Good condition. Must sell. 844-234. 887-648 or room 129 Lindley. LN234.
Owens Liquor Store
843-1186
910 N. 2nd
843-9891
The Advent Company is the leader in the Hi-Fi industry in research and product development. The company standard is designed to enable high gain popularity as one of the cleanest units at any price. And with a new range of new engineering and value uninsured at any price range, Your authorized Adventader is your choice 9-1
Tri-Phase Spakers - A Real Home Dice System Tri-Phase duty wires with dual high freq drives provide a safe protection. Dig out these Boogie Shes and check these specially designed units out at Ray Anderson's office.
1965 Baldwin Electric Guitar. Good condition-
$150.843-1085
2-23
SKI-Standing 195 ,cm. with look G.T. binders.
Used with three days. Like new, must be
cleaned.
Free stereo catale catalog lists incredible discounts on
Yamabu, Advent.宿, Brown, Crown, Daliughue,
Douglas, Enseigne, Ensign, Eno, Fendler, Gonville,
Rentz, 100 other kit and audiophile lines. Write
to Sound Values, IMS LS, E 3rd Street, New York.
2-18
Everything in my apartment must be sold. Chairs,
inside, outside, equipment, e., Saturday, July 15.
HELP WANTED
Ludwig Quadras-ph. Full set with Zidhijian jum-
cal. Call 841-3087. 2-246
Graduate Assistantship three-quarter time.
Chemistry-graduate fellowship. Apply in 290 MHz
location by February 15.
current computer programmer available immediate start. Office of Information Systems is seeking a ½ year student computer programmer in the Department of Information Systems in seeking a ½ year student computer programmer in the Department of Information Systems in a multi-agency administrative information system organization, utilizing an IBM 390 3456 processing BLTE network. Excellent career opportunity with experience in training programmer course and/or 6 months COHQL proficiency in KU School resume to Michael D. Roth-O'Leary Law, Application deadlines 8/17-9/17, EMPLOYEE M人才, microbes, and persons responsible for
Born Put your team through college the easy way.
Become an Avon Representative, and make the money you need, selling quality products on your website. For full details, call 842-642-6050.
3-8
Men or women. We need 5 people immediately.
Must have own transportation and be willing to travel.
For personal interview call Bob Lawson, 823-8110.
Lawson Kirby Carry. Will be need to time 4-15
LIBERAL, ARTS MAJORS to work in work
with the National Museum of American
Poetry representing an campus March
5 at a museum in a city.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost- Math 124 notes in Strong Hall, green spiral
notebook. Math 842-9259.
2-18
Lost a men's wedding band made of yellow and white leather. A custom-made gold white pocket Rittenhoff is offered. Call 843-267-9055.
Lost-Fri—11-Y-Zone, men's blue dress
Please return 240-room or leave Mau's
2-22
Lost last great friendship young at Black male with
Broadway in front of Strong. Please 822-4526,
Rundown in front of Strong. Please 822-4526,
Strand in front of Strong. Please 822-4526,
Found-Ladies wrist watch visit of Kappa
Kappa Gamma Sorrorly Call 841-7536, ask for
information.
Found...Mens'Belle Watch in the parking lot at Alumni Place. Suite 843-825-221
Found: Mr. silver's篮板 on Elkworth basketball court. Call 641-3080 to identify 2-22
MISCELLANEOUS
Just arrived. Incease from the Republic of China,
618th Street, 814-8000 for the consolition 15 and
18. 814th Street, 814-8000
10% off dinner with coupon
sisterkettlecale
Selected Secondhand
Goods • Vintage Clothing
- Furniture - Antiques
- Imported Clothing
HALF AS MUCH
7308 Mass. 841-7070
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass.
NOTICE
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes
Swan Shop. clock television. Open daily 12-5-
5-11.
EUROPE WORLDWIDE academic year round. SATA 4, 1228 First Ave. Tucker, Q4
SAN FRANCISCO 90635
Neceded: GAY CUIPLES who have been living in Hawaii have joined the effort to incorporate an in interesting study investigating maturation of study focus will be on the positive and strength of the often held assumption that gay relationships can lead to marital dissatisfaction. We will give $10 for a purchase of a $425 kit with $425 to Gay Cuiples and $425 to Werner 411-6300. With cooperation of Gay Sesher, we will donate the kit.
Everyone can help someone as a Volunteer. Volunteer Cleaning Issue. 864-389-218
PERSONAL
MARIN MUSIC-We make it easier. Folk, blues,
songbook, jazz, pop. Compose or play.
bandman, mandolin, autoharp, piano. McKenzie
Davis.
RURALE. When you want it, where you want it
you want it. Europe has a number of carriers,
17 European carriers, no charter taxis, call RYDHE.
(230) 624-9000. (230) 624-9000. (230) 624-9000. (230) 624-9000.
Gay Counseling Call. **B24-7500**, 6:12 p.m.
for referral. For socializing calls.
I can help you with physics and math problems and YOU can help me with my English. Call Me 212-876-3042.
**Karate:** Learn the ancient secret of the martial art Karate, which developed on the individuals development as martial arts in China.
Present student ID card and in admitted FREES.
Prepare to return 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Sunday.
Please make sure to arrive on time.
You missed your first opportunity to win $100 bonus price. Ripen Mellow Yellow Pages The Journal.
Accounting or computer science studied wanted
and will have knowledge of good work. Call Me
841-687-9171
841-687-9171
Don't miss ROCK CHALK REVUE Best ever
tickets for Friday the 29th still available at S.U.A.
www.su.a.gov/misc/events
If you want responsible officers for next year at the DEPARTMENT, HEAVY ANTI-DROPS, REFLECTION-HEAVY, Anthony, Daniel Goodwin and James.
We'll get you on class on time! Jayhawk Wake-Up:
831-834-8251 or 831-834-8251, or one person, .224
Happy Birthday David Miller. DW 2-18
RIDES RIDERS
Rizan Wanted- Spring break, destination. Tempe,
Arizona Headed that way? Call Seal for details.
212-658-9700
SERVICES OFFERED
Math tutoring--competent, experienced tutors help you through courses 000, 002, 105, 101, 115, 116, 117, 122, 123, 124, 142, 508, 567, 682 Reasable rates. Call 842-7641. Test preparation.
February "Tune up special!" We clean up and adjust dorsal, brakes and chain. Trio both have accessory mounts for rearview mirrors any part or accessories bought at time of "tune up." Rearview mirrors are $15, one $30, one $30 or speed 3,枪 $16,50.每车 $14,00. single speed, single speed, double speed, multi-speed for all marks of bicycles. Lawnweir Schuhmeyer Cylinder W 10h W 6th 9-6 Mon.-Thursday 9am-5pm.
Geldoscher Optical
DISTINCT TMV EYEWARE
POMPA ALFILIUM
POMPA LERNIUM
POMPA ALFIUM
POMPA LERNIUM
POMPA ALFILIUM
POMPA LERNIUM
POMPA ALFILIUM
POMPA LERNIUM
HEADQUARTERS
Imported Auto Parts
JAMES GANG
Foreign Auto Parts
843-8080
Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m.
- Pinball
THEISM BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy中心 is headquarters for the company, copying in La Crosse and helping you at 838 Massachusetts or phone 842-3610. Thank you.
Experienced typist—term paper, maps, music,
digital media, computer graphics, spellings,
corrected 843-5056 Mr. Wright.
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. t
Volkswagen Tune Up Special^81-500. Buso
Volkswagen Tune Up Special^81-500. Buso
W Ropere W Eintrags Erland Road^84-232.
W Ropere W Eintrags Erland Road^84-232.
Guitar players, players and listeners, listen to
the band on Sunday evening from 6-8
PM at KAU5-1.
Typist editor, IBM Pitcaille. Quality work.
Rates available. Tests, dissertation welcome.
WANTED
- Foosball
Will type your paper with TLC. Term papers and
dissertations are available at 811-730-6594,
811-730-1789 weeks & weekends.
2-18
Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for
paper requests 654-831-244, day: 829-898, every
weekend.
Female roommate wanted for 2-bedroom apart-
ment for $50 a month. On fun run. Call
2-812-9873
842-9873
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Nice apartment for one person beginning June 1.
Address: 3420 9th Ave., San Francisco, CA 94125.
844-498-6955 (campus), or 845-244-6955 (home), 212-377-8822.
Roommate wanted for house, 15 minute walk to campus, $35 month. Call 841-3837. 2-21
The Lounge
Wanted: people with musical talent. If you play piano, violin, cello, or flute, please list these talents earn some extra cash! The 312th Army Reserve Band gets together once a month to perform in the mid-west as well as locally. If you can spare one weekend (16 brs) per month, and have a band, call us at 843-161 or something that thing you enjoy part-time, call us at 843-161 or introduce yourself to me and guide you with an instrument and uniforms. Ask for Sgt. Berny詹姆斯 U.S. Army Reserve; 2100 37th Airborne Brigade.
Tracy Scaife and Terrace Coates need a female remorteate of Tennant Hawks 85 B now. Ou14-1146
Summer roommate needed. Own room, 4 bed-
room house #63 plus 1 utilities. Comfortable.
Roommate needs to be 25 years old or older.
Wanted co-pilot, Companion. Experienced pilot with 20 years of driving experience. Prefer female grade and staff member. Have four place plane available for your request. For more details visit box 371. 2-21
TORT'S DATSUN
500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. B42-8444
TONY'S IMPORTS DATSU
awrence, Kan. 842-0444
1 Roomate (male) for a large house with
extraocation accommodation, utilities 2-21
and 4296
CAMERA
Roommate wanted. Male/Female, quiet location,
traveller, owner, room, close to campus, call GEO.
1234567890.
Su Casa
in THE MARKET PLACE
745 New Hampshire
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts
& Crafts 841-3522
Wool sweaters and ponchos are here.
Wanted - driver or driver to join cash pool to download
information on vehicle for M-F M-P 0-5:00. Call Mary during day 27.
M-F M-P 0-5:00. Call Mary during day 27.
Drive-in Clinic for most imported cars
"It's a beautiful Day" blue album or J. D. Black
Call It 844-707-2911 Will pay good price
Call Us 844-707-2911
- Bud on Tap
- WORK INSTRUCTIONS AND PRACTICES
- Pool
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEM
MAISMITH WALL
THREE NATIONAL BANDS - AMERICAN BANDS - BROOKLYN BANDS
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Bedspreads · Flatted Sheetr
712Mass.St.
WATERBEDS
FIELDS
AIRCRAFT IN FLIGHT
Charter Flights Youth Fares
WingsTo EUROPE
KU Union Bldg./900 Mass.
Hillcrest & The Malls Ctrs.
843-1211
Low-cost Travel Arrangements for Individuals & Groups
CH
EU
RI
SU
Kansas Union
CHARTERERS/YOUTH FARES/APEX/AIR FARE
RENTAL & PURCHASE/STUDENT TOURS
SUA Maupintour travel service
Penguin
HILLCREST B
quality travel arrangements since 1951
- Pool
- Snooker
Ping Pong
Pin-Ball
- Foos-Ball
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
Open 7 Days a week No One Unlocked
12
Friday, February 18, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Weekend Sports Roundup
WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS-KU's women's gymnastics team will have its easiest meet of the season tonight in a tune-up for the State Invitational next weekend.
Although KU's team has been troubled by injuries all season, Wichita State University and Oklahoma have worse troubles. The Wheelerhackers have lost their three top all-around performers and have been scoring in the mid-80s, with two injuries. They haven't scored below 100 since Jan. 21.
A girls' team from the Lawrence Elite Gymnastics Club also will perform exhibition routines at the meet, which begins at 7 p.m. in Robinson Gymnastics.
180. Lockward said he expected KU to score in the 180 to 190 point range.
MEN'S GYMNASTICS—Coach Bock Lovack will be looking for improvement in his KU men's gymnastics team when the Jayhawks meet Fort Hays Kansas State College and Northern Colorado in a 5 p.m. meet tomorrow in Robinson Gymnastics. We will again practice, Kansas, did 17 of 28 routines, or 1 per cent, without major flaws.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL--The KU women's basketball team plays on the road tonight against Southwest Missouri State University at 7:30 in Springfield, Mo.
Lockwood said Fort Hays had been about 170 to 240 possible and that the numbers were too low.
KU, now 11-14 for the season, defeated SMSU 92-51 in Southwest's Turkey Tournament in November. SMSU has an 8-14 record for the year.
The Jayhawks won their last game, 71-61,
against Northwest Missouri State
University in the first women's basketball
in a tournament in Kemper Arena in Kansas
City. Mo.
Jonne French is the leading scoreer and rebounder for SMSU with 13.4 points and eight rebounds a game. Adrian Mitchell is the top scoring for KU with 16 points a game.
MEN'S TENNIS—The KU men's tennis will be more formal. The players will be more serious. Punil (in late)
The Jayhawks are back at home this weekend after travelling to the University of Oklahoma.
KU will play the Wichita State Whitehawk stockies tonight at 6:30 at the Alvaram Ristorante.
At 4 a.m. tomorrow, the 'Hawks will play
their first Edwardville, a team that
defeated KU.
The Wheatshockers are a relatively young team with a reputation of having strong No. 1 and No. 2 players, and the Southern Illinois team is regarded as one of the best in Indiana.
Bill Clarke, Mark Hasking and Jeff Thomas will remain coach Kirkland Gates' top three players. Greg Buller, who didn't play singles against Arkansas, will be in the middle of the league to remain at No. 3 and either Joe Urysser or Declutter will play the No. 6 position.
SOCER CLUB-The KU Socer Club begins its home season tomorrow against the Kansas United Club then travels to Manhattan to take on Kansas State Sunday.
KU coach Bernie Mullin said that the Kansas United team was composed of former KU and K-State players as well as new members of the North American Soccer League.
Last season Kansas United advanced to the quarter-finals of the National Amateur Cup.
The game is at 2 p.m. on the soccer field at 23rd and Iowa.
Student writers to compete here
High school journalists from eastern Kansas will compete here today in the Kansas Scholastic Press Association regional journalism contest.
More than 350 students from 21 high schools are expected to participate in one of three divisions determined by school size. Students from 5A and 4A high schools will compete in one division, 3A schools in a second division and 2A and 1A schools in a third division.
Students will compete in 13 categories of newspaper and yearbook production and
First, second and third-place winners at the regional contest will earn the right to compete in the state journalism contest in March at KU.
ROCKY
HITS RIGHT ON THE BUTTON!
WITH 10 ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS!
Eve. a17:30 9:45
Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:30
SILVER STREAK!
With Gene Wilder
Hillcrest
Ends Tuesday
Barbara Shroeder &
Krit Kristofferson
"A STAR IS BORN"
R
Eve. a17, 15:9, 11:
Sat. Sun. Mat. 1:45
Ends Tuesday
Guardian at the gates of Hell
the sentinel
Eve. 7.15, 9.10, 5:2, 2:05
Ends Tuesday
Wall Disney's
"FRFAKY FRI V"
Eve.
Sat. 7
>SILVER STREAK>
Eve 290 With Gene Wilder
7:40
5:14
Sun
Hillcrest
TODAY: Today is the last day for students to elect the credit-no credit option, to cancel enrollment or to enroll and pay a $10 late fee. Kenneth Wooden, an expert in the field of leadership, will speak at 1:30 in the Kansas Union's Jawkway Room. The lecture is free. The Kansas Scholastic Press Association's REGIONAL JOURNALISM CONTEST is being held on campus. Awards will be given in the fall to Union's Forum, Big 8 and Jawkways Rooms.
On Campus
Events
TONIGHT: THE MINORITY AFFAIRS CULTURAL ENRICHMENT PROGRAM will present Ramon Roubideaux speaking on the "Educational Dilemma of Native Americans in the Professions" at 7:30 in the Union's Forum Room. SIGMA GAMMA RHO sorority will sponsor a dance at 9 in the Kansas Room of the Union.
SUNDAY: THE KU SCOCER CLUB will paly oatway University at 2 p.m. at the 23rd floor of the Building 1.
TOMORROW: There will be a "CARING FOR PETS" workshop at 9:30 a.m. in 602 Dyche Hall. For reservations call 844-4173. The KU SCOCCER CLUB will play Kansas United at 2 p.m. at the 32rd and Iowa Fields. Gay Services of Kansas will sponsor a disco VALENTINE'S DANCE at 8 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. Admission is $1.75.
LOUISE'S IS STILL HERE
7th and Michigan
PRICE LIST
Draws .40
Bottles/Cans .50
Pitchers $1.40
Schooners .70
Hours
Mon.-Sat. 1-12
Louise's West
Louise's West
MALLS Sandwich Shoppe and Deli Meats Cheese Salad Desserts
THE MALLS Sandwich Shoppe and Deli
Meats Cheese Salad Desserts
We're open
10 a.m. 'til 1 a.m.
Bring your People Book Coupon
711 W. 23rd
Malls Shopping Center
We deliver after 5 p.m.
No checks accepted
---
SUA cancels 'Wizard' debut
Bakshi and "Wizards" had been tentatively scheduled to come to KU Fet, 4, but the situation changed in Bakshi's plans. Now both the film and Bakshi's personal appearance have been cancelled because of monetary issues, SUA film board member, said recently.
What had been planned as the Midwent premiere of *The Pursuit* directed by Baldwin, he begged me.
Bakali gained fame for his direction of the movies "Fritz the Cat," "Heavy Traffic," and "Coorskin." He is still on his latest project, "Lor of the Rats."
Schmidt said that 20th Century Fox, which has the rights to "Wizards," suddenly staged a virtual voyage on college campuses. The film was released since last week at a Kansas City theater.
"That's show biz." Schmidt said.
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Lawrence lacks adequate treatment for alcoholics
(Note): This story is the first of a three-part series on alcoholism.)
United States alcoholism statistics are awesome. Alcohol:
—is the most abused and abundant drug
- in related to one-half of the highway fatalities in a year, or 28,000 lives.
—drains the economy of $25 billion a year
—is a disease that afflicts between 10 and 18 million victims.
Despite the enormousness of the problem, Lawrence and many cities its size lack funds, facilities and manpower to deal with alcoholism. They face problems for police, hospitals and alcoholics.
BRUCE BEALE, commission of the Douglas County Citizens Commission on Alcoholism (DCCCA), recently said that Lawrence lacked both a drinking license and a treatment program for alcoholics who needed
Without treatment from a detox unit, Beale said, acclomics can die from delirium tremens (DTs), with withdrawal symptom caused by alcohol poisoning. DTs manifest itself through trembling, hallucinations, ideas of persecution and extreme exhaustion.
medical supervision. A detox unit is necessary to purify the blood of a chronic alcoholic, a 59 bighouse patient.
PAT BEARD, director of the Asher Half-Way House for Alcoholics, 345 Missouri St., said that 10 per cent of the alcohols who have DTs and who withdraw cold turkey die.
Beard said she thought that because so many chronic alcoholics were bolsterous, high-risk patients, it was often difficult to find doctors to help them.
Don Lenz, director of Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said he hoped there would be a detox unit installed within six months, although it would mean finding more manpower to run the 24-hour unit.
Lenz said the reason for the slow development of
treatment programs was that the incidence of alcoholism in Douglas County was unstabilized.
REX JOHNSON, Johnson County sheriff, said his officers picked up five drunkards a week, many of whom have no homes. Consequently, they are taken to treatment facilities for their own protection for a maximum of six hours or simply left alone. He said detox units helped to make sure alcoholies were "dry" before returning home.
Because there is no detox unit or inpatient program in Lawrence, chronic alcoholics must be taken to the nearest facility in Topeka or Kansas City.
Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Hospital, said Watkins only had occidental patients with DTS, and although it had no inpatient program, it helped improve the quality of symptom symptoms with medical and nephrological help.
It is comprised of 20 policemen who cruise the streets 12 hours to look for drunk drivers.
IF DBRUNK (blood alcohol content is higher than 10 per cent), a driver is fixed.
Beale said the DCCCera recently initiated the Alcohol Safety Action Failed (ASAF) to help reduce alcohol use among young people.
If the DCCCA determines that someone is a problem drinker, he is given the choice of facing trial, and possibly jail, or of attending four two-hour Alcohol Information School classes.
Beale said he would like to incorporate more programs, but was hampered by limited funds. The university's budget increased $7,000 from the city for fiscal year 1977, plus a grant from the State Alcohol Abuse Unit for $14,500. Beale said that the state grant, a three-year starter grant, would help him meet his goal, but he anticipated losses from the state next year.
Baea said so far, only four of the 98 who have attended the classes have been reentered for the class.
were distributed to the DCCCA tributaries such as the Asher Half-Way House, a (12-bed residency for alcoholics), the Alcohol Information School and various counseling programs.
Beale said the $23,500 needed to run the Asher house made it a defection operation.
Bale called KU students a tremendous source or volunteers because he thought they were sensitive to them.
WITH MORE MONEY for salaries, Beale said, the DCCCA could introduce new educational and treatment programs, such as an instrument program and a six-unit needs at least six employees to operate it.
Beale said that the grant was used solely for personnel salaries and that city and county funds
Another factor involved in the return of the child, according to Hyde, was a demonstration and meeting in December led by Russell Means, American Indian Movement leader, who called it a kidnapping case.
PLEASANT
Hyde said he thought the demonstration had been important in allowing him and his wife to have Hrolene home for occasional visits before Friday's hearing. After a 90-minute closed-door meeting between Means, Elwyn representatives of the Hydes in Dyce, Ewell let Rrolene return home for two days around Christmas.
Elwell said the parents had since received counseling and had attended parental education in the advice of court. Elwell said the Hyde and the reason their daughter had been retreated
"People keep putting alcohols into a limited role," she said. "They're also human beings. They're not no-good floxies in bars and burns in the gutter."
However, Beaal said, it is difficult to find volunteers and workers because monetary rewards are few and because people are uneducated about alcoholism.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The pediatrician, Charles Loveland, reported the injury to SIGs, which then prompted a call from the hospital.
Complaints filed by campaigners
KANSAN
By MARSHA WOOLERY
Staff Reporter
Seven and a half hours of tedious vote tabulation last Thursday night seem to have paid off for the Student Senate Elections Committee, because no one has contested the election, Kevin Flynn, committee chairman, said yesterday afternoon.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Although both loss presidential candidates, Randy McKernan and Sherri Grey, said last Friday morning that they would ask for a recount because of the close vote, neither has done so. Flynn said. He had said he did not expect anyone to ask for a recount.
Monday, February 21, 1977
See page three
One complaint against the election was filed last week by Harvey C. Jordon, Jr., who received a recount vote and a re-vote of the Nunemaker 2 district because he said his name was printed on his wrong ballot and when the mistake was revealed, the committee did not reprint the ballots.
X rays showed that Rolena had a spinal fracture of the leg and facial bruises. There was no significant change in her blood flow.
HIS COMPLAINT and three others alleging campaign misconduct will be discussed by the committee at 7:30 p.m. in Room 60 of the Kansas Union, Elkport said.
The three complaints alleging campaign misconduct were filed by Steve McMurry.
In the first complaint, McMurray said that members of the Spectrum coalition had violated the Senate Rules and Regulations on the Spectrum T-shirts within 58 feet of the nails.
Juvenile justice a contradiction
The parents were charged with child abuse in October after taking Rolena to a Lawrence pediatrician, saying Rolena had been a bed and a cauldron her leg in the bed *"aime.
Before the polls opened all campaign materials within 50 feet were removed. The candidates were also informed that the campaigns were campaigning within 50 feet of the polls.
In a second complaint, McMurray said that Elections Committee members, who according to Senate rules, must be bipartisan,
outwardly supported certain candidates by
wearing campaign T-shirts and campaign
buttons.
Juvenile Court Judge Mike Elwell said Rolena, who has lived in a foster home since October, would remain in the legal custody of the Social Rehabilitative Services (SRS) agency, with her parents, Anthony and Evelene Helley, who will be under SRS supervision.
As a result of a Friday afternoon hearing in Douglas County Juvenile Court, Rolena McGraw, the 9-month-old daughter of a couple child abused by her child abuse, will be returned to her parents.
Parents regain custody of child after court fight
McMurry also asked that action be taken "against any and all persons or coaltions" who tore down, marked up or destroyed Avanti campaism posters.
McMurry said that he didn't file the complaints to seek disciplinary action against the other coalitions. He said that he hoped the Election Committee would set up guidelines on permissible campaign tactics to avoid the problems in future elections.
FLYNN SAID results of the Senate questionnaire that accompanied the ballots in last week's election should be tabulated on Wednesday night's Senate meeting.
He said the committee needed volunteer help in the Senate office, 108B of the Union, to tabulate the questionmaires in the next two days.
Talying the questionnaires is time-consuming because each questionnaire includes eight questions, and 4,644 questionnaires were submitted -435 more than the number of students voting for student body president.
Because not all the polls registered students who filled out a questionnaire but didn't vote, it is uncertain whether some students filled out extra questionaires and stuffed ballot boxes, a committee member said.
The committee counted class office and graduate student ballots over the weekend.
President - Mike Nelson (Avail)
Vice President - Fred Gann (Avail)
President - Brad Yost (Spectrum)
Treasurer - Pattie Curry (Avail)
President - Tom Brews (Spectrum)
Vice President - Brad Yost (Spectrum)
President - Brad Yost (Spectrum)
Treasurer - Cindy Sugga (Spectrum)
SOPHOMORE CLASS
SOPrification Uber Clerks President—Matt Kilcher Vice-president—Roll Hamilton (Avant) Secretary-Davis Daniel (Reflection) Treasury—Barbara Gurcala (Reflection)
Charlotte Kinnebrook 100
San Jose Shaadi 102
Steve Shedd 106
Bernard Willmott 104
Mick L. Darby 98
Larry Crowse 96
William Reimers 94
William Williams 93
Dick Cowden 26
Frankie 24
Mike Mayer 24
Dave Gorman 24
Steve Kelman 23
Fraval Rock 26
David McSweeney 18
Leila Hard 17
Debra Nails 17
Hugo Nobile 17
Richard Freming 14
Bill Loe 14
Bob Hull 13
Adamus Miskorki 11
Ed Berenhfir 12
Helmert Meyer 16
10
99.9
Student demonstrators
Iranian students wearing blindfolds and hangman's noose demonstrated south of the Kansas Union Friday. Their actions were staged in support of international observers
photo by MIKE CAMPBELL
seeking to gain admittance to Iranian jails to visit what the students termed political prisoners. See story page three.
Regents approve supplemental budget request
D. STEVE DRAFTED
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-The Kansas Board of Regents Friday approved supplemental budget
requests by Regents institutions to cover increased utility costs resulting from unusually cold weather and authorize the construction of new facilities, correct construction flaws in Wesley Hall.
KU student aid said to hinge on Carter
Rv JOHN MUELLER
Staff Reporter
Jerry Rogers, KU director of student financial aid, said yesterday that three programs affecting 800 students were in jeopardy because of the Ford budget. The programs are the National Direct Student Loan Program (NDSL), Supplementary Education Opportunity Grants (EOG) and College Work Study Program (CWSP).
"THE RUMORS we have from Washington are that Carter will approve the cuts," rats said, and the U.S. may not support Health Education and Welfare). may not contest the cuts."
The University of Kansas could lose nearly $1 million in student financial aid if President Jimmy Carter approves federal funding by the former President Gerald Ford.
Carter had been expected to release his recommendations on the federal higher education budget last week. But Rogers said the conditions probably would come tomorrow.
If Carter approves the cuts, Rogers said, KU would lost about $295,000. The figure is
derived from multiplying the average amount of money each student under one of the three programs received last year by the 800 students in the programs.
MUCH OF the average amount, slightly more than $1,150, comes from the NDSL funds. KU last year received $767,000 in federal money for NDSL and paid only $80,000 in University money for the program.
Rogers said if Carter allowed the Ford cuts to stand, HEW might not protest the cuts formally, because, "according to our information, HEW may have succumbed to the new administration, the President being a Democrat and all."
Ford's budget eliminates the NDSL mount, and cuts the two other programs by about 20%.
INFORMATION from the Association of American Universities, the National Association of Universities and Land Grant Colleges supports Rogers' views. The groups said in a Feb. 7 telegram to the Office of Student Financial Aid that HEW wouldn't appeal the cuts to the Office of Management and Budget, thereby leaving
the cuts as likely items for congressional approval.
Rogers said the University "really can't do much except to wait and see what Carter will do."
KUH TAKEN one action to protest the cuts, in the form of a telegraph from Chancellor Archie Dykes to Kansas members of the U.S. Congress. Dykes has said he also plans to telegraph Carter about Carter's budget plans.
Dykes said last week, "I'm concerned that the reduction in financial aid might make higher education impossible for a substantial number of students across the country. I hope that the programs can at least be funded at the current level."
Jeff Weinberg, KU associate director of account financial aid, said the budget cuts would allow the university to opportunity Grant Program (BEOG), but would place almost total reliance on the budget cuts.
See STUDENT AID page three
WEINBERG SAID the reliance on BEGO wouldn't hurt lower-income students, but could hurt middle-income students. The BEGO and EFG grants give money to
The Regents recommended that $479,266 be added to the Regents institutions' supplemental fiscal 1977 legislative budget requests to cover higher utility costs since the beginning of this year. KU's share of the request is $112,382.
Max Lucas, director of facilities planning, said another flaw in Wesco was inadequate ventilation in the Wesco Terrance kitchen, which could cause funds for the correction of the problem.
CHANCELLOR Warchie Dykes told the Regents that Warchie Hall had "rather serious construction deficiencies." The Regents agreed KU should spend $25,000 to improve ventilation in the two large Wesco lecture halls, $5,000 to install more handrails on outside stairways and $4,000 to improve the drainage of planting boxes outside the hall. The repair money will come from interest earnings on Wesco project bond funds.
THE REGENTS accepted extension course fee increases for all Regents institutions. Undergraduate fees increased from $16 to $18 for each extension course credit hour, and graduate fees increased from $22 to $27 for each credit hour.
The Regents Coordinating Council
lunts approved a recommendation to
suggest the regents adopt a
regulations plan.
The Regents also authorized KU to spend 865,247 from a National Institutes of Health grant to improve research animals' quarters. Dykes said the money would improve conditions at five animal care facilities on the Lawrence campus.
proposal that was mainly the work of the KU Graduate Student Council and the Student Senate. The coordinating council unanimously accepted a resolution supporting the mayor, and sent the matter to the Regents Council of Presidents for study.
Toward the end of the Regents budget presentation, State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Arlington, passed a resolution to appoint executive officer, on requiring prospective KU and Kansas State University students to go to the smaller Regents institutions if the smaller schools' enrollments continued to fall.
REGENT HENRY Bubb opposed the concept, saying it would be like "nazism or terrorism."
Glee Smith, Regents chairman, said he didn't think the state now could legally prevent a graduate of a Kansas high school from attending any Regents institution
The Regents activities last week were the first for Regents Frank Lowman of Hays and Marshal Reeve of Garden City, who were recently appointed by Gov. Robert Bennett to replace Jess Stewart and Paul Wunsch.
2
Monday, February 21, 1977
University Dally Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Vance ends Mideast trip
DAMASCUS, Syria - Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance wounded up his mission to the Middle East yesterday after talks with Syrian President Haafaz Assad, probably the most skeptical of the Arab leaders about negotiating a settlement with Israel. Assad told Vance that any settlement must include Israeli withdrawal from all Arab territory seized in the 1967 Mideast war, full recognition of the national rights of the Palestinians and an end to the state of war.
Public judges porno flick
WICHTA-A - An offer by the owner of an X-rated movie theater to let the public judge his films drew standing-room-only crowds yesterday and about 40
pr018346A5
Bill Clark, owner of the Circle Cinema, made the offer to let the public in free to see films seized by authorities recently under a crackdown instituted by Sedgwick County District Attorney Vern Miller.
Russian urges U.S. involvement
PARIS- Exiled Russian disadeed Andrei Amalrik was quoted yesterday as saying that the Kremlin will think President Carter has lost his nerve if the U.S. government fails to continue to put pressure on the Soviets to eliminate political repression.
In an interview with the French news agency, Agence France Presse, Amalikra praised Carter's letter to Andrei Sakharov as "an unprecedented event, and especially an absolutely unexpected event for the Soviet leaders."
On arrival from Holland earlier in the day, Amalirk told reporters he had sent a telegram to French President Valery Malkovich. The police meeting. He said he had no response.
"I came to France to draw the attention of the French government and French public opinion to the wave of repression against Soviet intellectuals," he said.
"All evidence shows that in preparation for the Belgrade conference several months from now, the Soviet authorities are trying to end the activity of the group led by Yuri Orlov, which is seeking to make sure the Helsinki accords are implemented."
Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev plans to visit France before July 1.
PLAINS—The Rev. Bruce Edwards said last day he had resigned effective April 30 as minister of the Plains Baptist Church, of which he was a pastor. A deacon will be moved into the White House.
The minister said criticism of him had been building and he was "sure it was the backslash" of efforts he made last fall to
Minister leaves Plains church
integrate the all-white church after a black minister from Albany, Ga., applied for the position.
Edwards' said he had resigned after a special conference to discuss payment of an outstanding church bill that developed into a lawsuit against him of my responsibilities immediately.
POSITION OPENINGS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS RESIDENCE HALLS 1977-1978 RESIDENT ASSISTANTS
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS Must be Junior, Senior or Graduate Student for 77-78 academic year
Applications and job descriptions available now in Dean of Women's Office ('220 Strong Hall) or in Dean of Men's Office (228 Strong Hall).
ASSISTANT HALL DIRECTORS Must be Graduate Student or Fifth-year status for 77-78 academic year
All applicants should evidence above average academic achievement,prior residential group living experience, and availability for the entire 1977-1978 academic year (August-May).
Application deadline March 11,1977 The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer.
Monday, Feb. 21, 8:30 p.m.
University Theatre
BACK TOGETHER AT
KANSAS STATE
MARCH 8, 8:00pm
AHEARN FIELD HOUSE
MANHATTAN, KS.
ACCENT THE ARTS
General Admission $2 KU Students $1 Tickets available at SUA and University Theatre Box Office
Costa, recently named Cordelia Brown Murphy Professor of Piano has played with all the major orchestras of Europe. He has just returned from a concert tour of Europe and will present a benefit recital for the Music Scholarship Fund. Come hear this outstanding new addition to the KU Faculty.
After three years of separation, bread has chosen to regroup at KSU to kick off their reunion concert tour. Don't miss their only performance in this area!
CONCERT PIANIST
A K-STATE UNION PROGRAM COUNCIL PRODUCTION
and THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS Proudly Present
SEQUEIRA COSTA
Tickets available Feb. 21- Mar. 4 at TEAM ELECTRONICS Prices: $6.00-5.50-5.00
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GAUCHOS - 40% off Casual as well as velveteen for evening.
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Monday, February 21. 1977
3
ch
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and after a
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2
Author discusses child abuses; law suits, lobbying encouraged
BY BETH GREENWALD
Staff Reporter
nter
Recounting one horror story after another, Ken Wooden, an investigative writer, called for accountability in the court system while justice system during a speech Friday.
University Daily Kansan
Wooden, author of a book on child abuse in institutions, also led an all-day workshop
An investigative reporter for the CBS program "Sixty Minutes," he helped investigate and write a recent segment, "The Interstate Commerce of Kids," about a man who made $1 million a year from running a chain of sex education facilities advertised in its brochures.
In Alabama, Wooden said he saw iron cages where children were thrown for misbehaving. He described an institution in Florida as the "Buchwald of America," where urine was injected into children to test for toxins, given to children to encourage suicide.
FROM 1972 TO 1974, Wooden traveled to 30 states, visited 175 juvenile institutions. What he saw and heard became a book "Weening in the Playtime of Others."
Wooden said he saw children in Texas whose skin had been chemically burned when they were tear-gassed for punishment in 8-by10-foot rooms. He also said pregnant young women in the institutions had the need of solitary confinement or an abortion.
BUT, WOODEN said, these were only a few examples of states where corruption existed in juvenile institutions and that all states were guilty.
He said the juvenile institutions failed to correct juveniles 40 per cent of the time and 60 per cent of the time.
Wooden said that 2 million children were in juvenile institutions and that less than 10 per cent of them had committed violent crimes. He said 60 per cent of the children in schools were status offenders, children who were truant or neglected by their parents.
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These noncriminal children are being taught criminal behavior when thrown into a tank.
Wooden called juvenile institutions expensive human warehouses and said they were a big business, grossing $15 million annually.
WOODEN IS editing a book called "Dust Dreams," a collection of poetry written by institutionalized children. The profits of the book will go into a trust fund, Wooden said, which will be used to bring lawsuits against institutions.
He said law suits were only one tool to fight the institutions. He encouraged people to join local political clubs and lobby at the state level for stricter institutional licensing laws. Because most juveniles in institutions were underage workers, Wooden said, labor union policies
Wooden and Larry Barker, a friend, have
begain a program to teach social workers about abuses in institutions and about ways of dealing with them.
FOR EXAMPLE, he said all nonprofit organizations, except churches and their affiliates, must reveal their total financial assets. Because of the 1969 Freedom of Information Act, the form then said, employees must use the form to pass on the information to the press.
Although America is called a youth-oriented society, Wooden said, children are denied rights and protection, but the Justice Department is trying to form a children's protection unit.
Wooden said that options to existing institutions were needed and that the present system must be abolished even if concrete options didn't exist.
"The street is better than the county jail," he said.
Sophomores sought for society
Lambda Sigma, a University of Kansas sophomore coeducational honorary, is now selecting members for the 1977-78 school year.
Selection is based on scholarship, peer
support, activities and faculty recommen-
dation.
Applications have been distributed to freshmen by the members of Lambda Sigma. Completed applications must be returned to the dean of men's or dean of women's office by Friday, where applications are available.
Lambda Sigma, a KU service organization, is beginning its second year at
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
THE GUADALAJARA SUMMER
UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA
UNIV. OF ARIZONA July 1 August 12, anthroposophy, art,
education, folklore, education, folk-
history, political science, language and literature Tuition and fees, $20; board and room with GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL
UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA University of Arizona, Arizona, Aug. 31
The national membership of CWENS decided to become a coeducational honorary last summer, forming the national society, Lambda Sigma.
Last spring, members of KU's chapter of the International Association to Beltanize be brought to Milan.
Lambda Sigma's activities last year ended the Parent's Day Mum Sale and the Lambda Day Mum Sale.
New nationally affiliated MCAT/DAT Review Course to help prepare for the new MCAT. Review lectures, test taking tips, practice exams, review materials. Seven classes of 4 hours each. Weekly classes of 8 hours each. April 12 and ending April 16. Location: Rm. 21 Sedgewick Hall Rockhurst College, K.C., MO. Cost: $140 plus $15 refundable deposit on materials. Call or write:
MCAT/DAT Review Course
c/o Paul J. Peters, Ph.D.
32 W. 57th Terr.
Santa Ana, MO 4113
Tel.: (844) 326-6882
MCAT/DAT Review Course
KU, replacing CWENS Society, a sonhomore women's honorary
Notice to All Organizations
WISHING TO APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE STUDENT SENATE/STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE:
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, Level 3.
These requests must be completed and returned
to the Senate office NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 28,1977.
Eighteen blindfolded Iranian students, bound to wooden supports from which dangled menus, marched down Jayhawk Boulevard Friday to symbolize the plight of 18 Iranian prisoners arrested two months ago for antigovernment activities.
social welfare, went to Tartaru, Iran, as a member of the delegation and to do
The purpose of the march was to point out the efforts of a U.S. delegation to visit the prisoners and get their names, according to an Indian student who asked not to be
The British Broadcasting Company and CBS have tried to report the Iranian activities, the student said, but have envisioned difficulties from the Iranian government.
Iranians protest for prisoners
Beaded the KU protest, he said, there have been hunger strikes involving 185 people in San Francisco, Houston, Miami, Oklahoma City and Chicago.
Norman Forer, associate professor of
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
Iranian students also occupied the Statue
Work study cuts would hurt departments that employ students in the program, Weinberg said, because the KU department could afford less money available for student salaries.
Student aid
students from moderate- and low-income families. NDSL funds, however, provide loans to students with sufficient need regardless of income, so they could be hurt
FEDERAL MONEY pays 80 per cent of the salaries for KU students employed in the work study program.
From page one
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Use your knowledge of French to teach new skills in a Francophone country such as the Ivory Coast or Morocco. Gain great experience by living in another culture and helping others. Peace Corps Volunteers get free traw ; health/dent . care; 48 days pd. vac.; small, comfort. ivt. allow; 390 term. stkipd. 2 yrs. service. INTERVIEW. RECRUTERS ON CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMARCH MARCH 2, AND LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES PLACEMARCH MARCH 1.
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Weinberg said that if Carter adopted the cuts in the NDSL program, its only money would be repayments from students who have had past loans.
8:30 Sequeira Costa, pianist, benefit performance for the Music Scholarship Fund, University Theatre, $2.00.
Money from repayments of past NDSI loans could be as much as $700,000 a year, because the money was returned to new loans because it comes back to the University in monthly installments.
earth shoe
SALE
Reg. $37.50 Sale price $22.95
NEEDED TRACK OFFICIALS for Intramural Indoor Meet March 4th & 5th ApplyatRecreationService Room 208 RobinsonGym
Style 111
ede
816/531-9082
816/531-9082
Open House. Thurs. 11/4.FB & Sat. 10/4
Open Mon.-Thurs. 11/8/Fri. & Sat. 10/4
also 827 E. Walnut. Columbia, M. 65021
435 Westport Rd., Kansas City, Mo. 64111
7:00 "The Underground Soviet Song," a lecture by Vladimir Frunck, Swarthout
battery care
314/443-6010
energy change
earth
shoe
FREE Athlete's Foot T-SHIRT
FREE Athlete's Foot T-SHIRT With Purchase Of A Pair Of Track Spikes or Baseball Spikes Athlete's The Foot
919 Massachusetts
Lawrence
Phone 841-2995
net maintenance, Mary Chu
of Liberty recently, and demonstrations have been held in at least 20 U.S. cities.
3:30 "What is a Curator?" a talk with Ross E. laggart, senior curator of Nelson Gallery-Atkins Museum, Regionalist Room, Union
In Lawrence, about 45 clergymen and KU faculty members have formed the Comittee for Iranian Human Rights. The committee has organized a program in Houston and Washington, D.C.
We All
We Write All Risks
Automobile Insurance
--legislative decriminalization efforts.
OFF THE WALL HALL 727 New Hampshire
12:00 Concert Chorale, Burt Allen, conductor, Strong Hall, lobby
Gene Doane
Agency
824 Mass
Presents Norml Benefit Night with Country Heir and Thumbs Friday, Feb. 25
NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR REFORMATION
All proceeds go to
COFFEE SHOP
Accent the ARTS
OF MARIJUANA LAW IS a non-profit organization
a non-profit organization.
Informational Meeting
SUA Officer and Board Selection
Monday, Feb. 21, 3:15 p.m.
All interested persons
Kansas Union—Parlor Room
invited to attend
Today's Events
The Society for Creative Disorganization would like to invite you to a
ENTROPY
PARTY
educators
mediators
synergists
positivists
technocrats
poets
hackers
in the Hawk's Nest
3:30-5:30
with zizzy from the
TOM MONTGOMERY TRIO
Courtesy of SUA
Friday, February 25
*students *
*professionals*
*sciences*
*soft* *sciences*
*social* *sciences*
*asocial* *sciences*
engineering
humans
hackers hobbyists
We invite any and all citizens from among the
Paid for from the Student Activity Fee
- This society will designate student members to the already existing Committee for the History and Philosophy of Science.
Can science be observed outside the LAB?
to meet with us and consider the following questions
ENTRYPO is interested in an activity which finds us at its core.
OURS IS AN INFORMAL INTENT. We are having an opportunity to ponder these questions.
Can I deposit money to bank accounts? Are they required?
Can I deposit money to a bank account in the university? Is society at work in my myth?
Is the place of interest in the university? Is society at work in my myth?
Is the place of interest in the university? Is society at work in my myth?
Applications due Feb. 25
A sophomore cohonorary society at the University of Kansas is now accepting a candidate for the position of Dean of Women's Office, 228 Strong, or the Dean of Men's Office, 228 Strong.
AΣ
Lambda
If you have any questions, please inquire at the Dean of Women's Office.
Sigma Society
Mike Zimmerman
writer and photo-journalist for a wide variety of periodicals in Israel and North America, will speak on
"THE MIDDLE EAST
INFORMATION WAR:
RHETORIC AND THE TERRITORIES"
(West Bank problems will receive special attention)
Tuesday, February 22nd 7:30 p.m.
Walnut Room in the Union
sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish Students
-1
4
Monday, February 21, 1977
University Daily Kansas
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism.
U.S. holds cards
Maybe this will be the year.
Conditions are considered favorable for a major peace conference in Geneva involving the nations of the Middle East. There is a chance that finally, after all these years, something promising will happen regarding that crises-filled area.
But, as Secretary of State Cyrus Vance has said, "If progress is not made this year, then there is a danger that other factors may arise that may destroy the favorable conditions which currently exist."
WHAT HAS raised the hopes of optimists is that the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) has been weakened—both politically and militarily by the Lebanese civil war. It has been estimated that 40,000 of the PLO's 200,000 men died in that war, which ended with Syrian peace-keeping forces occupying Lebanon.
The PLO no longer has the power to block a Geneva conference, which it opposes because Isreal might as a result be recognized formally as a state by other Arab powers such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Syria and Jordan.
There also are factors that don't favor a Geneva conference.
Many fear that Israel demands and the presence of Syrian troops in Lebanon will evoke the temperers of the more rebellious factions of the PLO and bring about a new outburst of terrorism. These extremists, who believe they have been unjustly robbed of their homeland by Zionists, want Israel destroyed. This desire for destruction has caused such incidents as the slaying of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Summer Olympics and numerous plane hijackings.
ONE MAJOR drawback in setting up a peace conference is the question of how the Palestinians should be represented. Israel says it is ready to agree to Palestinian representation, but it wants a more moderate group of Palestinians with which to negotiate—no PLO.
Another problem is the Israeli elections May 17. Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's Labor party has come under attack in the last couple of months, and many fear the political power of Israel's conservatives could result in an even less favorable Israeli attitude toward the Palestinians, Rabin.
fearing anything that might hurt him politically, is wary of making any major decisions on a possible conference now.
But Israel can afford peace.
ROBIN'S RECENT statement that "1977 will not be a year of diplomatic magic" reflects that attitude.
Military spending takes half of the country's budget. Inflation is a continuous problem. The Israelis are strong militarily, thanks primarily to U.S. aid. Another war probably wouldn't cure an already ailing economy.
Arab nations also are interested in peace so their economies can continue to expand. But there are obstacles to peace in some of these countries as well.
FOOD RIOTS IN Cairo last month have left Egyptian President Anwar Sadat wondering about his country's political future, which could change abruptly if Sadat makes an unpopular decision.
All the countries of the Middle East seem to be looking to the United States for a solution.
"The United States holds 99 per cent of the cards," Sadat has said. "If it is really interested, it can have peace within a month." I am not mad yet by coincidence in
"Egypt and Israel don't have confidence in each other, but in the United States."
President Carter knows this. He has sent Vance to the Middle East to determine attitudes toward a Geneva settlement. He also is extending invitations to the heads of state of each country to visit him soon in Washington, D.C.
A MAJOR CONCERN is what would happen if the countries were to sit at a Geneva table. Arab nations, pointing to United Nations resolution, want Israel to return the land it occupied in the 1967 and 1973 wars. Israel is interested in returning some of the land, including a "mini-state" to the Palestinians, but refuses to give up its occupation of such territories as Syria's Golan Heights and Jordan's West Bank.
Possibility of peace in the Middle East rests largely with the United States, which already has begun doing its homework. But peace will be at hand only if others make concessions.
Such concessions must include Israel and the PLO, both putting history aside and showing a willingness to compromise at the table, wherever that table is located.
As you may or may not have noticed, the Kansan didn't endorse any of the student body. This week's Student Senate election.
The Kansan did not endure any candidate for student body president in last year's Student Senate elections either. Or any candidate for election in the year before that. In fact, the Kansan never has.
THE KANSAN is, in part, funded through the student activity fee allocated by the Senate. This portion of the fee, which totals about $2 per student a semester, is "in lieu of subscription." The Kansas could survive without it, but it probably would have to start charging for the paper and digital versions of students as a result of such a charge. The Kansas, therefore, is to a certain extent intertwined in Senate politics.
It's not that we're all politically apathetic. Kansan staffers probably know more new candidates than any student Senate elections than anyone else on campus-with the exception, of course, of the various candidates. It's simply Kansan has a vested interest.
Endorsement. self interest clash
Endorsing one candidate would not only alienate the other candidates—who might well win—but would, more than ever, give a great number of charges of convining and plotting and self-interest. Any attempt to endorse the candidate the paper honestly thought was the best way to get the job would go for naught.
A glance at the other college newspapers that the Kansan gets in the mail makes a non-interesting look, even more attractive.
Last year, for example, the University Daily loan at the University of Iowa endorsed one of three student body presidential candidates. They did this in a rather large, boxed,
front-page editorial accompanied by two front-page articles pointing out negative aspects of the two other candidates. The front page items appeared on the one and only election day.
NOW THE editorial may well have been for the best candidate; and the two other ar-
newspaper bluntly and unsubtly trying to call all the shots.
Another example is what happened in this year's K-State
The Kansas could have done what the Iowan did, but that kind of ego-trip causes far too many irate phone calls. That kind of political involvement we can do without.
everyone write-in in Curtis Redding, top writer of Kansas State basketball player. Once again, the team had been justified. But the Kansas will never have to be in such an awkward position. (Incidentally, 100th voodoo and forced a run-off election.)
Editor's Note
Jim Bates
Some people might say that the people at the Kansan are just a bunch of sniveling little cowards. If we had any guts, they would be the candidate we thought was right come hell or high water.
ticles may well have been well-founded and accurate. But the general impression the reader gets from these throws its weight around; a
And, frankly, these people may be onto a grain of truth. We do worry about alienating candidates.
main reason we don't endorse candidates is not cowardice but conflict of interest. And we like to think and hope the next few months will prove—that were president when he (God forbid!) blows it. Once in office, he is fair game.
BUT WE like to think that the
We also like to think that a student body president wouldn't be so petty as to carry out some personal vendetta against the just because of some critical editorial or unfavorable story.
Caution is advisable and tact is wise; but snivelling covardice is something to be frowned upon. The Kansan does not intend to snivel just because of politics.
MACKELY
SPEAK BIG AND CARRY A SOFT STICK.
ADVERSE CUTS
WARNING TO DOWNHILL ON HUMAN RIGHTS
Letters
Assassinations probe warranted
To the editor:
Growing concern in professional journalistic ranks about the information sovereignty affecting news reporting affords an appropriate backdrop for the observation that very little has appeared in the press and is reported in a recent Press Feb. 2 on the extension of
KU needs speed reading class
In the offices of the KU bureaucracy, thousands of memos, handouts, and reports circulate daily, keeping administrative cogs in perpetual motion.
In campus classrooms, professors and their assistants daily assign students to read and write articles, articles and newspapers.
Jimmy Carter's suggestion to cope with the mountains of administrative paperwork is to trim the government's size, increase theNUM and avoid complex and ambiguous language in reports.
FOR THE MANY KU students who are bombarded by verbage, there is only one solution—speed reading.
An average student will have taken approximately 25 seconds to read the above four
education is still stymied by skeptics and disbelievers.
paragraphs and will have digested about 50 per cent of the information. Average speed readers will have reduced that time to from five to nine seconds and will have increased their comprehension to between 70 and 80 per cent.
Speed reading as a time saver and an aid to comprehension is
THE SECRET OF rapid realing lies in the ability to master three things: to learn words, to use sentences that the eye can see at each glance; to think words as one reads them to eliminate "sun" and "rain"; and to recognize that the eye can see at each glance; to think words as one reads them to eliminate "sun" and "rain".
Mary Ann
a skill very much in demand by both KU students and faculty. It seems strange that so little emphasis in KU's curriculum is placed on reading power. What could, and should, be an integral part of
Paul Addison
Editorial Writer
centrate on the words being read.
methods are both different and most effective, the only real difference seems to be the cost of each program.
THE EVELYN Wood Reaming Dynamics Institute is the avowed leader in the field, as well as the most expensive, and because the course was first taught in Lawrence in 1967. Since then more than 3,000 people in Lawrence have completed it. The course includes two one-half hours a session and pay $275 for the course.
In Lawrence, at least four speed reading courses are being offered this semester—two by KU and two by private firms.
Evelyn Wood's major competitor is a New Mexico based corporation, the United States Reading Lab, which arrived in Lawrence for the first time last week and for just over $200 offers a 16-week program comprising four three-hour
WALTZING IN A WINTER WONDERLAND...
FUNHAME NATURAL GAS CO.
While each contends that its
At KU, although strides have been made the past two years to increase the number of reading courses, only the School of Education offers a class, which is quickly filled. The alternative is to sign up for an effective reading, which costs about $50, and is offered by the Dean of Men's and Dean of Women's offices.
For success in speed reading,
in as most other learning
methods, discipline, devotion
dial in the program are
needed.
FOR THOSE completing the course, both groups guarantee to triple reading efficiency or money is returned.
© 1977 NYT Special Features
class sessions and 12 weeks of home study.
Although it is possible to learn the method from any number of books currently on the market, the book you find that feels best reads speeding in best learned.
it is in course speed reading is best learned HEADER AS a freshman sophomore required course or as a part of a wider "learning techniques" class, speed reading would be an asset to every elementary education. In the benefits of a speed program would be reflected, throughout KU, in terms of increased understanding of course material,consumption of more reading material and a conference in academic excellence.
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. In addition, KU students must provide their academic standing and homework; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
the Select Committee on Assassinations (of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King). Established by massive congressional endorsement last term, the Select Committee on Assassinations (of John F. Kennedy) countered a doubling of its original opposition of 65 votes. There is little reason to believe this shift reflects any substantial change in public opinion, which by all indications is due to the growing reliantness investigation of both assassinations.
A key figure in the establishment of the Select Committee and current Committee chairman, Rep. Henry Gonzales, D-Texas, stated Jan. 25: "Now that the Committee has been a reality and their involvement is well that there are strong and organized forces dedicated to stopping these investigations in their tracks. . . During the span of its short life in the 94th Congress, the Select Committee found previously undisclosed evidence, critical witnesses who used revelations and revelations which lead to serious questions that must be resolved."
District of Columbia Rep. Walter Famtroy stated that threshold inquiries "have provided literally a thousand questions unanswered by the three assassinations." Among these, why seven FBI agents questioned Oswald for 12 hours and yet no transcript was provided to the Warren Commission and why the commission had been in the employ of the FBI. Congressman Mario Blaggi, who former a soldier leader of New York City detectives, called for a thorough investigation, speaking from the perspective of an officer. We would carry both these cases as open cases. So if we are dealing in terms of honest investigations carried on for the purposes of finding answers to questions that would have to be handled without no choice but to continue the investigation. The people have a right to know the truth."
Rep. Stewart McKinney, R-Conn., asserted that Select Committee counsel Richard Sprague was the victim of a massive hatchet job "the likes of which I have never seen." Rep. Scott Gunther asked the question of what motivated this hatchet job. Rep. Samuel Devine, R-Ohio, and Rep. Yvonne Burke, D-Calf., expressed sharply directed suspicions at the leaking (just before debate) of a Justice Department report which allegedly concluded that there was no need for further investigative intrusion into the King case.
An earlier report by the Justice Department had arrived at just the opposite conclusion. The leaked report was not available to supporters of the committee on Feb. 2 but was cited by opponents of ex-candidate Ben Carson's investigation. The House voted Feb. 2 to extend the Select Committee on Assassinations temporarily until March 31. Among those opposing an extension of the life of the former Rep. Larry Winn, Keith Sebelius and Joe Skubitz of the Kansas delegation.
Are they under the illusion that their voting in this matter is representative of the sentiments of a majority of their constituents? Or have they been caught up in some form of corruption of which is not intelligible out here where the sunflowers droop?
Bill Summers
P.O. Box 203
Pittsburg
B&G crew thanked
To the editor:
I would like to say a special thanks to those unsung heroes of the University of Kansas: the men and women of the buildings and grounds department. Too often these people are taken for granted and it is time we give them some well-deserved praise.
During the past winter the members of the buildings and grounds department were out and about in the freezing weather clearing sidewalks, salting stairways, and continuously shoveling the mud slush from the roofs of buildings so that knowing to know our learned instructors are opening the knowledge of the centuries to us, it is also very comforting to know that someone is
1.
protecting our butts during the icy weather.
The members of the buildings and grounds department deserve further praise for their constant cleaning, planting, trimming, and mowing throughout this visually appealing building. Maintaining a 'manicured' appearance at KU is not only noticed by visitors, but appreciated by the students.
Thanks to the people who know their job and do it exceptionally well.
Wel again the c when
Chris Funnell
Chris Funnel
Prairie Village sonhomore
Kau Nebr Satur with Buffa vanta
ASK advocated To the editor:
Propinquity and snobbery might be the reasons behind the University of Kansas not admitting Students of Kansas (ASK).
It is said that most of those seated on the Kansas Board of Regents are old KU alumn. Lawrence is only a scant 20 miles from the state legislature. KU has some undeniable clout in Topeka. But KU isn't the only school in the state to have a system that all had to be together under an ASK umbrella to help thwart KU's dominance in Kansas' higher educational planning.
The Student Senate, that munificent student governing body at KU, chose to ignore its sater institutions in the state by staying out of ASK on the premise that it would need more in fees. Humm, the Kanana said that there was perhaps a surplus of $100,000 in the Senate treasury, and the cost of ASK wouldn't have even dented that at 25 cents a student head. KU joining ASK would help the degree program educational elitism that is now so blatantly apparent.
KU should support ASK. With the state's largest school also in support of this group, it too would have more clout in Topeka for all the state Regents schools. Jeffrey Latz
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
*published at the University of Kansas daily August 16, 2015.* Subscriptions to *Jung and Juy* except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. **606414** Subscriptions by mail are $ a semester or $18 for a year outlasting the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county.
Editor Jim Rates
Business Manage Janice Clements
b
Monday, February 21, 1977
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21 W. 14th W.
'Hawks' fate to CU after victory
By DAN BOWERMAN
Associate Sports Editor
Coach Ted Owens and the University of Kansas basketball team have said all they didn't want to depend on anybody else for their breaks. They want to make their own breaks.
Well, the Jayhawks, what had it took against Nebraska this weekend, will have the chance to show their stuff Wednesday when they meet Colorado at Boulder.
Kansas overcame the stalling, boring Nebraska offense before 12,380 fans Saturday in Allen Field House, 74,66, and with that it will take a win against the Buffaloes to insure the home court advantage next Saturday night for the 'Hawks
in the first round of the Big Eight Post-
Season Tournament.
"IVE TOLD our squad the thing that's important is to count only on yourself," Owens said after the game. "We can't hope Nebraska loses to Oklahoma State University. The only assurance we have of being here next week is beating Colorado."
The Jayhawks tried to force their own breaks against the Corneliers by applying more pressure.
THAT STRATEGY, which was designed to give KU an early lead forcing Nebraska out of its slow offensive game and into the Hawks' fastpacked running style of play, is based on
And by the end of the first half. Nebraska
KANSAS 32
Nebraska 50
Staff whole bu JAY VOEI TED
Herb Nobles looks over Curt Hedburg for an outlet
Tennis team downs WSU edges Southern Illinois
It was a tennis weekend that won't be soon forgotten by Burkard Gates, coach of KU's team.
The edge of victory over SIU was exacerbated when we determined the outcome of the entire match.
Gates saw his team defeat the Wichita State Shockers, 6-3, Friday night and then beat the Cougars from Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, 5-4 Saturday.
Joe Ruyser, playing at No. 5 singles, was deadlocked in his match against Bill Rusick. The two played the final point of a nine-point tie breaker as their teammates looked on to see which way the 4-4 team score would tip. Ruyser won the point giving the 'Hawks the team victory and himself a 3-6, 6-2, 7-6 victory in singles play.
"THAT WIN (against SIU) was the biggest since I've been coaching," Gates said after the match. "It's an indication of what we can do."
The 'Hawks, who at one time trailed the Cougars 4-1, fought back to bring their record to 3-2. But more importantly, the gave Gates a new confidence in his team.
"We've always had to rely on our No. 1 and No. 2 single players and our No. 1 and 2 doubles teams to win," Gates said. "We have to keep the team together and we still won."
"This shows that we have more depth and power down the line and that we don't have to rely as heavily on our No. 1 and 2 players as we have previously."
ENGINEERS WANTED NOW FOR NEW INTERNATIONAL PROJECTS
Get right into challenging responsibility by helping construct new towns, roads, dams, irrigation systems, or other vital projects. See the impact of your skills by working in a country of Africa, Asia, Latin America, or the S. Pacific as a peace officer (e.g., assisting with laying allowance, or the days pd. vcs. ; 35th term, pay end 2 yrs. service; must be citizen).
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had Kansas playing its game. The Cornhuskers slowed the game nearly to a halt for the final three minutes, trying for a halftime lead.
Nebraska grabbed the lead at 16:23 in the second half, 41-38, but Paul Mokeski, who first entered the game a minute earlier, tied the score, 41-14, at 16:09.
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THEN THE Jayhawks received a big psychological lift when Nebraska's Carl Mpire missed a dunk and John Douglas took the ball down the court, his three-foot jumper caught a shot in free throw. That gave KU a 44-14 lead and the Hawkes were never behind again.
However, during that time Koenigs put in two of his eight field goals, while Brian Banks had one field goal for the "Huskers," giving KU a 35-34 baltimore lead.
With KU leading, 59-88, with about five minutes left, Banks missed an open layup after stealing the ball at mid-court from Milt Gibson. Koenings came back with jump shots of 11 feet and seven feet during the game and holds to give Kansas some insurance points.
NEBRAKSHA COACH Joe Cipriano said, 'We felt we were in the game until the missed dunk and a couple of easy lay-inks. We don't get many dunks, so we don't shoot
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Nebraska, though, remained close through the next ten minutes, but another miscue gave Kansas a final lift to pull away from the "Huskers."
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But Nebraska's 6'7" forward Bob Siegel didn't agree that the Cornelius were hurt
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DOUGLAS WASN'T forced to carry the scoring load by himself, though, as Koenigs put in 12 points in the first half and also finished with 19. He hit on 8-14 field goals, 3-0 of fire throws and had seven rebounds. Her Nobles also was in double figures with
But KU and Douglas capitalized on those mistakes. Douglas, following his 46-point outburst against Iowa State Wednesday, scored 14 of his 19 points in the second half. He shot 8-of-14 from the field, 3-of-5 from the line and pulled down eight rebounds.
2340 Iowa
"I knew I had to go the basket because Herb (Nobles) was on the bench," he said. "They (Nebraska) were cloggin' up the inside, and I went outside."
Douglas, who was affering from a cold, said he made an intention to go for points on the field.
Always in season and seasoned to please
★★
But the situation was reversed in the first half, when Koenigs got most of his points.
HOLLANDA (M) (48)
| | Ft. Lbs. | h | k | PF | Pts. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Norvak | 6-10 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 15 |
| Navok | 6-10 | 3-10 | 3 | 4 | 9 |
| Baskra | 6-13 | 3-3 | 3 | 4 | 10 |
| Baaska | 6-13 | 3-3 | 3 | 4 | 8 |
| Bednack | 6-13 | 3-3 | 3 | 4 | 10 |
| Hodberg | 0-0 | 2-29 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| McDonald | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| McDonald | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| McDonald | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| TOYOTAS | 28-36 | 9-0 | 36 | 12 | 60 |
| TOYOTAS | 28-36 | 9-0 | 36 | 12 | 60 |
KANSAK (NY)
| | FV | OL | K | PF | Pts. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Johnson | 4-8 | 0-1 | 4 | 3 | 12 |
| Wilson | 4-8 | 0-1 | 4 | 3 | 12 |
| Kenngtia | 8-14 | 3-4 | 7 | 4 | 19 |
| Kentgia | 8-14 | 3-4 | 7 | 4 | 19 |
| Douglas | 8-14 | 3-4 | 8 | 3 | 16 |
| Vin Moore | 8-14 | 3-4 | 8 | 3 | 16 |
| Mokkei | 1-5 | 3-4 | 2 | 3 | 14 |
| Mokkei | 1-5 | 3-4 | 2 | 3 | 14 |
| Mokkei | 31-40 | 18-30 | 2 | 3 | 74 |
| | FV | OL | K | PF | Pts. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| FV | 18-30 | 18-30 | 2 | 3 | 74 |
"THEY WERE playing a pressure defense, and it opened up the middle," Koemigs said. "The guys were really unhappy. They all fall inside to me, and I got the easy sleds."
But Owens was worried about KU's foul situation. Dennis Van Moore fouled out at 5:39. Koenigs and Hasan Houston had four each, and Clint Johnson, Douglas and Gilbson all had three. Nebraska hit on 22-of-29 free throws, while the Jayhawks hit 12-of-20. KU outscored Nebraska from the field, 62.
KANANS ... 35
KNARBASKA ... 34
NEROBAKA ... 34
20-46
"It sounds like a broken record, but once again fouls got us into trouble," Owens said. "We aren't getting the aggressive kind we intend, we're getting the reaching in ones."
McPIPE WAS the game's high score, with 7-of-14 field goals and 9-of-12 free throws.
In other games Saturday, Kansas State (10-3) took over the Big Eight lead by defeating Missouri (9-4) in Columbia, 88-77. Oklahoma (9-4) whipped Iowa State (11-31). Oklahoma (9-4) downed Utah (4-3), then Lewis' 27 points, downed Oklahoma State (10-3). 65-32.
Mundy paces gymnasts to win
KU's women's gymnastics team took 11 of 15 places and easily defeated Wichita State University in a dual meet Friday in Robinson Gymnasium. 123-15-101.98.
It was the first time KU broke 125 (of 160 possible) this season. The Jayhawks are the first time KU has broken 125.
Karen Mundy surpassed her season best in the all-around, winning the event with 33.35 (of 40 possible). Pegene Murphy was third in the all-around with 30.35.
Laurie Prospat took the other first place for KU on vaulting with 8.85. Murphy took seconds on floor and beam, while Sue Neville took two seconds and Rene Neville was third on unevers.
Mundy also won the balance beam with
8.45 (of 10 possible) and uneven parallel
bars with 8.25. She was second on vaulting
and third on floor exercise.
Kathy Koshua took first on floor, second in all-around and unevenness and third on floor.
KU's next action will be in the State Invitational Friday at Wichita State.
CAMP COUNSELORS WANTED
CAMP SOMERSET FOR GIRLS
CAMP COBBOSESS FOR BOYS
IN BEAUTIFUL MAINE
Minimum Age Request 20
CAMP OFFICE, Dept. 23
225 E. S7 SL. NI, NY 10022
(272) 755-8532
A NEW BEGINNING
OR
A SECOND
CHANGE
Partially funded by Student Senate
Partially funded by Student Senate
27th Annual Rock Chalk Revue
presented by the KU-Y
Hoch Auditorium - Feb. 25-26
Friday — $3.25 & $3.00
Saturday—$3.75- SOLD OUT!
Available at the SUA Office
in the Student Union
SHOWTIME 8:00 p.m. ALL SEATS RESERVE
SHOWTIME 8:00 p.m. - ALL SEATS RESERVED
University Daily Kansan
Women whip SWMS
The KU women's basketball team warmed up for its season finale against Kansas State University by defeating Southwest Missouri in a 68-30, Friday, for the second time this season.
Now 12-14 for the year, KU was in control of the game, according to coach Marian Washington, despite its trailing SWMUS 34-23 at the half. The 'Hawks' lead in the game exceeded four points until KU's offense took control with six minutes remaining.
Forward adrian Mitchell led the KU scoring with 18 points and also collected 11 goals.
SUA
SJA MOVIES
Mon., Feb. 21
rebounds each. KU shot 47 per cent from the floor and 78 per cent from the foul line.
CLASSICAL FILMS
BIRDS IN PERU. Dir. Romain Gary with Jean Seberg, Maurice Ronef. French/subtitles. Rated X. ORDER AT THE VANTIES. Dir. Marianne Rowe. Duke Ellington & his Orchestra. Monday, Feb. 21; 7:30 p.m. 75c
FILM SOCIETY
SUNDAY BLOODY SUNDAY (1971)
Dir. John Schlesinger with Glenda
Jackson and Peter Finch.
Wednesday, Feb. 23, 7:30 & 8:30 p.m.
1
Koleber Hose had 17 points, Cherry
barnett II 4 point and Sue Berena 12 points.
Lemke 13 points.
HOMERICA
CA
Thursday, Feb. 24, 7:30 p.m. $1
ABEL GANCE: THE CARM OF DYNAMITE. (1968) Dr. Kevin Brownlow, An introduction into the creative genius of Gance. English. The DYNAMITE STARTED SMALL (1968) Dr. Werner Herzig, West Germany.
"We played a good game," Washington said. "We tried a lot of different things in preparation for the K-State game on Friday and they responded by playing well."
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
HOMERICA
March 1-6, 8 p.m.
March 5-6, 2:30 p.m.
Union Ballroom
Tickets $3.50 at SUA
MASS STREET DELI
1941 MASSACHUSETTS
REUBEN SANDWICH
Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on Cottage Rye.
50c OFF with this coupon Reg. Value $2.00
B. F. WILSON
Coupon Expires March 20, 1977
Bull & Boar
11 W. 9th
OPEN FACED
HOT BEEF SANDWICH
served with thin sliced roast beef,
home-made mashed potatoes—smothered
in dark-brown gravy, relishes included
Coupon Expires
March 20, 1977
$1.75
With this coupon
Reg. price $2.10
SALT
[Illustration of a plate with a cooked fish dish, served with a knife and fork on a table.]
*Note: The image is stylized and does not contain any text.*
6
Monday, February 21, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Rock Chalk Revue a traditional stab at amateur professionalism
By SHERI BALDWIN
Entertainment Edito
For 27 years, Rock Chalk Revue has been both a tradition and a mystery to me.
Rock Chalk is more than a red-light sign in front of Hoch Auditorium.
It is hundreds of people, mostly nondrama talents from Greek houses. Each fall, they slave to prepare scripts the size of Sears and Roebuck catalogues. Each select four groups conjure 20-minute musical comedy productions from those companies.
Much of past Rock Chalk and in-between act (IBA) fillers would have been worthy of television variety show fame—once removed from the acoustic and technical encumbrances of Hoch. Those unworthy of such exposure might have qualified with polish and the deletion of campus-humor gag lines.
DESPITE CRITICISM for familiar problems such as length of the show and judging time, a hint of professionalism
survives in Rock Chalk—a hint that has grown as competition has increased.
arranger, Waugh had Jim Barnes, KU Marching Band arranger, do the music. Conductor Roger Kendell, Leawood takes the place of a faculty conductor.
This weekend's a Saturday show is sold out.
Tickets still remain for Friday's 8 p.m.
As each Rock Chalk剪 has done, producer Karyah Hannah Wang, Toppikha
Makar and Dhruva Sharma.
There will be no master of ceremonies,
used since 1967. The IBA players will do
The skits will be presented in the same order each night to alleviate technical problems. In the past, the order was varied each night to cancel judges' prejudices.
Seven trophies will again be awarded
Arts & Leisure
short song and dance introductions for the groups' skits, following the skits' themes. No outside student acts have been brought in to fill gaps between the skirts. The hand-selected group of 21 IBA players will take the place of what is usually provided by other organizations, songsisters and worse. And IBA work began last summer, not this spring, as has been tradition.
INSTEAD OF using a professional music
Wonder wins 4 Grammys
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -- Stevie Wonder won four Grammy Awards Saturday for his album, "Songs in the Key of Life," he won award for best male vocalist. For "I Wish," he won an award for best vocal rhythm and blues performance.
George Benson won awards for best record of the year for "This Masquerade," best pop instrumental performance for "Breezin'" and best instrumental rhythm and blues performance for "Theme From Good King Bad."
BRITTEN AND BLUES--music song. "Twinkle" by
Melanie Lynskey. You can listen to it on
Markdown or as a PDF file. - You Have to Go
to Markdown or as a PDF file.
AJZZ- a solo performance, "Baile & Zoiz" (Count Bale), group performance, "The Agriegas," theatrical work, Duke Ellington, vocal performance, Eliza Fläggar ("Flägern & Paas & ... Aaddn"), instrumental compassional
after Saturday night's performance. The added scores from five judges at Friday's performance and five at Saturday's will decide best actor, actress, costumes, set, original song, production number and overall production.
CLASSICAL—vocal solos; "Music of Victor Herbert" (Acoustic), "The Five Piano Concertos" (Acoustic), "The Five Piano Concertos" (Acoustic), "Gorgerian, Forges and Losses Massed"; Gorgerian, Forges and Losses Massed); "Harbor Concerts 75-79" (Dialhar Minor Music).
POP—song of the year. "I Write the Songs" (Bruce
Haden Down the Wind's Drain) and "O group social
voting" (Henson, 2014).
Each group received $300 from ticket sales to help defray production costs.
THIS YEAR's over-all theme is "A New Beginning. A Second Chance."
Alpha Chi Omega-Alpha Tau Omega will present "Sparsarilla: A Hard Drink to Swallow", in which Cinderella gets a second chance. The Omega-bound girl is brave, but to learn that life isn't always a fairy tale.
Other awards included:
"Evil Medieval," presented by Kappa Alpha Theta-Delta Upsilon, transforms a kingdom of evil, complete with king, queen and princess, to a happy one.
Pi Beta Phi-Gamma Delta takes the devil to heaven to capture a soul in "Heavens to Betsy." The devil is eventually converted.
"Mother Goose Lets Loose or Gooise Takes a Gamble" is by Gamma Phi Beta-Alpha Kappa Lambda. The group shows Mother Goose venturing from her storybook land with a spider to an evil land in which she can't fit in.
Tickets are $3 and $3.25 at the SUA office.
Theater
This Week's Highlights
"LOOT," p. 8. Thursday and Friday,
University Theatre.
Concerts
KI PAPKA LAMBDA CONCERTO
P II p.m. Tuesday, University
Duke!
SEQUEIRA COSTA, professor of performance, benefit performance for the Music Scholarship Fund; 8:30 tonight, University Theatre.
HOYT ROBINSON, student. Student Recital Series, b.p.m. thursday, Swarthwout.
INFORMAL RECITAIS by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts at noon every weekday through Mar. 4, Strong Hall John
RICHARD ANGELETT, piano; DON SCHEID, clarinet; and KAREL BLAAS, viola; Faculty Recital Series, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Saworth Intercall Hall.
Recitals
Nightclubs
OZ, rock group, and folk singer BETH Nixon, a graduate of midnight. Wednesday, the Ora House.
Lectures
"WHAT IS A CURATOR?" Ross Taggart,
senior curator of the Nelson Gallery-Atkins
Museum, 3:30 p.m. today, Kansas Union's
Regionalist Room.
"The UNDERGROUND SOVIET SONG," Vaidimir Frunikin, musicologist from Oberlin College, department of music at the University of Wisconsin. Lecture series: 2, tuesday, Swarthout.
COLETTE BANGERT discusses her
work at Union's Gallion.
Tuesday, Union's Gallion.
JOHN KESSEL, fiction writer, SUA
Contemporary author, Series 4,
2005-2013. Vanity Press.
'THE NON-ARTIST IN THE ART WORLD,' Donald Hoffman, Neen Jumpst. Douglas Drake and Ellen Gohen. 8 p.m.
Wednesday, Union's Forum Room.
སྐྱོང་གྲོང་ཁྷེར་ཨུ་ལྷན་མདོང་ཚོ་རྫོང་པ།
Hiking Man
There will be an informational meeting at 7:00 Thursday the 24th of February in the Oread room of the Union. Trip cost will be the $100-$110 range. Include everything! For information about the meeting, contact the SUA office at 864-3477.
APPALACHIAN TRAIL BACKPACK TRIP
NOW MATH TEACHERS ARE WANTED FOR OVERSEAS PROJECTS
Following finals in May (21-31)
- Art Supplies available at low prices
high probability of good experience as a math teacher in a country of Africa, Asia,
Latin America, or the S. Pacific as a Peace Corps Volunteer. Free trav. ; health-
dent. care; 48 days pd. vac.; small, comfort. liv. allow.; 3000 term. stipend end 2
year. serv. must be citizen of US. (WHERE IS A CAMPUS WHERE I WILL UP FOR INTERVIEW. RECRUITERS ON
CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT ON MARCH 2, AND LIBERAL ARTS AND
SCIENCES PLACEMENT ON MARCH 1.)
- only $3.00 per lesson
- Handcrafted gifts
- Pewter jewelry ENROLL IN CLASSES NOW!
DORETA'S DECORATIVE ARTS
- Pewter jewelry
Greenhouse Sale Continues
"A PROGRAM OF VICTORIAN TASTE; SOALS OF ENGLISH TANGUE," Jim Scally and Max Sutton, 4 p.m. Thursday, a. 491 Wescock Hall.
Also
We make Artists at Doreta's Learn to paint Scenic Landscape Settings
843-7255 1006 New Hampshire
1/2 PRICE PLANT SALE
Films
SIZZLER
FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
Good thru Fri., Feb. 25
1516 W. 23rd St.
Lawrence, Ks.
Includes dinner salad plus your choice of coffee, tea or soft drink. Limit 2 dinners per coupon.
Blooming Plants
Everything, that's right.
Everything In the Greenhouse
Everything in the Greenhouse
Cash & Carry
Last fall, the Lawrence Community Theater began organizing. Prospects looked promising because the theater would finally be able to host a major Art Center's renovated performance hall.
Hanging Plants
Now the theater will have tryouts for its first play, Paul Zindel's "The Secret Affairs of Midhurd Wild" at 7 onight at the Art Center. The play is scheduled for April 15, 16 and 17.
ABEL GANCE; THE CHARM OF DYNAMITE - In-depth portrait, directed by Kevin Brownlow, of the brilliant French director Adel Gance. Incident are scenes of Gance filming "Bonaparte and the Revenge" who took him more than 40 years to complete.
1/2 Price House Plants
Hanailung Plants
The
COUSIN COUSINE—Two unhappily-
married distant cousins, played by Marie-
Christine Barrault and Victor Lanoux,
become friends, then lovers. (R)
Every plant in the Greenhouse
Starts Fri. 2/18 End Set. 2/26 $1/2 Price
About 35 years ago, Lawrence saw its last community theater production. Since then several attempts at such a theater have had little success.
Garden Center
A season of play productions is the group's goal.
POCKET MONEY
SPECIAL!
and Greenhouse
4 blocks East of Mass. on 15th 843-2004
Two ground beef platters $3.29
Theater group plans 1st play
ROCKY - Passionate tale of struggle,
suffering and fortune. Sylvester Stallone is a true knockout in one of the year's best.
(PG)
NETWORK-Satiric look at television is that silly with a swag, savage, wagging grin; it doesn't matter formances by Peter Finch, Faye Dunaway, William Holden and Nate Daly gloss over
SILVER STREAK—Mild comedy-suspense film set abroad a transcontinental luxury line. It is partially redeemed by Richard Prorv's performance.
Accent the ARTS
Daily recitals in the lobby of Strong Hall
— Noon —
Basketball Officials
NEEDED FOR
TOURNAMENT GAMES
MONDAY, February 21
Concert Choral, Burt Allen, director
March 4 and 5
TUESDAY, February 22
Bryan Bell and Anderson, Cydi Brown, Sandy Densford, Barbara Beaulichsheim, Barbara Else
FRIDAY, February 25
Linda Shankel, soprano
Joe Hulce, violin
David Spence, piano
WEDNESDAY, February 23
John Boulton, flute
Soprano, soprano
Linda Amermian, soprano
David Spence, piano
Sign up at 208 Robinson
THURSDAY, February 24
Lynn Culmer, soprano; Augustus Pearson, piano;
Sharon Barron, piano; Jerome Dabney, tenor
The 9th Street Baptist Church Gospel Choir
Tenderloin Special
Pork
Tenderloin
Sandwich
85¢
enderloin Special
1.
Vista
RESTAURANTS
reg. 95'
Mon. thru Wed
Vista RESTAURANTS
1527 W. 6th
WITH 10 ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS!
Eve.af7:30 9:45
Sat.Sun.Mat
ROCKY S RIGHT ON THE BUTTON!
>SILVER STREAK>
Eve. With Gene Wilder
PG
Ends Tuesday
Barbra Streisand &
Kris Kristofferson
BLOODHOUND
Ends Tuesday
... a guardian at the
gates of Hell
Hillcrest
Eve. at 7:15 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:45
"A STAR IS BORN"
Hillcrest
Varsity
107274 ... September 9, 2005
the sentinel
Hillcrest
Eve, 7:00, 9:30
Sat-Sun, Miat, 1:30
Grandada
Taylor Street
Westchester, NY 10024
Ends Tuesday Walt Disney's
"FREAKY FRIDAY"
NOMINATED FOR
- including
3
ACADEMY AWARDS
BEST ACTRESS
W
Marie-Christine Barrault
"Cousin Cousine is fetchingly loony and great fun."
fe
R
London Society
Cousin
Cousine
Starts Wednesday Hillcrest
D lacl
wor
slip
53,
SPEED READING CLASS TO BE TAUGHT IN LAWRENCE
The United States Reading Lab Mid-West Division is offering their famous speed reading course to a limited number of qualified people here in the Lawrence area. The average person who completes this course can read 10 times faster, and with substantially improved comprehension and better concentration.
This famous course has taught many thousands of people to read over 1000 words per minute with the ability to understand and retain what they have read much more effectively. Average graduates can read most novels in less than one hour.
These meetings will be held on campus at the Lutheran Student Center, 15th and Iowa, on Wed., Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 17, 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Fri., Feb. 18 at 6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m., Saf., Feb. 19 at 10:30 a.m. and again at 1:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. and TWO FINAL MEETINGS, Tues., Feb. 22, 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Classes are limited and class places will be filled on first come-first serve basis only, so the sure to attend a meeting possible to insure a class place. Group meetings upon request may be arranged.
Monday, February 21. 1977
University Daily Kansan
7
its last then we had
ON!
o
their qualified who sub- con.
o read and usage
for its Affairs
the Art
115, 16
se that above event, if detail, tuition
student
gain at
, Fri.
t 10:30
and 8:30
m. and
basis Group
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Associate Sports Editor
Women dominate Big 8 swimming
Coach Gary Kempt said prior to the women's Big Eight Swimming Championship that there wouldn't be any records left. He was right.
During the three-day competition, which ended Saturday, in Robinson Natatorium, records were established or broken in 22-of-24 events.
Kansas, which had a total of six first-place finishes, won its third Big Eight Championship in a row by a 156-point margin. The Jayhawks finished the meet with 729.5 points, followed by Nebraska with 573.5. Then came Missouri, 404; Oklahoma
State, 225; Iowa State, 244; and Oklahoma, 255.
In particular reference to Kempf's prediction was the experience of Cathy Call, last year's conference swimmer of the year and one of our gold medals in the 1976 championships.
Swimmers defeat OSU
SHE WAS defending her titles in the 500- yard freestyle and 200 individual medley, and in both events she bettered her winning marks. But this year she placed third in the freestyle and second in the individual medley.
medley.
Call had to settle for only one first this year, winning the 400 individual medley in 4:50.6.
Demonstrating an emotional interest it
lacked all season, the KU men's swim team
won its final duel meet of the season,
the Alabama State University, 60-
53, Saturday.
The meet, which was Kansas coach Dick Reamon's last home appearance after announcing his resignation last week, was decided in the final event.
Peter Bakker-Arkema won by two seconds to hand Reason the goodbye victory.
"Everyone wanted to swim well today." Reasonan said after being thrown into the Robinson Natatorium pool in a victory celebration.
KU won eight of the 13 events.
Highlighting the day's events was senior Ben Wagoneer's record-breaking time of 1:59.33 in the 200-yard individual medley.
He also won the 200-yard breaststroke with a time of 2:14.0.
Kempf said he thought KU had improved sufficiently to beat the Colorado team now, but the Buffaloes and Kansas State would compete in the Big Eight championship meet.
The Jayhawks had last one meep, prior to the Big Eight competition. That was the only reason they came up with it.
KU QUALIFIED for the AIAW nationali
n four events, two relays and two individual
events.
The 200 medley relay team of Julie Tullie, Susie Padgett, Tracy Hagerson and Maureen Steban turned in a time of 158.4, which was sufficient for the rationals and to win a gold medal.
The 400 freestyle relay also qualified for the nationals—for the second time this season. In an earlier meet, the team of Sheehan, Debbie Bunker, Call and J. K. Walters broke the record for the event. But his performance has become improved by three to 3:38.5.
Bunker won two gold medals for the Jayhawks in individual events, and qualified for the ALAW national meet in both the 1980 and 1984 basketball (1:59.8) and the 1980 freestyle (54.27).
KU's other first place was the 800 freeze relay. The Jahayhaws swam the distance in 8:03.5, establishing a record for this year's first year of conference competition.
Sprinter Shella Calmese won two events and set a conference record at the Big Eight Indoor Track Championships while the third place team finished fourth. It finished fourth Saturday in Columbia, Mo.
Iowa State won the conference crown,
scoring 151 points. Kansas State was second
with 123, Colorado was third with 50 and
the Jayhawks were fourth with 30. Nebraska
scoreed 24, Missouri 22 and Oklahoma State
3.
Women finish fourth
Calmess won the 300-yard dash in record time, 36.2. She also won the 60 in 7.7.
Weekend Sports Roundup
Gymnasts win easily
Sean Williams broke a personal barrier and helped the KU men's gymnasts team to a big win over Fort Hays State College in Robinson Gymnastics, 102.86-153.00.
Williams scored a 9.0 (1.0 from perfect 10) on the floor exercise to win the event and the fifth place mark on the all-time KU record in both events. 8.7, Williams also won vaulting with 9.3.
Mike Hynes won the all-around competition, scoring 43.15 of 60 possible plays.
the pommel horse, 7.7; John Nunley on the still rings, 8.9; Jody Summers on the parallel bars, 8.35, and Ford Culbertson on the horizontal bar, 8.25.
Shooting derby ends
Jeff Scannel and Holly Ann Reusch won their respective divisions in the finals of a free throw contest sponsored by the KU Recreational Services Saturday night during halftime of the Kansas-Nebraska basketball game.
Scanshot 90 per cent from the line to defeat Carl Stolle in the men's division. Stolle
Reusch shot 68 per cent to defeat Rose
Anderson in the women's division. Anderson shot 63 per cent.
Club splits matches
The KU Soccer Club split this week's action, defeating Kansas State, 4-2, yesterday, after losing to Kansas United, 2-0, Saturday.
Freshman Reza Raisson scored two goals and junior Mike Turvey and freshman Roel Vanderveen scored one in the win over KState.
KU coach Berry Mullin said, "The (Kansas United) game was closer than the score indicated. They scored early on a KU play and were back again until one minute remained."
Srs. and grads needed to work in community service programs in to the U.S. Contact ACTION representative at Liberal Arts & Sciences Placement Office March 1.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to race, gender or ability. BRIANG ALL, CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
times times times times times
15 words or
less
Eastern
International
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $4.00
01 .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
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 simply by calling the UDE business office
864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Give away $10 per week and $100 cash plus
phone cards from U. Telephone Direct.
Mellow Yellow Pupus. U. Telephone Direct.
Subjects prepared for research study on music at a high school in the Bronx. Come to 48 Baker afternoon after 10:30 a.m. Feb. 9 to meet with students.
THUMBS. Lawrence's own street-level rock band, appearing at Off-the-Wall Hall. $95.00
Cantley House, The Episcopal Church at KU is open for study, meditation, prayer, and fellowship. 9 am and 10 pm. 11th through 12th November. Services: Holy Communion Tues. 9 p.m. and Thurs. 10 am. Wednesday 12th through 9 p.m. and 10 am.
Pancake feed Strove Thursay, Feb 23 at Trinity Episcopal Church, 1011 Vermont, 5-p.m. Adults at dawn; Children $1.00. Sponsored by the Excelsior Post. 206. Pascack, coffee milk,
The Plastic Club of Lawrence announces their 19th
annual law enforcement training at the National Guard Armory, 2nd and iowa,
Lawrence. Ks. Show hours by iowa and to 6 p.m.
One admission $-50 good three days. Food
available.
FOR RENT
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished. close to
Truen. Units marked. Narking. 843-9579.
Apartments and rooms furnished, paid,
paid on: 845-7576. tt
Frontier Ride-short term leases available. A one-bedroom suite with study. Heat Indoor pool and shag carpet. Hot pool door, disposal & laundry facilities. One-bedroom furnished and unfurnished from $135. Cali 842-7656 furnished and unfurnished from $135. Cali 842-7656
talenthouse apartments - Call Becky now. Summa
contracts on all Talenthouse apartments. Call 483-
792-0500.
Must siblet nilee, 2 bedroom unfurnished apart-
ment with campus $150 plus taxes.
Keep trying. 2-24
Keep trying. 2-24
Sublease 3 bedroom, unfurnished, house immemorial
Sublease 3 bedroom, unfurnished, house immemorial
family, $20 plus damage deposit. $2418. 2-22
Female grad student to furnish shared house near campus. Many extraits. 841-633-621
2-21
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
3-bedroom, 8-bit townhouse for sublease. Fire-place.
Call 814-5697, or 843-7333. **2-22**
"Tires-Batteries-Accessories"
19th & Mass.
843-9891 6:10:9 p.m. Sat.
8.a.Sun.
Two, 1 bedroom apartments, 1 block from KU.
643-7398 or 811-8767
**2.**
Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen & Sandwick Shop
846 Winnipeg 843-7685
2-bedroom apartment partially furnished. 1 block to campus. Heat 842-874-8. 2-24
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense—1) An at-a-glass book, for sensitive ones. 2) As study guide, 2) For Classification. 3) For Exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at www.tcf Crest Store.
FOR SALE
UNICORNS, Mermalids, wings in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to be presented. Professionally stone cutting service. Re-Work opportunities. Professional work, satisfaction gift,勺器 481.-8338
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BEL AUF ELECTRIC, 842-909-3690, W. 6th.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
furniture repair, custom furniture and Appliance Center. Tolmany, MA.
Redeemer Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod member (conference) with womens group in tow. We have active youth group, Face2014 300k in a mall for information on women's groups. For more information contact: Mit Fredrickson at 581-697-5900 or mail: mitfredonko@luhrmanchurch.com at a.m. Bible class and Sunday school at 10:15. Lutheran Layman's League meets every week from 9:30am to 11:30am.
The Allison Speakers are the only ones internally matched to room acoustics. The only one with a specification guarantee of ± 2 dB, is the E8th. Prices at $175. H: 3-4 E. 8th. Prices from $175.
Advent model 200 Stereo Receiver; designed to provide a versatile range of expensive and complex equipment. Its audible output is transmitted as an except total power output to that of the most powerful receiver. Audio 1, 8 E. Sh. we are specialists in the trade.
Volkswagen Owner! Four new NWB radial tires (85/16) and a new 240/12 tire (85/16). Add 50 per lift for mounting. $369. (105) Add 240 per lift for mounting. $369. Mass The appliance store on Mack with the discount code CLEAN. Woodrow Wilson Airport. Add 14 (85/16) or 14 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) or 14 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16) BR-12 (85/16)
Sony TTS-300 turntable with SME 300 II tone
audio card not perform $7500 turntable
C贝 841-845-3212 2-22
Attention new KMC Medical Students: For Wesene bincular microscope; 10x, for 40x, for 100x oil objects, 2 years old, excellent condition. For KUMC - 3025-014 or write J. Write, Box B, KUMC.
2-22
2-23
Bicycle=21-35)* MJM, Reynolds 331 DB Tubing,
Bicycle=21-35)* MJM, Reynolds 331 DB Tubing,
must sell, mustell C4 419-789-600 2-22
Jeep 1971 CJ-5. Good condition. Must sell. 864-23
Jeep 867-634 or 124e LMdley. 864-23
The Advent Company is the leader in the Hi-Fi industry in research and product development. The Advent Company offers 201 A. The Advent receiver is gaining popularity as one of the cheapest affordable. Their speakers offer engineering and value unsurpassed at any price. Adventorized Adventor, dealer in Audi, 13 E. 8th. 3-1
Tri-Phase Speaker - A Real Home Dice System
Tri-Phase heavy, duty wheelchair that he has freighted to a secure warehouse for protection. Dig out these Boogie Shoes and check these specially designed units at *R.A. Andrews*.
SKIS- *Pausinglad* 195, c.m. with look G.T. binnings. SKIS- *Pausinglad* 195, c.m. Like new. Like new. 2-23
814-Dwave 1049 Dwave
1965 Badinw Electric Guitar. Good condition-
2-235
843-1085-1085
Ludwig Druska-quad. Full set with Zildjian jclan
Calls 841-309.7
2-24
Brand new 10-speed Moto-Beanie. Originally $370, for $300, 842-6222. Extension $450.
70 VW HAJT. Rung perfect. Make offer and call HOATJ at 864-6953. 2-25
has the eyeglasses you want.
806 Mossaachusss
Phone 814-7211
ENGLISH SPORTS CAR, 1977 Simpson Alpine
components rebuilt or replaced. Power brake
switches.
VISIONS
HELP WANTED
1747 Star 128, 4-3d, 4-4sec, AM-MF, radials,
$1700. Call 272-6429 in Topcape 2-25
-
LOST AND FOUND
Student Computer programmer available immediately. Office of Information Systems is seeking a 1½ time position in the development of comprehensive administrative effort. Opportunity to join a growing information technology team. Provide support with VSI, IBM, CICS, MARR, WI, and a telecommunications provider. High school diploma required with programmer training course and or a 6 months experience as a student at KU. Resume reqd to: Michael Carlson (Graduate) CKU, Campus, CTU; 1977, AW EQUAL OPERATION COMPANY EMPLOYER. Work with persons, and personnel involved in the development of computer software.
LIBRARIA, ARTES MAJORS to work in
workshop on Artificial Intelligence in
campus March 25 and April 14.
Purchase materials from campus March
30.
Antique loom and spool holder, antique table day bed. 342-815-9431, Smitty's Museum table. Call 312-815-9431. Smitty's Museum table. Call 312-815-9431.
Bacon. Put yourself through college the easy way.
Become an Avon Representative, and make the money you need, selling quality products on your website. For full details, call 842-516-8080
6073
Men or women. We need 5 people immediately.
We will have a team of people who work.
No experience necessary. We will train.
For personal interview call Bob Lawson, 842-310-
Lawson Kirby Co. Will lead to full training.
s 4-14
Need experienced bass player with good equipment and attitude, reaches ahead work available in a band setting.
HEADQUARTERS
for
Imported Auto Parts
JAMES CANG
Foreign Auto Parts
843-8080 304 Locust
Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m.
Lost a man's wedding band made of yellow and white gold portion. Reward is offered. Call 852-763-4500.
Found-Ladies wrist writ in front of Kappa
Kappa Gamma Sorority. Call 871-788-4362, ask for
Sorority Info.
Local moving firm need experiential drivers and packers. Would like you to work a few hours a day in preparation for summer work. Please send in the resume to port office 237, Lawrence, Kansas 60044
Found.-Men's Bulloa Watch in the parking lot at Alumit Place. Call 832-4531. 2-21
Found-Men* class ring. *Junction City Blue*
*Monarch*, noon Feb. 14, 864-1146; Margaret, 2-23
Found: Men's silver caplet on Ellsworth baseball court. Call 841-1580 to identify. 2-22.
Lost-Fri—11—Y Zone, men's blue suede coat
Orange, men's blue or leave at Min $12
—obviously bevy coat
B 8-22
Vista
Found. The white cat with 1 green eye, 1 blue
eye, a grey patch on its nose. Phone: 2-35
4633.
Restaurants
Open daily 'til 1 a.m.
Fri. & Sat.'till 2 a.m. 1527 W. 6th
...
Restaurants
Su Casa
IN THE MARKET PLACE
745 New Hampshire
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts
& Crafts 841-3522
Wool sweaters and ponchos are here
Found—Puriumal liquid silver necklace found by Potters Lake. Call and identify, 8410-657-23
2
Found—one pair of women's gifts in front of Twemilah or Feb. 17. **644-8427** to classmate
Lost-Large Grey/Brown male cat near Trail-
ridge Apartments 842-736. 2-23
...
Found--dog who looks like a fish. If you want him (i.e. please want him) call Jim OM84-243-806.
MISCELLANEOUS
**PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT** is available with Alice at the House of U勉/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m.
NOTICE
**swap Shop**, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishware,
clock movements. Open daily 12:38.
843-3277
EUROPE, WORLDWIDE 4226 academic discursive events
(804) (880) 4128 First Ave. Quebec, QK 4
(804) (880) 4128 First Ave. Quebec, QK 4
Custom hardwareette. Rockport show. Dingo
Cabin. Tampa Bay Bears 16-8 Kiss 16. the 40th St. Market
UNITED - 16-8 Kiss 16. the 40th St. Market
PERSONAL
Eurowell now, in Lawrence driving school, receive transportation and education. For transportation, drive now, pay now, receive transportation, drive now, pay now.
EUROPE When you want it, where you want it. If you want it in Europe, European. No charter bus. Call Bike.
EUROPE European. No charter bus. Call Bike.
Gay Counselling Services; Call 842-7055, 6-12 pm for referral. For socializing calls, call 842-7055.
Karate. Learn the ancient secrets of the martial arts to stress on the individuals development as a martial artist and to learn self-control.
Accounting or computer science students wanted
accounting and/or computer science degrees. Good job for good work. Call Mark, or
contact us at info@wisconsin.edu.
Don't miss ROCK CHALK REVUE) Best ever
tickets for Friday 20th still available at S.U.A.
A. R. C.
EUROPE: YOUR WAY. Fly into or depart from
Airport 11 in New York or from New
Jersey. Depart from as many Airlines:
Discount on class A accommodations and
rail transportation available. For information
$-11
We'll get you to class on time! Jayhawkwake-Wep-
18, 8423-2538 or 8432-6131, per month. 2-ma-
nths
We are still giving away money in the MELLOW
Basket for the 2015 Christmas Eve Party. At eater,
win 1, or $10 bonus.
We enlisted meeting you during the last several weeks of our visit to Florida. Please your understanding, and your visit - Steve Leben
Scottwoman—Grr, All my love, Tiger. 2-21
Spend 29 days in Europe this summer. See Campbell 20 days, Paris, London, Pisa, Fiesole, Madrid, 441-728-3188
ARMADILLO
BEAD CO.
NOW IN THE
8TH
STREET
MARKET PLACE
941.7964.M4.S
9:30 Thurs 8:00
---
841-7946 M-5 10-5:30(Thurs. 8:00)
9th and Iowa
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
RIDES——RIDERS
The Lounge
- Pinball
TYPING
SERVICES OFFERED
To the girl who called—We may have your eye,
to the girl who calls—May there be a good year.
41-8180 or 8141-6412
2-24
River Warded - Spring break, destination: Tempe,
811-604-7858 Headed that way? Call Us!
811-604-7858 2-23
Anyone who was in Big Tomtown Canyon during
9250 food, please call FV, collect. at 303-456-
6927.
U.S. citizen, 22, Gemini, quiet, self employee,
well traveled, likes music and dance. Seeks
woman 20-25. Wives friendship, and possibly
marriage. Call Mary at 843-1484-255
nings
Your paper deserves the best Call Pengery for
644-313-414, days: 842-898-988,
and weeks.
Volkswagen Tune Up Special 819-2500. Bosch
Technology. VW Wiring Kit 819-2400.
VW Wiring Kit 900 and Energy Road 814-7322.
February "Tune up special!" We clean up and adjust drairies on bays and chain. True both for any port or accessory at the time of "tune up special!" Any part or accessory can be at time of "tune up special!" Speed $16,20; now $148; single speed or 3 speed, $16,20; now $148; single speed or 3 speed. See the back for all marks for all marks of bicycles. Lawrence Schwinwicz, Century, 19 W. Goth. 9-6 Mon.-Sat. 3-28
French lessons by native speaker with experience,
last phone. 841-2878. 2-25
THEISM BINDING COPY. The House of Uther's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you with 858 Manhattan offices or 482-858 Thank you.
Math tutoring - courses, experienced tutors can help you through courses. 600, 002, 105, 101, 114, 116, 117, 121, 122, 123, 124, 142, 580, 652, 827 Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681. **tf**
TYPING-Thesis, term papers, etc. Reasonable
Call, Bath Bell, 814-6477 3-4
Experienced typist-term paper, thesis, mule.
Experienced typist-typing, spellcheck, spelling
corrected 843-5036. Mrs Wright.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
- Bud on Tap
Typtip/editor, IBM Pica/clite, Quality work.
Raminate cases, tests, disclosures welcome.
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
TYPING—We have many return customers who are satisfied with our low cost and good service.
Pool
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
10-5 Mon.-Sat. 842-764
5 5th Bell Hall, 942-764
Till on Thursday
Open Book 90 min. maximum Except cover!
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand Goods • Vintage Clothing
• Furniture • Antiques
• Imported Clothing
1308 Mass. 841-7070
WANTED
Female roommate wanted for 2-bedroom apart-
ment for 528 a month. On bus route C 721
849-8933
Roommate wanted for house, 15 minute walk to campus, $85 month, Call 841-3387. 2-21
Nice apartment for one person beginning June 1.
Evaluate with or without a car. Please leave.
846-9698 846-5243
846-9698
Wanted co-op, Companion, Experienced pilot or instructor. Apply this summer. Prefer female grade student or a member. Have four place plane available for your interest. For more details write Lawrence B. Booth 307-212-2-21
Summer roommate needed. New room, 4 bedroom house. $875 to $1200 a utilite. Confidence. Savings up to 20%.
Wanted: with musical talent. If you play instruments, please include one or more sets of three talents earn some extra cash! The 312th Army Reserve Band gets together once a week on the mid-west as well as locally. If you can secure one weekend (16 hrs) per month, and work in the Army Reserve Band, you thing you enjoy part-time, call us at 843-1651 or visit www.armyreserveband.com/yoga/video with you an instrument and uniforms. Ask for Sgt. Benny James, U.S. Army Reservoir, 212
1 Recommence (male) for a large house with 82
65+ plus 46* units. For infirmity
build-up 841-845.
"It's a beautiful Day' blue album or J. D. Black's
Call 843-607-2449. Will pay good 2-244
Cell Call 843-607-2449
Roommate wanted. Male/Female, quiet location, fireplace, own room, choose to campau, call Gayle.
Male graduate students widen to share two bed-
room apartments, $19.50 per month, & 842-979-6300.
*Please visit us at www.hotelsun.com.*
Rides needed Leave KUwill M-F-W for Johnston County. Will pay Call Corp 6-205
2-245
Eyedoecher Optical
DISTINGCTIVE EYEWARE
N.Y.C. BROADWAY
Male roommate. Move in now pay his rent in.
From Fraser. Non smoke. Call 842-3605 between
and your roommate.
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
Gildocher Optical
DISTINCT TIME EYEWARE
Alliance House, 212 East 76th Street, New York, NY 10014
MAISMITH HALL
---
TRY
Home of The 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
8
Monday, February 21, 1977
University Daily Kansan
On Campus
CITY OF MONTREAL
Events
TODAY: Will he be a student-faculty seminar on JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union's International Room. There will be an informational meeting on SUA OFFICER AND BOARD SELECTIONS for anyone interested at 3:15 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union. MICHAEL ARGYLE, a psychologist from Oxford University, will speak at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room on "Training for Social Skills."
Announcements
TONIGHT: ALDEN RAND GORDON, a scholar from Harvard University, will present an illustrated lecture on "A Group of Nineteenth Century German Prints: Graphic Traditions and Contemporary Events" at 7:30 in Spooner Museum's lecture hall.
representatives from the KU Medical Center will be on campus to talk to representatives in careers in KU RECORDS OR RESPIRATORY THERAPY in MIDDLE EAST (422) 623-5900.
GUARANTEED AVIATION TRAINING NOW!
JAYHAWK SOPHOMORES & JUNIORS
As a sophomore or junior at K.U. you can reserve guaranteed training as a Naval Aviation Officer by graduate by participating as an Aviation Officer Reserve Officer (AVROC).
For more information see L. Gary Bakken at the Student Union, Tuesday
and Wednesday, Feb. 22, 13; or write Navy Information team, 4249 Broadway, Kansas
Navy AVROC. It's not just a job, it's an adventure.
TOPEKA-Five resolutions intended to increase the number of rural Kansas doctors won final approval in the Kansas House of Representatives Friday.
Rural doctor resolutions win final House approval
Three of the resolutions are aimed at the KU Medical Center. Two of them ask the Med Center to recruit more Kansas students, particularly from rural areas, and find them jobs in Kansas. Another recommends the development of model rural health care enters.
A fourth resolution asks the Board of
Residents to more residences in general
family practice.
The fifth resolution asks the state Department of Health to develop a better definition of what a medically underserved area is and determine the areas in Kansas that are underserved.
A sixth resolution that died in a House committee last week recommended that the Med Center develop a program for qualified students to complete both their undergraduate and medical degrees in six years.
The resolutions originated in an interim Senate Health and Welfare Committee.
a society to promote contact and interaction among persons from all disciplines who have an interest in science: its development, its methodologies, its contemporary impact, and its future. Student humanists, scientists, and educators are encouraged to participate in the organizational party/meeting on Friday, February 25 at 3:10 P.M. in the Hawk's Nest of the Hawk. This society will select representatives to the Hawk's Nest of the Hawk. The Society will further information, contact J. D. VanZandt or Berwill Williams at 844-3011.
The Society for Creative Disorganization.
Paid for from the Student Activities Fee
ENTROPY
LIBERAL ARTS GRADS . .
Consider an Alternative . . Consider
ACTION -
PEACE CORPS/VISTA
Representatives on Campus
Placement Office
March 1
Seniors/Grads sign up for interview now
Announcing the Incorporation of
Consider us service now
Accent the ARTS
SUA and the Art History undergraduates present . . .
THE NON-ARTIST
IN THE ART WORLD
Donald Hoffman
Jeanne Stump
Douglas Drake
Ellen Goheon
FREE
8 p.m., Wed., Feb. 23
Forum Room, Union
Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan 864-4358
FREE ALKA-SELTZER. FOR STUDENTS TRYING TO REGAIN THEIR FACULTIES.
PROPERTY
OF
U.MASS.
Alka Selzer
ALKA
SELZER
ALKA
SELZER
PLOP PLOP FIZZ FIZZ FAST FAST
PLOP PLOP
FIZZ FIZZ
FAST FAST
On the date listed below, we'll be giving away free samples of Alka-Seltzer on your campus. And that's not all.
Four of the sample packs we're giving away will contain $25 winning certificates good for a $25 prize (books or cash).
So, if you're lucky, we'll relieve a few financial pains as well. Only one prize awarded per person...prize value $25. No substitution of prizes permitted. Original prize certificate must accompany request to claim prize and cannot be mechanically reproduced.
DATE FEB 22 TIME: 6 LOCATION: OLIVER HALL
FEB 23 11-1 UNION
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 87, No.95
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Basketball race left to chance
Tuesday, February 22, 1977
See page six
Open door policy defined by new vice chancellor
Staff Reporter
BvJOHN MUELLEP
David Ambler yesterday defined an open door policy he will have for students when he becomes vice chancellor for student affairs.
Ambler, speaking at a press conference,
in Strong Hall, repeated a promise he made
two weeks ago to keep an open door for
students.
"We need to go through proper channels." Ambler said. "I like to pay attention to individuals, but we have to pay special attention to student leaders."
TWO WEEKS ago, when Ambler was appointed vice chancellor for student affair, he said that, "my door will always be open to students, I can't operate in any other way."
He said yesterday, "student leaders won't need an appointment to see me."
Ambler, 39, is now vice president for educational and student services at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio. He succeeds Mr. Baldwin, the last May to return to full-time teaching.
Despite the relatively low voter turnout in
last week's election, Ambler said, the Student Senate represented student opinion and he didn't think the University had any choice but to pay attention.
**WE NEED to communicate with**
students. We need an ethic that permeates
our practices.
He also said that not emphasizing communication with the Senate would be anarchy and he planned to attend Senate meetings.
"The 4,000 students who voted last week registered their opinion. It's democracy."
"The University has to be able to justify itself to students."
He said he thought the biggest problem on campus was a sense of cynicism in terms of respect.
Ambler, asked about alleged racial discrimination practiced by KU sororities, said 'I know of what you speak, but it's difficult to prove whether it's informal.
Tuition plan opposed by medical students
Staff Reporter
"I THINK the fraternites and sororites have made tremendous progress in recything the overlast two years. And I think the change isn't going to happen overnight."
By BARRY MASSEY
If the student agrees to work in an unobserved area, all or part of his tuition will be charged.
University of Kansas medical students, in a battle against a House proposal that could force the school to pay for tuition, will carry their fight to the House of Representatives if necessary. Debbie Hall, a representative of first-generation college students at Student Assembly (MSA), said last night.
Robert Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said that he was unaware of any official stand made by the University on Hayden's bill. But he said that there was some concern among faculty members about the bill.
Haynes, who presented her classmates' opposition to the proposal at a hearing of the House Ways & Means Committee yesterday, said that medical students were "very concerned" about the tuition proposal and would continue in their efforts to oppose it. She said that a final vote on the proposal was expected later this week.
Chancellor Archie Dykes couldn't be reached last night for comment.
"WELL TRY really hard to talk to the Ways and Mears Committee before the vote," Haynes said, "but if I pass, we'll definitely be lobbying in the House."
The proposal, introduced by State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, would require medical students to pay up to about $13,500 in fees for an area considered medically underserved.
"Some of the faculty is concerned whether we'll be able to continue to attract high level students if it is passed," Kugel said.
At the committee hearing on the bill, Emerson Yoder, president of the Kansas Medical Society, also spoke in opposition to Hayden's bill. He said that more efforts were needed to attract doctors to underserved areas but that Hayden's bill wasn't the answer to the rural doctor shortage.
Denouncing Hayden's bill as involuntary servitude, Yoder said that the legislature would be making a mistake to "try to pen our grads in this state."
YODER URGED the legislators to adopt voluntary scholarship programs that provide agreements to practice in underserved areas.
The Kansas Medical Society and Kansas Farm Bureau are working to develop scholarship programs that would attract doctors to rural areas. Yoder said.
Haynes said the bill wouldn't produce any significant effects on the doctor shortage until about 1982, assuming that it took effect on her first-year class. It wouldn't produce any quick solution to areas now underserved, she said.
There is also concern, she said, that many superior students would transfer to other medical schools, damaging the health care system in Kansas and the Med Center's reputation.
BECAUSE MEDICAL students prefer to voluntarily decide where they will practice, Haynes said, committee members should move toward other types of programs in.
See MEDICAL STUDENTS page 5
Ambler said students should be involved in University governance but that he didn't think they should be able to vote on awarding tenure to faculty members.
"That's primarily the responsibility of a faculty member's peers," he said. "Faculty members have the expertise in tenure decisions."
THE UNIVERSITY, he said, should focus on long-range planning because when new buildings are added, new operating costs also are added.
Ambler said that students had helpful perspectives on tenure decisions but he wanted to move slowly before giving them a vote.
Ambler said that the planning should emphasize student services, especially with a focus on
"Academic considerations are the heart of a university, but KU student services programs have a developmental problem," be said.
Ambler said that he couldn't specify how he would improve student services at KU, but that he planned to scrutinize uses of the program for more individual and intrinsic participation.
AMBLER SAID he was favorably impressed with KU during his first visit to the campus last fall. The impression, however, has his only reason for leaving Kent State.
"There is a very healthy attitude on campus. Your state has been very supportive."
"I decided to leave Kent primarily from a professional standpoint," he said. "I have to fight a temptation to put my roots down deeply."
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Ambler said that he'd been looking for the right change from Kent for two years, and the college's new president will move to Lawrence in June and become vice chancellor for student affairs July 1.
Vice Chancellor David Ambler
106 win College Assembly posts; new terms to begin immediately
A total of 106 undergraduate positions on the College Assembly of Liberal Arts and Sciences were decided in the election last week, and the results are now official. The new members of the College Assembly will begin service immediately, unlike past members who had held their terms in the fall. Their first meeting will be March 22. The winners are:
JUNIOR CLASS
Former president can't make KU visit
Former President Gerald Ford won't speak at the University of Kansas this spring as was once expected, a University official said last night.
The official, Max Lucas, University director for facilities and planning, said Ford's aides had contacted the chancellor's office to say that scheduling conflicts would stop Ford from appearing here.
"Ford's aides said that they were sorry but that because of previous commitments President Ford would be unable to come this spring." Lucas said. He plan to keep in touch with them to get Ford here this fall. It's possible, he said.
tour of college campuses later this semester, date had ever been set for its appearance.
It was announced in January that Ford tentatively planned to include KU in a
The former President's daughter, Susan, is a sophomore at KU.
Jim Machherberger
Scot Nielsen
Charles Cidell
Cris Gillen
Sarah Help
Joel Whitle
James R. Orr
Jim Miles
Jim Whits
Mary E. Janson
T. J. Winder
Larry Jean Watson
Jeff Murray
Mangao Joht
Krish Nilpapu
Monde D. Nightwonger
Mark Zuckerberg
Rent E. Erickson
Collette Hull
Peter Hutton
Torrece T. Tibum
Scott Lambers
Baker Reyes
Steve Lauer
Coole Davenport
Kevin G. White
J. I. Hall
J. R. Moha
T. R. Schreiber
Michel K. Linneberger
Thomas M. Watson
Jan Pfeiffer
Kevin McPhail
Stephen A. Miller
Bennett Gerster 75
Mike詹姆斯 74
Billi Hilgins 74
Randall Hiltigman 74
John Bakee 73
Leonard Hardford 75
David Kandali 76
Michael F. Larrle 75
Dennis Tietze 87
Sarah Duff 67
Eunice M. Min 66
Kenny M. Underwood
Gene Camerasa 84
Michelle O'Connell 84
Cindy T. State, II 83
Jim Lay 83
Tom Bawr
Mary Bed Moeller
Olivia Winters
Tim McCarthy
Sam Gilliam
Susan Glashan
Anandra Volk
Bill Shea
Bernard Johnson
Jeffrey G. Cogle
Darya Reagan
Ruth Benton
Russell Hutton
Robert Wayne
Bernard Johnston
Barnaby Thorne
Amy Mortensen
Ann Meyers
FRESHMAN CLASS
FRESHMEN CLASS
Niall Slomo 121
Ole Grey 130
Melanie L. Andersen 169
Tia McKinnon 169
Norne Harris 169
Tina A. Kirkpatrick 167
Salby J. Unalil 168
Joshua Miskin 158
Charlie Link 158
Hugh Wade 158
Terry Leachman 158
Christopher Haynolds 159
Richard Burkard 159
Richard Burkard Key 159
Rohde Hene Hillberg 165
Alex Hoskins 144
Douglas A. Penne 144
Gordon S. Jones 141
Jennifer A. Drapkin 141
Michael Dumner 141
Larry Leathley 137
Gregory F. Geier 137
Sarah Greveringen 137
Robic Largo 137
Gregory B. Chambers 133
Robert Maldenkamp 132
David Wilson 132
A. Allred 131
Margaret Berlin 129
Bessie McDonald 129
Michael D. Webb 129
Michael D. Gibbs 129
Flu strain found here can be fatal
A strain of influenza that sometimes can cause fatal illness has been confirmed in Lawrence by state health officials.
The strain, called Hong Kong B, was confirmed recently in two cases at Wakkins Hospital by the state Department of Health and Environment.
Although Hong Kong B is a relatively mild strain, Donald Wilkox, state epidemiologist, said yesterday the flu can be followed by Reye's syndrome, which has a 50 per cent fatality rate and can cause permanent brain damage.
Wilcox said the symptoms usually appeared in children two to five days after apparent recovery from the flu. Common symptoms are prolonged vomiting, disorientation, delirium and irritability, he said.
"The important thing is not to send the child back to school too soon," he said. "The parents should make sure the child is perfectly well."
After an outbreak of the Hong Kong flu in 1974, 16 persons reportedly contracted Reye's syndrome in Kansas, eight of whom died, he said. The disease is rare, however, striking only three out of every 10,000 flu cases, he said.
Only one case of Reye's syndrome has been confirmed this flu season in Kansas, he said. A 12-year-old boy in Wyndham County was diagnosed with the flu on Wednesday by KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins, said no new cases of Hong Kong B had been confirmed but several blood samples and throat cultures had been sent to the state hospital for analysis. The two persons at Watkins who had the flu about two and a half weeks ago were both in their early 20s and now have recovered, he said.
Wollmann said the vaccine given to most people during the mass flu inoculations last fall for swine and Type A Victoria wouldn't provide immunization against Hong Kong B. A vaccine is available for Hong Kong But Watkins didn't have it, he said.
Most local health officials agree that the flu hasn't reached epidemic proportions, but some cases of what is believed to be the influenza virus have been reported at Lawrence High School.
Jean Dicker, supervisor of school health services, said four parents had called her describing what seemed like Hong Kong B, and had sent home some children last week.
Lota Von Gunter, a nurse at Cordley School Elementary and absences had increased but some of the students may have occasion for George Washington's birthday.
"We've had a few cases of flu in the past
six hours, but I wouldn't diagnose it as Hong
Cheng."
Wollmann said that at the onset of Hong Kong B, the patient may have a sore throat, fever and aching muscles persisting for 48 hours, and severe cases may last a week.
Because this strain of flu has been in the area for some time, many persons have developed an immunity to it, he said, but as people should be avoided crowded areas.
"Something everyone can do is cover his mouth and nose when he coughs or sneezes, because that's how the germs are spread," he said.
Al-Anon meetings aid families, friends of alcoholics
(Editor's note): This story is the second in a three-part series on alcoholism.
By LIZ LEECH Contributing Writer
Les and Jean have just come from one of their meetings.
Both attend the meetings several times a week. Les has gone for eight years and Jean for five years. They knew that a person living with an alcoholic could suffer as much as the alcoholic, and they had learned from the meetings to deal with alcoholism, and they can admit it's an incurable disease.
THE MEETINGS they attend are Al-Anon Family Group meetings, sponsored by Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) for relatives and friends of alcoholics.
Les said the number of people at the meetings had increased from five or six three years ago to 10 or 30 people. They met in the Lawrence chapter, which meets in the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont street, on Mondays and Thursdays, and Wednesday at the church, 94% Massachusetts street, is about 10 years old.
Neither Les nor Jean is an alcoholic, but each is married to one.
"It's a soil-help program," Les said recently. He would find out to help some students drinking water and Al-Amer's purpose.
AL-ANON, like a KA, keeps the names of those who attend annoyance. At the beginning and end of each meeting an AA creed is read, but the rest of the meeting consists of discussion.
"You think when you go into the meetings that no one in the world has problems like yours."
"Before Al-Anon, I didn't have a way to cope, or have someone just listen to, get it out," Jean said. "When you are doing all this talking at the meetings, you're answering your own problems."
He said someone with a drinking problem would try to find any possible explanation for his drinking, but he didn't.
encountered similar situations in dealing with alcoholics.
"You think when you go into the meetings that no one in the world has problems, like yours."
Les said that many who attended the meetings
JEAN SAID that alcoholics sometimes physically abused other people.
"And we all take verbal abuse in some form or another and it's very hard to cope," she said.
Jean and Les said that no one should blame
himself for another's alcoholism, and that no one should try to stop an alcoholic from drinking because it was a disease the alcoholic had to conquer himself.
SHE SAID sometimes people living with alcoholics got ulcers and suffered from emotional problems. She said she had quit believing in God because she felt abandoned.
"The way we react-yelling, accusing,
me as well just as bad as the alcoholic's
drinking." Jean did.
"But it isn't a religious program." Les added.
"Al-Anon gives people something to believe in."
Many persons don't know whether to confront the alcoholic about his drinking and its results, or to resist it.
Les said that although an individual shouldn't try to stop the alcoholic from drinking it didn't mean that the alcoholie's drinking should be supported.
**NOT GOOD**
"YOU CAN make it pretty hot for them," he said
"I if he sweeps the creamy then you don't have to fix it."
let it in, just
"Don't make it easy for the person to drink,
but there are no easy answers."
Jean said that once she started going to Al-Anon meetings five years ago, she could accept her husband's alcoholism. What she couldn't accept was that she was at fault for the way she handled his alcoholism.
"For the first six weeks I went, all I heard was
what was wrong with Jean, and I was read to quit the program because that was what I'd heard at her party.
"I walked into a room of 40 women and I was scared to death," he said. "I but I staved."
LES, HOWEVER, said he couldn't accept the fact that his wife was an alcoholic. He had attended some AA meetings with her and under a little pressure from her had gone to Al-Anon.
"Gradually, the things they said started getting through my thick head. I fought the program but I was frustrated."
kept going to meetings because of the peace of mind they shared. They also said they enjoyed helping clients at church.
BOTH LES and Jean said they were glad they
"I found it very hard to accept that my wife was an alcoholic because I had the Victorian outlook on alcohol."
'Just tonight we got a call from a girl who was crying and saying her mother was drunk all the time.
"Gradually, the things they said started getting through my thick head. I fought the program but I wanted it."
One of the first things people are taught at Al-Anon, Les said, is to understand alcoholism.
time," Les said. "We told her to come right down to sleep, making that night. That kid was just desperate for her."
"Alcoholism isn't weak will. It's a disease that can be arrested but not curbed. That's a said." A man who was arrested for alcoholism.
HE SAID alcoholism was a three-fold disease composed of a physical compulsion to drink, a mental obsession with drinking and a spiritual belief that caused the drinker to lose faith in exegetes.
Jean said when the family understood alcoholism, it could often help the alcoholic recover and help the family to live.
"But we're not marriage counselors, and were not mental health experts," Les said. "You can't just wave a magic wand and solve a drinking problem because it's the growth of years of problems. It takes years to recover. But you have to take it one day at a time."
SOMETIMES THE problems are never solved.
"Not everyone who comes to Al-Anon gets help."
Les said. "They don't like it; what they hear there don't suit them and they never come back."
---
However, Jean said that for many it was a relief to attend the first Al-Anon meeting because everyone had the common problem of an alcoholic friend or relative.
2
Tuesday, February 22, 1977
University Daily Kansau
News Digest
From our wire services
Nemechek hearing delaued
WAKEEENEY—Francis Donald Nernschek, who was convicted Feb. 11 on five counts of first-degree murder, is scheduled to appear in Trego County District Court March 7 for posttrial motions and possible sentencing.
Judge Steve Flood agreed over the weekend to delay the hearing that was originally scheduled Feb. 28. The delay was requested by defense lawyers because of a court conflict.
of a court conflict,
Minnesota's Wakeney, the possibility of life sentences on each of the
neighborhoods returned by a jury in Saline County earlier this month.
Turkish talks progressina
ANKARA, Turkey [HP]—Presidential envoy Clark Clifford, in Turkey to press for timely settlement of the Cyprus dispute with Greece, yesterday reported "excellent progress" in talks about problems between Turkey and the United States.
While Clifford was meeting Prime Minister Suleyman Demirel, about 30 students stoned the U.S. Information Center, shattering windows and the windshield of an American official's car.
name of an American official] who was the former Secretary, who met Greek officials in Athens last week and told him Cyprus tomorrow, did not mention the island in a statement to reporters after more than four hours of talks with Demirle and other Turkish officials. But Demirle confirmed Cyprus had been discussed.
Carter welcomes Trudeau
WASHINGTON - With drum rolls and trumpet fanfales for his guest but none for his husband, Carter gave a warm welcome yesterday to Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, saluting the "tremendous friendship" between the United States and Canada.
the United States and Canada.
After receiving a 10 gum salute, Trudeau told Carter, "We feel these are great days for our relations and for the world. We have great expectations this continental neighborhood will flourish."
Trudeau and Carter met in the Oval Office after the welcoming ceremony. Yesterday was the first of two days of discussions expected to cover such wide-ranging issues as the economy, defense and fishing rights.
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter yesterday asked Congress to increase 1978 spending by $19.4 billion above what former President Gerald Geraid R. Ford proposed. Carter said money would put his campaign first step "away" filling his promises to the voters.
Carter asks for budget increase
Carter said the proposed 1978 federal budget was essentially still President Ford's budget because he hadn't had sufficient time to change it completely.
But he said that in changing Ford's budget, proposals had been rejected that would needlessly add to the burden of spending depended upon Medicare, Medicaid and food programs.
CARTER PROPOSED increasing spending to $499.4 billion in fiscal 1978, compared with the $440 billion Ford recommended. There would be a budget deficit of $7.7 billion, which is $10.8 billion more than Ford recommended.
spending in fiscal 1977 is now estimated at $4 billion, with the deficit at a record $686 million.
Most of the changes to the Ford budget were expected. Carter scrapped Ford's plans to cut food stamps, child nutrition programs, Medicare and Medicaid, public works programs and unemployment benefits.
He also rejected Frost's proposals for a $1-billion tax cut, replacing it with his own tax cut and job program that would total an estimated $31 billion over two years.
HE TRIMMED defense spending by about $350 million from Ford's request for fiscal 1978 and proposed cutting back on
authority for defense spending after 1978 by about $2.7 billion.
Outlays for defense under Carter's plans would total $111.8 billion, compared with Ford's $112.3 billion proposal. Carter would increase spending for the Department of Defense to Welfare to $161.7 billion, compared with the $184.8 billion recommended by Ford.
Carter deleted $28 million in proposed spending for 18 water resources development projects for 1978, a proposal that already has raised a storm in Congress. The project was not listed. Carter indicated spending for some of the projects could be restored later.
THERE WOULD be significant changes in outouts for housing assistance. The number of additional subsidized housing units to be assisted in 1977 would be increased from 238,800 to 400,000, which would increase outouts by $70 million in 1978.
Carter also proposed an increase of $27 million in public housing operation subsidies for 1977 and 1978 to offset higher utility costs from the severe winter this year.
Carter's budget proposals are still subject to change by Congress, which will begin in March.
earth shoe
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Amin sentences 1,000 to death
OFF THE WALL HALL
727 New Hampshire
SUA
NAIROI- At least 1,000 Ugandans were killed and hundreds more were arrested and tortured in a two-week campaign of terror; directed by Uganda's President Idi Amin and climaxed by the executions of the nation's Anglican archbishop and two senior cabinet ministers, reliable intelligence sources reported here yesterday.
Accent the ARTS
"Amin has insisted that they died in an accident while trying to overpower their enemies."
The sources said the campaign apparently stemmed from a decision by Amin to eliminate what he believed to be subversive elements within the Achene tribe on tribes armed with a Catholic clerical army. It was a Molem and member of the Katwa tribe, both minorities in Uganda.
Executed last week under the cover of an "auto accident" were Archbishop Janani Lawuw and high government ministers Charles Oboth-Ofumbi and Erinayo Oryme. All three had been accused of plotting to overthrow the Amin regime.
presents . . .
STUDENT PRINT
AND DRAWING SALE
works by Students
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offered for purchase
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10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Thursday and Friday,
Feb. 24 and 25
Union Lobby
Presents Norml Benefit Night with Country Heir and Thumbs Fridav. Feb. 25
All proceeds go to legislative decriminalization efforts.
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WED., FEB. 23
9:30-5:00
Hewlett-Packard Calculator Representative, David Wand, will be at the Kansas Union Bookstore on Wednesday, Feb. 23, 9:30 a.m. 5:00 p.m. to answer any questions and demonstrate the capabilities of Hewlett-Packard Calculators.
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OnCampus
Events
TODAY: Michael Argyle, psychologist from Oxford University, will speak at a bioquorum on "ANALYSIS OF NOVERALL COMMUNICATION" at 5:30 in 401 Canterbury Road.
TONIGHT: The University of Kansas chapter of the STUDENT AMERICAN PHARMACEUTICAL ASSOCIATION will meet at 7 in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. Mike Zimmerman, writer and photojournalist, will discuss the "INFORMATION WAR" at a hillel meeting at 7:30 in the Union's Wahrnut Room. THE ALL SCHOLARSHIP HALLS LECTURE will begin at 7:30 in the Union's Forum Room.
TOMORROW; Felix Moos will discuss "KU IN THE MICRONESIA PROJECT" at noon in room 1039 of the ASPEN FREE SAFETY TRAINING WORKSHOP, beginning at 1:30 in room 2040.
Announcemente
The ORAL COMMUNICATION REQUIREMENT EXEMPTION EXAM will be given March 31. Anyone interested in the exam should contact Noreen Carrocci, 864-3633, 3107 Wesco Hall, by March 7.
Correction
It was incorrectly reported in a Kansas story last week that the Dean of Men's office has received 700 applications for scholarship halls. The office has received approximately 480 completed applications; it has sent out 700 applications.
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ALL FALL AND WINTER FASHIONS INCLUDED
TUESDAY, FEB. 22, 7 p.m.-11 p.m.
Sale merchandise will be remarked to low, low prices one hour before doors open. Also all sale merchandise will be transferred from our Kansas City stores. All Sales Final. No Refunds — No returns!
New park development on commission agenda
Lawrence city commissioners are to consider tonight an ordinance that would appropriate for park development land between Tennessee and Vermont streets.
The city is piecing together several acres of land for a park to be named after J. L. "tommy" Constant, who died in 1973 and was the commissioner of Barkley Clark said yesterday.
Constant was a former Lawrence city commissioner, a member of the Kansas University Endowment Association and the KU Athletic Board.
CLARK SAID several old buildings were now on the land and the owners were unwilling to sell. However, under the law the city has power to condemn the property, Mike Wilden, assistant city commissioner, said.
Clark said the city was considering the condensation of all buildings in the proposed park area except for a Kansas Power and Light (KP&L) substation.
SUA
SUA MOVIES
SUNDAY BLOODY SUNDAY (1971)
Dir. John Schlesinger with Glenda Jackson and Peter Finch.
Wednesday, Feb. 23, 7:30 p.m. p.1 m.
Tues., Feb. 22
CLASSICAL FILMS
In other action, the commissioners are to receive a report from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce on a Lawrence land expansion the airport's runway.
THE 328 acres that adjoin the northeast and southern parts of the airport are to be sold to the city by the Endowment Association for $350,000. The chamber of commerce, which undertook the fund drive, expects to reach its goal of $35,000 by tomorrow according to Glenn West of the chamber.
The $55,000 will be the city's 10 per cent of the $350,000 needed. The Federal Aviation Administration will pay 90 per cent or $315,001 once the city's sum is raised.
FILM SOCIETY
Thursday, Feb. 24, 7:30 p.m. $1
ABEL GANCE: THE CHARM OF
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POPULAR MOVIES
FAMILY PLOT (1976) Dr. Alfred Hitchock with Karen Black and
Daniel Carroll.
Fri, Feb. 25 & Sat, Feb. 26, 3:30;
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Tickets $3.50 at SUA
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4
Tuesday, February 22, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
ASK not necessary
Myth has it that the University of Kansas is the odd man out among the state's colleges and universities, that KU, the rich kids' school, considers itself a notch better than
A story in the Kansan last week would seem to add some substance to the myth. The story noted that a semi-official group has been lobbying, with some success, for student interests in the state legislature during the last three years. As the story also noted, the group, the Associated Students of Kansas (ASK), has been working without the support of the students at KU, the state's largest school.
ASK has the monetary support of students at Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Emporia Kansas State College, Kansas State College at Pittsburgh, Hays Kansas State College (the other Board of Regents schools) and Washburn University.
STUDENTS AT THE six schools kick in a quarter apiece, through their activity fees, to give ASK operating money.
Support from KU students would add another $10,000 or so to the ASK till. But it is more than eagerness that keeps KU's Student Senate from funneling student funds to the ASK cause; it is a knowledge that such a student student money could be better spent elsewhere.
Don't look for KU to jump on the ASK bandwagon. ASK has approached the Senate for support each year—until this year. Perhaps that is a sign that the group realizes that its chances of getting KU monetary endorsement are slim.
At any rate, there hasn't been and isn't now any substantial support for ASK among KU student senators. They've cited such reasons as a reluctance to spend student money to pay professional lobbyists and a preference for voluntary lobbying.
BUT PERHAPS the overriding reason is a knowledge that there are some fundamental differences between the needs and desires of KU and her sister institutions.
KU's strength is in its professional schools, graduate schools and liberal arts and sciences programs. Other state schools primarily emphasize the sciences and vocational education.
Even K-State, the other state school most superficially comparable to KU, is intrinsically different. It is an agricultural school, rural in setting and with a student body that is different in background and preferences from KU's.
BUT MORE IMPORTANTLY, KU is the school that has grown the most in the last five years and the only one of the state schools that can reasonably anticipate a steady enrollment in years to come. The other state schools already resent that fact—witness the recent squabble over the number of KU alumni on the Board of Regents—and the competition among state schools can only become more fierce in years ahead.
Whether small college administrators want to admit it or not, there will be times in the near future when declining college enrollments will cause state officials to combine some of the state's academic programs in a central location. KU and K-State are the logical choices for the central location, and KU, with its strong professional schools, is likely to receive the lion's share of any benefits.
SOME WILL ARGUE that ASK has done an admirable job in supporting such issues as landlord-tenant legislation, which benefits all students. That is true, and because the KU students are reaping the benefits of legislation that others worked to implement.
But the fact remains that KU is a school that can better look after its own interests in future years.
KU's Student Senate has been wise to avoid committing student funds to support a program that it didn't start and has never heartfully supported. ASK has done a good job, but its interests can never accurately mirror those of KU students.
By ANDY WARREN
Guest Writer
Secession unwise for Quebec
Journalists are having great fun with the situation in Canada these days. Since Rene Leveque of the separation committee elected provincial Prime Minister of Quebec last November, nearly every major newspaper in the United States has run some sort of predictions about the future of Canada. Those predictions have run from Canada's becoming a collection of independent and private provinces applying for U.S. statehood.
This is sensational and a little inflammatory. It confirms my suspicions that when there is no news, journalists try to invent it. It is highly unlikely that Canada will break up and it would be extremely unwide to do so.
SINCE GENERAL James Wolfe defeated French Field Marshall Louis Montcalm on the Plains of Abraham in 1759 and claimed the entirety of Canada for Britain, nationalism always, and separatism occasionally. He also speecked proclaim of Quebec. It occasionally has led to violence and has resulted in the formation of the now eight-year-old parti Quebeacois, which was founded on the principle of separatism for the province of Quebec. Last November, parti Quebeacois candidate Léon Dauphin elected provincial Prime Minister of his native province, and promised a referendum on independence within two years.
civil servants. Its growth rate in new jobs lags 30 per cent behind Canada's other provinces, themselves in an economic mess. Its own unemployment is above 10 per cent.
THERE ARE A number of pragmatic reasons that Quebec would be ill-advised to opt for independence. Quebec is plagued with serious and sometimes crippling labor problems. The staff played host to strikes by 95,000 teachers, 80,000 hospital employees, 9,200 waterworks workers, 5,500 nurses and 5,200
A new country with this sort of climate does not have a bright economic future. Especially one which will need investment as badly as an independent Quebec.
THOUGH QUEBEC receives $1.5 billion in aid annually from Ottawa, its debts passed the $4 billion mark last year. Cutting off this aid would surely make for a burdensome national debt before the new country even opened its books. This, coupled
with the balance of payments deficit sure to arise from Quebec's importation of oil, natural gas, wheat, and the scads of raw materials needed for its already ailing industries, enough to crush the fledgling nation before it raises its flag.
Other small, but not insignificant questions arise. How to settle claims of federal assets within Quebec? Those assets belong to all the citizens of Canada. The maritime workforce is the remainder of Canada. Would a transportation corridor have to be negotiated? Parti Quebecois suggests that one of
every four Air Canada aircraft be given to "Air Quebec." How many Anglophones will accept that? There are hundreds of airlines that offer what to do about the Armed forces, currency and customs.
PERHAPS THE MOST important obstacle in the way of an independent Quebec is the residents themselves. The Financial Post of Toronto points out that a pre-election poll showed voter support for ministries only per cent. Whether part Quebeceans even has a clear mandate to administer the province is questionable. It polled only 40 per cent of the
Leveques and his more militant Quebecois are likely to push hard for independence, but in light of the obstacles looming large and the lack of popular support in Canada they may occur. Canada is a great nation, a great people (French and English) and relatively speaking, a good neighbor. It would be a shame to see the divisiveness of Quebec now any further. I agree. Leveques's probable failure will be the end of the notion once and for all.
Andy Warren is a sophomore in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
WESTPHAL
Military Budget
CAMPAIGN PROMISES
SURE YOU CAN KEEP HIM.
I GOT Δ CAGE
DIDN'T I?
Readers discuss Judaism, Owens and politics
Hitler denounced To the editor:
I wish to take exception to Bill Snifffen's editorial which appeared in the Feb. 3 Kansan in the new age antiquates absolutism."
in the first place, the editorial board of the Kansan acted irresponsibly by printing an editorial comment concerning a campus activist and interviewing a news article. Individuals who were not in attendance at the talk on Monday evening, Jan. 31, and who read Sniffers of the unabusably blamed and one-sided account of the content and tenor of the presentation.
Secondly, Sniffen himself has made several errors in fact in an obvious attempt to discredit Herschell Katch, who delivered the talk. Sniffen correctly believes that he should have believed the Holocaust was a general punishment to the Jewish people for our failure to keep all God's commandments properly. However, Sniffen incorrectly identifies the fact that she implication, all Orthodox Jews) "might be doing a bit of revision" by observing only approximately 150 commandments when, according to tradition, 613 commandments were God to Moses and some 600,000 Jews Sinai.
Many commandments relate to animal sacrifices that can only be performed in the Holy Temple which used to exist in Jerusalem but was destroyed almost 2,000 years ago by the Romans. Still other laws can be observed today, actually living in the Land of Israel. Some Jews living in Israel today can and do observe these particular laws which pertain directly to the Land. But Tratk, along with the majority of Jews today, lives outside the Land. The image cannot be any stretch of the imagination observe commandments which pertain directly to the Land of Israel.
When these two groups of commandments, together with several other laws which cannot currently be observed by any Jew representations or degree of commitment, are annulled by virtue of the present state of affairs e.g., no Holy Temple, then the over-all number of com- mands and observable today is substantially reduced from 613 to approximately 150.
Sniffen also suggests that organized religion negates freedom of choice by persecuting those who insist on solitist principles". Absolutes do not negate free will or deprive one of choice. Rather, organized religion upholds ethical norm by which an individual can choose to behave.
Nowhere in his editorial did Sniften make mention of the fact that Tkatch repeatedly condemned Hitler for having perpetrated this nefarious and dastardly crime. In fact, more than half the evening was devoted to discussing the question of whether we have any logical basis for such a policy which to Hilder's actions were wrong. Tkatch said he believes Hitler was wrong because "The Torah (the written and oral Jewish legal tradition) says it's wrong to bring suffering upon other people."
Brian Salvay director, KU Hillel
By neglecting to mention that Tkatch's whole presentation was a condensation of Hitler's actions, Snifffen has unjustly misrepresented Tkatch and has lead untold numbers of persons who read his editorial to记住 that Tkatch's deliberate insinuating the morality and humanity of what Hitler and all the Hamans of the world have done to the Jewish people throughout history.
On March 25,1971,the Kansas Jayhawks were in the Houston Astrodome,preparing to
Time for change
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 16th, 2013, by the School of Journalism, June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscription by mail are $10 a semester or $18 a year, a country visit is free, and a year outstate visit is free. The university activity fee varies.
contest UCLA for the right to play Villanova two days later for the national championship. At the time KU's record was 27-6, Villanova came away victories. It was the fifth time in six years that Kansas had won 20 or more games. For the third time in six years the Jayhawks were in three championships; the third two times they finished in second place.
Business Manager Janice Clements
Since that night in Houston, the Kansas Jayhawks have a record of 90-71 (56 per cent). They have won 20 games once. They have won two big Eight championships, but has been unable to keep up easily in the other four years. They have had three non-winning seasons. They are 5-9 against Kansas State (0-4 in Manhattan), 5-9 against Missouri (1-5 in Columbia), and 2-16 against Indiana, Notre Dame, Kentucky, tucky, a former No. 1 overall team has fallen. And the media now concentrates on attention on Crum, Gale Catlett, Dean Smith, Leffy Driesell and Drew Phelps.
five thousand KU. fans had driven eight hundred miles the right before to support Pierce Russell, Roger Brown, Aubrey Nash, and All-Americans Dave Tews. The Ted Wenski was the third winningest coach in the nation (149-41), 78 per cent. His 1966 team had come within an inch of a national championship, his 67 team had won its first game, his 88 team finished second in the NIT, his 69 team played in the NIT, and here he was, in 1971, in the Astrodome. When the media wanted quotes from the nation's top coaches, the Aldap Rupp, Guy Lewis, the Adulph Rupp, Guy Lewis, the McGuire boys and Ted Wenski.
Probably no Kansas fan expects a national—or even Big Eight—championship every year. But wouldn't it be nice to at least content for the Big Eight title from Iowa or go to like Lexington, Bloomington, South Bend, and Nashville without being laughed off the court and out of town; wouldn't it be nice to be on national television occasionally, which can only happen if you are confident months in advance that Kansas will field a strong team; and wouldn't it be nice to spend the good years (as 1978 looks to be) without dreading the turnovers, the fouls, and the illustration that you'll probably bring? Wouldn't it be nice for KU to BE "The Basketball School," rather than just talk about it?
Hopefully, the coaching staff or athletic director will quickly take those steps necessary to return KU basketball to its place of prominence—a place where they can flourish every third or fourth year, but by winning with seniors one year, then winning without them the next. If KU is not willing, or not able, to take those steps—whatever those steps may be —the new manager appropriate, theme for the souvenir programs.
On March 25,1971, thousands
There were some 16,000
University Council meeting of the previous day, gives a totally inaccurate picture of what transpired with respect to the "proposal" for a pre-finals dead week.
Your headline states, "Council recommends prefails dead week." The Council did no such thing. It discussed briefly an idea that was being considered by the Academic Council and the Committee. Oscar Haugh, professor curriculum and instruction, made no "proposal," but rather asked for our
apparently accuse gun groups, and the National Rifle Association in particular, of glorifying Fred Cowan, a psychotic killer, or making excuses for his actions. I'm an NRA member and have put up with your regular cheap shots at the organization for some time now. It is disgusting to watch people carry on a smear campaign against about 100 angry About ignorant bias should not be the trademark of a newspaper.
Readers Respond
of KU fans wore buttons that claimed "We're Number 1: It's A Way Of Life."
Mark Robinett
Mark Robinett Lawrence graduate student
Congratulations! You have lowered yourselves to the same depths as the Lawrence Journal-World. Your article on the "Gong Owens" movement rivals the Journal-World's coverage. I was shocked to see the "Gong Owens" T-shirts in the library. I don't understand the students at the University of Missouri acted in this manner. I'm sorry to see some KU students are doing likewise.
Craig Levra Lawrence freshman
Owens good coach
To the editor:
Inaccurate picture To the editor:
Coaches Owens, Miranda, and Reid have done an excellent job. Coach Owens has been named Big Eight Coach-of-the Year four times. He is the 20th coach in the country, KU has won the Big Eight Championship five times and the Big Eight Tournament six times under Owens' tenure, and he ranks No. 1 among all-time coaches in the Big Eight meet. KU has gone seven post-season tournaments under Owens.
Two experts who favor Owen's dismissal, John Bush and Jeff Nelson, should know all about the game that since Mr. Bush and Mr. Nelson know so much about basketball, they should try to secure positions as basketball player yet, get sports writers.
The report in the Kansan of Friday, Feb. 11, on the
thoughts on a tentative proposal.
It is true that the motive of any such proposal, if it should come, will be to respond to the problem of some instructors who were not present last week of school rather than at the scheduled time. The tentative proposal, however, was that no examination when scheduled during the week before the final examination period.
The Kansan incorrectly stated "no final examination could be given" the week before finals. The Kansan then quoted me as opposing that statement on grounds that it would interfere with our teaching methods. That is a complete false representation of my work should very strongly that final exams should take place as scheduled, except in extraordinary situations (some examples of which were given in the Council meeting).
On the other hand, many of us, particularly in science, mathematics, and engineering, want to have a test over each portion of the course prior to the final. The last suite manual, called the last week, allows the course is reduced to thirteen weeks. These tests are teaching devices which help the student prepare for the final, and help the instructor see where the students are having difficulties because they are more sure of type of examination, in my opinion, would be “interfering with our teaching methods.”
Paul Mostert
Professor of Mathematics
Paul Moster $ ^{+} $
People kill people To the editor:
Once again your editors have come up with another mindless political cartoon. This time you
persons killed by approximately 100 million guns owned by 55 to 60 million citizens last year. Let's see, 16,000,000 or about 0.03 percent, 0.029999, or about 0.43 per cent. Three-thundreds of a per cent of all gun owners are potential killers! It's enough to make you want to ban all guns on the spot. Especially since the nation's population owns a gun. That's a definite minority.
The NRA is an independent, nonprofit organization with over a million members. Its purposes are to promote the safety of our residents in firearms, to foster good sportmanship and to foster the conservation and wise use of renewable wildlife resources. (Incidentally to all you who feel threatened by wildlife, nothing but slaughters of wildlife, the money needed to provide wildlife protection, and that which was responsible for the renewal of such wildlife as deer in the Midwest, comes from hunting license fees.)
Granted the NRA actively opposes gun laws that they feel violate their constitutional right to keep and bear arms. They说 that a little gun control, like a little speech control or a little religion control, should be allowed under caution. The NRA backs mandatory sentences in felonies involving the use of a firearm.
If you want to think the NRA and gun owners are all a bunch of stonehead rednecks, fine. Apparently there's 60,000,000 Americans who disagree with you. We don't enjoy your opinion any more than you enjoy ours.
Douglas Todd Seneca junior
Posters disgusting
To the editor:
now that the balloons have been deflated and the tinsel lays trampled in the gutter, it is possible to cast an unjawed eye upon the phenomena of Election 77. I am your typical apathetic student, and it takes a while for me to come out of me, but the revelation I experienced in the last few weeks prompts this letter.
The particular aspect of the election which grated upon my sense more than anything else was the proliferation of political advertisements on campus. Bulletin boards were plastered with the usual garish trash, but the larger ones remained deemed interested in blaring their innair drivel ad museum.
My first choice in the "Most Obvious Display" category would have to go to the Avanti bunch for the hundreds (thousands) of avantian Avanti stickers on their screens on the face of the campus. The little pearls are stuck on trash cons, urinals, et cetera, everywhere within eyesight. Reflection and Spectrum aren't far from each other but the acid streak to strip layers of their excrement off of bulletin boards to read anything of note beneath.
As I type this, I do not know any of the election results, but I do hope that the whistle will not only be reinstated, but also amplified a few hundred decibles. Then it could be programmed to shriek incessantly so as to smother any murmur of complaint rising on the shop, Scent Sanitary.
Kansas City, Kan., sophomore
Students unseated To the editor:
As a season ticket holder for the KU basketball season I was appalled that seats normally designated for students had been sold to the general public. I will be the first to agree that the sport needs support from outside the school, but I won't. So I'm ready for the K-State game is inexhaustible. I ask simply for an explanation from the person or persons in charge of this blunder. Thank you.
Mike Forsyth Erie senior
M
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should be representative of the best journalism students. I seriously doubt that that can be readily claimed by the Kansan staff. Careless misquoting and easy assumptions in articles often occur frequently in frequent occurrence in this paper. Often the errors are harmless exaggerations, other times they are out-and-out misinformation. Usually, I take it in stride, however when careless errors and bad writing hit at the expense of other people's reputations, then I have to react.
On Monday, Feb. 14, Julie Williams wrote a press release for "Dames at Sea." Ms. Williams wrote the article without even consulting the two directors of the production! That blatant use of cast members, is a reputable source, she cannot be considered definitive in this case. Rather shoddy journalism, not to consult people intrinsically involved with a project being reported on, was the issue spoken to the directors she would have gotten her information correct.
"Dames at Sea" is in no way affiliated with the University Theatre"—there has been no connection with the University of Arizona Residence Halls are the producing agents in cooperation with SUA. And if "Dames" is affiliated with anyone, the two production has been HashingHall. All the major technical help, support, and encouragement has come from HashingHall. It was HashingHall of the project in the first place.
Since the Kanasan takes the time and space to print bad publicity for Hashinger, I'd appreciate equal time for the jury to hear his guilty injustice in not seeking her information in the most effective manner, and now Hashinger is suffering by being pushed into the background. Hashinger's contribution to Asa's work, Act, as well as the University in general, is immeasurable.
Both "Dames at Sea" directors would like to take this opportunity to thank Hashinger for their incredible support and endurance. It's the best kind of valentine one could receive.
Anne Abrams
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is in no way be University that has been no longer the teacher. The KU are is the in cooperation "Dames" is the Hashinger the entire ten Hashinger technical and en- come from as a Hashing project in the
Monday, February 22, 1977
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Medical students . . .
From nage one
stead of the proposed tuition waiver system.
The legislature also should accelerate its involvement in voluntary scholarship programs and should promote community recruitment programs, she said.
Outlining the rural doctor shortage in Kansas, Hayden said that now only four of the state's 105 counties met national standards for adequate numbers of physicians. Kansas is now short about 500 physicians, he said.
HIS BILL WOULD address two large problems that now exist in the state, he began in 2007. Doctors educated in Kansas to other states after the state had paid a major portion of their educational costs, and it would help correct a multidistribution of doctors within the state.
The bill would set the KU School of Medicine tuition each year at 87.5 per cent of the estimated total cost to the state of a medical students education, or about
$15,500. This year, a student's costs to the
state are funded at $15,500 to $16,000.
Now, medical students who are residents of Kansas pay $1,500 tuition for each calendar year and nonresidents pay $3,000. The state pays the rest of the costs.
UNDER HAYDEN'S bill, medical students who didn't wish to pay the full tuition could receive tuition waivers by taking their classes at the vaccination in an underserved area of Kansas.
The amount of the waiver would correspond to the priority of the agreed area of service; a higher priority area means a greater waiver.
For each year the student is given a tuition waiver, he is required to serve one year in a priority area. The waiver wouldn't be given until both board and books, and other incident fees.
FACED WITH A FINAL decision probably Thursday or Friday, medical students are mobilizing for a full-fledged campaign against Hayden's bill.
"We're very concerned about it." Haynes said, "and we won't give up until the very end."
Today's Events
Accent the ARTS
12:00— Flute ensemble: Bond Anderson, Barbara Else,
Sandy Densford, Cyndi Brown and Barbara
Bechtolsheim
3:30— Colette Bangert discusses her work in the current Union Gallery Exhibition, Union Gallery
8:00— Pi Kappa Lambda Concerto Concert. University Theatre admission.
For information call SUA, 864-3477
Mike Zimmerman
writer and photo-journalist for a wide variety of periodicals in Israel and North America, will speak on "THE MIDDLE EAST
INFORMATION WAR:
RHETORIC AND THE TERRITORIES" (West Bank problems will receive special attention)
Tuesday, February 22nd 7:30 p.m.
Walnut Room in the Union
sponsored by Hillel, K.U. Jewish Students
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University Daily Kansan
K.U. CAMPUS VETERANS
4:30 Meadowlark Rm., Union
4:30 Meadowlark Rm., Union
Abe Miller from the Topeka Veterans' Hospital will show a film and talk about part-time jobs at the VA Hospital. John Hall from IBM will be looking for graduating students for possible jobs with IBM. All vets are urged to attend.
TRAVELLING
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Unregimented StudentTours (under 30's) and CampingTours to Europe/Israel Spain, Greece, Turkey Scandinavia & Russia 843-1211 Maupintour travel service
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27th Annual Rock Chalk Revue presented by the KU-Y Hoch Auditorium - Feb. 25-26 Friday — $3.25 & $3.00
Saturday $2.75 sold out!
Available at the SUA Office
in the Student Union
SHOWTIME 8:00 p.m. - ALL SEATS RESERVED
WISHING TO APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE STUDENT SENATE/STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE:
Notice to All Organizations
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, Level 3.
These requests must be completed and returned to the Senate office NO LATER THAM FEBRUARY 28,1977.
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
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University Daily Kansun
Coin flips likely to decide Big Eight tourney berths
It's quite likely that the four conference basketball games scheduled to be played tomorrow night won't decide who plays in the post-season playoffs.
And if that happens, Big Eight Commissioner Chuck Neinas will be playing games in his office the first thing Thursday morning to decide it all.
Although Big Eight guidelines stipulate that the play of pairings shall align the conference's first place, it's also important to second with seventh, etc., it's up to the commissioner to break ties when no team holds an advantage over the other in regular season competitions. The game is the final
ALL SUCH ties will be broken by the flip of a coin.
The coin's landing beads or tails also might decide more than pairings in the post-season tournament. It could determine which team gets the home court advantage in the first round should there be a tie between fourth and fifth place.
Kansas, 8-5 and fourth in the Big Eight.
can avoid the latter coin flip simply by
to discuss—Nebraska, 7-6, at Oklahoa State, 3-10. The Cornhuskers win and the Jayhawks lose, the two are died for four, the Tigers continue to determine who finishes fourth and who is fifth.
winning tomorrow night against Colorado, t-8, in Boulder. But by doing so, the Jayhawks probably will just get themselves involved in another game of chance.
So conceivably the Jayhawks can finish anywhere from second to fifth after the
involved in battles.
A victory over the Buffaloes would likely put the Jayhawks in a tie with Oklahoma, 9-4, because the Sooners must play the
it that the game would be played in the afternoon for television coverage of the events.
Fifth Quarter
league-leading Kansas State Wildcats, 10-3,
in Manhattan.
Sports Editor
Gary Vice
PETER RICKMAN
WITH THAT in mind, KU could then finish in a third-place tie. But don't count the Hawks out of second place either, and they are playing to amuse the 2-11 Iowa State Cyclones.
The 21-10 Iowa State game left that leaves only one conference game left
But through a combination of predictable losses and unpredictable coin flips, the 'Hawks could face Colorado, Oklahoma State or Iowa State in the first round.
'Massacre' upsets Top 20
By The Associated Press
Tennessee was the big winner, leaping from 14th place a week ago to No. 7 in this week's rankings. The Volunteers beat Alabama, Oklahoma and Mississippi, 92-88, to raise their record to 19-4.
SAN FRANCISCO kept rolling along undefeated, and the so Dons held on to their 1. ranking. Last week they defeated Los Angeles in a rematch. B-87a to improve their record to 27-0.
Due mostly to this week's "Saturday Night Massacre," in which 11 teams in the Top 20 were defeated, the Associated Press College Basketball Poll underwent a nine-point increase including team's drop of nine spots and another team's climb of seven places.
marquette, 18-6, was the big loser,
plummeting from No. 9 to 18, after losing to
DePaul, 77-72, in double overtime, Detroit,
64-63, and Wichita State, 75-64.
Kentucky, 20-2, beat Southeast Conference rivals Florida, 104-78, and Louisiana State, 90-76, to hang on to their No. 2 birth.
The Dons garnered 50 of a possible 52 first-place votes, with the Wildcats getting
commissioner concludes the regular season's action in his office in Kansas City, Mo. If KU winds up fifth, the 'Hawks opening round of the tournament will be played Saturday in Lincoln against the Cornhuskers.
THEY'T THE main thing they'll be trying to avoid when they confront the Buffaloes, because a victory will assure KU of another game in Allen Field House.
"It's what we definetly want—the home-court advantage," team captain Ken Koenigs said yesterday. "I hope we can assure our fans of that. We'll sure try our best. We feel we can beat anybody if we bring them back here."
THE TOP TWENTY teams in the Associated Press National season record and total points. Points based on 10-5-10-11-12-6-7-8-9-3-2-1:
| Team | Points |
| :--- | :--- |
| Kentucky (4) | 27-0 | 1,028 |
| Georgia (5) | 20-3 | 972 |
| Nebraska Las Vegas | 20-3 | 972 |
| Utah | 20-4 | 528 |
| Tennessee | 19-4 | 460 |
| Florida | 19-4 | 419 |
| North Carolina | 19-4 | 315 |
| Wake Forest | 19-4 | 327 |
| Alabama | 19-4 | 307 |
| Minnesota | 19-4 | 169 |
| Missouri | 19-4 | 167 |
| Syracuse | 19-3 | 106 |
| Denver | 19-3 | 104 |
| Oregon | 17-7 | 66 |
| Michigan State | 17-7 | 66 |
| Illinois | 18-4 | 45 |
| Utah | 18-4 | 45 |
Although junior guard John Douglas wants to play the opening playoff round at home, he wouldn't guarantee it would happen.
"I can't make any promises that we'll be back. But the team—they say we will." he
SHOULD THE 'Hawks win tomorrow night and clinch the home berth, speculation on who their opponent will be is a real entanglement.
If the league's top three teams all win, KU would host Nebraska. And rumors have
Place an ad. Tell the world Call 864-4358
Which team KU plays means little, which team Domni永 Moore as long as a long, which team Van Moore as long as a long.
Scholarships
Two $250 scholarships offered
The two brackets in the play offs have teams one, eight, four and five from the season's final standings in one division as teams two, seven, three and six in the other.
There will be no consolation game to determine the third-place finisher in the conference tournament.
Delta Delta Sorority is offering two 3250 scholarships to full-time undergraduate women at the University of Kansas.
Applications are available at Delta DeltaDelta sorority, 1630 Oxford No.
The completed applications should be returned to the sorority by March 1,
along with three letters of recommendation, a personal letter and a copy of the
applicant's college transcript.
Local winners will automatically be eligible for one of the $1,000 national scholarships sponsored by the sorority.
Hewlett-Packard wrote the book on advanced pocket calculators.
Jayhawks will have to do much better to satisfy both their fans and coaches.
"IF WE'RE playing here we can beat anybody." Von Moore said. "We really can't say there's one team we want to play because there's nobody we've shown we're that much better than. We've just about lost to everybody once."
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But Douglas has at least one team in mind he'd rather play than another. "Oklahoma State would be a tough game. They've got the best talent in the Big Eight if they'd just get it together. I would rather play Nebraska, I mean I WOULD." he said.
What to
adw
ROUND TWO of the tournament will be held Thursday, March 3 at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo. On the following night the finals will be held to determine who represents the conference in the NCAA Championships.
What to look for before you buy an advanced calculator.
Herb Nobles voted in favor of playing Iowa State, while Clint Johnson only wanted to avoid the Cowboys, who "have so much potential."
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KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
David Wand, Hewlett-Packard representative, will be at the Kansas Union Bookstore on Wed., Feb. 23 to answer your questions.
That, however, is only round one, and the
| Conference | AR Games |
|---|
| W | L | W |
|---|
| Kansas State | 9 | 10 | 10 |
| Missouri | 9 | 4 | 19 |
| Oklahoma | 9 | 5 | 19 |
| Kansas | 8 | 5 | 17 |
| Nebraska | 7 | 5 | 17 |
| Colorado | 4 | 9 | 10 |
| Oklahoma State | 3 | 10 | 15 |
| Kansas State | 3 | 11 | 16 |
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Okahanna at Kansas State
Missouri at Iowa State
Nebraska at Oklahoma State
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University Daily Kansan
s
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39
use-3251
The Society for Creative Disorganization,
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2 off
5. 00
2 off
Announcing the Incorporation of ENTROPY
2 off
a society to promote contact and interaction among persons from all disciplines who have an interest in science: its development, its methodologies, its content, and its application. The professionals of the technologists, undergraduate or graduate, are invited to attend an organizational party/m meeting on Friday, February 25 at 3:30 P.M. in the Hawk's dorm of the Kansas Union. This社会会 will represent representatives to the organization for further information, contact J. D. Nestandz or Berney Williams at 864-3011.
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Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
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15 words or
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word .01 .02 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UKE business office at 643-4538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Give away: $10 per week and $200 cash, plus
phone calls to K.U. Telephone Director,
Mellow Yellow Messages
Bubbles proceed for research study on music at home. After attending classes, come to 410 Bali theatre after 10 a.m. on Feb. 28 to see the production.
Cantorbury House, the Episcopal Church at KU is open for study, meditation, prayer, and other activities. Services: Holy Communion Tues. 9 a.m and Thurs. 8, 3:30 p.m. Anw. Wednesday 11 a.m.
THUMBS Lawrence's own street-level rock, 24.15 inches at Off-the-Wal-9.95 2:05
24.50 3:05
Vote Tuesday, March 8. 6 Emphasize neighborhood connection. Name for City Council. Change 2-8 number of members. Name for City Council.
Pancake feed Shrub Tuesday, Feb. 23 at Trinity Episcopal Church, 1101 Vermont, 5 p.m. Adults drink at door; children $18.00. Sponsored by the Post Office. 2016. Pancake coffee, milk
FOR RENT
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished. close to
units, utilities paid, parking. 843-9579.
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
no pets, 843-7567. tf
Frontier Rides~short term lease available.
Rides only for use with study. Inside Hotel indoor pool ~slip carpet;
front door pool ~disposal ~laundry facilities;
furnished room ~bedroom furnished and unfurnished to $135, Call 800-222-6222.
Galeeble Apartments--Call Becky now. Summer,
fall and winter, contact me at galeeble apartments_call 682-930-5400; cont
contact on a weekday at galeeble apartments_call 682-930-5400;
Sublease 3-bedroom unfurnished house immmediate:
- $160,000 for rent;
- family farm; $500 plus damage repair. 841-2544 - 2-22
2-bedroom apartment partially furnished, 1 block to campus. Heatpd 842-8744. 2-24
3-bedroom, 1-bath townhouse for mulebase. Fireplace.
Call 841-5697, or 841-7333.
--men or women. We need 5 people immediately, and we will be willing to work with experience necessary. For personal interview call Bob Lawson, 842-310-8, Lawson Kerry Co. Will lead us to final date - 4/14
Must sitULEen, 2 bedroom unfurnished apart-
ment in campus. Camps: $150 plus tu-
rent. 1896-1899. Keep tryin
Subway-2 bedroom apartment after March 15, ac-
counting March 30.
Subway-3 bedroom apartment (5
(month lease), $100 deposit, $641-1494
or $750).
1. two bedroom apartments, 1 block from KU.
843-2398 or 841-7867.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Note—New on Sale! Make sense out of your book. 1) Essay guide, 2) Makes sense out of study guide, 3) Preparation, 4) For Exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Fort
UNICORNS, Mermials, wings in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry. Many stones to choose from. Stone cutting service. Reasons for interest in work, satisfaction game. anted. 841-2833.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BAL, BAL, BAL, BAL.
ELECTRIC, 893-300-990, W. 6th.
REPLACEMENTS ONLY.
Exclusive selection of new and used furniture and
furnishings for retail. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 701 Main St,
New York, NY 10024.
Redeemer Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod missionary (college) to worship with us. We have an active youth group, *Building 1*, 843-818-189; more information contact: MIlfred Fredrickson at schools at 9 a.m. Bible class and School school at 2 a.m. Second Sunday evening of the month, 2-24
SU.
Kansas Union
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The one with a specification guarantee of ± 2 dB. Hear at Riley Auditorium, Bay Area 3-4th Floor, E. 8th. Prices from $175.
Advent model 300 Stere Receiver: designed to deliver sound of associated audio, expensive and labor-intensive performance compared to output) to that of the most expansive magnetic chassis (chassis models 500, 600, and the traded).
Volkswagen Owners! Four new WEB radial three 1.25-inch wheels (20mm) for $495. Add $2 per tire for mounting, $3.00 for mask. The appliance店 on Mask with the display Woodworm, $87.50 for
Sony TTS-T500 turntable with SMP 3000 II tone
outperform perform test perform 3000 II tone
Cal. 841-833-2222 2-222
Attention new KUMC Medical Students; for sale:
Weseneine microscope image: 10×, 40×, 100× oilx
objectives 2 years old, excellent condition
KUMC 3540-8241 or write J. Otto Box 510,
KUMC 2022
2-22
Bicycle=21", MKM, Reynolds 32 DB TriBug
Campaignman equipped Good over-
load call. Call 845-796-6000
Jepc 1971 C.I.5 Good condition. Must sell. 864-2
887-6341 or room 124E Lindley. 124-2
232-8056
The Advent Company is the leader in the Hi-Fi industry in research and product development. The company also offers 201 A. The Advent receiver is gaining popularity as one of the cleanest units at any price. Availability of this product is limited for engineering and value unsurpassed at any price range. Your authorized Adverter is located in B-3-1
Tri-Phase Speakers - A Real Home Disc System
high duty, heavy duty with high dh frequency
protection, high dh protection, high
protection. Dig out those Boogie Shoes and check
these specially designated units out at Ray Atack.
120W.
SKI3 - Spandring 185 cm. with G.T. bind, G.T. snaps like Day like. Like new. Mature 2-23 614-804 Dave
1965 Baldwin Badium Guitar, Good condition-
150.83-104.85 2-23
ENGLISH SPORTS CAR, 1987 Sunbeam Alpine,
Sunbeam Alpine II. Compatible with
powerbanks rebuilt by Sunbeam. Power baskets
compatible with Sunbeam.
Ludwig Quadrus-plus Full set with Zildjian jamm-
call. Call 841-3057.
**2-24**
10 VW Bux. Runs perfect. Make offer and call HOJAAT at 84-698-685.
2-25
Brand new 10-speed Moto-Become bike. Originally $370, for $300. B42-6222. Extension
New Ways to See the Old World
Classic Guitar-Cornet size hand made in Mexico. Acoustic guitar with case after stk. apx 131.998 Vermont $2,700.00
CHARTERS/YOUTH FARES/APEX AIR FARES
& PURCHASE / STUDENT TOURS
Antique loom and spoil holder, antique day bed,
845-861-903-11, Sainsbury's in Tongaoxing, 2-25
845-861-903-11, Sainsbury's in Tongaoxing, 2-25
Discount electronics and equipment. All new.
name brand Guaranteed savings. Call
2-248
1974 Fiat 128, 138-4 d, 4-speed, AM-MF radials,
Call 722-3840 in Topkappa to 2-25
Call 722-3840 in Topkappa to 2-25
UA Maupintour travel service
Vollwagen *Fastback*-Automatic, 1970, good condition.
Höhenverlangerung, in yonder; indoor storage for 14000 at 844-664-8238. 2-28
for 11000 at 844-664-8238.
HELP WANTED
Bain. Put yourself through college the easy way.
Become an Avon Representative, and make the money you need, selling quality products on your time. For full details, call 822-8168 or 343-6072
Local moving firm need experienced drivers and
planners. Would like you to work a few hours a
week in preparation for summer work. Please
refer us to the office. Job #27, Lawrence, K6044 3-4
LIBERAL, ARTS MAJORS need to work in a variety of areas, including teaching. Please contact representatives on campus where you are interested.
Need experienced bass player with good equipment
Call Mike 841-6000 or 842-7252 after 2-923
PART TIME LECTURER IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Hire time (non-lease-time) appropriate for your role, including training in medicine; $6,500. Responsibilities involve teaching at least one course of study on a specific topic. Teach experience desirable but not required. Send resume, graduate and undergraduate degree to: John A. Landgrebe, Department of Biology, University of Guelph, 600M. Preference to applications received before October 31, 2018. AUTHORITY ASSIGNMENT ACTION EMPLOYER
2-28
Bureau of Child Research Achievement Place has opening for 1% time (afternoons) research assistants in the area. Students must have BA and be experienced in data collecting and analyzing results. Excellent organizational skills are required. Applications are available at 111 Hwouh, University of Kansas until Feb. 25. Qualified post baccalaureate and was 25 or above.
LOST AND FOUND
Part-time, male or female, please 45 $7.15 hr.
new job, call necessary, call for interview
2-244
Lost-Fri—11-JY Zone, men's blue suede coat.
Lost-Sun—9-Zone, men's blue coat at Mur Mau.
—only heavy coat
2-22
Found. Men's silver backbone on Elsworth basketball court. Call 841-5800 to identify. 2-22.
Found…Memb...class ring. "Junction City"
"Tennessee," May 26, 1948.月光海.五月节. Feb. 14, 1644-1126. Margaret
2-33
Found... The white cat with 1 green eye 1 blue
eye on a gray pelt on its nose. Please
481-6433 2-23
Found—Purelupe, liquid silver necklace found by Potter's Lake. Call and identify, 8410-725-2737
Found—One pair of women's front in front of Twenth Hall. 16. Call 864-4720 to claim.
Lost-Large medium brown female dog, near 15th street. Largest medium brown female dog, near 15th street. Autolabeln, better shape and features.
Lost-Large Gray.Brown cat male cat near Trail-
Ridge Apartments. 842-736. 2-23
MISCELLANEOUS
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Ubique/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m.
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
AiRFRAME WATERbeds
THE FIELDS
THE FELDS STORE
712 MASS
NOTICE
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dish-
ware, kitchen cloosings. Television. Oc-
dial 15-35. camel jumps.
EUROPEUROBOTIC WORLDWIDE
society of BATIMES 12345 Inc.
administrate cybersecurity
y security for businesses
Custom handwriting. Rockport shop. Dhupa
shop. 470 S. 65th St. (1st & 2nd, 8th &
9th LITERATED) - 16 Kest 80th, in the 81st MAR,
6th STREET.
Enroll now, in Lawrence driving school, receive a free driver's test preparation, drive training, transportation, driven, drive training.
Two $250 scholarships. Avv Folio-time undergraduate
$300 or above. On or before August 14, For further
information call 800-796-2345.
PERSONAL
Gay Counseling Service; Call 812-7505, 6:18 p.m.
for referral. For socializing activities.
**Narita:** Learn the ancient secrets of the marital arts, which have been on the individuals development as marital advice and guidance.
Don't miss ROCK CHALK BEVIEW Best ever
tickets for Ticket 25th still available at $130.00
You’ll get you on class to lesson Jawkhar Wake-
Up. U43-2832 or U43-6821. $3 per month. 2-24
We are still giving away money in the **MELLOW**
**EARRINGS** Kidde at Town
**CENTER**, WITH $10 or $100 buq.
**KIDDE**, WITH $10 or $100 buq.
EUROPE. YOUR WAY Fly into or depart from 51 European cities via scheduled service. Entrance fees apply. Discount on class A accommodations and rail transportation available. For information 1-800-324-2111.
We employed meeting you during the past several weeks to get to know you better, and your visit - Steve Layton's understanding, and your visit - Steve Layton's understanding.
Spend 20 days in Europe this summer. See
Booklet 63-218; Paris, London, Fireside,
Fiat 434; Call 843-218.
To the girl who calls "We may have your cut-
out," we are told a grey spree cut-
out. B141-0890 or B141-0824.
B141-0890 or B141-0824.
U.S. citizen, 22, Gemini, quiet, self employed,
well travelled, likes music and dance. Skeeks
woman 20-25. Wives friendly, friendship,
and marriage. Call Gary at 834-1434-198
2-25
Volkwagen Tune Up Special= $16.50
police charge, plus 25 cents per mile.
Mobil plus, and Entry Road = $84-2123
Anyone who was in Bilton Tompany Canyon during the flood, please call Rolf, collect, at 3-255
LH—1 with I could tell you everything that is in my heart—Love, Your Lady.
2-22
Tee Jim and Susan, Happy 19 months, Streetcreech those hirs laus. Alba—the Boys. 2-28
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
843-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
10th & 11th Mar
1
500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444
TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN
Drive-in Clinic for most imported cars
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10-5 Mon.-Sat. Till on Thursday
T-Bob. Get on your bag. Lo-Boy.
Hike your VW car forever Lawrence Volkswagen $150,000 to drive in under ten dollars 8th and 9th Street 614-7128 614-7128
RIDES ___ RIDERS
Ricket Wanted: Spring-break, destination: Tempe
Arvona Headed that way? Call for details!
*NON-EXISTING*
SERVICES OFFERED
Math tutoring--competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 105, 111, 116, 119, 121, 121, 122, 123, 142, 142, 558, 657, 662, 726.
Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681. **tf**
**February" *Tune up special*!" We clean up and adjust dredge chains and chain. True both any parts or accessories bought of time "Tune up special" for any parts or accessories bought of time "Tune up special" for any part
French lessons by native speaker with experience,
all levels. Phone: 841-2877
2-25
Licensed child care center on campus has operat-
ing facilities for five children.
641-383-3801 2-25
TYPING
THEISM BINDING COPYING. The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you are in R.S. Manhattan or phone 852-734-2801, thank you.
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. tf
Typist/editor, IBM Pixe/cille, Quality work. Reasonable rates. Thesis, dissertations welcome.
TYING-Thesis, term papers, etc. Reasonable
TYPING-Thesis, term papers, etc. Reasonable
3-4
Your paper deserves the best Call Pkg for
key dates: 841-324, day: 849-888, even
weekends.
TYPING. We have many return customers who were married to our clients or have a holiday in Harvey or Linda 842-910-3040
WANTED
Summer roommate needed. Own room, 4 bed-
room apartment. Show 613-6249. Contact:
2-22
the MARKETPLACE
8th & New Hampshire
the MARKETPLACE
8th & New Hampshire
12 Unique Shops
DEADBOLTS INSTALLED
MORRIS
Lock & Key
710 Mass. • 843-2182
- Pinball
Open Office
10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
9th and Iowa
Roommate wanted, male. Perman. quiet location.
Roommate, own room, close to campus. call Gavey.
Please be considerate.
Wanted: *With musical talent. If you play a brass, woodwind, or percussion instrument* **Cary the Cable** **3120. Army Reserve Band gets together a second time over the mid-wed and as well as locally. If you can square one weekend (18 hrs) per month, and have a good thing you enjoy post-time, call us at 943-681 or visit vince@armyreserve.com and vince with you on an instrument and uniforms. Ask Iowa St. Lawrence, KS.
- Foosball
Wanted: driver or elevator to join car panel to downward drive. Required: M-F 5-6:00, Call Mary during day 2. M-F 5-6:00, Call Mary during day 1.
Male graduate student wishes to share two bed-
room apartments, $15,000; call 843-294-1344.
"It's a beautiful Day' blue sky and J. D. Black's
champion of the拂幕. Will pay good money."
841-670-8167
The Lounge
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
Bleed needed. Leave KU after 24 call M-W-P for
Ride needed. Leave KU after 24 call M-W-P for
Shawnee (Shawnee)
- 2-255
Male manmounth. Move in now押本押我 rent in from Frader. No nun hitcher Call 842-3065 between them.
Need female Christian vacation house TOO shone to
Trailside Tahiti, aqua water, on this bus #112. $125.
For rent at 460-735-1822.
Volunteers needed to help with Special Olympics events throughout the state. Call 811-452-6930 for more information or visit www.specialolympics.org. Visit our Web site at www.specialolympics.org.
or 1 or 2 mates to share very nice 2 bedroom apartments. We will mark part of your pay only by the person who makes the payment.
WANTED: Female roommate for my nite 3-bedroom, furnished kitchen. Call 814-2827. Air conditioner 814-2827.
HEADQUARTERS
for
Imported Auto Parts
JAMES CANG
Foreign Auto Parts
843-8080 304 Locust
Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
ARMADILLO
BEAD CO.
NOW IN THE
8TH
STREET
MARKET PLACE
841.7966 M-S
10-5:30 (Thurs. 8:00)
NAISMITH HALL
THE NATIONAL GAMES - LOS ANGELES - WEST BROOKS - NEW YORK - ATTACK SQUARE - 212-348-6000
- Bud on Tap
- Pool
D
Home of The Chalk Hawk
TRY
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
- Pool
- Snooker
Pool
Pin-Ball
Ping Pong
Air Hockey
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
- Foos-Ball
9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl
Onen 7 Days a Week One No Under 18 Admitted
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
8
Tuesday, February 22,1977
University Daily Kansan
S
FALLEY'S
2525 Iowa Next Door to Gibson's Open 7 a.m.-Midnight 7 Days Prices good Tuesday thru Sunday Feb. 22-Feb.27 RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
Falloy's Solls Only U.S.D.A. Choice Grade Beef . . . Only the Best is Good Enough for our Customers
U.S.D.A. Choice Grade
SirloinSteak
Rodeo Brand All Meat
Bologna
79 b.
U.S.D.A. Choice Rib Steak ... $1 39 lb.
U.S.D.A. Choice T-Bone Steak ... $1 59 lb.
U.S.D.A. Choice K.C. Strip Steak ... $1 99 lb.
U.S.D.A. Choice Large End Rib Roast ... $1 29 lb.
U.S.D.A. Choice Small End Rib Roast ... $1 35 lb.
Fresh Frozen Channel Catfish ... $1 19 lb.
Fisher Boy Fish Sticks... 8 oz. Pkg. 29¢
Rodeo Brand Sliced Bacon ... 2 lb. pkg. $2^{49}
Rodeo Golden Smoked Hams ... lb. $1^{79}
Ohse Wieners... 1 lb. pkg. $79¢
Swift Premium
Brown & Serve Sausage ... 8 oz. $79¢
Farmland Canned Hams ... 3 lb. can each $4^{59}
Rodeo Pork Sausage ... 1 lb. roll $79¢
Carl Buddig Sliced Smoked Meats ... 3 oz. $39¢
Michelob Beer 6 pack $1.59 12 oz. Cans or Bottles Kitty Clover Potato Chips Plain or Ripple 10 oz. Bag 59c
Three Diamond
Chunk - Light
Tuna
6 1/2 oz. 49c
Butternut Instant Coffee...$3^{89}
Lipton Tea Bags...$1^{39}
Minute Rice...$1^{29}
Hunt's Peaches...$49^{c}
Del Monte Red Salmon...$1^{89}
Food King Applesauce...$1
Grade A Large Eggs...doz.$69^{c}
Parkay Stick Margarine...$39^{c}
SWEEPSTAKES
GRAND PRIZE
$5000
1st Las Vegas Monday for 2
Tuesdays
9:30 AM CCA Color Trail 10' TV
10:40 CHAN CB Radios
25 J.E.D. Digital Watches
200 News CALCULATORS
**CASING CAHN** is available only in 113 participating Association Ownerships and is available on Mail and Gatherer Websites. CASHING ON AMAZON AND PAWNEE City, Newark and Akrona and Pawnee City, Newark.
Win INSTANTLY or COLLECT to Win!
INSTANT
CASINO CASH
To enter, collect 10 Sweepstakes Jokers. See Collector folder for details.
SWEEPSTAKES
ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE JANUARY 20, 1977*
GAME NO. 05 ODDS INV GAME 13 DATE 24
Win INSTANTLY or COLLECT to Win!
INSTANT
CASINO CASH
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
To enter, collect 10 Sweepstakes Jakers. See Collector locker for details.
SWEEPSTAKES
OOGG CHART EFFECTIVE JANUARY 20, 1977*
GRAND PRIZE
$5000
GAME VALUE
$1000
PROFESSIONAL
10
SHOW STORE
10
NO. OF PRIZES
10
NO. OF GAME VOLUME
10
NO. OF GAME VOLUME
10
NO. OF GAME VOLUME
10
NO. OF GAME VOLUME
10
NO. OF GAME VOLUME
10
NO. OF GAME VOLUME
10
NO. OF GAME VOLUME
10
NO. OF GAME VOLUME
10
NO. OF GAME VOLUME
10
OOGG CHART EFFECTIVE JANUARY 20, 1977*
OOGG CHART EFFECTIVE JANUARY 20, 1977*
OOGG CHART EFFECTIVE JANUARY 20, 1977*
OOGG CHART EFFECTIVE JANUARY 20, 1977*
PROGRAM #1
WIN
10
10
10
10
This offer is a gift of one course after one month offered, depending on which course has been paid with payment. The course will be based on the amount of money you have paid for the FISTEE or the amount of money you have paid for the FISTEE, whichever is larger. The offer may not be redeemed without payment to
WIN
Scheduled termination date of this promotion is April 23, 1977
$1000
Get your FREE
Game Ticket
TOTAL CASH VALUE
OF PRIZES $180,000.
SALARIES AVAILABLE
Pepsi
6 pack $1 59
32 oz. Bottles Plus Deposit
Bright and Early Imitation Orange Juice
6 6 oz. Cans $1
Large California Navel Oranges
15 for $1
Nabisco Bacon & Dip Snack Crackers 8 oz $59¢ U.S. No. 1 Red Potatoes ... 10 lbs. Bulk 99¢
Falley's Own Pizza ... 28 oz. $199 Fresh Red Ripe Strawberries ... pint 59¢
Super Scoop Ice Milk ... ½ gallon 69¢ Cherry Tomatoes ... Pint 69¢
Banquet Frozen Dinners ... 6 flavors 2 for 99¢ Snow White Mushrooms ... 8 oz. box 89¢
Cove Creek Tomatoes
4 16 oz. Cans $1
Creamette Xtra Wide Noodles
3 10 oz. Pkgs.$1
Delta Bathroom Tissue
4 roll Pkg. 59¢
Bright and Early Imitation Orange Juice 6 oz. $1 Cans
Large California Navel Oranges 15 for $1
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S SAVE $564 Over Falloy's Low Discount Prices with These Valuable Coupons
Walrus
Italian
59c
99c
69c
FALLEY'S SAVE
FALLEY'S SAVE
Over Falloy's Low $564
Discount Prices
with Those
Vuluable Coupons
FALLEY'S
Italian
WISHBONE DRESSING
79¢
16 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
Regular
$1.09
COUPON
Delta
Bathroom
Tissue
4 roll
Pkg. 59c
FALLEY'S
Italian
WISHBONE DRESSING
79¢
Regular
16 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPON
Cove Creek Tomatoes 4 16 oz. $1 Cans Creamette Xtra Wide Noodles 3 10 oz. $1 Pkgs.
Pepsi
6 pack $1.59
32 oz.
Bottles
Plus
Deposit
FALLEY'S
99c
FALLEY'S
TRIX CEREAL
99¢
Regular
16 oz.
$1.19
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Angler Light & Easy
BROOM
$1.89
Regular
$2.89
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Light & Easy
SPONGE MOP
$1.89
Regular
$2.89
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPON
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
ENDUST AEROSOL
69c
6 oz.
Regular
$1.09
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Vanish
AUTOMATIC BOWL
CLEANER
9 oz.
69c
Regular
98c
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Sherwood Forest
WILD BIRD FOOD MIX
69c
Regular
89c
5 lb.
Bag
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Skippy
DOG FOOD
$2.99
25 lb.
Bag
Regular
$3.79
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Scope
MOUTHWASH
$1.79
Regular
$2.64
24 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPON
Chocolate Fudge
KEEBLER COOKIES
69c
Regular
16 oz. Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Chiffon
LIQUID DETERGENT
89¢
Regular
$1.19
32 oz. Limit 1 with coupon
Good thru Feb. 27
COUPOON
P
b M
b
M
Prof not allowed to see prisoners
See story page five
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
ON
ON
RAIN
ON
ON
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.87,No.96
Panel hears bills raising Med tuition
By STEVE FRAZIER
Staff Renorter
TOPEKA-Afve bills that would require medical school graduates to practice medicine in Kansas in exchange for loans, scholarships or admission to the University of Kansas Medical Center met little opinion. The two committees and Means Committee hearing yesterday.
One of the bills would set Med Center tuition at $1,000 and require graduating doctors to practice medicine in Kansas one year before the year they were enrolled at the college.
The bill, by state Sen. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa and chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, is similar to a bill by the House Ways and Means Committee hearing Monday, representatives of the Medical Students Assembly from the Med Center and Emerson Yoder, president of the Medical Society, opposed Hayden's bill.
HAYDEN'S BILL, also would require that Med Center graduates practice in Kansas, but it would allow them the option of paying up to about $13,500 tuition a year to avoid the obligation. Hayden's bill also would allow for different levels of tuition waivers in exchange for students' agreements to serve in the state. The levels of tuition waivers would vary according to the degree of medical personnel shortage in parts of the state.
Winter said he wouldn't object if portions of Hayden's bill were amended to his bill. Chancellor Archie Dykes said he couldn't comment on either Hayden's or Winter's bill, because he had been too busy preparing the budget requests to study the proposals.
Attempts in the Kansas Legislature to require Med Center graduates to stay in Kansas began when concern grew about doctor shortages in many areas of the state, especially in rural and western Kansas. Statistics indicate that 34 per cent of the Med Center's 1973 graduates stayed in Kansas.
AL TIKWART, mayor of Westwood Hills, said he favored Winston's bill because 36 of 105 Kansas counties are seriously underfunded. The Center program to recruit rural students had failed, Tikwart said, because only 12 per cent of those rural recruits returned to school.
Winter, writing in Topeka Report, a column published in newspapers in his home district, has summarized his bill as, "I like your state, you don't get our education."
Three other bills heard yesterday would allow the Kansas Board of Regents to buy positions in out-of-state osteopathy schools for Kansas students and require those students to practice in Kansas after their graduation. The Regents currently buy slots at the state university's museum and optometry schools. There is no osteopathy school in Kansas.
TWO OF the osteopontal bills are spon-
dicated to the ostethic hypsodent Hyden,
Satakana, and the other by W. Hirschman.
Terry Whelan, a lobbyist for the Kansas Association of Osteopathic Medicine, said her organization would support a program in which osteopathic students received tuition waivers and also agreed to practice in Kansas.
Another bill before the Ways and Means committee yesterday would continue and expand a current Med Center program that provides up to 68,000 a year to a student who agrees to practice in Kansas after graduation.
JIMMY BROWN
Drooping chaps weren't in the script for John Tongler, Coffeeville siphoners during Rock Chalk practice last night in Hoech (pictured).
Staff photos by GEORGE MILLENER
Not in the script
Omega-Alpha ChI Omega Rock Calk production "Sasaparilla": A group to Swallow. Tougier is thinking about adding the group to the See. See *S*.
Wall collapses at building site
An inside ground wall of the new School of Law building collapsed at 1:30 p.m.
"How did you find out about that?" he said, "Get off of the site."
The wall, about nine feet high and 400 square feet in area, collapsed while two Kansan reporters were at the site. Five people were injured, mostly crashed, nearly as dust, billowed from the ground.
Jack English, superintendent in charge of construction at the building, wouldn't say yesterday at the site where the wall's collapse would delay the building's opening.
REACHED LAST night by telephone,
gabiah said the wall would take four or five
days.
The building's general contractor, Casson Construction Co., Topeka, has refused comment in the past on whether the building would be finished by its May 23 deadline. Yesterday, Casson again declined comment on the building.
The $ 5 million building, east of Jayhawker Towers between 15th Street and Irving Hill Road, officially is scheduled to begin September 23 and be open for classes next fall
But minutes from a Feb. 4 School of Law faculty-student student contract contradict the official views of University of Kansas administrators.
ACCORDING TO THE minutes, Martin Dickinson, dean of the School of Law, "indicated that, because of the continuing failure of the subcontractor to deliver the precast concrete blocks, and other difficulties, it is now virtually certain that we will be unable to move into the new building until January of 1978."
The concrete blocks were replacements for 17 other blocks provided by Casson. The company was asked last fall to replace the original blocks, which form the outer skin of the building, after state and KU instructors decided the panels were of poor quality.
DICKINSON HAS declined to comment on why he doesn't think the building will be finished on time. But, according to School of Law sources close to Dickinson, he has told them of persistent problems in construction related to the Cason Co.
The sources said that defective concrete
Use of election balloon draws fine
The Student Senate Elections Committee last night voted to fine each Avanti sophomore candidate $15 for inflating a hot air balloon in front of Strong Hall Feb. 7.
The committee's action automatically is appealed to the University Judiciary, which will decide on the propriety of the committee's decision.
The candidates inflated the balloon despite a committee ruling F. 9 that prohibited use of a balloon as a campaign air or a "carnival air" to the Senate elections.
Bill Hamilton, Salina freshman who was elected sophomore class vice president, was the only Avanti sophomore class candidate elected.
THE OTHER candidates who were wired were Moli Hasenbank, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Lisa Larsen, Council Bluffs, Iowa; and Greg Snackne, Topeka.
Gary Berline, committee member,
echoed the sentiment of the committee
when he said, "We said no to the balloon and
they said the hell with us."
Under the Senate Rules and Regulations, the committee has the power to fine offenders from $5 to $50 or to remove them from office if they are elected, or both.
out Truck, the committee member who proposed the $15 fine, said, "The fine needs to be much higher."
Rob Green, whose later proposal that the fine be increased to $30 was defeated, said, "If they can afford to spend the money to pay them they can afford to pay the compensations."
In other action, the committee voted to return a $5 Senate filing fee to Harvey C. Jordan Jr., Shawne Mission sophomore, who filed a complaint last Thursday saying the Senate had failed to reprint ballots when it discovered his name on the wrong ballot.
He said that the mistake was both Jor-
SCHNACKE SAID the sophomore class candidates spent about $150 on their freshman classes.
Kevin Flynn, Elections Committee chairman, said that when the mistake was noticed, Jordan's name was hand printed on the correct ballots.
don's, who filed in the wrong school, and the committee's, which didn't catch the mistake until election day.
50 feet of the polls, McMurray also filed a complaint, which wasn't voted on, saying that members of the Elections Committee outwardly supported certain coalitions.
No action was taken on a complaint filed by Steve McMurray, Avanti campaign manager, which contained that members of the coalition had not been informed by rules by wearing campaign T-shirts within
Flynn said McMurray's complaints would be viewed as suggestions when the Elections Committee revised the Senate rules dealing with campaign practices.
KU fears aid decrease
If budget cuts recommended yesterday by President Jimmy Carter are approved by Congress, the University of Kansas could lose nearly $1 million in student aid.
Three programs affecting about 800 KU students are in jeopardy because of the proposed cuts, according to Jerry Rogers, KU director of financial aid. They are the National Direct Student Loan Program (NDSL), the supplementary Educational Opportunity Grants (EOG) and the College Work Study Program (CWSP).
Although Carter recommended restoration of some federal funds to financial aid programs, his recommendations still are under the amounts paid during the current fiscal year, so that KU would lose about $750,000 in the NDSL program, $150,000 in the EOG program and $105,000 in the work-study program.
KU proteasted the cuts through a telegraph encoder Archil Dykes to Kanaan members.
panels still were being delivered to the building site, and that one pad had been installed.
Dickinson's statements from the Feb. 4 meeting have been contradicted by Louis Kruger, state architect, who said last week, "To the best of our knowledge, the building was completed on time. There is every reason to believe that there will be no delay."
HE ALSO SAID, "Dean Dickinson obviously has a misconception about the building. The concrete blocks aren't going to delay the building we'll be done on
Casson Co. was denied a request for extending its May 23 deadline, when the board approved the building completed. The request was made in Topeka at a Feb. 3 meeting of representatives from Casson, the county government of Regents and the state architect's office.
According to state law, each day after May 23 that the building isn't completed will cost the Casson Co. $500. But the School of Law sources said Dickinson had questioned whether the contract specifying the $500-a-day fine would be enforced.
THE FINE would result from a civil law concept called liquidated damages, awarded on construction contracts to cover costs incurred by the damage measured in exact dollar amounts. Liquidated damages on a University construction contract require action by the court.
Jonathan small, a member of the civil division of the attorney general's office, said yesterday that "we usually will enlist any individual provisions that specify liquidated damages.
But, he said, "I liquidated damages have always been looked at with a very careful eye. I've been here four years, and I don't expect to lose money. I enforce them on university construction."
SMALL SAID that his office hadn't refused to enforce the damages for university construction contracts, but that previous construction delays had been legalized through extensions granted the contractors.
Max Lucas, University director of facilities planning, attended the Feb. 3 meeting at which Cannon was denied its request for an extension. According to Lucas, "It will take a maximum effort to stay time, but there has been no extension."
Small, however, said enforcement to collect damages required careful study.
Lucas also said, "The company must legally be done by May 23. The panels are
"IF THE people come to us with a complaint, we'll sit down with them," he said. "But construction contracts give the architect a modicum of justification for delays."
Construction on the new building, which replaces Green Hall, began in March 1975. Its five stories will house the School of Engineering and have room for 30,000 more volumes.
The building also will include a courtroom that doubles as a classroom, individual study stations, student lockers, eight-bedrooms, lockers and space for the Legal Aid Society.
A major advantage of the new building is that its 95,000 square feet of floor space will accommodate an enrollment of 660,104 more students than last semester's enrolment. Green Hall originally was designed to house 160 students.
Alcoholism a barrier for prof, students
(Note: This story is the third in a three-part series on alcoholism.)
By RICK THAEMERT
Tom, one of more than 10 million alcoholics in the United States, has been a professor at KU for many years. He considers himself lucky. His drinking problem never cost him his family, his job or his peer respect. It did, however, almost cost him his self-respect, and his life.
Jane, Tom and Bill (not their real names) have been at the University of Kansas for several years. They're active, respectable people, both socially and professionally; they realize that Jane, Tom or Bill are alcoholics.
Staff Reporter
Tom began drinking as a social, or weekend, drinker, but soon was drinking heavily every night at the bar.
ALTHOUGH HE HE was never drunk while teaching, he said, alcohol did him perform his role.
"My performance was not what it should have been," he said. "Anybody's performance is likely to be interfered with when they spend so much of their time talking, and the thing they think is a horrible truth about themselves."
Tom said because alcohol took 72 hours to work
out of the system after extremes intolerable.
To compensate, Tom worked harder at KU to hide his problem from colleagues and students.
Although he felt continuous guilt, he said, his colleagues praised his work. No one noticed him.
His family, however, did notice.
"I WAS MORE argumentative at home," he said, apparently was very much concerned about his impersonality.
"in a moment when I wasn't thinking at all, I came very close to committing suicide," he said. "The bottom I lit was so horrible I don't ever want to be there again. It was worse than losing all my life." I lost myself. There was a morning I met myself so much I didn't want to live any more."
TOM, A "highbottom" drunk (one who conquers the disease without losing social or family status) said admitted he was an alcoholic was difficult.
But the decision wasn't easy, Tom said. It came only after prolonged depression.
It helped that there were many years I was loving family relationship. When I told them I was going to seek help, they said, "You were beginning to need Weibo. And you were that decision."
"It's not easy for anyone to take the first step," he said. "I've admitted that I was powerless over alcohol, and it's hard to admit that something controls your life."
Torn said he realized he lost the ability to control when or how much he drank, so he went to the gym.
"A person who wonders if his drinking has became a problem probably has the problem," he said. "When drinking is a cause of problems in life, it's a drinking problem."
Tom said about one of every ten persons is an alcoholic. The same proportion exists among adults.
"YOUNG PEOPLE who experiment with life make mistakes from which they will learn," he said. "Experimenting usually rubs off, but for one in ten, it doesn't."
For that person, college life is difficult, he said. "All the fun takes place at drink places." Tom said. Consequently, when student alcoholics succumb to peer pressure, they often drink and use drugs, which results in ridicule and statements such as, "The way you drink makes me sick." Tom said.
They know they drink more than others for the
sake. They must be afraid. They want to escape
from life's problems.
ACCORDING TO government statistics, more than 90 per cent of college students consume alcohol. The heaviest drinkers are found in the social sciences, humanities and fine arts depart-
Jane was recently a KU graduate student. She drank to relieve the strain of studies and personal stress.
"One of the things alcohol did for me was calm me down. I was very anxious," she said.
LIKE TOM, Jane tried to compensate by overworking in school.
"I'd draw on all my resources for two days to write a paper or speech, then I'd get drunk," she said. Consequently, she was exhausted, underweight and couldn't sleep.
Suffering from an addiction to both drugs and alcohol, Jane said, she couldn't write a paper or give a speech without taking a drink or tranquilizer. Because her apartment rooms were also heavy drinkers, nothing appeared unusual about her habits.
Jane said she spent many late nights drinking alone, wallowing in self-pity. Extreme loneliness, sobbing and occasional blackouts were results of her drinking, she said.
Although she was a serene person when sober, Jane said, she became very violent when drunk. She was thrown out of several Lawrence bars for throwing glasses, or for being obnoxious or extremely drunk, she said. She was arrested three times for drunken driving.
"I HAD more money when I was drinking because I didn't eat, entertain or buy clothes. I didn't have anything except drinking," she said. Because of her drinking, her marriage broke up. After a divorce, she tried to commit suicide and broke her lee in the attempt.
"I scared me but it didn't stop me from drinking," she said. "Instead of dealing with the
See ALCOHOL page three
15
Staff drawing by DAVID MILLER
2
Wednesday, February 23, 1977
University Daily Kansam
News Digest
From our wire services
Gas misconduct alleged
WASHINGTON—Texaco is withholding from production over 500 billion cubic feet of natural gas in two fields off the coast of Louisiana that could have been tapped this winter to ease severe gas shortages, congressional investigators said yesterday.
Texaco didn't attempt to pump this gas into interstate pipelines because of a "deny to maximize its profits," said John Railway, who headed the probe by pointing out that Texaco had a policy.
the House Oversight and investigations subcommittee. Texaco denied that it is withholding gas from consumers and said the allegations were "warmed-over versions of similar misleading charges made several days ago in a study submitted to Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus."
Court to review admissions
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court said yesterday it would decide if special school admissions programs that benefit blacks and other minority students illegally discriminate against whites.
violate the rights of whoever eventually rules could affect drastically all affirmative action programs in education and business.
The justices voted without comment to review a decision by the California Supreme Court that such programs foster a type of reverse discrimination and violate the rights of whites to be treated equally under the law.
Carter seeks budget increase
WASHINGTON - President Carter asked Congress yesterday to increase 1978 budget spending by $19.4 billion more than former President Gerald Ford proposed, and it appeared from the initial reaction that most lawmakers approved.
Carter asked Congress to approve total federal spending in 1978 of $454.4 billion, up from the $440 billion that Ford had recommended three days before leaving office.
office.
That would hike the 1978 budget deficit to $57.7 billion, $10 billion more than Ford worked.
Carter's plan to cut defense spending by $257 million in 1978 and by $2.7 billion in future years was called "not a very radical one" by Rep. George Mahon, D-Texas., chairman of the House appropriations subcommittee.
Search for boy abandoned
ATCHISON—The organized search for nearly deaf 4-year-old Jeremy Coots ended Tuesday night after a specially trained rescue dog led searchers to the bank of the Missouri River, where authorities believe the boy drowned.
of the Missouri
The site is that 400 yards from the backyard of a babysitter's home from which he was逛完 afternoon. Friday afternoon.
The dog's owner and trainer. Kumaz Ft. Lauderdaire, Fla., said that after checking the dog's relocation several times, he was sure the boy walked down a ramp. "He's always there," she added.
Based on Kazo's report, Atchison County Sheriff Ernie Hansen said Tuesday night he would shut down the official search.
Amin ousts Christian servicemen
DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania (UPI)- President Idi Adi of Uganda has begun a purge of thousands of predominantly Christian Langi and Achole tribesmen in the army, air force, police and prison service, refugees who fled Uganda said yesterday.
The refugees said thousands of the tribesmen had been massacred and hundreds of students of those tribes arrested in Kampala and that Amin was replacing the militants in the armed forces with Moslems and Suddanee loyal to the president.
Amin is a Moalman who often defends his actions by saying he has received inward guidance.
The refugees said many prominent Ugandans had been arrested and were being detained.
Among those believed murdered are four prominent professors.
There are approximately 600,000 Lani and 400,000 Alohue in Uganda. Their home is the Nairobi airport.
Citizens group criticizes city's Bowersock approval
By JOHN MCANULTY
Staff Renorter
At last night's Lawrence City Commission meeting, the Lawrence Citizens Advisory Council (CAC) criticized the commission for its approval of the Bowersock proposal and charged that the commission was unresponsive to the group's recommendations.
one advisory council comprises Lawrence citizens appointed by the commission to advise it on selected issues. Jack Cohen was appointed in 1983, even though the commission was doing a good job in general, it had acted hastily in approving the Bowersock proposal, which enable the county to acquire land at the town center and 4th streets along the Kansas River.
HARRI SAIID the commission had asked the group to study the Bowersock proposal but hadn't waited for the group to make any recommendations.
Commissioner Donald Binns suggested that CAC be required to make its recommendations within a specific amount of time in the future. Binns criticized the group for not consulting a city sub-site and also studying the Bowersock proposal.
Harris said CAC thought that too many questions remained unanswered in the Bowersock proposal and that the company had acquired all the Bowersock land.
manger Fred Pence said that the city had studied Bowersock four years and that the commission passed the proposal because it thought it had made the best deal possible.
Commissioner Carl Mibeck agreed with Harris that the commission should have conferred with CAC on the matter and said that in the future he would try to be sure the commission didn't act on an issue before the council could give its recommendations.
Harris said that the commission, in the eyes of most of the council members, was instructed to present recommendations, and that communication between the commission and the public also had room for improvement. He said many residents knew who the Lawrence city manager was.
ANOTHER member of the council,
William Lemenay, 2349 Murphy Drive,
said an average citizen was afraid to talk to commissioners and afraid to attend commission meetings because he was afraid the commission would "step on his neck."
Commissioner Argeraisme said she thought the present commission had generated public interest and pointed out that many homes had bad, full houses in the past two years.
TO TRY TO improve communication,
Commissioner Barkley Clark motioned that a record be put on file listing complaints
that were not received, and which would be available to the public. The
commission unanimously approved the motion.
In other action, Tom Groene, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, announced that the chamber had exceeded its goal of $55,000 in the Lawrence airport business. He presented a ceremonial check to the commissioners for $35,001.
The $35,001 will go to buy 320 acres adjacent to the present airport. The Kansas University Endowment Association is selling the land to the city for $350,000, and the Federal Aviation Administration is providing $315,000 of the amount.
Troene said the remaining $10,75 from the drive will be divided among the donors.
ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE!
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警察職務
If you'd like to cash in on these Air Force benefits, start by looking into the Air Force ROTC.
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SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS: If you are a physical science, math or engineering major designated slots are available in the following categories:
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Apply THIS WEEK. See Capt. Macke, Military Science Building, Room 108, or call 864- 4676.
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SEE EUROPE THIS SUMMER!
ADVANCE BOOKING CHARTER to EUROPE
Operated by Maupintour
In conjunction with the University of Kansas Office of Study Abroad and SUA Travel
June 7 to August 9
Kansas City to Paris/London to Kansas City
AIR LINE
$460.00 per person PAN AM airfare only
SUR
TRAVEL
student flights both to and within Europe. We issue the International Student Identity Card, a must for traveling as it qualifies you for discounts at museums, student restaurants and much more. Stop by the SUA office, 4th floor, Kansas Union, next to the gallery for more information.
... has further information for the student traveler. We have a travel library with books and pamphlets gathered by students for students traveling on a low budget. We have information on other
The University of Kansas Summer Study Abroad '77
ENGLAND and SCOTLAND
and SCOTLAND
Dates: June 7 to August 9, 1977
*Cost: $1495
Application Deadline: April 1, 1977
Cities included: Paris, London,
Exeter, York, Bath, Bristol,
Stafford, Edinburgh, Cambridge
Contact: Prof. John Macauley,
Dept. of History
YUGOSLAVIA
Dates: Mid-June to Mid-August, 1977
*Cost: $750.00
Application Deadline: April 2, 1977
Contact: Prof. Joseph Conrad, Dept. of
Slavic Languages
GERMANY
Dates: June 7 to Aug. 9, 1977
Cities Included: Paris, Hamburg, Kiel,
Lubeck, Copenhagen, Berlin, and London
Application Deadline: April 1, 1977
Contact: Prof. Henry Fullenwider, Dept. of
German
O
MEXICO
Dates: June 13 to August 6, 1977
*Cost: Average $450.00
Application Deadline: April 15,
1977
Stays in Guadalajara, Mexico
Contact: Dept. of Spanish &
Portuguese
A
SPAIN
1
Dates: Mid-June to Mid-August, 1977
*Cost: $1250.00
Application Deadline: April 1, 1977
Cities included: Granada,
Toledo, Burgos, Sequoia, Madrid
Contact: Prof. Robert Spires,
Dept. of Spanish & Portuguese.
FRANCE
Dates: June 7 to August 9, 1977
*Cost: $1325.00
Application Deadline: March 1, 1977
Cities included: Paris, Charfres,
Chateau Country of the Loire,
Historical sites in Burgandy or
Normandy
Contact: Dept. of French & Italian
- Cost subject to changes necessitated by airfare where included and or currency valuations.
Wednesday, February 23.197
3
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OnCampus
Events
TODAY: AN AHS WEDNESDAY MASS will be at 11 a.m. in Danforth Chapel, Felix Moss, professor of anthropology, will discuss "KU IN MICRONESIA PROJECT" at a faculty forum at noon in the United Ministries Center. A FREE SAFETY TRAINING WORKSHOP will be at 1:30 p.m. in the Room Forum of the Kansas Union. JOHN KESSEL, assistant professor of English, will speak on writing and poetry at 4 p.m. in the Union's Parlor A.
TONIGHT: The student chapter of the INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS will hear a discussion about engineering in New Mexico and the Southwest at 7 in the Apollo Room of Nichols Hall. THE UNDERGRADUATE ANTHROPOLOGY ASSOCIATION meets at 7 at 230 Alabama St. The STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL MEDITATION SOCIETY will present a free lecture on Transcendental Meditation at 6 in the Governors Room of the University at Lincoln Center, where they will have a topic of WEST ARTS LECTURE at 6 in the Farm Room of the Union. A faculty rectal will be at 8 in Swarthout Hall.
TOMORROW: MAY RECRUTTERS will be in the Engineering Placement Office, beginning at 8:30 a.m. TRAVEL AUDIT SEMINAR will be from 1 to 3 p.m. in 104 Carruth-O'Leary Hall. The GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in 4021 Wescoe. Jim Scaly and Max Sutton will present "A PROGRAM OF VICTORIAN SONG: SHOALS OF ENGLISH THEATRE" at 4 p.m. in 4019 Wescoe. An African STUDIES FILM, "Middle America: The Land and the People," will be shown at 7 p.m. in Strong Hall Auditorium. KANAL. 91.5 FM, will air "THE ARGUMENT ON MIDDLE AMERICA" at 7 a.m. RECYCLAT will be at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. A film PSYCHATIC HOSPITAL CONDITIONS will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. The U.S. COAST GUARD auxiliary course will be at 7:30 p.m. in the community building, 11th and Vermont streets. HILLEL will sponsor an Israeli Folk Dance at 11 p.m. on the 10th floor of McCollurn Hall.
Grants & Awards
ROBERT ROWLAND AND FRANK CROSS, KU debaters, took second place in the Northwestern University Debate Tournament last week. ROBERT EWAGASS, professor of slavic and soviet areas studies, has been awarded the prize. Prize for the best book is given annually to the best book published in the previous year on a Roman topic.
Announcements
THE ORAL COMMUNICATION REQUIREMENT EXEMPTION EXAM will be given March 31. Anyone interested should contact Noreen Carcacci at 864-333 or in 3107 Wescoe by March 7. THE MOUNT OREAD BICYCLE CLUB is looking for designs for a new logo. Contact Gene Wee, 864-347, for details.
Jane said she realized she was an alcoholic because she kept drinking when it was no longer appropriate. After drinking in a bar, Jane would usually wine, because it was cheaper.
problem, I kept on drinking. I wound up
without any body being able to handle me at
From page one
Alcohol
I REALIZED I was an alcoholic, but I didn't think there was anything I could do," she said. "On campus, I wasn't aware of professors or professors that had an alcoholic problem.
Finally, however, she aused help from
her, and help her, and
Alcoholics Anonymous, who was
Now, she said, she reenacts that her feelings of inadequacy were natural, and not a cause for drinking. Also, because of her being sick, it is now sensitive to both germs and drugs.
"I if I drunk now I be as dick in two weeks as I once was," she said. "At first, without alcohol, I thought I'd die. All wanted was to get through a day without
BILL IS A Senior at KU. Unlike Jane, he had no problems. He drank because heliked
drinking. Now, I'd rather die than have that compulsion."
"My family life was fine," he said. But, he added, after he became an alcoholic things changed. "I think it just damn near killed my mom.
"I was out drinking every night. It was my life, I'd start at seven, be crocked by ten, didn't know what was going on by 11, and set home by five."
Consequently, he either flunked or missed his excuses at KU, be said.
Bill said he suffered from blackouts, benders (drunk for several days), and a brain injury.
ONE DRUNKEN RAGN shot him犯骚动 for having three gunshots in his pick-up. Bill said he had been going after someone at the highway other time, he drove his van off the highway.
Now, after aid from AA, BILL is doing fine,
although two months ago he slipped back
The men were arrested in a Holiday Inn motel room after police followed footprints on the floor.
Hickard has been released on $15,000
Holyair still is being held in Douglas
Council.
Peter Helyar and Michael Hickam, both 18, each have been charged with two counts of burglary. In two separate incidences, he and his associate robbed a cash and goods from Gibson's, police said.
Bill said it was especially difficult to resist alcohol when most college students drink.
KU symphonic band on annual state tour
"It's kind of scary not having control, a part of your life," he said.
"Friday that's just about kill a person," he said. "Where do you meet people? You meet them in a bar. Where do you take a girl on a date? You take her to a bar. It's kind of a lonely existence when all your friends are out barboring."
They will be arraigned March 3 in Douglass County court, according to Douglas County court.
into drunkenness for a short time.
teachers from throughout the state Friday in Wichita.
The University of Kansas Symphonic Band is visiting eight Kansas cities this week in its annual concert tour, Feb. 21-Feb. 27.
Foster says that the band has little time to play, but the annual trip is still estimated. But
The tour ends with a home town performance at the University, where it is舞台ed by the University Theatre in New York.
Two suspects waive hearings
Two men charged in connection with a Jan. 29 burglary of Gibson's Discount Center, on January 10, waived their premium billed yesterday and were bound over to district court.
But, he said, staying "dry" is essential to retaining respect among his friends.
"They're always talking about public relations for the University," he said. "Well, this is just like an Outreach program."
The band features two clarinet solos: Bob Lowry, director of instrumental music at Morningside College, Sioux City, Iowa; and Frank Bibb, Teopke graduate student.
The 71-piece band, under the direction of Robert Foster, is appearing in Anthony, Kingman, Lawrence, Overland Park, Kinston, Wellington, Witchin and Winfield.
The soloists play with the band in a performance of "Music of Three Famous Composers," featuring the works of Ferde Grefe, David Bennett and Hirme Sinee.
Because most people tag alcoholics as the gutter type, it's very hard to be open about
TREKING
"I'd word got out at school that I was an
allic, allchill walt would break loss," he
said.
BACKGAMMON
Tonight, 7 p.m. Kansas Union
The band will play at the Kansas Music Educators Association meeting of music
Kansas Union
Other compositions include Robert Schumann's "Concerstuckt," George M. Cohan's "Star Spangled Spectacular," Florent Schmitt's "Dionysiaques" and several compositions arranged by J. J. Richards.
OFF THE WALL HALL
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Friday. Feb. 25
legislative decriminalization efforts.
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Friday, Feb. 25
All proceeds go to
May 21-31, 1977
General meeting: Richard Douthit, Emporia,
will share his AT experiences in the Nantahala
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Meetings will be held at 10th Floor.
Place: Orcad Room, Kansas Union
a non-profit organization.
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E
ENTROPY
The Society for Creative Disorganization would like to invite you to a
in the Hawk's Nest
3:30-5:30
with 12 people from the TOM MONTGOMERY TRIO
Courtesy of SUA
Friday, February 25
to meet with us and consider the following questions:
PARTY
reducers
oxidizers
synthesizers
producers
technocrats
poets
hoggers
hobgivers
students *
professors
"hard" sciences
soft sciences
"social" sciences
"asocial" sciences
engineers
We invite any and all citizens from among the
Can the observable outside the LAB be used? Can data be collected from the LAB? What is the place of education in the university? In society? On your wrist? in myth? What is the place of education in the university? In society? On your wrist? in myth?
- This society will designate student members to the already existing Committee for the History and History
Paid for from the Student Activity Fee
ENTropy is interested in any activity which finds science its core.
DURS is an INFORMAL INTENTION. We are waving a beer party to siderily ponder these questions.
Q
AURH (Assoc. of Univ. Residence Halls)
AUKn L
ELECTIONS - Tues., March 8 & Wed., March 9 5-6 p.m. in every residence hall cafeteria
For petitions & filing forms, see your Hall
General Elections for AURH President AURH Vice-President
2) Team members must be from different residence halls.
DEADLINE FOR FILING - Fri., Feb. 25
President or call the AURH office - 864-4041
REQUIREMENTS:
G
1) Candidates must run as a team
all at the
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12:00— John Boulton, flute
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4:00— John Kessel, fiction writer
Parlor A, Union
8:00— "The Non-Artist in the Art World," discussed by Donald Hoffman, Douglas Drake, Jeanne Stump, Ellen Goheen Forum Room, Union
8:00— Richard Angeletti, piano, Don Scheid, clarinet Karel Blass, viola—Faculty Recital Series, Swarthout
8
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4
Wednesday, February 23, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Comment
tprompts on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Dam projects needed
The disclosure that Jimmy Carter will cancel funds for 19 water projects in 18 states until safety and environmental hazards can be gauged has caused a wave of furor from politicians and resources officials in those states.
Carter's reason for dropping the funds from his 1978 fiscal budget, which begins in October, has its merits. But the administration's announcement, as officials in the 16 states involved have said, is a display of poor judgment and bad timing.
The announcement came early before 11 governors and representatives of six other states, including Kansas, met in Denver and later endured a task force to speed up federal aid for drought-stressed areas in Western Kentucky and states. Carter recently recognizes the seriousness of the drought; he sent Secretary of Interior Cecil Andrus to the Denver meeting.
UNFORTUNATELY, THE decision on the dam funding leaked out of Washington before the President can make an announcement later in the week.
One dam that would be affected is the proposed Auburn-Folsom South Central Vally Project in Northern California, a region where the drought is the most serious. California produces 25% per cent of national's food supply, per cent of its exports. A prolonged drought there could very likely result in higher food prices nationwide.
The seriousness of the drought extends to the Midwest, as well.
Small towns throughout Kansas and Missouri are major suppliers of water to farmers who daily have to haul water to their cattle. Because of three consecutive
dry summers, however, those farmers have had to haul more water than in past years.
Those small towns, and even some rural water districts, have had to shut off their supply to farmers because of dwindling available water for their other customers.
UNDER CARTER'S PLAN, the Meramec Lake Park project in Missouri and the Grove Hill project in Kansas would be among the affected dams. These projects are considered primarily recreational projects, however.
Colorado in the past has allocated water supplies to California, Arizona, New Mexico and Wyoming. But because of a below-normal snowfall this winter, Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm is pondering how his state will meet those allocations this year.
Many of the dams, as Secretary Andrus said last weekend, are controversial ones that have Carter concerned. This would include the Meramec project in Missouri, where residents near the dam have voiced their opposition. Carter's proposal, as one might guess, has left opponents of dams delighted.
AN OPPONENT OF AN affected Louisiana dam said, "Maybe this is an indication that we have somebody in the White House who cares a little bit about some of these things."
Larter's concern with environmental and safety standards is full of good intentions. He needs to review those intentions. He should provide funds to Western projects such as the Auburn Dam, and eliminate waste projects that are primarily recreational.
Recreation we can do without for the moment. But continuing problems of drought and irrigation will have their effects in the years ahead. We need the water.
By MERLE GOLDMAN
Natural gas crisis needs study
Guest Writer
The United States is now passing through its second energy crisis, one whose effects have been more severe than those of its 1973 counterpart. Then, Americans suffered from high prices and long lines at gas stations as they heated their homes during one of the coldest winters in recorded history.
The new crisis has also brought a new problem, energy unemployment. Workers' livelihoods are now subject to the vicissitudes of the pipeline as well as supply and demand. The basic difference between the old and new phase of employment crises is the resource in short supply. Then it was oil and gasoline; now it is natural gas, an energy source that beats half of the homes in the United States and provides energy for 40 per cent of U.S. industries.
wrong if it patterned its long-term policy on the measures it has hastily taken during the crisis.
ALTHOUGH WE could be sure that gas stopped flowing in pipelines in the last few weeks, this fact is no reason to suddenly conclude that all the gas is not coming out of the continent is about to disappear.
knowledge about gas supplies is taken from statistics gathered by the American Gas Association, a group organization for natural gas producers. According to the AGA, consumption went above the finding of new natural gas reserves in 1968 and the soaring prices has since depleted supplies by 25 per cent. If current rates of consumption continue, the AGA predicts that the United States will have to pay for only about 10 more years.
SO SAYS THE major source of information about gas resources. And the gas companies' cries for permanent deregulation seems justified. But the House Interstate and Congressional committee on Oversight and Investigations conducted hearings last year which could if well-known, greatly damage the credibility of the AGA. The committee, headed by John Spencer, a geologist employed by the AGA to make objective assessments of available gas supplies had ignored an AGA definition of a "proved," that is, readily exploitable, gas sources and accepted the estimates the gas companies gave them.
Most government surveys of natural gas supplies have also based their estimates on gas companies by gas companies. The FFC and
Federal Energy Administration both failed to use the subpoena power granted them when they investigated available supplies.
AT THE BOTTOM of the gas crisis is an unsolved mystery, a question of how much gas is available and how many gas companies are in reserve. Until now we have largely accepted the gas companies' interpretations of what is a "proved" gas field. Because measuring gas uses expensive and uses technology, gas companies are the only ones who have been willing to collect data on a large scale. But the fact that the Supreme Court said in 1968 that the FPC could increase the regulated price of gas when the AGA said that it was unable to pay the cost of new discoveries makes the companies' claims of shortages a little suspect.
estimates about how much natural gas is available remain in a knot of statistics that it seems only experts can unravel. If Carter is truly a "people's president," he will make sure that experts with the people's interests in mind, ones who are not afraid to use the power of technology in their mystery, are asked to investigate the supply of natural gas.
Americans have been primed for a long-term energy crisis. There is no doubt that one is coming if we continue current warming, because servation is needed now and in the future. But we should never let our enthusiasm for conservation substitute for the need to reduce greenhouse gas when an energy crisis is real and when it is manufactured.
THE GOVERNMENT'S immediate reaction to the crisis has been a call for conservation. President Carter asked Americans to turn down their heaters and Congress to permit public access to interstate pipelines to states in the Northeast and Midwest. To facilitate the flow of gas, Carter has also temporarily suspended the Federal Power Commission (FPC) regulations that have down the price of gas flowing across state lines since 1954.
Carter's swift response to the crisis deserves praise. His call for conservation emphasized the need to support the American way of life. His request for deregulation was an effective way to quickly increase the flow of natural gas and reduce energy costs. Carter administration would be
Merie Goldman is a senior majoring in journalism.
Pot argument ridiculous
committee in opposition to the decriminalization bill.
"I am concerned with what has happened to America. This committee should consider that young parents are in the education as a sign of their坠 abandoning concern for their welfare. I know of two patients who smoked one and one psychotic condition that took six months to cure."
-Harold Voth, a Menninger Foundation psychiatrist in hearings before the House Federal and State Affairs Committee. Feb. 15, 1977.
"But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas," "But, this is Kansas." J. Thomas Ungerleider said after hearing the testimony of Voth and others who opposed the bill. "This is America 100 years ago. It is fun of it to come to Kansas."
If Voth's testimony is representative of what the Kansas Legislature has done, Rep. Mike Glover's bill that would reduce penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana will pass and become law July 1.
It embarrasses me that our state legislators had to be subjected to such testimony, and embarrassed in doing so. Their testimony was representative of that given to the
his testimony, which has nothing whatever to do with reducing penalties for murders of sources of murjana, was: Where did the teenager who smoked two joints of murjana and ___ was or asked about an ack month gets the stuff?
and go back in time 100 years."
Penny
The only question of importance raised by Voth in
IT ISN'T surprising that Ungerleider described the testimony he heard in opposition to Glover's bill as "discriminatory" and "ridiculous he had heard on the subject. Based on what Voth and others who testified said, how could one think they were even talking about the committee was considering?
It must have been expensive.
WHAT I HOPE the legislators are asking themselves is whether it is just to put a person in jail for a year and fine him $2,500 because he had an ounce of marijuana, the maximum law possible under state law.
Brent Anderson Editorial Writer
And, if that question isn't easy enough to answer, I please copy it for a second conviction of simple possession
of marijuana: a possible $5,000 fine and up to 10 years in prison.
he has been argued that rarely, if ever, has the maximum penalty for a possession of marjuanja That argument is as ridiculous as Voth's, if not more so.
The time is right to pass Glover's bill, which would reduce penalties for possession of two ounces or a maximum of marjuria to a maximum fine of $100. If smoking marjuriana is a prohibited questionable, a maximum fine of $100 seems a bit more appropriate.
IT WILL probably be shocked to some that a shy, conservative down to earth woman gets high about as often as he eats lobster, would favor a bill reducing the penalties possession of marijuana one of授牌 by Glomer.
If there's an increase in psychotic cases after the bill passes, Voth can say, "I told you so."
U.S. MAIL
CARTER HOTELS
SALAMAND
NEWS
Let's abolish February
SCRABBLE, Va.-Dan. Patrick Moynihan, the junior senator from New York, is considering a bill that may secure his place in history. At the request of his Buffalo office, so the story goes, he is thinking of a bill to abolish February.
Because this is a piece of humane legislation I have been promoting for 25 years, the senator's initiative naturally impresses me as sound. President Carter may get modest land for riding on it, while White House staffers and 400 advisory committees, but the Moynihan Act, if it is written into law, will prompt jubilation across the frozen land.
MOYNIHAN, IN his own audacious fashion, would begin
by abolishing February straight-out. Reportedly he'd add one week to April, two weeks to June and one week to September. He'll be one more day for New Year's Eve. The birthdays of
James J. Kilpatrick
tel 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Washington, Lincoln and Harrison would be relocated by appointment of the president of the Senate and the speaker of the House. Senator's Day would fall on May 19. It sounds too good to be true.
NEWST
MAGAZINES
NEWS PAPERS
PERIODICALS
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Readers Digest
The effect of all this would be to give the country a running start on spring. Right after January, we'd be into March, and March is a month we can live with. March has a good name. It comes highly recom- mentable, and it's also a hard speak a harsh word about March. How much snow do they get in Buffalo in March? A durn sight less than they get in February, that's for sure.
and Virginia suburbs of Washington, these country capitalists are hawking door to door at 50 cents a log.
© 1977 NYT Special Features.
HERE IN RAPPAHANNOCK County, Va., up in the Blue Ridge Mountains, we haven't had anything approaching the hardships of Buffalo, Cincinnati and Fargo, but it has been hard for us to do so dinarily, we get a ew inches of Christmas card snow, and I write a pretty country piece about the pines in ermine and the vanilla frosted fields, and the pine trees are away. This year the snow has hung around like a bad case of snuffles. The water pump froze, a pipe burst and the tractor congealed and wouldn't start. The birds have been learning to eat, but in their hearts aren't in them.
There is nothing good to be said for February. The month is beyond redemption. It is dark in the mornings and dark in the afternoons. The firewood gets wet and the kindling won't ignite until it gets hot, and they won't stay out. For three weeks the collies tracked in snow. Then we had a two-day thaw, and they tracked in mud.
THERE IS BUT one thing to do, and I'm doing it. I am taking two weeks' vacation and heading for Savannah, Sea Pines and New Orleans. The immediate consequence will be that the cherry trees in pannahook County, temperatures in the 60s, crocs on the lawn, and bluebirds on the wing. The cherry trees will start to bud in Washington, and the committee is getting ready to commit. When I get back, February will be gone, and believe me, it won't be missed.
Carter can do with his $50 rebates. He can send 'em to the Northern Piedmont Electric Cooperative, Box 325, Culpeper, Va. Or to Mr. Alvey at Pyrofax Gas. Or to the fuel oil folks.
AT LEAST THE electric power hasn't gone bloody—it hasn't gone bloody so far—but that's the best thing that can be said for electric power. The electric bills are horrendous. In our neck of the woods, everybody knows what Mr.
You wouldn't believe the firewood situation. The wood dealers have become the merchant princes of the Blue Ridge Mountains. They consult with a real estate agent only. A few years ago, you could get an honest cord of wood for $20. Now, as a favor, they offer a pickup load for a hundred bucks. A hundred bucks! That was the price one肩o would quote, wife and wife, he wasn't especially eager to sell it here in Rappahannock. In the Maryland
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A Pacemaker award winner
Wi been
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--861-4810
Business Office--861-4358
rumbled at the University of Kansas daily August 18th. Subscription holders are invited to June and July eagle Saturday, Sunday and Halloween. Subscribers to mail $ a member or $130. Subscriptions by mail are $ a member or $130. A year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $150. A year outside the county.
Manager Editor Jim Bates
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Editor
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La
Campus Editor
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Barbara Burrell
Copy Chiefs
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Sports Editor
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Photographers
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Mel Adams
Wednesday, February 23, 1977
University Dally Kansan
5
w much
re remain
s that it
unravel.
'people's
take sure
people's
who are
power of
water to in-
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Performers iron out rough spots in revue
Staff Reporter
By MARSHA WOOLERY
Keeping their clumsy feet in time to the orchestra and Cinderella's crown out of her Fairy Godmother's tutu are only a couple of problems faced by performers preparing for the Rock Chalk Reve Friday and Saturday night.
Most of the problems are technical rough spots that should be smoothed out at tomorrow's second dress rehearsal and tomorrow's final practice, cast members said.
Last night was the first dress rehearsal and complete run-through of the revue, and props and costumes were arranged, showed that not everything was right for the first two groups had to perform without appropriate lighting because two lightning bolts members were taking class examinations.
ALL THE groups seemed to be plagued by traditional problems of adjusting to the orchestra's tempo and delivering lines and words of songs audibly.
Maude Gridley, Pi Beta Phi sorority member and "Bob Meany" in the sorority's "Heaven's to Betsy" skit with the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, said, "Most people in the cast who were in last year say the problems are the same, except our biggest conflict is with the music arranger. We do not want to do the. tempo is different and the orchestra takes a lot of time out of our practice."
Rick Taylor, chorus member in the Delta Upson fraternity's production of "Evil Medieval" with the Kappa Alpha Theta secrecy, and his group's biggest problem was adjusting to the orchestra because the group began practicing together until Saturday.
"THE LEADS are also having a problem keeping in front of the directional markers so they can be seen."
John VanKeppel, Alpha KappaLambda director of the production, "Mother Goose Lets Loose, or Goose Takes a Gamble" with the Gamma Phi Beta sorority, said the two houses also had a problem with the micronhones.
the groups' performances for both nights and by using only IBA (in-between acts) players to entertain during set changes between skits.
Despite the simplification for the mashable, the different set crews are better able to perform.
Jeff Burns, Alpha Kappa Lambda cast member, complained that the microphones lowered the quality of the over-all production, because singing had to be yelled and blocking had to include jumping from one microphone to the next.
Kathy Hannah Waugh, Rock Chalk producer, said that one microphone had been added this year to the six across the mixing room, and the mixing room had been added to two of her machines.
Waugh said some technical problems had been avoided by keeping the same order for
Glenn Neppy, Phi Delta Gamma chorus member, said his group had three times as many props as the other groups and consequently had last-minute painting and
WAUGH SAID that the groups knew when they submitted their scripts last fall when the set deadline was, but that only one group had completed its set.
Steve Leben, newly elected student body president, Ralph Munyan, vice president, and student senators will officially take their places in the Student Senate at a joint meeting of the new and old senates at 6:30 tonight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
She said she thought starting the skirt and cast selections last semester had helped.
Leben to take office
Taylor disagreed. "Since it was earlier, it made it pretty tough to have to start practicing during country club week," he said.
“Studying? What's studying?” has become the standard statement for most cust members, who have averaged four to six hours of practice a day the last two weeks.
THE LONG practices have taken their toll—cast members spoke in raspies whispers off stage, some going home to nurse their pneumonia or mononucleosis.
Stott Stanley, Alpha Tau Omega Rock Chalk direct of "Sasparilla: A Hard Drink to Swallow", said his biggest problem now was keeping up morale.
Diane Daugerty, Alpha Chi Omega's "Cinderella," said, "A big problem is that everyone's tired of the skit. It's just hard making it look alive the whole way through, making it so the audience will enjoy it at all times."
Some cast members were discouraged by the lack of unity between the directors, steering the film.
Goal of KU prof in Iran thwarted by consulates
"I think it's like always," she said. "People are going to be nervous up to the end of the week and then they'll be excited."
Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare, went to Tehran, Iran, two weeks ago to see 18 Iranian prisoners. He hasn't been allowed to see them.
Waugh said there hadn't been any deliberate releases from the groups, but only minor last minute conflicts in the use of University property. She said directors were not always aware that they couldn't always tell everyone in the casts and crews before problems occurred.
Forer recently telephoned Don Brown-Forer, associate professor of philosophy and an organizer of the Lawrence chapter of the American Committee for Iranian Human Rights, saying he had met with Iranian and Iranian leaders, both of whom were incooperative.
Forer's visit to Iran was planned to coincide with a nationwide American protest concerning the 18 prisoners who were arrested and December 2015 activities.
IN FACT, Brownstein said, Forer received warnings from the American consulate that if he didn't stop trying to see the prisoners, he might be deported.
Brownstein said an effort to free the 18 prisoners was a symbolic effort to free all of the Shah of Iran's political prisoners, whose human rights had been denied.
FORER, WHO teaches classes in social change and activism, with me with iraniian university professors to discuss community self-help programs. Forer said he was in-
Iranian and American students recently
intranced the Statue of Liberty to protest the
Brownstein said that the effect of Forer's efforts couldn't be determined, but that, combined with other protests, they might have some influence.
development of less-deprecated commands
to return to Lawrence
today at kopernik.
terested in the social and economic development of less developed countries.
Forer is KU's representative to the Midwest University Consortium of International Social Development, which is concerned with the integration of institutions in social institutions.
THE LAWRENCE chapter of the American Committee for Iranian Human Rights, of which Fower is a member, comprises about 35 persons who are concerned with the denial of human rights to iranians. Most are former members of the committee wasn't political or partisan because it didn't support any one Iranian group.
Brownstein said the Lawrence chapter, formed two months ago, was the first chapter organized in the United States and was the national headquarters of the
The committee sent letters to President Jimmy Carter and eight senators and congressmen asking for support in securing rights for Iranian prisoners.
TESL TEACHERS WANTED FOR NEW PROJECTS IN THE PEACE CORPS
Many countries of Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the S. Pacific include English as a part of their curriculum. Work in the largest school district in the world as a Peace Corps Volunteer. Free travy; health/diagnostic; or care 6 day pd. vc.; small. Library & Information Services. RECRITERATIONS ON CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT ON MARCH 2. RECRITERONS ON CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT ON MARCH 2.
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Brothers face March hearings
One of two brothers being held in connection with the Feb. 6 murder of Margaret Maxey, 46, was found competent to stand trial for the assault by Mike Eilwein, associate district judge.
Joseph Gardner Jr., 22, was found competent by a team of local doctors. They submitted their opinions on whether he had been shot in the leg and against him and to aid in his defense.
Joseph and James Gardner, 18 will face preliminary hearings March 2 on charges of first-degree murder. James Gardner hasn't asked for a competency hearing.
The brothers were arrested F. seven hours after Mayex's body was found.
Both men are being held in Douglas County Jail without bond.
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University Dalilv Kansan
Wednesday, February 23, 1977
'Gong Owens' is just grumbling
The thing to do these days seems to be to start a new rumor concerning the future employment of KU basketball coach Ted Owens. This isn't anything new.
It seems that, at any school, when an athletic team doesn't treat the fans to a perfect season and consistent tournament wins, the logical reaction is to demand a new coach. Simple enough. Except it's not simple or logical.
I wasn't at the Kansas-Nebraska game, but I assume the "Gong Owens" T-shirt wearers were there. I talked to a sampling of those students last week, and they assured me they would continue to demonstrate their opinion at the games.
EVIDENTLY *T* the "concerned students and alumni" who distributed leaflets during the Kansas State game calling for a new basketball coach who didn't so conceive night.
The rationale behind these efforts—the shirts and the leaflets—seems questionable. Anyone can have a shirt printed, And, from talking to some shirt owners, the largest estimate of the students involved is 25. There are more than 20,000 students at KU—25 hardly represents a significant groundwell of opposition.
And about those concerned alumni and students. Numerous efforts were made to determine the identity of this group: a check of printing services, a call to the alumni association, calls to alumni who were in distress, calls to anonymous people, guessing, anything.
AND THE T-shirt people said they knew nothing of the leafleters' identity either. The groups certainly aren't coordinating their protest efforts so far.
If these people are so concerned about KU's basketball program, why didn't they or haven't they identified themselves? A university doesn't lend credibility to a cause.
Owens has said he's busy coaching the team and doesn't think every dissident grumbling deserves a comment. And he's probably right. The team isn't perfect, and his time to be spent with it. Also, this team will be open to anti-Owens rumblings have been heard.
However, after the Iowa State game, Owens did close his dressing room to the press for the first time this season. It could be worse; we discussed his job situation with the league.
CLIYE WALKER, athletic director, isn't commenting on the situation or on Owens' status. That in itself would seem to indicate that he isn't wearing blinders, and, by and large, he's not defending or endorsing the basketball staff. That may or may not be significant.
Five the Gong Owens shirt owners were interviewed last week, including the person who was diagnosed.
All five said they thought Owens had done a good job, had a good recruiting and coaching reputation, and record. They weren't what you'd call adamant or fired. They did have two replacements in their roster, but probably wouldn't want to come to KU.
IT APPEARS that then the main thrust of the argument is change for change's sake. This is obvious.
Consider Owen's' count. At 240-112 (a 848
winning percentage), it is an inviolable one,
and many fans have become spilled by his past successes. Most coaches would settle for those statistics without quibbling. And Kargas has said the same-Jack Hartman of Kansas State for one.
The concerned group's leaflet points to a declining record in non-conference games.
A check of statistics for the past 10 years doesn't support this accusation.
During these years (1966-76) KU has had seven winning seasons, two losing and one even. And the winning years were big in 1968, when it was only one gm record. 8-14, in 1972-73.
GRANTED, KU'S record in non-
nCREATION play has not been as good as in
AGAIN, ALL of the shirt wearers interviewed said that they thought Owen's recruiting reputation was excellent and that his talent over the years had been good. And aren't playwrights like little, Nern Cook, Dove Hewlett, Dove Hewlett and John Douglas outstanding talent?
What makes a good reputation—just what works? Standardized methods and personnel play a part, too.
It has been said, by a member of this year's basketball squad, that KU loses premier recruits because it doesn't offer those players money, cars or other luxuries.
It seems, though, that college athletics was meant to be less than a business venture. The problem is that it does not work.
The season is about over and word has it that if 'things' are going to happen, they'll hurt you.
So perhaps changes are in the works. But this whole thing seems like a bunch of problems to deal with.
Fifth Quarter Courtney Thompson
And who said so few complainers
denied or needed so much publicity in the
world?
Big Eight play. But they have had winning or even records for these games. And since 1970 the competition has been getting better. Indiana and UCLA on the schedule, Indiana and UCLA on the schedule.
It's true that KU hasn't had a winning record against these schools. Also, this year has had an abundance of "minor" opponents.
Courtney Thompson Associate Sports Editor
In conference play seven of the last 10 seasons have been winning ones.
The contention that KU has been a trifle inconsistent is correct. Going from an 8-18 year to a 2-7 season is a jump. It but it's hard to stay great—we all have our off years.
It's true that attendance at home games has decreased especially within the last two months. You might not expect a minor—approximately 1,500 fans—from a decade ago. It should be mentioned, though, that the season starts earlier now, with a day off on Monday to celebrate Christmas break (a six-week period).
The Jayhawks, now 17-8, have had their problems this year, but the team must be considered one of the most entertaining to watch—albeit unpredictable.
AND TO Owens' credit there have been five NCAA tournament appearances, two second-place finishes in the second-place finals and only one second-division finish in his 13 years. He's also been the winning coach in Big Eight holiday games, someone who supposedly isn't cut it.
it seems that the fans are lamenting the fact that KU is no longer the automatic kingpin in the Big Eight. Neither, apparently, is K-State. And Missouri has also been beaten this season. So spoiled KU fans themselves to competition in the conference.
THE LEAFTER also lists decreasing attendance at home games.
And it gets increasingly difficult to lure fans back to Lawrence unless the team is next to perfect. Ticket prices also have risen markedly from a few seasons ago.
Recruiting reputation also is a concern. In a reputation is a word lacking in precision.
KU CAMPUS NEWARKS
CAMPUS VETERANS GENERAL MEETING
Thursday, Feb. 24th
4:30 Meadowlark Rm., Union
Abe Miller from the Topeka Veterans' Hospital will show a film and talk about part-time jobs at the VA Hospital. John Hall from IBM will be looking for graduating seniors for possible jobs with IBM. All vets are urged to attend.
things—and not the institution, coach or education—perhaps they should head for the press. Collegiate athletes if getting into a sport are assuming a big business role anyway.
ITS OBVIOUS that KU and K-State don't have the edge they use to have. They are more aggressive. Everyone has or is getting improved facilities, has a good coach and recruits with championships in mind. The standings are an indication of this increased competition.
Maybe the dissatisfied fans are right. Certainly an athletic director cannot ignore the factors of decreasing fan and alumni engagement by dissatisfaction with the coaching staff.
FREE Athlete's Foot T-SHIRT With Purchase Of A Pair Of Track Spikes or Baseball Spikes Athlete's The Foot® 919 Massachusetts Lawrence
919 Massachusetts
Lawrence
Phone 841-2995
Warranted, Master Che
WISHING TO APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE STUDENT SENATE/STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE:
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, Level 3.
Notice to All Organizations
These requests must be completed and returned
BUSINESS/ECON GRADS NOW WANTED FOR BUSINESS POSITIONS OVERSEAS AND AT HOME
to the Senate office NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 28,1977.
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
Hurry Tomorrow
Ex. Opportunities with good response for highly motivated individuals. Peace Corps and VISTA service highly regarded by both domestic & interpersonal, bus. firms, looks good on resume. Challenging work in Africa, Asia, Latin Amer., and in the U.S. Volunteers free trav.: health care; pd. vac.; $3000 term, pay end 2 yrs, service in Peace Corps, $600 and 1 yr. serv. in VISTA; must be citizen for PC, have permit. res. visa or be citizen for VISTA.
a "crucifying indictment of ward conditions." Filmed in a state Psychiatric Hospital.
Sign up now for interviews. Recruiters on campus at Business Placement Office on March 3.
Thurs., Feb. 24 - 7:30
Forum Room (Kansas Union)
Partially funded by Student Activities
present
Accent the ARTS
SUA and the Contemporary Writers and Poets Series
... in a reading of their works:
John Kessel, fiction writer
4 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 23 Kansas Union, Parlor A
Victor Contoski, poet
Information at SUA 864-3477
4 p.m. Friday, Feb. 25 Kansas Union, Parlor A
BUY
TWO SANCHOS GET ONE FREE
with this COUPON
Expiration date March 15, 1977
Taco Grande
9th and Indiana 1720 W. 23rd
SJA Classical Series
Limited Artists
THREE LIVES
UNFULFILLED;
EMOTIONAL
AND COMPLEX...
Glenda Jackson Peter Finch
Murray Head
"Sunday
Bloody
Sunday"
R COLOR
WEDNESDAY, FEB.23 7:30 and 9:30 p.m $1 tickets available at SUA office
Tuesday, Mar. 1
7:30 p.m.
SUA Forum presents Alger Hiss on "The McCarthy Era"
Tickets available at the SUA office
University Theatre Admission 50c
100
Special Jazz Concert For 1 night only Thursday, Feb.24
PAUL GRAY'S Jazz Place
926 Mass.
Jay McShann BAND featuring Claude "Fiddler" Williams
Accom ment s are of sex. e BRING
Jay & Claude have recorded in each of the last 6 decades, and are leaving next week for an extended concert tour of Europe!
Admission only $4.00
Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations.
(Due to this concert, the Jam session will be tonite, Feb. 23rd.)
University Dally Kansan
Wednesday, February 23, 1977
7
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kawan are offered to all students without regard to their financial status. BIRLING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL;
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirteen thirteenth十四th十五th十六th十七th十八th十九th十九th十九
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
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 months. Any item can be placed in person or daily BY DVW. The UDR business office at 843-4538.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Give away $10 per week and $100 each, plus
U. Telephone Directory
Yellow Marge Paper
Canterbury House, the Episcopal House at KU
Canterbury University. Chapel for visiting.
Chapel available for coursing. 1116
Louisiana. Services: Holy Communion Tues. 9
Sunday. 12 p.m. and 9 p.m. A Wednesday.
12.30 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Subjects needed for research study on montane aconite came to 418 Bureau Avenue after 10:30 a.m. with a group of students from the University of Arizona.
The Pied Plid Court of Lawrence announces their 19th
and 20th Annual Military Awards. 27, National Guard Armory, 2nd and 1owa,
Lawrence, KS. Show hours 8:11 and 7:10 on Sunday at the
One admission $15-good three days. Food and beverage $6-$9.
THUMBS. Lawrence's off-street level rock band, appearing off-The-Wall. 9:00 AM on Sunday.
Vote Tuesday, March 8. Emphasize neighborhood engagement with City Commission management. Name for City Commission $2-$8
**HOMERICA** WEEPES FOR THE FUTURE OF
BALLROOM. Tickets now on sale at the BUA
ballroom.
FOR RENT
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished. close to Union, utilities paid, parking. 943-9579.
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
nets, pads 843-7676. 1f
Frontier Ride~short term lease available. Frontier Ride~school term lease with study. H heated indoor pool ~shag carpet area, sauna ~free bathrooms pool ~disposal ~patio ~laundry facilities pool ~furnished ~furished and unfurnished from $739. Call 800-264-5444.
Two, 1 room apartments, 1 block from KU.
841-3298 or 841-7867
2-24
Must suit ladle; 2 bedroom unfurnished apart-
ment; $150 monthly; $450-849. Keep trying.
2-24
Gatehouse apartments - Call Becky now, summer!
Contracts on all Gatehouse apartment - Cell 814-
contracts on all Gatehouse apartment - Cell 814-
2-bedroom apartment partially furnished, 1 block to campus. Heat pad 843-8744. 2-24
For rent March 1. Share 2 bedroom apartment
room, 843-1278 for a mate, must own own-bed-
room 843-1278 at least 2 months prior to
rent.
Sublease 1-2 bedroom apartment after March 15, an
$475/month lease (monthly deposit $60); 3-4
bedroom (monthly lease), $100 deposit; $612-
428 or $791-838.
FOR SALE
western Civilization Notes—New on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization 10, Part I. For Class preparation, 3. For Exam preparation, 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Towne's
UNICORNS, Mermials, wings in flight and other imaginations in silver and gold jewelry. Many artists from Stone cutting service. Repeat service. Professional work, satisfaction guide 811-3833. tt
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
appliances for residential, commercial,
furniture and Appliance Center. 704% Miles
863-271-5920.
Redeemer Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod membership (conservative). All students and active youth groups. Place: 300th and Haskell, at Lutheran Church of St. Louis more information contact: Mit Predrickson at baird@lutheranchurchofst.louis.edu or by Mail to the school at a Mailing Box or by School class and Sunday school at 10:18a Lutheran Lyman's League meets every week at the church.
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only ones with a specification guarantee of ±2 dB. Hear at Audio, Ray Atake, 8th Floor, E 8h. Prices from $175.
ENGLISH SPORTS CAR, 1967 Sumbum Alpine,
components repaired of scaffold. Power breaker.
HVAC system of scaffold.
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts & Crafts 841-3522
Fineest In Selection of Modern Art
& Crafts 841-3522
in THE MARKET PLACE
Wool sweaters and ponchos are here.
...
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BELL AUSTRALIA
ELECTRIC, 843-909-3800, W.dh. 6/18.
Advent model 300 Stereo Receiver; designed to provide the capability of recording in both expensive and complex equipment. Its high performance compares nicely, in every respect, with many other models. It offers exquisite sound quality and complex programming. Ray Dunn and Scott W. We are present at the next event.
Volkwagen Owner's Four new WSB radial tires for $120 including federal tax. eax Size A78-15R at high speed, spin bal. Ray Stonebooks, 329 Mass. The appliance店 on Mast with the discount tire come. Come thine parking lot behind the door. 15-13, 17-13, 18-17B-13, 16-14B-14, 1-23
Jepel 1917 C3-S Good condition. Must sell. 864-24
887-634-841 or 904-2nd LN Landry.
The Advent Company is the leader in the Hi-Fi industry in research and product development. The Advent receivers are available in 201 A. The Advent receiver is gaining popularity as one of the cleanest units at any price. And the Advent receiver is engineered and工程量 unassumped at any price and is unmanned. The Advent receiver is 3-1 Audio, 13 E. Bht.
Tri-Phone Speakers—A Real Home Dico System —15* heavy duty, wonders with dual high freq protection and dual low freq protection. Dig out those Booze Shores and checks these specially designed units out at Ray Audit.
SKIP-Spaulding 195 cm. with GOT, k. BINDER,
skin 181-420 DVAR. take last week. mint. 2-23
SKIN-414-420 DVAR.
1955 Baldwin Electric Guitar, Good condition-
1650 843-1085 2-23
Ludwig Quadrus-plus. Full set with Zildjian jy伞
Calls 841-3087. . . . .
70 VW Bug. Run perfect. Make offer and call
HOAJAT at 864-6985.
2-25
Brand new 10-speed Moto-Bomee bicycle. Originally $770, sell for $300. B42-6222, Extensions 44
1974 Flat 128, 12-4 dr. -4-speed, AM-FM, radials.
Call 722-6743 in Topopea 2-25
Collects from ADRS.
Antique loan and spool holder; antique day bed
811-935-8443, Smiths Inc. in Tongkoneng 2-25
811-935-8443, Smiths Inc. in Tongkoneng 2-25
Classic Quail-Consert concert hand made in Moxon with classic quail feathers. come after s. p.m. 11:30 Vermont with bass guitar. $250.00
Discountect电融券和电膨算 All neu 安$Alf 算企
Discountect电融券和电膨算 All neu 安$Alf 算企
Beta 算企
Beta 算企
Beta 算企
Volkswagen Fastback - Automatic, 1970, good condition. Original cylinder mount well suited for $1000. Call 800-268-4534.
Matching twin beds with mattresses and box springs. 837-6700 Leave a message 2-25
OWNER OF ANTIQIARIAN BOOKSTORE
OWNER OF ANDROID! Everything must go.
including six very special performances.
Mr. Bull during all eight performances of
"March 1-6 at the Ballroom.
Ballroom.
Must sell Camera Mamiya/Sekor 1000 DTL with
upper case up rings. Hird rings, used like no.
phone cases.
BOKONKO. Just arrived, a new shipment of freighters to Bokonko Airport, where Mirko Miyagi and jumpers. Exclusively for the Fuji Xtreme series.
$700 without bargain 172. Chevie, Vega, four
caliber in a very good condition Parden 323.
In a good condition Parden 323.
1974 Audi Fox automatic, front wheel drive, 30
mpg tuned up, excellent condition, $805.82
BHP.
HELP WANTED
Avon. Put yourself through college the easy way.
Become an Avon Representative, and make the money you need, sell quality products on your website. For full details, call 412-842-8586 at 6973.
Men or women. We need 5 people immediately.
Must have own transportation and be without
suitability to travel to interview site.
For personal interview call Bob Lawmon, 823-3110,
Lawmon Kirby Co. Will lead to full time summer
LIBERAL. ARTS MAJORS need to work in
the field of criminal justice, corrections,
Pacific Coast representative camps, March
12-15 and June 1-4. Apply online at
www.artsmj.org.
A moving firm need experienced drivers and packers. Would like you to work a few hours a week in preparation for summer work. Please contact us at 212-654-3000 or box 237, Lawrence, Kansas 69044. 3-4
Need experienced bass player with good equip-
ment. Must have a cell phone, available we
will provide Call All 843-8300 or 847-7252
PART TIME LECTURER IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. Half time (non-treatee) appointment required. Bachelor's degree, $4500. Responsibilities involve teaching at an organic chemistry laboratory. Teaching experience desirable but not required. bend resume, graduate and undergraduate degree. Department to: John A. Landgrebte, Department of Organic Chemistry, 60645. Preference to applications received before the ACTUITY AFFIRMATING ACTION EMPLOYER. 2-28
Eyelidkeeper Optical
Vista
Fri. & Sat. 'til 2 a.m. 1527 W.6th
Restaurants Open daily 'til 1 a.m.
PRAIRIE MILITARY CENTER
LONDON, UK
FASHION & STYLE
Found…Mens’ class ring. “Junction City Blue
Sky,” June 19, 2014, at Jay-
way Park, jaywaypark.com. 8-44-118-611-
Part-time, male or female, appraise $475 hr. 20-
30 mths; 5 yrs old; 842-725-4944; for appraise
3/8-7/19; 842-725-4944; for appraise
2/4/19
Bureau of Child Research Achievement Place has opening for its 12 time (afterterno) research assistant positions. Applicants must have BA and be experienced in data collection and analyzing results. Excellent aptitude and experience. Applications are available at 113 Hewlett. Universities and all ofen are encouraged to apply. 2-25
LOST AND FOUND
Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen
Waitress. Part time, evening, fences, and area restraints. Enjoy and enjoy meeting people. Qualifies excelling in the field of healthcare.
Found–Purifier ligand silver necklace found by Potters Lake Call and Identity, 810-257-2378
& Sandwich Shop
Found. Black with white markings terrify
around Union on 7/21. I打 814-6241. 3-25
846 Illinois
Found—the white gate with 1 green eye, 1 blue
eye, a grey nail on it! Now please... **PAGE 2-3**
841-6433.
OWNER OF SWINGING SINGLES' BAR LOOK-IN
TONIGHT (SUN) at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
If you understand the true implications of sex-
liberation, contact Sammy during all eight pre-
views on KU's website, "KU's March 1-6 at 34-
Kansas Union Ballroom."
CHER
Kane
Lot-Large Gray/Brown male cat near Trail-
Ridge Apartment. 842-736-2
2-23
Found- one pair of women wings in front of Twente Hall on Feb. 16. Call 844-7420 to claim.
MISCELLANEOUS
Found: Ring found at Potter's. Please call and identify. 841-1852
2-25
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Ubex/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass.
CHARMTERS/YOUTH FARES/APEX AIR FARES
RENTAL & PUCKACH/ESTUDENT TOWNS
RENTAL & PUCKACH/ESTUDENT TOWNS
"DOMERICA" FIGHTS FIRE WITH WHEELBURN
"TOMERICA" FIGHTS FIRE WITH WHEELBURN
Tromeria Button. Ticket now at the sale at
the Tromeria Store.
New Ways to See the Old World
Lost: Pair of tan and black ladies gloves somewhere near Stright. If found please call 2-248
2-248
EUROPE WORLDWIDE academic conference year round S.A.T.A. 4228 First Avt. Tucker G. Jr. 4231 Third Avt.
Shaw Spon, 620. Mass. Used for furniture, dishes,
clocks, phones, televisions. Open daily 12-31.
825-323-6090
843-7685
NOTICE
Two $250 scholarships. Any full-time undergraduate
or graduate student in the School of Engineering
1690 Oxford Road Due March 31. For further
information please contact the Admissions
Department.
Gay Couples Rup Group, Fest. Feb 25, 8
pair check with GSOK, Room 1634 Union for
room reservations.
**HOMERICA** LAUGHS AT THE EXCESSES OF
BALLOONS. Tickets now on sale at the SUA
Balloons.
Custom handwritten Rockport show. Plum
Garden, 2800 W. 49th St., 6th St. Market
LIMITED - 16 Easth St. in the 6th St. Market
Gay Men's Rau Group: Thursday, Feb. 24, 7:30 p.m., p.114 Connecticut.
EUROPE When you want it, where you want it
EUROPE When you want it, where you want it
European. No charter box, call RHY
European. No charter box, call RHY
SUA Maupintour travel service
PERSONAL
Gay Counseling Services. Call 842-7505, 6:12 p.m.
for referral. For socializing calls, call 842-7505.
Drive-in Clinic
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
**Karen:** Learn the adventures of the marital affairs on the individuals development as married families.
for most imported cars
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444
843. 9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
Don't miss ROCK CHALK REVIEW! Best ever
tickets for Friday 25th still available at SUA.
Click here to book online.
y travel since 195
TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN
car
You'll get you on class time! Jajahwarh Walker-
Up, 843 or 833 or 832. $1 per class. 2-24
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
189b. K. MARK
We are still giving away money in the *MELLOW*
weekend.
The CFA will give $100 to the CFA in the MIA,
win $10, and $100 bonus. $200
will be given to the CFA in the MIA.
8-8 Sun.
EUROPE: YOUR WAY. Fly into or depart from 38 European cities via scheduled service (IBeast Eurostar). Check your ticket online for Discount on call-able A- accommodations and rail connections available. For information anytime 481-7083.
Stand 29 days in Europe this summer. See www.kidsbusiness.com/stand for details. Pax-Plus: 843-721-898
To the girl who called - We may have your gueat cut,
81-889-2501 and 81-889-4100.
B1-889-3624 - 2-24
U.S. cities, 22, Gemini, quiet, self-employed,
well travelled, likes music and dance. Skees
woman 20-25. Wishes friendship, and possibly
marriage. Call Gayli at 841-384-1295.
2-25
Volkswagen Tune Up. Special $16.55 Book
发票。 Volkswagen Tune Up. Special $16.55 Book
发票。 VW Rewind, 9th and Entrury Road. 841-3230
841-3230
Anyone who was in Big Trompton Canopy during the flood, please call Rye, colleen at 3825-8256.
Tou and Jim Susan, Happy 19 months. Sweeeeeth these big hairs. Alauna—the boys.
2-28
Help your WN run forever. Lawners Volunteer
will help you fill out forms all will under ten dollars and knight's
gift cards.
the MARKETPLACE Bth & New Hampshire
Weasel--Happy 12st, don't forget to go bunny
hunting turtle. Your Sweet Bubba.
2-23
12 Unique Shops
Am looking for good homes for two cute 11 year old girls. I am a girl from a town, can't take along. Call me 5-203-8767.
"HOMERICA" IS IN ARBOUT COURTSHIP MAR-
KETTING BALLS. Union Ballroom, Tickets now on sale at
homerica.com.
ISR2 strengthens, purifies, concentrates Now
available at LOVE RECORDS, 15 Worth st. 8th
NW, 940-376-6000.
RIDES --- RIDERS
Ringer Wanted - Spring break, destination: Tempur-
Fred's Headood that way? Call Scott for details
841-606-2233
841-606-2233
SERVICES OFFERED
February "Tune up special." We clean up and wash the equipment, adjust wheels, adjust hubs, crank and head. And install any parts or accessories bought at time of "tune up" (e.g., wheel brakes, tires, speed or 3 speed, lugs $16.50, now $14.00, single speed, all wheels). Then we make sure the parts for all makes of bicycles, Lawrence Schwinn Cycle, W2 10th W, 6th - 9 Mon-, Thurs - 6th Fri.
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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, 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, 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french lessons by native speaker with experience,
all levels. Phone: 841-3287. 2-25
has the eyeglasses
you want.
806 Massachusetts
phone 841-7421
CONFUSED BY
FINANCIAL AID APPLICATIONS?
Let H & R Block take the work and worry out of your annual struggle with financial aid applications. For quick, convenient, low cost service CALL 842-3207.
H&R BLOCK
BEAD CO.
NOW IN THE
8TH
STREET
MARKET PLACE
10-5:30 (Thurs.8:00)
HALF AS MUCH
- Furniture - Antiques
Goods • Vintage Clothing
Selected Secondhand
- Imported Clothing
7308 Mass. 841-7070
The Lounge
"A different kind of bar featuring seclusion and quiet."
- Bud on Tap
- Pinball
- Pool
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
843-9812 Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
Licensed child care center on campus has open
doors 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and one half day-2
morning(s). 164-383-3831
- Foosball
TYPING
Your paper deserves the best Call Pengy for
864-313-344, day 842-698-8885, everties
and weekends.
THEISM BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you are in Manhattan or phone 423-862. Thank you.
Experienced typist-term papers, thesis, mime,
proofreading, proofreading, spelling,
correction, 843-2543. Ari Whitney
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
9th and Iowa
TYPING - Thesis, term papers, etc. Reasonable
typing. Call Beth, 841-647-767.
3-4
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tt
WANTED
Typist editor, IBM Piscataillac. Quality work.
Supports. Thank you. Discussions welcome:
Job #218-8229
TYPING - We have many return customers who
have been served by our good service
Phone Harvey or Linda @ R$59.99
Wanted: Man with musical talent. If you play a brass, woodwind, or percussion instrument, why choose the 312th Army Reserve Band gets together once a month to play all the mid-west and as well as locally. You can all over the mid-west are likely to speak one week (18 per week) per month, and have a thing you enjoy part-time; call us at 843-1651 or visit us online for more information. You will be video with you an instrument and uniform. Ask for a call to U.S. Navy J.A. University, 210 nortown st. L. Lawrence, MA 02781.
Roommate wanted. Male Female. quiet location.
Room owner, room close, to campan, call Garg,
842-9139
842-9139
Wanted: higher or older to join car pool to drive
through the parking lot of a senior living facility.
M-F M-8-P 6:00-9:00. Call Mom during day 21.
Please call 317-645-3828.
"It's a beautiful day' blue book and J. D. Black-
tie's prophecy 'Will pay good yodh'
Call It 834-701-5999
HEADQUARTERS for
HEADQUARTERS
for Imported Auto Parts
JAMES CARG
Foreign Auto Parts
843-8080 304 Locust
Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Male graduate student wishes to share two bed 64-80' and 92-100' at 6:00 p.m.
NAISMITH HALL
Bride needed. Leave KU after 34H. M-W-F for
willow. Will pay Call 649 Calyx
(Shawnee).
Male mistreatment. Move in now paid no息 to Fraser. Non smoker Call 841-2650 between Fraser and Fraser.
Need female Christian recommite SOB to share
Prayeral Appeal, water paid on Sun River #112
Prayerful Baptism at St. John the Baptist Church
123 W. 76th St., San Diego, CA 92405
WANTED: Female roommate for my nite 2-bedroom, furnished apartment.安排 March 1, 2014. No phone calls. No meetings.
The Chalk Hawk
or 2 masters to share very little 2 bedroom apartments
or 3 masters or more room. We will pay for your rent and our rent payments.
We will cover your entire stay at the apartment.
Volunteers needed to help with Special Olympics track and field program for mentally retarded persons. Help with training sessions, 24-hr courses. Visit Chambers at 841-485-2632 or 843-536-2635.
MORRIS Lock & Key
WANTED—A GOOD OLD FASHIONED UNLIMITED
ADULT ATTENTIVE. A 19-year-old AMERICAN BOY
IN AN AUTHENTIC 19-YEAR-Old AMERICAN BOY
OTHER TRAINING POPE HIMSELF. LOS ANGELES,
during all performance of "HOMEMICA"
at the Opera House.
2 TICKETS for Rock Chalk, Saturday night. Will pay fair price. Call Bob at 841-6655.
Doug Jones
DEADBOLTS INSTALLED
710 Mass. • 843-2182
Save TIME and MONEY by calling
after 6:00
at 842-0575
about K.U. Student Discount
(20 minutes from Lawrence)
- Pool
* Snooker
Ping Pong
Home of
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
Owens Liquor Store
843-1186
910 N. 2nd
TRY
FORD cars and trucks
Offered by:
SUTTON-KOLMAN
STUDENT DISCOUNTS
Highway 24-49
Tonganoxie, Kansas
Local Telephone
845-2618
- 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 X
WHY NOT!
Sell your unwanted items with a classified in the
UDK
8
Wednesday, February 23, 1977
University Dally Kansan
Javhawks confident for road test
By GARY VICE
Sports Editor
Road victories haven't been the Jahwayks' forte this season. In fact, if it wasn't for the last three-second winning shots, they would have only one road win to boast about.
Nevertheless, the team speaks confidently about knocking off the Buffaloes in the 8:35 CST game and would assure the Jayhawks, 8-5 and 17-8 overall, of returning with the home-court advantage for Saturday's opening round of the Big Eight.
Needing a victory on the road is never a favorable position, senior forward Herb Nobles said, but playing in CU's Balch Field House does have its advantages.
"I THINK it will be to our advantage to be playing Colorado on the road than any other Big Eight team," Nobles said. "Temas like that." The Alabama State have played us a lot tougher.
Donnie Von Moore agreed, saying, "The chances are better for us beating them on their court than on beating anyone else on theirs."
The record book indicates support for those contentions as the 'Hawks have won their last three outings in Boulder. However the combined victory margin was 10-5 against the Bucks, 10-5, are 8-5 playing at home, including a victory over Kansas State.
Center Ken Koenigs said, "I think Colorado is a favorable foe for us in that they're a second-division club. But it's not the choice to play on he跑 because of difficulty."
WHAT KOENIGS is referring to is the dilapidated basketball gymnasium that the Buffs will continue to call home until then. The new building will hold a Baldy Field House can hold only 3,000 fans.
Be dumped amid the howling Colorado supporters appeals to Von More, who said,
it like to play in small places. It reminds
me of the gyms I played in in high school.
*Other team's crowds really get me going—especially when they boo me. They
Such conditions have apparently also affected junior guard John Douglas, who is averaging 26 points on the road while averaging just 18 in Allen Field House.
Kansas coach Ted Owens said Colorado's small lineup poes some problems for the
KU's signings hit 26
Two more signings were announced by the Kansas football office early this morning following yesterday's announcement that lineman John Oddell of Wellington had signed a national letter of intent with the Javahuws.
Oell, 64 and 255 pounds, was joined by running back Kevin Houston, 64 and 180, of Liberty Mo., and wide receiver John Randle, who scored on briskly breaking, the number of signings to 26.
Odell, who has run a 4.8-second 40-yard dash, considered one of the top linebackers in his league.
IN A PHONE interview late last night, he said he chose KU over Oklahoma after a court order.
Women cagers must win to keep their season alive
By RICK BRYANT
BY RICH BRYAN
Sports Writer
The rest of the season hinges on one game for the University of Kansas women's basketball team as it hosts rival Kansas State. The game will start at 7 in Alumni Field House.
Tonight's contest is a door-die situation for KU, now 12-43 for the year. If they defeat the Wildcats, they'll force a playoff to determine the state representative to the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women regional tournament in Decorah, Iowa, March 10-12, if they lose, their season is over.
Kansas State has defended the Jayhawks this year by a total margin of 10 point.
K-STATE is 3-1 in state conference play and 17-10 overall. KU is 2-1 in the Big Eight. If a playoff game is necessary, it probably will be played at Wichita State University or some other neutral court, according to KU coach Marian Washington.
Widecat coach Judy Akers will start two six-foot players against the 'Hawks, Laurie Miller, the team's leading scorer with an average of 11.7 points a game, and Margo Jones will start at forward and center respectively.
K-State's height advantage bothers Washington, but she thinks her team is capable of staying with the Wildcats on the backboards.
"we proved we can stay with them in any game by the fact that we outbounded them in both games," she said. "To win, we must make sure we stay in focus and press to keep them off-balance."
Washington said she wanted to win the game but added that there was a chance for an at-large berth in the regional tournament.
“but we have made an application for the bid
‘I will be will only one of several teams in
the Midwest under consideration,’ she said.
‘I haven’t told my team yet because I
wanted their best effort to win and not have
to make it through the back door.’
NEW PROJECTS IN PEACE CORPS AND VISTA WANT ELEMENTARY ED GRADS
Get right into the field you were trained for. Teachers are needed in countries of Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the S. Pacific as well as in the U.S. to work as Peace Corps or VISTA Vols. Free tray; health care; pd. vac.; small, comfort. liv; allow, $900 term; pay end 2 yrs. serv; in PC, $600 1 yr. service as VISTA.
SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERVIEW. RECRUITERS AT CAMPUS AT EDUC.
PLACEMENT ON MARCH 2.
CHATTER
A WHOLE NEW DIMENSION IN "Talking Pictures"
CHATTER-BOX
THE STORY OF A WOMAN WHO HAS A HERIOUS WAY OF EXPRESSING OTHERS YOU'LL ROAR WHEN SHE SITS DOWN TO TALK!
It's not what she says...
it's where she says it.
R RESTRICTED
NOW PLAYING
IN
KANSAS CITY
BRYWOOD
356-6900
CHOUTEAU
453-7383
WAY
SEVILLE
527-7000
"At 10:30 last (Monday) night, I was
wearing a shirt and pants that all the
blanks that were worn at KU
THE STORY OF A WOMAN WHO HAS A HILARIOUS WAY OF EXPRESSING HERSELF
YOU'LL ROAR WHEN SHE SITS DOWN TO TAKE
It's not what she says...
it's where she saves it.
R RESTRICTED
NOW PLAYING IN KANSAS CITY
PARKWAY
4442575
TRUMAN
761-1900
"I was going to Oklahoma because of the tradition," he continued. "They have a super program, but I wasn't really thinking about my future."
SPRINGS
287-5031
COMING
Feb, 25th WICHITA Fox I
Mar. 2nd ST. JOSEPH Hillcrest
Mar. 4th COLUMBIA Whitegate
TOPEKA Grand
Head coach Bud Moore was in Wellington to sign Odill yesterday, and Oddell, who was also recruited heavily by Arkansas and Virginia, he thought he had made the right decision.
"I've felt better and better about it as the day went on." he said.
Odell's father, Mc Odell, who is also his high school coach, said, "I can tell you what made him go there—Bud Moore. Moore was the reason for his going to KU. But put a sell on him, 'cause till this weekend he was OU-bound."
HOUSTON, WHO is also a standout baseball pitcher who posted an 8-1 record last year, picked up 994 yards running his first outing and was also sought heavily by Missouri.
"I like the facilities at KU better than Missouri's," Houston said last night from Liberty. "The dorms were better and I can work here." But they don't let freshmen play at Missouri."
McCarroll, who also played safety had 19 receptions for 400 yards and eight touchdowns.
Another player KU had hoped to get, defensive back Dick Boussakoub of Kapun-Mt. Carmel in Wichita, has signed a national letter with Notre Dame.
"THEY'VE VERY quick which allows them to continually change their defense and confuse their opponent," Owens said. "They'll try to show a zone when they're really in another coverage. What we've got to do is not play guessing games with them."
**MANNAS**
F - Cliff Johnson, 18; junior
G - James Kneipp, 16; junior
G - John Kneipp, 16; junior
G - John Hammond, 16; junior
G - Joshman
C - Cillian Johnson, 18; junior
C - Grey Veyman, 16; junior
C - Bill Holtman, 16; junior
C - Cliff Johnston, 18; junior
G - Greer Veyman, 16; junior
G - Gregory Veyman, 16; junior
G - Eddie Ellison, 18; junior
E - Killian Ellison, 18; junior
Probable starting lineups
SUA
FILMS
Wednesday, Feb. 23
SUNDAY BLOODY SUNDAY
(1971)
Dir. John Schlesinger with Glenda Jackson, Peter Finch. Great Britain, Classical Films. Wed. Feb. 23-2, 10 a.m. m1.
EVEN DWARFS STARTED SMALL (1968)
Dir, Werner Herzog, West Germany and
ABEL GANCE: THE CHARM OF DYNAMITE (1968)
Dir. Kevin Brownlow. An introduction to the creative genius of Gance, England. Film Society Thursday, Feb. 24, 7:30 p.m. $1
FAMILY PLOT (1976)
Fri, Feb. 25 & Sat, Feb. 26, 3:30,
7:00 & 9:30 p.m. $1
Dir. Alfred Hitchcock with Karen Black, Bruce Dern. Popular Film Series.
IS THERE SEX AFTER DEATH? (1975)
Dir, Jeanne and Alan Abel with
Jeanne and Alan Woodlawn, Rated
X, I.D. at the door at the door.
Midnight Film Series.
Fri, Feb. 25 & Sat, Feb. 26, 12:00
Fri., Feb. 25 & Sat., Feb. 26, 12:00
midnight $1
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
Announcing the Incorporation of ENTROPY
The Society for Creative Disorganization,
a society to promote contact and interaction among persons from all disciplines who have an interest in science: its development, its methodologies, its contemporary impact, and its future. Student humanists, scientists, and educators are invited to participate in the organizational party/meeting on Friday, February 25 at 3:30 P.M. in the Hawk's Dell of the Kansas Union. This society will select representatives to the National Society for Science Education for further information, contact J. D. Nestandz or Berny Williams at 844-3011.
Paid for from the Student Activities Fee
A NEW BEGINNING
OR
A SECOND
CHANGE
Partially funded by Student Senate
27th Annual Rock Chalk Revue
presented by the KU-Y
Hoch Auditorium - Feb. 25-26
Friday — $3.25 & $3.00
Saturday—$3.75-- SOLD OUT!
Available at the SUA Office
in the Student Union
SHOWTIME 8:00 p.m. ALL SEATS RESERVE
AUTHORITY
The Transcendental Meditation Program
Create an Ideal Society
The progress of society is founded upon the growth of consciousness of each individual. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
FREE Introductory Lectur TODAY Wednesday 8 p.m. Kansas Union Governor's Room 4th Level
©1979 Work Plan Executive Council—U.S. All rights reserved.
Transcontinental Airlines™ is a service mark of WPCF—a nonprofit educational company.
LUNCH is now being served
at the Wheel.
Featuring today's special—
Green Pepper
2 Free Draws with any pizza
ordered at the Wheel.
HEAVY
EDDYS
Pizza
Fast
Free
Delivery
841-3100
HEAVY
EDDYS
Pizza
Fast Free Delivery
841-3100
SUA
SUA and ACCENT the ARTS
presents
A New Play by Paul Stephen Lim
HOMERICA
A Triple on Sexual Liberation
MICHAEL JACKSON
March 1-6, 8.OO p.m.
March 5, 6, 2.30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Tickets at SUA $3.50
913-864-3477
Find it in Kainsan classified. Sell it, too. Call 864-4358.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
DREARY
KANSAN
Machines copy students' faces
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 87, No. 97
Thursday, February 24,1977
See page three
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Makeshift windbreaker
Chris Marcotte. Tomeka sonahomore. used her jacket as a windbreaker to protect a wind-irritated earache.
President's private life revealed
Staff Reporter
By MARSHA WOOLERY
People who meet Steve Leben, student
people, think of him as a pleasant,
unassuming friend.
Going through the Kansas Union Dell line yesterday, he was asked by a checkout girl about a picture in his hand. He prepares a photo of her, and she born last week on election day as he had predicted. The checkout girl was a new aunt herself, so they chatted briefly about their plans.
"Once you get to know him and it gets late and he starts to go slap-happy, he lets loose."
But to those who know him well, such as Ken Jones, Overland Park junior and Leben's roommate the last two and a half years, there is another side to Leben.
TO THOSE who know him as leader of the Reflection coalition, Leben seems intelligent, concerned and sincere, a fluent speaker and a whiz at organizing.
To those who know him through his work with the KU-Y, a service organization that assists students diligent and responsible—someone unafraid to untangle the organization's finances as
Jones recalled one night during a election campaign when the two
had stayed late up painting banners. When they were finished, he said, they decided to use the lefter paint for a message to an Oliver Hall maid in the hall bathroom.
"TO THIS DAY, I don't think anyone knows who put "H-Buth" on the armeni, "haha."
Leben sat in the Union cafeteria and ate
he lunch neatly, even folding a barbecue potato chip bag and sliding it under his plate. He mopped up spilled ice on the table and autumn leaves on the bench. A cowboy bear beet Nestness seems as much a haiti with him as organization.
But Jones said, "No, he's really a sloppy person—sloppy with a capital S. You should be careful."
Ginny Erdwin, El Dorado junior, grew up with Leben. Erdwin, who was cavaliered with him, said that "he's very picky about his appearance but as far as throwing things around, he doesn't care."
ERDWEN SAID Leben was quiet and reserved in high school.
"He's a lot more confident now, and I 1
shows up in his relationship with peo-
nels."
Leben's interest in student government began in junior high and high school, but he almost always lost the elections he ran in, he said.
Jill Grubaugh, Sports Committee chairman, said that on the long night of counting balls, he kept telling supporters, he could only know how many times I've lost.
elections, he said, because "i was always upset about things in high school because of the assumption that in the problems between students and faculty, the faculty was always right."
But Leben kept running in high school
See STEVE LEBEN page three
Tasheff, Owens part with emotion
By SANDY DECHAN
Staff Reporter
Sensititiality apparent in their stifled sobs and low, raspy voices, Tedde Tasheff, former student body president, and Steve Owens, former vice president, addressed the Senate leadership before officially handing the Senate leadership over to the newly elected officers.
"I was a rookie when I took this job and I guess, "I still a rookie at heart," he said, his voice becoming lower. "The only thing the Senate rules say I have to do is preside over Senate meetings, but the job goes far past that."
Tasheb is succeeded by Steve Leben, Dadojor junior, and Owens is succeeded by Ralph Munyan, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore.
"People think she gets enough pats on the back, but she did so much. She's proven that the president of the student body is no job for a junior politico."
“At meetings, I walked this fine line. It’s hard to know when to be blunt and tell someone to sit down, and at the same time to walk away.”
“I knew I tipped off that fine line at times.”
In the joint meeting of 106 old senators—21 of whom will serve on the new Senate and 85 new senators, Owens reminded the senators that they have responsibility and you better not screw up."
Summarizing his functions as vice president, Owens said, "It goes past keeping the coffee in the coffee pot fresh by supplying overstuffed paper recycling boxes.
Later Tasheff returned the praise, saying,
"Any of the good times, accomplishments
and general good spirit of the Senate have
been due to Steve's willingness to stand by
Looking at Owens, she said, "Just had to
FacEx agrees to new procedures
Staff Reporter
By JOHN MUELLER
FaEx yesterday approved proposed changes to streamline promotion and tenure procedures and forwarded the tenure committee on tenures on Promotions and Tenure (UCP).
The changes were proposed in a report from the Faculty Senate Committee on university affairs, and she subliities (FRPR). FRPR urged the consolidation of spring and fall tenure reviews by eliminating the present March review and promoting an tenure review in November.
UCPT, which originally asked FRPR to consider recommending the consolidation, will review the FRPR report, and return its findings to FaceEx for further action.
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of
mathematics and FRPR chairman, said last night that the FacEx action “tends to leave everything up in the air -FacEx wanted to let the balloon float with UCPT.”
Srinivasan said he hoped UCPT, an administration committee, would work closely with faculty members to analyze the FRKPR results, final approval from faculty government.
"What is going to be gained from the changes is clearly a matter of administrative convenience," Srivasantsa said. "Unless there are compelling reasons, UCPT should not have a 'take it or leave it' attitude toward the faculty."
THE CONSOLIDATION would start in fall 1978. FRIP said that "to implement the proposed change next fall could cause undue hardship to a few departments."
faculty members is mandatory at the end of their sixth year. For faculty hired on three years' probation, the review comes at the end of the second year.
A tenure review for University of Kansas
FRPR had recommended that "if a candidate does not come out successfully for tenure in this initial fall (review, the University Committee on Promotions and Tenure (UCPT) will leave her-case case open until late spring."
FACEX SAID the late spring action, which FFRP intended as a 'last chance' check-back with UCPT, shouldn't be necessary. In forwarding the FBRP report to UCPT, FacExx added a statement that any春报 review 'should not be necessitated for verification' and formation relevant to tenure cases can be FACEX GIVES APPROVAL page nine
say that so you'd know that I think you're topotch."
Both Owens and Tasheff receive plaques for their Senate work.
But Owens' last stint as presiding officer didn't go smooth, when a decision he made against Mr. Blanchard
The controversy causing the snag concerned whether senators on SenEx or the senator responsible for this matter and whose other term end in May, should retain their positions as senators until May.
Newly elected senators officially replaced old senators last night.
While Owens said that the senators couldn't retain their Senate seats, he was not wrong. He had made sure
Some senators said that although those senators had been replaced on the Senate, they were responsible to the Senate until Mav when their other terms ran out.
Dul Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
made a five-minute statement landing
Tashseef and Owens for their work, saying
they "are proud to be an elite star team, and those two have made it."
"We didn't always see eye to eye, but inevitably we accomplish more by working together than when working at cross purposes."
In a closing statement, Tashsef repeated accomplishments made during her term, warned the new senators about the Karsan insurgents to queue to the distinguished senator of 1976-77.
Her voice quivering, Tasheff presented the plaque for the "most distinguished senator of 1976-77" to Kevin Flynn, senate candidate and Elections Committee chairwoman.
"He's a leader in the best sense of the word," she said. "His dedication this year is the same as it has been the past two years. He was an example to us, given invaluable advice to Steve and me."
The inscription on the plaque Flynn received said, "In recognition of outstanding service, leadership and 'minutes'-Student Senate 1978-77."
Flynn has been a senator for two years. He also served on the University Council and the Senate Higher Education Week Steering Committee.
Tasheff told the new senators, "It is your responsibility to talk to the students, not to the press because the press often gets things half-assed backwards."
Any "big" action the Senate attempts is left unreported by the Kansei, she said, and on the occasions Senate actions are covered, they are badly reported.
"Don't take the rap for the UDK's ignorance," she said.
Tasheff and Owens' meeting with the old Senate was prolonged by a close race for three holdover Senate seats that can be filled only by senators in the 1978-77 Senate. Holdover senators are automatically on the University Council.
Although two of the three holder positions were easily filled by Owens and
See TASHEFF page 3
Junk man salvages living
By RICK THAEMERT
Staff Reporter
Joe Lown is a junk metal junkie.
For 28 years, Lown has spent each day at Auto Wrecking and Cojun, Ki-72. E Nith St., surrounded by junk—bedsprings, wrecked cars, toilets, washing machines, skillets and any other type of junk imaginable.
He sorts it, loads it and delivers it—the house ruler over his seven-acre domain.
But, Lown said, people don't take advantage of all the usable parts in junkyards
"You could just about find any part you wanted out there." Lown said, pointing to the staircase.
"Those art students from up there on the hill used to come in here about every day and buy iron, but now they only come every once in a while," the 49-year-old junk man said, walking through pathways connecting mounds of pipes and plumbing fixtures. His hands were short, a circular name patch above the shirt, a decorative belt, and he sported a green, winter Cossack hat despite the 70-degree temperature.
ARTISTS WANTING scrap metal for sculptures, scouring antique collectors, and Mr. Fixits all have given up these parts of the modern convenience of baving things.
"AN OLD GUY used to come in looking for antique brass fittings, but he don't come in no more, either." Lown said, in a slightly different tone. "You have to find out it's antique, so they have on it."
But not everyone is careful. Consequently, many people come to the junkyard and usurp other's throw-aways—as such as lamps, auto parts and tires.
People now are more careful about what they throw away than they once were because of the risk.
MOST OF THE junk business is buying and selling auto scrap.
Lown pointed to an old Chevy, painted with wild designs, and said, "They took and had that thing out at the demolition bump; then they came in here and jumbled it."
"1 like having the chance to foul around with old cars," he said, but "it don't hardly affect you."
Except for an occasional Model T, he material in his junk yard have been matched with some antique car parts.
The junkyard gets about a truckload of junk a day. Some of the junk has been in the same spot more than 10 years, Lown said as he lists the most hundreds of black industrial paint cans.
Several bright yellow display cases from a warehouse simply contrast with the more muted gray of a gallery.
In fact, cars are one reason Lown likes the business.
Lown likes his job because the junk he gets is interesting and often has a colorful
"I guess I just been here so long I got used to it," he said. "There's not much else I can do. I heard the older you get, the less work you can find."
LOWN SAID HE got into the junk
room. He was careful, he said, it
was because it was a good, steady job.
Lawn spends most of his time sorting metal to coat. Much of the metal goes to steel manufacturers.
Occasionally, people sneak in at night and steal junk, Lown said, because there are no junky dogs to guard the seven acres.
The metal is bought by Auto Wrecking and Junk Co., for $13 a ton.
IT'S LONELY at the junkyard, Lown said.
He said he didn't know exactly what junk comprises the vast wasteland, or where it came from.
Lawn said it was difficult to keep track of new junk.
"Every time you get a space cleared out, somebody bring a new load in and just keep going."
A TIN PLATE that had been used in offset
mounting on a Low, clattering in a strong Kansas gun.
"It gets kind of noisy out here sometimes." Lown said, referring to the slapping of tin and the creaking of unhinged car doors in the wind.
The job also is dangerous.
"Pretty nearly everybody who's worked here got hurt," he said. "I liked to lost an eye one day. I was cutting a pipe and it flew back in my face."
Despite the disadvantages of the job, Lown said he liked it. In 28 years he has seen much more change.
After all, one man's junk may be another's treasure.
[Image of a person reading a book]
Just junk?
If one had the time and desire to look through the mounds of rubbish they might find something unavailable elsewhere.
Staff photo by MARIANNE MAURIN
According to Joe Lown, the man-of-the-yard for 28 years there are a lot of usable parts scattered about.
---
2
Thursday, February 24, 1977
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Turner endorsed for CIA
WASHINGTON—The Senate Intelligence Committee yesterday unanimously recommended Adm. Stansfield Turner to be the new director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, committee chairman, said he would recommend full Senate confirmation of Turner today.
Turner, in *Tuesday's testimony*, had told the committee he would resign as CIA director rather than carry out a presidential order for activities he thought were inappropriate.
illegal.
A 19-year-old Turner, a former classmate of President Carter at the Naval Academy, will be permitted to keep his naval commission. Invoice said Turner had agreed not to seek either the position of chief of naval operations or chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff if the posts became available during his tenure.
Labor Party picks Rabin
TEL. AVI, Israel - Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin narrowly defeated Defense Minister Shimon Peres yesterday and retained the ruling Labor Party's approval
to lead it into the May national elections.
But Rabin's slender 41-vote margin out of more than 2,000 votes cast left the scandal-marred Labor Party vulnerable at one of the most crucial times since the founding of the Jewish state in 1948.
A sirlin Rabin and a glumfaced Peres sat on the dais at the party's 1977 convention early yesterday as the chairman read out the results: 1,445 votes
Rabin and 1,404 for Peres.
Rabin then stood up before the cheering, chanting crowd and called on the party's leaders to put their divisions aside and unite behind him in a struggle to win the national elections in May.
Polar sub route possible
BRUSSELS, Belgium - North Atlantic Treaty Organization sources believe that Soviet submarine captains have found a passage under the polar ice, a discovery that would allow Soviet missile-carrying submarines to take up positions west of Greenland.
The passage is through the channel between Greenland and Elesmere Island, a route that would bring Soviet submarines with older, comparatively short-range missiles closer to targets in North America.
The passage around the northern tip of Greenland has long been held to be impassable. However, modern Soviet submarines now appear to be sufficiently well-equipped and practiced to find and follow the passage across the Arctic Ocean. The only other known location of Ellesmere Island is known. They would then be able to find ice-free positions farther south.
Carter decision blasted
WASHINGTON - Angry members of the Interior Committee yesterday assured staff that they would be supporting the funding for 19 water-control projects as a result, ill-timed, appropiant and wasteful.
Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus took the criticism on behalf of the Carter administration, attempting to assure Congress that the decision does not mean an end to the projects but only a re-evaluation.
The congressmen were not convinced.
The congressmen were not convinced. "It's like pronouncing a verdict of guilty before the trial," said Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz., chairman of the Interior Committee and backer of the biggest affected dam, the Central Arizona Project.
Amin says Uganda 'safe'
KAMPAIL, Uganda (AP)—President Idi Amin of Uganda has assured the organization of African Unity that "despite imperialist propaganda, Uganda is calm and there is no cause for alarm," the newspaper said. The president of Uganda newspaper said Tuesday.
Earlier in the day, Uganda's state radio quoted Armin as saying he had overcome a military revolt supported by "exiles, Israelis and imperialist agents." He reportedly thanked soldiers who overpowered "dissidents within the armed forces" after a coup plot was discovered days ago.
Amin has said the plot was uncovered after the discovery of weapons from China.
Anglican Archbishop Janai Lawn, who
allegedly under disputed circumstances
Canon Burgess Carr, the general secretary of the All-African Conference of Churches, and other church leaders have charged that Archbishop Luwum and two government ministers were murdered. The Ugandan government says the three died in an auto wreck hours after their arrest on charges of plotting to overthrow Amin.
The government-owned newspaper said Amircin Carr and the Archbishop of Canterbury, head of the world Anglican Communion, "were involved in the sinister plan to cause chaos in Uganda. That is why they were disappointed when their plan failed and are present at the center of the anti-Uganda propaganda."
Insurance men give seniors the hard sell
Staff Reporter
Concerned about your "financial future planning?" Need financial advice? If you're a senior at the University of Kansas you may have already received an abundance of advice from high-pressure life insurance salesmen.
By KERRY KELLY
Graduating seniors are often the targets of these agents, who often are reluctant to identify themselves until a student agrees to make an appointment with them.
Instead, the salesmen often tell students that because they are graduating, "they qualify for our special program," and students should enroll in a financial planning to ensure a secure future.
It took Scott Volding, St. Louis senior, two-and-a-half months to rid himself of one persistent agent. He had made an appointment with the agent, thinking he was a stockbroker, before he found out he was an insurance salesman.
AFTER THE agent arrived and the two discussed insurance policies, the agent began filling out forms, Volding said, and the agent got "pushy" after Volding told him he wouldn't be "sold anything in half an hour.
"I told him I wanted to think about it and call my father and ask him about it." Voiding said. "Then the salesman gave me this line—'Wouldn't you like to go to bed tonight knowing that you had finally done something on your own?'"
He said this pressure began in mid-November and lasted through January, during which time the agent called him every other day.
Volding said that one time the agent called him at a party at 9:30 on a Friday night to arrange a time when they could meet.
"THE THING I hated the most that he was just a little too pushy," he said. "They just come on and in 15 minutes I was almost ready to buy some life insurance."
"I tell them right away that I already have insurance," he said. "Then they start cross-examine me about the intricacies of my policy.
Waddy Sedovic, St. Louis senior, has had problems with life insurance salesmen, too.
"They keep bugging me about wanting to come and see me and I keep telling them no.
Judy Kroger, director of the Consumer Affairs Association suggests that students who are interested in insurance go to a brokerage agencies and check out different rates.
"He asked me if I was in architecture and then told me that they specialized in that particular area and therefore they were outside of the special problems we had." he said.
But no isn't good enough, so I just end up banging up on them all the time."
WASHINGTON (AP) -Gulf Oil Corp. violated federal law by failing to deliver contracted amounts of natural gas to a House subcommittee charged yesterday.
HE WARNED students not to sign promissory notes. Promissory notes can be signed by students who buy life insurance to pay for future expenses. Students then think they are getting something for nothing, be said, and when they try to get out of it later, they discover
"DON'T TAKE the first deal offered to you," she said.
Bob Treat, Springfield, Mo., senior, was told by an insurance agent who contacted him that the agent specialized in Treat's field of study.
An agent called Cheri Stelmach, Kansas City, Mio., senior, wanting to talk to her about her 'future plans.' She told the agent she wasn't interested in buying insurance at that moment and hung up. A week later, the salesman called her again.
Gulf charged with gas violation
A State Farm Insurance agent who asked not to be identified suggested that students be as blunt as possible with rude insurance agents.
"I thought it was a bunch of malarky. I didn't want to talk to him so I just hung up," said Treat, who also had been contacted about his future financial planning by other
Gulf denied that it is deliberately withholding gas and said it was doing
"Put the guy down and he won't come back," he said. "Until you tell him no, and it may take two or three 'no's, he'll keep coming back."
Locals request funds
The report by a panel of the House Commerce Committee also accused the Federal Power Commission (FPC) of its regulatory failure" in its dealings with Gulf.
"I told him that my parents had taken out a "10,000 life insurance policy for me," she said. "He said that didn't matter—I still owned it." Mr. Reilly asked to see how few life insurance could work for me.
everything "humanly possible" to get it to customers.
By JOHN MCANULTY
The city saved about $415,000 of the funds last year by not building the Haskell Loop, a plan that would have made a road from 11th and Haskell to the bridge area, providing easier access from 23rd Street to points north.
About $1 million in community development funds are available to Lawrence this year and various groups meet to establish proposals to try to gain a piece of the cake.
Staff Reporter
The Pinkney Neighborhood Association last night asked for a comprehensive plan by the city to redevelop the Pinkney area and renovate houses. It also asked that the area just south of Pinkney receive funds for general improvement.
Students who are bothered by agents can report them to Fletcher Bell, state commissioner of insurance, by either calling 1-800-542-3579 or sending the commissioner of insurance, Topeka, K6612.
The city commission, which decides which groups will receive funds, will hold a study session next week to make a preliminary decision on who will receive money.
The Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, signed by then-President Gerald Ford, gave Lawrence $20,000 a year to improve the city. The city saved about $7,300 of it that year.
Gene Vogt, the city utilities director, asked that the water lines in East Lawrence be replaced, and Mollie Vanker, manager of the city water district in Massachusetts St., called for a neighborhood canning center for people who have gardens and don't want to waste excess
Fred DeVictor, director of the city parks and recreation department, submitted a request for $250,000 to build a new recreation center in the East Lawrence
The North Lawrence Planning Council last night withdrew a previous request for a recreational facility and asked for installation of sidewalls, painting of more than 200 houses and general rehabilitation of the North Lawrence area.
Other groups that asked for money:
The Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, for renovation of the west wing of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital to relieve the mental shortage" of housing for patients.
Children's Hour, Inc., for money to obtain a house to continue a day-care program for children with special needs.
The Alder Transitional Care Center, for renovation of the interior of its house, 345
The Douglas County Crime and Delinquency Organization, for a transitional house for ex-offenders recently out of jail.
Headquarters, Inc., for a facility to house patients recently released from mental health care.
The Rape Victim Support Service, for office rental and printing of brochures.
The Community Learning Center, for space in the vacant police-fire building at 8th and Vermont streets to continue specialized education of children.
The Douglas County Armette Baseball Association, for new baseball backstops and renovation of the city's older baseball diamonds.
Feb. 14, the Douglas County Advocacy Council on Aging requested funds for a senior center to be in the vacant police-fire building at 8th and Vermont streets.
Penn House, for weatherstripping, insulation and other winterizing materials to be distributed among low-income and elderly families.
Also last week, Women's Transitional Care Services asked for a shelter to provide help to rape victims and to women having domestic troubles.
And finally, the Lawrence Community Theatre requested $1,500 for a new stage.
Applications for projects should be submitted to the city manager's office by 5 p.m. on the day of completion.
CITY SCENE
TONIGHT: KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7:30 in Parlors A and B of the hospital ward. Hospital guests will be shown at 7:30 in the University's Forum Room.
TODAY: GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in room 4021 of Wescoe Hall
On Campus
TOMORROW: There will be a conference on "EDUCATING THE HAND-DICAPSED FROM MINORITY GROUPS" from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Union's Room Forum. Visiting pianist STEPHEN ZANK will perform works of Bach, Beethoven and Liszt in a concert at 8 p.m. in Saworthback of Murphy Hall.
Announcements
The subcommittee released the report while an official of Texaco, Inc., was testifying on separate allegations that his firm is not developing reserves of 500 billion cubic feet of gas in the Gulf of Mexico because of a desire to maximize profits.
Applications for the Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa National Senior honorary, are available in the Alumni Office, 403 Kansas Union. completed applications, along with a transcript, are due at that office by March 4.
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But Richard B. Palmer, senior vice president for Texas' Western Hemisphere operations, said the company had no intention of accelerating production from the business and to move its offices on boarding. The charges were levied by subcommittee investigators.
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"A company in this economy that doesn't make money is a drag on this economy, I 1
Palmer denied that Texaco was intentionally withholding gas. He said such allegations were hampering the nation's energy market, and defended his firm's right to make money.
in its report on Gulf, the subcommittee asserted that Gulf has violated the Natural
Gas Act by failing to deliver 625 million cubic feet of gas a day last year to the Texas Eastern Transmission Corp., a major pipeline system.
It recommended that the FPC and Texas Eastern "initiate legal proceedings against Guf to require that it comply with its delivery obligations." Any such legal action would be added in an October 1976 FCP directive ordering Guf to supply the gas in question.
Hurry Tomorrow
a "crucifying indictment of ward conditions." Filmed in a state Psychiatric Hospital.
The report said that consumers "cannot rely on the Federal Power Commission to protect them because the commission did not issue their permit and to enforce Gulf's delivery obligations."
Texas Eastern supplies gas to Texas,
Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois,
Ohio, West Virginia, Mississippi, Alabama,
Tennessee, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, New York, Maryland and
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Forum Room (Kansas Union)
Thurs., Feb. 24 - 7:30
Partially funded by Student Activities
Senate committee clamps lid on senators' incomes
WASHINGTON (UPF)—With Democrats overpowering stiff Republican opposition, a special committee drafting a new Senate code of ethics voted yesterday to clamp an $8,753 lid on the income a senator can earn on top of his official $75,500 salary.
If the full Senate approves the proposals passed by its Committee on Official Conduct, the lid will go on a member's outside earnings from speeches, appearances, articles and other activities, with no more than $1,000 for a single fee.
But no restrictions would be imposed on "unearned" income, such as that from business investments. Supporters said that incomeposed less potential for conflict of interest and could be realized with less of a senator's time.
Foes rejected those claims and one, Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, said, "I would hope the Senate would have guts enough to say that if we're going to limit those who make a few dollars marking speeches, we will never be able to about those with income from investments.
Current rules set no limit on a senator's total outside earnings and members can earn up to $2,000 annually in honoraria, with a $2,000 limit per speech.
Veteran Reps. Claude Pepper, D-Fla, and James Quallen, R-Tran, charged that the proposals would unfairly penalize congressmen with salaries from small farmers to large farmers but do nothing to hinder the wealthy members with big investment incomes.
Under other provisions tentatively adopted by the committee, senators would be required to disclose all sources and amounts of income each year in a public statement. Senators may also issue officees with privately-financed unofficial account offices, often called "slush funds."
The limit on outside earned income was passed when the committee voted 9 to 6 against a plan to impose a $15,000 ceiling instead.
The committee chairman, Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., called the income limitation "one of the touchstones" of the entire ethics code and said he and Democratic Leader Hillary Clinton would change when the plan reaches the Senate floor, probably within the next 10 days.
Inoyne was the only Democrat opposed to the limit and only two GOP members, Strom Thurmond of South Carolina and Thomas Stafford of Vermont, favored it.
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Thursday, February 24, 1977
5 million the Texas a major
and Texas against with its actual action 1976 FPC the gas in
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opposed to members, colina and wore it.
Gaylord limitation tire ethics ic Leader resist any he Senate 0 days.
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10
Photocopy machines offer unique portraits
By JOE RADCLIFE
Staff Reporter
If you pass a photocopying machine and see a student with his face pressed against his lips making a photocopy mug shot of him, you may look like an obvious lack of sanity.
He's merely participating in a college pastime that began about three years ago.
For a nickel, you can risk a little embarrassment and receive a unique self-portrait. Many who have done it consider photocopied portraits a form of art.
"Everything in life is art," Bill Remmers, Lawrence graduate student and photocopy veteran, said Sunday, "Therefore, this is art."
Remembers remembered with laughter his photocopy days. He said that about two years ago he made several copies of his photographs, and then he constructed a photographed copy of his head.
"I matched the pictures up, and it worked
well," he said. "It was really scary
one."
The self-service machines in Watson Library and in many departments throughout the University have been within the last year by IBM photocopiers.
Nammers said he had heard that although the IBM machines do an adequate job on faces, they didn't copy them as well as the machine he used.
"This is a very important educational experience," he said straight-faced. "It's a shame that the University has shirked its duty in this area."
John Glinka, associate dean of libraries,
said the quality of face reproduction wasn't
as good as in other universities.
Staff drawing by DAVID MILLER
"I've never heard of people photocopying their faces," Glinka said, adding that the self-service machines weren't supervised if they didn't know what people used them for.
Ken McCracken, IBM sales representative for the University, said that copying faces wasn't one of the machine's more pressing duties.
He said that the old machines constantly broke so they were replaced by the more modern ones.
McCracken said that persons should keep their eyes closed when photographed by their camera.
Most of the University residence halls use Olivetti coniers.
Luann Karsten, Prairie Village sophomore and desk assistant at Naiamth Hall, said that she had seen face copying, but that she didn't know how often it was.
"Face copying is not a major application on IBM machines," he said. "I don't think research and development had that as a major consideration."
"I don't usually watch people photocopy their "i" faces," she said. "I saw one guy with his face down on the glass, photocopying it, and then I went to the glass to stick around to see how it turned out."
Jessie Rader, Lenexa sophomore and desk assistant at Oliver Hall, said that students there weren't satisfied with mug shots.
"They sit on the machine too," she said. Rader said that copies of faces on the machine in Oliver didn't come out well and looked smashed up.
Steve Leben
"You can't really see any features," she said. "it actually looks better when they sit on it."
From page one
Now Leben relishes the Senate's influence, but after a few days in office, he's a little overwhelmed at the amount of work the presidency takes.
"The first day, I was sitting there thinking of all the committees I'm now a member of and it just occurred to me that I should have had in the past," he said.
Still, Leben said he was confident of his ability, even he needs a little research to prove it.
But Jones said research came easy to Leben, as does studying.
Because of the campaign, the election and now loads of Senate work, Leneb hasn't
"Since the only homework I've turned in is my Editing II stringbook, I think it would be a fair statement to say I'm behind," he said.
THE PRESIDENCY, which pays $1,500 a year, may encraddle on Leben's study time, but Jones said Leben wouldn't let it interfere with his sleep.
"One of the most amazing things is the way he approaches his classes," he said. "We make the same grades, but I have to work 10 times as hard."
Leben, who confirmed his political ambitions, said he planned to attend law school.
"He has a great love for sleeping—a big nap freak," he said. "At the Senate, he thought he was going to have a couch in his office, but I guess they took it out when they remodeled. I don't think he'll actually be here now." There was a lock on the door, so he could.
ERDWEN SAID Laizen eventually would go into politics, but said he would stay in Kansas. "He just feels good about the area," she said.
Randy McKernan, Salina junior, the race for the third position was close.
Steve McMurray, Norton senior, and Don Green, Abeline sophomore, tied in the initial vote, and tied once again in the revoe. McMurry finally won the seat by a oint toss.
Tasheff...
From page one
After Owen adjourned the meeting of the old Senate, Munayen presided over a short session.
He urged new senators to participate in Senate meetings, be active in Senate standing committees and feel free to talk with him and Leben.
AETT Invites All Prospective Members and Little Sisters to our 1st Annual
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Leben began working as a disc jockey at the KOYV radio station in El Dorado as a junior in high school. He became interested in the local reporting he did for the station and worked up to news director last summer. he said.
His father's job as a realtor has also influenced him, he said.
"He runs his own business and almost always has done that. It's the way I've grown up that I think I'll have to be my own boss." "Well, I'm not sure," but I'd rather be in charge myself," he said.
Jones said he and Leben could talk about anything, but often disagreed on politics because Leben was more conservative than Jones.
Leben said he voted Republican and probably always will. "To me their basic structure is that the government shouldn't invest in people's personal affairs," he said.
He said he couldn't criticize President Jimmy Carter, however, because he had time to read only local newspapers about University or Kansas Legislature news.
He's even had to let two favorite pastimes—bowling and reading about recent events.
Despite his sloppiness, nap-taking,
conservation and whatever may remain a
part of it, he will be more than content.
the type of person that you could pat all your confidence and your hopes in and he won't
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"An irreverent force by an ungrateful subject. Lamont Cranston was right?"
1
UNIVERSITY THEATRE—MURPHY HALL
Feb. 18, 19, 24, 25 at 8:00 p.m. Feb. 20 at 2:30 p.m
Ticket Reservations: 864-3982
KU students admitted without charge upon receipt of current Certificate of Registration.
This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fee
This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fee.
---
SUA Forum presents Alger Hiss on "The McCarthy Era"
Tuesday, Mar. 1
7:30 p.m.
University Theatre Admission 50°
Tickets available at the SUA office
1980
SCIENCE TEACHERS WANTED FOR NEW INTERNATIONAL PROJECTS
Expand your knowledge of the natural world by living in a country of Africa, Asia, Latin America, or the S. Pacific. Many young minds are waiting to discover the wonders of science and you can help by becoming a Peace Corps Volunteer. Free course materials can care 48 days pd. vec., small comfort, ilv. allow; $3000 stipend and 2 yrs. vet. for INTERVIEW. stipend and 2 yrs. vet. for RECRUTERS ON CAMPUS AT EDUC. PLACEMENT OFFICE MARCH 2 AND LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES PLACEMENT MARCH 1.
Notice to All Organizations
WISHING TO APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE STUDENT SENATE/STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE:
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, Level 3. These requests must be completed and returned to the Senate office NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 28, 1977
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
AEC
Lambda Sigma Society
A sophomore cohonorary society at the University of Kansas is now accepting a position at the Dean of Women's Office, 239 strong, or the Dean of Men's Office, 238 strong.
Applications due Feb. 25
If you have any questions, please inquire at the Dean of Women's Office.
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From the devious mind of Alfred Hitchcock, a diabolically entertaining motion picture.
There's no body in the family plot.
ALFRED HITCHCOCKS FAMILY PLOT
KAREN BLACK • BRUCE DERM • BARBARA HARRIS
WILLIAM DEVANE • JOHN WILLMAN • EARNEST LEHMANN
From book to "THE RAINED PATTERN" to VICTOR CANNING
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You must see it twice!
FRIDAY, FEB. 25 & SATURDAY, FEB. 26 7:00 and 9:30 p.m.
3:30 Matinee each day
Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union
$1 — Tickets available at SUA office.
4
Thursday, February 24, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Focus on Television
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
TV: a love-hate affair
We interrupt our regular editorial page to bring you this special message. . . .
Are you tired of 50s spinoffs and police drama? Do you have a crush on Farah Fawcett-Majors? Do you think that TV is either the greatest invention since fire or else an insult to your intelligence? If so, then this page is for you.
Television is by far the most influential appliance in your home. In the fewer than 30 years it has been on the American scene, it
nas become one of the most hated and loved facets of American life.
It has been accused of destroying our ability to read, teaching violence to our children and turning us all into simplistic morons.
It has also been praised for bringing about the Global Village and a new age for mankind.
Anything that important certainly deserves at least a special page in the University Daily Kansan.
it's 6 p.m. The television set
gets dark for a moment, then
brightens to show a shiny,
paneled studio.
Trivia, fluff invade the news
A semi-circular desk sits on a shag carpet in the middle of the studio. The desk is panelled to match the walls behind it.
Behind the desk are three well-scrubbed, smiling faces. The faces rest atop bodies clothed in Johnny Carson coats or clothes by Dior. The teeth are Ultra-Brite white.
The face in the middle begins to talk. It chats with the others about something funny that happened in town, a studio and about the newest movie in town. After a few moments of such pleasantries, she asks, "What happened to ob, by the way, something happened in world news today."
THE LOCAL EVENING news has begun.
a creature born of television stations in metropolitan areas. It has become the subject of study and scorn within the television industry and the journalism profession.
The happy news format is informal. Its set is designed to remind viewers of a confey,
It's a "happy news" program,
residents what tomorrow's weather would be.
PRODUCERS SOON stepped back, took a look at their telecasts and decided that news they were interested in. They probably were right.
So the team format, a la Huntley and Brinkley, was
PETER KLEIN
Jerry Seib
Editorial Writer
wheeled into the local studio.
Sets were brightened and made
more informal. Stations
increased their use of film reports
and pictures to accompany
news stories.
modern living room. Its purpose is to entertain and, to a lesser degree, to inform.
There was once a time when local news programs featured a drab man in a plain sport coat reading news "shorts". Usually the same man would read the sports news and another announcer, probably untrained in meteorology, would tell area
of hair, shiny teeth and a pleasant voice. Producers showed a remarkable willingness to sacrifice quality of coverage and presentation for aesthetics.
Aut this was fine. Then things were carried too far. Newcasters, many of them good journalists, weighed ad-judgements.
THE TEAM FORMAT disintegrated into the chit-chat format. Newsmen were drawn together at the beginning of the show to spend precious minutes warming their audiences to the news. The anchorman and his cohorts would share trivia, banish the humor and unknowl, before launching into the news. The program soon resembled the Tonight Show.
And when the program did get around to news, it was a kind of news that was different from any most viewers had experienced. Some call it fuff, some call it solf note. Whatever the term, the news had great doses, stories about friends, happy stories and humor—all, unavoidably, at the expense of harder news.
Kuralt—fine journalists who
kurtal not proclaim to be
entertainers—have written and
read the news about the
happy new newsletter.
They say that local news programs aren't giving viewers what they need to know. They question the ability of untrained news reporters to valid news judgments or to spot news that should be reported.
IN THE EARLY years of the happy news trend their warnings went unheeded. But now there is some evidence that producers are seeing the error of their ways and are quietly pushing out the happy news format.
Representatives of the television industry were predicting the death of happy news at last fall's Sigma Delta Chi, Society of Professional journalists, convention in Los Angeles. One can only hope that the TV show will be back. But a look at news shows from Kansas City gives rise to some skepticism.
American businesses have suffered years of public criticism for their ruthless policies. The recent undertaking of several large corporations, that with drawing their sponsorships of violent television programs, has a hefty round of anglism.
Corporations join antiviolence forces
The subject of violence on television is an old one, but regular television viewers will readily admit that this day-day reality is still full of it.
make $20,000 or more annually are thinking of boycotting products that are sponsored on those nouns.
It has been estimated that 35 per cent of those who watch television regularly are beginning to avoid violent programs, and 10 per cent of those television watchers who
AMONG THE organizations
drawn reaction from corporations that no longer advertise on programs considered unprofitable or in poor operations are: Best Foods, Kimberly-Clark, General Foods, Johnson & Johnson, Procter & Gamble, Kraft, Brother & Gamma, and General Mills.
opposing violence on television are: the American Medical Association (AMA), the National Partnership (PTA), the National Citizen's Committee for Broadcasting (NCCB), the National Council of Churches Southern Baptist Convention.
Television news programs should be delivering just that—that the program that delivers news without fluff can't be successful. Hughes Rudd proves that television news is the news each morning on CBS,
Jay Bemis Editorial Writer
This trend has been spreading across the country for the last decade. It has not gone unobserved or uncriticized. Longtime newsmen such as Walter Crinkite and Charles
Don Johnston, president of the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency, suggests that sponsors are perhaps risking guilt-by-association by sponsoring violent programming, and he regards these antiviolence forces as potent.
The AMA has called television violence a mental-
Their campaign has already
health problem and an environmental issue.
"TV has been quick to raise questions of social responsibility with industries which pollute the air," Richard Palmer, president of the AMA, noted. "As television ... may be creating a more serious problem than air pollution."
THE GOAL, IN SHORT,
became entertainment. If some
news was conveyed in the
process, that was icing on the
plate, and it was possible for
ratings, television
news producers had sold out.
THE AMA HAS asked 10 major corporations to review their policies about sponsoring violence. The AMA's action has drawn quick responses from such companies as General Electric, Kroger and Joseph Schiltz Brewing, all of which have promised to look
Television news can be both entertaining and informative, and maybe, just maybe, we are awakening to that fact.
more closely at their sponsoring policies. A recent study has shown that Chevrolet, a division of GM, was "Far and away the advertiser of the most prime-time violent programming." Also, an AMA booklet is being published to educate parents of their children about habitats. The AMA hopes that the PTA will distribute the booklet to its 6.6 million members across the nation.
TIME TO TURN
IT OFF, HAROLD
DEAR.
Click
TIME TO TURN IT OFF, HAROLD DEAR.
Click
WESTPHAL.
WEST PALL
THE PTA, IN TURN, has devised its own campaign against television violence. It has a step-by-step plan which may include program monitoring; guidelines for protecting to local stations; new equipment needed of the previous plans work, boycotting businesses and the programs they sponsor.
€
Another ardent supporter of curbing television violence is the NCCB. It has complied a list of the most violent protesters in the 100-point violence scale. Members of its top 10, with their ranks are: “Quest” (NBC), “Starsky” (ABC), “Baretta” (ABC), “Baba Baa Black Sheep” (NBCP), “B65; Baa Five-Halve” (CBS), “60; Six Million Dollar Man” (ABC), “54; Kojak” (NBC), “Sleepover” (NBCP), “Delcechio” (CBS), 52, and “Serpecio” (NBC), 51.
But it seems that Nicholas Johnson of the NCBC put it best in saying, "Advertisers have always exerted that pressure. Consumers are doing this as a matter of self-defense."
IT HAS BEEN suggested that affiliate programs be allowed to look at previews of network programs before they are broadcast, since such affiliates have complained that they don't receive programs in ample time to relect them.
But to many, this, in addition to sponsors dropping ads from programs, is viewed as a form of censorship.
One advertising executive says, "The use of economic muscle to dictate what broadcasters should not present is often insufficient and as strongly resisted for television as it would be were
And now some words about the sponsors
Quick-a commercial.
Time to race for the Fritos,
the beer, the doorbell,
the bathroom-though perhaps not
necessarily in that order.
But you'll have to move fast. Even though that once-brief getting longer, even though that getting-longer message soon becomes two, three or four, we breaks in the action is a must.
You've barely enough time to water a couple of plants, rip open a box of Ritr crackers or pop-the-top off of a cool Coors. You're out there, where you are, merely taking the time to fluff up the old
bellowing, "How do YOU spell relief?"
The hard sell is back. Dazzlers like these were listed among the 100 best commercials in 1975 by ad men.
Advertising is big business; its ability to cow even the most devoted customers is much power. We have instant soup, herbal shampoo, pills that can handle diarrhea or constipation, and pathogena politicians (no
We are ordered not to smell like we smell, to have hair at various places where it stubbornly grows anyway or to bech when gas from below beckons. If violence or
PETRINE CATHERMINE
Bill Sniffen
Editorial Writer
pillow, you'll miss the first part of the next segment of your favorite television show. And, if you watch it, I am, you probably realized that it's best to sit through the commercial(s) and get the jalapeno bean dip when he criticizes woman bounds off the screen.
HAVING HAD TO sit through commercials, I've come to two conclusions. First, Madison Avenue and its connecting alleyways across the country think we're all a bunch of idiots. Second, we are all a bunch of idiots.
"Give me the Campbell life"
some mornon with a tennis
racket sings "I am stuck on
Band-Aid and Band-Aid's
on me," her equally moronic
child resounds. In compes hubby.
television has made us insensitive to their needs, sales, commercials have surely made us just as insensitive our own.
**WHO'S TO BLAME?**
Neanderthal doubtless got nagging backaches (hard work), and she didn't. Washington surely dropped a denture or two in his soup; and yes, even little Shirley Temple once wore one time or another, used Odoco-Eaters in her slippers.
entity. How a new-car salesman can really believe there is a fundamental difference between a Maverick and a Vega is beyond me. Is Fruit of the Loom the absolute when one is considering an underwear purchase?
Yet our salesmen, to be good at their trades, must ascribe to the maxim that to sell a product, one must thoroughly believe in it. If he is successful, he will be completely sure of his product, and completely unaware of his self-deception.
But times were tough then.
TIMES ARE TOUGHER
now; we've got too much to
choose from.
TV has a worldwide influence
To blame the advertising crowd alone would be to forget that it takes two to tango—no matter what brand of shoes one tangoes in. but the ad man does his share, and he is a curious
THE OTHER SHOE is worn by folks like us. When Speedy says "Plop plop, fizz fizz, with a relief it is," we believe him. When Jolin' Dio Jimdango touts Mister Coffee as the best coffee-maker on the market, his word is law.
You might as well ask what taking Gerald and being in love have to do with each other. There she is, sweet thing, with her kindness, and easily saying "I'm in love and I take Gerald." Their late-night encounters must be a thing of beauty: "Haven't you forgotten something, dear," hubby whispers hoarely Light, camera, action-write famous Gerald line, cut.
pletely for one month each summer to give citizens a chance to get out and about.
And no one complains.
But we get exactly what we deserve, so we can't complain. One could request a bit more class in commercials, but goods don't get sold that way. And pay television, without commercials, isn't likely to get anybody's vote.
I'D PUNCH HER in the mouth.
THE UNITED STATES INFORMATION Agency and American Forces Network provide a variety of TV shows designed to provide entertainment for American
There is one solution.
How do I spell relief?
Throughout the world, at any hour and on any day, the lives of millions of people are being molded and stimulated by that gargantuan product of 20th century technology, the
Just 20 years ago it was predominantly in the United States and the Western world that the magic eye radiated its beam across countless sitting rooms. Today the box is a high consumer priority in all but the most developed nations, and plays an ever increasing role in creating public opinion, propagating ideology and hence influencing political and social change.
How do I spell relief?
BBC PROGRAMS are financed by a license fee paid annually for every TV, while the independent channel is financed
T-u-r-n t-h-e d-a-m-n t-b-i-n-g o-f-f.
N
citizens abroad, as well as to influence public attitudes.
graps with the medium and put it in a realistic perspective. There, TV is banned on Thursday and shuts down com-
Co office cour the le Cent reme
TV'S RAPID WORLD development has resulted in a number of different systems, most of which provide a blend of audio and visual media musical shows, quiz shows and news. Whereas commercial programs dominate the U.S. stations, balanced only by the low-budget, high quality of many countries' networks receive government help and finance. In Britain, the BWC was onmittent until commercial video was introduced in the late 1800s today, viewed in choice of three channels: the popular BBC 1, the more culturally biased BBC 2 and an independent channel similar to
America isn't the only nation that has been transformed across the globe by TV. The British are notorious for their high quality production
As the magic box continues to spread its signals across the globe, it seems that only the fcelanders have really come to
Television's impact abroad has been dynamic, for it is a medium that many govern-ments influence an illiterate public.
Paul Addison
Editorial Writer
of documentaries and zany comedies, as well as historical dramas such as "The Forsey Toys" and "Upstairs, Downstairs."
In Latin America, too, where many nations have high rates of contagions of receivers compared with their per capita incomes, governments use the medium to regulate entertainment providers.
by eight minutes of ads every hour. In the near future, according to a recent British report, consumers will channel their payment to EPS.
Cit office after remo
BEHIND THE IRON Curtain,
Communist ideology and
government practice
furniture (flauted), though
propaganda programs which
receive low ratings compared
with sports and entertainment
Across the English channel, the French television broadcasting system has undergone recent decentralization that has split up the old federating body, ORTF, into six separate establishments. It has been president Valery Descaret and the government guarantee the independence of broadcasting from government control and to bring viable cost-cutting measures into effect.
The comp coun to re
WHEN YOUR SHOW premiered seven seasons ago, you raised the eyebrows of a lot of critics and bored viewers. They said your show was a success. You were in the field of situation comedies. Some people, in describing your show, even used an old
Don't forsake us now, Marv
Say that you're not leaving us, Mary.
What are we going to do on Saturday nights without you? It was difficult enough adjusting to your new time slot midway through the season so we supposed to adjust to no Mary Tyler Moore at all?
Tell us that what we read in the papers and magazines about your show going off the air is utter nonsense. Tell us that you'll be back next fall, just as you've been back the last seven years. Lon and Tom and Murray and Sue Ann and Georgette and Ted.
at least liked). Murray wanted to be something more than just a housemate. He wanted a household face. And you, Mary, want to prove that you
It's going to be tough on all of us, Mary. I hate to say it, but it's all your fault.
forgotten adjective:
"brilliant."
Some of us did not catch on right away. We heard those people talking, but we were a bit
Don't do this to us, Mary. You've got to stav.
But you never lost yours, Mary. Eventually, the rest of us began to catch on. We tuned in, and it didn't take long before tuning in became a habit. You kept friends came to be our friends.
Believe me, Mary, we laughed too.
She was terrific.
We laughed with Rhoda when she was your neighbor, when he told her to secure. Once, while dining on a couple of Twinkies, she turned to you and said, "Wouldn't it be better just lust tap these on my mires?"
WE SYMPATHIZED with you, Mary, when everyone
Stewart Brann Editorial Editor
skeptical. After all, all most television stand-up start off with a bang, but it doesn't take much to lose their sparkle and wit.
None of you ever achieved all that you wanted, but you persevered. And, most importantly, you laughed.
THE DAY-TO-DAY frustration that you and the others experienced were as polygamous as you wanted to produce the best news show in Minneapolis. Sue Ann wanted to be loved (or
could accomplish anything you wanted.
made fun of your parties. And yet we laughed when your parties were spied. Lou got no drunk, Sue Ann insulted her. She was resistant, Georgette had her baby halfway through dinner.
We'll never forget when you went to the funeral of Chuckles the Clown and all of you laughed uncontrollably. We all fear that you would be a funeral. You did it for us. It was humor in its highest form.
Such was the secret of your success, Mary. Your wit came not from incessant screening or contrived plots or dumb gags, but from the humor that lurks in our daily routine.
WHAT WILL WE do without you, Mary?
We'll turn to the TV during your time slot next fall to see what the network has put in to improve the same. There will probably be another Norman Leet socrime or some empty variety show or "Jokipa" Good it is, Mary, you simply can't be replaced.
Well, I guess this is goodbye.
I'm going to miss you, Mary-
we all will. Extend our
farewells to the rest of the crew,
too. And thank you for a wonderful time.
'I think I'm going to cry.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
*published at the University of Kokomo daily August 24th, September 1st and June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Friday.* *Kokomo 60644 Subscriptions to mail a request to a member of the Kokomo mailing list.* *A year outside the county. Student submitter or $20 a year outside the county. Student submitter or activity fee.*
Business Manager
Janiee Clements
Thursday, February 24, 1977
5
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Moving courthouse confusing job
Confusion may result when all county offices now situated in the historic county courthouse move to temporary quarters on the lower level of the new Law Enforcement Center while the courthouse is being remodeled.
Citizens who are already confused about office locations may be even more confused after the courthouse is emptied for the remodeling.
The temporary quarters, which will be completed in a few months, will house the county offices for the 12 to 18 months needed to remodel the old courthouse.
ABOUT 60 county employees will be affected by the move.
Beverly Bradley, county commissioner,
said Tuesday that the courthouse probably would close for a day or two during the move.
But she said that date won't be set until the temporary quarers were completed,卸
"There's no question that the move will be terribly confusing," he said. "But my personal plan is to move all the things routinely used in the office at the last minute so we can set up shop in the temporary quarters almost immediately."
Delbert Mathis, county clerk, said his office intended to curb service as little as 5 per week.
THE TEMPORARY quarters are in one large basement room in the law enforcement center partitions between off-duty security officers will have offices in a separate room.
Remodeling of the courthouse will begin immediately after the county offices move from the old building. Jim Williams of the county attorney's solicitors, who is directing the project, said.
"The quarters will be terribly cramped," Mathias said.
He said the first three months of remodeling would involve installation of a sew roof, patching of stonework and working over windows to make the building more durable. He also built parts and parts of the interior will be built for historical reasons, he said, including marble floors and stairs, the central rotunda, and the old courtroom.
THE BUILDING will be completely relighted, rewired and air conditioned he said, and lowered ceilings and carpeting included in the remodeled office space.
University Dally Kansan
Several fire safety features will be added to the courthouse, Williams said. Two fire hoses are located near west and east sides of the building, one facing the building, one containing fire hoses and a water source.
☆ ☆ ☆ :
County considers 4 bids for courthouse remodeling
Douglas County commissioners yesterday considered four bids for outside remodeling work on the old county courthouse.
The bids, submitted by three Lawrence companies and one Topeka company, will be reviewed by Jim Williams of Peters, Williams and Kubota Architects of Lawrence, who will then make a recommendation to the commissioners.
The work will include installation of a new roof and patching of the exterior stonework on the courthouse at 11th and Massachusetts streets.
The companies submitting bids were: Casson Construction Co. Inc., Topeka, and B. A. Green Construction Co. Inc., Harris Construction Co. all of Lawrence.
The commission also approved a resolution that would allow a proposed Quaker Oats Co. pet food plant to relocate to Road at the company's expense if necessary
Packer Road, is north of the Kansas Turmupite off of Iowa St., is an access road for the Packer Plastics plant. The Quaker Gate Plant will be near the road.
Three arrested on drug charges
Johnson said the trio—Peggy Case, 23, and Robert Worlen, 21, both of Emporia, and John Elledge, 27, 709 Alabama St.—had been arrested for allegedly try to sell an amount of *Methylene Dioxymetaphene* (MDA) to undercover policemen.
Three persons were arrested last night on charges of selling illegal drugs, according to the police.
The arrest was made a few blocks east of campus on 41st Street, Johnson said. He declined to say where the arrest was made, but added that it hadn't been in a residence.
OFF THE WALL
HALL
727 New Hampshire
He said that members of the Lawrence Police Department, the Douglas County Sheriff's Department and the KBI had assisted in making the arrests, and that the three might be charged with similar drug violations in another county.
DOG
Johnson said the case had been worked on for a long time, but he didn't ask how long. He said it was not enough hallucinations if taken in large enough doses. Johnson said it is an amphenylate.
The three persons are being held in the Douglas County jail.
NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR REFORMATION
Presents Norml Benefit Night with Country Heir and Thumbs Friday, Feb. 25
OF MARIJUANA LAW IS
legislative decriminalization efforts.
SUA
a non-profit organization.
FILMS
Williams estimated that the remodeling work would take a year and a half, meaning it will be the fall of 1979 before the county would be left with the temporary quarters can move back in.
All proceeds go to
The attic will be insulated and a sprinkler system will be installed, he said.
ABEL GANCE: THE CHARM OF DYNAMITE (1968)
Dir. Kevin Brownlow. An introduction to the creative genius of Gance, England. Film Society Thursday. Feb. 24. 7:30 p.m. $1
furnishings, moving expenses and the cost of the temporary housing.
Dir. Alfred Hitchcock with Karen
Black, Bruce Dern. Popular Film
Film. Frie. 2 & 5; Salt. Feb. 26, 3:30,
7:00 & 9:30 p.m. $1
EVEN DWARFS STARTED SMALL (1968)
Dir. Werner Herzog, West Germany and
The project cost is $1.11 million, including
Dir. Jeanne and Alan Abel with
Dr. Janice and Michael Winer, the
X.I.D.'s will be checked at Nicoor,
Midnight Film Series.
Sunday 25, Feb. 15, 26. 12:00 midnight
FAMILY PLOT (1976)
IS THERE SEX AFTER DEATH?
(1975)
Action Peace Corps, Vista
Those offices that will make the move are: county clerk, county commissioners, motor vehicle, treasurer, appraiser, budget and accounting division, county executive, processing, maintenance supervisor, register of deeds and zoning administration.
Representatives will be on campus at the following placement offices:
L. A.&S.
Kansas Union
Tues., March 1
Tues., Wed., March 2 Wed., March 2 Thurs., March 3
Woodruff Auditorium
Sign Up for Interview Today
KU Chinese Students Association presents:
a Mandarin Chinese Film with English Subtitles
解诀
"EXECUTION IN AUTUMN"
Feb. 26 (SAT.) 7:30 p.m. at Student Union, Forum Rm.
Free admissions to members, 5Oc for non-members.
Tickets for sale at the door.
The film has won five Kinma awards for 1972: Best Film of the year, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress, Best Color Photography.
This Ad. is sponsored by KU international club.
FILM SOCIETY
Even Dwarfs Started Small
Dir. Werner Herzog (1968)
plus
Abel Gance: The Charm of Dynamite
Dir. Kevin Brownlow
Thursday, Feb. 24, 7:30 p.m. $1
Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union
Tickets at SUA office
the SUBMARINE
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A film by Jean-Charles Tacchella
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Evenings: 7:35 & 9:20
Sat.-Sun. Mail, at 2:05
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Eve, 7:30, 9:40
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MIDNIGHT MOVIES "IS THERE SEX AFTER DEATH?"
"THE ONLY REALLY FUNNY MOVIE SINCE WOODY ALLEN'S 'BANANASI'"
"THE first REALLY FUNNY R-ATED MOVIE EVER MADE!
A clever and brilliant satire. The cast of some of the attractive and witty people have managed to captivate audience and critics alike." - Kevin Swainson, ABC TV
“...its mind is so sane, its imagination so free, and its fantasies so logical, that it becomes something even more rare than good satire, that is, it becomes good dirty satire.”
Vincent Canby, New York Times
"A VERY FUNNY MOVIE! It is hilarious from its beginning to its ending, which is a live-action, play-by-play of the international *K-12* movies."
"A FREQUENTLY OUTRAGEOUS FLAM!" The sexual revolution raked over the camps. -Justin Collins New York Magazine
"FUNNY! FUNNY! FUNNY! IT LOOKS LIKE THE MARK BROTHER IN 'A NIGHT AT MASTERS AND JOHNSON'." *Sherwin-Williams* NET/WTV.
"IS THESE SEX AFTER DEATH?" stays within the funny-off-and-on-porno-spoof genre…it provides considerable naughty-hawdy comedy." *Paukai Kael* New York Magazine
STARRING BUCK HENRY · ROBERT DOWNEY · MARSHALL EFROH · HOLLY WOODLAWN
JIM MORAN · EARL DOUD · LARRY WOLF
FLOTTERING THE INTERNATIONAL SEX BELT
produced, written and edited by JEANNE and ALAN ABEL · MICHAEL ROTHSCHILD
Woodruff Auditorium-Kansas Union Tickets at SUA office
Fri., Feb. 25 and Sat., Feb. 26
12:00 Midnight $1
Rated X - ID's will be checked at the door.
WE are ready for Spring Break! ARE YOU?
Hurry down and see our one and two-piece swimsuits.
THE ATTIC 927 Massachusetts
6
Thursday, February 24, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Javhawks win 4th spot by default
By GARY VICE
Sports Editor
Oklaham and Missouri left the door open for the Jayhawks to enter into a tie for second place in the Big Eight conference as the Nets slammed it shut last night in Roudier.
The Buffaloes scored 11 of their last 13 points from the foul line to tie a come from behind in a victory.
Earlier the two teams had learned the results of the other conference games in a spring training camp, dropping their records to 8-5. The Sooners lost to the Big Eight Champion Kansas State Wildcats, who claimed their first conference championship since 1973 by winning 6-2.
THE JAHYAWKS failed to move up to the conference standings as their record fell to 48-72. The team then door remained open, KU kept its hold on fourth place in the conference and the play-off home-court advantage was Nebraska. 77—also lost in Stillwater to Oklahoma State, 62
That sets the stage for KU's opening round in the Big Eight PostSeason Tournament against the fifth-placed Cornhuskers. The game is scheduled to be televised starting at 3:10 p.m. Saturday in Allen Field House.
Kansas and Nebraska have split their
team on Saturday for the season with each
team playing on 14 games.
AND IT WAS the home court that held the magic through the conference last night as all host teams won, including K-State, and was in the league's top five teams to win last win.
Kansas won't be involved in any tie-breaking coin tices this morning in the commissioner's office as the only deadlock is between Oklahoma and Missouri for second place. The winner of the toss will wilt up and the loser will wilt up in third and host the Baskets, 3-9.
not teeps erased a five-point, 29-24,
deficit in the second half to beat the
Jayhawks who suffered through their worst
scores performance of the season.
IT WAS ironic that shooting would be the 'Hawks' downfall as the team went into the game hitting 47 per cent from the field, one of the highest averages in KU history. But KU could hit only on 7-of-28 attempts from the field in the second half for 25 per cent accuracy and 19-of-52 (37 per cent) for the same.
KU's sporadic shooting was paced by Hassan Houston, 1-4, Ken Koenigs, 3-10, of Boston.
Kansas began the game with accurate
shooting, however, and established an 8-0
lead, Donnie Von Moe, who started in place of Houston for only his second start of the season, hit for four of his six points in that streak.
THE BUFFS tied the game at 12 and 14 before Clint Johnson made seven consecutive points to put KU ahead, 21-14. The game was tied five times, with the last tie coming with 9:47 remaining and the score at 41.
The tie didn't last long, however, as Emmett Lewis, the game's high scorer with 16 points, was fouled by Johnson as he connected from the corner. He hit the free throw to give Colorado its first lead of the game, 42-41.
With five minutes left to play, KU committed its seventh foul of the second half and the Buffs began reaping the benefits of the bonus situation.
Colorado went into a patient four-corner offense and the Jayhawks were forced to foul to get the ball back. That action proved to be the difference in O-14 from the line to preserve its victory.
Commenting on the loss at the end of the season, KU assistant coach Duncan Reid, said, "Thank goodness we have something to look forward to. Tonight was just embarrassing. And at the end it was just a flasco."
Alleged letter-signing celebration causes confusion; terms debatable
By DAN BOWERMAN Associate Sports Editor
A poor choice of words in an Associated Press story yesterday concerning the signing of John Odelk to a national letter of intent to play football at the University of Kansas caused some confusion, according to an AP spokesman.
The story said that about 50 KU alumn and fans "celebrated" the signing of Odell, who was an outstanding defensive lineman for the Chicago Bears, and signed took place in the school's library.
The reference to the Odell sign was used in connection with an AP story about an NCAA regulation barring member schools and coaches from "involvement in big celebrations when they line up potential stars."
Dave Berg, executive assistant in the enforcement section at NCAA headquarters in Overland Park, Kan., said the rule prohibited NCAA-member schools and their coaching staffs from publicizing any other than through normal media outlets.
THE QUESTION arose, according to the AP spokesman, when the Associated Press received a call concerning a news conference held by Iowa Gov. Robert Ray and University of Iowa football coach Bob Counts announcing the signing of a top recruit.
"This has been interpreted to mean they will not be involved in anything beyond the issuance of a news release and the reports information department," be said.
BERST ALSO said that there could be different interpretations of what constituted involvement on the part of member schools and coaching staffs and that the NCAA couldn't prohibit someone not directly involved in celebrating a signing as long as representatives of the member schools weren't involved.
Things such as news conferences and
agging parties could be classified as a
political crisis.
"there are too many extenuting circumstances that could be involved in an attack."
THE WORD "celebrated" caused the
immunity, imprinting that a party occurred
after poisoning.
KU head coach Bud Moore, who was present at the signing, Odell's father; Odell; and Ken Scott, a spokesman for Wellington all said there was no party.
"I wasn't involved in a party," Moore said. "I was there to sign the young man. There were some interested people standing by. I did not say one word except to demonstrate the young man and tell him he's going his'coming to the University of Kansas."
Odell's father, said that following the signing his son went back to classes and studied law.
SCOTT, WHO reported the signing to the Associated Press also said no party acco
"About 50 KU alumni and fans turned out to see the signing," he said. "He had been recruited heavily and it boiled down to Oklahoma and Kansas. The KU alumni and fans were trying to get him to sign with them, and they turned out to see him sign."
Berst said penalties for violation of the rule were handled by a committee of infractions, and that a penalty could range from a letter of reprimand to a probationary period. He added that probationary periods usually were reserved to "willful violations—activities circumventing NCAA rules."
"I can't see where news conferences or signing parties fit into that (willful violations)," he said. "But that's not my decision."
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| | PG | FT | PT | RF | Pft |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Johnson | 4.8 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 11 |
| Johnson | 5.10 | 3.4 | 1 | 2 | 9 |
| Koehring | 3.18 | 4.4 | 6 | 2 | 10 |
| Koehring | 3.14 | 4.4 | 6 | 2 | 9 |
| Douglas | 3.14 | 3.4 | 6 | 3 | 10 |
| Douglas | 3.14 | 3.4 | 6 | 3 | 10 |
| Van Morcea | 3.4 | 0 | 3 | 2 | 9 |
| Van Morcea | 3.4 | 0 | 3 | 2 | 9 |
| Sunders | 6.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Sunders | 6.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Sunders | 10-12 | 15-18 | 82 | 82 | 10 |
KARE WOODS
Quality Unfinished Furniture
KANSAS (49)
9:30:5:30 Monday-Saturday, till 8:00 on Thursday
| | FG | FT | R | PF | Pt |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Lewis | 7-18 | 5-7 | 3 | 2 | 16 |
| Ellis | 7-18 | 5-7 | 3 | 2 | 14 |
| Kitts | 3-7 | 3-2 | 9 | 2 | 8 |
| Baltimore | 3-7 | 3-2 | 9 | 2 | 10 |
| Bailiff | 5-9 | 4-7 | 10 | 3 | 14 |
| Schoenhoff | 5-0 | 0-6 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Cumminte | 5-0 | 0-6 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Cumminte | 30-30 | 10-28 | 30 | 17 | 58 |
| | | | | | |
COLORADO (58)
All tickets already purchased for the game must be picked up at the KU hotel.
They may be purchased for $2 at the Field House or at bounty number one in the Kansas Union lobby. A current student ID is required. The onboard bus will be open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and 9 a.m. to noon Saturday. Reserved seat tickets also are available for $4.
The Field House ticket office will accept orders from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today and tomorrow. The office also will be open from 9:30 a.m. until game time on Saturday.
This decision was made because of the uncertain nature of the play-off situation and the risk involved with mailing at such short notice.
Conf. Overall
Kanada State 11 9 10
Michigan 11 9 10
Maryland 11 9 10
Rochester 7 7 15
Rochester 7 7 15
Toronto 7 7 15
Oklahoma State 4 10 15
Oklahoma State 3 11 15
KANNAS 29 30 - 48
COLORADO 35 35 - 48
HARVARD 144 144
Playoff tickets now available
Football tickets are now available for the free-roam play-off game in Alen Field Hospital.
Rock Chalk Revue
Tickets Available for Fri. at SUA
--your BANKAMERICARD welcome here
APPALACHIAN TRAIL BACKPACK TRIP
Following finals in May (21-31) INFORMATIONAL MEETING TONIGHT IN THE OREAD ROOM, KANSAS UNION: 7:00. For information contact, the SUA office at 864-3477.
WHAT'S YOUR PROBLEM?
Did Louise Get Another Rash? *
Did The Harbor Lights Burn Out? **
Did Ichabod Hike Back To Washburn?
Did You Get Trampled In A Cattle Chute?
Did The Wheel Lose It's Bearing? **
Did The JayHawk Lay An Egg ?
Did Quantrill Make His Last Stand?
Forget Them At...
Pitchers $1000
12-6 M-F
Dry
THESTABLES
1401 WEST SEVENTH NOON-MIDNIGHT "Home Of The K.U Student And Budweiser"
SOCIAL WORK MAJORS ARE NEEDED AT THIS TIME FOR NEW VISTA PROJECTS
Help others with your skills by becoming a VISTA Volunteer. As a VISTA you can get right into your field and be able to reach out to those who need you the most. Vols. get free trav; health care; small life, allow; pd. wac; 6400 term; stipend end 1 yr. service. Must have perm. res. visa, or be citizen. SIGN UP NOW FOR INTERNIEWS, RECRUITERS ON CAMPUS AT LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES PLACEMENT MARCH 1 AND EDUC. PLACEMENT MARCH 2.
4URH (Assoc. of Univ. Residence Halls)
AURH
General Elections for AURH President AURH Vice-President
For portions & filing forms, see your hall
President or call the AURH office - 864-4041
DEADLINE FOR FILING - Fri., Feb. 25
REQUIREMENTS:
1) Candidates must run as a team
2) Team members must be from different residence halls
ELECTIONS - Tues., March 8 & Wed., March 9
5-6 p.m. in every residence hall cafeteria
1
The "Stuff tonigh State Jayha
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TWO SANCHOS
GET ONE FREE
with this
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Expiration date March 15, 1977
Taco Grande 9th and Indiana 1720 W. 23rd
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Partner, Litwin's jean wall is coming. But don't just sit around waiting for it.
I'M SORRY, BUT YOU CAN'T DO IT. I'M NOT SURE IF YOU WANT TO LEAVE THIS FIELD. GO AWAY.
Mosey on today. We've got Levis galore at prices our competition doesn't believe So, Remember It's LITWIN'S for
LEVI'S
master charge
THE INTERBANK CARD
831 Mass. Free Parking in rear
Thursday, February 24, 1977
rd
Wildcats beat KU, win AIAW title
Sports Writer
By RICK BRYANT
The banner in Allen Field House said, "Stuff the Chickwaffles for the third time when it told the story, as the Kansas State women won." The Jayhawks last night by a 24-6 margin.
K-State's victory was the third this season against KU and gave the Wildcats their sixth straight Kansas AIAW conference basketball title. The Wildcats, now 18-10 for the year, won the title with a 4-0 conference record. KU finished second at 3-2.
KU coach Marian Washington will now wait to see whether her team, 12-15 over-all, will be accepted for an a-large position in the Tournament, March 18, in Decorah, Iowa.
THE JAYHAWKS had several chances to beat the Wildcats but were troubled by
turnovers and misused shots. Adrian Mitchell put KU ahead, 42-40, for only the second time in the game with 10:04 left in the second half.
K-State hit three points and the Jayhawks never recovered. A basket at guard V. C. Sanders with 4:50 left, pulled KU to within two seconds of a score, straight lines to put the out game of reach.
KU then led for four minutes until K-State's Laurie Miler tied the game at 41. The Jahways subsequently missed two shots that went in and out.
SANDERS AND center Adrian Mitchell were the only KU players who scored in double figures. Sanders led the Jayhawks with 14 points. Mitchell scored 12, and had a game-high of 13 rebounds. KU led in rebounds, 35-29.
K-State's Miller led all scorers with 17
points, while Wildcat forwards 14
convey and Leann Wilson each had 14
convey.
"We gave them a tough game and the girls have nothing to be ashamed of,"
Washington said, "K-State has a fine team, but they had to work to get this."
41
KANSAS
23
STATE
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
High scorer Laurie Miller(41)sinks a basket for K-State.
Style 530
Sand Suede
and Pumpkin
earth shoe
Washington will be notified Tuesday
about KU's application for an alarge
amount of funding.
SALE
Reg. $39.50
Sale Price
$34.95
435 Westport Rd. Kansas City, Mo. 64111
816/531-9082
Open Mon.-Thurs. 11/4-Fri. & Sat. 10:4-
also 827 E. Washburn St. Mo. 65201
313/443-6103.
GLOBAL BANK
BANK OF AMERICA
KALSO earth shoe
MORTAR BOARD Senior Honor Society
Membership open to men and women who will graduate Spring 1978
Rain Charge
Information sheets available in 220 Strong Hall. Must be filled out and turned in by February 25, 5:00 p.m.
'Tonight, the Sherif will give you two hi-ball ups for the price of one. And the bartender makes 'em extra good on Wednesdays.
2 FOR 1 HI-BALLS
SHERIFF
SAM
JONES
*Our new music mix provides a blend of light jazz, with some rock. The unique sound system produces a loud enough level for dancing, and a soft but audible volume for conversation.
OPEN 9 p.m.
Wed. thru Sat.
Lower Level Eldridge
University Daily Kansan
7th & Mass.
S
Learn to paint Landscape Settings
Also • Handcrafted gifts • Pewter Jewelry
843-7255
1006 New Hamp.
- Art supplies available at low prices
We Make Artists At Doreta's
❤️
- Only $3.00 per lesson
Doreta's Decorative Arts
ENROLL IN CLASSES NOW!
FISH & FEAST SALE!
Fish & Feast Basket includes 2 of our famous Fish Fillets, our new Hush Puppies, a frigate full of Fries, a slew of Slaw and an extra large, 20 oz. Schooner of Coca-Cola.
All For Just
$1.69
Later or sooner, you'll try our Schooner! Try our new 20 oz. soft drink Schooner.
for only
35c
Long John Silver's SEAFOOD SHOPPE
SEAFOOD SHOPPES
Ford
RENT-A-CAR
LEASING
ARNAL
ADMIRAL
2340 Alabama
PLEASE COMPARE OUR RATES! 843-2931
FALS WORLD'S LARGEST LEASING FORD AUTOMIZED LEASING SYSTEM
LUNCH is now being served at the Wheel. Featuring today's special Black Olives
OUR STORE GREAT!
SMALL WORK CUST.
A MEDICAL WHY
Cust.
HEAVY
EDDYS
Pizza
Fast
Free
Delivery
841-3100
JOB OPPORTUNITY
1977-78 ACADEMIC YEAR
RESIDENT DIRECTOR,
ASSISTANT RESIDENT
DIRECTOR
and
RESIDENT ASSISTANT
at
Naismith Hall
Information including job requirements, descriptions,and applications may be obtained from the Manager's Office. Naismith Hall. 1800 Naismith Drive.
Deadline for submitting applications is 5 p.m. Friday. March 4. Naismith Hall is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer; male/female.
SUA
presents
SUA and ACCENT the ARTS
A New Play by Paul Stephen Lim
HOMERICA
A Triage on Sexual Liberation
ROGER CAMERON
March 1-6, 8.OO p.m.
March 5, 6, 2.30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Tickets at SUA $3.50
913-864-3477
8
Thursday, February 24, 1977
Univeralty Dally Kansan
Barnthouse won't miss basketball anticipates beginning 'normal' life
Few people know who Cris Barnhouse is. Fewer still realize he is a two-year letterman on the University of Kansas basketball team. But when he takes his uniform off for the last time at the end of this season, he's not going to miss it.
"I never thought I'd say so, but II'm tired of basketball." Barnhouse said. "I'm looking forward to getting out and playing tennis and going out at night again."
Even though Barnthouse isn't a well-known player, he has helped the Jahywahks out of a few tough scrapes during his four years.
years.
His latest accomplishment was a tip-in at the buzzer to give KU a 91-89 overtime victory against the Iowa State Cyclones last
Wednesday. That tip-up and victory kept the 'Hawks in contention for the home-court advantage in the first round of the Big Eight Post-Season Tournament.
ALTHOUGH HE was ungently excited about his last-minute shot, Barnhouse said he didn't get as much excitement from basketball as he used to.
"I know it'become an old term, but college basketball has become a business," he said. "Everyone is under pressure worrying about keeping his job, and there's little rab-rah or displayed emotion on the court."
Instead, Barnhouse prefers to reminisce about past experiences on the floor, like the
Barnhouse, whose four-year grade point average is 3.9-2 second only to Koenigs on the basketball team—now concentrates most of his time on his education.
times he, Ken Koenigs and Ruben Shelton teamed up in junior varsity contests.
Barnabus is a Phi Kappa Beta, but he had to miss the beginning of his initiation. He was 15 and he was the last.
"SOME PLAYERS have allowed basketball to become their primary objective in college," he said. "I try to leave it behind after I walk off the court."
Besides his other scholastic honors, Barnhouse was named to the Big Eight All-Academic team last year and was a second-team All-America.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) —The Kansas City Royals completed their contract negotiations yesterday by signing Dennis Leonard, the right-handed pitcher who was the top winner last season for the American League western division champions.
Leonard, 25, who had a 17-10 record last year, was the dead of the 36 players on the team.
corn millet)
and with Herb Nolies, is one of only two students on this
course.
Earlier in the day the Royals announced the signing of five other players: outfielder Hal McAra, shortstop Fred Patek, outfielder Tom Poquette, first baseman-outfielder Pete LaCock and pitcher Larry Gura.
Royals sign 6; contract talks now complete
Leonard agreed on a five-year contract, as have some of the team's other key players, including McAeR, American League batting champion George Brett and Brooklyn Dodgers player Jeffrey Huber. Twenty of the players are under multi-year contracts and 16 under one-year contracts.
HARNTHOUSE HAS PLAYED in 42 varsity games in the last four years, including two starting assignments last year. He has played in 13 varsity games this year but for an average of less than four minutes a game.
He said he also wanted to qualify two individuals: Laurie Propst in diving and team co-captain Cathy Call in the 1,650 freestyle.
Pizza inn.
Debbie Bunker has already qualified for the 100 and 200 freestyle events.
Leonard led Kansas City pitchers last season in win, starts, complete games.
Barnhouse played junior varsity basketball during first two years. As a sophomore, he scored 14 points.
Patek, the Royals' regular shortstop since 1971, signed a three-year contract, as did Poquette, who hit .302 as a rookie outfielder last year.
But, Barnhouse, who was a walk-on to the team four years ago, will leave the KU basketball team after this season as quietly as he came to it.
Gura, who pitched a 4-2 record for Kansas City after he was acquired from the New York Giants.
Jayhawk swimmers go easy at regionals
The KU women's swim team isn't trying to win the ALAW Regional meet this week, according to coach Gary Kampf, the head host of their best people and their strongest events.
841-2670
Thursdays
6 p.m.-Midnight
Giant Pizza
Special
Giant Pizza, pitcher of
soft drink, all the salad
you can eat
$5.95
Sunday
Buffet
4 p.m.-9 p.m.
All the Salad
and Pizza
You Can Eat
$2.20
Saturdays
& Tuesdays
Pitchers
$1.00
Draws
25c
The three-day meet, held today,
tomorrow and Saturday in Lincoln, Neb.
, involves schools from seven midwestern
states. A total of 19 teams will be
competing, including four teams from Big Eight
Illinois, Missouri, Nebraska and
IOWA State.
"Last week we proved that we're the best team in the area and that we have the best assembly of talent in the Midwest," said Kempf. "So this week we will go to take it."
THE SWIMMERS will try to meet the times required for entry in the AIAW national competition next month. To qualify for the regionals, a swimmer also had to train three times before the event during the season. All but two members of the KU team qualified.
Kempf said he primarily wanted to qualify the 400-yard medley relay team and the 200 and 800 freestyle relays for the national meet. KU's 400 freestyle relay team has already bettered the required qualifying time twice this season.
Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan, 864-4358.
Announcing the Incorporation of ENTROPY
The Society for Creative Disorganization,
a society to promote contact and interaction among persons from all disciplines who have an interest in science; its development, its methodologies, its content, and its audience. The University of Arizona scientists, technologists, undergraduate or graduate students, attend an organizational party/m会议 on Friday, February 25 at 3:00 P.M. in the Hawks of the Kansas Union. This society represents representatives to the organization for further information, contact J. D. Vanzand or Berlyne Williams at 864-3011.
Paid for from the Student Activities Fee
Pre-Moving
SALE
40%
20%
off all Authentic Western Shirts, longtails and 4-snap sleeves.
off on all selection of Boots.
GUNS
209 W. 8th Lawrence, Ks.
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
Charles Raasch
Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Open 8:30 Thursday
M
master charge
the airline card
842-8413
master charge
the master charge
917-560-1234
for Graduate Study at the University of Kansas
The 1977 Senior Class is offering a $500 scholarship for seniors interested in University of Kansas graduate program.
SENIORS Scholarship Applications
Qualifications: Scholastic achievement Community and University services Not financial need
Applications available in Student Affairs Office Strong Hall
DEADLINE: March 30
7th & Mass.
Total Entrance In One Location
The Lawrence Opera House
& 7th Spirit balcony
Presents
ANOTHER SMASHING WEEK
OF ENTERTAINMENT
NORTH CITY MUSEUM
Total
Entertainment
In One
Location
Trackin' on Thursday
—Featuring KJHK's own DJ, Steve Doocy
— Discoteque Diggin' Dance
—$1.00 Cover & Free Pitcher with Every Admission
Four Tickets Given Away for Friday & Saturday
the Billy SPEARS BAND
FABULOUS FRIDAY
& STUPENDOUS
SATURDAY
On Stage
9:00-12:00
—Nairobi Trio in the Balcony (Saturday Only),12:00-3:00a.m.
—All for One Cover of $2.50
—Pitchers $1.25, 7:30-9:00 p.m.
Cross over the bridge to
THE sirloin
Best place in town to bring your parents and guests . . . come by this weekend.
Our motto is and has always been . . .
"There is no substitute for quality in good food."
1 and 1/2 miles north of Kaw River Bridge Phone 842-1431 for information.
Rooms available for parties.
Private Club facilities available
THE Sirloin
DINING
F
recon
Nar
psych
facult
dition
reque
time
been
TH
forms
facul
University Daily Kansan
9
FacEx gives approval
From page one
reconsidered during the following year."19 Nance Boney, associate professor of physiology at Stanford University and faculty members who accumulated additional evidence to document their tenure requests could present the evidence any time after unfavorable tenure decisions had been made.20
THE ADDITIONAL evidence would
have been recorded during the fall of
the faculty member.
However, FacEx last week indicated it was skeptical of the final check-back. Denney and other FacEx members said they wondered whether the check-back who won a Nobel prize between two winners," or would simply waste UCPT's time.
strength of any additional documentation" between fall and spring.
BUT FACEX members said yesterday that even without a final review or check-back, faculty members should be made aware of their right to give UCPT additional information after a UCPT decision has been announced, and that a
letter from UCPT, informing faculty of
their decision, should be sent after
the UCPT decision.
. .
Srinivasan said, "There will be some problems if we have no check-back. Some departments are going to be violently opposed."
The reason for the opposition, be said, would be that faculty members who had to wait until fall of their seventh year for a second review would be denied a year of
"LOSING THAT year would really get things messed up," we said. "It is a crucial time."
FRRP's report was based on a recent survey of University schools and departments. Although a majority of the survey respondents favored the proposed changes, the changes weren't popular with all faculty members.
Srinivasan said in the report, "More people seem to be against the proposed change than we expected—even if they still be in a minority—and they seem to feel more strongly on the matter than we expected."
MORE THAN 90 per cent of the departments and schools surveyed responded, the study found.
"The present system spreads the work out for the departments and schools. If we have to put it all together in one package in the fall, the work load could be enormous. The amount of pressure to get the job done before existing equipment and the quality of the decision might suffer.
jections to the FRPR proposal, including the following:
"if past experience is any guide, for many faculty members the four to five months between November and March are valuable in terms of strengthening their credentials and have made the difference between an adverse and a favorable decision."
or complete information, write
D.C. Broadbridge
2863 Shannon Court
Northbrook, Ill. 60942
One of America's outstanding boy camps, campgrounds in northern Wisconsin and Michigan will be limited to the staff fee of the 1977 season. Dates are June 22 - August 15. Regular trip transportation, living quarters, round trip transportation, living quarters, recreation, trainecute work job, consequently, only a temporary character and integrity will be considered.
SUMMER JOB
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their grade level. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 10 FIREL HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times times
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
01 02 03 04
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
AD DEADLINES
the RUD will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months. All cases can be placed in person or simply calling the UDR business office at 864-1358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Give away: $10 per week and $100 cash, plus
U. Telephone Director's
Middle Yellow Pages.
THUMBS. Lawrence's own street-level rock
bag, appearing "Off-the-Wall" Hall. $950.
Subbeats needed for research study on music at an age of 10. They were recruited to come to 49 Bailor anoyline after 30 mət. She was 52 yər old.
"HOMELINE" WEEPS FOR THE FUTURE OF BALLoon. Tickets now on sale at the BUA shop.
The Pflaid Club of Lawrence announces their 10th!
Birthday Party, Saturday, December 25, 26, 27. National Guard Armory, Zid and Iude,
at 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. on Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
One admission $1.50-good all three foods. Food
will be served in the cafeteria.
Vote Tuesday, March 8. Emphasis: neighbor-
hood matters. Hearing for Cities Commissioner
2-28
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid,
nets, peds 843-7567. tf
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to
union, utilities paid, parking. 843-9579.
FOR RENT
Canterbury House Episcopal Church at KU, 11K1
Lontanian house open house March 1, 1977 p. 116 to
9 p.m., includes meeting to organise an Episcopal
conference on Wednesday, April 30th,
munions-Tuesday, 9 p.m., Thursdays, 3.50 p.m.
Two, 1 bedroom apartments, 1 block from KU
843-399 or 841-7867
2-24
Frontier Ridge - short term lease available.
Frontier Ridge - long-term lease available,
with study. Heated indoor pool, covered outdoor pool, conditioned indoor pool, disposal pool, laundry facilities, furnished, and unfurnished from $135. Call 822-765-9400.
Galilee Academy - Call Becky now summer,
to enrol for the 2015-2016 season.
contacts on all Galilee Academy calls. 822-
491-7333 or galileeacademy.com.
Must situate nile. 2 bedroom unfurnished apart-
ment on campus $150 plus plu-
se. Keep trying.
2-bedroom apartment partially furnished, 1 block to campus. Heat pad. 842-874-64. 2-24
Sublet 3 – bedroom apartment after March 15, ac-
cording to the lease agreement.
6 (month leave), 100$ deposit. $824 - 149 = 675
$(month leave).
For rent March 1. Share 2 bedroom apartment
on 83rd street, male must own brown
bedroom, 984-178-128 or call 984-178-128.
Individual rooms available in co-op situation.
Room 126, close to campus $55, #84-921, a2e for
co-op close to campus $55, #84-921, a2e
Specifics 2 bedroom duplex, un fitted, ias-
nmented, fully furnished, located in a
district available. April $135 plus usitis;
June $180 plus usitis; July $190 plus usitis;
Uptairstars room for rent Two blocks from campus.
Uptairstarss room for rent Available March 3-
845-845, 342-910, or 845-845
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Note—New on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to students and teachers. In preparation, 3. For Exam preparation, "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at TopToronto.com.
HEADQUARTERS
for
Imported Auto Parts
JAMES GANG
Foreign Auto Parts
843-8080 304 Locust
Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
building materials. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 7041 W. 32nd St., New York, NY 10016.
Rededeen: Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod. Meet with 300th and Haskell, invited to worship with us. We have an active youth group. Place: 300th and Haskell. Information: info@rededeen.org. More information contact: Mit Fredrickson at school at 9 a.m. Bible class and Sunday学校 at 10 a.m. Lutheran Leyman, League meets every Saturday at 10 a.m.
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only one with a specification guarantee of ± 2. DB. Hear at E. Bsh, Prices from $175. At Ray Aude, E. Bsh. Prices from $175.
ENGLISH SPORTS CAR. 1987 Supreme Athletic
compounds or replica? Power brake
compounds or replica? Power brake
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BELL AUF-ELECTRIC, 840-898-3000 W dln. chn.
ELECTRIC, 840-898-3000 W dln. chn.
Advent model 305 Stereo Receiver: designed to deliver the highest possible sound. It is expensive and complex equipment. Its audible features include a high power output to that of the most powerful acceptor. At 2 x 8h, we are specializing in the trade.
The Advent Company is the leader in the Hi-Fi industry in research and product development. The company also offers 201 A. The Advent receiver is gaining popularity as one of the cleanest units at any price. And it does so because engineering and value unparalleled at any price and unmorized. Advent dealer is 3-1 Audio, 1 E. Sh R.
Tri-Phase Speakers - A Real Home Disease System
that will help protect your drivers. Built in four cores for safe high volume protection. Dig out those Boogie Shoes and check these specially designed units out at Ray Audit.
Ludwig Quidrus-plus. Full set with Zidjian cymbals. Call 841-3087.
70 VW Bag. Run perfect. Make offer and call
HOTAJ at 864-6985.
2-25
Brand new 10-speed Moto-Bome. Originally $770, sell for $300, 842-6222, Extension.
1974 Fld. 128, 14d. +qcup. AM-FM radials,
Cell. Call: 622-7115 in 'nobeer square', 265
£750 Call 292-646-100 in Pooley collect
2-85th St, London, on portable magazine collection
at Vale Road, Roehampton, close to Woolwich railway station.
Classic Guitar-Consert stave hand made in Mexico.
Guitar concert stave with case after the six. 519. Titernum Warranty. Call us at (212) 687-4000.
Volkswagen Fastback - Automatic 1970, good condition
Volkswagen Fastback - Automatic 1970, good condition
for $100. Call 864-602-902
2-28
Discount electronics and equipment. All new
name brand. Guaranteed savings. Call 800-352-6741.
Matching twin beds with mattresses and box
girls. 813-6750. Leave a message. 2-25
OWNER OF ANTIQUARIAN BOOKSTORE
OWNER OF AUSTIN HISTORY
including six very special first-editions. Look for M. Bull during all eight performances of
"Austin's March 1-6 at the Kansas Univ.
Ballroom.
Must sell: Camera Mamiya/80kern 1070 DTL with case and close rings. Hardy used like new, model T624C.
BOKONOK. Just arrived a new shipment of
Early American Skeletons Exclusively.
Bokonok Exclusively.
$700 without bargain 1972. Chevy, Vega, four
in cylinder. In a very good condition. Fiat-
3-15
1974 Audi Fox, automatic, front wheel drive, 30
mph, tuned up, excellent condition, $805 at
Hertz. (800) 620-5454.
Flying Junior Sailor with Spinaker and many
842-5065 2-28
**AIRT x 15 radials for VWs, only $60 each**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each. Air Tires $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each. Air Tires $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each. Air Tires $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each. Air Tires $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each. Air Tires $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each. Air Tires $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each. Air Tires $25 each.**
Wait, I should check the image again.
The text is:
**AIRT x 15 radials for VWs, only $60 each**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
Let's re-read one more time.
"AIRT x 15 radials for VWs, only $60 each"
"Air Tire Racks $25 each."
"Air Tire Racks $25 each."
"Air Tire Racks $25 each."
"Air Tire Racks $25 each."
"Air Tire Racks $25 each."
"Air Tire Racks $25 each."
"Air Tire Racks $25 each."
"Air Tire Racks $25 each."
"Air Tire Racks $25 each."
Okay, I'm ready to output.
**AIRT x 15 radials for VWs, only $60 each**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Racks $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
Wait, the `Air Tire Rads` part is a bit messy to transcribe. I'll just provide the visible text.
**AIRT x 15 radials for VWs, only $60 each**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
**Air Tire Rads $25 each.**
Skid = 120 cm. Head HRP Pro with marker bindings
Call: 841-5963 or 841-2289 3-25
Radial lights for small car owners. Many in Chevy
Mounting and balancing available. Bag Strap
Mounting and balancing available. Bag Strap
Mounting and balancing available. Bag Strap
New rubals on sale. 145, x 13, $3 each, 15, x 12
each. Mounting and halining avatars. Hayati
68 WV Carrion Ghia. Good condition. Make offer
and call Mohammad, 81-3259 by 4 p.m.
2-25
AIRFRAME WATERbeds AVAILABLE AT THE FIELDS STORE 717
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
Set of four CURB 14 B. F. Goodrich radial steel
bars with 30mm holes on each bar.
Backbone Steel bays 928, Mass Open Thursday
thursday at 10am.
HELP WANTED
Bacon. Put yourself through college the easy way.
Become an Avon Representative, and make the money you need; sell quality products on your website. For full details, call 462-845-80 or 8-38-6073
men or women. We need 5 people immediately.
We have an apartment building we work in, we have experience. We will训. For personal interview call Bob Lawson, B43-3101 Lawson Kirby Carp. Will to lead fill time 4-14
Local moving firm need experienced drivers and packers. Would like you to work a few hours a week in preparation for summer work. Please call 217-695-8204 or box 257, Lawrence, Kansas 66044. 3-4
PART TIME LECTUREER IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY - ten-temple or appointment for 1977-84; teach in organic chemistry, $5500. Responsibilities involve teaching at A.C. College of Science and/or chemical. Teaching experience desirable but not required. Send resume, graduate and undergraduate degree to John A. Landgrebe, Department of Chemical Engineering, 60640. Preference to applications received before application to UNIVERSITY AFFIRMANCE ACTOR EMPLOYER
2-28
LIBERAL AETS MAJORS to work in job
transfer or relocation for the ETA.
Please Corps representative visit campus March
18th.
LOST AND FOUND
Bureau of Child Research Achievement Place has opening for 19 days (afterterno) research assistants. Contact HR for application. Must have BA and be experienced in data collecting and analyzing results. Excellent organizations are available at 114 Hawthorne, University of Kansas until Feb. 7. Applicants must be enrolled and enrolled. Please contact +25-826-3058.
College student part-time. Light filing and tele-
phone work. 814-6430. 2-25
Delivery person and odd jobs, some heavy lifting
Must be familiar with Lawrence. Mon-Pri 1:00-
5:30 and all days Saturday. Must be 21 with
residence in Lawrence. May visit at
man Garden at Centerfield 12th and New York.
2-25
Part-time, male or female, approx. $45,75 hr.
20-24 hours; 30-34 hours; 44-56 hours; call for applications
@ 30, 30, 842, 742.
Overseas Jobs-junior year-round, Europe. S.
America, Australia, Asia, etc. all fields; $500-
$700 per week required. Information-Writing International Job Center,
DET. KA, Box 4090, Berkeley, CA 94729- 2-24
Walrusen. Part time, evening, five area restaurant. Free parking. Gratitudes excellent. Phone 841-3686 - 31
Need one car capable of lifting heavy mail
430 lb. Car needed $1 for 1; 420 lb. Car needed $4 for 1; 530 lb. Car needed $1 for 1; 750 lb. Car needed $1 for 1; 860 lb. Car needed $1 for 1; 980 lb. Car needed $1 for 1;
Found Black with white markings terrier pup
around Union on 2.71. Please call 814-6414. 2-25
Lext:押 of tan and black indies gloves some
near Strung H found please 2-24
Near Strung H found please 2-24
DEADBOLTS INSTALLED
Found: Ring found at Potters. Please call and
identify. 841-1832 2-25
OWNER OF SWINGING SINGLES' BAR LOK-ON
IF you understand the true implications of sexual
libration, contact Sammy during all eight performances.
"SWINGING SINGLES" March 1-6 at 4-8
Ballroom.
Reward for information on lost banner of Lawn High Twelve Club (Masonic) No Questioned
Lost: Feb. 22 (morning) Texas calculator on
Lafayette, 341-S Street—treasured 943-160-
8766
Lost: Bus Pass Student No. 234281, Call Mike
481-6452
3-2
Vista
CONFUSED BY
Restaurants
710 Mass. • 843-2182
MORRIS
Lock & Key
Fri. & Saf. 'til 2 a.m., 1527 W. 6th
MISCELLANEOUS
Let H R B Block take the work and worry out of your annual struggle with financial aid applications. For assistance, low cost service CALL 842-3027
H&R BLOCK
FINANCIAL AID APPLICATIONS?
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-
8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 8 a.m.
Mas.
"HOMERAM AFGHTS FIRE WITH WIFE"
Bathroom. Tickets now on sale at the BSA
Dentistry
NOTICE
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dine-
nants, cloisters, televisions. Open daily 12:5,
18:37-20:37
EUROPE/WORLDWIDE academic discours years round S ATA 4228 First Ave. Tueker, GA 31690
Two $250 sushi restaurants. Any full-time undergraduate
student can attend a Sushi Course at Mount Omaha Road, Bay Ridge, March 16 for further info.
*HOMERIC* LAUGHS at THE EXCESSES OF
TICKETS. Tickets run on sale at the SUA box-
ballroom. Tickets run on sale at the SUA box-
Gay Couples Rag Group, Saturday Feb. 25, 8 p.m. check with SQR, Room 1643, United for information.
The KU Sailing Club chairs charter trip to the Bavaria region, where they will host a national convention that we are offering the same trip sometime after May 25. If anyone would be interested in joining us at mba along with your phone number or email address, please contact us.
Gay Men's Rap Group: Thursday, Feb. 24, 7:30
p.m., 11:14 Connecticut.
MORTAR ROAD Senior Honoree. Order to men
garden stands must not just an information sheet
garden stands must not just an information sheet
PERSONAL
Gay Counseling Service. Call 842-7505, 6:12 p.m.
for referral. For societal calling, call 842-7505
EUROPE. When you want it, where you want it. You can do it in Europe. No charge to carry, call HELP (800) 652-7900.
**Karate:** Learn the ancient secrets of the martial art. Learn how to train on the individuals development as a martial artist. Includes instruction on karate techniques.
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We are old billiard players over the MILLOW
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Cinema in the MILLOW win $10 and $100 bonus 2-35
EUROPE: YOUR WAY! Fly into or depart from Europe. Choose from the following airports (Rates). Departure from an American Airlines Discount on class A accommodations and rail transportation available. For information call 212-750-8300.
Spend 20 days in Europe in this summer. See
Book 835-2718, Paris, London, Pisa, Fiora,
Brasil, Buenos Aires, and more. Call
843-2718.
To the girl who called—We may have your cat.
To the girl who called—A gray spot on her
641.8080 or 641.8423
U.S. city, 22, Gemini, quiet, self-employed,
well traveled, likes music and dance. Seeks
woman 20-25. Wives friendly and possibly
married. Mail Gay at 849-1448; 255
nings.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
843-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
0-9 p.m.
Owens Liquor Store
843-1186
910 N. 2nd
MARKETPLACE
8th & New Hampshire
12 Unique Shops
To Jim, Till and Susan, Happy 19 boys. Streecreech those big jips. Alahe - two boys. 2-28
Volkswagen Tune Up Special-$15.00
Volkswagen Tune Up Special-$15.00
VW Rear Bumper, 9th and Energy Road $84.12-$32.39
VW Rear Bumper, 9th and Energy Road $84.12-$32.39
Deadbeat says Hi! 2-24
An looking for good home for two year 12 year old girl in West Yorkshire. We are looking for a live town, can take along. Call after 5:30pm on the day of booking.
IS02 strengths, purifies, concentrates Now
available at LOVE RECORDS, 15 WEST 9TH ST,
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Anyone who was in Big Tompson during
the flood, please call Rev. collect, at 303-225-
6858.
Help your VP fun forceen Lawsuits Volunteers
and Help with Complaints. Learn about under ten dollars, 9th and 10th Awards,
641-2125, www.lawyervolunteer.com
"HOMERICA" IS IN ASSOCIATION MAR-
KETT RAILWAYS. Union Ballroom. Tickets now on sale at www.homerica.com.
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I'm looking for companies to travel around
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ROCK CHALK REVUE . Don't Miss It! 2-25
Math tutoring--experienced, experienced tutors help you through courses 600, 602, 105, 111, 114, 117, 111, 122, 123, 124, 142, 580, 582 etc. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7841. *ter*
Football
The Lounge
February "Time up special!" We clean up and adjust drairies, brakes and chain. True both any part or accessories bought at time of purchase or any parts or accessories bought at time of purchase or any 3 speed, car $1650, new $1490; single speed, car $1200; multi-speed car for all makes of bicycle; Lawrence Schwinn Cycle; 1W 20h, W 6h, 3-6 Mon, Thurs. Illumination 7pm.
lemon lessons by native speaker with experience,
all lewh. Phone 841.2827. 2-25
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf
CUSTOM JEWELRY
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mla,
article typewriter. Written spelling, spelling
corrected by proofreading.
Licensed child care center on campus has opening for one full day child and one half day child.
mermaids stone cutting unicorns pyramid repair ... reasonably priced fantasy
THEISIS BINDING COPYING The House of Usker's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us know if you are at 818 Massachusetts or phone 848-3257. Thank you.
Tyski editor. IBM Pica/elite. Quality work.
Call them: 842-121-7290. Discussations welcome.
Call soon. 842-121-7290.
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
10-5 Mon.-Sat. Till 8 on Thursday
TYPING-Thesis, term papers, etc. Reasonable
Call. Bath Bell, 814-6477
2-4
LaurieStetzler 8413883
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"It's a beautiful Day" blue album and J. D. Black-
saw. "A Few Days" will pay good 244
Call Scott 843-707-097
- Pool
Wanted: People with musical talent. If you play a brass, woodwind, or percussion instrument why should you be in 1312th Army Reserve Bank gets together once a week over the mid-west as well as locally. If you can come to S.W.A.C.E., you would like to earn $3.61 per hour doing something you enjoy part-time; call us at 841-683-7950 or visit www.s.w.a.c.e.edu/videoworking you with an instrument and uniform Ask us if you're in U.S. Army Reserve Banks 3-11 St. Lawrence, La.
Male graduate students wished to share two bed-
room rooms at 82-50 floor, #42-897899.
6:00 p.m.
Bride needed. Leave RU after 2:45 M-W-F for Johnson Count. Will pay Call Cory 30%.
Male malecomic. Move in move any no rent in
the apartment. Non-smoker. Call 842-3000 between
From Prater. Non smoker. Call 842-3000 between
From Prater. Non-smoker. Call 842-3000 between
1. or 2 mats to share very nice 2 bedroom apartments.
2. pay your part at home and pay your own costs.
3. pay your own taxes.
4. pay your own utilities.
WANTED: Female roommate for my nice 2-bed-
room on the 1st floor. Please call 841-2872-2577,
monthly page 13, Call 841-2872-2577.
New female Christian reconnaissance SOB to share
Talentforce Academy water, a bus to Bus Station,
Talentforce Academy $125
Volunteers needed to help with Special Olympics track and field program for mentally retarded persons. Will be trained sessions, 2-4 hours per session. Chambers at 434-566-1088, 434-566-1089, 434-566-1090 if interested.
WANTED - A GOOD OLD FASHIONED UNLIMITED AUTHENTIC 14-YEAR-OLD AMERICAN BODY JEWELRY THAT THE POPE HIMSELF. Look for Francis Jenkins, March 1-6 at the Kansas Union Games 3-4
Studios roommate wanted for large apartment on Bus Route. Call 842-9732
3-2
2 TICKETS for Rock Chalk, night will
pay fair price. Call Bob at 814-6455.
2-25
2-3-bed room or apartment for summer and
fall vacations. Ask for Paul Rivers.
684-6005, Nathan.
2-25
Will pay face value for one of following "Instant"
between $1,000 to $2,500. $122. $24. Call
Between: 6-8 pm
2-24
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ARMADILLO
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MARKET PLACE
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FORD cars and trucks
STUDENT DISCOUNTS
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by calling
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after 6:00
at 842-0575
about K.H. Student Discount
about K.U. Student Discount
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Home of The Chalk Hawk
Highway 24-40
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9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcress Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
10
Thursday, February 24, 1977
University Dafly Kansan
Citizens $ ^{7} $ goal is safe community
To get people to do more than just worry about rapes, residents of one Lawrence neighborhood are working to make their neighborhood safer.
The area, comprising the 1000 to 1400 blocks of Ohio St. and the 1100 to 1400 blocks of Louisiana St., has recently been the scene of two ranes — the last Feb. 12.
Julie Gordon, assistant dean of women who lives at 1227 Ohio St., said yesterday that after the Feb. 12 rape several neighbors had taken their photos, 10 to get acquainted with each other.
The main reason for the meeting was to learn neighbors' faces, she said. The residents always just find out who lives in the yellow house on the corner."
GORDON SAID the residents were leaving on their porch lights and were circulating a petition to obtain more street lights for Ohio and Louisiana streets, which
"We don't want it to look like New York," Gordon said. "We want it light, but not too bright."
One neighborhood woman is designing a sticker for residents to put in their windows.
Gordon said the neighborhood now "almost has an escort system."
Some of the houses don't have porch, neither the said, and their residents may try to get a new one.
'SOMEONE WHO has a night class can
'Talk to a neighbor and say 'Hey, I'm going
Most of the people who attended the meeting were women. Gordon said that perhaps men must didn't care as much as everybody that he was sure to get everybody in the neighborhood together.
up on the hill tomorrow night—would you like to walk with me?” she said.
At the first meeting, the Rape Victim Support Service (RVS) presented a film by one of its members who lives on Louisiana Street. Poppy Petit.
SPEAKER, Lauren Cape, Lawrence senior and RVSS member who lives on Ohio Street, said the organization would be glad to show the film to any neighborhood organization.
Conviction not cause of magazine's recall
By JIM MURRAY
Staff Reporter
Hustler magazine is no longer available in Lawrence, but not because of publisher Larry Flynt's recent conviction on obscurity and conspiracy charges in Ohio.
THE AREA around Ohio and Louisiana streets is known as an easy mark for rapists, Cape said, because many students live there and many women from GSP-Corbin Residence Walks to taverns or to night classes through that area.
Bev Noyes, manager of the Town Crief,
930 Massachusetts St., recently said the
store's distributor, Palmer News Co., Inc.
Topkea, had recalled all air-conditioners
even though the magazine was a good seller, it apparently
hadn't been missed.
"Not many people asked about it after it went of the said. "Not as many as I was when I said."
Rerry Tolle of Palmer News said that Trump's plan for economic reasons before Flint's convulsions
"IT WAS strictly a business decision to call back the magazine," Nola said.
Nolte said that before Flynt's conviction, the Flynt Distribution Co., which sold the magazine to wholesalers such as Palmer News, had made several demands on wholesalers about how to distribute. He said Palmer News added the demands so much 'hard' and economically unprofitable, so it decided to stop distributing Hustler.
He said that because Rustler was sold on a guaranteed sale basis, Palmer News recalled all distributed copies of the February issue, and returned them to Flynt Distribution Co. to get its money back. He said it never received the March issue.
NOLTE SAID that Flynt hadn't made any demands about his other magazine, Chic, and that Palmer would continue to distribute it.
Note emphasized that Flynn's conviction
seems to the decision not to
distribute Hassler.
"We do not censor the magazines we distribute," he said. "We have no legal right to publish."
JESSE SADI, "It's clear that the jury was angry" as Flint and Hunt, and was wasted in a trial where they were
"Our neighborhood organization is one of the most positive things to happen yet, instead of people just sitting around talking about the rape that happened." Cape said. Gordon agreed that her neighborhood was known as an easy mark.
The circumstances of Fynt's conviction raised several legal questions, according to Paul Jess, associate professor of journalism who teaches communications law.
Three other Hustler executives, including Plyn's father and brother, were acquitted on charges.
The conspiracy charge was more of a distribution charge, yet people more central to the distribution were acquitted, and Flynt was convicted."
Jess said another charge, that of engaging in organized crime, raised other charges.
Jess said he couldn't explain how Flynt alone had been convicted on both charges when the law says a minimum of five people must be involved.
The sentence Flynt received also raises a constitutional question. Jess said.
The residents are transients, so they never get to know each other and don't worry much about the upkeep of their homes, she said.
"The fine line ($1,100) is not unusual, but the sentence of 7-25 years probably can be challenged on eight amendment grounds—that it is cruel and unusual punishment," he said. "I think the sentence is terribly severe."
Jess said that cases like this were the result of the Supreme Court returning obscurity rulings to the states and their community standards.
"This causes problems because it leaves variations and uncertain standards in publishing for national publishers and distributors," he said.
People on their way to the Jayhawk Cafe and the Wagon Wheel Cafe, taverns in the area, often scream and make noise, she said.
and.
*BESIDES wishing they'd realize that
KU Pre-Med Club Presents
CARLA SULLENS
from the Stanley Kaplan Institute speaking on
"The New Med-Cat . . . What to Expect"
7:30 p.m.
THURSDAY, FEB. 24
Kansas Union, Council Room
FUNDED IN PART BY STUDENT SENATE
Accent the ARTS
this is a residential neighborhood, I wish they'd stop screaming because we can't tell when someone's really in trouble." Gordon said.
PONDERED IN PART BY ENGELA.
Today's Events
10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
Student Print and Drawing Sale Kansas Union, Main Lobby.
12:00 noon
Louis Culmer, soprano
Augustus Pearson, tenor
Sharon Barron, piano
Jerome Dabney, tenor
The Ninth Street Baptist Church Gospel Choir
Strong Hall, Main Lobby.
LOOT
University Theatre, $3.25, $2.50, $1.75 tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office.
8:00 p.m.
Hoyt Robinson, organ
Student Recital Series
Swarthort Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
8:00 p.m.
Kathy Hoggard, director of the KU Information Center and RVSS member, said the center had received several calls asking whether there had been many rapes in the
The only recent reaps in Lawrence, Hoggard said, were Feb. 12, when a woman was abducted from 1135 Ohio St. and raped by an employee and Jan. 30 in the same Ohio Street area.
*Wywe hope this will help other com-
munities get them involved.*
She said she hoped the stickers would be designed and the petitions signed by that
The neighborhood organization's next meeting is 6:30 p.m. on March 1, at 1080 Oak St. Gordon said she encouraged anyone meeting to march 3 and missed the first meeting to attend.
MALLS
Sandwich Shoppe and Deli
We're now open 10:30 and 'til 1 a.m. Save 50* with your People Book Coupon
711 W.23rd
842-3232
Malls Shopping Center
--at
SPECIAL JAZZ CONCERT Tonight, Thurs., Feb. 24
PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE
926 Mass.
Jay McShann Band featuring Claude "FIDDLER" Williams
Admission only $4.00
Jay & Claude have recorded In each of the last six decades, and are leaving next week for an extended concert tour of Europe.
PETER SCHULZMAN
Julio C. Meade
District Manager
901 Tennessee
841-3464
Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations.
I think they are talking.
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Military service, a career, family and possibly extensive travel await you after graduation. 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's College Insurance Plan for the 50 states and in many foreign countries. Ask your campus representative today about American General's full coverage and full service.
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Jan Cloon
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Willie Amilson
901 Tennessee
841-3464
Bill Byers
901 Tennessee
841-3464
SIRIUS
American General LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
Offer thru Mar. 27
920 W. 23rd
Lawrence, Ks.
Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily
Mr. Steak
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
217-543-8000
$3.99
A fancy restaurant dinner,
without the fancy price.
Steak &
ALASKAN
KING CRAB
S.U.A. Indoor Recreation
CLAIR
TABLE TENNIIS: All-campus Tournament planned for sometime in April.
BOWLING: Open lanes Monday through Friday, Noon "11 p. m. Friday. Nite Date=Nite, 6 games for $3.
11 p. m. Friday. Nite Midnight. Sunday, 1 p. m. 11 to 10 p. m., open lanes. Price per game: Noon "11 p. m. 60 cents; after 6, 60 cents;
MATRIX
FOOSBALL: All-campus Tournament planned for sometime in April.
BACKGAMMON: Every Wednesday at 7 p.m., Pine Room, Union. Beginners Welcome.
TENNIS
Jumping
KK
CHESS: Sunday, 2 to 4 p.m., Parlor C, Union, Monday,
7 to 11 p.m., Parlor C, Union.
SPORTS
BLIARDIOS: Six regulation Tables. Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, 1
POLITICAL CHEVRON
BRIDGE; Wednesday, 4:30 p.m., Parlor A & B, Union,
Sunday, 3 p.m., Parlor A & B, Union. Bridge lessons for
beginners are available through Free University.
Faculty and students welcome.
This is the third year Student Union Activities has devoted a complete focus on indoor activities. With more emphasis on these activities, they should be better than ever. Many fun and active events are being organized, and we hope K.U. students will participate.
H t
WATCH FOR ORGANIZED FRISBEE
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT SUA OFFICE, 864-3477
AACF
BRAVO!
COOL
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
aion Ac-ocus onasis on erer than beingents will
KANSAN
Big Eight tourney starts tomorrow
Vol. 87. No.98
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
See story page 10
Friday, February 25, 1977
1-3477
Funding for KU additions to get subcommittee okay
Staff Renorter
By STEVE FRAZIER
TOPEKA-A Senate subcommittee plans to recommend construction funds today for additions to Robinson Gymnasium and Wichita High School, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday.
Hess said the committee would recommend that KU spend $380,492 of the extra fee money, which excludes the $380,000 for meals provided by the Receipts of their January meeting.
THE KU SUBCOMMITTEE decided not to allow the University to spend all of the excess $1.1 million in student fees collected because of the higher-than-expected 1978 tuition.
The KU subcommittee and the other Board of Regents institutions' subcommittees were scheduled to report their fiscal 1978 and supplemental fiscal 1977 budget recommendations to the full Ways and Means Committee this morning.
"IM PRETTY confident that Robinson and Mallet will go through this session."
Hess, chairman of the University of Kansas subcommittee of the Senate Ways and Means Committee to address the educational programs and capital improvements for the Lawrence campus that had been requested by Gov. Robert Bennett and restored some cuts in funding.
"The subcommittee's recommendations don't get automatic approval" Hess said, in a telephone interview. The subcommittee members have the chance to visit the campus and they go over the plan with the committee.
Hess said his subcommittee would recommend that the Robinson addition be funded at a total cost of $6.7 million, rather than at $7.3 million as requested by the University. University administrators have said the extra $60,000 was needed to cover costs caused by inflation occurring since the date the project was planned.
If the KU subcommittee's recommendations are approved, KU would get $2.5 million in fiscal 1978 for first-year construction costs of the Robinson project and $3 million for the first year of the Malott project.
Hess said the subcommittee decided not to allow KU to spend the extra fee money to encourage Regents institutions to make their enrollment estimates more carefully.
Money requests due on Monday
Applications for $48,965 to be allocated to student organizations by the Student Senate in spring budget hearings are due at 5 p.m. at the Senate office, 105B in the Kansas Union.
Applications can be picked up in the office software. Budget hearings will be March 27.
Tom Mitchell, Senate business manager,
said that as of yesterday he had received
two applications, Last year, he said, the
company awarded $46,350 to about 50
organizations.
State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa and chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said the Regents institutions' calls to students to report what claims that applied to all Regents schools,
These system-wide items—faculty salary increases, increases in operating expenses and shrinkage requirements—will receive a review by the committee in full committee meetings. Winter said.
**WINTER, WHO also is chairman of the KU Medical Center subcommittee, said the Med Center subcommittee wouldn't make recommendations public until Wednesday.**
Hess said his subcommittee wouldn't
recommend some of the new classified positions requested by KU for the new School of Law and visual arts buildings that might not be ready for use when scheduled.
"As I understand it, there is a real
satisfaction the School of Law building won't
be destroyed."
If all the buildings open as scheduled, he said, KU is entitled to the new classified positions and could request money for them supplemental fiscal 1978 budget requests.
The KU subcommittee agreed with Bennett that KU shouldn't get the money
Enrollment expected to be above record predictions
See ADDITIONS page seven
Dryck estimated five weeks ago that final enrollment would total 23,988 students, up from 22,604 in 2015.
Figures from the Office of Admissions and Records indicated a total first-day spring enrollment for both campuses of the University. In April, when the first-day enrollment was 21,356.
Final enrollment estimates for the spring semester are slightly higher than earlier record predictions, Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, said yesterday.
Dyck said the final figures, compiled after the 20th day of classes, would be available Monday. But based on figures available so far, he said, "We'll probably be a little higher than our predictions, probably by 100 students."
The 20th day of classes was last week. Dyck said his office needed until Monday to relax the figures because "we have to send all the information through the computers, tabulate it and then subtract the religion numbers" (Dyck, full-time equivalent students, "emphasized").
The delay between first-day enrollment figures and final figures accounts for students who enroll after the first day of classes or enroll in continuing education.
The final enrollment figure for the Lawrence campus will reflect the number of students who enrolled: through the easy-access program; at the Linwood Center in Kansas City, Kan.; in the Topeka Capital Complex program, or in extended courses offered at community colleges in Johnson and Wyndotte counties. The Linwood and Kyester Colleges offer an international satellite courses for University of Kansas credit.
100
Dyck said the final figure also included students who enrolled late on the Lawrence campus, and off-campus graduate students who received their undergraduate university credit for their doctoral research.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Crash landing
High winds and warmer temperatures brought out Susan Plesch,
Salina freshman and Carlos Veluz. Puerto Rico fresher, to test
the drifts for kite flying in front of Fraser Hall. But the guts proved too much for the kite and the kite flyers turned their attention
Fire guidelines called confusing
Rv LEROV. JOHNSTON
Staff Reporter
Confusion over the exact meaning of the Kansas state fire marshal's October safety recommendations continues to delay fraternities' compliance, Tim Metzler, Interfraternity Council (IFC) president, said yesterday.
"The original recommendations were too confusing to act on," he said. "The fire marshal's office sent one report to the board, and the board approved one to the housing corporation boards."
Metzler said the boards, which control funds for the fraternities, had raised money to make necessary changes in the houses, and they exact guidelines before they proceed.
fire marshal's office to come to KU and clarify its position. Metzler said.
"We're still trying to find out which guidelines are recommendations and which guidelines are requirements."
FOLLOWING THE initial confusion over in reports, which asked for action on the report.
A fire marshal representative was to have come during Christmas vacation but never did, Metzler said, so the IFC recently planned for a meeting with the office March 5.
Metzler said he doubted that the March meeting would resolve the problems either.
"The inspectors will still have to go to each house individually again and make specific recommendations for each one," he said.
METZLER SAID the fire marshal's office
put pressure on the fraternities to
convoy.
"There is no deadline," he said. "All they really want is steady positive movement. We've taken our time on this so we won't be too worried." "We want to get this right the first time."
Interest in fire protection at KU increased after five faterenomies men were killed in a plane crash.
August. Lack of a third floor fire escape was one flaw cited in the accident.
Paul Markley, fire protection technical adviser at the fire marshal's office in Topeka, said he was pleased with the progress being made at KU.
Markley said that his office didn't have the manpower necessary to make rounds as often as he would like, but that he visited underteens and one sorely at KU in October.
Metzler said the fraternities Markley visited had personally requested images.
THE MAIN items recommended for all houses by the fire marshal's office were approved smoke detectors and fire alarms. Metzler said that many bids had been received by the houses for such systems, but that few had decided which systems to buy.
Metzler said another apparent cause of delay was deciding how fraternities and
sororites fit into the fire code requirements, which he called complex.
J. J. Wilson, KU housing director, said the code was clear for University property.
"ONCE A YEAR, they inspect the scholarship halls, residence halls and Stouffer Place," he said. "We have had two cases of injuries that we are in violation of the code."
But when asked about fire marshal recommendations for Stephenson Hall last October, Wilson said, "I'm not even sure they're necessary."
Cal Karlin, Stephenson Hall director, said he had received a list of the recommendations, but added, "I'm dissatisfied with the housing office has moved on this."
**KARLN SAID** that of the 10 items on the last only two minor ones had been imprinted.
KU hears whistle
The peaceful tranquility of Mt. Oread temporarily vanished at 5:22 yesterday afternoon, when the KU team came in for the first time since fall semester.
But Rodger Oroke, director of facility operations for buildings and grounds, said, "We have no the whistle will be blown again."
The whistle was blown, he said, on orders from Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
Shankel confirmed that he had been responsible for the return of the whistle. But he said, "It's not permanent yet. We are thinking about
According to Shankel, "We had a special request from a group to make a tape of the whistle for a surprise performance."
Future use of wasps' home under studv by HPER
STUDIO WORKSHOP
Staff photo by MIKE CAMPBELL
Wasp watcher
Heather Dew, Ontario, Canada, graduate student, spends many hours each week observing the activities and habits of queen
wasp for her doctor's research project. Dew said it was possible to be emotionally attached to a wasp that had been watched.
By DAVID JOHNSON
Staff Reporter
To some people, the two-story brick and stone schoolhouse on the corner of 2xrd and Iowa streets may be an eyesee, a relic from the days of the three Rs and five-mile walks through snow to elementary school.
But to Heather Dew, Ontario, Canada, graduate student, and seven colonies of wautua, 6th school is home for a research project based on the climate of Victoria.
More a victim of disrepair and disarray the decay and dislipidation, the building sits alone on the southeast corner of a southwest corner.
When the Clinton recreational park was being planned, the KU department of facilities planning thought the schoolhouse would have to be torn down to make way for the project. Seven years later, it became a public housing district house," under the control of the department of entomology.
In another room, Martian Riedy, Hope senior, is doing research work for a senior project. She peers silently into a cellophane-covered, two-foot by three-foot box. There are seven boxes in the room, each containing the nucleus of a wasp colony—a queen wasp
DEW HAS BEEN working on her doctoral research for the past year and a half on the division of labor among paper wasps. After a year of field work, last fall she began breeding the wasps in mating cages set up in rooms in the schoolhouse's musty basement. Because wasps normally mate and build nests in April, he to simulate spring-like conditions with fluorescent lights.
"We spend about 12 hours a week observing and taking data on the progress of the wasps," she said. Each box is observed twice a week.
The wasps are fed water, honey and green caterpillar "wasp-
burgers."
Dew has been stung only once by the paper waps since she moved her research inside. But when she was working as an uncle, Dew also got stung by a paper wap.
ALL THE NESTS are slike except for one that has two queens.
That nest is a study in domestication, Dew said. One queen, tagged "green 50," sits on the nest and lays eggs while the other forages for food and doesn't reproduce.
vespula wasp (yellow jacket) was so painful she quit studying them.
Despite their occasional aggressiveness, wasps are mild-mannered. Dew said.
"If you disturb them, sure they're going to defend their nests,"
"and they'll be angry if you're properly, don't make loud rains or move to nearby, won't bother you."
DEW WILL HAVE to walk slowly and speak selflessly until she finishes her research, probably two-and-one-half years from now.
She now has only herself, her two assistants and occasional visitors to concern herself with.
Last fall, she shared the building with another graduate student who was responsible bees. The bees now have been moved to three locations.
The entomology department has used the building for at least 15 years, but the health, physical education and recreation department would like to use the building to store equipment and sell concessions at ruby and soccer matches.
Tom Willkerson, recreation services coordinator, said his department had done preliminary studies on how the building could be used for intramural and sports club purposes. He said tentative plans called for construction of a sam deck from which people could watch matches and installation of a sauna. The construction would also could be used as a warming house after an outdoor ice rink is built on the adjacent list, he said.
WILKERSON SAID the projects wouldn't be inexpensive
"I'd anticipate it would take several thousand dollars to fix it in," he said. "I would depend on the available funds."
The recreation department has made several requests to use the building after the entomology department relinquishes it, he said, but it never has received confirmation on the request from the office of facilities planning.
Keith Lawton, director of facilities planning, confirmed that he and received the requests, but said he didn't forestall them. He also said he was part of the emergency department.
"I don't have any feeling whether it is serving the appropriate use, but now I would assume that it is or the University would have
2
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From our wire services
Turner confirmed for CIA
WASHINGTON - The Senate yesterday confirmed the appointment of Adm. Stanfield Turner to head the Central Intelligence Agency. The approval came on a
The 53-year-old naval officer takes control of the CIA at a time when it once again is in the news as a result of alleged clover activities.
The latest controversy involving the agency revolves around published reports that the CIA paid off millions of dollars over a 20-year period to Khalifah Hussein of Kuwait, who have made millions. The report has sparked debate.
Carter sent Turner's nomination to Capitol HF Feb. 7, not longer after his first choice for the post, former White House aide Theodore Sorensen, had asked that he be reelected.
Carter affirms rights goal
WASHINGTON—President Carter pledged yesterday that his administration's foreign policy would be marked by a concern for human rights and declared that "when I speak and when Cyrus Vance speaks, I want it to be the absolute truth." Carter, during a visit to the State Department, stressed the moral underpinning of his administration's view of the world. He also urged U.S. foreign aid obligations to foreign service political appointments. The State Vance and assembled State Department employees that his administration will be "tenacious and determined in our search for greater world peace."
Damage to crops serious
A low pressure system that generated winds of 72 miles an hour and blew silt over southwestern Kansas for 36 hours, has moved south—allowing agriculture officials to find wheat crop damage is serious, but not critical.
"It it did not destroy all the wheat in western Kansas, but it was the beginning of something that could be very devastating," said Early Hayes, president of the Kansas Association of Wheat Growers. "If we could get rain or snow almost immediately, any further windworm, there could be some salvage and recovery." And a silt rod on winds up to 72 miles an hour that started Tuesday and continued through 9 p.m. Wednesday. The dust reduced visibility to almost zero most of Wednesday, prompting closing of almost all highways in southwestern Kansas, but they were reopened when the dust settled.
BROOKLINE, Mass. AP—Convicted Watergate burglar and former CIA agent E. Howard Hunt says giving money to foreign governments, like the reported grants to Jordan's King Hussein, is "an honored tradition within the CIA."
Hunt asserts payoffs often made by CIA
He said at a news conference yesterday that he made substantial cash payments to government officials in Japan, Mexico and India while working as a CIA station chief.
"The payments to foreign governments are a long and honored tradition within the CIA." Hunt said. "There is certainly nothing illegal about this."
Hunt, 58, made the comments at his first news conference since leaving federal prison at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Wednesday.
Hunt didn't say how much money was in the bag, where it came from or who received it.
The session was held at the suburban Boston office of his booking agent, who will oversee a series of lecture tours Hunt has planned.
Hunt served 32 months in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy, burglary and illegal wiretapping in the 1972 Watergate break-in.
He said he assumed the payments, which were made in exchange for questioning.
"When I was station chief it was common or me to pay substantial figures for personal expenses."
of the local host government. "Have said"
"I certainly support Uruguaian in-
intelligence, a Mexican intelligence service—that is, the most different ones—and the Japanese are the perilous.
Hunt compared his role in the Watergate burglary to his earlier job as a CIA officer.
Hunt, who recruited the break-in team, said he had been instructed to "photograph" the attackers.
"My involvement at Watergate was solely a continuum of my years in the CIA in which I followed the orders of my superiors," he said.
He said he didn't deal with then President Richard Nixon and top White House advisers, but assumed from the amount of money involved in the case that the Watergate break-in was a White House-approved activity.
Hunt said he felt "a pretty good amount of bitterness" toward Judge John Sirica, who sentenced him, and White House officials, and his family. "We themselves after his career was ruined.
"I paid my price for Watergate in sorrow and lost wasted years in tragedy, ridicule and humiliation." Hunt said. "I feel no act of constriction can be required of me."
Nixon could have averted the "horrene-dougery tragedy" of Watergate by admitting soon after the break-in that the men in charge thought it would be the thought was a good cause. Hunt said.
"The break-in itself was a minor legal problem," he said. "It was the hysteria afterward that ballooned this into a major international tragedy."
Rumors of trouble, shakeup persist at ABC
NEW YORK (AP) - Her friends say it's unfair. Her critics say it's long overdue. At issue is the criticism and mounting controversy swirling around Barbara Waters, not only the first woman in a network audience, but the highest-paid newscaster in television.
Fed by corporate leaks and colleagues' criticism, questions are being raised about her performance as co-anchor of the ABC Evening News and about the status of the network news executives who last year her to a five-year, $10 million contract.
In the past three weeks there have been published reports that Walters and her coanchor, Harry Reasoner, aren't getting along and that one of them might step down. There also have been rumors that a news division management shakeup is possible and that ABC's wizard sports executive, Roone Arledge, will be brought in.
Arledge is known to be reviewing tapes of each evening's show and making recommendations. And be has mentioned that the addition of a star such as Howard Cossil in a sports slot on the evening program might lift it up.
One ABC board director, in a private conversation, recently mentioned the possibility of Arledge taking over the news division. Arledge has declined comment. Denis greeted him with an enthusiastic shakeups at ABC. But as the reports continue to surface, senior executives have all retreated behind "no comments."
There is enough comment on the record, and plenty of behind-the-scenes chatter, to suggest that ABC is concerned that the expensive gamble of hiring Walters, 44, hasn't worked out and that the format of the show may have to be altered.
ABC officials are unhappy that the dirty corporate linen is being washed in public.
ABC's hope that the wooing of Walters away from NBC's "Today" show would
significantly improve the ratings of its evening news program haven't been realized. The ratings have gone up only a point or so, with ABC currently holding down 19 rating points to NBC's 28 and CBS's 30. ABC executives say the show has made inroads in metropolitan areas and with youthful viewers.
Another problem: intentions to expand the show to a ground-breaking 45 minutes were frustrated by reluctant affiliate stations.
"That didn't leave us much room to ac-
commode the massive eagos of Harry and Barbara," said one production assistant. He said field reporters found they were getting lost in the maze of the new format, much less money - in the new format.
The initial hostility of the veteran Reasoner to his superstar co-anchor subsided but only to "a simmering smoulder," according to insiders.
Walters hasn't been available for comment but is known to be vigorously defending her position on the show. She is currently in Teheran interviewing the Shah
Conservative spokesmen announce shadow cabinet
WASHINGTON (AP)—Leaders of the conservative movement announced a "shadow cabinet" yesterday to keep an eye on President Carter and his policies. The counterpart secretary of state, New Hampshire Gov Meldrum Thomas, said he planned to travel to Panama to express concern about the Panama Canal talks.
The conservative 'shadow cabinet' includes a counterpart to each member of the group. Ron Paul, secretary for the group is Ron Paul, a former Republican congressman from Texas, who introduced himself by saying he had included the fact that he was an obstetrician.
The group's organizers say the shadow cabinet idea was based on the British government's policy of organizing such a cabinet with counterparts of each of the individual official cabinet members. The opposition cabinet members advocate that government's policies and prepare alternatives.
Thomson, a Republican, said he intended to lead a delegation to Panama, which is seeking greater control over the Panama
of Iran for another of her special programs. Reasoner also is publicly silent but has told friends he wonders whether he will survive the hassle.
Canal. U.S. and Panamanian diplomats are negotiating the canal's future.
William Rusher, publisher of the National Review, a conservative magazine, was elected chairman of the conservative group that will serve as the shadow attorney general.
The project may upstage plans for the Republican party to organize itself into a shadow government now that it is out of control. A committee from Garford Ford as he left the White House.
"Practically speaking, the difficulty of the Republican party picking a shadow cabinet is there is nobody in authority in the Republican party who can specify who the particular members would be," Rusher said.
Rusher, a Republican who has been a leading advocate of a new conservative party, brushed aside the GOP plans as "politically impossible."
The various elements within the GOP, Rusher said, would battle over each appointment without an incumbent President. The Republican-led Senate was more in agreement.
OFF THE WALL HALL 727 New Hampshire
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The 1977 Senior Class is offering a $500 scholarship for seniors interested in University of Kansas graduate program.
Qualifications: Scholastic achievement Community and University services Not financial need
DEADLINE: March 30
SENIORS Scholarship Applications
for Graduate Study at the University of Kansas
Strong Hall
Applications available in Student Affairs Office Strong Hall
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
There was one member of this Board — call him Brother Jones — in whom all the people in the Church and community had great confidence on account of his character, integrity, sincerity and faithfulness of his church vows and all causes of his life. That is why he is neither Mr. Smith's experience of hearing the "leaves ratite" was ground enough for accepting him.
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
The Church Official Board has just come to order. The Moderator stated that Mr. Smith was present and wished to make application for baptism and membership. "Mr. Smith will you please give us a statement and testimony of your spiritual experience leading you to make this request." Mr. Smith spoke loudly, and I listened with interest. I live my home is several hundred yards of the main road, and is connected by a lane that has a heavy growth of trees on both sides. Recently walking home late at night, suddenly I heard the leaves rattle in a tree above me — the head was calm and no wind was stirring. It frightened me I stopped a moment, and they rattled again; it was like a fire alarm. I walked in and in the house as quickly as possible. The more I think of this experience the more I am convinced that it was a warning for me to 'Get right with God!'
Brother Jones got up and made a talk about as follows — we will not try to quote him. Two things he had in mind, First, impress his hearers that The Bible revealed there are great, powerful, even terrible "UNSEEN POWERS" both good and evil unseen powers all of us. Second, take to heart things to do in order to show the GOOD and the BAD POWERS and be blessed with a true and right experience of "hearing the leeches rattle." The angel of The Lord encampment round them who learn
The Moderator then asked the Board if they thought this experience entitled the man to be accepted for baptism and was allowed.
One brother got up quickly and said: "I move we take him in. It appears to me that we got a lot of members in this Church, in this Deacon Board, and may the preacher himself, 'WHO AIN't NEVER HEARD THE LEAVES RAT.'"
Him, and delivereth them" — Psalm 34:7. The Bible also tells us of "evil angels!"
Brother Jones then related to them the experience of King David just after he had been ankinged King over all Israel. The Philistines made war on him. There is no telling how many times David had already whipped them in battle—including the giant Galloway—yet it seems that he fight to unit them up and go up; he fets a compass behind them, and come upon them over against the muberry trees, and let it be, WHEN THEU HEAREST THE SOUND OF A GOING IN THE TOPS OF THE MULBERRY TREES, THAT THEM THOU SHAFT BESTHE THEM THE TREE, THOU THEM THE TREE, TO SMITE THE HOST OF THE PHILISTINES! After "hearing the leaves rattle" David won a great victory! 2nd Samuel 5:23, etc.
The King of Syria made war against the King of Israel. The King of Syria thought he had a traitor in his camp that told the King of Israel his strategy. However, one of his soldiers told him it was that Prophet over in Israel who could tell what words he spent in his own headquarters. The Syrian King went and surrounded the Persians. His servant saw the army that surrounded them he was greatly frightened, but Elshaaï said to him: "Fear not for that they be with us are more than they that be with them." Doubless for a moment the servant thought his master had gone cray, but Elshaaï prayed to the Lord to open the eyes of his servant so he could see:"And the Lord opened the eyes of her servant." And the Lord opened the eyes of all horses and charms of fire round about Elshaaï." — 2nd Kings 6:8-23) it appears there was plenty of cause for the "leaves to rattle" in this instance.
Consider what Moses saw at the Burning Bush, the leaves alire but not consumed? Consider how the "unseen power" struck down the Apotheke Paul on the road to Damascus, and how he got up and went about to "tum the world up-side-down" I think they tell us that the enemy had a special knowledge or less, who make some claim of being Christian in this great land. It is to be feared that most of us have never heard "the leaves rattle." Go to reading your Bible and let nothing hinder you!
P. O, BOX 405, DECATUR, GA, 30031
Friday, February 25,1977
University Dally Kansan
3
Strong winds blow in problems
The spring winds blowing across Kanaas can be frightening and can cause a variety of problems.
Besides scattering papers from unwary grips and causing hats to fly into the distance, it caused one unidentified KU student to be trapped briefly in Blake Hall this week—forced by the merciless wind to wait until a helpful stranger opened a door.
KANU radio up for award
The five-feet-tall, 55-pound student was shaken by the event.
KANU-FM, broadcasting from the University of Kansas, is one of 10 United States radio stations selected to compete for the Best Station Award sponsored by Broadcast Management and Engineering magazine.
KANU is the only public broadcasting station selected to compete for the award.
"The concept of KANU is to provide an alternative to other commercial stations," John P. Easley, station development director, said recently.
"KANU is different from rock or country stations in Topeka or other areas because of the variety of programs we offer," he said. KANU plays a variety of music, including rock, bluesgrass and classical, in addition to news press, sports and talk programs.
The KANU staff renovated a building constructed during World War II that was made of bricks from Wakaraus River Valley soil and cinders, Brad Dick, KANU director of engineering, said, which earned it the nickname "mud hut."
KANU's engineering department describes the equipment required to reach the station's equipment, Dick said.
It is funded by the University, the Public
Assisting Corporation and Friends of
KANL.
In 1973 KANU won the George Foster Peabody award for its program, "The American Past," whose host is Calder Pickett, Stellter professor of journalism. It won the major Armstrong Award for excellence in music in 1971 and 1974.
Final selection of the winners for the Best Station award, to be made by readers of Broadcast Management and Engineering issue, will be announced in its March issue.
On Campus
Events
TODAY: "EDUCATING THE HAND-DICAPPED from Minority Groups" is a conference from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Room Forum of the Kansas Union. ENHANCED Disorganization will meet at 3:30 in the Union's Hawk's Nest. VICTOR CONSTOKS, poet, will give a reading at 4 in the Union's Council Room.
TONIGHT: VISITING PIANIST STEPHEN ZANK will perform works of Bach, Beethoven and Liszt at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
TOMORROW: BACH ARIA MASTER
Sawborough to 6 p.m. in
Swarbout Reccital Hall
SUNDAY: ROBERT LOWERY, clarinet guest artist, will play with the KU Symphonic band at 3:30 p.m. in the University theatre, and at 4:15 p.m. in the university will give a recital at 3:30 p.m. at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
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"I was so embarrassed," she said. "I seemed like all half an hour. I can't imagine the feeling."
BEGINNING MONDAY, the yearly ritual of blowing hair and dust greeted drivers and pedestrians. But strong winds are common this season. To Joe Eagleman, professor of geology
The wind is caused by exasperate called the middle latitude cyclonic effect, brought about by areas of how atmospheric pressure passing eastward across the United States. Less intense cyclonics bring rain and moist weather. More intense cyclones bring more extreme currents in the upper atmosphere—bring strong winds to low pressure areas.
ESTIMATING THE wind speed this week at 25 to 30 miles an hour, Eaglemann said there would be a one-week return period—because the weather would ablate for a week and then return.
Heavy winds in 1973 reached an estimated
10 miles an hour and left Lawrence
heavily
Because they are easily damaged by strong winds, the flags on top of Fraser Hall have been absent from their posts this week. The flags cost $100 each, according to the weather department's tenance. "When they start popping, that's when the edges start fraying." Wiley said.
THE FLUTTERING and the popping in the only indications Wiley has to take the flags down. A maximum wind velocity was chosen at one time, above which the flags were taken down, Wiley said, but he didn't know what it was.
Wiley said that a woman tried to raise the flags Monday, but that she was nearly yanked off the wheel. Wiley estimated her weight at 115 to 120 pounds. When a flag is
raised the leverage created can be so great that it often takes two people to raise one
Every time the flags flutter, some damage is done to the edge opposite the pole, Wiley said. The building maintenance department repairs them until they're impossibly shredded at which point new ones are bought.
From a trailer parked at Falley's Discount Foods, 2525 Iowa St., Lawrence station radio KT-NFN is providing the L leukemia Society of America Radiothon.
Radiothon to raise research money
The radiothon began at 2 p.m. Wednesday and will continue through 6 p.m. Sunday. It is being held to raise money for leukemia research.
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Volunteers will take pledges throughout the radiothon. KU fraternities and sororites are canvassing the city, and those who volunteer will be asked to pledge by calling 841-7007. Those who want
to volunteer to collect pledges should stop at the trailer.
The local radioth办 coordinator is Mary E. Windholz.
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Friday. February 25,1977
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
'Cats token champs
So the Kansas State Wildcats won the Big Eight Basketball Championship. Big deal. So what?
This is the year of the Big Eight Post-Season Tournament, and the Big Eight Championship is no longer worth that much. The Wildcats get a nice trophy, of course, and a nice seeding in the post-season tournament, but they aren't playing in the NCAA tournament. That honor belongs to the winner of the Big Eight Post-Season Tournament.
FOR THIS year's KU fans, the tournament is a lucky break. Without it, this year's season will be an uneventful one. With it, the Jayhawks still have a chance to go into the NCAA tournament.
But the fact that the new tournament has worked to KU's advantage doesn't change anything.
The post-season tournament was created for one main reason—money. It extends the season and gives the various money-stayed teams a chance to qualify. The chance to grab those needed ticket receipts.
Of course the fact that KU and K-State (and, more recently, Missouri) have a tendency to win the Big Eight Championship year after year had to have some effect on the vote of the other big school. It has moved the current tournament was approved by a 6-2 vote. There isn't really any need to specify which two schools were opposed.
SOME BIG Eight officials have said that the tournament didn't really rob the conference champion of its play-off berth, but merely increases the Big Eight's chances at placing two teams in the NCAA. A conference champion which lost the tournament, they say, would have a very good chance at an at-large berth in the tournament.
This is wishful thinking to the least. The Big Eight is a great football conference, but the same cannot be said for basketball. The Big Eight would receive an at-large berth only after the SEC, ACC and Big Ten had been placed. And may not even then.
Other defenders of the tournament say it is good because it increases fan interest in late season games that would otherwise be meaningless, as teams battle for the home court advantage and a higher seed. This is probably true, but it also decreases interest in early season games and renders the old "must-win" situation extinct.
IT ALSO turns the Big Eight Pre-Season Tournament into a joke. KU may well play K-State four times this season. This is good enough, it takes the shine of a traditional rivalry.
For years now, the Atlantic Coast Conference has had a post-season tournament. It has probably brought in lots of money and created lots of fan interest. It has also caused many ACC champions to spend the play-off season at home while less-talented (but hot at the right time) ACC teams lost in the NCAA restalions.
The Big Eight Post-Season Tournament is mistake. Having both it and the Pre-Season Tournament are a bad idea.
Maybe the Jayhawks will get it all together and sweep the tournament. If they do, their fans will cheer and the wheat will wave and the 'Hawks will go to the NCAA.
But we really shouldn't be there.
Affirmative action goes on trial
The Supreme Court this week quietly agreed to hear a school discrimination case that promises to be less tacitish as it addresses issues and even more important to colleges and universities.
Like the busing cases the court has heard, the latest case concerns a struggle between blacks and whites. It involves an attempt to increase minority representation in previously white-dominated institutions, as did the busing cases.
THERE'S AN interesting twist to the new case, however: the person who said he has been asked against is white, not black.
He is Allan Bakke, a 36-year-old white civil engineer who is suing the regents of the school for not complying with Davis Medical School. He says that he would have been admitted to the school in 1973 or 1974 and had not followed a special admissions policy for 16 minority students.
Bakke claims, in short, that it is a classic case of reverse discrimination. In taking his case this far he is bringing to the fore something that has been grumbled frequently in
Affirmative action policies are designed to eliminate all discrimination, for whatever reason, in institutions that
Jerry Seib
Editorial Writer
anyone in a way that is not discriminatory.
recent years; that our attempts to stop discrimination against "minorities" have gone so far that they have produced new cases of discrimination against those in the "majority."
ON TRIAL before the Supreme Court are the affirmative action policies that have become the Ten Compromise educational institutions, including the University of Kansas. Affirmative action policies are thick documents that can be read in university or business can hire, fire, admit, diamise or deal with
receive federal money. They have, however, come to be associated with the movements of blacks and women.
The Supreme Court should bear the latter argument with a healthy skepticism. Discrimination isn't always discrimination, especially if one is trying to cut through years of social and educational inequities.
When the Supreme Court hears Bakke's case, a clear definition of the powers of affirmative action should emerge. Civil rights leaders see the case as a call for more commitment to helping minorities achieve social and economic equality. Others oppose affirmative action policies, saying that discrimination is discrimination no matter who
ON THE face of it, admission to a medical school is a clear cut matter. The people with the highest grades and highest admission test scores get in. The answer is that you don't ask a question of black and white; a lot of gray area to be considered.
Admissions tests are drawn up by members of the white majority, who instill their white identity in thinking into every question on the test. The same is true, to a lesser degree, of nearly every class and every test a student completes a grade point average.
The black from Harlem or the Chicago from rural Texas is at an inherent disadvantage when facing either situation. His test
scores and grades have to be taken with a grain of salt.
LIKEWISE, the Suprem-
Court will have to decide
whether the needs of society
will outweigh pure objectivity.
When two candidates are
approximately equal
in qualifications, does the ad-
vantage go to the minority
candidate because minorities
underrepresented in the
profession? Should schools
go so far as to give less qualified
candidates a chance at the
expense of their white counterparts?
They are emotional questions all. In voting to hear the case, the Supreme Court was grimly no clue to the way it is leaning.
Given the personality of today's Court, it seems that anyone who reverses a challenge inamination has chance of winning his case. But the Court should remember one thing before making its own decision to start making up for centuries of discrimination some time.
Letters
Officials hurt basketball team
To the editor:
National championship,
nowwinning season, excellent
job. Big Eight champions, All-
Americans, strong team,
laughed off the court, good
years, Gong Owens, 56 per cent,
post-season winners of victories.
These phrases were used in the two
letters to the editor in the Feb.
2 Kansan. One attempted to
explain the decline of KU basketball, and the other praised the record of Coach Jordan. Proverbial window. We don't need cheap explanations and scapegoats because we all know the real reason KU basketball is big. That's days of old-Big Eight officials.
Before you jump to conclusions and decide I don't know
FETCH SOME WATER,
BOY! THIS TOUR OF
ANCIENT EGYPT SEEMS
TO HAVE BEEN TOO MUCH
FOR MR. VANCE!
© 1977 NYT Special Features.
Alger Hiss, who worked in the State Department for 10 years and was convicted of two counts of perjury on Jan. 21, 1950, will be the guest of the University of Kansas next Tuesday.
Nixon and Hiss cases compared
Hss probably will enjoy his visit to the University, and students probably will benefit from his appearance here. Who might speak more knowledgeably about the McCarthy Era than he.
SAMENHWWW
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August 10th, 2014. Subscriptions are $5 per month and June and July are except Saturday. Sunday and Halloween. Subscriptions by mail are $8 a semester or $18 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county.
Associate Campus Editor
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Copy Chief
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Managing Editor
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Stewart, Bram
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Business Manager
News Advisor Publisher Business Advisor Bob Giles David Dary Mel Adams
STILL, SOMETHING bothers me about supporting a person like Hius by paying 50 cents to buy him a ticket to the gym from gsUA. I plan to hear
HSS HAS never admitted to any of the charges that were made against him, and he will speak to the judge he speaks here. Now, however,
B. R. H.
The activities in question took place around 1937, but didn't come to light until then-Rep. Hiss was being a traitor and cranium spymp in 1948. Because the statute of limitations on any treason or espionage charges had run out seven years earlier, Hiss was told about his involvement in the case to a New York grand jury.
Although oversimplification might be unfair, it should be noted that Hiss was accused of passing secret documents to Whittaker Chambers, a former magazine editor, for transmission to a Communist spy ring.
him speak, so I guess the 50-cent admission fee is worth my seeing him.
Brent Anderson Editorial Writer
It is doubtful that anyone will be too upset by the Hiss visit. What happened to him nearly 40 years ago is of interest to many of us, especially those who think the United States Communist witch hunt conducted by Nixon and Sen. Joseph McCarthy.
Nixon's demise, because it
We may never know for sure whether Hiss really was a Communist and spit—a traitor to the United States. Time has healed some of the wounds caused by the Red Scare of the 1960s, but it has been shown that innocent people were hurt because of it.
he can speak knowing that the man most responsible for his conviction is despised throughout the country.
I DON'T mean to imply that the crimes Nixon and Hiss committed, if any, are similar. Any relationship between their demises is, at most, ironic. But what if Nixon were to be the guest of the University of Kansas March 17?
was recent and closely followed,
is familiar to most of us. What
we know about Hiss is based on
more limited information, so
possibly we are less quick to
praise him or curse him.
It wouldn't take long for the uproar to start, and it probably would end only after the former president left the campus or it was announced he had decided not to come at all.
I wonder if, in 20 years, the students of KU would react to a visit by Nixon the way we react to the visit by Hiss. A far-fetched comparison, granted. But there is a similarity between the public led by the public in their days of fame. History indicates, I think, that Hiss was hated in much the same way Nixon is today.
what I'm talking about, consider the following facts. KU is averaging 16 turnovers and 23 fouls per game. No matter what team they play, no matter what position they play, and the turnovers continue. Neither Owens nor the players should feel responsible, though, because they have no control over what happens on the court. The rets have decided that KU should make their basketball games, and they are making sure their decision sticks.
No example could point this out better than the KU-K-State game here Feb. 12. KU was in excellent position to come away with a victory when the officials decided to let K-State win. John Overby, an official at the game, awarded the ball to K-State after it fell. K-State then be a jump ball. Had there been a jump, KU might have won, but the officials couldn't let that happen.
I think having Hiss as a SUA
Forums speaker is a good idea,
and I'm looking forward to
seeing him. Do you think they
could get 50 cents a head to hear
Nixon speak?
Has anyone thought why the officials at the KU-MU game here Jan. 8 ejected Donnie Von Moore instead of Hoble Nobles? It was because Herb was having a terrible day shooting (6-21 in seven). Donnie could have helped hold MU's center, Kim Anderson, in check. The officials' strategy would have worked, too, had not John Douglas made everything he threw up on the stretch. I guess even the officials are enticed to a bad game every
So, all you foul-mouthed, quick-tempered fans who think you know all the answers had to admit that it is much simpler than you think. And the next time you see a Big Eight official on the street, stop and ask him how KU's team was going. I'm sure he knows.
John Herbert Lawrence Junior
Gym court misused To the editor:
Five of us went down to Robinson Gym last week during open hours with the intent to play a game of basketball. Upon arrival, we noticed that there were 20 persons on one court, and we needed to play on the other court were only 10 students, with no one waiting to play. We courteously asked these 10 students if we could split the court with them and play half court as the other students were doing. Our team was full of confidence and profanity, and we were told by one of the 10 students that they were "athletes getting into shape" and that "at athletes make K.U. go." Furthermore, we were told by one member of the group that basketball is a man's game and not for inimitable players; students failed to yield the court, we went to the management.
Before he even walked on the court, the manager told us that he'd had trouble with this group last week, and that he was too tired to play. "So you didn't have him," he didn't have the backing of the campus police. Upon entering the court, he stopped, told us that these students had every reason not to attend after we pointed out the discrepancy in numbers and that we had been told that these players had been there all morning; so he told us to go to the already-backed court.
We feel this is not fair because
Robinson facilities are supposedly for all students. For 10 persons to bully 35 isn't right, and if the management won't do anything about the problem, they will point that will see that these facilities are run correctly. Finally, if these "athletes" are being put through school with part of other K.U. students' sportsmanship, they will K.U. and should exemplify the spirit of fair play and good sportsmanship. These "athletes" did not.
(Names withheld by request.)
A question of pride To the editor:
Courtney Thompson obviously does not have the sense of pride in Kansas University basketball that the Gong Owens supporters have. She lauded Owens numerous times in her article (Kansan, Feb. 23) for producing seven Winning seasons in Iowa and having "winning" seasons is not what has given KU the reputation for outstanding basketball, nor has it made KU the second winning team in college basketball.
Miss Thompson points out that KU has been playing rughester competition, as some sort of rationalization for our team's playoff berth. In nonconference action, the Jayhawks should be playing, and remaining competitive with, the best team in the country nationally recognized teams since 1971 has shown that we are not competing with them any longer! And our cumulative conference record of 74-61 (55 per cent) against Big Eight球队 makes it more likely to make any longstanding Jayhawker follow crime!
She also writes that 25 Gong Owens shirtwearers "hardly represent a significant groundwell of opposition." I feel that the decrease in attendance indicates that more than 25 people are unhappy with their game, and no one can go to any KU game and expect to see a sellout crowd of 18,000 fans; in fact, only one of KU's 13 home games was sold out this year.
Lastly Miss Thompson mentions that our "recruiting reputation also is a concern." In the past few years, KU's recruiting program has trained high school All-Americans to play in Allen Field House for the crimson and the blue. However, several times this talent never blossomed as expected. Perhaps it was that the players able to excel on a college level, but the recurrence of such a phenomenon so many times in so few years might cause one to wonder whether the staff actually restricted this talent. Recent examples include students who tend to mind are Aubrey Nash, Marshall Rogers, Leonard Gray, Nino Samuel, and most recently Andre Wakefield. In fact, Rogers went to Pan American University last year, and Gray went to Long Beach State and is now playing pro ball.
KU "k basketball is GOING downhill! I have a feeling that the silent majority on our side, not just not "a grumbling few."
Editorial corrected To the editor:
Jeff Nelson Salina Senior
I
The Kansan editorial (Feb. 21) on the Middle East was remarkably well-balanced. However, several crucial facts were omitted and an outright error made.
Israel refuses to recognize and thus negotiates directly the issue of an organization recognizes the existence of Israel. The editorial failed to mention that the Palestinian Council's 10-point program and national policy are due to the destruction of Israel.
The editorial also failed to mention that both sides of the dispute, and Cyrus Vance, are waiting until after national elections in Israel in May to start any serious bargaining.
Also, Egypt, like Israel, desires peace, or at least a nonwar state at this time. Israel should be roughly 10 times that of Israel, but about the same GNP, spends about the same amount (upwards of 40 per cent) as on military expenditures. The food rations in Cairo last for a series of financial difficulties which have plagued Egypt for years. Additional domestic economic problems could undermine the current government as much as an unpopular policy decision taken by Sadat.
Finally, the editorial incorrectly stated that Israel refuses to give up the West Bank and portions of the Golan Heights for security reasons, and the old city of Jerusalem. But the planned Palestinian minimum bank, not in outer Mongolia,
Diane Wolkow
Prairie Village senior
Tanman wait rude
To the editor:
Jay Bermis in his or her (I can't tell from the photo) comments regarding John Jay, who has relied both insensitivity and ignorance. The fact that the editors would print such a childish piece confirms the Kansan's reputation as a narrow-minded organ of anti-Semitism, importantly support. Bernis should wonder who would wait one second to catch a look at any Kansan staff member's shadow or no shadow. To lay in Mr. Snider is as clearly rude as anything I've seen this spring.
W. Propst Box 591 Lawrence
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 not be signed; KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
Friday, February 25.1977
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Staff Reporter
By JOE RADCLIFFE
LA&S courses being phased out
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in phasing out nearly all the courses in the University, because of low enrollment, Jerry Lewis, a lawyer, and director of the LAAS, said yesterday.
Most L&A&S classes are "topics and
most IA&S" courses, whose topics range
from basic algebra to complex calculus.
Student interest in the courses has fallen the past two years. Lewis said, he has not hung on. "It's a huge problem."
Panel approves marijuana bill
TOPEKA—A House committee's decision to amend a marijuana decriminalization bill was "one of those things that had to happen" to get the bill through committee, the bill's sponsor, State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said yesterday.
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee, by a 15-3 vote, approved Wednesday a proposal to reduce penalties for possession of less than one ounce of marijuana. The original bill had set the limit at two ounces.
Glover's bill, as amended, would reduce penalties for possession of less than one ounce of marijuana to a $106 fine. However, a second amendment would make a third conviction a class A misdemeanor, by up to $2,500 and one year in prison.
The amendments, except for the one classifying a third conviction as a class A misdemeanor, were suggested by William Abbott, director of the KBI, at a Feb. 15 committee hearing. Abbott said he would support the bill if it was amended.
Glover's original bill specified that gifts of marijuana couldn't be punishable as sales, but the committee decided not to legalize gifts.
Glover said the bill would be considered on the House floor sometime next week.
Lewis said that the LA&R program still would include honors and independent study
the fall. Twenty-one "topics and problems"
courses are taught this semester.
THE "TOPICS and problems" courses first were offered in 1968, Lewis said, and reached a peak total enrollment of 1,500 in 1972. Now the enrollment is about 300.
The courses usually are taught by graduate students under the supervision of
their instructors.
Because each course is approved by the College for only one semester, Lewis said,
"We didn't hire people or make a commitment for more than one semester," he said. "We wanted to do it in two."
Lewis said several programs in the College, such as African studies and women's studies, began as "topics and problems" courses.
HE ALSO SAID a new major in Women's studies might be offered in the fall.
A proposal for the new major, endorsed by the University Educational Policies and Procedures Committee (EPPC), was approved by the College Assembly at its December meeting, but it won't become official until it is approved by the Council of
"MY IMPRESSION is that the proposal will probably be approve eventually."
Robert Fried, professor of physics and astronomy and chairman of the EPPC, said the proposal had a good chance of getting passed by the COCAO and the Regents.
ATLANTA (UPI) — Police said today they
were investigating a stowaway in the
notorious downtown lowe stomper.
Foot stomper caught in act
Mitchell, 28, was arrested Thursday when he allegedly tried to stomp on a woman's
Chief Academic Officers (COCAO) and the Kansas Board of Reins.
In the past several days, several women have reported having their feet bruised by a ladder. Two of them were on platform shoes into their feet, then fled. One woman required treatment at a
One woman required treatment at a hospital, police said.
The EPPC tended to judge a proposal by the academic merits of the program it proposes, Friufu said, but the COCAO concentrates on budget and resource problems that could arise if the proposal was passed.
He said he didn't know of any big budget problems that the COCAO or the Regents might find in the proposal, but said the research will look into the program's budget in great detail.
Mitchell was charged with a dozen counts of battery.
Accent the ARTS
The School of Fine Arts presents
Sunday, Feb. 27
8:00 Back Aria Group. Chamber Music Series.
University Theatre. 15.00 tickets at Murphy law office
3.30 Symphonic Boud, Robert Foster,
conductor, Robert Lewyn, elmerine, guest artist playing music
written for him by Ferde Grobe, David Bennett and Harry
Simmone. The band will play selection by Schumann, Giordana
and Schmitt. University Theatre, no admission charge.
Did Louise Get Another Rash?**
Did The Harbor Lights Burn Out?**
Did Ichabod Hike Back To Washburn?
Did You Get Trampled In A Cattle Chute?
Did The Wheel Lose It's Bearing?**
Did The JayHawk Lay An Egg?
Did Quantrill Make His Last Stand?
WHAT'S YOUR PROBLEM?
"We were pleased to endorse it," Prinfun said. "It looked like a good program."
University Daily Kansan
Forget Them
Pitchers $1000
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Mixed Bouquet $3.50.
1/2 dozen roses and
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Drug charges faced by three
Three persons arrested Wednesday night on charges of trying to sell illegal drugs to undercover police officer were arraigned in Douglas County Court yesterday.
The three, who still are being held in Douglas County Jail on $2,500 bond each, are to appear at preliminary hearings March 4. police said,
Peggy Case, 23, Robert Worden, 21, and John Elledge, 28, were arrested after allegedly trying to sell a half pound of Methylene Dioxypyramine (MDA) to undercover policemen, police said. The half pound of MDA had a street value of 80,000.
Members of the Lawrence Police Department, Douglas County Sheriff's department and KBI agents participated in the arrest, made a few blocks east of campus on 14th Street, Rex Johnson, Douglas County sheriff, said.
Rock Chalk Revue
TONIGHT Hoch 8:00
Accent the ARTS
Today's Events
10:00-4:00
Student Print and Drawing Sale
Lobby, Union
12:00 Linda Shenkel, soprano
Joe Hutte, violin
David Spence, piano
4:00 Victor Cantoski, poet
Porter A. Union
8:00 Stephan Zank, piano. Visting Artists Swarthout Recital Hall. Murphy Hall
8:00 Loot University Theatre, Murphy
8. 00 Rock Chalk Revue, Hock Auditorium
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Coupon expires March 20, 1977 - So hurry!
Announcing the Incorporation of ENTROPY
The Society for Creative Disorganization,
a society to promote and interaction among persons from all disciplines who have an interest in science: its development, its methodologies, its content, its applications. Employers who are interested in technologists, undergraduate or graduate, are invited to attend an organizational party/meeting on Friday, February 25 at 3:10 P.M. in the Hawk's of the Kansas Union. This society will select representatives to the KC School of Engineering for further information, contact Joe D. Nanzand or Berney Wernicke at 844-3011.
Paid for from the Student Activities Fee
Riggs
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Open till 11 p.m.
Retail Liquor
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TROPHY
NAVY NUCLEAR PROPULSION. THE FASTEST WAY UP IN NUCLEAR ENGINEERING.
If you want to get into nuclear engineering, start by getting into the Nuclear Navy.
The Navy operates more than half the reactors in America. So our nuclear training is the most comprehensive you can get. You start by earning your commission as a Navy Officer. Then we give you a year of advanced nuclear technology, training that was
cost you thousands if you could get it in graduate school. During your career, you'll get practical hands-on experience with our nuclear powered fleet. Maybe you'll work on a nuclear submarine, maybe a nuclear cruiser. But wherever you work, you'll really get to prove your worth—as a young Nuclear Propulsion Officer entrusted with the most advanced
technical equipment known to man.
If that sounds like the kind of responsibility you're looking for, speak to your Navy recruiter. He can tell you if you qualify as a Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate. Or call toll free 800-841-8000. (In Georgia, 800-342-5855.)
Navy Nuclear Propulsion Officer. Some men wait for the future. He lives it now.
NAVY OFFICER. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB,IT'S AN ADVENTURE.
a
Friday. February 25, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Jazz BR
Staff drawing by DAVID MILLER
A heart, besides 2 ears essential to jazz listening
Bv TIM BRADLEY
Reviewer
Writing about music is quite the trick, because music is at once personal and universal, technical and emotional. Experiences of this kind dispassure fans. Who's really to say what's right, what's good?
Jazz, from its inception, has been a music of change and of resistance to change. Every artist has had a style that old fans hate and new fans love. Musicians, critics, and audiences carry on and on about the merits of this versus that music. It was strong, the daddy of them all, hated bop and made no secret of it. Buddy Rich and Stan Kenton each had some ill-considered use of the song music that alienated many country fans from jazz. Duke Ellington used to do two
so many scaled-monkey shrieks; to the electric "sophistikun" fan, anything recorded before 1960 is music for squint-minded antiquarians. Brubeck babies don't like it and play on the board, in and all these fans are running around oblivious to each other, like Pontiac passing in the night.
So-called jazz experts have their images to maintain. Some prove their hipness by demonstrating how far "outside" their musical tolerance can be, especially missing the beauty of some very "inside" music. Others must prove their expertise by knowing dates, labels, who wrote, and what they drove the bass etc., on every jazz side ever recorded. Yet these same experts know not a
And hey, who's to say where jazz came from? Experts are sure it had African rhythmic origins, but there was room in the mix for Creole, Caribbean and South American input, because after all, New Orleans is a city in Chicago, St. Louis and New York.
THE DEAL IS that all the chatter about relative quality of music from certain time periods or certain musicians is just flapdooole and energy on the same bone, and the very music that divides us is the music that unites us.
John Coltrane was a great admirer of Sidney Beetle, even though his musical carnises
Grammy land. the musicians, of all sorts, still need our support, though. And not just for the band or their styles or style, but for jazz itself.
I'M NOT suggesting that we put the clutch in on their discretionary engines. Sure, there are those players who have learned to success formula, neither expounding nor expanding on it. There are times when it seems the only music is the ring of the cash register, out of time, as they did in 1964. Johann Philip Kirpnerger wrote a book called "Methode Sonaten aus'm Ermel zu schudeln", which lazily translated means "Tossing Off Smites." With it, mercenary music mongers can steal from the masters.
Arts & Leisure
Good music must have the
TO BIG BAND BUFFS,
avant-garde music sounds like
arrangements of the same tune;
one for black audiences, one for white.
And Miles Davis hates everybody.
Iazz will survive rock influence
LEROI JONES would have us believe that jazz is an exclusively black territory and others describe it as an essentially American experience.
were galaxies apart. John Williams, the brilliant classical guitarist, admits to owning a Les Paul electric. In the studies, jazzzers are rubbing shoulders with non-jazzers working on TV themes, movie soundtracks and commercials.
By STEVE FRAZIER
Reviewer
For about 25 years after the bop revolution of the '40s, jazz seemed to have its mind made up.
True, new styles - cool, third Stream, hard bop, funk, and avant-garde - sweat in and out as styles had before, but jazz music has been the primary music. During the decades that preceded bop, musicians usually sought to appeal to listeners' feet, but as jazz musicians fled the constraints of swing music, the 80s, jazz music to be music to be enjoyed only by those who would be still and concentrate.
Record companies are springing for reissue series, so we now have a good opportunity to discover again or for the first time the art of the progenitors, the makers of the call jazz. Our music has made it into big clubs, the mass media, concert halls, even into
bean about the emotional content of their specimens.
Rock moved in to meet the demand for popular dance music, and jazz musicians found satisfaction in meeting their personal demands for creative freedom.
A lot of great jazz, though, is coming from Europe, Norway, Sweden, South America, even Japan. The cooperation and partnership between Henderson and Benoog Goodman, Gunther Schuller and Thelonious Monk, and Gil Evans and Miles Davis bespeak
Eventually, jazz found itself ready to enter the 70s. Often brilliant, it was heard in the United States on only a trickle of recordings by a steadily dwindling number of devotees. The result was that their music pronounced dead before, and now many were beginning to take the death knells seriously.
Yet most jazz musicians continued to deliberately avoid any efforts to remake their music into pop music.
THE RECORDED history of jazz from 1945-70 is nothing short of glorious, as shown in the art of Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, John Coltrane and Rollingins, John Coltrane and Ornette Coleman. But cold vinyl can't tell of the musicians' frustrations; records don't influence their fame, famous and respected artists in Europe and "nigger entertainers" in their own land. Nor does the music explain why many once-sensitive artists had their disrestruction, in alcohol or drugs.
ability to transcend and transport, to involve the listener, who need not worry whether it’s from the Drool School or if it’s hip or who wrote it. Duke Ellington said ‘it don’t mean a thing if it isn’t got that swing’; if it isn’t got that swing’ Louis Armstrong pointed out, “If you have to ask, when I can’t tell you.”
Something was bound to give, and it did: Miles Davis' trumpet shattered the walls of convention with a jazz*rock mixture in 1973. Notices in jazz's haunted music popular culture made her dominant force in jazz in the '70s.
Davis, of course, didn't singlehandedly create jazzrock, but "Bitches Brew" proved that the hybrid style could be both artistically and financially successful. And the students who play musicians who have recorded under Davis is astounding: Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, John McLaughlin, Wayne Shorter, Billy Cohamb, Joe Zawalim, Gwendolyn Benson, Ron White, Tara White, William White, Bob Ma朋, Larry Young and Jack delohtone.
AS WITH ANY new style, jazz-rock is played by innovators and imitators. The innovators have shown that rock rhythms can be exciting propellants in their music, and the best jazz-rock can stand on a scale of satisfying and rewarding art.
Unfortunately, the imitators far outnumber the innovators. In the battle for popular appeal, they cater to the lowest common denominator, which is, as the saying goes, both quite low and quite common. To complicate matters, disco invaded pop music, and now the roster of the most successful monotonous rhythm tracks and string machines can only be read as a casualty list.
new jazz style in the '70s. But there has been a furry of activity from all schools of jazz that those who delight in labels must hesitate before calling the '70s the Jazz-Rock Era.
Jazz-rock, for better or worse, has been the most pervasive
EVEN THOSE UPSET with the increase in jazz-rock mercenaries must admit that the new style has drawn many young people and bins for the first time. Understandably unsatisfied with jazz-rock and somewhat acclimated to jazz inflections, they eagerly engage "for only hinted at in most jazz-rock."
THE THOUGHT that Eubie Blake, Count Basie, Dizzy Gillespie and Anthony Braxton might all release newly-recorded material in 1977 is perhaps comparable to Johann Strausky's song "Stravinsky" sitting down together to compare notes.
Interest in the various styles of jazz is made easier by the fact that the history of the music is so readily accessible. The entire development of jazz is crammed into three quarters of a century. Each decade has brought a wave of young talent ready to challenge the older ones and a rhythm that really rapid and drastic style changes that make it possible for musicians from every era to be alive and active today.
Another reason for an increased jazz audience is that jazz education has boomed in the United States, especially in high schools. At last count there are more than 100 school jazz bands, each one giving young musicians their first real exposure to jazz.
Besides "live history" from survivors of other eras, extensive reissue projects by the artists introduced a new audience to classic jazz performances, and the same companies unearth
long-lost tapes that shed new light on jazz history.
Europe, which accepted American jazz long ago, has begun to return the favor. Some of the best jazz in the United States can be heard on the ECM and SteepeCase, played by brilliant European musicians such as Jan Garbarek and Niels Hanning Orsted-Pederson.
There's such a long distance between "that's no good" and "I don't care for that." Let us lay down our labels and listen, first with our ears, then with our hearts.
Big bands, declared economic impossibilities after the '40s, refuse to die. Count Basie, Harry James and Mercer Gould, founded tradition Veterans Woody Herman, Stent Kenton and Maynard Ferguson recruit heavily from college jazz programs and find many of their jobs teaching high school music. They are innovative new bands, such as Toshiko Akiyoshi/akisho Tabackin, Thad Jones/Mel Lewis and Gil Evens, show that big bands can work around the inherent limitations of large spaces with extended solo space and brilliant arrangements.
NEW AMERICAN record labels devoted to jazz appear regularly. They range from Pablo and Horizon, divisions of RCA and A&M records, to small independent labels like Xanada, Chiaroscuro, Improvising East-East and Famous Door.
EVEN AVANT-GARDE,
although not thriving, appears
to be doing better in the '70s,
but not on the record from
the Arista-Freed label.
Jazz in the '70s, impossible to label under any one name, has given cause for hope and fear.
Because the number of money-minded jazz musicians trying to be pop musicians is so much larger than it has been in the past, they are saddened that their approach might swallow the whole of jazz. But
renewed interest in all types of jazz indicates that the art in jazz will survive along with the musicians.
Study of '40s bebop revolution may aid cultural understanding
By CHICO HERBISON
Guest Writer
"when i get to heaven gonna play on my
burn
harp gonna play all over god's heaven but only with the cats who can make the changes
When the black poet Dollar Brand composed these lines more than a decade ago, he could very well have had the black jazz musicians of the 1940s in mind. The social and economic upheavals which marked the post-World War II years were accompanied by a similar revolution in American jazz. Although, in the early 1950s, swing music was big enough to hold the attention of the American jazz audience, a musical coup d'etat—bebop—was in process.
The racially-turbulent 80s have passed but the crisis has not. And, if there is indeed an historical continuity in Afro-American culture, an examination of the history of the African community provides us with clues to an understanding of the seemingly peaceful 70s.
HARLEM NIGHTCLUBS in the early 1940s were the gathering places for a group of young black jazz musicians who had been members of were also saxophonist Charlie Parker, guitarist Charlie Christian, trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, drummer Kenny Clarke, and pianist Thelonius Monk) who began playing jazz with new forms of jazz expression.
experimenters sought to counteract the restrictive nature of large jazz groups.
Although it would be highly inaccurate to conceive of these people as a "circle" of musicians, it would be equally misleading to deny that they were all who occurred among them. All graduates of big bands which prospered during the 1930s, these young
BECAUSE OF the emphasis on ensemble playing in big bands, any other band can be denied. And, due to the primary function of the swing bands—to provide music for dances—even short, though in many instances they are longer. In the position of mere background music
There was, in addition to these aspects of the big band era, a third barrier against which the black bebop musician had been able to overcome theseceptions, jazz historians have been reluctant to deal with the social and racial implications of bebop's "birth." Unfortunately, there is a paucity of references to bebop's roots. keys to the "how" and "why" of bebbop.
THE CLUES WITH which we are provided, however, strongly suggest the racial nature of the reaction against swing music. A small, but growing band was so popular than coincidence that the big band era (with its commercially successful white leaders) led to a period of jazz dominated by black musicians, a period which was, in turn, followed by a preponderance of white musicians in the "colour" school of the 1950s.
Supported by statements of black musicians who were there when “things were cookin’”, the resulting theories have been widely used in style of jazz which the white musicians couldn’t copy (and, therefore, from which whites could not reap any sort of financial rewards”)—in other words, from which whites can win the cats who can make the changes.
musicians of this jazz style. The musical revolution represented by bepop was, at times, an unbelievably fast tempo and rhythmic complexities of bepop prevented many musicians, of all colors, from attempting to play, let alone mastering, the new music.
THEOSE WHO HAVE attempted to attack this view of bebop have yet to recognize the possibilities.
This re-establishment of polyrhythmic devices in jazz and the renewed emphasis on the "blues" (feeling and form) which, among other elements, characterized bebop, suggest the movement of this music away from traditional jazz. Some of the musicians of the black musicians of the 1940s were engaged in a type of cultural renaissance not unlike their counterparts (John Clotrane, Sonny Rolls, Archie Sheph, et al.) in the 1960s. The African-influenced jazz of the last decade was very much a "spiritual" descendant of bebop and their subsequent, Christian, and their follower bands laid the groundwork for the musical aspects of the black revolution.
THE NEED TO examine the social character of the beeb, or any other predominantly black, era of American society, is not easy for racial isolation in jazz. As the black novelist and poet Ishmael Reed has so aptly written, "... the super-race phase of American life—the advocated by African Americans or the whites, men or women, is through."
Jazz, from its very inception, has been a reflection of one of the most sophisticated forms of cultural exchange. Such an exchange cannot occur understanding—racial or otherwise—and heran lies the real revolution.
Herbison is a graduate student in American Studies.
Lawrence, Kansas City music thriving
By BILL UYEKI
Entertainment Editor
It seems local jazz enthusiasts and the local jazz music scene have a reciprocal relationship—one
Recently KJHK-FM, the other campus station, has added jazzer programming five mornings a week. Newer, and only a fraction as powerful as KANU, KJHK nevertheless provides an alternative to the usual blare of local rock stations. Not a bad way to wake up.
There's an abundance of ways to see, hear and enjoy jazz locally, for example:
Radio-In those parts of the country, the jazz programming on KANU-FM has become an institution. There's about 35 hours of jazz weekly; 'Night Is' is a house term with any jazz fan around.
Nightclubs — last night a packed house at Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts St., heard some sizzling City City jazz from the Jay McShannon Band,带领 Claude Williams on violin.
The Seventh Spirit, 6½ by E. 7th. S., a private 21 club in the basement and in the balcony of the Opera House at New York City. $200.00.
Trumpeter Tommy Johnson leads the Tommy Johnson Experiment; the Nairobi Trio is a talented, multi-faceted group of ten trained pianist whose fingers brim with musical ideas, leads a trio; and the River City Jazz Band, when it isn't playing under other names as a country band. He's also a musician, incorporating b cool, jazz-rock styles.
blues shows and hampshire picking sessions, Off the Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St., schedules some fine jazz acts, such as vibest Gary Burton and Oregon, both featured last year.
Groups - Lawrence jazz groups deserve some mention. All are comprised of competent musicians who need support. None are buying Cadillacs with their earnings.
Each summer the Kansas City, Mo., Parks and Recreation Department seems to do a better job of booking outdoor shows, most of them on Brush Creek in the early spring. The staff included the Duke Ellington Orchestra, the Stan
Concerts^2-Friends of Jazz in Kansas City and the Topeka Jazz Workshop, two nonprofit groups, try to schedule about five or six jazz concerts in their cities annually.
Jam sessions—Probably the best bargains for bringing good live jazz in the area are the jazz jam
Kenton Orchestra, the Gary Burton Quartet, Jean Lucy Ponty and Buddy Rich.
Jam sessions were largely responsible for the jazz innovations from the bop revolution. After-hours jam sessions gained major popularity during the heyday of Kansas City jazz in the 20s and '30s, Thomas "Beas" Pendergast lentily allowed clubs to perform at Jam sessions dawn. Later, the scene switched to New York.
Limitless solos and total reliance on sheer musical improvisations were the main characteristics behind jam sessions. The absence of vocal melody, with spontaneity, excitement and energy. Often, as in certain Kansas City jams, the mood among participating musicians was competitive; to see who could play solo the music best was a prerequisite for phrasing.
There's one jam session conducted weekly in Lawrence, at the familiar jazz hotspot, Paul Gray's music studio. Jazz Band leads the club to other musical activities and club grab their instruments to join the band onstage.
The mood is more cooperative than competitive, and though the music only lasts until midnight, most listeners don't seem to mind. The session's popularity is always increasing; the free admission and good music nearly fill the club with listeners every Thursday.
There are more jam sessions in Kansas City than we can fit on this page, but it's worth mentioning a few. It should be noted that all are in Missouri, which simply means listeners must be at least 21 years old and also must be prepared to pay slightly more for drinks than usual.
At the Hotel President, 14th and Baltimore, Roy Searcy leads an exciting jam every Sunday night from 7 to 11. Searcy is a jazzy, blues and boogie-woole style pianist, who's dedicated to keeping the Kansas city sound alive. He performs by himself three nights a week at Papa Nicks, 418 Delaware in the
In the Signboard Bar in Crown Center Hotel, Main and Pershing streets, the John Lyman Quartet jams jams every Monday and Friday afternoons from 4:30 to 7:30. The Ron Roberts Trio joins a jam at Pandora's Box, 214 E.85th, St., from 4 to 7 every Saturday afternoon.
River Quay, but the Hotel President jam session reveals his fine talent for leading a band.
Blues, which donated heavily to the development of jazz, is the music played at the Bagad Lagoon, 3712 Broadway, from 4 to 7 Monday and Saturday afternoons. Colt 45, a tight, house-rocking band, leads the blues jams, which often encompass rock, disco and funk styles.
Most jam sessions involve many "weekend" musicians—players who earn their livings in other fields during the week but let it all loose on weekends. Some are members of a local executive, who played recently at Paul Gray's.
That these musicians don't earn their living with their music doesn't mean they're not competent; it's simply a play of the times. Jazz musicians who make a singing by performing are few these days in Kansas City.
Let's not kid ourselves—the very best moments of Kansas City jazz occurred more than 40 years ago when top artists from the Midwest and Southwest came to play at the downtown clubs and all-night jam festivals. The music is amazing and often exciting how much that era still influences Kansas City jazz in the '70s.
Friday, February 25, 1977
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This Week's Highlights
Theater
"LOOT," last performance at 8 tonight,
University Theatre.
ROCK CHALK REVU, 8 tonight and Saturday, Hoch Audiolium.
Concerts
GORDAN MACRAE with the Kansas City
Philharmonic & p. m. satue. Music Hall
Museum.
SYMPHONIC BAND with guest artist
Lawry, 3:30 p.m. Sunday,
University
BACH ARIA GROUP, a New York City group as part of the Chamber Music Series.
Recitals
INFORMAL RECITALS by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts at noon every weekday through March 4, Strong Hall jobbay.
STEPHEN ZANK, piano. Visiting Artist
SEQUEIRA COSTA, professor of per-
fessor SEQUEIRA COSTA, professor of per-
fessor
SEQUENCE COSTA, professor or performance, 8honight. Battelt Auditorium.
University of Kansas Medical Center,
Kansas City, Kan.
CARLA L EWDARNES, organ. Senior
soccer coach 50 p.m. in Sherman
York Region 929 Yeramton Ave.
Nightclubs
The JOE UTEERBACK TRIO, 9 to midnight tonight. Paul Gray's Jaz Place. Jazz music CLAUDE WILLIAMS and Mike WHITE, 9 to midnight Saturday.
THE BILLY SPEARS BAND. 9 to midnight and Saturday, the Opera House.
The NAIROBI TRIO, midnight to 3 a.m.
Saturday, the Seventh Sacriment halftime
**COUNTRY HEIR:** a local country-folk band, 9 to midnight tonight. Off the Wall Hall, BOBCAT, a rock band, 9 to midnight Saturday.
VICTOR CONSTOSKI, poet SUA Critical Writers and Poets Series, 4.p.m. The University of Chicago Press.
Lectures
Films
BONAPARTE AND THE REVOLTION—A milestone in cinematic accomplishments, this film took French label Gance nearly 50 years to complete.
ROCKY - A knockout with excellent
motion and numerous muscles.
Before a friend overcomes you (G) GO!
BACH ARIA MASTER CLASS, 2 p.m.
Saturday, Washout Hall.
NETWORK—Manic energy generated by Peter Finch and Ned Bafty almost overcomes Paddy Cheyfayek's shotgun approach to satire. (R)
FAMILY PLOT —Here's yet, another Hitchcock thriller, this one involving kidnappers played by Karen BLANK and also stars Bruce Dern and Barbara Harris.
SILVER STREAK~Very weak suspense plot is supported by the comic talents of Richard Pryor. Gene Wilder is miscast as a straight romantic lead. (PG)
Film's nominations may mislead
By CHUCK SACK
Reviewer
If the Academy Award nominations succeed in alerting us to the merits of films we might otherwise bypass, they also have the drawback of blinding us to the unnominated charms of these same movies. Oscar's most famous marquee is the final arbor of taste, but the fact is that Oscar's pigeonholes may subtle alter the viewer's emphasis.
A case in point is "Cousin, Cousin," which received three nominations this year for Best Foreign Film, Best Acress, and Best Original Screenplay. All these ponderous accolades tend to bog down the airy comedy of the original enterprise.
THE FILM is a cinematic confection, a wonderfully likeable film shot in bright, gay colors and graced with effervescent good humor. The director's works of the arty stereotype for foreign films.
Writer-director Jean-Charles Tacchella's lightweight plot begins with a wedding in modern rural France. Ludovic (Victor O'Connell) has an eye for fashion, groom, attends it with his young second wife, Karen (Marie-France Piser), and his daughter. The bride's entourage includes her oldest daughter, Martha (Marielle Fouglard), her husband, Pascal (Guy Marchand).
When Pascal and Karine disappear for a quick affair in the bushes outside the reception, Marthe and Ludovic, the new cousins of the title, are left dancing alone. Within the first 10 minutes of the film it is obvious that the Best Original Screenplay nominee is a bulging-boy-meets-31-year-old girl story.
From page one
Additions ...
requested for repairs and remodeling of Lindley, Spooner and green halls and plants
HESS SAID that the subcommittee thought KU should spend $99,000 for new stage curtains at Hoch Auditorium, but that the money should come from the Regents' capital improvements budget, not from the fiscal 1978 KU budget.
the UB subcommittee approved $100,000 for a study of future KU energy supplies. Hess said he hoped the University would benefit its study on a solid-waste fired power plant.
The subcommittee agreed with Bennett's approval of utility cost increases, irrigation water research in Western Kansas, new staff for the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art and $189,870 for library acquisitions.
The subcommittee didn't approve KU's appeals to restore cuts Bennie made for new equipment requests; new unclassified positions for the department of special education; exploration for oil and gas reserves by the Kansas Geological Survey, or for four of 14 requested classified positions to maintain the grounds on West Campus.
The subcommittee is expected to recommend partial restoration of the money Bennett can for a master's degree program in human development. Hess said partial funding, about $230,000 rather than full funding, would be enough to start the program.
AFTER REELING from the shock of this development, the Oscar consumer may start searching for the Best Actress nominee. Ms. Barraunt undeniably has the leading role, but she's nothing like her American counterparts. Her role doesn't allow her to blossom aloud as Sisy Spacec in "Darryl" or Talia Shire does in "Carrie" or Talia Shire does in
Review
*honey*, *one doesn't have the opportunity to express an emotional gait required of Lvii Umanna.*
Nor is she, with her broad face, fleshy
nose and a large smile to teeth, a classic
manner like Dina Dimma.
However, if you can discard these Academic preconceptions, you'll notice that the actress does have a good deal of talent. The natural, even style of the film tends to detract from many of her accomplishments, but without any showcase scenes Ms. Barrault gives a great deal of depth to her character.
SIMILARLY, the script has strengths where you often least expect them from an Oscar nominee. The story of Marthe and Ludovic's progression from hurt spouses to platinic friends to gullible lovers is played against a background of family gatherings. In the scenes with family holidays, the scenes are crammed with eccentric and enjoyable characters.
Tacchella advances his theme of freedom and limitation in love through an examination of the gentle zoo formed by the relatives. Pascal braats that he is only 30 conquests short of Casanova's sexual assault, Mr. Marthe, he breaks off his affairs with two housewives, a family planning director, a shopgirl, a druggist and a lady busdriver.
MARTIHE'S MOTHER searches for a new boyfriend and comes across a 20-year-old magician who saws her in half on Christmas Eve. Nelsa, Ludovic's daughter, takes
Most of the time the actors manage to rescue these moments, as when Karen puts down her razor to check her makeup before resuming her suicide attempt. Other times the director gloses over defective passages by quickening the tempo.
"Cousin, Cousine" emerges as a light and pleasant film, one that will delight the casual movie-goer. Those who attend with a scorewell for the nominations may be disappointed, but those who support the gold-plated statue, and too much fun to be taken seriously.
indiscretic pictures at a wedding and then shows the slides at the reunion. And the lovers' affair becomes increasingly scandalous while they innocently entertain themselves by tattooing each other with a pencil that proves to be indelible.
Although Tacchella proves to be a keen observer of his characters' lives in the fashion of a good novelist, his direction is often quite loose. The episodic plot allows him to get away with some of this, but the few lapses in cuteness are very annoying.
Group to play Bach cantatas
The renowned Barch Aria Group from New York City will perform arias and duets from the cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach at the University Theatre in Murray Hall.
The concert, the fourth part of the KU School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series, features nine professionals who play piano, violin, saxophone and under the direction of William Scheidle.
The group, at Lincoln Center, New York City, has appeared each season to standing-room-only crowds at Carnegie, Town and Philharmonic Halls in New York
Tickets cost $5 and can be purchased at
Universal Theatre box office or
passport office.
Cross and Rowland, Lawrence seniors, won the national championship last year and will defend their title April 4th at Iowa-Missouri State in Springfield, Mo.
For the third straight year, the team of
three players who have been
prized to the National Debate are
KU debaters to defend title
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THIS YEAR Cross and Rowland have won 10 matches and lost 23, a winning per-
formula.
This year they have placed first at the University of North Carolina, Wake Forest University, Georgetown University and the University of Utah. They have qualified for the elimination rounds at every tournament they have attended this year.
The top 16 teams are invited to nationals; most others must win at a district tournament to qualify for nationals. Rowland and Cross won't know where they are ranked among the top 16 teams in nationals, but they probably are ranked first or second.
The team spends varying amounts of time on debate each week, but Cross and Rowland said yesterday that they average 20 to 30 hours per week. Each is
The invitation was received yesterday by Donn Parsons, professor of speech and drama and forensics director the past 11 years.
CROSS AND Rowland have been debated partners four years at KU. They also debated at Lawrence High School, where they were partners their sophomore year and state champions their junior and senior years.
The debate season begins in mid-October and lasts until the National Tournament in April. There are 15 weekend tournaments a season. Cross said.
In 1975 they didn't qualify for the elimination rounds at nationals, but last year they were able to play in the elimination round on opponent the 'judges' ballots. Among the reasons for their victory were a surprise affirmative case for certain opponents and a strong national tournament.
Individually, Rowland has been named best speaker at Wake Forest, Georgetown and Uth. Cross was second-place speaker at Wake Forest.
"It was a calculated risk, introducing new evidence." Cross said.
JUNIOR AND TIBUIA JUNIOR SCA SANT JOAN
SCHOOL MUSICIANS
"We hadn't had the chance to put it through the fire and we weren't sure how much information the other team would need. It was a real surprise that we衣it just happened to work out real well."
I
PARSONS SAID it was hard to predict another win this year for the team but said
that the players were happy.
"Their record demonstrates that they're a top team," he said. "They're outstanding debaters. They've worked hard, they have the capability and they'll give it a good try." Parsons said that before going into any debate he talked over strategy with the
£00T
"An irreverent farce by an ungrateful subject. Lamont Cranston was right?"
UNIVERSITY THEATRE—MURPHY HALL Feb. 18, 19, 24, 25 at 8:00 p.m. Feb. 20 at 2:30 p.m. Ticket Reservations: 864-3982 KU students admitted without charge upon receipt of current Certificate of Registration. This program is partially funded by the Student Activity Fee.
Rowland called debating a "complex academic sport."
"We talk about which side we're on, affirmative or negative." Parsons said.
"There are different kinds of strategy," he said. "Also, we've seen some of the judges before through our four years of debating and we know what to expect."
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MIDNIGHT MOVIES
"IS THERE SEX AFTER DEATH?"
"THE ONLY REALLY FUNNY MOVIE SINCE WOODY ALLEN'S 'BANANASI'
"THE FIRST REALLY FUNNY X-RATED MOVIE EVER MADE!
A clever and brilliant satire. The cast of some of the attractive and witty people have managed to captivate audience and critics alike." - Kevin Saunders, ABC/TV
"...its mind is so sane, its imagination so free, and its fantasies so logical, that it becomes something more rare than good satire, that is, it becomes good dirty satire."
"A VERY FUNNY MOVIE! It is hilarious from its beginning to its ending, which is a live-action, play-by-play of the International Sey Boulf"
"A FREQUENTLY OUTRAGEOUS FILE" The sexual revolution raked over the coals." - Justin Cotin, New York Magazine
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FLATTERING THE INTERNATIONAL BEE BOWL
produced and directed by
JEANE K and ALAN ABEL • MICHAEL ROTCHSILD
Fri., Feb. 25 and Sat., Feb. 26
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8
Friday, February 25, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Six nominated for Alumni board of directors
The University of Kansas Alumni Association's Nominating Committee has nominated six KU alumni to serve on the association's board of directors.
Chosen by the committee were Alice White Breitenbach, Dodge City; William Coughlin, Krasas City, Mo.; Jim Dumas, Columbia, Md.; Carol Arnold Ellison, Alabama; Charles J. Brennan, Loveland, Lawrence, and Bernard "Pete" Whalen, Goodland.
Three of the six nominated will be elected by mail votes of alumni in April and will serve on the board. The elected members are also responsible for take office May 23, commencement day.
DEK WINTERMOTE, director of the Alumni Association, said recently that nominees were chosen partly because of their interest in the Alumni Association.
"The three elected will help the other board members develop policies, oversee staff, finances and alumni activities," Wintermote said.
BRETENBACH, a 1967 graduate, is secretary-treasurer of Breitenbach Farms. Inc. She is treasurer of the Ford County Historical Society and a member of the Coronado Historical Park Bicentennial Project and Museum of Science and Association of university Women. She also is charter president of Ch Omega Alumni of Western Kansas.
Coughlin, a 1968 graduate, is vicepresident in the corporate and municipal
bond department of George K. Baum and Co., a Kansas City investment banking firm.
HE IS ON the executive committee of the Kansas City Municipal Bond Dealers Association and the Midwestern district of the Security Industry Association.
Dumas, a 1964 engineering graduate, is a professor of engineering and service for the Western University.
A varsity basketball player at KU, he received a graduate degree in 1971.
He is a member of Sachem and Owl Society and of an Alumni Association steering committee that encourages participation of black alum in KU affairs.
Eilson, 1963 graduate with a degree in education, is a consultant to the Center for Education.
IN 1974, SHE completed her master's degree in early childhood education and child development at the University of Washington.
She has been a regional consultant of the Washington Head Start. Start. Technical Assistance.
Loveland, a 1970 graduate, has been a student services coordinator for the Research Medical Center School of Nursing and a project assistance specialist for a division of the Kansas Regional Medical Program.
IN COLLEGE she was a member of the All-Student Council, the University Orientation Committee and the Inter-Residence Council.
Loveland was a member of the KU Vice Chancellors' Advisory Council for Minority Group programs and a member of the ad-
Whalen, a 1960 graduate of the School of Law, is a lawyer in the law firm Whalen, Whalen, and Whalen.
He was first brought to trial in 1949, but the jury couldn't reach a verdict. At a second trial he was found guilty and sentenced to death for unlawful imprisonment in 1984 because of good conduct.
hoc Committee for Student Spouse Orientation.
His trial created much controversy because many people thought the FBI had
In 1948, Whittaker Chambers, a magazine editor who had confessed to having been a Communist Party counter, accused Hiss, a German-American doctor, of helping transmit confidential government documents to Russia a few years earlier. Hiss denied the charges, and since under the statute of limitations he couldn't be tried by the Federal Court, Hiss was jailed and in jury in 1948 on two counts of perjury.
Alger Hiss, convicted of perjury in 1950 after being accused of espionage, will speak on "the McCarthy Era" at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Murphy Hall in Murphy Hall. Attribution is 50 cents.
He is a former officer of the Sherman County Bar Association and a member of the American Bar Association.
In 1974 Hiss, who had once practiced law in Boston and New York City, successfully petitioned to be reinstated to the Massachusetts bar.
Alger Hiss to speak about McCarthy era
tampered with evidence to insure Hiss' conviction, Hiss' chief accuser was then-Sen. Richard Nixon, who at the time was a member of the Committee on unlawful Activities.
in 1927. He wrote "In the Court of Public
inaction" in which he denied all the charges
that were against him.
In 1975 he petitioned the federal government to obtain documents and films he thought would be useful. He accounted for four microfilms—one that was blank and two that were illogical.
Following Hiss' conviction, Sen. Joseph McCarthy began his infamous accusations that there were 205 card-carrying members of the Communist Party in the State Department.
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Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358.
1
9
Friday, February 25, 1877
on ST and
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Staff Reporter
Students experiment with platinum
By JULIE ROBINSON
10
Two University of Kansas graduate students are experimenting with $5,000 worth of platinum, a metal most artists-earn successes one-can't afford to work over.
4358.
Lee Carrell and Ron Hinton, both assistant instructors of design, have been working with the metal since last March, when KU was one of two universities in the country selected to experiment with platinum.
Matthey Bishop, a British corporation that markets platinum, sent both KU and the Rochester Institute of Technology 20 ounces of platinum because both institutions are noted for their work in jewelry and silversmithing.
MATTHEY BISHOP donated the metal to open the platinum market again and to.
revive interest in the metal as jewelry material, Carrell said.
Its use in jewelry work declined after the second World War, when white gold, a cheaper metal that resembles platinum, took its place.
Then, in the 1960s, platinum was used industrially and in aerospace technology because of its durability and high melting temperature. This use, according to the net price of the metal high and caused a decline in its use in jewelry making.
Carrall that platinum is an excellent metal for jewelry making because it is strong, durable and doesn't tarnish. Its best qualities are its resistance to wear on them well and doesn't wear out, he said.
HOWEVER, THE metal is hard to paint,
hard to melt and costs about $20 an ounce.
"I worked with platinum before, but I was so worried—because I didn't know anything about the metal and了我 afraid I would mess it up—that I really didn't learn anything," Carrall said. "But now we feel a real freedom to experiment with it."
Both Hinton and Carroll had worked with small quantities of platinum before.
Hinton said, "We have an awe and respect for the metal."
Hinton and Carrell are using this research as part of their graduate work. Carroll, who will receive a master's degree in May, plans to show contain some platinum jewelry.
THE AGREEMENT with Matthey Bishop is that if they decide to keep the jewelry, they have to pay for the metal used in it. The jewelry is then marketed at the jewelry if they decide to sell it.
project. The corporation has already placed platinum scraps with fresh platinum.
to tar, Hinton and Carroll have used
the third of the platinum. The other
two twiddles are less precise.
They have been using traditional metal techniques such as casting, construction, fusing and fabrication. They intend to compare the properties of platinum with two metals they are more familiar with, gold and silver.
Carrell said that the corporation's donation was supposed to be a one-timing gift, but he said he wasn't aware of it.
Scarlett says platinum is harder to bend, scratch or melt because it is much harder than gold or silver. Its melting temperature is that of gold or silver—300 degrees Fahrenheit.
"I prefer gold so far, around 18 carat gold, but I can't get enough to work with," Carrell said. "After that I like silver, and then platinum."
Prof says Lawrence relatively unpolluted
Although Harvard University scientists began a study of the effects of sulfur pollution on lungs and other aspects of human health in the Topeka area recently, a University of Kansas professor says that Lawrence is relatively pollution-free.
Dennis Lars, assistant professor of civil engineering, said this week that the compounds of sulfur the Harvard team was studying weren't produced by Lawrence and which would include the Cooperative Farms Chemicals Association (CFCA).
A recent story by the Associated Press said that the Harvard team, led by Charles Hube, would spend five weeks in Topkenz to assess the health of the tissue will be monitored for several years.
LUNG TISSUE is being examined to determine the effect of sulfur compounds, particularly sulfur dioxide, which is formed when coal is burned. Coal and fuel oil are inert materials that do not react with coal and power generating plants that are located in the eastern United States.
Also, a coal-fired generating station will open next west year of Topeka.
Topeka was chosen as a starting point for the study because it represented an apex of a triangle of pollution, the base of which is the Eastern Seaboard.
Other cities to be study are: St. Louis,
Watertown, Mass.; Beauville,
Otisco; New York.
Lane said these cities represented areas with large amounts of industry. Topeka was compared to areas farther west, it had nearly 10 times the amount of air pollutants.
"BUT I DON'T think it' anything to get alarmed about yet. The starting place always seems to be 10 times worse," he said.
Lane said one thing that bothered him was that Wichita was excluded from the study, although it was more of a pollution problem than Topeka.
Pollution has two basic forms—gas and particulates—Lane said. Sulfur dioxide is the gas form and sulfates, or sulfur compounds, are the particulate form. Both forms, when inhaled in small quantities, can be harmful.
For instance, sulfur dioxide can combine with fluid coating the lining of the lungs to form sulfuric acid, which will destroy the lung tissue. Lane said that the effects of water were unknown and that the Harvard study was aimed at finding the effect.
LANE SAID that because of natural gas and other fuel shortages, more coal might be used.
"We ought to get some research background now so we can put the brakes on (pollution) before a severe problem exists." And no nulu dioxide problem in Lawrence."
Lane also said that the only particulates found in Lawrence were from soil that was carried from area farms. The CFCA plant east of Lawrence on K-10 highway doesn't have a natural outlet but attains ozone; another pollutant that is commonly emitted by automobile exhaust.
The state of Kansas has no standard by which to judge a dangerous level of nitrous oxide concentration, Lane said. But by using federal standards, he said, it was determined that the plant won't emitting a dangerous level of the pollutant.
"The plant is trying to clean up. They're doing it as a good faith effort," he said, adding that nearly all of the equipment used for cleaning is also other experimental or newly developed.
Lane said the Kansas Power and Light consensuous effort, to control pollution per se.
"There are so many types of sulfur particles besides sulfur," Lane said, "and we don't know which one, if any, might cause respiratory trouble."
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Fridav. February 25,1977
University Dally Kansan
Javhawks try to repeat win against Cornhuskers
BY COURTNEY THOMPSON
Associate Sports Editor
Tomorrow's first-round playoff game for the Big Eight post-season tournament between Kansas and Nebraska probably will have a reactive quality to it.
The 3:10 p.m. playoff game in Allen Field House will be regionally televised and will
be the second time the Jayhawks have played Nebraska within a week.
Some fans anticipate that the game may be a boring, ho-hum replay of last Saturday's contest. But that might not be too bad - KU won that game, 74-66.
Although much of this week was spent in semi-consusion calculating the umpleten
possibilities for playoff matchups, most assumed KU would play Nebraska here. But after losing to Colorado Wednesday, the team had lucky to get the home-court advantage.
APARENTLY playing at home does good things for KU—the 'Hawks have lost
MICHAEL BURKE
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Nebraska coach Cipriano doesn't like the officiating. He gets a rematch tomorrow.
In swimming, size isn't everything
By KEN DAVIS
Sports Writer
Linemen in football get bigger every year; the age of the seven-foot center has arrived in basketball; big, strong power hitters are in demand in baseball.
But you won't be able to convince Kurt Anselmi that being big is everything. The freshman diver on the KU swim team knows better.
Anselmi is listed on the Kanaas roster as 5 feet 4 and 140 pounds.
KU coach Dick Reason said of Anselm,
"Don't let his size deceive you. He is an extremely strong person. He has tremendous lee drive and leg strength."
"I think my size helps me a lot," Anselmi said. "Mark Hill (KU diver who is listed at 6 and 175 pounds) is lankier and has more trouble jumping." He admires him, especially for his swimming options."
Anselmi he was pleased with his first season on the KU diving team—and with good reason. He has the season's best mark in three-meter diving for the Jayhawks this year and the third best point total in one-meter diving.
Anelsil's best day of the season was Feb. 5 in the meet with Nebraska. He scored 32.8 points in the three-meter event, which is the highlight in the Big Eight this year Reason said.
"I'm very pleased with what I've done as
a 'in placing'," Ansiama said. "I just hope I
get to know my friends."
Reason has been equally pleased with Anselmi's performance.
"Kurt is one of the most mature kids I've ever had the pleasure to coach," Reamon said. "He has all the background, experience and noise you could ask for."
"He has lived up to and exceeded all the expectations we had of him when we recruited him. The thing I enjoy most about him is that he loves what he does. He has great interest and enthusiasm and it really rubs off on others."
During his high school career at Shawnee Mission South, Anselmi was a two-time state champion on the one-meter board and last year was given honorable mention on the national level, receiving letters from 10 to 15 universities that were interested in his diving ability.
"I choose KU because of the outlook of the team," Anselmi said. "Everyone was real and I loved it."
relationship with the other team members."
Concentration is a key ingredient to the success of a diver. Anselmi says that he can use concentrations to get out of dangerous water.
"I set a perfect methyl picture in my mind each time by thinking about the dive I've seen it in books and on film. It always work the way we’ve seen it though."
only one home game but have lost all but two games on the road.
Losses by Missouri and Oklahoma (the two teams tied for second place at 9-5) and by Nebraska were responsible for the Jahvahws' first-division finish.
Intramural Indoor Track Meet
Thursday, March 3rd
Entry DEADLINE at 5:00 p.m.
Friday, March 4th Room 208 Robinson
Preliminaries 7:00 a.m.
Saturday, March 5th - Finals, 3:00 p.m.
Men & Women Divisions & Co-Rec Relays
Intramural Swim Meet
Diving and Swimming Events
Monday, March 7th - Preliminaries, 7:30
Tuesday, March 8th - Finals, 7:30 p.m.
Had Kansas been able to beat Colorado, it could have created a three-way tie for second place. But KU coach Ted Owens said his strategy backfired when he announced the Missouri and Oklahoma results to his team at halftime.
-
Robinson Natutiorium - No entry fee Enter at Recreation Services at pool lobby on March 7th, 7:00 p.m.
Entry sheets available at RECREATION SERVICES
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"I thought it would loosen us up knowing that we had the home-court advantage cinched—but that obviously didn't work. The second half was awful."
2
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KU SHOT only 25 per cent in that period
The Jayhawks' record against Nebraska this season is even. But KU seems to have trouble winning the "rubber" game of a three-game series—winess the losses to Kansas State in Lawrence and to Missouri. The Jays' record against KU's record against both teams was even.
Whoopee Seating Available On Stage With a Dancin' DJ
Owens said that, because the team had little time to prepare for the playoffs, he was glad to play a team he had faced recently—like the Cornhoppers. Logically, he would hope the Jayhawks could repeat last Saturday's win.
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The consensus among KU fans seems to be that NU is a boring team to watch because it forces Kansas to slow its style of play.
KU CAPTAIN Ken Koenigs has said that Nebraska is a troublesome team to play because it controls the ball well and thereby throws KU off pace.
Carl Mpei, 8-4 center for the 'Huskers, will be the object of the Jayhawks plans, as usual. Carl Mpei's 23 points against KU led scoring for Nebraska last week.
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KU 'freshman guard Hasan Houston suffered a sprained ankle this week in the game against Colorado and probably will be replaced tomorrow by Milt Gibson.
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Without starting another wearying enumeration of possible playoff combinations, there is one interesting possibility to mention.
K-STATE, the Winner of the conference race, plays Iowa State, the loser of that race, in Manhattan tomorrow. If K-State wins (and don't assume anything because the Cyclones beat Missouri this week), and if KU wins the traditional intra-state race, it would be played at 7:38 p.m. Thursday. March 3, in Kansas City's Kermer Arena.
The post-season tournament generally has been met with unenthusiastic response from Big Eight coaches. But finishing fourth in the conference caused Owens to
restate his position concerning the tournament.
"You bet I like it now! And I hope I like it a lot better in the next few days."
KANSA
F-Flint Johnson, 6-2 junior
F-Herb Nobles, 6-7 senior
C-Ken Koenigs, 6-10 junior
John Douglas, 6-2 junior
G-John Gunn, 6-0 junior
NEBRAK
B-Fog Siebel, 6-7 senior
F-Terry Novak, 6-4 junior
D-Ric McTips, 6-4 sophomore
G-Gallen, 6-5 sophomore
G-Allen Holder, 6-4 senior
AURH (Assoc. of Univ. Residence HeIs)
General Elections for
AURH President
AURH Vice-President
AURH (As)
For petitions or filing forms, see your Hall President or call the AURH office - 864-4041
1) Candidates must run as a team
REQUIREMENTS:
1) candidates must be a team
2) team members must be from different residence halls
ELECTIONS - Tues., March 8 & Wed., March 9 5-6 p.m. in every residence hall cafeteria
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BACK TOGETHER AT KANSAS STATE MARCH 8, 8:00pm AHEARN FIELD HOUSE MANHATTAN, KS.
After three years of separation, bread has chosen to regroup at KSU to kick off their reunion concert tour. Don't miss their only performance in this area!
A K-STATE UNION PROGRAM COUNCIL PRODUCTION
Tickets available Feb. 21-Mar. 4 at TEAM ELECTRONICS Prices: $6.00-5.50-5.00
bread
Friday. February 25.1977
11
g the tour-
cope I like it
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aps
University Dally Kansan
alls)
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halls
ch 9
JOB
3
1
Games set for tourney; MU No.2
KANSAS CITY (AP) — Missouri lost to last-place Iowa state WEDnesday night and the draw for second place in the Big Ten basketball tournament yesterday.
Missouri's 95-46 loss to Iowa State dropped the Tigers into a second-place tie with Oklahoma. Both teams finished with 9-5 conference records.
The Big Eight conducted a drawing in Kansas City yesterday to determine pairings for the first round of the post-season conference tournament.
As a result of conference records and drawing, the first round shapes up the rankings. The second round, State 13,-11 will be heat to Iowa State 3-11; at night, Kansas 8,-6 is host to Nebraska 7,-7 in the 3:10 p.m. regional television contest; Missouri plays Oklahoma State 4-10, at night, and Texas 9-4, plays at Illinois at 6:08 p.m.
K-STATE
MANHATTAN 7:35
IOWA STATE
WINNER
THURSDAY, MARCH 3
KEMPER ARENA 7:05
WINNER
KANSAS
LAWRENCE 3:10 (TV)
NEBRASKA
WINNER
FRIDAY, MARCH 4
KEMPER ARENA 7:35
MISSOURI
COLUMBIA 7:35
OKLA. STATE
WINNER
THURSDAY, MARCH 3
KEMPER ARENA 9:05
WINNER
OKLAHOMA
NORMAN 4:05
COLORADO
WINNER
The winners of tomorrow's games will advance to the conference finals in Kansas City March 34. The winner of the tournament gets an automatic bid to the National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament.
KU gymnastics teams on road this weekend
The Jayhawk gymnastics teams both will compete on the road this weekend.
KU's men's gymnastics team's all-backers Mike Hymes, Jody Summers, and Katie McDonald represent Kansas in the Fort Hays Kansas State College Invitation tonight before joining the rest of the squad for a meet at Texas and Texas tomorrow in Norman, Okla.
The purpose of the regionals is to qualify swimmers for the national meet next month. KU's 200 freestyle and 400 medley relay teams are other possible qualifiers.
KU coach Bob Lockwood said that Cohen and Cohen would compete in all
Sports
six Olympic events for the first time this year. Culbertson had to add a routine on the floor exercise, and Cohen added routines on floor exercise and pommel horse.
"THIS WILL give them a chance to work all six events." Lockwood said. "It will be good experience for both of them. Both worked all-around in high school, but they haven't had a chance to perform on this level of competition."
The 800-yard freestyle relay team placed in the meet but missed the required national medal.
Lockwood said the meet with Texas would be competitive because Texa and KU would have a similar schedule.
Oklahoma, one of the three powers in Big Eight gymnastics, features a team of outstanding gymnasts including Olympian Bet Conner, and is favored to win the meet.
THE WOMEN'S gymnastics team will
finish its team season tonight in the State Invitational at Wichita State University, although all-around performer Karen Gosling has a chance for further competition.
"If we hit our routines, we won't have too much trouble," he said. "But if we have an off day then any one of the other teams could come up and beat us."
Washburn University, Fort Hays Kansas State College and Emporia Kansas State College also will compete in tonight's meet, which begins at 7.
SNOW ALSO expressed confidence that Mundy would be able to qualify for the AIAW regional meet in the all-around competition. To qualify, Mundy must score an average of 32 points in four meets. There are 40 points possible in the all-around. Mundy needs to score 31.55 tonight to get the 32 average.
But Snow is worried about the team competition because all-aurrender Laurie Propt won't compete because she is participating in the AIAW regional swimming championships this weekend in Lincoln, Neb.
"She'll probably quality." Snow said,
"unless she has a horrible day."
"It's going to be a real competitive meet," he said. "With Laurel, were there any differences in scores better than everybody in the state. When her, we see about that many points."
The KU women's swim team is in second place after the first day of competition in the AIAW regional meet in Lincoln, Neb. The meet continues through tomorrow.
NFL players, owners near 5-year contract agreement
WASHINGTON (UPF)—The leadership of the pro football players union agreed yesterday to endorse a five-year labor contract with the National Football League owners, subject to a vote of approval by the members.
KU coach KEN snow expressed confidence in the meet but said it would be competitive.
Swimmers now 2nd in AIAW regionals
The tentative settlement, reached last week to end three years of labor strike, calls for a modified college draft, liberalized free education and new funding provisions, an option for the owners to increase the regular season by two games to 16 and a payment by the NFL of between $15 million and $16 million to settle legal claims against all suits since the last contract expired.
The executive committee of the NFL Players Association (NFLPA) went over details of the collective bargaining agreement for more than six hours yesterday and will submit to it a meeting of NFL player representatives of the teams today.
Laurie Propst qualified for the AIAW national diving competition with 385 points.
Ed Garvey, executive director of the NFLPA, predicted the player reps would approve submitting the agreement to a vote with the team with a recommendation that it be ratified.
There was a strong possibility that the owners, meeting in New York today, may
Nebraka leads the field of 19 teams with 108 points. KU is second with 17, Iowa State is third with 21.
Garvey said there were no serious objections raised to the proposed agreement.
rums raised to the proposed agreement. Garvey and Sargent Karch, executive director of the American Institute Council, concluded four days of conferences prior to the union leadership meeting.
approve the contract before the players do
work. The contract is a written contract by
a vote of at least 21 of the 24 teams.
Soccer team expects two wins
Although two starters and another player on the KU Soccer Club are injured, coach Mullin expects his team to pick up two victories on the road this
The Jayhawks play Kansas State College at Pittsburg in a 10:30 a.m. contest. The Wildcats will play University in Joplin at 3 p.m., Sunday will play Ankenas in an 11 a.m. game.
"We feel very confident about the team this year," Mullin said. "So we feel we can win any game we play."
KU's injured players are Paul Addison with torn ligaments in his left ankle and Terry Wilcoxen and Felipe Santos with possible cartilage damage to the knee. Addison and Santos were starters on the team.
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BACKGAMMON: Every Wednesday at 7 p.m., Pine Room, Union. Beginners Welcome.
PING PONG
TABLE TENNIS: All-campus Tournament planned for sometime in April.
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
FOOBSBALL: All-camp Tournament planned for sometime in April.
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Sunday, 3 p.m.; Parlor A & B, Union. Bridge lessons for
beginners are available through Free University,
Faculty and students welcome.
This is the third year Student Union Activities has devoted a complete focus on indoor activities. With more emphasis on these activities, they should be better than ever. Many fun and active events are being organized, and we hope K.U. students will participate.
WATCH FOR ORGANIZED FRISBEE
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT SUA OFFICE, 864-3477
12
Friday, February 25.1977
University Daily Kansas
'Hawks' track team hopes change in scenery brings needed luck
By ROB RAINS Sports Writer
Track coach Bob Timmons hopes that a change in scenery for the Big Eight Indoor Championships this weekend will have a positive effect on his team.
After what happened at last year's meet, it can't hurt.
Suffering from a series of false starts, key injuries and dropped batons, the favored Jayhawks finished second last year—two points behind Kansas State.
Timmons is hopeful that all of those mistakes have been buried in Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium. He is looking for a fresh start when this year's meet—the 49th annual—convenes in a new location, the Nebraska Sports Center in Lincoln.
"WE CAN'T REALY meet that meet," Timmons said about last year. "We had the best team, but made numerous mistakes. It was a hard job." "We'll be out to redo edgers ourselves this year."
This year's meet gets under way at 7:30 tonight with the preliminaries and finals in the long jump. Other preliminaries will be held on Friday at 8 a.m., followed with the high jump finals at 1:45 p.m.
On paper at least, it looks like the Jahyhawks will be the favorites to win their eighth straight. They would light up in nine of the 16 scheduled events, and are second in five others.
TIMMONS EXPECTS THE 'Hawks' bigger, better season than normal, who've beaten twice this season.
"We feel that they're the team we have to beat." Timmons said. "They have quality, depth and versatility. They don't have a single even they can't score in.
"Past Oklahoma, I'd have to say Nebraska has been the big surprise. Although we beat them in a dual meet earlier this year, you can't count on the same point spread in a championship meeting, which when they'll be running at home."
UNLESS THERE is a repeat of last year's collapse, which Timmons and the team won't even think about, KU should capture more than two individual titles.
The 300 is the only new event in this year's Meet. With Wiley and Dave Blatchet, who is tied for fourth best with a 30.8 clocking, it should be a good event for KU.
Leading the pack should be junior sprinter Cliff Wiley. Wiley holds the conference's best time in the 300-yard dash, 29.8 seconds, and is tied with OU's John Hammond. The 400-yard dash is 6.0. Garrison is the defending champ in both the 60 and the 60-ward low hurdles.
ANTHONY COLEMAN, with a school record of 7.07 in the 69-year high hurdles, is leading that event but should receive a strong challenge from Dan Lavitt of Missouri and Jeff Lee of Nebraska, both of whom have run 7.1.
Jay Wagner runs a runlea- leading 48.1 in the 440, but Nale Udof of MU follows at 48.2. Wagner is second in the 600, having run 1:10.4.
First in the 600 and the 800 is a surprising freshman, Scott Poolehning of Nebraska. Bob Prince of K-State, the defending champ in both events, is third in the 600 and tied for fifth in the 800. KU's Tommy McCall is third in the 800, with a time of 1:52.3.
RICK ENSEZ i is the other KU runner with a league-leading time, a 2:10.0 in the 1,000 The "Hawks Glenn Harter is tied for third at 2:10.7.
KU's unit of Blutcher, Kevin Newell,
has been selected to be headscarf for the best time in the rule relay. He is
In the field events, KU's Jim Podrebareli is leading the shot put with a toss of 57-11; Mike Wilk is first in the triple jump, 49-2% and is second in the long jump, and Tad Scales is the leading pole vaulter, having cleared 17-1%.
Other events where KU should score points are the high jump, where Steve Anderson is third and fourth; a 1 jump rank second and third; the two-mile run, where John Rosece is second with an 8:45.65, and the 60-yard low hurdles, where Coleman is third and James Aldridge
REARDON ALSO is in third place in the long umma and fourth in the triple umma.
Tinnisons said although the Jayhawks would lose fan support with the move from Kansas City to Lincoln, the new 225-yard line will allow the Tampa Bay 12-pack track in Municipal Auditorium.
"The facilities are a big improvement," Timmons said. "We saw that in our dual up there when we got four NCAA qualifying teams you can look for those kind of times again."
MEN-WOMEN
Now you don't have to choose between getting a good job and continuing your education.
You can come into the Army. Learn a skill.
Travel halfway around the world. And still find
time to work on your college education.
It's all part of the Army's unique educational idea, Project AHEAD (Army Help for Education And Development).
Staff photo by JAY KOELZE
If you qualify under Project AEAD, you’ll be accepted to our college. You’ll take courses taught by accredited teachers for the tuition and fees for approved courses at our college or your education when you’re working full time at a college.
KANSAS
about Project AHEAD.
800 Massachusetts Avenue,
Boston MA 02106
803-8459
Join the people who've joined the Army.
Call Army Opportunities
about Project AHEAD.
550 Hours of Normal
Work. Apply to:
Lawrence, KS 66044
Lawrence, KS 66044
10
Jay Wagner—660-yard specialist—hopes to win again
We Make Artists At Doreta's Learn to paint Landscape Settings
- Only $3.OO per lesson
• Art supplies available at low prices
Also • Handcrafted gifts • Pewter Jewelry
Doreta's Decorative Arts
843-7255
♥
1006 New Hamp.
ENROLL IN CLASSES NOW!
CLIFF KEUTER
DANCE
COMPANY
March 3,8:00 p.m.
Rice Auditorium, Baker University
$2.50 ADULTS BALDWIN CITY, KS. $1.50 UNDER 12
SPONSORED IN PART BY KS. ARTS COMM. & NATI. ENDOWMENT FOR
THE ARTS
Koen Ken吉和 Cri Barmhouse have been named to the 1977 Big Eight Academic All-Basketball Team as honorary captains. Both have been named to the "Brain Team" last year and both have maintained an "A" average in pre-medicine. They are majoring in pre-medicine.
2 KU players on brain team
To be eligible for the squad, an athlete must maintain a "B" average. Academic all-BiG Eight team members automatically升学 to the academic all-America队.
The team members and grade averages:
Cary Carrabille, Oklahoma - sophomore in
Bachelor's degree.
Kim Anderson, Missouri—senior in education (3.02).
Fred Stevenson, Oklahoma State—senior in business (3,12).
Ken Koenigs, Kansas—junior in pre-meed (3.97).
Cris Bratruhue, Kansas—senior in premed. (3.96).
Pizzainn
Sunday
Nite Buffet
4 p.m.-9 p.m.
ALL THE PIZZA
AND SALAD
YOU CAN EAT
$2.20
Saturdays
PITCHERS
$1.00
DRAWS
25c
Hillcrest Shopping Center (Next to Hillcrest Theatres) Dial 841-2670
TARANTULA!
Hairy ...
Scary ...
Fascinating!!!
PETSTEP
in the
Malls
841-4300
Final 2 days, Tomor-
your last chance
1/2
PRICE
PLANT
SALE
Everything, that's right,
Everything in the Greenhouse
1/2 Price
Blooming Plants
House Plants
Hanging Plants
Every plant in the Greenhouse
Starts Fri., 2/18 Ends Sat., 2/26
1/2 Price
The
Garden Center
and Greenhouse
4 blocks East of Mass. on 15th. 843-2004
Welcome Back Billy Spears!
2 FOR 1 SANDWICH SALE
Daagwud's welcomes The Billy Spears Band back to Lawrence with a GIANT 2 For 1 SANDWICH SALE.
The Billy Spears Band appears Friday & Saturday at The Opera House, so come on down and join the fun.
Special Good Friday & Saturday only.
DAAGWUD'S
644 Mass., Located in The Opera House Sub Hotline 841-5635 Open 'til 2:30 a.m., For the Late Night "Munchies."
The Month The Annual The 24th The Bath The Ba
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 25, 1977
13
y . . .
y . . .
In the Malls
1-4300
rrow's
FOR NEW PEACE CORPS PROJECTS
WANTED: ALL GRADS WITH FLUENT FRENCH
Price
inter n house 5th 843-2004
house Plants
ants Plants
Dusts
hies."
Use your knowledge of French to teach new skills in a Francophone country such as the Ivory Coast or Morocco. Gain great experience by living in another culture and helping others. Peace Corps Volunteers get free trai; health/deni; care; 48
comfort.舒适. live. allow.; $3000 merit. extend 1 yr. service. Must be U.S. citizen. OR INHERIT RECRUITMENT
CAMPUS at EDUC, PLACEMENT MARCH 2 AND LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES PLACEMENT MARCH 1.
Feb. 28, March 6
March 9-11
THE WILLIAM INGE MEMORIAL THEATRE 8:00 p.m.
An Evening Of Dance Drama
KANSAN WANT ADS
Membership open to men and women who will graduate Spring 1978
Information sheets available in 220 Strong Hall. Must be filled out and turned in by February 25, 5:00 p.m.
Senior Honor Society
MORTAR BOARD
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to race, color, national origin or family status. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Easy additional
word information $1.00
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 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.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These cards can be placed in person or be called the UDK business office at 864-1538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Give away: $10 per week and $100 cash, plus
U. Telephone Directory
Mellow Yellow Pencil
The Pldid Club of Lawrence announces their 19th
20, 26, 27, National Guard Armory, 2nd and Iowa,
Ks. Show at Iowans on Friday from 10 a.m to 8 o.p.m.
One admission $15-good all three days. Food
available.
**NORTHERNIA** WEEPES FOR THE FUTURE OF BALLROOM TICKETS. Tonks can on take at the STA box in Ballroom. Tonks are open until 8:30PM.
TIUMBS. Lawrence's own street-level rock band, appearing at Off-the-Wall Hall. 9:50 p.m.
Vote Tuesday, March 8. Emphasis neighbor-
hood. Preserve agricultural land. Change city
name. Promote public health.
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to
Union, utilities paid. parking: 845-9798
Apartments and rooms furnished, paid, paid,
no pets. 843-7567. tt
Frontier. Ridge—short term lease available, with study. Holded indoor pool* shag carpet* + with study. Holded indoor pool* shag carpet* + with study.
Cantleybury House Episcopal Church at KU, 1116
Louisiana open house March 1, 1977 2 p.m.
9 p.m. meet online meeting an Episcopal
Church at KU, 1116, Tuesday 9 p.m.
munition—tuesdays 9 p.m., Thursdays 3:30 p.m.
FOR RENT
door pool - disposal - patio - laundry facilities
furnished - furnished - unfurnished - $359. Call 841-205-6700
furnished and unfurnished from $359. Call 841-205-6700
Individual rooms available in co-op situation.
Available for lease to:
close, close to campus, $55, $82-92,92 ask for
location.
For rent March 1, Share 2 bedroom apartment
room 84-128 at night. Must own own bed.
84-128 at night. Must own own bed.
vaulthouse Apartments - Call Back now. Summer
connections on all Vaulthouse apartments. Call
Sublease 2-bedroom apartment after March 15. lease $4,000/month. lease $3,000/month. lease $1,500/month. lease $1,000/month. lease $844-$649/month. lease $449-$349/month. lease $249-$149/month. lease $149-$89/month. lease $79-$59/month. lease $49-$39/month. lease $29-$19/month. lease $19-$9/month. lease $7
Upstairs room for rent. Two blocks from campus,
Bloomingdale. Available March 2.
849-345, 849-371, or 849-645
*Shaucone 2 bedroom double, unfurnished, kitchenette, laundry room, garage, available April 385 plum utilities 841-206-7900.*
*Shaucone 3 bedroom double, unfurnished, kitchenette, laundry room, garage, available April 385 plum utilities 841-206-7900.*
Available March 1-] Private 1-bedroom college
cottage $3,900; Private 2-bedroom college
cottage $4,500; $800 month plus electricity $414.61 - 3
- 14.34
Room for male in 3-bedroom mobile home. Share
kitchen and bath. B43-862. 3-3
Large, 2-bedroom unfurnished duplex apartment with a spacious living room, $700 monthly, available March 1 to June.
for most imported cars
Drive-in Clinic
TONY'S IMPORTS DATSUN
500 East 23rd Lawrence, Kan. 842-0444
Owens Liquor Store
843-1186
910 N. 2nd
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of these notes and sense to make sure you get the study guide. 2. For Classificationation. 3. For Exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Tolto
Excellent selection of new and used furniture area
The Furniture and Appliance Center (701) 825-6321; Mss.
Inc. 401 West 11th Street, New York, NY 10026.
The Allison Speakers are the only ones inherently matched to room acoustics. The only one with a specification guarantee of ±2 dB hear at Royale 4-8, Ray Audit E. Bih, Prices from $75.
ENGLISH SPORTS CAR, 1967 Sunburn Alpine
Cars for use in all environments. Power brakes
reduces rigidity in rear wheels. Power brake
wheel brakes.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialist.
HVAC servicer. HELP AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 830-969-3000, W. 6th.
Advent model 350 Stereo Receiver: designed to provide an inexpensive, expensive and complex equipment. It suitable performance compare output to that of the most expensive external charge chain receiver. The trade-off is between the price and the trade-offs.
The Advent Company is the leader in the Hi-Fi industry in research and product development. It offers products for all audiences, 201 A. The Advent receiver is gaining popularity at one of the cleanest units at any price. And it has been approved by the engineering and value unsurpassed at any price. 13 E. Authorized Advent dealer is B-3-1
Tr-Phase Speakers—A Real Home Dico System that gives you the ability to drive, built in four boards for safe high wind protection. Dig out those Boobe Shoes and check these specially designed units out at Ray Auckland.
To VW Bug. Run perfect. Make offer and call
Hospital at 864-0985. 2-25
Brand new 18-speed Moto-Bike because. Originally $300, set for $300. Bicycles. Extensions. Lengths.
1974 T100 128. 4-4d, 4-price, AM-FM, radials
17170 Call 272-4628 in Toekee collection 2-25
Antique boom and spool binder; antique day bed
storage; antique tool box; antique tape dispenser;
antique airplane. App in Travis 2-355.
Classic Guitar-Concert size hand made in Mexico.
Wash & dry. After sit up, s/n 1319. Vermont
Band
Matching twin beds with mattresses and box springs. 831-6750 Leave a message 2-25
Volkwagen Fastback - Automatic, 1970, good tires, new brakes, excellent cylinder, motor, 285/60R14, call for details.
OWNER OF ANTIQUARIAN BOOKSTORE
OVER 40 YEARS OF ALLEY AND EVERYMORE must go on including six very special events. Mr. Bull during all eight performances of "THE WINTER" March 1-6 at the Karaal Ballroom.
$700 without bargain 1927 Chevy, Vega, four
cylinder. In a very good condition. Farnier 381
605.
1974 Audi Fox automatic, front wheel drive, 30
miles, tuned up, excellent condition, $265.00
to $325.00
Flying Junior Sailboat with Spinaker and many
extra. 842-5065
2-28
Skis = 190 cm HRP Pro HPR with marker binders
Calls 841-8253 or 841-8230 5-2
AR78 x 15 radials for VWa, only $60 each. AR78 x 25 radials for VWb, only $90 each. AR78 x 32 radials for VWc, only $280 each. The 929 Main Owner Tuesday at 11:30 - 8:30 - 7:30.
New radials on anatex 145 x 13 x $4\mathrm{em}$ cushion, 105 x 12 x $6\mathrm{em}$ cushion, 90 x 12 x $4\mathrm{em}$ cushion. Mounting and haltering availables for all radial sizes.
Used radials for small car owners. Many to choose from, including adjustable and balancing available. Ray Stone. Mounting and balancing equipment. (312) 864-5027. www.rastone.com
Set of four CR78 14 H B. F. Goodrich radial steel
C870 14 H B. F. Goodrich radial steel
Rayback水库 S-295 929 Mass Ongest Thurday Thursday
29 May 2016
HEAD TO HEAD
Selected Secondhand
- Furniture - Antiques
7308 Mass. 841-7070
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redken
Goods • Vintage Clothing
- Imported Clothing
HALF AS MUCH
68 VW Carman Ghla Good condition. Make offer
88 VW Carman Ghla, M14329 - 829 after 6月.
2-25
Douglas 1019 turboprop in mint condition. Includes $100 Emerson cartridge. Will sell at $75. Call RMG Auto Sales at (800) 323-6461.
**NWEDOOD** 8005, 804A tuner and Tuner. Timen 1.5 sensitivity and instrument is 70 watts per channel. Equipment is in perfect condition. Soil for $90, will ask for $70.3. Rock Nick 841-3300
For sale 1966 Foid Elmwood 200, 250 AC, power
stabilizer, new trim kit, Chan, service reqs,
e.g. ac servo, compressor, pump, etc.
HELP WANTED
Kennedy wood stove recipe receivers $75 and beverage cocktail tables;心形 $54,258-314-8100
Men or women. We need 5 people immediately.
Must have own transportation and a willing to
work on-site for personal interview call Bob Lawson, 842-3110,
Lawson Kitey Co. Will lead to full time
saturdays 4-14
Born. Put yourself through college the easy way.
Become an Avon Representative, and make the money you need. sell quality products on your website. For full details, call 842-6158 or 8-58 6073
Local moving firm need experienced drivers and packers. Would like to work a few hours a week in preparation for summer work. Play with the team at part 237, Kansas. Kansas 66044. 3-4
LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS to work in work
with the Public School Representative or campus Maple
Bridge School Representative at a public school.
PART TIME LECTURER IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY 4小时 time (non-teen-tween) appointment needed. Req. $3500. Responsibilities involve teaching at the university and working in chemistry. Teaching experience desirable but not required. Send resume, graduate and undergraduate degrees to John A. Landgrebe, Department of Biology at John A. Landgrebe, University of California. Preference to application received before ACTION EMPLOYER 2-28
Bureau of Child Research Achievement Place has opening for 1/2 time (afternoons) research assistance in child development. Must have BA and be experienced in data collating and analyzing results. Excellent organization, communication and presentations are available at 113 Hwoung, University of Karuiz until Feb. 25. Qualified men and women are needed.
Walrusfair Part time, evening, fine area restaurant; attractive and meeticulous premises. Granaries.
Need one person, capable of lifting heavy man-
uals 20 lb., or up to 55 lb. for a 2-car truck; $4 for 8 hours; work 6am-8pm.
Need one person, capable of lifting heavy man-
uals 20 lb., or up to 55 lb. for a 2-car truck; $4 for 8 hours; work 6am-8pm.
Delivery person and odd jobs, some heavy lifting.
Must be familiar with Lawrence, Mon-May 19-10,
Friday through Saturday. Req's: Kansas driver license. See in person Jim Freeman at Garden Center, 12th and New York 2-25.
LOST AND FOUND
College student part-time. Light ligh and telephone work, 814-6430.
2-25
Found. Black with white markings terrapin
ground on union on 2/21. Please call 814-624-972-
2-25
Last Bus Pass Student No. 234281, Call Mike
811-4522
3-2
Found. Ring found at Pottera. Please call and identify. 841-1852. 2-25
lost: Feb. 22 (morning) Texas calculator on
campus or at 11th Street—rewarded, 443-162-8800.
Lost: Man's fullbore 20f. possibly at
Mars in the European and American
expedition. 842-7019
Reward for information on lost banner of Lawyer
(Masonic) No. 923-1
Appeal No. 83-189
Phone: 83-189
Found large green and white Thermo in Philosophy Department Office, claim at 5025 West Wesley.
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts
...
--in THE MARKET PLACE
Imported Auto Parts
...
HEADQUARTERS
& Crafts 841-3522
Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Foreign Auto Parts
843-8080 304 Locust
NOTICE
Swap Shop, 620 Macks. Used for furniture, dishes, patio chairs, closets, clotheslines. Open daily 12-5pm. (984) 322-7460. www.swapswash.com
Two $200 scholarships any full-time undergraduate or graduate student. One $500 Grand Oriental Road, due March 6th. For further information call (813) 437-2978.
MISCELLANEOUS
"POMERICA" FIGHTS FIRE WITH WIFE
In lieu of balloon, tickets now on sale at the
UniCarly Balloon. Tickets now on sale at the
UniCarly Balloon.
AMERICA'S LAUGHS AT THE EXCESSES OF
THE WORLD TAKEN BY HELP FROM
Balloon. Tickets can be on sale at the SUA box.
www.sua.com.au
EUROPE/WORLDWIDE academic year (annual
round SA YA, 4228 First Ave., Turck, GA,
30084 (800) 241-9082
3-4
Gay Couple Rap Group: Saturday, Feb 25, 8
pick check with GSK. Room 103A - Union for
the Arts
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uher/Quick Copy Center. It is available from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturday at 4:30 p.m.
Pin-Ball
PERSONAL
MOURAT ROAQED Batterie Horseshow. Open @ 9pm
(Mon - Fri) 10am - 5pm, gallery at 39th St., 120 W. 49th St.
at 9am / 5pm, 9am / 5pm. Feb. 8 - Mar. 16.
Is your social life dragging? Want to meet other
students? Party this week. 814-746-776
Air Hockey
GARY SERVICE METTING: Tuesday, March 1, 7:30 p.m., International Room of Union, Gustavus College, Kansas City, Kansas Legislature, speaking on sexual privacy, the ERA and its impact on capital punishment, to invite 250 people.
Karen: Learn the annual secrets of the married
woman. Explain how to navigate the individual development as a married woman.
We are still giving away more tickets in the MELLOW
stores and at WESTERN STREET. Enter at TOWN
CITY in the MELLOW store or by calling 718-354-2600.
In the CITY in the MELLOW store or by calling 718-354-2600.
U.S. officer, 21 yrs. Grenland, quiet, self-employed
wife of a senior woman, 26 yrs. Grenland (Grenland)
mature woman, 32 yrs. Grenland (Grenland)
48 yrs. Grenland (Grenland)
Anyone who was in Big Tompkins Canyon during
flower, please call Few, collect, ect.
6927 3-245
Spend 20 days in Europe this summer. See Bruinbrush, Munich, Park City, Pisa, Florence, and more.
*CLOSED*
Volkswagen Turn Up Special $16.90 Bouchon
VW Variant Upland Upright $15.90 VW Vantage
VW Vantage Upland and Entryside $48.4125
$48.4125
EUROPE; VOOR WAY; Fly into or depart from
M EU european airports vlc scheduled service (Best
offers) at Europort Airport; Discount on
Discount on course-A accommodations and rail
transfers; Pa information- anytime 841-7638.
To Jim and Susan, Happy 19 months. Streetcreee
those big lips. Ala-ha the Boys. 2-28
ISO2 strengthens, purifies, concentrates Now-
available at LOVE RECORDS, 15 Worth Street,
Near the AVE 107.
CTION OF BEER
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
843.9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
0.05 km
- Feos-Ball
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
Eidgkeier Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
F BEAD CO.
NOW THE
STREET
MARKET PLACE
Open 7 Days a Week No One Under 18 Admitted
841-7946 M-S 10-5:30(Thurs.8:00)
Help your VW run furter. Lawsuits. Volunteers.
For more information, visit us at:
412-735-6000 or www.vwv.com
412-735-6000 or www.vwv.com
Am looking for good home for two cats (15 yrs. old)
and 6 months old. I am a lightly brown, town, cane-like cat. Call me at 800-243-7090.
- Pool
- Snooker
ROCK CHALK REVUE Don't Miss It! 2-25
M.D.A. thanks for just being you
and loving me. Forver, L.B.
2-25
"HOMERICA" IS ASKING COURTSIDE MAR-
KETTING. Katie Gronn, Tickets on sale at
Gramercy Grim's Ballroom. Tickets on sale at
75 West 10th Street. (212) 436-8940.
SERVICES OFFERED
Round Corner Catering is a good place to get in and get in to some of our current Seasonal Shipping. **2-25**
I'm looking for companies to travel around Europe, my summer must be out-going and I plan to be visiting.
HILLCREST E
9th and Iowa—West of Hillcrest Bowl
French lemnis by native speaker with experience,
all levels. Phone 812-2897
2-25
TYPING
Math tutoring-competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 002, 102, 105, 111, 116, 117, 118, 121, 122, 123, 124, 142, 150, 538, 627, 965.
Reasonable rates. Call 842-7841 for details.
Licensed child care center on campus has open-
ness for one day and one half day.
$44 - 633-3531 - $25
February "Tune up special." We clean up and upgrade the equipment in the room, wash dishes, and dine, brush, and mud. And install any parts or accessories bought at time of "tune up" to ensure that they are in proper condition or 3 speed, or $16.50, or $14.00 single speed, or 2 speed. We also make sure the machines for all makes of bicycles. Lawncare Schwimm Cycley, 182 W. 6th, 9-6 Mon.-Thur, 6-11
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
Bird
WANTED
Experienced typist-term papers, thesis, mike,
electric paeia typewriter, proofreading, spelling
grammar. Send resume to W. K. Lahiri, 360 West 10th Ave., New York, NY 10024.
Typhis editor, IBM Pica Plus, Quality work.
Rewardable rate. Ties, dissatisfaction welcome.
Email: typhis@ibm.com
THEISM BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for姆斯 bindings & copying in Lawrence. Let us help you with $35 Massachusetts or phone 848-323-Thank you.
has the eyeglasses you want.
806 Massachusetts
Phone 841-7421
YPING-We have many return customers who are satisfied with our low cost and good service. We can be contacted at (612) 458-0890.
Your paper deserves the best. Call Piggy for great typing at 434-8143, day 7; 482-8999, evening.
TYPING-Thesis, term napets, etc. Reasonable
Call. Beth Bihl. 841-6777
3-4
Ride needed. Leave KU after 2:48 M-W-P for Johnson County. Will pay Call Corp £695.
VISIONS
846 Winnipeg 843-7685
Male graduate students wish to share two bed-
room apartment, $913 56 month, call 843-759-9287.
Hole-In-The-Wall Delicatessen
S
Kansas Unior
& Sandwick Skob
AiRFRAME WATERbeds
LABLE A1
THE FIELDS
STORE
712 MASS ST.
842-7187
CONFUSED BY
FINANCIAL AID APPLICATIONS?
Let H & R Block take the work and worry out of your annual struggle with financial aid applications. For quick, convenient, low cost service CALL 842-3207.
New Ways to See the Old World
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CHARTERS/YOUTH FARES/APEX AIR FARE
Wanted: Work with musical talent. If you play a brass, woodwinds or percussion instrument with a piano, Army Reserve Band gets together a time mid-monday or the mid-wednesday as well as locally. If you can provide one weekend (10 days) per month, and have something you enjoy part-time, call us at 834-1651 or visit www.musiciansuniversity.com to give you with an instrument and uniform. Ask for Sot. Bennett James, U.S. Army Reserves, 2100
1 or 2 mates to share very nice 2 bedroom apartments
I or 2 mates to share very nice 2 bedroom apartments
you pay just 35% - you pay only
60% of the cost of a two-bedroom apartment
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WANTED Female roommate for my nike 3-bed
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Call 812-822-2828.
Volunteers needed to help with Special Olympics
competition in the State of New York. Call
818-342-6050 or visit www.specialolympics.com
Need female Christian resumee COON to send
TravelAgency-approved cover letter on Bus Route # 812
TravelAgency-approved cover letter on Bus Route # 812
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2 TICKETS for Rock Chalk, Saturday night. Will pay fair price. Call Bob at H14-6455. - 225
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One of America's outstanding boys camp, One of America's outstanding boys camp, limited number of openings on the staff for the 1977 season. Days are June 22 - August 12. round trip transportation, living quarters, travel train transportation, is an orally interactive summer job, construction a
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2663 Shannon Court
Northbrook, Ill. 40042
2-3 bedroom house or apartment for summer and next fall. 835-645-6451 Ask for Karl Keneddens, Ted
after 6:00
at 842-0575
Studios roommate wanted for large apartment on Bus. Route: Call 842-9732
3-3
Male associate for Jayhawker Towers. 1/3 rent
Call 841-4967
OVERWEIGHT ROOMSMITE WANTED. Have a good plan and aim in hosting for a place to stay with you. You can be at home, on the couch or in your room.
L. would like to buy a "many" 10-speed bicycle.
Contact Saul, 841-3861. 3-3
Fernale wanted to share 2-bedroom apartment
953 month) 841-419-6
3-3
about K.U. Student Discount
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---
14
Friday, February 25, 1977
University Daily Kansan
Faculty research rooms disputed
Staff Reporter
By KATHY GANNON
Officials at Spencer Research Library and Watson Library disagree about supporting 97 private research rooms called faculty studies in the two libraries.
Alexandra Mason, Spencer librarian, said researchers working on these papers or dissertations needed and appreciated private study rooms.
But H. Robert Malinowsky, associate dean of libraries, said, "I think research studies are an extravagant use of space for this building right now. I question having them if we can't even accommodate the general student body."
Watson has 32 research studies for faculty members and graduate students on the topics.
SPENCER HAS 65 faculty studies, 45 of them on the ground floor, occupied by faculty members and graduate students. Twenty research studies are in the three departments of Spencer-University Archives, the Kansas Collection and Special Collections on projects needing constant use of the resources available in the departments.
Malinowski said he was uneasy about the research studies at Watson because they represented "many seating areas we're depriving undergraduates."
Broad training helps teachers find work
Most teachers now have to assist with some kind of extracurricular activity, such as sports or drama, besides teaching classes, Regier said.
Students in the School of Education can enhance their chances of getting teaching jobs if they train in more than one area, or in another area of education placement, said yesterday.
Last year, 60 per cent of KU's approximately 500 graduates from the School of Education got jobs, although Regier said they weren't all jobs in teaching.
and economic pressures are forcing some school district to hire one teacher to fill two
Missouri, Nebraska and Kansas usually have a higher percentage of employed education graduates than other states, so the competitive academic competition is greater here, he said.
In 1972, 782 students a record high,
graduated from the school. That number
remains unchanged.
Bad publicity could be a reason for that decrease, Virginia Musgrave, director of placement for Emporia Kansas State College, said.
Academic areas with a great demand for teachers now are learning disabilities,
Reports often state that there is an oversupply of teachers, Musgrave said, but that oversupply isn't in all areas of teaching.
Editorial award to Free Press
The Detroit Free Press has won the top citation for editorial excellence in 1978 from the Chicago Journal.
The Free Press won the sweepstakes award for three editorials it published last August during the height of summer violence in Detroit. The foundation cited the group outlining a "mature, solid way" for the community to recover from the violence.
The Free Press entry was also judged best among newspapers with a circulation of more than 50,000. Winners in other in-circulation groups were the Arlington Heights (IL). Herald, the North Platte (Neb.) Telegraph and the Sheridan (Wo). Press.
Winners were selected by faculty members the William Allen White School of memorialism.
Panels approve ban on chrome
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Legislation banning all U.S. imports of Rhodesian maize and wheat House subcommittee yesterday after U.K. Ambassador Andrew Young warned that further delay on the issue could cause violence to spread throughout southern Africa.
The bill approved by the House International Relations subcommittees on Africa and international organizations would repeal legislation by which the United States has imported Rhodesian chrome since the Johnson administration despite United Nations economic sanctions against Rhodesia.
Competitive fields include physical education and social sciences.
Mary Martin, specialist in the State Department of Education's teacher education unit for post-secondary administration, said those people who weren't getting jobs were unwilling to go where the jobs were.
special education, speech therapy and school psychology. Reiler said.
Martin said that people were moving from inner cities to suburbs, decreasing the number of vacant land.
Last spring, representatives from 27 school districts came to KU and interviewed 483 prospective teachers. This year, the number to visit the campus was the same number to visit the campus.
MALNOWSKY said the faculty studies situation was different at Spencer. It has a closed circulation policy so researchers don't get lost in space, and it's not a lack of space for readers at Spencer.
Mason said she thought the Spencer studies were worthwhile because researchers often said the private rooms were valuable for research work.
The Association of Research Libraries, an organization of the nation's larger academic libraries, including KU, recommends that university libraries accommodate at least 25 per cent of their students. At Watson, less than half that percentage can be accommodated by the available study and research space.
Malinsky said the Watson studies, added to the building in the early 1960s, catered to a small group of people who had legitimate needs.
"IN THE '60s we had enough reading space and enrollment wasn't as high as it is."
But Malinowski has his biggest concern to accommodate the general student.
All the faculty studies are now occupied and both libraries have waiting lists of researchers who want private rooms. Some of the rooms are assigned to two or three researchers whose schedules allow them to use the rooms at different times.
But, Malinowsky the studies aren't used heavily enough. He said that about half the rooms were in constant use, but that the other half were used infrequently.
Mason said that some researchers used the rooms every day at Spencer but that generally the use depended on a researcher's schedule.
RUGBY!
It's Head-Knocking Time Again!
After our tour of England, the K.U. Rugby Club is ready to kick off the Spring 77 season this weekend. Come see the opening scrimmage and then join us at Father's afterwards!
Saturday, Feb. 26 2:00 p.m.
H
SHE SAID KU had few places where a researcher could work uninterrupted. For example, if a faculty member is in his office, he could be interrupted by telephone calls she said.
Rugby Pitch, 23rd & Iowa
Faculty studies in both libraries lack telephones and researchers aren't supposed to use them.
"No one can reach them in the studies," Mason said. But librarians will contact
Each study has a desk, a chair, a book-case and a wakebasket.
Faculty studies are available by application. An application form asks for a description of the research project, the resources used, the time needed for the project and the frequency with which a study room will be used.
The 45 faculty studies at Spencer are assigned on a semester basis. The 20 Spencer department studies and the Watson department studies are not of time the project will take to complete
The studies are open during library hours.
SUA
SUA FILMS
FAMILY PLOT (1976)
Dir. Alfred Hitchcock with Karen Black, Bruce Dern. Popular Film Series
Dir. Jeanne and Alan Abel with
Dir. Jeanne and Alan Abel with
Rated X.I.D. will be checked at the dor.
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Fri., Feb. 25 & Sat., Feb. 26, 3:30;
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IS THERE SEX AFTER DEATH?
(1975)
BONAPARTE AND THE
REVOLUTION (1925
and 1971)
Dir. Abel 1 Gance, France.
Sunday, Feb. 27, 3:00 p.m. $
THE COLLECTOR (1965)
Dir. William Wyler with Terrence Stamp, Samantha Egger, Cannes Film Festival Best Actor, Best Film Festival Monday, February 28, 7:30 p.m. 75c
THE BIRTHDAY PARTY (1968)
Dir. William Friedkin with Robert Shaw, Patrick Magee. Adapted from a play by Harold Pinter. Classical Film Series.
Prinl series.
Wednesday, Mar. 2, 7:30 p.m. 75c
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
Kansas Union
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Feb. 26 (SAT.) 7:30 p.m. at Student Union, Forum Rm.
This Ad. is sponsored by KU international club.
SUA Popular Films
The film has won five Kinma awards for 1972: Best Film of the year, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress, Best Color Photography.
THE MYSTERY OF THE WEEK
KU KU Chinese Students Association presents:
M Asian Mindarie College in Film with English syllabus
From the devious mind of Alfred Hitchcock, a diabolically entertaining motion picture.
There's no body in the family plot.
ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S FAMILY PLOT You see it twice.
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KAREN BLACK - BRUCE DERN - BARBARA HARRIS
WILLIAM DEANNE - JEANNE WILLIAMS - ERIENN LEHMAN
For the best "THE RAINBIRD PATTERN" by VICIOR CANNING
ALFRED MUTTOOK
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7:00 and 9:30 p.m.
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The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
1974
KANSAN
Monday, February 28, 1977
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol.87.No.99
Having a mime "Red Meanie" from Hell can mix with the best of Heaven are Fritz Schell, Goddard sophomore, and Amy Halderman, Hutchinson ina, in a scene from PII Beta Phi and PII Gamma Delta's Rock Chalk Revue skit. The couple are two of the hundreds that participated in the Revue last week. See review page five.
Heavenly hua
Construction completion extended to June 7 for law school building
By JOHN MUELLER
Staff Reporter
The new School of Law building doesn't
have an office, but Mr. Krueger,
Klaus Krueger, state administrator, says Friday.
The $5 million building, east of Jayhawk Towers between 15th Street and Irving Hill Road, officially had been scheduled for completion by May 23. University administrators have maintained that no extension of the deadline had been given to Casson Construction Co., Topeka, the building's general contractor.
But Kruger said, "The building is not legally scheduled for completion by June 7."
MAX LUCAS, University director of facilities planning, said Feb. 15 that Casson had been denied a request for extending the May 23 deadline. The request was made at a hearing in the federal district court against Casson, the university, the Kansas Board of Regents and the state architect's office.
Speaking a week after the Feb. 8 extension has been granted, Lucas said, "I will not be giving up the time, but there has been no extension. The company legally must be done by May 23."
Luca said yesterday he hadn't known of the June 7 extension until last Monday.
"IHAVEN'T received an official letter of notice from the state architect," he said.
Krueger attended the Feb. 3 meeting. He
STATE SEN. Wint Winter, O-Rita-and chairman of both the Regents subcommittee and the full ways and means committee, said the subcommittee didn't think the Regents had justified the repair and energy conservation money.
Winter said that he agreed with the principles behind the Regents requests, but that he didn't want to see a $4.3 million capital improvements "slush fund" controlled only through the Regents office. The cuts might be restored later in the budget process, he said, if the Regents provide more reason to grant the requests.
Regents' budget faces possible cut
The $2.5 million for energy conservation projects had been requested for additional
said Friday. "We knew then we would grant the Cason request. We waited until the 8th because that's when the company asks for payments each month."
According to Krueger, "The Feb. 3 meeting was a general meeting. We just met on the Thursday of November."
TOPEKA - The Kansas Board of Regents' fiscal 1987 budget will be slashed by nearly one-third of the total approved by Gov. Mike Huckabee and his committee's recommendations are made law.
But Robert McFeeters, chief of construction for the state's division of architectural services, said, "Casson lost four or five full days because of the weather."
Kruger said Casson had received the extra two weeks "because we recognized that January was a cold month and caused a loss of days for the company."
Lucas said he had talked with Kruger and Krueger had told him the extension was to be closed.
building insulation, storm sashes on windows, window glazing, sun shades and a power management system at Emporia Kansas State College. The Regents estimated that the projects would save two years to pay for themselves in two to four years.
Staff Reporter
HE DIDN'T specify how many days Casson had lost because of the cold weather.
By STEVE FRAZIER
The cuts would include a $2.5 million request for energy conservation projects and $400,000 of a $1.75 million request for research and remodeling at Regents institutions.
The Regents subcommittee also recommended a $50,000 reduction in the Regents budget for buying slots for Kansas students in the Creighton Dental School in Omaha. Winter said the Regents had been funding the program at more than actual tuition costs and that Creighton had been refunding the difference to the students.
THE REGENTS were unaware of the refunds until a student complained to a
The Regents subcommittee, reporting Friday to the full Senate Ways and Means Committee, recommended $3.1 million be cut from the $9.7 million Regents budget approved by Bennett. The original request was for $8.8 million.
Kansas legislator that his refusal wasn't as large as another student's, Winter said. The subcommittee recommended the Regents to approve a contract with Creighton at the actual tuition cost.
Kruger, according to Lucas, felt he had be consistent because similar extensions had been taken.
Members of the individual Regents institutions subcommittees said they had recommended cuts in some of the institutions' budgets because of the central Regents capital improvements fund. One example was the University of Kansas that received a compensation that $99,000 for new curtains to be cut from the KU budget requests and that the money be taken from the capital improvements budget.
WINTER, RECOMMENDING that $500,000 be cut from $1.75 million requested for repairs, maintenance and remodeling, said, "We just didn't have any idea how these funds were being appropriated to the various institutions."
By state law, each day after May 23 that the building isn't done would've cost Casson $500. Casson saves $7,500 in possible fines because the extra 15 days it has received.
Winter said the subcommittee had recommended the money not be approved because the Regents had a staff lawyer in Topeka who was qualified and experienced.
The Regents subcommittee recommended elimination of $20,000 for labor negotiations legal expenses at Kansas State College at Pittsburg. The Regents had requested the money to hire a labor negotiations expert from Wichita to represent them in talks with the Pittsburg faculty.
THE KU subcommittee, as expected, recommended in its report to the full ways and means committee Friday that KU be allowed funds to build additions to Robinson Gymnastics and Maket Hall. Winter said the minor subcommittee had requested additional information and wouldn't report its recommendations until Wednesday.
THE FINE would have resulted from a civil law concept called liquidated damages, awarded on construction contracts to cover intangible damages whose effect can't be measured in exact dollar amounts.
Budget items that apply to all the Regents institutions—faculty salary increases, other operating expenses, library acquisitions, classroom equipment replacement and increased utility funding—weren't discussed in the subcommittees.
Krueger said that a Feb. 22 collapse of one of the building's inside ground walls wouldn't delay its completion further, but he believed the way the wall had been constructed.
"If the contractor doesn't properly brace the wall, and if the concrete blocks aren't stacked properly, it doesn't take much for it to collapse," he said. "With the winds we had that day, it's not really startling the wall collapsed."
Kruger said Casson or its insurance company must pay for replacing the wall.
JACK ENGLISH, superintendent in charge of construction at the building, has declined comment on whether the wall's collapse would delay completion of the building. He said last week that the wall should be repaired by today.
The collapse of the wall and Krueger's acknowledgment of the extension apparently confirm the views of Martin Dickinson, dean of the School of Law, who told me that the School of Law faculty-student office that the building wouldn't be finished on time.
According to the minutes of the meeting, Dickinson "indicated that, because of the continuing failure of the subcontractor to deliver the precast concrete blocks, and that we will now virtually certain that we will be building into the new building until January of 1978."
KRUEGER DISAGREED with Dickinson's views on the building until Friday. On Feb. 17, Krueger said that "to the best of our knowledge, the building should be completed on time. There is every reason to believe that there will be no delay."
Krueger also said at that time.
The sources said that defective concrete panels were being delivered to the building site, and that one panel had been dropped and broken two weeks ago.
"Dickinson obviously has a misconception about the building. The concrete blocks aren't going to delay the building. We'll be free on time."
Construction on the new building, which replaces Green Hall, began in March 1975. The new building's 95,000 square feet of floor space will accommodate an enrolment of 566,104 more students than last semester's enrolment.
Dickinson has declined to say why he doesn't think the building will be finished on time. But according to School of Law sources close to Dickinson, he has told them of persistent problems in construction related to the Casson Co.
The concrete panels were replacements for 17 other blocks provided by Casson. The company was asked last fall to replace the original blocks, which form the outer skin of the wall. After state and KU investigators decided the panels were of inferior quality.
Problems, complaints part of election litter
By SANDY DECHANT
and MARSHA WOOLERY
Staff Reporters
Three weeks ago, Harvey C. Jordon Jr., Snawnee Mission sophomore, to the Kansas University to attend what he thought was his first varsity football running in the Student Senate elections.
Jordon and a few other candidates waited there about an hour, and when no one else came
When Jordon called the Senate office next day to ask what had happened, he learned that the date in his letter was wrong and that the meeting actually was that night.
Jordon said he wouldn't attend that right's meeting, and was told he could come to the Senate office to check that his name is listed correctly and listed on the right ballot.
When he went in the next day, the ballots already had been sent to the printer.
Early Wednesday, Feb. 18, the first day of the elections, Jordan went to a poll and looked for his name on the ballot. He found it, but it was on the Liberal Arts and Sciences ballot instead of the Numeraker No. 2 ballot.
He said he called the Senate office and was assured that the ballots would be corrected by hand before the ballot boxes were transferred to the right polls. He was told new ballots would be printed for Thursday.
When Jordan checked the Oliver Hall poll that night, his name had been removed from the Liberal Arts and Sciences ballot as promised. But it had been handwritten on the ballots for the third Nunemaker district instead of the second, he said.
HE WENT by a Wescoe poll Thursday morning, he said, and found that no new ballots had been printed and that his name had never been crossed off and rewritten.
That Thursday, Jordan fled a complaint contesting the election in his district. Before the ballots were counted that night, the committee acted on Jordan's complaint.
The committee said an unfortunate mump had occurred, but thought little could be done.
Jordan finished last in his district: He got 10 votes.
JORDON ASKED that his case be reviewed, but when the committee met last Tuesday, it once again decided that it would be impossible to hold another vote in Jordon's district. The committee decided to reimburse his 45 registration fee.
Jordon had considered appealing his case to the University Judiciary, he said, but decided the time and frustration wouldn't be worth it.
Despite several problems similar to Jordon's, all three presidential candidates and members of StudEx called the election a success.
A total of 4,200 student voted in the election, breaking last year's 3,300 vote.
BY ADDING 9 polls to the 10 polls from last year, the committee hoped to make the polls more accessible to the students and reach a goal of 5,000 voters.
The committee didn't increase voter turnout by 1,700, as hoped, but members said they were pleased by the increase of 819.
Because of the expected increase in vote turnout and the additional polls, more voters are voting.
The attempt to get such a large increase in the number of voters, and still maintain fairness, caused several problems, both foreseen and unforeseen, for the committee.
Kevin Flynn, Elections Committee chairman, said last night that half as many ballots were printed in each school as the number of eligible voters.
A TOTAL OF 650 ballots each were printed for the sophomore and junior classes, and 500 were printed for senior class members.
Flym said the committee initially printed far too few ballots.
Available ballots were divided among 19 volls, aggravating the problem. Early
See ELECTION DEBRIS page eight
Interim trashman picks up realistic view of goo
By RICK THAEMERT
Staff Renorter
Steve Yeakee is an atypical trashman. Of the 40 city trashmen he works with, half are illiterate and 10 are ex-cons. Yeakee, however, graduated from KU last year with a bachelor's degree in ancient history and will enter KU law school next fall.
"Three years ago, if somebody would've asked me whether I wanted to be a trashman, I would have recoiled in horror." Yeakel said. "Being a garbage bagman was my job, though high school and college finals I thought I've got to do or I'll be a trashman."
But Yekail took the job because he needed money for law school and because hard physical work can knock out some of those defenses. He alert and keeps me from going stale."
Yeakel said they, like most people, held the opinion that "your trash is like goo, and the man who comes and gets it is an extension of the trash."
YEAKEL'S WIFE and parents at first were embarrassed when he took the job and was not able to work.
City trashmen also are the brunt of complaints because they provide the most objectionable waste.
Yeah, Yeahal, it's not uncommon to people in Caddisilla staring at garbervilles at garden parties.
BUT NOW, working behind the huge, white city garbage truck, it's clear Yeakel is unabashed about his work. He works fast, and he's methodical and tireless. His glings trash bags and cans into the truck, then on hops on the emitter, emitting a high-pitched
"Frustrate people have hung-ups and a bsnman is a good, safer lessen to take it on."
whoo to let the driver know he and his coworkers are finished.
"Trash throwing is the most fun when you really work hard, just sweat and let it fly," he said.
Veaelak told the trashman worked harder when there was an incentive system that enabled them to go home when they finished their route. He said the men would exhaust themselves to do their work in five hours instead of just working for a day, however, was killed by the city commission.
"That's the main criterion for respect around here--hard work. People down here take a lot of pride in what they do. There's a technique to doing it right."
he said he often found cans containing good things that have been discarded for apparently trivial reasons. Sometimes, he used a pair of small squirrel, a meal spawned from poverty.
"It's unusual to see people really work hard for anything, especially trash," he said.
Yeakel said the trashman he worked with were the hardest workers he'd ever seen.
YEAKEL ALONE lets about 8,000 pounds of trash fly a day. The truck on which he drives the truck makes it work and usually makes at least one trip a day to the dump. The city owns about 16 trucks.
WORKING ALLEYS is the hardest work, he said, because all the can are in a row!
Looting trash isn't uncommon among trashmen. For example, Yeakel found a garden hose in one load of trash that he needed.
See TRASHMAN page three
Yeakel said working with trash mude him aware that "an affluent society breeds a
photo by MARIANNE MAURIN
Part of the job
staff photo by MARIANNE MAURIN
inough years ago Steve Yeakel never thought he would find himself in this ac- cupation, he doesn't mind a bit. Yeakel enjoys the physical exercise that is a part of a trashman's job.
cupation, he doesn't mind a bit. Yeakel enjoys the physical exercise that is a part of a trashman's job.
---
2
Monday, February 28, 1977
News Digest
From our wire services
Congressmen accept raise
WASHINGTON—An overwhelming majority of the congressman who fought the $12.00 pay raise are it, anyway.
A telephone survey of Capitol Hill turned up only 12 representatives who said they definitely intended to turn back their requests to the Treasury or donate them to
The survey was done to check out the widespread belief on Capitol Hill that many congressmen who publicly announced the navy hack secretly wanted it.
Among those who said they were either donating or turning the raise were Bens, Maura Keehs, D-Kan, and her husband, Andy Jacobs, D-nd.
An aide to Rep. Keith Sebelius, R-Kan., said Sebelius was taking the money because he had two sons in law school.
Vance's China report due
WASHINGTON—Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said yesterday the administration was checking to determine whether Henry Kissinger reached any secret understandings with the People's Republic of China concerning American abandonment of its ties with Taiwan.
Columnist Joseph Kraft said that President Carter was asked about the alleged understandings in a Feb. 8 meeting with Huang Chen, head of the Chinese liaison
Commenting on the report during an appearance on CBS’ “Face the Nation,”ance said, “We are checking to see whether we have all the papers at the State Department.”
Kraft said that although there was no proof that any understandings were reached, "it now seems apparent that President Nixon and Secretary of State Kissinger virtually promised Peking that they would scrap the Taiwan connection in a couple of years."
New York loan in doubt
NEW YORK—Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal told Mayor Abraham Beame yesterday that the government might not grant New York City a $255 million loan to avoid insolvency next month because he doubts the city could repay it.
"Blumenthal said a loan would depend upon the city's making significant progress toward renewing a financial stalemate that stemmed from a court order."
*This development poses serious consequences for the city, which is already vigorously pressing the banks and the unions to agree to a moratorium plan that will be reviewed at a later date.*
Monday Night
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Fish only 99c
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Chips good after 4:00
Pirate's Cove
6th & Maine
11:00-9:00 Sun.-Thurs.
11:00-10:00 Fri.-Sat.
Amid signs that Amin planned some sort of spectacular gathering at the airport Wednesday, Radio Uganda warned that the airline would count a raid similar to Israel's last July.
"We've had offers from the U.N. to intercede, but we've handled our affairs through the German embassy, and so far we've issued few deep concern," Carter told reporters.
In Washington, President Carter said the United States was monitoring the Ugandan situation closely, trying not to upset President Amin and trying to take advantage of his good wishes that he has expressed.
**"wooting a" military spokesman** generally believed to be, yesterday, the chief of an army invasion, the invading force would be disintegrated by the Ugandan armed for-
NAIROBI, (AP)—President Idi Amin yesterday postponed his meeting with about 240 Americans living in Uganda, reconnecting it for Wednesday at Entebbe University.
Washington said the nearest Marine unit was in the Mediterranean. But the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Enterprise and other U.S. warships were cruising off the East African coast after a courtesy visit to Kenya last week.
Amin has been quoted as saying he was ready to meet any "task forces" an apparent reference to an earlier charge that Marine were polished to invade Uganda.
Amin was to have met today in the capital city of Kampala with the Americans because he was going to speak the meeting was delayed until 8 a.m. Wednesday at nearby Entebie because the Americans, mostly missionaries in outlying areas, were on for more time prepare for the gathering.
in what appeared to be another Ugandan effort to defuse American alarm, the radio
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Amin reschedules his meeting with Americans
The spokesman urged Ugandans to be alert for signs that might indicate an invasion and said that because of the Israeli raid, the presence of U.S. naval vessels off the coast of Kenya in the Indian Ocean "must be taken seriously."
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838 MASSACHUSETTS
TELEPHONE 842-3610
JOB OPENING AVAILABLE
Part-time Student Employment
Office... Student Senate Title ... Executive Secretary Length of Appointment March 28,1977 to March 28,1978 Salary...'75°/Month Requirements...Available 15 hours/week
DUTIES
1. Compile and distribute minutes for Student Senate meetings and for the Student Executive Committee meetings.
said earlier yesterday that Amin wanted to thank the missionaries for their work and planned to award special medals to some of the Americans.
3. Responsible for management of the Student Senate office and maintenance of the Student Senate Resource Center.
Amiri also was quoted daily as saying he was being looked forward to discussing it with others.
2. Responsible for the assemblage and codification of legislation pertinent to the Student Senate.
Both Carter and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance appeared to be trying to play down the situation and not antagonize Amin, who would have had a long ago, and now styles himself field marshal.
4. Responsible for organizing and maintaining all files within the Student Senate office.
FACTS ABOUT THE POSITION
memorandum being prepared on their activities in 1973. Embassy in Japan was closed in 1973.
There was no explanation of why 3,000 people would attend the 8 a.m. meeting or
Position available 28 March 1977. Application closing date is 8 March 1977. Interviews will be held on 10 March and 11 March 1977. Pick up applications at the Student Senate Office, Suite 105, Level 3, Kansas Union. "An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Qualified men and women of all races are encouraged to apply."
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee
The radio said the meeting had been moved from Kampala to the lounge of the airport at nearby Entebbe on Lake Victoria "because it is the only one in Uganda large enough to accommodate the 3,000 people who will attend the meeting."
Notice to All Organizations
WISHING TO APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE STUDENT SENATE/STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE:
These requests must be completed and returned to the Senate office NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 28,1977.
Budget Request forms for Fiscal 1978 are now available in the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, Level 3.
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee.
BUY ONE
TACO
GET ONE
FREE
TACO
The taco is a hard shell filled with taco meat, garnished with cheddar cheese, lettuce, tomatoes, and sauce. One offer
per customer. Offer ends March 6,1977.
TACO
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2340 Iowa
APPLICATIONS
DUE
MARCH 1.
MARCH 1
That's the day your application is due. Be a part of the Student-Serving-Student. SUR Officer and Board Selections:
President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer
Indoor Recreation
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SUA OFFICE-KANSAS UNION
University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 28, 1977
3
ns
on their
ambassy in
had been range of the Victoriaanda large 000 people
why 3,000 meeting or
A
EEE:
able
vol 3.
1977.
ends
ends
ue.ent.
Trashman
From page one
"IT'S PART of a system in which the wealthy throw off things and it goes to the less fortunate," he said.
In fact, one time, a trashman found $500 in an old purse amid some trash.
"It's like winning bingo," Yeekel said.
"Everybody gets the fever for a couple weeks and has to open every purse they see."
When the amount of confiscated loot gets to a certain size, some trashmen have to buy them.
But not all aspects of trash-throwing are so rewarding.
Many trashmen are chased by dogs, and despite constant nips and barking, Yeeel said that "a dog ain't worth his oats unless he barks at a trash truck."
**KEAELK'S IDEAS about trash have changed since he became a trashman, and now he likes the job his fellow workers and others do.** He said he were very good about their trash.
"My own concept was that trash was ugliness, uck, heil. He said, but now, his ideas have changed."
--presents
"Trash is there, it's part of life," he said.
"It's nothing to be unlight about."
When Yeakel enters law school next fall (providing, he joked that his application wasn't volded because he was a trashman) he'll look up in his trash can in a more realistic manner. They won't be full of goo—just trash.
Yeakel alluded, "A rose by any other name ... trash by any other name smells that"
Hall council elects four new officers
The All Scholarship Hall Council last night elected new officers for the new Student Senate year at a meeting in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union.
Elected were Kent Ervin, Parson junge from Battenfeld Scholarship Hall, for the bishop's sophomore from Stephenson Hall, for vice-president; Jim White, Coffeivy sophomore from Grace Pearson Hall, for secretary; and homophone from Grace Pearson Hall, for the treasurer.
LITTLE ROCK (UPI) — The right-wing Citizens Council of Arkansas yesterday sent a telegram to Leonid L. Brezhnev in the Soviet Union complaining of “flagrant violation of human rights” in the United States because of school busing.
"Please try to get President Carter to stop busing students to obtain racial quotas in schools without a vote of parents concern. It is a flagrant violation of human rights in the United States," the telegram to Breznew, general secretary of the Communist Party, said.
Brezhnev gets complaints
The Kansas Civil Rights Commission, a state-funded organization in Topeka, ruled Friday that the University of Kansas discriminated against Mildred Watson, former associate professor of social welfare, because she is a black woman.
The Citizens Council, an organization described by Warnock as a "right-wing group", opposes school desegregation, busing and Communism.
The commission levied a monetary settlement, the amount of which will be announced in the next two or three days, according to Lovett, general counsel for the commission.
LIBERAL ARTS GRADS
Consider an Alternative . . . Cor-
ACTION—
PEACE CORPS/VISTA
Representatives on Campus
Placement Office
March 1
Servers/Careers for later
Mike Davis, KU general counsel, said last night that he had seen the hearing examiner's recommendation, which said he should pay Walton about $10.00 in back pay.
Commission ruling favors black woman
Warnock admitted the telegram was sent, "somewhat tongue in cheek."
Consider
Davis said KU had not received official notice of the decision. In fact, he said that KU had been given no notice of the Friday decision and heard of the decision through the press.
KU has 10 days to seek a rehearing with
Seniors/Grads sign up for interview nov
The Contemporary Sounds of the Mellow Music Maker
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Coming Sat., March 5th, River City Jazz Band
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the commission and Davis said he intended to do so. If the rebarbing is denied KU can continue.
Watson, who filled the complaint in falt 1973, said the discrimination continued for 7 years. "I don't know," she added.
JOB OPPORTUNITY
---
1977-78 ACADEMIC YEAR
RESIDENT DIRECTOR ASSISTANT RESIDENT DIRECTOR and RESIDENT ASSISTANT at Naismith Hall
Information including job requirements, descriptions,and applications may be obtained from the Manager's Office. Naismith Hall, 1800 Naismith Drive.
Deadline for submitting applications is 5 p.m. Friday. March 4. Naismith Hall is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer; male/female.
JOB OPENING AVAILABLE
Part-time Student Employment
Office ... Student Senate
Title . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Treasurer
Length of Appointment . . . . . March 21, 1977 to March 21, 1978
Salary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 100^\circ$/Month
JOB DESCRIPTION
(1) the accounts of the Student Senate (primarily the Student Activity Fee, the Student Transportation Fee, and bus pass sales) totaling three-quarter million dollars,
The position entails executive/administrative responsibilities over:
(2) the permanent property inventory of the Student Senate, total valuation of over one-quarter million dollars.
(3) the office of the Treasurer including supervision of two other employees.
(2) experience in inventory accounting,
(1) Knowledge of simple accounting procedures,
JOB REQUIREMENTS
(3) experience in office management,
(4) basic office skills,
(5) attendance at Student Senate, Finance & Auditing, and Transportation Committee meetings.
FACTS ABOUT THE POSITION
Position available 21 March 1977. Application closing date is 8 March 1977. In-room pick up applications at Student Senate office, Suite 165, level 3. Kauai Union.
"An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Qualified men and women of all races are encouraged to apply."
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee.
Steak
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Mr. Steak
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
S.U.A. Indoor Recreation
$3.99
A fancy restaurant dinner,
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Offer thru Mar. 27
920 W. 23rd
Lawrence, Ks.
Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily
PLAYER
BOWLING: Open lanes Monday through Friday, Noon 11 p.m. & Friday Nite - Date Nite, 6 games for Saturday, 3:30 p.m. & 11 midnight, Sunday, 1 p.m. & Till 5 p.m. for each game, Noon 11 p.m. & 5 p.m. coves, after 6, 60 cents.
BACKGAMMON: Every Wednesday at 7 p.m., Pine
Room, Union. Beginners Welcome.
TABLE TENNIS! All-campus Tournament planned for sometime in April.
PENNY TOWNSHIP
FOOBSBALL: All-campus Tournament planned for sometime in April.
JACK & JILL
CHESS: Sunday, 2 to 4 p.m., Parlor C, Union. Monday,
7 to 11 p.m., Parlor C, Union.
44
TEK
BILL IARDS: Six regulation Tables. Monday through
Saturday, 130 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, 1
p.m.
TUXEDO PIG
BRIDGE: Wednesday, 3:00 p.m. Parar A B, Union,
Sunday, 3:00 p.m. Parar A B, Union. Bridge lessons for
beginners are available through Free University,
Faculty and students welcome.
This is the third year Student Union Activities has devoted a complete focus on indoor activities. With more emphasis on these activities, they should be better than fun and activities and are being organized, and we hope K.U. students will participate.
WATCH FOR ORGANIZED FRISBEE
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT SUA OFFICE, 864-3477
4
Monday, February 28, 1977
University Dally Kansas
Comment
Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism
Taxes sting singles
And for single taxpayers, this bad news could get worse.
The tax reform acts of 1969 allowed a single taxpyter a paltry $750 standard deduction and let his married friends off the IRS hook to the tune of an average 20 percent less than he paid. Now, President Jimmy Carter proposes well-publicized tax reforms of already reformed tax laws as part of his $31.2 billion economic stimulus package. But there is one area that won't change; his proposal calls for a raise in the standard deduction—$2,800 for couples but only $2,400 for singles.
One is left to wonder who is getting stimulated...
CERTAINLY NOT the 1.3 million people the U.S. Census Bureau estimates aren't married but live together (up from $654,000 in 1970). Certainly not the 2.8 million men and 4.4 million women who were divorced or legally separated as of March 1976. Certainly not the rest of the singles in the world whose marriage is the highest) luckless souls whose only legal dependents are themselves and possibly a dog or two. And unlike the head of a household who gets $50 a head for his dependents, dogs are, in the eyes of the IRS, worthless.
The fundamental assumption upon which tax benefits rest is that it apparently costs married people more to live than it costs single people, though one wonders how. Surely two incomes beat the heck out of one. And if these incomes are of reasonable size—say $12,000 a year or so—married people can't be doing all that badly.
A POSSIBLY more devious reason exists for encouraging people to marry. Marriage was, at least until recently, one of the major stabilizing forces in the United States. As late as the early 1960s, men seldom passed at girls who wore glasses. World War II, women over-aged 30s and 40s, often only as librarians or, if lucky, hair stylists. Men in that age bracket were only a bit less likely to succumb to societal pressure.
A return to the simple philosophy of Jefferson is applicable to the current tax system—government is best that governs least. One hopes societal attitudes have improved in response to future protection against the financial inequity of current tax laws and Carter's proposal.
Whether an individual chooses to marry, a woman or another or fiddle on a roof is no business but it is.
His decision shouldn't cost him a penny.
Once upon a time, there was journalistic art called "paragraphing." The paragrapher, who was unsung owner of the newspaper, wrote short one or two sentence comments about the local, national and world scene. These comments were—or were supposedly—wry, and contained a bitter grain of truth.
Clever paragraphing a lost art
Throughout the late 1800s and early 1900s, the paragrapher reigned supreme. Eventually, however, he was beed out by practitioners of other journalistic fields and became more and more a lost art, practiced by one but the editors of small town weekdays.
The main reason paragraphing is dying out is that it is just too hard to do well—and is especially hard when writing the same problem Johnny Carson has with his monologue. But while Johnny Carson has a large stoke of joke writers working to try to make people laugh every day, the poor paragraphing has to do it all himself.
NO ONE, that is except Bill Vaughan of the Kansas City Star, who died last weekend at the age of 61. With his death, a significant extinct category extinct as far as major newspapers are concerned.
It is no wonder that young
Two incidents last week furthered my convictions that politicians are only human. And, in the spirit of objectivity, one incident happened to include the governor, Gov. Robert Bennett, and the other a Democrat, Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona.
Politicians human, too
Let's turn to state matters first.
Gov. Bennett and the Kansas Republican Party were caught with their elbows down last week after a court ordered the associated Press that the state GOP had bought liquor on credit. A person or business in
wasn't being spent on political entertaining.
"I don't buy alcohol, so I don't know how much that would buy," *人民* said last week. "People who contribute to the Republican Party—is that how they want their funds used?"
Bennett's monthly drinking bill averages $100. As one might expect, this has left some people wondering, including the Rev. Richard Taylor Jr., president of the Kansas University Dr. Forces.
" . . . When there is great concern about marijuana consumption in Kansas, why is there no concern about the use
Jay Bemis
Editorial Writer
A. N. S. M. R. A.
Kansas extending such credit is in violation of state liquor laws.
AS A RESULT, William Payne, J., a Topea liquor store owner who never before had been issued an Alcohol and Division (ABC) citation, had this license suspended for 10 daw
The ABC listed three instances in which the credit was extended, and the total tab was $1,355.85.
Yet Jack Ranson, state GOP chairman, said in a statement released early last week that the party had purchased $2,588.30 in liquor for Cedar Crest, the governor's mansion. These purchases took place during the 26 months that Bennett has been governor, and were part of a $25,000 annual tax on property owned by Bennett's "political" entertainment.
of our most abused recreational drug?"
BENNETT HAS BEEN clear in pointing out that the practice of buying liquor on credit involving himself and the state GOP had evolved out of a desire to insure that state tax money
"It is not a regulation they
build," Taylor said. "It's a law.
Should Kansas law enforcement
with recreational drug pushers."
themselves each month. Even I would publicly admit that my monthly drinking bill is a little more than that.
TAYLOR ALSO reflected on a statement made by the ABC director, E. V. D. Murphy, that the credit purchase of liquors in the state wasn't terribly serious.
What Taylor doesn't seem to realize is that the governor and members of his party are only human.
After all, the governor is a graduate of the University of Kansas, where many people attend. He must $100 worth a month through political entertainment, other must be drinking with him. So even if the governor has at least four political parties a month, that's only an average of $25 that could be allotted for each party.
So those who are having second thoughts about the governor should have third ones as well. The human, and a KU one at that.
THERE ARE PROBABLY thousands at KU who drink more than $20 worth of liquor
Mo Udall has proved that he's only human, too.
Moy's upset about President Jimmy Carter cutting off funds to 19 national dam projects, one of them affects his state.
"This is a major expense, an ongoing project that's been debated for a decade," Udall said. "It came from the Central Arizona Project.
UDALL AND MEMBERS of his House Interior Committee have even gone as far as to designate the administration to that of former president Richard Nixon. The committee members are pointing out that the Nixon administration has made attempts that Congress had appropriated.
ouail then asked why there had been no consultation before Carter's major decision. It seems that Carter did not wish to not with Udall, anyway. Because one week before Carter's decision to curb the dam funds, Udall and 72 other members of the state's planning urging Carter to halt construction of "unnecessary and environmentally destructive dams" and to make a "serious effort to turn off the waste tax on unnecessary projects."
"I seem to remember some speeches (and the presidential campaign) about the administration and consulting with Congress."
"We're still kind of nervous in Congress," Udall says.
AFTER CARTER'S announcement concerning the dams, Udall said he thought the
It seems that Udall didn't write the fine print of the petition he signes the week before, or at least he doesn't matter. I've been told for several years now that "before you sign any thing, read the fine print."
petition only referred to new projects.
Perhaps Udall should have been told this when he was young. But it's best to forgive Mo. He's only human.
THOSE PEOPLE who do have the talent for quips and
politicians who" . . . No. Got one. "The KU whistle is missed only because classes are."
Not bad for three minutes of mumbling and wall-staring. Not especially funny, either. And even it was more a matter of a lucky flash than a logical progression.
Take a potential tunny the KU whistle, for example.
don't work that way. My mind certainly doesn't.
I would really like to be able to fill the rest of this column wi-
ther I want to say really trying to think of some.
Trying, but falling miserably.
would-be newspaper satirists
write more in the style of Art
Buchwald than that of Bill
Vaughan. Parodies and
reminiscences are less
defined and, basically,
easter.
The true paragrapher has even brighter flashes several times a day. He has to, or he loses his job.
Editor's Note
basketball tournament is that it is higher than last year's."
Jim Bates
"It would be interesting to find out how many people against the Avanti Coalition were a kid who was a pew king of Plymouth."
Here are a few more feeble fruits of my wall-staring and dim flashes. If nothing else, they will probably prove that the Kansas State troopers are elsewhere for Bill Yaughan's replacement:
The new law school building should be ready in time for this year's seniors. But they'll all be professors by then.
"K.State has finally gotten nearly equal representation on the Board of Regents. Next thing you know, they'll be wanting a Rhodes Scholar, too." The Kanax student feature at Stanton Body President Steve Labeau last fall was most shocking II've read since the bulletin board in Wescow Terrace."
"The best thing you can say about the attendance so far in the Big Eight post-season
pithiness become stand-up comics, which offers greater eg gratification and pays better than a newspaper job.
Investigation is self-destructing
exorbent budget ($6.5 million for one year) and hired an additional 73 assistants to work with him in the investigations. Although no palpable evidence has been produced, Sprague interviewed a man with "permission" regarding James Earl Ray's escape through Canada after assassinating Kins in Mumbai.
Last fall, what seemed to be one of the more altruistic and highly praised actions of the 94th Congress was the reopening of the investigations into the bombings in President Kennedy in 1983 and civil rights leader Martin Luther King in 1968.
mittee unavoidable heli-bent on its own destruction.
The problem began, as many problems do, with money. Once hired, Sprague began to act with ever-increasing autonomy from the congressional committee. He submitted an
Idi Amin is one of the 1970s' most controversial figures and revels in the publicity that his every move accords. To many of his soldiers he is a large, affable and cuddly president whose antics have focused world interest on the country and "on the map." To the world, humanism is a tony, the Amin is a tyrant, a contradictory, hypocritical and extroverted maniac who has brought repression, torture and fear to the Ugandan people.
with Russian and Cuban emissaries in Mexico.
BUT ALAS, SUCH high hopes have been inexplicably dashed as the committee, through its own grand design, has broken down to a few, insistent infighting led by the committee chairman, Henry Gonzalez, D-Texas, and the chief counsel, Richard Sprague ofonialia, a district attorney who reached the furniture throwing date, and has put the com-
The House of Representatives Select Committee on assassinations, with the advent of a new administration, seemed to renew hopes of eminent men that have plagued the minds of many people, both in and out of government.
THE FULL HOUSE, viewing with alarm the amount requested by Sprague and the padded staff, has voted to and the committee's life by March 31 unless Sprague can come up
Also, he says he turned up the people who were never questioned regarding contacts that Lee Harvey Oswald had
His Excellency the President of the Republic of Uganda, Field Marshal Al Haji Dr. Iri Amida Mimd, VC. DSC, MCI.
Amin must be treated with care
two key members of the committee to support him and his staff, with budget intact, for the investigation. The flight was on.
Pretty distinguished
But most people couldn't be paragraphers even if they wanted to. Their minds just
YES, YES, I'VE GOT EVERYTHING:
THE INVITATION,
THE HIP FLASK
AND THE MOM!!
FRIED CHICKEN!
WHITE HOUSE
MARY JOHNSON
AMIN'S LATEST outbursts, according to reports, have been a series of purges on members of the Roman Catholic Church and Catholic and Protestant
SPRAGUE, ACTING more independently of the committee every day, took the matter into his own hands and convinced
character, eh? Not when you consider that Amin, Uganda's notorious dictator, awarded himself most of the titles. If the government-controlled new paper, the Voice of Uganda, is it okay, Amin soon add the titles Emperor and Son of God.
Paul Jefferson
Editorial Writer
Gonzalez retaliated, first by refusing to send pay vouches for Sprague's staff, and ordering him not to spend any money without his (Gonzalez) written authorization.
with a lower operating budget and more solid evidence that the renewed investigations can be as productive as first hope. Gonzalez then confronted Spencer about what he believed to reduce the size of his staff and specify all his expenses so the investigation could stay within its temporary budget of $84,000 a month.
BUT THIS seemed only to heighten the professional-called conflict-personal, as men began to act complete Sprague made veiled. Mafia-like accusations that Gonzalez was getting more and more on a limb in his efforts to bridge the gap were "corrective measures." Not to be outdone, Gonzalez persisted the attorney general's office to suspend Sprague's a staff access JBI files, and said that he believed Sprague was "beresk."
Paul Addison
Editorial Writer
For many, Amin is best know for his frequent attacks of verbal diarrhea that one week speak highly of foreign nations and the next week chide them. Mr. Amin has been in the hands of Zionists and then later spoke of his admiration for the country. Britain, he has said, "a nation in decadence," though Amin has assured the Queen of his support to his esteem and sent some money to the government to prevent further economic decline.
leaders. Ten days ago, the Anglican Archbishop of Uganda and two cabinets ministers were killed in a bombing in Hundreds of other deaths have been reported along with thousands of arrests of tribal leaders.
This shameful investigative force reached a climax last week when Gonzalez fired Sprague as chief counsel, only
to have the rest of the committee vote to reinstate him.
As one House member put it,
"I Gonzalez and Sprague can't get together, maybe we don't need either of them."
The House has taken on the responsibility of conducting an investigation into the deaths of two of the most important and promising leaders in this half of the 20th century. The public has a right to expect an investigation that is logical, responsible, proactive and we have no need for the internecine battles that have marked politics in the not-so-recent past.
AS GRACEFULLY AS possible by now, this carnival will come under the jurisdiction of the full House this week, which may vote to either fire Sprague in favor of someone else, or to get rid of both Gonzalez and Sprague.
Instead of a means to an end, the Select Committee on Assassination has become the organization ever having much of a beginning.
For five years, Amin's hard-headed dictatorship has kept Uganda in a state of terror. It has now fallen. After seizing power from President Milton Obote in January 1971, street crowds have begun to flock the announcement a return to civilian rule and democracy.
AMIN FOR many years has been a thorn in Britain's flesh. Uganda has been a fully independent member of the Commonwealth since October 1962 though Britain has formally broken off diplomatic relations with the country. However, Amin still says he is confident that the Commonwealth Conference, a move that could be embarrassing for the Queen and already has brought unwelcome statements from other members of Parliament.
"THERE IS NO room in Uganda for hatred and enmity," Amin declared. "We want to clean up the country in all aspects and then organize free and fair elections."
These, unfortunately, still haven't materialized. As Amin enters his sixth year in office—he once said he would never rule more than five years—Uganda's political and economic future still looks troubled.
The nation suffers from a lack of basic foodstuffs that have led to huge price increases and profiteering. At first the blame for the black market situation was placed on Ugandan Asians who were subsequently expelled from the country. The black market still exists and Amin has turned his wrath on the Acholi and Langi tribes, who he says are trying to assassinate him.
WHILE FOODSTUFFS and other goods are in short supply, military hardware is plentiful because of Russian support. Amin, however, refuses to be dictated to by the Soviets as he showed in his forceful Angolan policy.
And there's a lot that could be said. For example: the Student Senate could have no real effect on decisions concerning the building funds controversies; it could make them known; that is, assuming that the much-vaunted "communications" channels really exist. And on a more basic level, there are well-known inadequacies through the level of the University, from faculty shortages to small misdirection of funds.
Whatever his temperament—and it seems likely that he is at times deluded and misled—Amir is a power to be reckoned with. But Amir can’t easily dismiss, for instance, his chairmanship of the Organization of African Unity or his position as head of a strategically important African country. His idiosyncrasies has largely changed to disgust and repulsion, Amir must be treated cautiously by the authorities and conceived move would perhaps lead to a harsh reply that could affect the world in untold ways.
TH
Medi
musi
juni
to
Neec
origi
1
"I best perf Fer Kin his sopl
Bu Med the ente thou
I said that issues weren't being talked about and that the apathy most of us seemed to feel wasn't being touched by anything being publicly said. I feel, and feel deeply, that the Student Senate could easily be taking positions on matters it ignores now. Even if we were confident it could make itself a moral voice, a representative of all our consciences.
To the editor:
I was grievously misquoted in the Kansan a few days ago and I feel I weit it to myself to set the record straight. The topic was the recent Student Senate elections and I was quoted as saying that there was no reason to vote in that election. That isn't what I told your reporter, and I'd like to say what I was thinking.
Issues need airing
Letters
There are social and moral issues to be talked about, too; the deep dark secret that nearly everyone living in the residence halls smokes grass once in a while, or the fact that agents of SAVAK, the Shah of Iran's CIA, are on campus spying on our Iranian students for reports from foreign sources. There are scores of topics like this and they cry out for public discussion.
People voted in (realtively) huge numbers during the election indicating. I think, a
real desire to influence their status, to create a voice for themselves. After all, the only real antidote to apathy is to be aware of a reason and a reason, to take action. But the Student Senate shows no sign of ever coming close to really filling that need; maybe some people are important. So for myself, and many others, the one quote of mine you printed accurately will still hold: no issues, no vote.
Dave Eagle Prairie Village sonhomore
Publicized at the University of Kansas daily August 19th, 2014 at noon in The Student Union and June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday weekdays. Subscriptions by mail are $1 a member or $18 a year; a visit to the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. State subscriptions are a year outside the county.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Editor
Jim Rates
Alison Gwint
Associate Campus Editor
Assistant Campus Editors ...
Managing Editor Greg Hack
Campus Editor
Alison Gwinn
Associate Campus Editor
Lynda Smith
Barris Editors
Barbara Rovowski
Copy Chiefs
Editorial Editor Stewart Brann
Business Manager Janice Clements
Advertising Manager
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Assistant Classified Manager
National Advertising Manager
Tim O'Shea
Judy Jasmine
Randy Higbee
Pat Thornton
Danny O'Connor
Robin Gruender
University Dally Kansan
Monday, February 28, 197
5
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Reviewer
'Evil Medieval' praised
permanent—what heatkind is misled—reckoned the world, the militarism, for asses of African land in his head of a ant African museum at his largely August and guest and must be by the bury of ill or ill perhaps that could not wayls.
MARTI SCHILLER JOHNSON
---
sophomore
If there's a grand slam of Rock Chalks, the Kappa Alpha Theta and Dali Upiosse have a secure place in history. Their production, "Evil Medieval," took six of eight awards at Saturday night's 27th annual Rock Chalk Revue.
mend their ennouncement a voice for
vice all, the onlypathy is to a chance,
action. But shows no close to going
it's like it thinks it's itself, myself, and
one quote of accurately
votes, no vote.
But don't be fooled by the sweep. "Evil Medieval!" was NOT the only bright spot of the evening. ALL of the productions were screamed, covered, even though the awards didn't show.
THE KEY to the success of "Evil Medieval" was a completely original music score by Dong Ferguson, Wichita junior. The music gave continuity and drive that skilt from start to finish. Needless to say, it took the award for best original song.
Another focal point of the skit was the ingenuous on-stage costume change that further emphasized the overall Rock Chalk Costume. "I'm not in Chance." It drew the best costume award.
"Evil Medieval" also took awards for best set, best production number, best male performance and best overall production. Pergouen played a perfectly "terrible" character could have seen more of his queen, Bonnie Yoxall, liberal sophomore.
THE SKIT didn't take the best female performance award, Nancy Wewsandlau, Lawrence junior, won it for the Bla Peta Phi Gamma Delta "Heavens to Beyts" skit. The production had some pacing problems, but displayed strong performances by Mark Robinson, Robinson, Kirkwood, Mo., sophomore, and Cliff "Glock" Hallock, London senior.
Wideauslaan's performance stole many hearts, and her duet with Robinson was the most compelling of the evening. The plot seemed to revolve around a seemingly seemed to cry for a Cole Porter song.
The group also won an award for best original script, determined last December when judges selected the four scripts to be performed from 13 submitted scripts. The award was not presented at Saturday's award ceremony.
THE ALPHA CHI OMEgal-Alpha Tau Omega skipt, "Sarparilta; A Hard Drink to Swallow," had its own shining moments. The production should have won an award at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival dialogue and one-liners provided the most sophisticated humor of the evening.
Several minor roles in *Samarpaill* should have been expanded and exploited—should have sustained performance as Belinda Boyd's a Jewish fairy godmother; and the "Chip" and Date deputies played by Mark Trombold, Witchbird, and Chuck Trombold, Witchbird freshman.
The skirt's dance finale was a close contender for the best production number.
**COSTUMES WERE dazzling in "When Mother Gose Lets Lose or Goose Takes a Knee."**
Arts & Leisure
Gamble" by Gamma Phi Beta-Ala-
Kappa Lambda, Steve Maturte gave a good
performance as the Spider, but the skirt
was too loose. He kept it from
getting off the ground.
Cotterculture fairy tale characters were great, but they should have been developed in a more realistic way.
Four separate productions with four separate sets have potential for many time
and technical problems. One of Rock Chalk's success stories this year was the performance of the "In Between Act Players," who entertained the audience and were to be venerable and talented, and able to keep the audience warm and receptive throughout the evening. However, dancers they weren't, and they should have scared them off. They routine, song and comedy they handle grace and professionalism.
THEY EVEN made waiting for the judges' decisions as painless as possible with a barbershop quartet, proving they had something for everyone.
For technical quality, the sound system defied the barn-like qualities of Hoch Auditorium. All of the technical transitions appeared smooth, although Hoch's limited facilities undoabedly gave untold and uncounted headaches.
Point totals and judges' sheets are available on request in 110 of the Kansas
THE WILLIAM INGE
MEMORIAL THEATRE
8:00 p.m.
Feb. 28, March 6
March 9-11
An Evening Of
Dance Drama
Casa de Taco SPECIAL:
DOZEN BIG, ALL BEEF
TACOS $4.25
Exp. 3/30/77
Happy Hour 5 to 6
1105 Mass.843-9880
SUA Forum presents Alger Hiss on "The McCarthy Era"
Tuesday, Mar. 1
7:30 p.m.
University Theatre Admission 50°
Tickets available at the SUA office
MICHAEL R. RUSKIN
So you think you're not an artist? Doreta will teach you how! NO TALENT REQUIRED!!
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This Week's Highlights
"AN EVENING OF DANCE DRAMA" 'tonight through March 6, and Mar. 9-11.'
Theater
♥
"HOMERICA - A TRILOGY ON SEXUAL LIBERATION," premiere of Paul Stephen Lim's third play, 8 p.m. Tuesday through Mar. 6, Kansas Union Bathroom. "FOOL'S RUNNEY," Movement Center, Saturday p.m. Wednesday. Lawrence Arts Center.
"A MATTER OF GRAVITY," starring Katharine Hepburn, 8 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, Lyric Theatre, Kansas City, Mo.
- Decoupage
CLIFF KEUTER DANCE COMPANY,
Wednesday through Friday, Baker
University, Baldwin City.
Concerts
Recitals
Let's Face It, WE'VE GOT THE BEST!
★ Raleigh ★
★ Motobecane ★
★ Univega ★
SPORT
SPORT
INFORMAL RECITALS by students and faculty of the School of Fine Arts at noon every weekday through Friday, Strong Hall lobby.
HOWARD BOYAJIAY, faculty. Faculty
Recital Series, 8 tonight. violin怀德
Recital Series, 8 tonight.
Lectures
MARILYN MICHAEL, muerto-sopran.
Student Recital 8. p. 6/m.
Maria Micaela Bertolon
TOMMY BRITTAIN, oboe. Faculty
Rational Series, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
Swarw at 10 a.m.
MARIBETH KIRCHHOFF, contralto.
Faculty Recital Series. 8 p.m. Thursday.
5:30 p.m. Sunday.
7th & Arkansas
Nightelubs
KELLEY WADE, pianist and guitarist,
p.m. to 1 a.m. in Threads through Thursdays.
MILLIONAIRE AT MIDNIGHT, 9. to midnight Wednesday, the Opera House.
BILLY SPEARS, 9 to midnight Tuesday,
the Bierstert
843-3328
BYRON JANIS MASTER CLASSES, 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. Thursday, Swarthworth.
CRITICAL SYMPOSIUM on "Homerica," with Henry Wheesley, Saturday for Julia Drake, Los Angeles Times; and Gwyneth Paltrow, 2 p.m. Wednesday, University's Balcony.
GALLERY TALK on "Sallie Lawy,
Thayer and Her Collection," Carol Shankel,
assistant curator, 3:0 p.m. today, Spooner,
Thayer Museum of Art lecture hall.
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ANY LARGE PIZZA
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Coupon expires March 30, 1977. So hurry!
Coupon expires March 20, 1977 - So hurry!
THE STUDENT SENATE NEEDS YOUR INVOLVEMENT NOW
If you are interested in being involved in student government, apply for appointment to one of the following committees:
Membership now open on the seven standing committees of the Student Senate. . .
Academic Affairs
Cultural Affairs
—Student Rights,
Student Rights, Responsibilities, and Privileges
Financial & Auditing Sports
Membership now open on the five subcommittees of the Student Senate. . .
—Elections
—Minority Affairs
—Transportation
Committee on Classroom Teaching
Positions available in the STUDENT SENATE OFFICE . . .
—Recreation Advisory Board
1) Coordinator for Public Relations
2) Complaint Service Director
Deadline for Applications: March 4,1977
Pick up applications at the Student Senate Office, Level 3, Suite 105, Kansas Union
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AUDIOTRONICS
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---
Monday. February 28,1977
University Daily Kansan
KU rallies to advance in playoffs
BY COURTNEY THOMPSON Associate Sports Editor
For much of Saturday's first round game of the Big Eight post-season tournament, Kansas and Nebraska looked like they preferred to forget about the whole thing.
The Jajwahys finally won, 61-88 but when the last minute was seemed that Amarillis would go right.
Throughout the first half and for about the first 13 minutes of the second half, both teams played shaggyly and monotonously. Neither could a good lead and the game
Kansas also was charged with 14 personal injury in the first half compared with seven for
The 8.700 fans in Allen Field House seemed bored by the lackluster play and low scoring as KU shot only 38 per cent from the field.
THE FIRST ROUND win for KU put the Jayhawks in the semi-final round Thursday night at 9:06 in Kansas City's Kemper Arena. Kansas State, which defeated Iowa State, 97-62, Saturday, will face KU. Missouri and Oklahoma, the other first-round winners, will meet each other Thursday night at 7:06.
Until an apparent last-ditch fights caught on it looked like the Jayhawks' season had ended. With 7:10 left to play the Hawks got its win, but the team scored to put KU within one point, 49-48.
The tempo of the game increased as both teams exchanged points and the KU defense improved. With 4:33 left to play and a 56-54 lead, the Cornhuskers went into a four-third lead.
BUT KANSAS was having troubles as Nobles fouled out with 2:25 to go. Brian Banks of Nebraba missed the first shot of a one and one situation and Douglas made a reverse layup to put KU ahead with 1:55 remaining.
Nebraska kept the ball until Herb Nobles deflected a pass fromNU's high scorer Bob Siegel with 2:50 left. KU got the ball and Ken Koenigs hit two free throws to the game, 56-56, after being fouled by Curt Hedberg.
Milt Gibson, who started the game for KU in place of the injured Hasan Houston, was foiled by Banks and he made the free throw to give KU the lead, 59-56. Gibson, who averages 37 per cent from the free throw line, hit 50 per cent Saturday.
Couch Ted Owens said Gibson was getting more confidence in shooting.
'His shot was a big one for us today. And so were Ken's. And Brad's—his was
OWENs referred to two free throws made in back-to-back after being in front of fully folded NTU's.
Banks had just made a 21-foot shot with 22 seconds left to put Nebraska within one point. Then Sanders was foiled sending him to Alabama, where shots accounting for the final margin.
THE CORNIHSKERS killed the ball in from the base under the KU basket. But Banks let it roll, and roll and roll until the ball rolled Nebraska for a five-second violation.
The 'Huskers' idea was to save time on the clock and still get the ball as far downcast as possible without the clock running. The ball bounds within the required five seconds.
Owens said he had expected NU to go to the delay early.
For Nebraska good strategy was needed and although it was attempted -it back
"THEY PLAYED for us to make mistakes," he said. "So I thought they might do it anymore. But we didn't make them." We defensive mistakes when they were ahead."
Nebraska coach Cochi Cipriano lamented the failure of a usually reliable tactic.
"We had the same game plan as always against Kansas--don't give them second shots and play good defense. Usually the defense is effective against KU with their big men, but we lost the ball and that hurt." "Oriano said it was a simple case of
"It wasn't a fun way to end the season."
Cipriano said it was a simple case of missed shots.
"We could have won," he said. "We didn't handle the ball well when we were ahead. Our tip-ins missed, KU's went in. Our free throws missed, KU's went in.
"I wasn't a fun way to end the season," BUT FOR KU it wasn't actually that hard. It made accuracy from the free throw line that accuracy from the difference-NU shot 64 per cent.
"Although we got good open shots in the second half we couldn't get them in," Owens said. "But I told them to keep putting them up and we plugged away anyway."
Owens commented on the attendance, KU's lowest of the season, saying "It wasn't bad considering all the confusion about tickets, the weather and television—I didn't really want that. But their noise level sure was good."
Sanders provides Owens' relief
By ERIC MARTINCICH
Sports Writer
For relief, Ted Owens Kansas coach
ruled it S.A.N.E.D.R.S.
It was reserve guard Brad Sanders' two free throws with 16 seconds left that iced KU's 61-58 win over the Nebraska Cornhuskers Saturday afternoon.
"I knew the game was ours after I made these two shots," Sanders said. "Now we get to go to Kansas City for another chance."
THIS WAS not Sanders' first time to come through in the clutch. His shot against St. Louis forced the game into overtime, and KU eventually won in double overtime, 84-73.
"I didn't worry about it. I just con-
tended on the makesups he," he said.
"And I'm not too concerned."
Sanders, who played slightly more than 10 minutes a game this season, said he didn't see much of it.
"I could've been the goat or the hero in both cases," Sanders said. "I've been lucky."
Owens said he was impressed with Sanders. a Leavenworth sophomore.
"Brad's free throws were the best," he said. "I cannot remember Brad Sonders playing in a game where he didn't help us." I know they take fine shots, not better.
KANSAS
34
It was KU's total free throw shooting,not
Guard Brad Sanders
just Sanders', that impressed Joe Cipriano, the Cornhusker coach.
"FREE THROWS were the key to the game," he said, "the hit theirs, we missed it."
Kansas hit on 11-of-13 from the line for an 6.4 per minute hit, 8.5 per minute on connection 14 of 14-22.
The "Huskers took 17 of those shots in the first half, when the 'Hawks were whistled for 14 fouls. Ken Koenigs found himself on the bench much of that time with four.
"the referees called it close the first half," Koenigs said. "I was disappointed in my first half performance. I feel I hurt the team when I'm on the bench.
Koenigs said the 'Huskers didn't go at him as he thought they might.
"I knew I had to be very careful in the second half."
"I was surprised they didn't take advantage of the situation," he said.
★★
KOENIGS SCORED nine of his 11 points in the second half.
NEBRAKIA
42
The KU-KState game will be played at 9:05 p.m. Thursday in Kemper Arena, Kansas City, Mo., after the Oklahoma-Missouri game.
By beating the Cornhuskers, KU advances to the semifinal round of the post-season tournament. There they will meet Kansas State for the fourth time this season.
Jack Hartman, K-State coach, was quoted by the Associated Press on playing KU for the fourth time. He said, "Two's enough," and he added, "I think all the coaches feel that way."
| PG | PF | FT | R | PP |
|---|
| Johnson | 6-14 | 9-12 | 7 | 5 | 10 |
| Nobles | 5-14 | 9-12 | 7 | 5 | 10 |
| Miller | 3-14 | 9-12 | 7 | 5 | 10 |
| Douglas | 8-21 | 9-12 | 9 | 2 | 23 |
| Elliott | 9-21 | 9-12 | 9 | 2 | 23 |
| Von Mource | 0-4 | 0-4 | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| Watson | 0-4 | 0-4 | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| Makekid | 1-1 | 0-4 | 5 | 1 | 2 |
| Maackie | 1-1 | 0-4 | 5 | 1 | 2 |
| Rayburne | 0-4 | 0-4 | 3 | 1 | 2 |
| Gibbs | -0.4 | 11-13 | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| | PO | PZ | R | RF | Pf |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Norval | 5.0 | 4.2 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
| Siegel | 7.13 | 6.4 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Steigel | 8.13 | 6.4 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Banks | 4.4 | 1.6 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| Banks | 4.4 | 1.6 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| Heßberg | 4.8 | 1.8 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| Heßberg | 8.47 | 14.49 | 1 | 15 | 1 |
**R**MANNA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 32 - 41
Attendance. 0.777
Nobles helps Douglas steal the ball from NU's Siegel
Women gymnasts win; men finish second
Karen Mundy took second to teammate Pegem Peery in the all-around competition at the Wichita State University Invitational women's gymnastics meet but fell short of winning. She will collegiate Athletics for Women Region Six meet March 10-12 in Lincoln, Neb.
Mundy and Murphy paced the KU women's team to a 114.44-104.58 victory over second place Washburn University. Emporia Kansas State College was third with 98.08, Wichita State fourth with 93.19, and Kansas State College fifth with 92.04.
KU's men's gymnastics team took two in a triangular with Oklahoma and Texas
Saturday, after the Jayhawks' top three all-arounders swept the top three places in the NCA Tour.
Oklahoma won the Saturday meet, scoring 215.50. KU was second at 190.10, and Texas was third at 172.85. The Jayhawks' 190.10 was .05 below their season high.
MIKE HYNES won the all-around competition at Fort Hays with 44.70, Jody Summers was second with 43.70, and Ford Culbertson was third with a career-high 40.20. KU's fourth all-arround performer, Chris Cohen, was sixth.
Jon Nunley's third on the still rings and
sewn Williams third in long in horse vaulting
KU track team takes Big Eight Indoor title
Sports Writer
Bv ROR RAINS
Indoor Champions
KU track team
"Everywhere we go, people want to know,
who we are. So we tell them, 'We are the
Jayhawks, the mighty, mighty
Jayhawks. .!!"
LINOIN, Neb. — It's a good thing the
national track team has made it to
won championships in two own competitions.
All it has to do is run, jump and throw.
And Saturday it did that better than anybody else as it rolled to its eight Big Eight Indoor title in 12 years.
After the championship was safely theirs, the Jayhawks celebrated by singing a chorus of "Mighty, Mighty Jayhawks," as middle of the Nebraska Sports Center, rises.
The Jayhawks won six individual events and one relay, setting two school records and qualifying two more individuals for the NCAA championships.
The sprinkling of the sell-out crowd of 5,138 who stuck around for the awards presentation weren't particularly impressed with the Jayhawks singers per-
BUT THEY had to be impressed with the Jayhawks performance on the track.
Swimmers win AIAW regional
The three-day meet in Lincoln, Neb., held Thursday, Friday and Saturday involved schools from seven Midwestern states and 19 teams. Four Big Eight schools were represented. Nebraska was first at 511 with 214 and Iowa State seventh with 118.
Coach Gary Kempel said the team's original intent wasn't to win the meet, but to qualify certain events for the AIAW national next month. But the Jayhawks were able to qualify only one of those events.
The KU women's swim team changed his mind midway through the AIAW regional meet and decided to win. That was a sound decision as Kansas finished first with 344 points.
KU never trailed in the two-day meet,but
The Jayhawks placed first in the 400 medley and 800 freestyle relay, 400 IM (Cathy Call) and 100 freestyle (Debbie Bunker). But both the 400 and 800 relay teams failed to meet the AIAW qualifying times.
LAUER PROPST, the only KU qualifier,
useable like the *nationalists*
it couldn't quite break away either. Oklahoma trailed the 'Hawks by 10 to 15 points through most of the meet, finishing 15 points behind. 76-61.
A rapidly improving Nebraska squad finished third with 43 points. Missouri edged out Kansas State, 27-24, to take fourth, and Oklahoma State, 18-16, to finish eighth. State eight and Oklahoma State seven.
IT WAS A big improvement over last year, when through a series of errors, the team was down by 25 points.
Kempf said he wanted to arrange a special qualifying session with Missouri by Wednesday to try to qualify the two relay teams.
"The team was really up for the meet what happened last year," head coach Bob
A forewarning of what was in store for Saturday came in the second running event—the 60-yard dash. KU, which qualified 13 of its entries in Friday night's preliminaries, had three entries in the 60. The other three were from Okiahahoma.
Kevin Newell, Cliff Willey and Dave Blutcher were the Kansas entries. Among the Oklahoma entries was John Garrison, the defending champ.
What's more, Wiley finished third and Blutter fourth, to give KU 11 points.
The scoring was on a 6-4-3-2-1 basis.
Newell, running in the lane next to Garrison, said, "When we had gone about 45 yards and he hadn't caught me, that's when he and it. That's where he caught me we'd say."
Timmons, aware of Oklahoma's strength in the distance events, said, "It was terribly important that we start out well. That was a big event for us."
THE 'Hawks did start out well. In the only final Friday night, the long jump, freshman Jay Reardon took second and senior Mike Wilk finished third. Oklahoma's Mike Pleasant won, but KU led in points, seven to six.
Wagner broke the school record and
Jim Poldbearade the won play with a throw of 57-9. Jay Wagner won a school record of 10:4 to win the 600, and Wiley Won the record-breaking time of 29.73 seconds.
The trend continued Saturday. Out of the first five events, Kansas entries won three.
qualified for the NCAA meet in the preliminaries, running a 1:09.79.
WAGNER SAID he wanted to get the qualifying out of the way (he needed a 1:10.3) in the preliminaries. He also wanted his time to bother Nebraska freshman Scott Poehling, who had run the fastest 600 in the conference before the meet.
In the finals, Wagner ran what Timmons called a beautiful race. He took the lead after the first lap and held it the rest of the race while fishing a full second ahead of Peollim.
"I was going easy into the corner hoping that he'd try to think he could pass," Wagner said, and then I'd move on him. "You're not going to come back a second time."
KU RESTED on its early lead as Oklahoma charged back. UO picked up seven points in the mile run, with Stan Finfishing second and Randy Wilson third.
They got six more out of the 1,000 as Wilson took first. And when Vernon broke the Big Eight record in the two-mile, the gap was cut to 53-45.
Within 15 seconds, KU had matched that 12 point splurge by the Sooners. First, Steve Rainbow hit 74% to win the high jump, and then Tad Scales won a vault with Jim Johnson of OU to take the pole vault, after neither could go higher than 16-6%.
TIMMONS WASN'T worried, but he felt
that those totals went up on the
tireboard.
"I couldn't figure out what events weren't in it, yet." Tennysons said. "I didn't know where I was."
Wagner, after running his record-breaking 600, came back to anchor the Jayhawks' mile relay team to victory. Running a 47.2 split, Wagner caught Poochling in the middle of the final lap and then to give KU the meet's final event.
The other qualifier for the NCA ... besides Wagner was sophomore Terry McCann. The third qualifier was Bob Prince in the 801 but was timed in 1:51.14, a second under the qualifying time.
The unit of Stan Whitaker, Newell, Blutcher and Wagner's time of 515 DIE BRUCE (1960).
Hynes led the KU squad with 47.45 in the all-around, although Summers wasn't far behind with a career-high 47.20. Oklahoma's Bart Conner, an Olympic competitor for the United States last year, won the all-around with 55.70.
KANSAS KANSAS
Jay Wagner is congratulated by Wiley (left) and Blutcher after anchoring the record-breaking mile relay team
SUMMER ALSO had a career-high score in vaulting with an 8.8. Burt Nunley's 8.0 on the still rings was a career-high, but Bob Wesel's 7.45 on the horizontal bar.
"The team felt good because they weren't that much outclassed," KU coach Bob Cox said. "We don't have a team like Oklahoma with an Olympic gymnast it feels good when you're not outclassed. We're not really that much better than us. But Conner is a good gymnast."
1
In the women's meet, Murphy won the all-air competition with 30.95, followed closely by Mundy's 30.85, Mundy's 30.95 was to qualify her for regional competition.
MURPHY ALSO took first in vaulting with 8.2, and Mundy tied for first on the uneven parallel bars with 7.9, took second on the balance beam with 8.33 and placed third on floor exercise with 7.96. Rene Villie took third in vaulting for KU with 7.95.
"I thought it was a good meet," KU coach Ken Snow said. "Fortunately, we had a good day on beam, and no one could reach us after that. No other team had a super day, and we did what we had to do and came through with it."
The men's gymnastics team will close its dual season this Saturday when Colorado comes to KU for a 2.p.m. meet in Robinson Gymnastium. Lockwood said he expected to be close because the two teams had been scoring about the same season.
The women's tennis team opened its spring season on the road this weekend, and the team was already on track.
Kansas scored 15 (of a possible 18) SMSU,
11. Stenberg College, 7 and Tulsa. 2.
After losing to Missouri Southern 10,
Saturday on a snow-covered field, the
Jayhawks came back to defeat Arkansas, 2-
1, yesteday in a mudbath.
Mary Stauffer, who played at the No. 4 position last fall, was undefeated at her new No. 3 position. Carrie Fotopoulos (No. 2) and Caroline Mulligan defeated in singles play and KU's No. 2 doubles team of Cook and Tracy Spellman was 3-0.
KU now has several weeks to catch its breath before returning to competition. The team's next match is March 31 when they play in the 'Texas Invitational' in Austin, Tex.
Women netters start off season with three wins
Bad weather and injuries combined to
zombie this weekend. Club as it split two
zombies this weekend.
Club splits games
KU was forced to play most of its game in Fayetteville one man short when injuries to George Bures and Roger Ebert left them with only 10 men.
KU's skills were scored by freshman Joe Anthony and player-coach Berrick Mullin.
The junior variety squad tied Kansas at St. Louis at tatsburg 8-4 Saturday in a game simulated by the team.
University Dally Kansan
Monday, February 28, 1977
7
Bennett says he would veto marijuana bill
By DENNIS MINICH
Staff Reporter
plaf phe
siegel
ond
TOPEKA-Gov. Robert Bennett said Friday that if a bill calling for the decriminalization of marjana was on his desk right now he would veto it.
47. 45 in the wasn't far klahma's iitor for the all-around
Bennett, interviewed by a group of about 30 College Republicans from Kansas colleges and universities, said the marijuana before the Kansas House of Representatives would make possession of small amounts of marijuana similar to a traffic violation.
high score
Nunley's
er-high, an
zonal bal,
Bob against
a n Olympi
you're not
that much
gym-
in vaulting first on the took second and placed 7.96. Rene or KU with
ters son wins
"KU coach we had a could reach had a super lo and came
will close out
Colorado
in Robinson
e expected
e two teams
same this
The bill was recalled from a House committee Thursday. As it now reads, conviction for possession of less than one ounce would be a misdemeanor, but continued convictions of more than that amount could be more seriously than under current laws.
opened its weekend, and record.
e 18) SMSU, alsa. 2.
St Missouri
ated South-
ens College,
won the all-5,
followed
's 30.85 was
or regional
at the No. 4
and at her new
ulos (No. 2)
also un-
KU's No. 2
cy Spellman
to catch its repetition. The 1 when they vitualin in
southern 1-0, field, the Arkansas, 2-
BENNETT SAID, "We would be better off
we had never started cigarettes,
nes
Bennett said he wouldn't know how the ball would read until it had cleared the net.
of its game in en injuries to rt left them
reshman Joe Mullen
tied Kansas
Saturday in a
alm.
or drinking, so why should we increase our sirs?"
combined to s it split two
"I might approve a bill when it gets her right if the present House bill were right"
Bennett said be favored a resolution now under consideration to place a liquor by-the-drink amendment on the next state ballot, he said. "We would have enough support in the House to pass."
"There are several groups who have strong lobbyists opposing the resolution," he said. "Liquor store owners and private investors are strong opponents of Dry Forces in opposing the resolution."
"BECAUSE OF these lobbyists, I don't gain the needed two-thirds majority."
Bennett also discussed the problem of an
"There are many areas in desperate need of doctors," he said. "right now, the House is considering many ideas proposed in despair to cure the problem."
insufficient number of doctors in rural areas in Kansas.
The bill he specifically talked about was a proposition in which students entering the KU Medical Center would pledge to work in an area of the state needing physicians.
Bennett emphasized that the proposition was just one of many being considered to answer this question.
The more time a doctor would spend in one of these areas, the less tuition he would pay.
"This is not a new concept," Bennett said.
"The military has been using programs like this for some time. You are trained, and use that training to the benefit of the military."
"RIGHT WHEN we figure it costs $13,500 to train a doctor at the Med Center. If you work for the state, the cost would be part of your own state. If you don't, you pay your own way.
TODAY: There will be a meeting of STUDENT TEACHERS at 3:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. There will be a NATIVE AMERICAN ALLIANCE meeting at 4 p.m. in the Union's International Room.
"It is conceivable for a doctor to be trained and the state would pay the entire cost."
Clint Johnson, starting forward on the University of Kansas basketball squad, has been named in a $30,000 lawsuit by another KU student who claims he gave her gonorrhea.
In the litigation filed at Douglas County District Court, Waldorf says Johnson first expresed her to gonorrhea on March 4, 1976. She said she received treatment after detecting the disease and notified Johnson of what happened. According to Waldorf, Johnson told her that he, too, had been treated for gonorrhea.
TONIGHT: FREDRIK POHL will lecture on "Future Studies" at 8 in the Union's Forum Room, State Sen. Arnold Berman will speak to the KU YOUNG DEMOCRATS at 7:30 in the Union's Council Room.
VD suit filed against Johnson
Susan Waldorf, Shaker Heights, Ohio, graduate student, has charged that she was the victim of Johnson's wanton and malicious conduct and disregard for the consequences of his act. Waldorf also claims to have had extensive surgery because of the disease, which has left her totally sterile.
However, the petition said, further contact with Johnson resulted in a second exposure to the disease and ultimately her sterilization.
On Campus
Events
KANSAN WANT ADS
TOMORROW; There will be a meeting of STUDENT TEACHERS at 3:30 p.m. in the Union's Forum Room. ALGER HSS will meet on Monday from 1 to 4 pm. There will be a 50 cent admission charge.
Acommodations, foods, services and employ-ment of the following employees in the NEW YORK CITY AREA: FAMILY BUSINESS MANAGER, INVESTOR, PROCESSING ANNUAL RETURN, NATIONAL TERMINAL TECHNOLOGY REPRESENTATIVE, TRANSFER MARKETS ASSISTANT, REGISTRY TECHNICIAN.
CLASSIFIED RATES
Each additional word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.30 $3.00
Each additional
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday p 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday p 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday p 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday p 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday p 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 online through the UK business office at 804-6358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Vote Tuesday, March 8. Emporia's neighbor-hood
manager, Dan Farris, has joined the
management team for City Commission. 2-58
**HOMBIRM** WELPES FOR THE FUTURE OF
**Balloon**. Tickets now on sale at the BSA
Ballroom. Tickets only on sale at the BSA
Ballroom.
Give away: $10 per week and $100 cash, plus
U.S. Telephone Directive
Mellow Yellow Pages
ANTIHROPHOLOGY BOOK SALE: Union Loboy.
10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, March 27
Canterbury House Episcopal Church at KU, 1116 Lomontian open house March 1, 1972. 8 p.m., includes meeting on an Episcopal Episcopal Chapel from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,munition-Tuesday 9 p.m., Thursday 5:30 p.m.
FOR RENT
MEDICAL STUDENTS: Quality binocular microscope, wooden case, pointer. Welcome to the new campus only $39. 2nd yr student George Watson, 724 N. Bellefontaine, KC. M, MC 64117 815-358-6381
Framer Ridge> short term lease available, with study. Hesitated Indoor pool> shag carpet; with study. Hesitated Indoor pool> shag carpet; door pool> disposal + patio > laundry facilities + furnished and unfurnished from $312. Calgary furniture and unfurnished from $185. Call 642-705-0120.
1 and 2 room apartments. Furnished, close to
Uen, utilities paid, parking. 843-9579.
Apartments and rooms furnished, utilities paid.
no pets, 843-7567.
Gatehouse apartments - Call Becky now, summer.
Contracts on all Gatehouse apartment 483-821.
Contracts on all Gatehouse apartment 483-821.
Sublitle 1 bedroom apartment after March 15, ac.
2 bedrooms 1 bedroom apartment after March 15, ac.
3 bedroom apartment (tenure) $100 deposit. $829-$499 or
$1,499-$799 for first month.
*Bioscure 2 bedroom duplex, un-formatted, latency free*
*Bioscure 3 bedroom duplex, un-formatted, latency free*
*Applicable April 14th* *Plant utilities*
Individual rooms available in co-op situation,
and other types of room. Please contact
closed close to客车 $55, 842-941, as well.
For more information, please call.
Eyedoecker Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
R. A. Lippincott
CREW ROUTING
CERTIFIED AUTOMATIC
CUSTOMER ACCESS
COMPLIANT OFFICE
CUSTOMER ACCESS
CUSTOMER ASSIGNMENT
EQUIPMENT
EQUIPMENT
Vista
Restaurants
Open daily 11 a.m.
Fri. & Sat. 12 a.m. 1327 W. 6th
ARMADILLO
BEAD CO.
NOW IN THE
WEST STREET
MARKET PLACE
841-7946 M-S
10:5:30 (Thurs. 8:00)
Upstairs room for rent. Two blocks from campus,
825-3450, Available March 16,
825-3450, 845-3450 or 845-3450.
For rent March 1. Share 2 bedroom apartment
48-147 atrium, 5 a.m. for Jim; 3-
48-148 atrium, 5 a.m. for Katie.
Available March 1- Private 1-bedroom cottage
$2,495-$3,699. Available April $3,699-$4,099.
$2,000 monthly plus electricity (8414-9-384-
99).
Room for male in 3-bedroom mobile home. Share kitchen and bath. 843-862-6
3-3
Larger, 2-bedroom unfurnished digics apartments
with laundry, $170/month, available 1-844-555-3900
and 1-844-555-3911.
FOR SALE
Skiize nine house, close to campus, with three other KU men. Own residence, wills and phone numbers. 408-269-5700.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sure you check out the following items—1) As a study guide, 2) For Class preparation, 3) For Exam preparation. *New Analysis of, Western Civilization* available now at New York University.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and
furniture suppliers and Appliance Center, 701-812-6455
Hall-Strut Furnitures and Appliance Center, 701-812-6455
The Allison Speakers are the only ones internally matched to room acoustics. The only ones with a specification guarantee of ± 2 dB. Hear it at Ray Audio, Rockville, MD, or Ray Audio, E. Bih. Prices from $175.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Speakals. BEL AUF.
ELECTRIC, 845-309-9000. WELL B. 801-276-5000.
Advent model 300 Stereo Receiver; designed to be versatile and easy to use for expensive and complex equipment. Its available performance compares closely with output from a most expensive expensive channels components. Hay is offering an active stereo receiver.
The Advent Company is the leader in the Hi-Fi industry in research and product development. The company develops a 2019 A. The Advent receiver is gaining popularity as one of the cleaned units at any price. And the company is also making engineering and value unassumped at any price runge. Your authorized Dealer is in B-3-1
Tri-Phase Speakers - A Real Home Disco System 15-kg heavy speaker blocks two blue square blocks for safe high voltage protection. Dig out those Bingle Shoes and check these specially designed units out at Ray Audio.
Classic guitar-Guitar concert stool hand made in Moe-
ton, WA. Handmade with maple wood and with capo cage after six months. 1939 Vermont.
Volkswagen Fiatback - Automatic, 1970, good
condition. Nice interior and cylindrical mats.
28 inches for $1000. CALL 644-664-3000.
OWNER of ANTIQUARIAN BOOKSTORE
OF ANTIGUARIAL MUSIC must go,
including six very special first-editions.
Mr. Bull during all eight performances of
*ANTIQUARIAL* March 1-6 at the Kansas Uni-
ballroom.
Must sell. Camera Mamiya/Sekor 1000 TLP with
hardware of rings Hardy used, like nos
833-5090-8000
BOKDONK J. Just arrived, a new shipment of Freight to New York. We will provide airport transfers and impressions ExecutiveVacation@bokdonk.com
$700 without bargain 1727. Chevy, Vega, four
inverter. In a very good condition. Farnier
3-14-17
1974 Audi Fox automatic, front wheel drive, 30
mips tuned, up to excellent condition, $655.84
to $679.29
Skies-193 cm. Head HRP Pro's with marker binders.
Cell 845-8230 or 841-8230 3:25
- 3:25
Flying Junior Sailor with Spinaker and many
auctions. 842-5965
2-28
ARTS x 15 radials for VMA, only $60 each. AIRS x 15 radials for VMA, only $45 each.
ARTS x 25 radials for VMA, only $30 each.
929 Macro Thursday at 8:30 - 9:30
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
10-5 Mon.-Sat. Till 8 on Thursday
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th, 841-2656
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
New radials on site, 145 × 13 = 498 eqh, 195 × 18 =
230 eqh. Mounting and balancing available at
NASA.
Used carts for small car owners. Many to choose from. Holds a few items, balancing available. Ray Stone Monitoring and balancing available. Ray Stone Monitoring.
843-9891 6:30-9:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat
set of four CRT8s 14 B. P. Goodrich radial steel
Creeves 65mm F2.8 10-24mm f/2.8 Sturcock stack
690mm Ossen Glass Thursday 10th
Friday 10th Friday
KFNWOOD 8055, 8064 tuner and amp. Tuner has 1.5 sensitivity and power is 70 watts per channel at 1 distortion. Equipment is in perfect condition for 8000 calls, will offer for $7.3-$3. Rick Biank 841-3290
Daihui 1019 furnace in mint condition. Include $100 Encouragement cartridge. sell at $75 Call RR RR RR
For sale: 1966 Ford Fiatel 500, 28C, AC, power window, new snow, clean, service records 811-232-6740, 811-232-6741
Kenwood wink starter receiver, $275 and
well-made taste table, coffee, Call Mike 524-254-31-4
71 Chevy I 1 ton, 283. 3 speed Extra's, very
reliable -843-2812 3-4
Outrageans speakerk Electro-Voice 15" woofer plus hifi speakers high horn Super echelle c3408 841-2828
CLEAN 74 Dodge Charger, 3-door, automatic.
915-222-1000, 915-222-1600, 915-222-1600, 1600-815-2220,
phone 843-815-2220, or 843-815-2220
Minolta SR100 camera, 50mm lens, filters, tripod,
and zoom lenses with case. Call 841-4386.
Most sslj. AR Turntable) with Shure carryin
skeleton for $70 firm. Mark, 822-891-12 @ 6 p.m.
HELP WANTED
1975 FT Kwawaki motorcycle 175cc Very clean.
Also, use 14, 15 inch tires 82-93/40R 3-4
$$
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$$
HEADQUARTERS for Imported Auto Parts JAMES CANG Foreign Auto Parts 843-8080 304 Locust Mon.-Sat. 8a.m.-5:30p.m.
SUMMER JOB
8-8 Sun.
Two Marantz HD-55 speakers. Almost new. Mark
842-6716
For complete information, write
Avon Put yourself through this college way. You'll have to study for a foreign language, and for a full online call, call #821-6000 or #823-7000. For more info, call #821-6000 or #823-7000.
One of America's outstanding boys camp, the Camp Cave, is limited number of openings on the staff for the 1977 season. Oaks are June 22 - August 17. Round trip transportation, living quarters, scout camp, tracutive school, job consequently, only persons with the highest character and integrity will attend.
LIBERTAL ARTS MAJORS to work in job
with the National Library of
Peace Corps representative in campus March
13, 2014. Send resume to Peace Corps
USA, Department of Liberty.
J. Watson's -Applications being taken for employment Departments Part-time or full-time Employment Employees
PART TIME LECTURER IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY for 1977-82 academic year. Minimum salary $4500. Responsibilities involve teaching at a university, providing chemistry Teaching experience desirable but not required. Seize resume, graduate and undergraduate degrees. Provide training to J. A. Landgrebe, Department of Chemistry at University of Georgia 60414. Preference to application received before term. CERTIFICATE OF UTILITY AFFIRMED TO ACTUAL EMPLOYER 2-28
2863 Shannon Court Northbrook, Ill. 60062
Waltress. Part time, evenings, fine area restaurant. Must be attractive and enjoy meeting people. Expand resume. Call 212-530-4899.
...
...
Finest in Selection of Mexican Arts & Craffal 841-3522
Su Casa
IN THE MARKET PLACE
455 New Hampshire
VISIONS
has the eyeglasses
you want
806 *
Pho
men or women. We need 5 people immediately.
Must own own transportation and vehicle.
We will train. For personal interview call Bob Lawn, 842-310-7
Lawn Kirby CO. Will lead to full time summer
Local moving firm need experienced drivers and packers. Would like you to work a few hours a week, would like you to summer work. Please send class schedule for summer work. Please port 237, Lawrence, Kansas 60044.
Need one person capable of lifting heavy mail
120 lb. Car, car needed; $8 for 2; host work. See
$30 for car. C
Delivery person and odd jobs, some heavy lifting. Must be familiar with Lawrence. Mon-Fri: 1-60 5:30 and all days Saturday. Must be 21 with a Bachelor's degree or in the garden at Garden Center, 15th and New York, 2-25
LOST AND FOUND
OWNER OF SWINGING SINGLES' BAR LOCK-UP
FAMILY AND FRIENDS
If you understand the true implications of bar librarian, contact Sammy during all eight per-
son visits. Contact Sammy at 342-861-7546; March 1-4, 3-4
Kansas Union Ballroom
Reward for information on lost banner of lawman.
Mascotte (Mascotte) No. 2-322.
Asked. Phone 843-1839
Lost: Feb. 22 (morning) Texas calculator on
Lost: March 18 (street-reward) 843-1528.
Lost: Bus Pass Student No. 234281, Call Mike
841-4832
3-2
Found large green and white Thermo in Philosophy Department Office, claim at 362 Wesley Street.
Lost Man's billfold 2010. Possibly at the
European and American borders.
842-7019. 2-28
Silver bracelet with green stones, Nikon lens
cover. Call 864-3173. 3-2
Taken Feb. 13 from Delta Upson Fraternity—one large brass coffee urn and brass candlestick Leads are being investigated. Reward for information (No questions asked) 842-532-6199 for Pat For
Last:蓝 and silver ring in room Wesoc
443-709-8221, restroom
630-709-8221 to 1019 Wesoc, Reward
1309 Wesoc
Lost: female black and white English Setter.
Reward: *Bewald* 843-612 or *843-144* 3-2
MISCELLANEOUS
"HOMEBERICA" FRICTION FIRE WITH FIRE
BROOKLYN BROOKLYN BROOKLYN
Broadway, Ballroom, Tickets now on sale at the SB
Store.
NOTICE
Swap Shop. 420 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
paps, lamps, clocks, televisions. Daily 12-5.
Safety instructions see back cover.
EUROPE/WORLDWIDE academic discount year
round SPA T2A 4228 First Ave. Tucker, QK
410-795-3600
GARVIES SERVICE METTING Tuesday, March 1; 7:30 p.m., International Room of Union. Guest speaker, Daniel S. Schrader, Kansas Legislature, speaking on sexual privacy, the RAH, law put reform, capital punishment
HEAD TO HEAD
901 Kentucky - 842-9001
We Care About Hair
Redhead
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods • Vintage Clothing
- Furniture - Antiques
- Imported Clothing
7308 Mass. 841-7070
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
The Chalk Hawk
COMPLETE SELECTION OF BEER
**HOMERICA** LAUGHS AT THE EXCENSES OF
HOMERICA! Tickets now in stock at the SUA
BAY Halloween Ticket Store.
TRY
9th and Iowa - West of Hillcrest Bowl
Open 7 Days a Week. No One Under 18
PERSONAL
- Pin-Ball
- Air Hockey
- Foos-Ball
Gay Counseling Service. Call 842-7500, 6-12 p.m.
For socializing activities, call 842-7500.
- Pool
* Smooker
* Ping Pong
E enroll now in Lawrences driving school. Receive the required driver's license and pass the first test - transportation provided. drive copilot.
EUROPE. When you want it, where you want it.
Daily departures, scheduled airlines. 30 American
cities. 17 European. No charter hassle. Call Rhyk,
841-7203. 3-28
Karate Learn the ancient secrets of the martial arts to stay on top of their stress on the individuals development as a martial artist.
To Jim and Susan, Happy 19 months. Streetcreech those big lips. Alahe-the brains. 2-28
TYPING
Volkswagen Tune Up Special $16.50. Bosch
Tune Up Special $24.99. Volkswagen VW
Repairs, 9th and Every Room $18.99.
$Isolate stromwork, pcr matrix. Now
Barb, Happy 21st Birthday, Hugs and Kisses,
Furry Creature
2-28
I'm looking for companies to travel around
for conferences and go hiking. Ask for
Patti: 842-707-700.
Hole-In-The-Wall
Delicacessen
& Sandwick Shop
B.S.-Hose your birthday is better than last year.
Remember still?
2-28
846 9thinais 843-7685
"HOMERICA" IS ABOUT COURTSHIP, MARRIAGE ... AND WORSE! March 1-4 at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Tickets now on sale at the SUA box-office. 3-4
SERVICES OFFERED
To Scott M. Jarson Happy 21st birthday! By
Steven A. it is like to be "a special
season." 2-258
Earn credit while seeing Florence, Florence,
Munich, Pisa, London and more. Call 844-759-8200.
**THEISIS BINDING COPYING.** The House of Ubser's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for both binding & copying in Lawrence. Let us handle you $.83 Massachusetts or phone 942-856-1000.
Thank you.
February "Tune up special." We clean up and wash the machinery, adjust wipers, adjust hubs, crank and head. And install any parts on accessories bought at time of "tune up" (or when your machine is in good condition or 3 speed, repire $16.50, now $14.00; single-speed, repire $25.00, now $21.00). We make all for makes of bicycle. Lawrence Schwinn Cycley, 18 W. 6th, 9-6 Mon.-Thurs., Thill 11th Street, New York.
math tutoring - competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 602, 102, 105, 111,
116, 117, 119, 121, 122, 123, 124, 142, 500, 658, 727
Reasonable rates. Call 842-7841.
CONFUSED BY
CONFUSED BY FINANCIAL AID APPLICATIONS?
Let H B & Block take the work and
worry out of your annual struggle
with financial aid applications. For
quick, convenient, low cost service
CALL 842-3207.
H&R BLOCK
Experienced typed—term papers, thesis, mike.
Experienced typed—term papers, spelling,
spelling error. 843-3053, Mr. Wright.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4470. ff
*TYPNING-Thesis*, term napers, &. Reasonableness.
Call Bath. 811-6477. 3-4
Typist/editor. IBM Plexite/cite. Quality work. Email: typetest@ibm.com. Distributions welcome. Mail: 821-9327. Nilson, B21-9327.
Your paper deserves the best. Call Peggy for
864-313-1434; days 824-909, evenings
and weekends.
**TYPNING** - We have many return customers who were satisfied with our service and good service. We are pleased to make a M2428 M2429 available.
WANTED
Male graduate student wishes to share two bed-
room accommodations, $91.58 month, at 842-7829;
09 p.m. on Tues.
Newest Christian Christmae roommate SOCH to share
Training Aglia, age womens, or Bus ROS $125,
Training Aglia, age womens, or Bus ROS $125.
WANTED: Female roommate for my pile 2-bed,
3-bathroom apartment in Manhattan. $850/month plus utilities. Call 814-2871-2877
Wanted. Work with musical talent. If you play a brass, woodwind, or percussion instrument, why not bring it to the 3120h Army Reserve Band gets once a year the mid-wed and as well as locally perform all over the mid-wed and as well as locally spare one weekend (18 hrs) per month, and train you in band music. What you喜欢 part-time, call us at 843-1651 or visit you with an instrument and uniform. Ask for Sgt. Benny James, U.S. Army Reserve, 2160
Studious roommate wanted for large apartment on Bus Route. Call 842-9732
3-2
WANTED—A GOOD OLD FASHIONED UNI-FLEX
autographed 14-YEAR-OLD AMERICAN BOY
AUTHENTIC 14-YEAR-OLD AMERICAN BOY
THAN THE POFE HONELN’S Look for Fran-
cisco pilot performance; performance
Balloon-Back 3-4
1 or 2 mates to share very nice 2 bedroom apartment. Swimming pool, swimming school, bus service; we will pay part of your rent-you pay only approx. $90 mo. Can 841-413-88. Keep 2-8
OVERWEIGHT ROOMMATES WANTED. Have a
overweight roommate from a friend. Barb 845-9267
Male roommate for Jayhawker Towers, 1/3 rest.
Call 841-4967.
Female wanted to share 2-bedroom apartment.
$85 monthly. 641-4519. 3-3
I. would like to buy a men's 10-speed bicycle.
Contact Sean, 841-3861. 3-3
Roommate for 2-bedroom duplex very close to
campus. 841-6566 3-4
Female roommate to share space. 2-bedroom apartment one block from campus. Call 814-5735.
MAISMITH HALL
THE WOODEN BANK OF THE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON MEMORIAL GATE
CUSTOM JEWELRY
DESIGNS FOR UNUSUAL PEOPLE
mermads stone ruttina
unicoris
pyramidis
nassu
cutting
reasonably priced
Laurie Stetzler 8413883
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
- Bud on Tap
The Lounge
"A different kind of bar
"seclusion and quiet."
- Pool
- Pinball
Southwest End of Hillcrest Bowl
- Foosball
Open Daily 10 a.m.-Midnight Except Sunday
---
8
Monday, February 28, 1977
University Daffy Kansan
1. $a < b$ if and only if $b > a$.
Election debris
From page one
Wednesday evening, shortages occurred in the class officer ballots.
The shortage continued during the evening. Folls in Oliver, Naislmith, Lewis and GSP-Corbin Halls had to be reopened Thursday night.
BECAUSE THE committee had allowed only one-half hour to transport the boxes from the day polls to the night polls, the committee right opened about an hour and a half late.
As a result of the delay, no check was made on ballots that remained from the day polls before the ballot boxes were transferred to the night polls.
Flynn said he couldn't estimate how the ballot选举 and delay had affected him.
Oliver Hall opened 45 minutes late Wednesday night and had only 35 sophomore candidate baskets, even though he actually comprises freshmen and sophomores.
RUTH BENIEN, Oliver Senate candidate, said about 150 people voted at Oliver this year, compared with about 250 last year.
Steve Leeben, student body president,
predicted that if the ballot shortage and
time delay had been avoided, the committee
had drawn a vote less 5,000 voters to the
polls.
The shortage of ballots and distribution problems were unforeseen by the committee, but in its preparation for a close meeting with the committee anticipated other problems.
The committee, to indicate that no horseplay would be allowed in the election, Feb. 6 drafted an interpretation of its instructions placed in the Senate Rules and Regulations.
THE OPENING of the statement giving the committee's purpose, said, "It is necessary to prevent political excesses from surrounding the electoral process with a carnival air through the introduction of the rules that have no proper place in that process."
The committee interpreted its powers to include the ability to prejudge an event for some reason.
When the committee announced its interpretation to the candidates Feb. 8, a dispute began about whether the committee had overstepped its powers.
Steve McMurry, chairman of the Senate Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee (SRRP) and Avanti coalition campaign manager, said the Senate would allow the Senate to new policy with either SRRP, of which it is a subcommittee, or the entire Senate.
But no other approval was sought or desired by the Elections Committee, McMurray said, because "the middle of the country is still being drawn to disagreement with the committee."
**MEMURY ALSO said that the phrase including "carnival air" was to have been deleted last fall because it was so vague, but more recently it looked to make more immediate revisions.**
"We wanted to throw out the crap, and line was part of the crap" he said.
McMurry resigned Feb. 11 as SRPK chairman because of the controversy and lack of support from the party.
Leben said the carnival atmosphere phrase was only a preamble and wasn't intended to give specific powers to the committee.
But Flynn, supported by Tedde Tasheff,
former student body president, and Steve
Owens, former vice president, said the
committee had acted within its power.
The committee split on whether the interpretation was ill-timed. The interpretation came four days after the Senate filing deadline.
THE NIGHT the interpretation was announced to the candidates, a complaint
For three weeks, Avanti sophomore class candidates had been planning to inflate a hot-air balloon in front of Strong Hall, and a week before the committee's interpretation, they had received the University Events Committee's recommendation. Feb. 9, the Elections Committee said the
SUA FILMS
THE COLLECTOR (1965)
Dr. William Wyler with Terrace Stamp, Samantha Egger, Cannes Film Festival—Best Actor, Best Actress Award Winners. Make a Resume at MCA
THE BIRTHDAY PARTY
Dir. William Friedkin with Robert Shaw, Patrick Magee. Adapted from a play by Harold Pinter. Classical Film Series.
(1968)
Wednesday, Mar. 2, 7:30 p.m. 75c
FILMS OF RUSSY RBDKELEFV
Dir. Frick Tuttle with Eddie Cantor, Gloria Stuart. Musical sequences directed by Busby Berkeley. and
FOOTLIGHT PARADE (1933)
Foulk, Brian who writes James Cagney, Janet Bolehill. Musical sequences directed by Berkeley. Film Society Series. The Broadway Theater.
THE SEDUCTION OF MIMI (1974)
THE SEDUCTION OF MIMI (1974)
Dir. Lina Wertmüller with Giancarlo Giannini, Italy.
ALL SCREWED UP (1975)
Dir. Lina Wertmüller with Luigi Dibleri, Italy. and
balloon would promote a "carnival air" in the campaign and therefore prohibited it. Avanti disregarded the warning and inflated the balloon Feb. 15.
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STUDENTS
Fri., Mar. 4 & Sat., Mar. 5, 3:30, 7:00
& 9:30 p.m. $1
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
Feb. 22, after two hours of debate, the committee voted to fine each of the Avanti sophomore class candidates $15. Under the Senate rule, the committee has the authority to fine violators from $2 to $50 and the committee offices—cr both—for campaign violations.
THE CONTROVERSY over the fine was just one of many problems within the system.
Committee members, who had to find poll workers to fill 390 man-hours, had failed to find workers for 50 man-hours by the night before elections.
As a result, the committee that night called for last-minute volunteers and often had them do so.
Carolyn Duzer, committee member,
said that the committee attempted to fill the
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--time slots earlier, but that students who commit themselves for a specific time.
Flynn said a training session for poll workers had never been planned because committee members told him it would have been impossible to get them all together.
A complaint filed Thursday said committee members—who under Senate rules were to be nonpartisan—had actively campaigned for candidates, wearing T-shirts and campaign buttons and distributing campaign materials.
polls workers had read the instructions.
voters were wrong bellouts and
some were not.
THE ONLY instruction planned for the poll workers was on a mimeographed sheet of general polling instructions, and Flynn and Kagan checked Wednesday indicated few
The buttons and stickers worn by
members at the Feb. 1 Election Conference.
In June 2014, a group of people
after a warning from Flynn. He said that most members had decided which candidates they would vote for when the committee began its election work, but denied that their support had influenced committee decisions.
NO ACTION was taken on the complaint, but Flynn said it would be considered when the 1977-78 Elections Committee revised election rules for next year.
The ballot count, which started at 11:30 p.m. Thursday, took seven and a half hours
because of extra care taken to get an accurate count, Flynn said.
In counting this year's presidential ballots, one reader read to four tabulators, who after 50 ballots compared their counts. The readers were not identical, the ballots were recounted.
Flynn said that although this method was always used, it was especially important this year because the race was seen as potentially close.
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Representatives will be on campus at the following placement offices:
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Educ. Wed., March 2
Bus. Wed., March 2
Engr. Thurs., March 3
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WHY IS SIGLINDA STEINFULLER DEAN OF BEER? WHY NOT?
Fellow Beer Persons.
Life is full of unanswered questions such as: Is there intelligent life elsewhere in the universe? And if so, do they wear socks?
Schlitz.
one word for beer, and you know it.
In beer, however, there are no unanswered questions. Because there is only one word for beer, and you know it.
Therefore, as your Dean of Beer, I suggest you research the essential rightness of the word for yourself at your next social function. Or even your next antisocial function.
Thank you.
And please note: The recommended source material for locating the word can be found in any phone booth. In other words, look in the Yellow Pages. Under "Beer"
WHEN IT'S RIGHT,
SCHLITZ
Tom See Schlitz Campus Rep.
843-3058
YOU KNOW IT.
1970
THE DEAN
OF BEER
SCHLITZ